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                  <text>1~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Nov. 21, 1~

'Round

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Lawmakers may act •on a bill that
would hike the salaries of l!llVen elec-.
ted county officials when their lame
duck session reswnes MondaY~
A bill being drafted for introduction by Rep. Frederi\!k H.
Deering, [).Monroeville, would
grant salary hikes of at least 11 percent. But the final version of the
meaaure, expected to consolidate
seven separate pending bl118, could
contain a higher pllrcentage in-

Meigs
L·o cal
By Supt. David L. Gleason
For a long period of time now we
have talked abou~ the condition of
several of the buildings in the Meigs
Local School District. We have also
discussed the financial situation un·
til it seems we are beating our heads
against a wall.
We have tried to pass two levies,
one an emergency levy in 1978 and
one a pennanent Improvement levy
In Nwember of this year and both
were defeated. The people are
saying "we are paying . enough
taxes" and "things • are tight
everywhere." So what do we do
now? What can be accomplished?
These are questions that we have
wrestled with for the last few weeks.
What are we going to do now that
the levy did not pass? What can we
do? OVer and over again we look at
these questions.
As you know, I have been pursuing
many avenues with the board of
education during the last several
months. Finally and fortunately for
the Meigs Local District, we have
stumbled onto several laws and have
developed a tremendous plan that I
personally unvelled at the hosrd
meeting earlier this week.
Unfortunately at that board
meeting there developed an alter·
cation that prevented me from fully
presenting the "no cost to the tax·
payer" bond issue that I have been
working on.
·
Therefore, this evening, I am
repeating to you my statementto the
board of education that was briefly
made on Monday night. It was titled
''The Superintendent's Statement
Regarding the Need for Additional
Monies for the Meigs Local Schools"
and is as follows :
''The defeat of the 3.5. mill per·
manent improvement levy this mooth has placed the Meigs Local School
District in a very difficult position.
Our district bulldings need a great
deal of attention. I cannot in good
conscience advise the board to adopt
a wait-and-see attitude.
"Inflation continues to rise rapidly
putting an even greater stress on our
present operating budget. We have
already identified many Of our
costly facility needs that need irnmediate attention. Restating some
of those needs I cite roofs (at Bradbury, Salem Center, Junior High,
and Harrisonville), the gym floor at
Harrisonville, the crowded conditions at Salem · Center, the furnaces at Rutland, Harrisonville,
Pomeroy, and Salem Center, the
fence at Pomeroy, windows at
Salem Center, Harrisonville, junior
high, Rutland, and S,.lisbury, and
the junior high facilities. These are
just some of the problems. There are
many more. The needs of our school
district are great and in my opinion
any increase in state funds would be
insufficient to meet these needs.
"Therefore, I am recommending
initial pre-election proceedings
which will be the first steps in

placing a bond issue pursuant to Sec- crease.
The hikes would go to seven eleclion 3318.04 which states: 'Tax shall
ted
officials in all of the state's 88
be at the rate of one-half mill for
counties who haven't had a raise in
each dollar of valuation except that
in those years in which the tax rate four Y\liii"S= prosecu\Ors, sheriffs,
treaaurers, engineers, recorders,
for debt service outside the ten-mill
coroners and clerks of court.
limitation Is less than three and onebalf mills, the rate shall be increased to that rate which is the difference between four mills and the
tax rate for debt service outside the
Twelve defendants were fined and
ten mill limitation, until the purchase price is paid but in no case 10 others fodeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
longer than 23 years.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
"What this means is that we
presently are sentllng more than the were Stephen McCormick,
required one-half mill bond in- Galllpolis, $18 and costs, speeding;
debtedness to the state. It alJO James Grimm, Pomeroy, and Tommeans that there is a way by which my Boso, Portland, $22 ·and costs,
we can keep this additional mooey at speed; William Tabler, Stewart, $5
home In our district to help us with and costs, operating an unsafe
vehicle; RoMie Hewlett, Long Botour building needs:
It is extremely complicated but tom, $21 and costs, speeding; Te!T)'
can best be. explained by realizing Cain, Albany, $5 and costs, failure to
display warning devices on a
that we presently are:
disabled vehicle; John Baird, Blue
{1 ) Collecting 4 mills in bond
Rock, Ohio, $23 and costs, speed;
retirement
Budd Darst, Middleport, $15 and
( 2) Need approximately ol)!y Jlh
costs, insecure load: Wlnlfred SutMills to retire our present bonds
(3) Are required by law to collect ton, Marietta, $24.50 and costs,
speed; JameS Cremeans, Coolville,
the 4 mills
(4) Sending the difference between 4 mills and the needed 1¥.1 mills
DEER ACCIDENTS
to the State
Two automobile a'ccidents in(5) Need to send only one-half mill volving deer, one involving a
to the State if we have voted more sherifrs cruiser, were investigated
than the 4 mills
by the Meigs County Sheriff's
"lfeel confident that the majority Department Thursday.
of the public wants a gpod school
At 4:30a.m. on US33a deer ran insystem for the boys and g1ris who at- to a sheriff's crusier driven by Sgt.
tend Meigs Local Schools. This is the Randy Forbes. The deer could not be
best avenue I have found to Improve located following the accident.
the educational facilities in our There was heavy damage to the
district because if everything goes vehicle.
a5 planned, Including cooperation
At 6:45a.m. on SR 124in Syracuse
from the State Department, there a' deer was killed when into ran into
will be NO increase cost to the in- the path of a vehicle driven by
dividual taxpayer in the Meigs Local Robert Sawyers, Racine.
Schoo!Distrlct."
A yes vote will mean that we will
be able to get the money presently
being sent to the state (apPAPERS FILED
proximately $1,000,000 in June). Ano
Secretary of State Anthony J.
vote will mean we will continue to Celebrezze, Jr. said today articles of
send the money to the state.
'incorporation have been rued with
Taxes will not be increased or
his office in Colwnbus by Meigs
decreased either tiy voting yes or no.
cOunty Financial ConsultantS, Inc.,
You must understand that I am not Middleport. Incorporators were
saying this money is all we need, but Gary L. Chasteen, Gayle L.
what 1 am saying is that this is
Chasteen.
money we can get in June without
raising taxes.
FUNDS RECEIVED
It is also money that can only be
State Auditor Thomas E.
spent for buildings, grounds, and Ferguson reported the · November
equipment for bulldings. It will·not
diStribution of f1 ,096,894.10 in local
be enough BUT it is a start. It will government fund money to Ohio's 88
. help us fix the immediate building counties and 424 cities and villages
problems now that even the 3¥.1 mill
levying local income taxes. Meigs
permanent improvement levy would County's portion was $12,500.
have taken five years to do. It will
not raise taxes. More information
will be presented if boatd action is
taken to proceed with the issue.

· The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to RBilroad St. at
6:57p.m. Thursday for Sarah Boyles
who was treated at home.
SEEK LICENSE
A marriage license was issued to
Charles William Baer, 33, Minersville, · and Sandra L. Hill, 37,
Racine.
MEETS TIJESDAY
OAPSE Chapter 17 will meet
Tueaday, Nov. 25, at 7:30 p.m. at
Meigs Junior High, Middleport. All
members are urged to attend.

. Unlet~~ action Is taken now, the of- . raised about the ability elf tile coianflcials won't receive a raise for lies ... to pick up the additional cost
another four years, the bill's that would be impoled upon lbem."
backers
said. (lhio's
Constitution
prohibits mid-tenn
Increases
for the
offli:eholders,whowereelectedNov.
4and take office Jan. I, 1981.
The proposal baa been met with
-'·"" response In the General

.....,....

~

.
. •
paet'l!ded in death by her huablnd,''
Hunter In 11167
~
.
cee will be beld aI 1 :.
p.m. Sunday at the White Funeral ~
Home In Coolville with the Rev.
Dwlgbt Davia officiating. Burial ;
will be in Slate Cemetery at Slate, :
W. Va. Friends may call at !he:;
funeral hnome anytime at 1 p.m. ~
Saturday.
'
'
"

,

Geraldine Bamhouse

aen1

Assembly.
"I will support a reasonable inMrs. Geraldine M. Barnhouse, 70,
crease for county officials, but I Route I, Guysville, died UDeidon't know if one is going to pass," pectedly Thursday night at
said Senate Presldent.elect Paul E. O'Bleneu Hospital in Athens.'·
Glllmor, R-Port Clinton.
Mrs. Bamhoulle was born at Wood
Sen. Harry Meshel, D- County, w. Va., a ·daughter of the.
YoWigstown, head . of the Senate late Mr. and Mra. Charles L. Fill'Finance Committee, said wage hike , nsworth. She ·wu a member of the
bills are never popular in lame d11ck Valley Bible Cen(!lr at Lottridge and
sessions. "There baa to be a question bad resided in the Coolville- ...------------~~
Lottridge area for.the past .fT years. .
Surviving ate eight 80118, Walter
E., Donald and William Falrfu,
Coolville; Ralph, James and
"'"If' . . •
and Everett cremeans, Coolville, Richard, Guysville; Raymond, Glll'$25 and costs each, did not bave ner, N. C., and John, Marietta; four
·STARTS FRIDAY
'
name and address on traps; LalT)'
daughters, Donna Veon, VIenna, W.
TWO WEEKS
Va.; Nancy Bond, Barbara Knopp
Sigler, Rutland, $10 and costs, tm- and Sarah Bond, all of Coolville; a
safe vehicle.
Forfeiting bonds were Melanie K. brother, Walter Farnsworth,
Simmons, Pomeroy, Rebecca Davlsvtlle, W.Va., a fl!ater, carman
Whitmore, Ridgeway, 28 grandTeaford, Middleport, James R. Call,
hild
d t
t
N.Pleasant,W.Va.,RobertStantOII, c
reo an
wo greaWALTERMATI'HAU,~
·:;;

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~

Ill

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'Michigan .. .. • 9

Ohio State • . • . 3

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O ve n Interior Light
End·of .cook cycle audible
signal
('nnkhank inrlutiPrl

•

$34995
.

LAY-A-WAY FOR CHRISTMAS

the end of the current fiscal year June 30, 1981. Rhodes
and lawmakers have the option of Imposing state spending cuts or tax increases, or a combination of both, to
meet requirements of the Ohio Constitution that the
budget be balanced.
Rhodes has previously ordered the state budget trimmed by a total of 6 percent to help erase some of the red
ink. .
Senate Republicans, who will control the chamber
when the newly-elected Legislature convenes · in
January, have said they favor more spending cuts and
a temporary increase, possibly in the sales tax, to offset the deficit.
Although action on a tax increase is considered
unlikely before the 113th General Assembly adjourns
for the year, Rhodes.could call lawmakers into special

to

~=1 !"U::~~:.ssmg

I FRIDAY thru THURSDAY -

NOVEMBER 21 thru 27

Mayor's. Court
Six defendants forfeited bonds,
two were fined and a third was given
a jail sentence in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Te!T)' W. Hancher,' Clendennln, W. Va., $350,
posted on a charge of driving while
intolicated, and $100, possession.of
marijuana; Steve Vail Meter,
Pomeroy, $100, disorderly manner:
Kathy S. Bush, Cheshire, $350,
driving while intoxicated, and $200, .
fleeing a pollee officer; Harold Wbltteklnd, Pomeroy,. $25, driving a
weaving course; Debbie Allensworth, no address listed, - $100,
disorderly manner; . Charles
Blackson, Pennsylvania, $29,

I

SISSY

SPACEK

TOMMY LEE
. JONFS.
lfOJ

Sbetbou1ht
KP was a

GOLDIE HAWN .

oorortb ond
a pushup
wu. bnl.

lB1

I•ItiVA'I'£

III~N.JAMIN

speeding.

Fined in the colJI'I were Kenneth
Madden·, Middleport, $225 and costs
and three days in jail, driving while
intoxicated; Marvin Marty, Woodsfield, $225 and costs, three o!ays In
jail, driving while intoxicated, and
George McDaniel, Middleport, five
days in jail, intoxication.
Ronald Lavender, Mason, forfelted a $30 bond, posted on a loud
muffler charge, in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews 1-----------'-"----------';_--Tuesday night. David W. Coppick,
Rutland, was fined $50 and costs for
passing on a double yellow line.

ELBERFELDS

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FOR ·

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lAYAWAYS

27 to 42 WAIST
. 30 to 36 tENGTHS

, ME.N'S '1P
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STRETCH DENIIt\
BLUE JEANS
'

•

Iowa

Purdue ...... .

MSU

Indiana .....•

session next month to specifically shore up the
recession-weakened budget.
Meanwhile, the Senate is expected to vote this week
on a House-passed bi,ll to protect residential property
owners from tax increases caused solely by Inflation.
The measure, authorized by voter approval of State
Issue 1, changes Ohio's law in which tax reductions are
applied to residential and fann property that undergo
· periodic reappraisals;
The Senate has scheduled a vote Monday on a Housepassed bill to help struggling black and other minority
businesses in Ohio survive during their initial period of
operation.
Among other things, the bill creates a Minority
Business Development Office within the department of
economic and community development. It would

•

•••• • ••• 41
••••••••• 0

provide teclmical·, managerial and counseling services
to new firms along with bid packaging and bonding
assistance.
· Across the Statehouse, representatives may be
asked to vote on a last-minute bill increasing the
salaries of elected county officials, Ohio Supreme
Court Justices and judges throughout the state.
The measure, granting pay raises of at least 11 percent in certain cases, is to be heard Monday by the
House Local Government Committee.
Backers point out that salaries for the local officials,
who were elected Nov. 4 and take office Jan. 1, have not
been increased in four years. Under a constitutional
prohibition against mideterm increases, they will be
barred from a psy hike for another four years unless it
is approved by the General Assembly now.

etttine

tmes
GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

V.OL 15 NO. 43

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt .35NOATH -('hano &gt;W8· 4S24

Vari·Cook" Ouen Control changes cooking
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want.
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·Nebraska •••• 17

Notre Dame •• 24
Air Force • • • • 10

Lawmakers face hectic agenda

.,,.,
SALE
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ELBERFELDS IN .·POMEROY

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1980

'

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

35 CENTS

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TV news future depends
.
9n CNN success-:-Schonfeld
By KEVIN KELLY
With this, viewers are subjected to
:coLUMBUS - The Immediate the lowest common denominator of
future of teleVision news hangs on entertainment. Based on ratings
the success · or failure of the' Cable surveys conducted by CNN, a
News Network, according to the majority of viewers asked said they
"electronic news godfather."
would prefer to watch the news
_,Reese Schonfeld, president of Ted channel for several hours rather .
Turner's 24-hour dally news chan- than current fare on the three netnel, further predicted radio and works.
television will be the "dominant
"If you were marooned on a desert
hard news source" in the next 20 island with a televiBlon set, which
years.
channel would you choose? My
·Scllllafeld made his remarks . guess is that 60 percent of the people
fri.~y ~tt)le
ely of Professional in this room would choose CNN,"
Schonfeld said.
~~llsts, : Sigma Delta Chi
"I believe the price CBS 'charges
t:::onal con . lion here at the Ohio
for Walter Cronkite is too high-too
ler. ~.A.'o, ~
~:Jrnlllt~~e ~iruWng I have regar- many game shows, too many sitded IIU,,u
most exc.ltlng jour- coms, too many hours of tedlwn, too
IMlilllll 81i!Mtnnlty In this quarter much dead air," headded.
Schonfeld, formerly in charge of
~
t S,r Schonfeld noted.
United Press International's
~ cable subscribers see gl.lm_. ·a~ the CNN operation on the television news service, was heading
WTIIB 11twa J!I'Clll'8lll at 10 p.m. The the Independent TeleviBlon News
lb:-liiGUIII old chllnnel Is not yet A.!aoclation In 1978 when sportsman
earrled b7 area cable stati0111.
Turner, who had recently put his
Schonfeld said for many years ,\tlalita-based "superstalion" on
television news was at the mercy of cable, approached him with the idea
advertisers who felt entertainment, of ail all-news channel.
CNN debuted earlier this . year
nOt news, helped make people.watch
with
an ali-day broadcast on WTBS,
televiBlon and sell their products.

Na~e

Mike Davis new
'
m~mber of o·vn staff

GALUPOLIS
Morris E.
_ Haaklns, president and board chair": man of the Ohio Valley Bank, an. nqunced Saturday the addition of
· ·Mike Davis to the bank's staff.
• pavis will be associated. with the
censumer loan department.
. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Dean-Davis,
Gallipolis, Mike is a graduate of
Gal1la ·Academy High School and
Cblwnbus Business University. He
served three years in the United
l!lf,ates ArmY in the Finance Corps,
with a tour of duty in Vietnam.
.- 'He and. his wife, Elva, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Cllllams of Galllpolls, are the
· parents of . a son, Ethan, 4, and a
daughter, f\obin, 10. They reside at
147 Second Ave., Gallipolis, .
· Davis Is a member of the First
Baptist Church, and of the Gallipolis
Area Chamber of Commerce.
· . Upon completion of his·schooling,
· Mike was associated with his mother
lilicffather in the operation of the
DaviHihuler Co. unW the sale of the
hiast- In 1970. Mike and wife Elva
~ own and operate the A B C Kid-

die Shop In the Silver Bridge Plaza
- a store now in its seventh year of
operation .

MIKE DAVIS

'! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

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IIIBert

Jxtended fo~ state weather
- ~1111111 Sunday. High·In the low 101. Cbance al preclpitatkm 11811' eo
. . . . liftlay. .
.: - · · c 1et1 Flll'l ~811- MQoday ihrolllh Wedneeday - Cloq(y Monday
'I with poalbla abo Will a. Fair Wednelday. High trom 1111 upper
• to . . . 111 M~ and Tueeday cooling to the upper a to mid 4GI
Yrt 'r;-Jntheupper20uild30a.
,:.

.. tdl,
;

Iranian leader says U. S.
response not very clear

nil COurl
•
$5(}' ()()() .bl ck granl
receives

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..... .................................·••••••••••• D-3-4
~

and Its growth since then has been
encouraging, Schonfeld said. It is
now seen in 3.6 million homes and
the network hopes to have 10 million
subscribers by June, 1982.
While admitting CNN is a
"modest" product, Schonfeld .didn't
hesitate to play up its good points.
Because it is on the air each day of
the week, major news stories have
been broadcast over CNN hours
before the networks, wire services
or newspapers knew about them.
An example is CNN breaking
news President Carter would d~~~~;:.
Ronald Reagan in Cleveland •
hours before anyone else knew
it.
Schonfeld said the story brok•,~·"
around 3ll5 p.m.-"JIOIIP . ~ra
1 time" -and Done of the Detwarlus in:-.
· terrupted their progranunlng to announce it.
"Duriilg the c9urse of our six months, we bave done dozens of stories
better than our competitors and
dozens worse," he said. "The journalists sitting here must know wbat
we're talking about, We are quoted
by the New Yor~ Times, lhe
Washington Post and by the wire
services and other newspapers.
"But it is a greater achievement
for us when newspapers and wire
BOUNCING AWAY - · A pass from Michigan safety Bob Murphy (28) in the first half of Saturday's
services pick up lnfonnalion we ·
quarterback John Wangler bounces .out of the ~ds of Big Ten title game in Columbus. Murphy was called for
have developed," he added. "So far,
wide receiver Anthony Carter as he IS hit by Ohio State pass interference on the play. Ohio State lost, 9.3. See
we have had no ·limbs sawed out
details on C-1.
from under us and we hope you can
continue to quote us with confidence."
Schonfeld said CNN's major
weakness 'is failure to cover local
news, a situation he hopes to correct
by establishing corresponding news
stations.
Schonfeld's prediction electronic
news will be the major competitor
news agency reported .
United States on this subject," Pars
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) for news and advertising in the
An
unidentified
spokesman
was
said.
future comes into conflict with a Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad
"The U.S. reply was neither exColwnbus Battelle Institute study Ali Rajal's office said Saturday that quoted as saying the U.S. government
"preswnes
in
modifying"
the
plict
nor clear regarding the
the American response to Iran's ter·
released this week.
terms
ror
release
set
by
the
Iranian
document
ratified by the Majlis,"
"When cable companies are of- ms for the release of the 52
Majlis,
or
Parliament,
on
Nov.
2.
Pars quoted the spokesman as
fering 60 to 100 channels in one American hostages ''was neither exThe agency said Iran had asked saying. "In some cases not only had
market, advertising. on one station pllct nor clear," the official Pars
the Algerian government, which is a direct reply not been made but ad- ,
(Continued on page A3)
acting as the g(}obetween In the dltional proposals had been offered.
hostage negotiations, to ask the
"Since the government of the
UVe
e
United.States ·~to clearly announce Islamic Republic of Iran considers .
its positive or negative response to itself to be the only .executor of tfle •
Majlis decisions, the United States
theMajlis document."
0
The prime minister's office said preSumes (is presumptUous) in
Iran "bas not give any response, modif)&lt;ing this document," the Pars
COLUMBUS - Ohio Youth Coin- lial treatment centers. Foster either positive or negative, to the
(Continued on page A3)
mission Director William K. Wlllls families will be recruited locally and
Saturday announced approval of a the project allows for those parents
fOO,OOO block grant to Gallla County to be trained and supervised.
Juvenile Court for development of
Nine youths will be referred to the
three projects designed to provide Gallla-Melgs Community Action
more extensive loelll resources In Program as part of the juvenile emdealing with local delinquency ployment program. The court will
pay $3.85 to Gallla-Melgs Comproblems.
The .grant will also offer com- munity Action Program for each
munity alternatives for unruly and hour each youth works. This
delinquent youtht in lieu of com- program is designed to provide a'
mitment to the Ohio Youth Com- means for youth to make restitution
mission. ·
. to either the court or the victims .
The projects, submitted to the
The grant, part of the OYC's new
OYC 1b)i Juvenile Court Judge f1,1 million Youth Service Grant,
Thomas S. Moulton, included a allows Ohio's counties to receive
t9,603 home advocacy PI'OII:rBIDo a funds to treat juvealle offenders at
$22,999 child support and placement the local level according to a forproject and $17,3118 for juvenile em- mula tied to each county's
population. According to Willis, each
ploymenL
The home advocacy program was county Is eligible to receive an
PAULCASCI
AD~CARSON
developed to enable the court to allocation of at least ~.000, but the
provide COUJII8ling aervices to youth ·final amount is proportionate to the
ANNOUNCE RETIREMENTS- Both the Middleport VWace 1'-.
and their families in their homes. population, 'based on the 1970.census.
master,
Paul Cud, and his assistant, Adrian Canan, will face tblllr lu&amp;
The youth 1nvo1vet1 will also be
Willis uld the per capita method
Chrlstmlll
rush in December. Both, after long yell'l' ..vice, are re&amp;~r~nc
eligible to reeetve a $15 weekly .of providing funds was adopted so
as
of
Jan.
9, 1981. Cucl took office on Aprll2, 198ll and w01 have-_
allowance for education an4 large counties would be entitled to
pleted
17
years
and nine months active aervtce at the time a1 bla
reenatlon. 'lbere will be 16 youth in more money 11nd so all countit!ll
retirement.
He
baa
21 years credit, however, due to time spent Ill the U. I.
the project for a period of 12 weeks.
would not have to provide vlrtuall~
Navy
and
accwnulated
sick leave. Carson, Route 1, Mlddleport,rt,~~~ ·
The child IIIJIPOI't and placement the same progra~ns, ''especially if
with
the·)J.
S.
Postal
Service
in July, 1961, and will be quitting al
project will enablll the court to place • they don 't need them."
years
service.
He
previously
had
five and one-half years aervlce '!IIIII
siK youth In fOliar homes aod four
Designed tu reduce conunilrnents
Bureau
of
the
Census
and
th!,
Departmenl
of Agriculture. n
youth in ~roup home andlvr reshwn1
(Continued op page A3 )

:. GalliR

Inside today. . .

.Ar. clea.tlll •••.

NOW
ON•L 'Y
_
_

Miami ....... 13

By JOHN W. CHALFANT
Auoclated Press Writer '
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio lawmakers face a
hectic lll!tinda packed with votes on several important
bi1J8 u 'they return to the Statehouse for what is ex. ~to be their last work week of the year.
•The Ho\IBf and Senate hav.e scheduled rare Mol)day
Door sessions In antlclpatioQ of wrapping up business
Tuesday and adjourning for .the Tll&amp;nksgivlng holiday;
·But. that timetable, outlined earlier by legislative
leaders, may be as vulnerable change as a turkey is
to a winding up on Thursday's dinner menu.
Gov. James A. Rhodes is scheduled to meet· Monday
with top leaders of the General Assembly to review
Ollio's chronic budget problem and how to solve it.
- ~The state faces a projected 1353.7 million deficit by

. .

35. m inute timer for easy.

Oklahoma . . . 2i

.

ALL SEATS JUST $1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.50

LITTON Microwave Oven

•

Cincinnati . • . 23

BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT a SIJN

BAUM TRUE VALUE

RUTLAND FURNITURE -

College football scores

..

..

TO END MARRIAGE
Filing for dissolution of marriage
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court were James Earl Estep,
CHESTER, OHIO
Pomeroy, and Debra Lynn Estep,
Gallipolis.
1--------------------------------------~

SUNDAY APPEARANCE
The Phoenix Choir of Baltimore,
Maryland, an outstanding group,
will be appearing at the RBcine First
Baptist Church, Fifth StreJ~t,
Racine, on Sunday, Nov. 23, at 7:30
p.m. The public is cordially invited
to attend.
·

-

~~w:· ti:~ R~~~: r~grandc~Besl~ :~ drenhe~ ~ pare~n~tsi,~sh~e~'!l'. ~as~~i~GL~E~N;D~A~J~A~C~K~S~O~N~~l

Galllpolis, and James R. Slnuns,
Galllpolis, $40.50 each, speeding;
Linda L. Hart, San Diego, Calif.,
$30.40, speeding; Kenneth K.
Snyder, Pomeroy, $35.50, failure to
display · registration; . Arthur E.-

..--------------------------1

If I can be of assistance to you,
please feel free to notify me at 9922153.

The ,local officlala' ngea vary' ·
depending on a county's population.

r----·-A-----------------·
1
D
aths'
'
rea e

Terminate 22 cases

· Meigs County happenings
SQUAD CAlLED ·

Lawmakers
may
act
on
pay
hike
bill
~.
•

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

~

COunty J

"

1
'

I

f

.,

'&lt;

�"'· ·

· ·- ----'"··~···

......

~~ - ·· · · - ~··---·--

---- ·· - ....

~-

.

.. ·...--·-· ·

-··---

---·-~

A·2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Nov. 23. 19811

junbaJI

~imts· ~mtintl .

LOOKIN,UP .
. A t&gt;IRTV
WORP-I
HEARt&gt;A .
NEW ONE.

Opinions and ·CommPnts
· .funlla~ 'mimt!l- &amp;"tntintl
Published every Sunday by The Oho Valley Publishing Co.· Mu.lti.media, lneo.'
.
LetW~ of opinion are welcomed. They should be less than 300 words long ( ar subject to reduction by the editor) and must be :signed with lhe :signee's address. Names may be wtlhheld upon
publication. However, on ri!quesl, IUlJI'JeS wiU be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personaUties.

lib-er-al

Iranian . ..

(llb'~r-AI), Dd.1. [&lt;: .La~. liber, rreel, 1, rrw- ;.

rree

(Continued from page A1 )
report said.
Iran's latest comment came on the
385th day of the hostages' captiv.ity.
The United States sent il!; reply to
Iran's conditions to Tehran via
Algeria last week.
The reply was not made public,
· but on Thursday Secretary of State
Edmund S. Muskie said the United
States had accepted Iran's four points in principle. However, the Pars
report indicated the United States
had not met all of Iran's conditions.
Iran has demanded the release of
the estimated $8 billioo in Iranian
assets frozen in the United States;
withdrawal of pending lawsuits
against Iran ; a U:S. pledge of noninterference in Iranian affairs and
return of the wealth of the late Shah
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi and his
family.

born ; . hence. suitable to one or
birth· ,.
reftn.ed; not narroiVly restricted; as, a liberal ed~
:lon. \he ltberal arts; 2, generous: open-handed: hav- ~
ng or dl~playlng a generous li•cllnatlon: J, plentlf\11; 01
bo ~nt1ful, abundant: 4, unpreJudiced; rree rrom nar- · il•
~

row ness In Ideas or religious doctrines· catholic· 5

a

In

U~~eral; free, as a translation: •• disPosect tO· demo- ci
eratic rather \han aristocratic or conservallive form ot· In

!~!~~~cu~,;__ _l!f~.~~~~r~.:_ ,Ob!:... or .~~''/!!'}!:.h!"~ ·~
'

HERE IT
I~ "••

GAlLIPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE

825 Third Ave .. Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
Published every week$)' evening ncept Saturday. Seeond Class Postage Paid at GaUipo tis,
Ohio 45631.
·
THE DAILY SENTINEL

111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . ~769. Published every week day evening except Saturday. Entered
as second class mailing matter at Pomeroy, Ohio PostOff!ce.
By carrier daily and Slinday Sl,OO per week. Motor route •uo per month.

MAIL
SIJBSCRIPTION RATES

'OleGaWpoliJ Daily Tribune tn Ohic and West Virginia ooe year 133.00; six monlhs S1 7.50 ; three
montht.l J10.50. Elsewhere $38.00 per year; six months no.oo; three months ll UlO : motor route

13.90 moothly.

The Deily Sentinel, one year 133.00; SiX months 117.50; three months fl(I.OO. Elsewhere $38.00 ;
si:J: months$20.00; threemonthsSU.OO.
The Associated Press i.!l e~:clus.ively entitled to the lUe for pubUcalion of all news dispatches
credited to the newspaper and als&lt;! the local news publishffi herein.

~~
q,v --..~·--d·-

Berry's World

•
: SIGN LANGUAGE WITH ICY FINGERS - Icicles near Maugansville, \'&gt;1d., Thursday, after an overnight
lin barbed wil'e fencing "seem .to pointto this farmscape sleet storm slleathed the countryside with ice. (AP
_,.. :
. Laserphoto) .

:JJallia
• .•
l

Voyager: a billion miles ·f or a· st()ry
By Don Graff
True, the press does pride itself on
going to almost any length for a,good
story.
Even so, a billion miles might be
considered extreme.
Yet there it is on the front pages Voyager's close encounter with
Satilrn, its mystifying rings and
multiple moons. It will take years to
organize and analyze all the in·
fonnatioo the spacecraft is radioing
back to earth. But even the sketchy
details made public so far have added inunensely to our knowledge of
the planet and the solar system and also posed some inunensely puz·
z!ing new &lt;tUestions.
Even without the phOtos, it is a big
story. With them, it is a front-page
spectacular. It is a little like the s~
recently past good old days of space
exploration, when man was
reaching for and landing on the
moon.
And there, the , very success of
Voyager points up a problem. The
space program as presently planned
may already have seen the best of its
days.
There isn't much now scheduled to

!1" 11

'"•'

the state of the economy and the generally viewed the moon-land ~ .."
federal budget, and the belt- program as unnecessarl1y costly for .'·
tightening mood of the inc9ming ad- the rewards. Much more could have ··..::
ministration, the chances of all or been accompll8bed with unmanned •A•:•
even much of that do not look mi.ulons. But Americana on the "'"
moon were politically e1111e11Ual to '"''
promising.
Spaee enthusiasts are more than a recover ground lost to the SOviets
little concerned that the program when they became flnt into !!pllCe.
may be comirig to a complete halt.
The space effort may benefit from -:
The obvious, and in a comparative
sense the easiest, missions haVt! less public relations and more ~
already been undertaken. Those discretion. And lt will never want f!l'
contemplated for the future are both advocates tb nmiDd the public of the •
more complex and more costly, and wonders awaiting e:rploratioo of the • ,.
while of intense interest to scientists universe beyond tbla single planet. ••·~ •,
One of their number can certainly ... ··
often less so to the public.
Also, space explora\lon has lost its be counted upon to keep up the good .... ·
Beyond that, there are only ten- status as a national undertaking. We work. Astronomer Carl Sagan llaa · ~: :
tative plans, and hopes. A Pl"\lbe have landed men on the moon, had become a media as well as a 8clen- •
similar to Galileo to Saturn and its close-up looks at Man! and the outer tific celebrity and Is Ill over the "·:·
moon Titan, which as seen by planets, and now the new priorities tube, currently with Ills "Cosmos" "~ ·
Voyager eerily suggests an Earth in are down to Earth. Space projects, lf series.on public televlsioo. He bas an ·" ~
deep freeze. Further missions to undertaken at all, are becoming attention-getting and penuaslve · ,-..
. way of dealing with the e.entlala of •.
Mars to deposit an automated discretionary.
That, however, may not be all that the space story, IRJdl u In puttlJII! · vehicle on its surface and return soU
b&amp;d. When space was a matter of the cost Into perspective with his Db- .~&lt;:
samples to Earth.
All, however, dependent ·upon ad- national prestige and - or so .we servation that the wealth of t. " :·
ministration approval and thought - even security, the 8clen- fonnation !run VO)'aler Is being ~":·
congressional willingness to 8"" tific effort was often dbtorted for gained at a cost of "about a penny. '~·
'
propriate funds - an estimated $2 political effect. The scientific for every person living oo earth."
billion over the next 10 years. Given establishment, for e:rample,
Call that a front-page bargain.
"' ·

follow Voyager. A twin, Voyager 2,
will reach Saturn next August for a
follow-up look, then continue on to
rendezvous with the two giant
planets even farther from the sun,
Uranus in January 1986 and Neptune
in August 1989.
Mter that will come the Galileo
mission, a spacecraft to orbit
Jupiter and drop a probe into its at·
mosphere. Providing, that is, the
Space Shuttle program does not continue to fall behind schedule. Delays
already have pushed Galileo, to be
launched from the shuttle, back
from 1982 to 1983. ·

·~·

,.

GOP state effort achieves limited success

~·

.. .

• • • .J
~-

'

...
parties, their l01111e11 were liinited to Democratic majorities.
By Robert Walters
legislatures.
There
are
nwneroua
elplanati0111"''"
WASHINGTON (NEA )
Their most noteworthy victories ' approximately 175 seats, acconllng
to the Natiooal Conference of State for the Republicans' Inability to'
Although the Republican Party this came in three states:
match their top.of-the-tlcket Jan.'"!"
year spent millions of dollars. on a
In Ohio, where the Democrats con- Legislatures.·
dsUde
with equally lmpraslve vic-'"'' '
In
the
nation's
10
moat-popu!OUB
sophisticated campaign to gain con- trolled the state Senate by an 18-15
tories
In
legislative contellla.
"~
states
where
IIIOI!t
of
the
gains
or
trol of state legislatures throughout margin prior to Election Day, the
losses
of
congresalooal
11eatll
are
ex·
the country, that effort produced Republicans now dominate that
A plurality of the comnry•s voters
only limited success on Election chamber by exactly · the same · peeled to be registered - the
Democrats maintain their control of remain "behavioral Democratll" Day.
proportions.
inclined to vote for lbat party·;-·15 of the 2111eglslaUve chambers.
The GOP achieved significant
In Ohio and Illlnol!, for e:rample, nomlnees If aJI. other factora art";;
In Illinois, a switch of only one
gains in three major states, but the
the
Republicans' gain of control of equal- and that inlltlnct manlfellll ..
results of the unprecedented effort seat in the state House turned an 8$one hoW!e was offset by the Itself strongly at the bottom of the :
pale in comparison with both the 88 pre-election Democratic majority
Democrats' ability to maintain their ballot, 'll"llr:re candidates often are ':;
amount of money spent on the en- into an 11!1-311 Republican edge.
unfamiliar to the voten.
:::
In Pennsylvaula, the Democrats majority In the other boule.
deavor and the party's victories in
Becaue
ticket-splitting
bas
~
The Republicans registered
had controlled the state Senate by a
this year's other political cootests.
become
not
only
acceptable
but
·
:l:
As a result, Democratic 27·23 margin; a new ~25 tie now significant net gains ln more than a
politicians in many state capitalS exists, with the power to cast the tie- dozen other states, lncludlng Con- fashionable, voters who picll:ed the ::;
will again dominate the process of breaking vote held by the state's necticut, Delaware, Idaho, Indiana, Republican nominee for tbe :
Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Mlllowi., · presidency and perbaps for a :
drawing new boundaries for Republican lieutenant gqvemor.
But
among
the
appro:rimately
Montana, New Melico, North ~e~~~torlal or gubernatorlal - t ....
congressional and state-legislative
may have~ inclined to l!eal'l:b for ;
6,000
seats
contested
in
43
state
Carollns, North Dakota and Utah.
districts based on population shifts
Democrat.
they also could IIUPIIOI't- I
legislatures
this
·
year,
the
reflected in the 1980 census. .
.
With
the
ezceptlon
of
only
ManFinally,
tbe Democratic- :
Republicana'
net
gain
was
only
In an attempt to thwart the
·
tana,
where
a
11111811ve
shift
of
24
dominated
redlstricthig of :
about
200
seats
considerably
Democrats, the Republican National
seats
turned
a
87-33
Democratic
legislative
-ta.ln
the eu'ly lrTOI :
fewer
than
the
275
to
300
seats
they
Corrunittee, a special political·
into
a
57-43
Republican
made
IJIIIIIY
of
thole
dlltrlcta vir: ~ .
majority
picked
up
In
1978,
when
they
spent
$2
action corrunittee Called GOPAC and
margin
of
control,
these
victoriea
·
tually
impregnable
to
Republican : ·
other · organizatio!lll poured $3.5 million on a similar effort.
either
reinforced
e:riltlng
attacll:which
expl•h•
wily reap- ::;
Because the Democrats won some
million to $5 million into the cilmRepublican
ma~tles
or
failed
to
I
portlonment
Is
10
Important
to 10 .:
paign treasuries of Republican can· seats that had been vacant or held .
wrest
control
from
entrenched
IDIIIIY
poiiUclana.
•
didates for seats in dozens of state by legislators afflllated with minor ·

"Do you think thert1's something wrong with
me?l have no cowboy stuff."

MORE TO BE SOW
Many more paperbacks are written to be sold than there are volwnes
penned to be read.

By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEAl- The candidates were not the only winners
and losers when the · votes were
tallied up on Election Night. There
were also the political insiders who
had worked _in one campaign or
another. And there were the
politicians whose futures may be
radically changed by the election
even though they were not running
for office.
Most of this year's uneleded winners turned out to be Republicans.
Chief among them were Richard
Wirthlin, Stuart Spencer and James
Baker, ail key figures in Rooald
Reagan's victorious campaign.
Pollster Wirthlin not only
produced the year's most accurate
surveys of voter upinion ~ he was also
one of Reagan's top strategists. His
advice, say insiders, was .almost
always correct. Wirthlin can un·
doubtedly look forward to a bright
future in Republican politics.
In early September, as the Reagan
campaign was foundering at the rate
of a ga ffe a day, the call for help

went out to political pros Spen~r
and Baker. Since both had worked
for President Ford and other
moderate Republicana, they were
not welcomed with open anns by
many of the conservatives surrounding Reagan. .
But with Spencer on the candidate's Jllane and Baker at cam-

a big.winnerinacampaignyearthat

ana

. ..Today
----=-----------------1
in h•o.torv. •
....,

• .1 '

•

•

Today laSundlly,Nov. 23, the328th
day of 1980. There are 38 da)'lleft ln
the year.
Today's highligbtln history:
On Nov. ZS, 17111i, the Brttlshstunp
Act '11'11 flnt repudiated In the
American colonies, by the court of

Frederick County ln Maryland.
On this date:
In 11180, the Grand Duchy of
Lu:rembourg '11'11 separated !run
the Netherlands.
.In 1943, during World War II, U.S.
Marinelselzed the island of Tarawa
from the Japaneae In fierce f!gbtlag

in the Gilbert UlandL
In 11.46, the United States ended
wartime food rat!~.
In 1S71, Cblna !oak ill - t u a
perinanent member of tbe U.N.
Security Coancll
In 1t'l8, the bodlel ol bundredl ol
vlctlma of the "JonlltOWII
Mauacre" In Guyana started
arrlvlnl,!n UnltedStatll.
Tea yem ago: A U.S. hellcoll'er
force landed at a ,n- of war
caq~ln North Vllltnlm but did not
find lhe Anlerlcan priiOnen lt bad
CDIDI to riiCIIII.

I

.

'

to tm the

war:

:;:.:=va:vethe..!=::i
Vlperledldmoretbllll'ILieiiiOIIe)',:
however, be "' an 11119'- to IIIIIIJ"'

ofO.wlnnlllcctmpolp.
:
Viguerle- oat of tiD
hu - of the DICIIIt pow a falllpa C'
in the New RJ&amp;bL He wiD ·m ntl- f11:
have a IUbltantlal lmpect on tt.r
political-.
.
Fln1er polaUnl bu qalte:

.-uaa::

·'

~~~u

there's no present
like the time
make it a
BULOVA

Christmas Dreams Come True At ...

9~
Jri&amp;J~I

Now, .
your retirement funds
can
work
harder
than
~--------------------------.. .ever

12
,,

7

TO

..

. .

.

: Larry's Wayside Furniture

Gallipolis, ·oh.

Third &amp; Olive

'

LOST OUR LEASE

·.WE MUST VACATE THE BUILDING BY JANUARY 1st
'
1

·.

..
"
--

.OUR LOSS YOUR GAIN

•

..

SAVE

11:

e:rpert who helped

/

SUNDAY HOURS

OPEN

:

dlreckDall:

/
/
/

Don't Bel\.
LAS'l' MINUTE

THROUGH CHRISTMAS

-

be began as a l01er. The Ten-.'
.
:::
nesseean badly needed a power base
Another winner In Campaign '10
from which to launch another Richard Vlguerle, the

~,~

NEw .

.,.
...

anybasehemlghthavebopedfor.

..

QUARTERS
By

.,.

paign headquarters, order quickly - presidential bid In 111M. His Ieeder- :
emerged from the chaos. Most a&amp; llhlp of the newly Republlcal Seaate :
servers credit them with turning the - not to mention hla poiiUon u a :
Reagan effort around.
lltandllrd bearer for the moderate ...
Sen. Howard Baker also came out wing of his party - Is better than :::

(Continued from page AI )
will reach an even smaller per·
centage of the audience," said
Joseph Sheldrick, a Battelle resear·
cher. "The advertiser who wants a
broad ba'se will return to
newspapers."
Nevertheless, Schonfeld said· all
profits made by Turner are sent
back into CNN, and its advertising
and subscriber rates have been
growing.
" It seems to me just a little early
to paraphrase Lincoln Steffens and
suggest that we are the future and
we work," he said. "But we do know
something we did not know six months ago. The CNN concept works. "

Parachutist dies

-.-...

The ·elections unelected winners

'C)1~~~NE/4, 1 nc ~:-~

A friend with humanitarian impulses has just opened a bar. He's
catting it the Thirst-Aid Station.

Taylor and Lonnie Burger.
deemed appropriate to . the
Continued from page A1)
Included in the grant is funding for rehabilitation of offenders at the
to' &amp;he OYC and to encourage coun·
the employment of an alternative community level.
uel to utilize resources "available for specialist to work with the probation
Willis said that the grant is ex· yol)th at the local level, the Youth . department · in the implementation pected to red!!ce youth com·
Sei'Vice Grant awards will be ad- of these projects and to ferret out mitments to the Ohio Youth Com·
ministered at the local level by the community based alternatives misSion.
senior juvenile court judge. An ad·
.. visory council appointed by juvenile
Sales tax revenue up in Gallia, Meigs
judges will oversee the program.
The council will meet quarterly in
In contrast to the $94,029.53 for OcCOLUMBUS - Sales tax revenue
tober,
1979, Gallia collected $69,036
public metings.
in Gallia and Meigs counties was up
Appointed to the Gallia County during October while motor vehicle in county motor vehicle sales taxes
Juvenile Advisory Council recently sales taxes went down sharply, State during·the past month, a 26.5 percent
were Neil Morrison, Gene Ar· Treasurer Gertrude W. Doqahey decrease.
The decrease was deeper in r - - - --'----....,- - - - l
mstrong, Becky Scott, Beth Star· reported Saturday.
cher, Albert MacKenzie, John
Meigs,
where $34,656 was collected
Sales tax receipts collected in October totaled $172,234.38 in Gallia, a in October, a 36.3 percent decrease
9.5 percent increase over the over the $54,453.32 gained in 1979.
Donahey said there has been a two
$161,164.86last year, the report said.
percent
decrease in sales taxes and
An 8.5 increase was noted in
a
1.4
percent
decrease in motor
Meigs, where $67,981.89 was collecvehicle
sales
tax collections
ted over the · $62,630 .24
ST. LOUIS (AP) -A parachutist
statewide
in
October.
taken in 1979.
was killed Saturday . when an ap·parent attempt to land atop the r-----------------------~
Gateway Arch, the world's tallest
monwnent, went awry as his wife
fihned his fall, police said ..
Authorities said the rruin jwnped
DAILY 10:00 to 9:00
out of a plane over the arch with a
Juanita
jlarasail and glided toward the
SUNDAY 12:00 to 7:00
stainless steel structure, which is 630
"Merle Norman
feet tall at its apex.
Cosmetics"
CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY
An eyewitness, James Spears,
The hair place for everyone '
said the man appeared to have sucPh. 446-2673
ceeded in landing atop the structure
43
State
St. Gallipolis, Oh.
when a gust of wind blew him over
Open Mon. thru Fri. 9 til9
he fell down the north leg of the
arch.
.
.
Saturday 9 to s
Spears said the victim appeared to
make a vain attempt to open a spare
· parachute before be hit the ground.
Police on the scene said the man's
wife kept her camera rolling as her
'
husband fell.
The man's identity was not im- ·
rruidiately released.
The Gateway Arch, completed in
1965 at a ·cost of $29 millioo, is a
monument to the nation's western
. expansion after the Louisiana Purchase of llll;l.

~

,

THIRST QUENCHER

POPULATION UP

WASIDNGTON (AP) The
government says the nation's
population grew by 1.6 million in
1979, primarily because of the larger
birth rate, pushing the population at
the end of December to 221.1 million.
The National Center for Health
Statistics lllso reported Friday there
were 2.359 million niarriages perfonned during 1979, the largest
yearly increase.since 1946.
The nwnber of divorces in 1979 1.17 million- was3.5percenthigher
than for the previous year, the center said.

TV. . ..

Economy: weak,
relapse possible
Like someone recovering fr.om a bout with the flu, the
economy in its current weakened condition, is susceptible
to a relapse.
After a sharp drop in production and sales last spring,
there were some signs that the economy was beginning a
weak recovery.
But now comes another round of rising interest rat\!S and
higher inflation - a one-two punch that some economists
think will send the staggering economy back to its knees.
The sharp jwnp in interest rates is the most dramatic
example of mounting pressures.
In the past week alone, the prime lending rate at most
banks jwnped from 15.5 percent to 17 percent, increasing
dramatically the cost of borrowing by businesses. That
brought the prime back to its highest level since May and
only a few points below its record high of 20 percent of last
April.
The move has even more significance if it is viewed as
an indicator of interest rates generally. Costs of all types
of borrowing for businesses are going up and that will
make them cautious abo1,1t expanding operations.
Higher rates also mean it's likely conswners will cut
back plans to buy houses, autos or other major items.
Mortgage rates, already in the 14-15 percent range, are
making it more difficult to buy houses. Figures on new
housing construction in October shg_wed a modest 1.6 per'\
cent. increase from building during the previous month,
but the number of building pennits issued last month dropped almost 15 percent. The building pennit figure, since it
indicates future trends, is considered particularly distur·
bing.
.
In other business developments this past week:
- Despite gloomy economic news and rising interest
rates, the stock market continued a powerful advance
begun after the Nov. 4 election of Ronald Reagan. The Dow
Jones average of 30 industrial stocks closed above 1,000
Thursday .,... the first time it has done that in almost four
years- before falling back a bit Fri:iay.
·
Analysts said the market rally was fueled by hopes that
a Reagan presidency and election gains for the
Republicans in Congress will be good for investors.
-Personal income rose a substantiall.l percent in October, its fourth consecutive mdnthly (gain. But once adjusted for inflation, that gain may prove illusory, government economists warned.
Wages and salaries were up sharply during the month.
But a large part of that gain was due to federal govern·
ment salary increases in October, the report said.
-Corporate profits, after taxe,ll, rose about 8 percent in
the third quarter to a seas\)nally adjusted $137.2 billion an·
nual,rate. That represented a recovery of about 40 percent
of the previous quarter's huge 19.6 percent drop, a new
government report indicated.

COIN CLUB MEETING
POMEROY - The OH KAN Coin
Club will conduct·a regular business
meeting on Monday evening at. the
Riverboat Room of the Meigs branch, Athens County Savings and .
Loan, W. Main, Pomeroy. Out-oftown coin dealers will be on hand to
participate in the social hour at 7
p.m. The educational program will
be on the topic, "Security for Collectors." A 3().lot coin auction will
follow the meeting and refreshments
will be served. Pre.•ident David Edwards invites any area resident in·
terested in coins or paper m9ney to
attend the event.

"

~

,.

-..
·-~

.,'

30%-40%-50%-60%

..

Our Individual
Retirement Accounts are now paying the
highest, tax-sheltered interest ever.
lfyou are self·employed or a salaried employee not cove"red by a retirement plan . an
"Individual Retirement Account (IRA) has
always been a great idea. Now, with the in·
creased interest rate of 8% (8 .45% annual
yield), it' s even better. What's more , your ·
interest is tax shelte r,ed, compounded daily ,

and is paid from day of deposit to day of
withdrawal . You work hard for your money.
At Ohio Valley Bank, we're seeing to it that
your money works hard for you. For further
det~il s about the l RA, or about any of our
·savirigs plans, just stop by any of our four
convenient locations.

i

.oaturalJ1biwMJWa,...•pr ,, ,.,

In Pnlldeat carter'• ellllp. t.:
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-~
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llmld at tbe entlttete. ,., ,,,.
Many Cllllplip lidel inlllt
Cuter rejectld Jlllldl of tbllr IOII!t
ldvlct, dlq It Iii '11'11 witlt::

MlniMII..,.

nwi

dlaulroui.-Ha. •

-

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•

SALE STARTS MONDAY, NOVEMBER. 17
liON. &amp; FRI. 9 to 8

TU., W., 1H., SAT. 9 to 5

OhioValley Bank
·

Fc t:h: ral

r c~u l al i on:.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Member FDIC .

r..-quirc a ~ u b!&gt;U.n tia l pe nal ty for prcma wrc withdrawa l.

�...

A-7-TbeSandtlyTllne&amp;&amp;lntlnel, Sunday, Nov. 23,19110
1

Pair enters quilty plea to B&amp;E's
POMEROY -:- Two Meigs County recognizance from Meigs County
men have pleaded guilty to bills of , Corrunon Pleas Court pending a preinformation charging them with the S«lntenee investigation by the state
Sept. 25 break-in at the Louis DeLuz adult parole officer.
The duo gave the sheriff's departresidence in Stiversville.
Charles A. Ritchie, 28, Portland, ment statements admitting to the
and Johnny Krider, 19, Long Bot- break-In, In which a ciilor television
tom, were released on their own set and a number of pictures were
taken.

•
·
d
on agen 8
T WO GDC proJeCtS
.
MARlETTA - 'fwo applications sider a $2,105,020 appplicatlon for
involving million dollar projects at the GDC which would allow for £he
the Gallipolis Developmental Center . construction of four, 16-bed collages
will be on the agenda Monday night serving the moderately, severely
at the Area Six Health ·Systems and profoundly reterded people of :U
.
Agency Inc. here.
· Ohio Counties.
In addition, another application up
The review committee will eonfor review h8ll been submitted by the
Parents Volunteer Association, a
private, non-profit organization
made up of family members of the
residents of the facility.
CLOSED FOR HOLIDAYS
Their project would allow for conGALLIPOLIS- Holzer Clinic Ltd.
will be closed at the Main and struction of four, eight-bed residenSycamore Clinics in Gallipolis and tial cottages for geriatric patients
the Jackson County Branch in who are mentally retarded at a total
OffiO'S BEST - Members of the Circleville Ser- "President of' the Year" award. Mike Cummings,
Wellston on ThursilaY and Friday, cost of $1,185,152.
toma Club were honored as "Club of the Year for 1979- right, of Grove City was named the District Governor
Several other projects will also be
Nov. '!1 and 28, in observance of
of the year for his work in the South Central Ohio
80" recently during the international service group's
reviewed.
The session will be held at
ThanksgiVing.
Fall State Conference in Columbus. P. J. Ryal, second District which includes CircleVille. Also pictured is
7:30p.m.
at
the Hotel Lafayette.
In case of an emergency during
from left, formerly of Gallipolis, was lauded as the Gene Long, present District Governor and a member
the holiday period, physicians of the
state Sertoman of the Year. Asa Bradbury, third from of the Circleville Sertoma Cluq.
Holzer Clinic Ltd. staff will be on
left, formerly from Middleport. received the Ohio
duty in the Emergency Room
(phone 61H46-li201) of the Holzer
Medical Center Hospital.
RIO GRANDE - Ron Glover, an
Holcer Clinic Ltd. will resume nor- a!WIUius of the colldge ('61) who now
CIRCLEVILLE - The Circleville Bradbury was then applauded as ner received an award at the district mal operations at all facilities on heads the EuroPean Marketing
Sertoma Club was named tops in the "Past President of the Year" in the level for having the highest per- Monday morning, Dec. }.
strategies for American Express
centage
of
members
present.
Grove
state
making
a
clean
sweep
of
major
through his London office, is
state of Ohio recently during the
awards banquet segment of the Ohio awards for the Circleville City Sertomaman Mike Cummings,
assisting the Rio Grande Marketing
Team in helping to establish a courSertoma District State Fall Con- delegation. Bradbury is from Mid· who is now State Director of SerWILL EAT CROW
dleport and a former basketball toma, was named the District
ference in Columbus.
se· of action to market Rio Grande
Governor of the .Year for ,his work
Having to e.at crow is what the · College.
During the banquet that com- coach at Southern.
with
the
South
Central
'District
loudmouths
will have to do now that
'While
accepting
the
award
as
top
pleted the conference attended by 66
Glover, who carries the title
which
includes
both
Circleville
final
election
results are in.
the
Sertoma and LaSertoma clubs, the Sertoman, Ryal noted that the local
.Senior Vice President of Marketin~
was presently celebrating clubs.
CircleVille service club was honored group
their 15th anniversary and that it
as the "Club of the Year" in Ohio.
International Sertoma Director was their finest year. He also
. Lowell Scott presented the award to pledged that the Circleville club
local president P. J. Ryal for the would continue to grow and add to
year ending July 1. Ryal is a former their ser•·: ... to the community.
Four c1 .. · n. .nbers of the local
resident of Gallipolis.
Ryal was also· honored in- group attenuoJ the conference and
I
dividually with the coveted "Ohio banquet inclurling Ward Skinner,
Sertoman of the Year" award for his Bob Scranton, Larry Lewis and John
distinguished service to the club and Fausnaugh.
Also at the conference, Pickaway
the corrununity.
Plains
Sertoma President Dan HamImmediate Past President Asa

.. . .

According to the Statements, Rlt- .
chle' and Krider toQk the pictures to
the· old Portland Jocks and began
taking them apart, on the~
lion mooey was hidden In them. · •
The pictutel and the television
were later tbrown into the Oblo
River, the report cootinlll!ll.
· The DeLuzes died In a traffic accident In Malon, W.Va., several
days prior to tbe break-ln.
.
1n ot11er court acti?"· Judge John
. C. Bacon said Ronnie Pearson, 18,
Pomeroy, would be sentenced
sometime th1a week for a bl'll8k·in at
the Jay-Mar Coal Co., Cheshire.
Pearson W81l relCIIIled from thi!
colinty jall Nov. 8 after pleading ·
guilty to a bill of Information.
·
The sheriff's department adVised ·
Buddy Jewell, 18, Rutland, 1!as been·
charged with another break-in jlt
Jay-Mar earlier this week.
He made his Initial appearance
Friday in Meigs County Court ·and
W8ll released by Judge Patrick
;o'Brien on his own recognlzanee.
Deputies are also investigating a ,
break-In afffill's Pennzoilln Racine.
According to the report, entry was
made through a broken window \lll
the building's sl!le and approximately $150 in change was
tilken.

.

VOLUNTEER WORKERS - VolWiteers who are

worlrlngtobulldthenewmodlfiedcolonlalstyle~

Wesleyan United Methodist Church

RACINE - Hard work, deter-

Racine.
The site where the modified
mination and courage are s~ to
make a "dream" come true, Mem- colonial style church is being, built
bers ol. Racine Wesleyan Unfted .. was donated by Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Methodist Church possess all three Wingett, Racine.
The structure is 88 feet and eight
ingredlel!ts to make such a dream
inches in length, 46 feet wide, has a
come true.
Tbrougb cootributlons, IJ\OilCY: full baseinent, five clllllsrooms, a
fellowship room, kitchen and
making projects, and donated labor,
Racine W~eyan United Methodist p8stor's study.
.
The site preparation Wllll done by
Church members are erecting a new
church on SR 124 in the village of Gordon West and Racine Village

RIO GRANDE- The Rio Grande towards the Humane Society and the
College and Community College Salvation Army. It will begin Mpnfraternal order of Alpha Delta Epo day, Nov. 24, at 7 p.m. and weather
sllOD and the 11*1 Alpha Delta Epo . permitting, will finish Tuesday,
silon fall pledge class will be spon- Nov. 25, at 7 p.m.
The course will extend 23 miles
IIOI'!ng a 125 mile "dribble-thon"
fromRioGrandeCollegetoJackllon,
frOm Rio Grande College to Wilber32 miles to Chillicothe, 34 miles to
force University.
The · "dribble-than" will serve a · W8llhlligton Court House, 32 miles to
dual Jllll'1lUI!C 8ll proceeds will go Jamestown, 12 miles to Xenia, and

SM

The Ladies Auxiliary of the fire
depa .-tment met Wednesday evening
at the fire house. President
Margaret Christy opened the
meeting with "The Lord's Prayer,"
followed with the Pledge to the Flag.
Roll call . was answered by each
naming a food for Thanksgiving dinner. The secretary's report was read
by Clarice Allen and the treasurer's
report by Opal Hollon. Committee
reports were given. The Christmas
dinner for the auxiliary, firemen and
families was discussed with the
Good of the Order committee to be in
charge. Drinks and meat will be furnished with everyone to take a
covered dish for the potluck dinner.
The dinner will be held at the
firehouse on Sunday evening, Dec.
14, at 5 p.m. The December meeting
.. of the Auxiliary will be at the home
of Clarice Allen on Dec. 3 at 7: 3fl
p.m. There will be a $2 gift exchange. A new member, Louise
Hines, was welcomed by the group.
Games were enjoyed after the
business meeting with prizes awarded. Birthday gifts went to Margaret
Christy, Opal Wickham and Louise
Hines. Refreshments of snowball

Clara Conroy.to those named above
and Enna Cleland, Opal Wickham,
Ethel Orr, Dixie Beair, Virginia Lee,
cieo Smith, Anna Taylor, Marcia
Keller and a guest, Hilda Weber cl.
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen spent
the weekend in Westerville with Dr.
and Mrs. Billy Robert, Allen and
Katie.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Fisher,
Wooster, were recent weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
SprinGfield, were weekend guests of
Mrs. Letha wood.
Mr. and Mrs. Haas Betz, St.
Joseph, Mich., spent several days
with Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy.
Miss Hilda Weber, Columbus,
spent a ~ek with her sister, Marcia
Keller .
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Bailey and Mrs.
Delmar Baum were recent callers of
Mrs. Everett Hayes at Great Bend.
Darrell Cleland, Columbus, called
on Denzel Cleland Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen attended the funeral of his aunt, Hattie
Martin, at the Steen funeral home in
Ashland, Ky. Tuesday.

* ·*·

• Full-$1lO changer • volume , Tone
and bolonce con rrols • Dust cover
• Headphone iock • Two matching
speoker.s • S•mu\oTed wood cobine l1

SAVE

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Cassette wl.. Auto ltop

Pradlcalllft W..l
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•Woke to music or alarm
•l ighted digital readout
' •Bu il! ~i n M/FM CF:~tenno
•Simulot&amp;d wa lnut cobinol
MODILUO:I ,

tone slide conffoh •Fast-forward
cod eiecTion butTons •Comes with

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ST'YlHo MAY VARY IN 50IN. STOR:ES

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rule Cfla/, r;IUih·buttO:n l ·track
cf1anglng, CIUS1 co'oltr, ~speakers .

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OlfT·GIVING

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end boys' sil M 6- 18.

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0v'ont I M

five miles to Wilberforce University.
Money h8ll been pledged for each
sale and donatiorts will be accepted
during the "dribble-thon." Be
looking for them along the roadside!
The event will mark the first Rio
Grande College away b81lketball
game of the season at Wilberforce
University. Game time Is Tuesday,
Nov. 25, at 7:30p.m.

thedarkness.

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WATCIIIS
1• BYOCK

NEW 1980 SKYLINE....;. 14x70, two full baths, three bedrooms, total
electric, carpeted, furnished, delivered and set-up.

25%
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.• .

Mfl. LISI PIICI
AVAILAILE

ANNOUNCING NEW HOURS

MAY VARY

'TIS THE SEASON TO SHOP ·MURPHY'S fOR ALL YOUR HOLIDAY G"fS &amp; NIIDSI

MONDAY THRU FRiDAY 10100 • 5100

© 1980 Ambassador Cards. a dt\ltSIOn of Hallmark Cards, Inc.

••• •n

bo~

.....
-·
l)ead•. body·10lc.

'2..

SUPII

SPRING VALLEY

IUYI

2M

SAVI

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MWII MX . . H

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monr halide)'

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de1lgna. IS, 16or

PHARMACY
446-7459

Spring Valier Plaza

1-

Gallipoli~

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l~unt .

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50

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,_,., T1 tq, ft fol l,

co.Available at G. C. Murphy's Downtown Store, 348 2nd Ale.
~

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SUNDAY

1100. 5100

'189

When desk chores accumulate, brighten your load with one of our
n.ewest styles. Ample d[awers and pigeon holes ... precisely the right
s1ze and scale to fit limited floor space. Each desk features
sturdy ,all-wood construction. Solid pine with pine veneers and quali• ty hardwoods in frultwood tones, all given lasting beauty with
special32·step hand finishing process . See the entire collection!

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BAKER FURNITURE

OPEN

M~ S 9-S

CALL 992-3307

FOR EVENING APPT.

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*DOOR PRIZES * FRII Glm * REFRESHMENTS

11&amp;00 A.M. TO 5100 P.M.

I

KINGSBURY HOME SALES, INC.
11M EAIT MAIN STREET
POMEROY,OHI045769

PHONB tf2-7D4

•

COMPLETI NEW SELECTION OF atRISTMAS MERCHANDISE

*Grave Blankets and Wreaths
*Christmas Arrangements fLive, Permanent &amp; Silk)
*Door Wreaths
Register lor the S20 Gilt
*Swags
Certificate to be given
*Candles &amp; Candle Rings away each Saturday
and a SSO Gilt Cer- .
Poinsettias
tlllcate to be given away
on December 24th .
*Potted ·Plants
*Terrariums

*

Christmas Gifts For That
Hard To Buy For Person
We've tilled our shop with the S{llr.lt ol Christmas
and we know you'll enjoy, seeing everything that
Is new and beautiful for the holiday season.
Orcle the data now...
·
Plan to be with us for our "oPenhig" of
the Christmas Season
"The Way America Sends \-ove"

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

laFIIZ.MWI

-::- !'I

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. !.......... CDI...;., fll
grwtinga.Mont ...... lnbol:.

Special

WATER SURVEY
NEW · DELHI, India (AP) - A
recent survey of India's rural water
IIIIJlll)y conducted by the World
Health OrganiJatlon reveals that
more than 80 percent of the rural
population rl the country Hve
without safe and genn-free water.

NEW 1980 CHALLENGER -;-. 12x60, 'two bedroom, total electric,
carpeted, fully furnished, delivered and set-up.

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'!

LOT MODEL CLEARANCE

No-iron poly / (ollon. Shor1 ond
lo"11-slee ved s ty les. S,M,l,Xl.

Serving rurkey and all the trimmings? Don't forget
another Thanksgiving favorite - the colorful
turkey on Ambassador parryware. He'll dress up
your table. and make clean-up easier. too!
Matching accessorie$ 69¢ to $2.29

and owns a smithy, a casting plant, a
locksmith workshop and a paint
shop. It can produce 200 atypical
doors annually.

NDA y I NOVEMBER 30t

TIMEX'

STYLE~

l)istorical buildings was established
when an inquiry showed 5,000 such
doors needed to be replaced.
The business has 25 employees

and storage spa(e!

.

S.o.,.llfv l r.lyviny1 chlorld. I re• IDol!•
lille o r.o lree, wilt giw• y-. of u•.
faty 10 OIM~. toke down. Wllh Wnd.

ond bootoes, Bo'p'l'
and Oidl' 11ylu.
f l!' ~~~ to 12 mo1.

Eloltl(· wo llt b"eh

DOORMAKERS
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP)
.- A special enterprise to produce
non-slandard doors for Prague's

Styled with grace

Englan~

PRAGUE, Czecholllovakla (AP)
Electric current w~ cut off and
_ n-ame in the Prague llllbway wu all traffic &amp;topped until the woman
Interrupted during the attemoon . emerged, unharmed, at the lieU
1'Uih bour recently wben a 'IS-year- subway stop.
old woman carefully cUm~ down
She explained that she had always
to the trac11:s 8lld t!lsappolred Into liked walking through tunnels.

Wood· took .

"-••••i
'"c
4'SctiCI,_laR

I 317

i'

You're Invited To Our Ou-istmas

T.SHIRTS

OA BRIEFS

t',

all volunteer help. The exterior will be finished in
brick, providing enough funds are available. The
estimated cost of the structure is $225,000.

workers. Gravel was hauled by Bill r------~--------'------_:_;_
ffill and Bill ffill, Jr.
The church received a grant from
West Ohio Conference of the United
Methodist Church in the amount of
$15,000 and $2,000 frOm the Athens
United Methodist Church. Total
estimated cost ill $225,000.
VolWiteer workers are called
"The Hardly Able Construction
Crew." The only paid employe Is
Richard CUrtis.

the bkby If he sent her to jail.
But Lorlmar Productlona, which
Sue Ellen, played by Unda Gray,
packages the ptlme-tlme soep
opera, warned in advance that the I aemancJed tbat he call her blull, but
J.R., played by Larry Hagman,
••allant's motive would not be
slammed the phone down and said:
what audlen~ had been led to
"Nobody's going to jall. I'll handle .
expect, and - you guessed It 'Kristin
in my own way.''
would be revealed next week.
The big episode was shown
Kristin's guUt was made clear In
simultaneously in the East and
the final scene wben Sue Ellen Midwest, one hour later in the
who Is Kristin's sister and J.R.'s
IWckY
Mountains and three hours
wife- remembered she had left the
later
on
the West Coast. AT&amp;T
pearl-handled revolver In· Kristin's
reported
an
unusual increase In
apartment shortly before ~he
interstete
phone
calls after the
shooting. Sue Ellen. who had been
show
ended
at
11
p.m.
EST, as some
arrested tor the shooting and then
West COIIIll viewers called east to
balled out by a myaterious
find out who did it.
benefactor, accused her sister of
framing be'r.
In
where the show u
.even more popular than In the
Far from ·denying It, Kristin
United States, the British l!roadwaited untQ J .R. reached for the
phone to call pollee, then dropped . casting Corp. spread the word at
3:59 a.m., 18 hours before It would
her pregnancy bombshell and
broadC81lt the crucial episode. ·
threatened to tell his father about

S-TRACK PlAYER. &amp; PHONOGRAPH

REGULAR '6.49

REC . 11.16

NEW CHURCH - Almost under roof Is the new
modified colonial style Racine Wesleyan United
Methodist Church. The.church is being constructed by

WITH

It EO . '4.17

Two.:rurkey Table

NEW YORJ( (AP) -SO It wu
Krilltln Sheplrd, tblt IIUle minx,
wbo sbotJ.R. Ewing. Wbat'i more,
abe aaJJibe'• expecting hll baby!
, _ ll&amp;utUna .....tlolll Wfte
· C!UIIV!JIId to the , faitbful mllllona
wbo tuBed to "Dallll" 011 CBS
Frtdlly night to Wllleh one of the
moet )le..lly publicized aeries
epilodee in television blltory.
CBS hoped It would alao be the
blghest-rated. Nationwide flgurea ·
from the A.C. Nleben Co. won't be
available 1111Ul Tuesday, but CBS
expected to have ratings for New·
York, Chicago and Los Angeles
sometime today.
· 'Kristin, played by Mary Crollby,
had been a prime supect ever since
J.R., her brothilr-lnlaw, broke off
their affair and then framed ber for
proltltutlon when sbe tried to ex·
poee hla corru~ bulline1111 deals.

·w

STEREO PHOIIO WITH IWO SPEAKERS

;\_

Kristin, J.R.'s mistress did it!

Holds up to 24 B- t~k tape cartridges in

r--------~-------;---...L.""
I ndividual compartmenhi. Ruuat tan color.

Chester
News
Notes
cake,
coffee and tea were served by
By Clarice Allen

;

1

:.J

Fraternity sponsors dribble thon

l·lrack C.rry C.••
...97

are, front, 1-r, Maurice Lott, Pat Webb, Fred Smith,
Harold Roush; back, Paw Sayre, Dick Curtis, Dick
Lee, Ed Wagn~r. Kevin Wolfe, Harold Teaford, Bob
Hill, Jake Lee and Ralph McKenzie.

·Hard work makes dream come true

r----------------_;____:______.....,,__________________. . :. . ___

REGULAR

are called "The

Hardly Able Construction Crew." Making up the group

in Europe, Africa, and the Mid-Easi,
met with team members representing various college departments
and offices and discussed an Initial
course of action for the college to
follow.
Purpose of the marketing group is
multi-faceted. Like any comtnercial
product, the college is a consumer
·item and needs to be promoted and
marketed.

URPHYS

'

-t '' ,J

;

Glover working with project

Circleville club tops in state

. r"'
J

Mrs. Millard Van .Meter
·
106 Bunernut Ave.
9'12-572'1
Pomeroy, o .

Ph. W.M0~9

Weacc:eot 111 m•lor credit c1rds &amp; Wire tlowers tverywflef'l.

�----·----- Sunday

A"'- The Sunday TlmeiJ..Sentlnel,Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

Martha Faye Crawfonl '
APPlE GROVE - Miss Martha
Faye Crawford, 35, Jerry's Run
Road, Apple Grove, died Friday at
ber home following aloog illness.
Born Jan. 25, I!M5, In Huntington,
Mia Crawford Is survived by her
grandparents, Robert and Minnie
Crawford, which whom she resided.
She was preceded In death by her
parents, Ernest a·nd Pauline .

•

Cheshire woman. faces prelimina·r y heari~g
GALUPOUS - Char2ed wit.h
felonious ·assault, a preliminary
hearing date of Dec. 3 set set for Jo ·
Ann McDonaid, Cheshire, in
Gallipolis Municipal Court Friday.
Bond was set at ~1500.
Two other cases were continued in
municipal cqurt,
Jackie Wray, Gallipolis, pleaded
not guilty to a charge of criminal
damaging. Bond was set at $2,000.
Charged with resisting arrest, Edna McCallaJJ, no address listed,

Gallipolis, with Rev. Denny Coburn
officiating.
BUrial will be in Mound Hill
Cenetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Sunday from 2-4
and7·9p.m.
Casket bearers will be Richard
Simpson, Bill Jenkins, Dave
·'-Tawney, John Milhoan, Jerry
Evans; and Frank Burke.

spotlighting. .
Forfettlnl bond on chargee of ex·
Forfeltlnc 815&amp;.50 on a charge of cesalve apeed, were AU111 J, Raines,
operating an overweighted vehicle 29, BiclwelJ, taD; and, Thelma L. Mcwas Vernon W. Mille!", 24. OU HilL
Bride, 5t, ('•Uipolll, P7.
Olarged with lnlulftc:lent funds,
the ~ agalnlt Delores Belcher,
MBBT8TVEIIDAY
Gallipolis, Marion William•,
CHESTER-The Melp Area
Galllpolla, and Judy Byen (two
counts), G•lllpolla. ·
' ~ "-l. will meet at 7:311 p.m.
Don L. Drennan, 21, Galllpolll, ~ at the Chellter Cllureb rl
was fined ~ on a charge of per- tbe Naarene. Speaker will be the
mitting a minor to operate a motor Rev. John Coffman. The pUblic Is Invited.
vehicle. .

pleaded not guilty. Bond was set at
$1,000.

Eleven other cases were ter·
mlnated.
Charged with DWI, Howard E.
Runions, ·39, Lalunansville, W.Va.,
and Dewey A. McGlone, 27,
Waterloo, each pleaded guilty and
were fined $300 plus a 10 day sentence.
John W. Leach; 18, Che!hire, and
James D. Hammonds, 38, Gallipolis,
were each fined $250 on charges rl

Quality craftsmanship

Toys--they still make

Gelgel".

Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday at the Stevl!ns·
Falrleas Funeral Home with the
Rev. William McDaniel officiating.
Burial will follow In the Beale
Chapel Cemetery at Apple Grove.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6-9 p.m. today.

a

MakeKmarf'
Your
Christmas
Savings
Store

COOLVILLE-William M. Hubbard, 69, of Coolville and Parkersburg, W. Va., died unexpectedly
.Friday at his Coolville residence.
He was hom at Brookneal, Va., a
son of the late Edward C. and Lucy
White Hubbard.
He was also
preceded In death by four brothers.
Mr. Hubbard was a member of the
Parkersburg Seventh Day Adventist
Church and was a trustee and board
member of that church. He owned
and operated the Hub Realty Co. In
Parkersburg for 35 years. He had
resided on a Coolville fann for some
·20years.
Surviving are his wife, bena
Howell Hubbard; three daughters,
Mrs. Ray (Jacque) Jones and Mrs.
Robert (Mary) Humphreys, Parkersburg, and Mrs. William (Nancy)
Scott, Bath, N. H. ; a son, Jerry,
Parkersburg; eight grandchildren;
two great-grandchildren, and two
sisters, Mrs. Mamie Schultz, Silver
Springs, Md., and Mrs. Nellie Rit·
tenhouse, Anquin, Calif.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at the Parkersburg
SeventhDay Adventist Church, 19th
St. and Park Ave., with Pastor John
Oddie officiating. Burial will be In
Mt. Olivet Cemetery, Parkersburg.
Friends may call at the residence
anytime after noon Sunday. The
body will lie in state at the church
one hour prior to services. The White
Funeral Home of Coolville Is in
charge of arrangements.

SUNDAYthru
WEDNESDAY

COMPANYPROBLEK'l
NEW YORK (AP) -

Retaining

. long-time employees "who are no
longer carrying their weight" is one
of the major reasons why companies
.run Into trotlble and often go out of
bualneu, says a management consulting firm.
According to A.E. Getzler X Co. of
New York most alllng firms display

the aame symptOlllll.

•

It says other reasons companies
run into difficulty are:
Falling to trim away fat by cloalng
obaolete plants and unprofitable
divis!oris; maintaining once
profitable showrooms and other ,
show spaces that are currently un- ·
profitable; falling to analyze costa
and the current demand for ita
productl; producing too many dif.
ferent !terril, and unreall.ltlc cash
now pi-ojecll0111.
MEETS 'IUESDAY
RACINE-The Southern Athletic

MASON - In today's world of
plastics, . substitutes and "ar·
tificlals," it's sometimes difficult to
find the "real McCoy ...
Many realdenta will be surprised
probably to learn that they have tbe
"real thing" right here in the Big
Bend Area - the products of the
"Calico Worksbed."
Never heard of It?
Well - let me explain thiit the
''Calico Workshed" Is a relatively
new venture In the Big Bend area
and is operated by the Howard Hue~
Family. The worksbed turns . out
fabulous, handmade wooden toys,
some of which are accented by
calico accessories.
While the workshed operation Is
new to thia area, the Huck family
"has been at it" for the past 13
years. Every member of the family
has a role In turning out the toys and
other wooden items which are
reflective of yesteryear.
The colorful "happy" toys
produced at the workshed are the
brainchild of Howard Huck. As a
youngster, be had me "store
bought" toy. The rest of his play
things were made by his father with
Howard assisting. These earlier
homemade toys were, however, a
far cry from the pi'Oductl made at
the woodshed. All of the nostalgic
toys - puzzle animals, train selll, a
wide range of pull toys, a fantastic
· "crazy horae," a jointed dancing
man and others - are created from
patterns made by Huck. In addition
there are adult items such as
elephant racks which have a v~ety

"Coupons Anilable At Your Local Kmart"

Save
"10

. TilE MASTER - Howard Huck, Ohio Power Co.
· employe, is the mastermind of the Calico Workshed.

He is pictured with only a part of the wooden toys and
products produced by family members in Mason.

10ABK413W
Reg. S264

Our.Reg. 69.97

Our

59.97

~249
Personal Size Color 1V Set

Model

With Coupon

Portable Typewriter

Self-corred if\G manua l has
811-charac ter keyboard. lid .

290

Poria Color with automatic frequency, color con·
trois. Molded handle.

28

0urReg. .

5148
Take-with
Price

3·wav Modlllar Stereo System

Metal Storage Shelves

Includes AM/FM radio. · 6-track
Player I recorder and phOnograph.

Unit has 4 shelves Ond a gray
finish. 60x36x12-in. Sh6p now!

23.88
I 104 I • 2.00

William L. Tawney

DEERKD u:n
GALLIPOUS - The Gallia·Meigs
Poet of the Ohio Highway Patrol in- ·
vestigated a car-deer accident In
Gallia County late Friday afternoon.
Troopers said Amanda D. Chaf·
fins, 26, Bidwell, was northbound on
CR 17 (Tycoon Rd.) at 5:50 p.m.
' when her car struck and killed a
deer running acroSs the road.
Moderate damage was done to the
Chaffins auto and there were no injuries.

'

.

The Saving Place"'

William M. Hubbard

0ALUPOUS William L.
Tawney, 76, a resident of Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, died 2:30 p.m. Friday in
Holzer Medical Center. He was a
retired fanner.
·Mr. Tawney was born Dec. 3, 1903,
in Clendenin, W.Va., son of the late
Floyd and Luella Sinnet Tawney.
He married Nellie Pell in Kentucky in 1937. She survives, along
with four sons: Oakey Tawney,
Gallipolis; Leo Tawney, Columbus;
Lawence and Bill Tawney, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by one
son,.Don, inJuly,1968.
Eleven grandchildren, two
brothers and two sisters survive :
Earl Tawney, Rt. 3, Gallipolis; Max
Tawney, and Mrs. Ruby Jenkins,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Anna Summers,
Charleston, W.Va.
He was a member of the Rodney
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday at the McCoy·
Wetberholt-Moore Funeral Home,

'em like they used to.

k mort "' SOle Prk:e

•

Less Polaroid •) Rebate

of - . eiJ8In and Jr:ey ""'dlr"t,IID8JJ
wooden jugs of star flowera, to name
onlyafeW.
Some 13 years ago, the Hucks started making 1\'v.;.len toys to benefit
school and church organizations.
They were living ·In Terre Haute,
Ind., at the time. Demand for the

21.88 ~~.:~~:'

3.94

·Savel The lutlon'"lnstant camera

Your Choice!

Polaroid'' motorized. !ully automatic·
camera tokes beautiful SX-70•
color pictures. Save at 'Kmort.

Fashion
Sweaters
Or Pants
So1. ac rylic
s l i p -o ns
team with
polye ster
knit pull-ons.

15.47 -

CRAZY HORSE - Charlotte Jenks, mayor of
Mason, works at the Calico Workshed In painting the
bodies of "crazy horses," reflective of years ago.
4 ·
DaysI

Color Print Film

"Electro Ftolh 555" Pocket Camera

36 exp. 35mm.
-400ASA.

Built-In electronic flash. 18 lens. arid
wrist strap . Uses 110 cartridges.
lotlorle• not iocluOed

4 47
•

160 AlA Super I

,,..~,..~.

1.5112" LX7" Hx634" W.

Mttery r::!li] 3.97

By Bob Hoeflich

SAVE

Metal with lasllc.

aooueCidng with," t41ii...U .lin.

Huck who obviously lovee the hobby
that has grown into a family
business:
Non-toxic paints are used on the
toys for the safety of children and
the pieces while being made undergo
such pressure from the . various
machines, that they are sure to hold
together.
.
Every evening finds members of
the family at the woodshed In
Mason, shall we say, giving Santa a
muciHieeded helping hand · will'
some very picturesque toys.

•

Color movie film
wltrout

Battery ·
Replaces 9 volt

toys, understandably, grew and
grew and five years ago the Hucks
went into heavy production of the
handniade items. They spend an of
their spare time making the toys and
attendil)g craft shows in Ohio, West
Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina,
Indiana and Tennessee. Their toys

are always a hit since there are
many people around seeking a backward glance to other times. They at·
tended their first show taking their
merchandise in a station wagon.
They now have two specially equipped vans In which they travel to the
shows llO they can meet public
demand.
The Hucks have moved about
some with Howard's work with the
Ohio Power Co. The family moved to
New Haven last spring. A bouse had
been started next door to Mrs.
Huck's mother, Charlotte Jenks,
. who,' by the way, ii! the mayor r:J.
Mason. They took over the bouse and
converted it into quarters for the
woodshed and eventually will have a
big showroom at the front of the
structure. Howard Is currently at
the hydro plant in the Racine area.
The sons of the Hucks, Chris, a
sophomore at Wahama High School,
and Mike, a\lendil)g Hocking Tech
at Nelsonville where he Is majoring
hotel-motel management, grew up
in the construction of wooden toys
and today they can operate all of the
equipment to turn out various pieces
needed for the finished product.
Mrs. Huck is the "artist" of the
family. She does the Intricate painting such as eyes, hair, smiles, etc.,
on necessary "calico" a~ries.
Mrs. Jenks has taken a big interest
in the business and can be found
· much of the time painting pieces of
trains, horses or whatever when not
tied up with her duties as Masoo
Mayor.
••All of our toys are happy toys and
are toya that cJIIIdrea caa · cjo

Lifestyle writer

f:;.1•.

IE]

SAVE•2

SAVE $6
Our Reg. 2.97

Our 5.77 6-pr.

1.97

4.44

Sleep/Play Suit
Inf ants· suits in
polyester terry .

Tube Work Socks

6-pr. Pkg. Men's cotto n / nylon socks ..
Fits Slzeo

IC&gt;13

10.88

26.88

Elect1011ic M111in
6 electronic
with sound.

games

Our Reg. 6.47

4.47

SAVE

Adventure Bum

24·hovr Timer

complete wlth ~ -on ·the ·floor and CB detail·
ing. 4 changeable balloon tlres. super Jack,
jerry can, spare tire, black rack.

For appliances or
lights. Automatic .

-~ (

Our Reg.66c

48e
. .lnlltll Fol

25 sq. ft. roll. Shop
and Save.

ENDLESS JOB - Mike Huck, Hocking Technical College student,
apendl his apare time In a seemlnglj endless job of sanding tubs full of ·
Uny toy parts at the Calico WoodShed in Mason.

Sola In $t:lo!tlna

Goodt Dept. -

20% ,J·
OFF

~.

---..J'

Solid
Pack

lmJ

49.88
1

Christmas

"'ffdcct" POitable

Our Reg. 63.88

l'holtotTaPh

Stereo' has automatic changer, built· In
Sale Price

r.rr-t

Our Reg. 1.77

Our Reg. 1

011 Reg. 2.17

38

&amp;.!!!.J

1.27

1.24

1.44
c.Oallloll

$

Ea.
Dial' lath Soap

Cards

White or gold Dial•
soap In 1&gt;-oz.' bars.

........
K mort4D

16x26" Tawell
Sheared te&lt;ry towels

ot

lip

S•lfllltl S.C.

HcrtdV OfOCJI!Zer.
Plalllc. In colOn.

cotton/~yester.

ARTIST'S TOUal- Mrs. Mary Huck peifwlM the does au the llnllng of ace e••ory tteml wblch are often
Intricate painting of eyes, hair and other accent points a part of the toy

C~~rporal l on

on the colorful toys at the Calico wortsbed and also

Boosters will meet at 8p.m. Tuesday
at the high schooL Parents of aU .
students taking part in the athletic
programs and residents interested
in the progr81rui are asked to attend.
(

seta:

·

�•
B-2-TheSundayTimes-Sentlnel, Sunday, Nov ..23,1~

HM C plans 7th annual
Thanksgiving service
GAWPOLIS- The Chapel at the
Holzer Medical Center will be Ute
site for the Seventh Annual
'l'hanksgiving Eve Worship Service
on Wednesday evening, Nov. 26,
from 7 1intil7:30 P·'!l· Patients, their
families and guests are welcome, as
are the hospital staff members, their
families and any other visitors to the
hospital.
'
This special religious service will
include seasonal hymns, scripture,
prayers, a meditation centering
around the theme of Thanksgiving to
God, and Holy Communion will he
offered for \hose who wish to receive
it. The organist for the evening services will be Corinne Lund. A vocal
duet by Dee Ann Penn and Don
Wothe will also he a part of the
Thanksgiving Eve obsen&gt;ance.

Miss Penn is a··student at Rio
'Grande College and is in her !hind
year as a member of the College
Grande Chorale. Wothe graduated
from Rio Grande College, was a
member of Ute Grand Chorale for
three years, and is now a teacher in
the Rio Grande Elementary Schogl.
The Rev. Arthur C. Lund, hospital
chaplain, will lead the worship service. The patients who wish to attend
will he taken to and from the Chapel
by members of the hospital Volunteer Sen&gt;ice League and the Red
Cross Gray Ladies,
Those patients unable to come to
the Chapel will be able to hear the
service in their rooms through the
closed circuit television system in
the hospital on Channel tO.

Grqup sets aside donations
for veterans' Christmas
MIDDLEPORT- A donation was
made for the Christmas party at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital when
the American Legion Auxiliary of
Lewis Manley Post 263 met recently
at the home of Mrs. Margaret
Bowles.
The unit also discussed remembering a local veteran at Christmas
With a gift. A report was given on the
recent fall conference held at
Crooksvl'lle Mrs Bowles was
.
.
presented a red bind pin on behalf of
.Mrs. Lorrene Snyder, district
· recogru'ti on for co11ecPresl
. .dent, m
which-brought the
tingthemostdues
unit to goal.
Special note was · made of Armistice Day and a program on flag
etiquette was held in the absence of
. Americanism chairman, Mrs. Campbell Harper. The bulletin, " The
Firing Line" was ordered. Mrs.
Smith was recognized for receiving
a citation on national security at the
fall conference and Mrs. Richards

Holiday visits
meeting subject
REEDSVILLE - Plans for a
holiday visit with \h.e residents of the
Meigs County Infinnary were made
when the United Methodist Women
of, the Reedsville Church met recently with Mrs. Ullian Pickens.
The meeting opened with the
Lord's Prayer in unison. Church
bank and Health Care Center money
was collected and 25 shut-in visits
were reported, Mrs. Vivian Humphrey, president, extended thanks
for the food for two families which
had been contributed by members.
Cards were signed for sick friends .
Mrs. sandy Cowdery presented
the Thanksgiving program tising
"True Meaning of Thanksgiving" as
her topic. She was assisted by Mrs.
Pat Martin In an impressive candle
lighting ceremony ·with the members taking part by lighting a candle
to show something for which they
are thankful. There was group
singing of "Amazing Grace" and a
closing prayer by Mrs. Verna Rose.
Bible games were conducted
MrS- Pickens with prizes going to
Mrs. Vivian Humphrey and Mrs.
Rose ..
Door prizes went to Mrs. Cowdery
and Mrs. Ruth Ann Balderson.
Refreshments in the Thanksgiving
motif were served to Mrs. Violet Satterfield, Mrs. Rose, • Mrs. Ruth
Toothman, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal and
Beverly, Mrs. Marlene Putman,
Mrs. Martin, Mrs. Virginia Walton,
Mrs. Cowdery, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Dolly Reed, Mrs.
Vivian Hwnphrey, Mrs. Erika
Boring, Mrs. Mary Alice Bise, and
Mrs. Balderson.

Chuck .Steak

$ 69

$ 79

S
U
N
D
A
y
BIG FOUR Church, songfest,
RIO GRANDE College cafeteria
closed; no buffets.
. 7:30p.m. Revival; speakers are
Darrell Wiser, Jake Payne.
REV. Joe Godwin, Jr. will be at
Northup Baptist Church 7:30 p..
Singing. Pastor Lyle Burgess
All welcome.
welcomes public.
SONGFEST TONIGHT
SYRACUSE - A songfest will be
Wl·th. the Ambassadors Quartet,
held tonight (Sunday) at 7 p.m. at Rutland, providing the enthe Syracuse Church of the tertainment. The Rev. James Kittle
.
Nazarene,BridgemimSt..Svracu"P. _ extepdsawelcometothepubhc.

Young Turkey
10-lb• .
&amp;Up

'1 09
.

'

CELERY .

49~

Stalk

10 lb.
bag

FLORIDA

ORANGES

•, ••

,

Pepsi
or Diet Pepsi

YEU.OW Q,ING

Sliced Peaches
16 oz. can

i99
LIBBY

BROUGHTON'S

PUMPKIN

c

29 oz.

can

·2% MILK
GALLON
PlASTIC

STILWELL

Let Odyssey2 turn your TV roofn into a family arcade. Choose
from 27 cartridges to be played right on your TV scr1;3en.
Baseball! Golf! Football' Showdown in 2100 AD.! Sub Chase!
Computer lntro ... and more. 38 sports, educational and
arcade games in all. And new ones are always on the way,
Come in today and play'

-

,,

ICE CREAM
half
• 59

,,

EGGNOG

I'

for Christmas

DELMOITE
QJT
· GRN. BEANS

lj '

(

.

.

Kimberly Ann
8eynolds, daughter of 8ev. and Mrs.
\filliam A. Reynolds, ·Bidwell, and
Raul David Finnicwn, son of Rev,
8nd Mrs. Jack Finnicum, Kanauga,
tere united in marriage In an opi!n
4i,hurch wedding at the Cheshire Bap- ·
list Church. The Rev. William Uber
officiated at the ' double-ring
&lt;)eremony on Saturday, Oct .. 11, at
6:30p.m.
:
·; Preceding the cereniony a half·
liour of pre-nuptial music was
Gr-esented by Mrs. Gertrude Hysell,
creat-aWlt of Ute bride, at Ute organ,
and Carl Ward, cousin of the bride,
iit the piano. Selections included
\YouColourMyWor!d", "You Light
tip My Life", "The Hawaiian Wed~
4ing Song", "Portrait of My Love",
:::rr•, and "Savior Like A Shepherd
,t.ead Us".
,
.. Two seven branch candelabra,
ed with fresh ivy by Mrs.
Ua Mack, and t11e trinity candle
rated the altar. 1
,. Given in marriage by her parents
ind escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown of
)ll;ganza and chantilly lace fashioned
:!fith a Victorian neckline, sheer .
i,(j[e, sheer bishop sleeves, empire
&lt;Waist and full A-line skirt with atilached chapel train. A wide ruffle
)ordered the skirt and train and a
'iatin ribbon·encircled the waist and
llowed in the back. Her waltz length
;yeil was trimmed in matching chan:!illY lace secured to a camelot cap
"with attached blusher veil.
;,_" She carried a ,bouquet of silk
melon colored carnations, orange
.$weetheart roses and baby's breath.
for something old she carried a
lfllonogranuned handerchief of her
•~randmother Reynolds ; something
;borrowed was a silver bracelet from
tf!er sister, Karen Reynolds;
~elbing blue was her garter, and
:'&amp;1980 penny in her shoe.
; The bride's attendants were
~ren Reynolds, sister of the bride,
tJnald of. honor, ' Carolyn Swisher,

.
C

l:cousin of athefriim!l
bride,
and bride,
Jean
lkollohan,
of the
t:bridesmaids. T!JeY wore Identical
:towna of orange· followered, double
:\not, polyester' featuring roun~
ecklines and , small spaghetti
rapa. They w9re capes of sheer
10lid orange double knot polyester
band carried bouquets of silk orange
~d tan tiger Illies and wore baby's
~thin their hair. .
~l Miss Tonya DrummOI)d, cousin of
~ bride, was flower girl and wore a
•patln melon, long a-line dress with
t phort puff sleeves. She wore baby's
~th 1n her hair and carried a
et of
petals.
~. David Patrick, friend of the
~.kroom. served1as best man. The
~Ushers were Brett Harrison, a.friend
~ilf the groom, and Jeff Ward, cousin
·t!i the bride, with Bobby Roush,
ltousln of the !ride as rlngbeuer.
• The
a dark brown tux•;edo with a while ruffled shirt and a

bputonniere. His attendants and
bride's father wore idential tuxedos
with melon ruffled shirts. The·
ringbearer wore a rust colored
three-piece suit. They also wore a
matching boutonniere.
The mother of the bride wore a
polyester solid pink gown with a
cummerbund and sheer sleeves. She
wore a corsage of three melon carnations and baby's breath as did
Mrs. Finnicum, who was in a floral
gown with a beige top.
Miss Linda Stiles registered the
guests. All the flowers at the weddilig were silk and made by Mrs.
Connie Drummond.
Wedding bells and orange and
white streamers ·were featured
decorations in the reception room of
the church. Serving at the reception
were Dawn Martin, Monica Dobbins, Linda Stiles, Mrs. Odella
Mack, Mrs. Gladys Rife, Mrs.
Phyllis Rankin and Mrs. Mary
Stiles.
A four-tiered cake with four small
cakes at the base centered Ute wedding table. The cake, baked by Mrs
Denver Walker, was decorated with '
the wedding colors and topped with a
miniature bride and groom, given by
by the groom's sister, Brenda Swartzberg, who was unable to attend the
· wedding.
Two showers were given - one
Debbie Roush and Carolyn Taylor
and 90e by Roma 'Ward and Jean
Mollohan. Photograpbs were taken
by Peg Thomas.
The couple took a wedding trip to
Nashville, Tenn.
The bride is a graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and Gallipolis
Business College. She is employed
as a bookkeeper at Carter &amp; Evans,
Gallipolis. Mr. Finnicwn is a
, graduate of Gallia Academy High
School and Buckeye Hills Career
Center. He is empl 0yed as a weldor
at Portsmouth Docking, Kanauga.
The couple reside at Quail Creek
In Rodney, Ohio.

16 OZ. C111

DEL

WHOLE

CORN
17 DL Clll

79•2·

We buy direct from the factory and in large volume,
GALLIPOIJS - Darcy Ellen groom, served as best man. The
which is a tremendous savings. Instead of keeping
Lingo and Anthony James Maniaci ushers were Ken Davis, friend of the
that
savings for ourself, we pa ss that savings along to
exchanged wedding vows during groom, Mike Maniaci and Jim
you, and throw in a big savings to boot, giving you the
Nuptial Mass at the St. Louis Maniaci, brothers of, the groom.
lowest prices on living room suites anywhere.
Catholic Church on Saturday, July Each wore a tux identical to that of
12, at 2:30 p.m. The double-ring the groom's with a lavender-tipped
ceremony was perfonned by Father carnation boutonniere.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
William Myers.
ALL SUITS MARKED WAY BELOW
Lingo
chose a long apricot gown of
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
. REGULAR SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICESI
and Mrs. Charles Lingo, Gallipolis. quiana carnations: Mrs. Maniaca
The groom's parents are Mr. and wore a long blue gown and a corsage
Mrs. Natalie Maniaci, Zanesville, of blue carnations.
Guests were registered by Cindy
Ohio,
A half-hour of music pl,'eceded the Grahlim, friend of the bride, .and
ceremony with Edle Ross as Joni Zwnbrunnen, cousin of the
organist. SolOist· was Mr. Merlxn bride.
The reception , immediatelY
Ross.
. Escorted to the altar by her following the ceremony, was held at
father, the bride wore a fonnal gown the Shrine Club where a buffet din··· Reg. $499.95
of ivory organza trimmed with chan- ner· was served, Tlie wedding cake
tilly lace and seed pearls. It was made by Mrs. Denver Walker ~as
Pc.
fashioned with a wedding band served by Kim Stout, Cindy
neckline, empire bodice, and sheer Graham, and J odee Collins, friends
SAVE $200
full bishop sleeves with lace cuff . of the bride.
Following a wedding trip to
the A-line skirt featured a cascade
Beach, the couple now
Daytona
of ruffles at the back, flowil\g into a
reside
at
3054 Morsetown Court
chapel length train. The bride's
South,
Colwnbua.
·
fingertip veil of illuaion, edged with
'
lace, fell from a cap of chantilly
lace. The bride's bouquet was a cad- ~----------~ 1~.::~
cade of white sweetheart roses and
"
carnatio!lll surrounded by baby's
breath.
,
,.
I h' •at 1
Vicki McGhee, friend of the bride,
Reg. $499.95
served as maid of honor. She wore a
lavender gown of quiana fashioned
STARTS FRIDAY
with a blouson top and short capeNew 2 pc . pillow arm living'
TWOWEEKS .
room suite with I DO% nylon
like sleeves. She carried a bouquet
cover
and maple trim . This
of lavender and white carnations
SAVE $200
is a bargain if there ever
and daisies with baby's breath.
was one.
Bridesmaids were Carla Fellure,
friend of the bride, Holly Lingo and
Kelly Lingo, sisters of the bride.
WALTER MATTHAU •'RI
E ch
id ti 1 t th
maid
of honor's.
·a wore
.a gownElich
en carried
ca o ae
bouquet of lavender and white carnations and daisies.
The groom wore a gray tux with
an ascot tie and a white rosebud wilh
baby's breath boutonniere.
Dave Kirkendall, friend of the

$29995

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"HOME OF BEAUTIFUL KITCHENS"

2119 JACKSON

625-2318

PT. PLEASANT

JACK &amp; JILl'S
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·Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Maniaci

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be used for expenses of the chapter.
Mrs. Nelson used for devotions,
"A Thankful Heart" taken from·
Ideals. Games were played · with
Mrs. Bishop, Mrs. Pauline Atkins,
Mrs. Stella Atkins, Mrs. Avanell
George, Mrs. Marjorie Rife, Mrs.
Allegra Will, Mrs. Winn, Mrs. Frances Young, Mrs. Bernice Hoffman,
and Mrs. Ruth Erlewine winning
prizes. Mrs. Pauline Atkins won the
door prize which was a Christmas
cactus.
An Hawaiian theme was carried
out in the refreshments served by
the hostesses. .Mrs. Nelson on her
recent trip to Hawaii, brought back
most of the food served at the
meeting. Fruits from pineapple
boats, macadia nuts, cookies, sandwiches and chips were served on
pineapple replica wooden trays.

"'

SELECT OR STANDARD·

' ·179

'. .} ~"'

Frozen Oysters

Tavern ·Ham

:~

.~or.;,. '

LB.

8-16 oz. BoHies

sa.

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Chuck Roast

SUPERIOR BONELfSS

Tribune Remember Calendar

This fall,
the brightest ideas
in the world
are hereto

1'- ,

HARRISONVILLE - ffoliday
plans were made and recent moneymaking projects reported on at the
recent meeting of .ine Past Matrons
Club of Harri$onville Chapter 255,
Order of the Eastern Star.
The meeting was held at the home
of Mrs. Jiin Nelson with Mrs. Paul
Winn as the c&lt;&gt;-hostess. Mrs. Betty
Bishop presided at the meeting with
- plans being made for the Christmas
dinner to be held on Dec. l6 at
Shoney's in Point Pleasant. Each
member will take a guest. Following
the dinner members will ·go to the
home of Mrs. Winn for a party and
·
gift exchange.
Reports were given on the Rural
Mail Carriers dinner, the auction
luncheon sen&gt;ed at Albany, and the
household products sale which, is
still open for orders. The money will

USDA CHOICE BONA ESS

LB.

r;::======....~~~~~=====================lw

.

Eastern
Star
makes
Wed&amp;ngs------------------~
holiday projectplans

"'

·Ved.

CHOICE BONELESS

Fellowship set
for December6
A Christian fellowship supper was
set for Dec. 6 when the Willing
Workers Missionary Society of the
Fiist Church of God, Syracuse, met
recently at the church.
The hoUday bazaar was discussed
and It was noted that it was a huge
success. Mrs. Allee Loomis thanked
the women who worked on items for
the bazaar, and tlie financial report
of the proj«t was given by Mrs.
Vlrginla Oiler.
At the next regular meeting of the
society, there will be a gift exchange
by the members with the amount of
the gift not to sceed
Mrs. LOOmis opened the meeting
with IICI'ipture trom n Corinthians,
and Mrs. Jay Clark had prayer.
There was a poem, "Does Daddy
GO?" byMrs. l.AlomlS.
Followlne the meeting the women
were seJved a dinner by the men in
appreclllt\Gn for their Christmas
bazaar work. Mrs. Ethel Hassler
had the ciCllllng prayer.

B-3-TbeSwldayTimes-Sentlnel,Sunday, Nov. 23,!980

•

THE REV. Arthur C. Lund, director of Chaplaincy Sen&gt;ices at the
Holzer Medical Center, selects scripture he will use for the Thanksgiving
EveSen&gt;ice to he held in the hospital's ChapeL

was presented her field· service pin
and also a home base award.
Mrs. Hampton spoke on legislation
and distributed leaflets, ' 'How a Bill
is Made." Members were requested
to send a record of hours and money
spent to community service chairman and the veterans affairs chairmen,
Communications were read and a
report of the fall conference held at
Crooksville was made. The unit is
continuing the sale of datebooks and
cosmetic bags.
Mrs, Bowles served refreshments.

OFFICEBS EU!lCI'BD'ftlJIIDAY
()(fleers will be lleeted at the •
Tuelday night meetlnc rt the
Harrtaonvllle Senlar au-. Club to •
be held at 7:30 p.m. at the
townhoule. All menben ue urpd
to attend Refrellhmelltll will be _... --;

PRICE HOSPlTAIIZED
Leslie · Price is a patient at Mt.
Cannel East Hospital In Colwnbus.
Cards may be sent to him there at
Room 405. Mrs. Price i! staying with
Mrs. Virginia Crew, 1148 Nocturne
Road East, Reynoldsburg, 4301111.

':,6

t• II tp ... y_,,

.. .....

A$29.00 ·value

Popper
Pops corn fluffy light In
just 4 minutes without oil,
stirring or shaking.

A $29.00 Value

Exclusive ROTAWAVE(nl) Cook·
lng System-A rotating •ho-r
ot power that cooks better end
cooks most tooda looier' than
ever.betorel

r.

�B-0--TheSundayTIJne&amp;.Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980
'

B-4--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23,1980

A1arriage--L~-----------served as best men. Groomsmen
were Mark Epling, Colwnbus; Brett
Epling, Gallipolis; Scott Epling,
student at Portales, N. Mex. ; and
Kent Epling, student at Stillwater,
Okla., all brothers of the groom.
Ushers were Mark Kiesling,
Gallipolis; Gary · Fenderbosch,
Galllolis; Jolm Bateh,. Jacksonville,
Fla.; and Mike Highsmith, Dalton,
Ga. Rlngbearers were J . J. Dlugos
who carried the bride's ring, and
Jeremy Dlugos who carried the
groom's ring, .both nephews of the
bride.
The groom, IUs groomsmen,
ushers, ringbearers, and father of
the bride wore solid wllite, short tail
tuxedos. The father of the groom
wore a white tuxedo. The groom's
boutonniere consisted of two frost
white sweetheart roses with leather
leaf. The ring bearers wore one pink
miniature carnation with leather
leaf. The rest of the groom's party
wore a large pink carnation with
leather leaf.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
Roberts wore a mint green gown of
qiana accented with a thin qia~
cape with pastel flowers. Mrs.
. Epling wore an aqua gown pleated
from waist down.
The mothers of the bride and
groom wore frost white sweethearts
with pink miniature carnations and
baby's breath with a pink bow. Each
mother was presented a long stemmed snowsong white rose at the conclusion of the ceremony.
A pool side reception honoring the
couple was held following the
ceremony. The cake was three
tiered surrounded by four smaller
ones. It was decorated with pink
roses and mint green leafs. The
women's association of the Flrst
United Presbyterian Church,
Gallipolis, served at the reCeption,
Fqr a wedding trip, the couple
spent two weeks in Honolulu,
Hawaii.
The new Mrs. Epling is a graduate
of Hurricane High School,

\ l

Mr. and Mrs. Dean Epling
GALUPOUS - Pamela Lou
Roberts, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold L. Roberts, Hurricane, West
Virginia, and Dean Thomas Epling,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Miles T. Epling,
Gallipolis, were wtited in marriage
in a lawn ceremony at the home of
· the groom' a parents.
The Rev. Father AI MacKenzie officiated the double ring ceremony on
August 16 at 11:30 a.m. following
pre-nuptial music performed · by
Brant Adams, pianist, and Meghan
Griffin, soloist; their selections included : ' 'Someone,'' ''Somewhere,''
"Thru the Eyes of Love," "Lord's
Prayer," and "One Hand, One

Hearf.."
Guests entered the lawo through a
white arch decorated with white
bows and streamers. The platform
was decorated with a standing brass
arch, covered with white silk
garland of small phlox flower.
Kissing doves were at the top of the
arch with connecting streamers to
each side hooked with bows. Two
brass columns stood beside the arch
d~t·ated the same with large
Boston ferns sitting on top. Two
palm trees were in the back corners.
The platform was surrounded by
many fresh flowers . The
background overlooked the riverview.
The bride was given in marriage
by her parents. She entered through
the arch, escorted by her father and
walked up on a flora lace aisle runner. She was attired in a formal
gowo of English sheer net over taffeta with a high neckline. A bertha
capetet formed a cap sleeve and
outlined the sheer yoke. Feather em-

Grandchild of local couple weds in Ravenswood

UMW precedes meeting with dinner

broidered mows adorned the yoke
and overlay on the skirt and
cathedral length train, attached at
the shoulders. Imported reembroidered atencon lace accented the
empire waistline and cap steeve
fluted with organza accordion flounce. The skirt featured a silk organza
fluted flounce.
She wore a wide brinuned leghorn
hat which was trimmed in feather
embroidery and alencon lace.
She carried a bouquet of ivory
white gardenias with large white
snowsong roses, with gardenia University, Huntington, W. Va. Her
Hurricane,
W. Va., and
leaves.
husband graduated
fromMarshall
Gallia
The bride's attendants were Mrs.
Academy High School, Gallipolis,
Brenda Dlugos, Hurricane, W. Va., and attended Jacksonville Universister of the bride, matron of honor ; sity, Jacksonville, Fla., from 19'73Miss Christina Derosa, Lewisburg, l'ln. He is employed by the M. T.
W. Va., maid of honor; Miss Ann Epling Company, Gallipolis, where
Epling, Gallipolis, sister of the he is sales and advertising manager.
groom; Miss Tonya Woodward,
The couple now reside at Jackson
Gallipolis; Miss Tami Woodward, Pike, Gallipolis.
Gallipolis, and Miss Carolyn Stokes,
Huntington, W.Va.
The attendants were attired in
long pink spaghetti strap gowns of
RETURNS HOME
qiana with matching knee length
POMEROY- Mrs. Alma Johnson
jackets. The jackets were accented has returned to , her home in
with pink lace around the arms and Springfield after spending two
down .the front.
weeks here with Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Misses Stephanie Hall and Tiffany Davis. Enroute home she visit.ed
Hall, both cousins of the bride, were with Miss Dorothy Leifheit, Orient.
flower girls. They both wore long Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Richard
pink dotted swiss off the shoulder Leifheit, Emma Jo and Curt, visited
dresseS accented with pink hearts at the Davis home.
and pink flowers. They carried white
wicker baskets filled with pink and
white rose petals. Each wore a hair
TOMEETTIRJRSDAY
comb with a pink miniature carMIDDLEPORT- Officers will be
nation and baby's breath.
installed at the Thursday night, 7:30
Jolm Burlisle, Jr., Huntington, W. p.m., meeting of Evangeline ChapVa., and Danny Mink, Gallipolis, ter, Order of the Eastern Star.

FOREST RUN United
Methodist Women of the Forest Run
Church enjoyed a Thanksgiving dinner preceding their regular meeting
recently,
·
Preceding the dinner, Mrs. Mary
Nease gave devotions prepared by
Mrs. Leah Nea.se using a reading
from the Upper Room,and oite entitled "Thanks From Our Minister
and His Family" and concluding
with prayer.
Mrs. Hilda Yeauger and Mrs.
Kathleen Scott were the program
leaders with the group· singing
"Count Your Blessings,'~ followed
by prayer by the Rev. Stanley
Merrifield. Each member gave a

Thaitksgiving reading and then as
they gave a thank offering listed one
thing for which they are thanlduJ:
There W~S a special reading by Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon.
It was noted· that the yearbooks
will be made on Dec. 1 at the home of
Mrs. Mary Nease. A committee was
appointed to take fruit baskets to
shut-ins. Sixty-three sick visits were
reported.
·
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Merrifield and family, Mrs. Betty
Blackwood, Mrs. Faye Hamilton, ·
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon, Mrs. Mae
Holter, Mrs. Mary Nease, Mrs. Erma Roush, Mrs. Mary K. Roush,
Mrs. Carolyn Salser, Mrs. Kathleen

Open house
enjoyed by
Riverview parents

Scott, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Ann
Watson, Mrs. Naomi Wyatt, and
Mrs. Hilda Yeauger. ·

SORORITY TO MEEl'
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the .
Meigslnn. ·
UONSTOMEET
POMEROY - The Pom~y­
Middleport Lions Oub will bold. Its
regular meeting at noon Wednesday
at the Meigs Inn.

Send Our FTD

Thanksgiver Bouquet
Thar]ksgivi ng is Thursday, November 27.

Open House at Riverview School
was enjoyed by many parents,
students and teachers at the recent
PrO meeting.
Following a Thanksgiving reading
by ·Cathy Spencer, a business
meeting conducted by the president,
Marlene Putman, included
discussion and plans for committees
to assist the school personnel with
holiday projects at the school.
It was decided a designated
amount of money will be paid to
each classrqom teacher, as well as
each traveling teacher, to be used
for instructional needs. The PrO
·will· be payipg for magazine subscriptions bought annuall;:y for the
school.
Mrs. Weber announced a successful Parent-Teacher Conference
Day held recently at the school. Mrs.
Well's first grade won the attendance banner and prize for
highest percentage of parents attending.
·
Following the meeting, the faculty
of the school served refreshments.

Phones 446-6681
446-4848

\Ufl

FURNITURE
.GAllERIES

.Never can
a Substitute for•..

MONUMENT

a .Casting
'(o Our

l

·~

Featu ring
fall f lowers in an excl usive
FTD Ratta n Cornucopi a. Ca ll or v isi t us now.

Open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Weekdays. Sunday 1to 6

TZER'S FLOWER SHOP
453 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio

Helping you.

of cancelled
Ruth
:, Kruger
for stamps
a boywas
onsent
a to
kidney
machine. It was noted that a
f donation . was made to the cystic
·, fibrosis driv'e. A donation will also
be made to the American Legion
Child Welfare fund in memory of
Esta Wise, a Gold Star Mother.
!:' · A "pot of pennies" was started for
: Thailand, the foreign relations coun~ try this year. Mrs. Olin Knapp ·and
~ Mrs. Davis on behalf of the juniors
~ visited the Meigs Community School
: Wednesday to present apples to !he
: teachers, aides and students, in ob• servance of American Education .

OUR MOST POPULAR MAPLE
011

Sale

CHRISTMAS
OPEN
.HOUSE
FRI. &amp;SAT., ·
NOV. 28th &amp;29th

•••

r

~ Personals
"••

Delighlfully·authentlc, ruggedly·
built and extremely functional,
this hospitality group from our
famous "Pioneer Treasury" Col ·
lection speaks for itself .. . elo·
quently . Distinctive design,

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine
• spent the weekend in Newark
• visiting their · son-in-law and
~
= daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David
~ Eskew and children.
~
Mrs. Bessie Mitchell of Colwnbus
~ 1s here foc a week's visit with Mr.
• and Mrs. Osby Martin and Adam.'
·"• Other guests of Mr. and Mrs. Martin
•• are Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Reapp,
: Jenitt Island, Fla. who are also
: visiting relatives in Gallipolis, Mr.
: and Mrs. Harry Reapp and family.

superior construction, very wide
open stock selection insure
availability of additional pieces
as needed .

(Shown to Right)

Handsome five piece
group with formica top
table 40"x58" extends to
88" with 3 10" leaves •
host chair and · 3 side
chairs.
$
Reg. $979 SALE

"

REGISTER
TODAY

Drop-leaf table 48" wide and 2
chatr sin harvest gold and maple.
Perfect for the smatter kitchen or
just 2 people.
Reg. S576
SALE

bove: 58" chin•
eg. $1,275 SateS995

All chairs, cl!lnas
and tables can
be used
lnterch•ngably,

-~~---

- -~ --

Come Share in the Festivities

Transitional styling
goes with all decors.
Extra·thi ck back and

at

s ingle·welt detail
on the seat cushion.

Peddler's Pantry

Tr_..,..._ __
-~--...­
"" """"'~'
10 ((SitO IO

·S--,
- ,_,.__
IUII·!ttlon o

--

.._,:)tate &amp;Third------Gal&amp;polis-,..1

.,

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......... . .........
........ ..., ,•.

' I{• .

IN!IIo&lt;t con.

.•'~

w-

..
•

La-Z-.Boy &amp;·Action Recliners

•

Flexible Flyer Runner Sleds

.* 41•• REG. •23.99.~········· NOW '14.39
*54 REG. '27.79·• •••••••••
NOW '16.67
.
11

*60" REG. '31.87•••••••••••• NOW •19.12

.

Generous propartions at com

fort and contemporary style
Extra· deep tufting on ma&lt;., iv•/
pillo w back, seat cushion
roll arms.
Upholstered
, plush fabric.

~

LAY.IIIfAY FOR QIRISIMASI FREE DEliVERY UP 10 lltE 241M

.,NO RAINCHECKS.

••

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CHOOSE FROM THE LARGE SELECTION NOW)N STOCK

'

Houn: ttD0-5:00 Dally .'

t:oo-1:00
Mond. &amp; P:rl.

A SHOP•A•RAMA

I TOR

(

Space-saving
modem recliner

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLY ON HAND LASTS.

THE.FINEST AND MOST COMFORTABLE CHAIRS AVAILABLE TODAY!
TOPE'S RECLINERS ARE BUILT SO Wi_LI.. 'NE PUT A TEN YEAR
GUARANTEE ON THE MECHANISM OF EVERY CHAIR WE SELL.

.

Three-way comfor t is yours in this dy namic tri o of
rec l iners from F lexstee l!
Enj oy ultima te luxury
wh ile sitting, lounging or lea ning back f or a snoo ze.
Each chair open s up to a full reclini ng posi t io n
need ing only inches of wa ll space ' They're fine ly
crafted, tailored in lush fa bric s and p ri ced at ve ry
com fortable savings .

*

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.'.

,

n

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Save 40%

'

'
•••

FEATURING:

~I!

.

'

(;:

Holiday Recliner Sale

·¥:·

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Christrn8'8 '

_)(

,

':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
·
r
5 DIFFERENT DINING GROOPS IN OOR SliM WINIXMS

(

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

'.

'74410 $1155 ..•

/1~ . ·
)/J)
JIWILIY •
.

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c O- o 1 &lt;0
! I &lt;IOIICI
on I ·• &lt;GI H IU Mn ~~ lu o .

to fill your Christmas stocking.

~l!d-ridin
·~:g '

From 40" " 64" W'lde. ·
S. Priced From

342 2nd Ave., Gallipotts 446·2691
113 court St., Pomeroy 992-2054
i

lelodl...

So.o• Wo n fto.

""""' • ~"'' "'" let&gt;nCI Yoo
oro ou ro IO fiRO mt1 IUCI

-l'4~~- ..
§"li~·
~
~liZ,

Several Matching
Chinas Alii 1111 Sale.

.

I

,. _

T~ o ~ oo,.

of wine and a dazzling display of gifts

II

f~

6th-Cross Pen &amp; Pencil Set
Dec. 13th-Bufova Wall Clock
Va tued at $85.00.
o'ec. 20th-Man's or Ladies' Butova
Watch Valued at $100.00
Dec. 24th-Diamond Ring.
choice of a man's or
Valued at S500.00.

...... . _

Enjoy lounge chair to
tuxurtous tun recuner comfort _
only "Inches" from any walt

•

$444

Drawings· At 4 P.M.
Each Saturday and
4 P.M. Christmas Eve.

oom Saver
wm •m••••

....... _ 10&lt;1

DECORATOR GROUP

S!IJrting Monday, Nov. 24th
Stop in either Gallipolis or
Pomeroy and Register for
these FREE Gifts to be
given away in both stores.
There 's No Purchase
Necessary and you don 't
to be present to win.
Just stop by and sign up.
Register as many times
as _you like.

IR

~ - s.

Trestle Table 34x66 with formica ·
top, 52" bench and 2 Ia rge side
chairs.
Reg. $759
. SALE

PLUS OTHER PRIZES

seat and back in
a long-wea r Iabrie.

!I'l- l -~

SPECIAL:

WIN A •500.QO

SIT ON Ill
SNOOZE ON Ill
SAVE ON Ill

Tradit ional comfort.
Beautifully styled
with a deep ly tufted

Let us Welcome you Into the Holiday
Season with a cup of coffee,'a glass

••

GAUIPOLIS AND POMEROY

GREAT CHRISTMAS
GIVEAWAY

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.

r-------.!.....---------------=:..,~-Wl~·th~gr~ee~n
l~ea~v~es~an~d~ivy~en~t~wm~
:38:8:-8:6:03::::::~
Serving~at
the guest registry· ~ed~·~.b~~~·~:;~~~h~·~~~JJ~::::::P:h:.
was

775

JEWELRY STORE

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;.;;;;;:;:;;~j

RIO GRAN DE
COLLEGE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

f

say it right.

FAMOUS TEMPL£-SlUART DINING FURNITURE

Dining Room Groups

Pot of p~·es b.egun by club-

t,

~ing~~Y
.

·~·

SHOP THE AREA'S LARGEST '
FURNITURE STORE

4 *:~--~:~-.::~-l-H:-w.,-~,.-··- · ,. - . ~.
529 JACKSON PIKE ~ () W ~~
,

PHONI 446-4554

HOURS: MON•.sAT. 9 AM 10 I

.

PM SUIIMY l"M

DEC. 24TH DELIVERY
FINANCING AVAILABLE
jl

r

..

Electron1c•
TechnoIogy

~~=======~;:::::::~~~::~~::~~~~~~~::~::::::::,
~U

RAVENSWOOD - Miss Jeri Lynn caacade pattern.
Mrs.· Bonnie Smith, Ravenswood. Chase, Md.; Mrs. Donald Cennamo
Waugh became the bride of Timothy
Maid of honor was Miss Sue Special decoratiorui for the registry
of Washington, D. C.; Pearl RoberE. Rect9r on ·Saturday, Oqtober 11, Wickiser ,
Ravenswood . table included mniature silk fall
tson of Prestonsburg, Ky., and Mr.
at 2:30p.m.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Brenda Hall flowers arranged in a brandy snif- and Mrs. Gary hall of Wellston.
'I)le bride is the daughter Of Mr . . of Wellston, Miss Kim Twyman of ter.
.
and Mrs. Jack A. Waugh of Raven- .Fairmont, W. Va., Miss Kim CaterHostesses serving punch, coffee
CIRCLE HO,SPITALJZED
swood. The groom ls the son of Mrs. sonofDanbury,Conn., and Miss Cin- .and cake were Miss Rhonda
POMEROY - Homer M. Circle,
Wayne F. Wiggins and Charles J. dy Rader of Sunmiersville, W. Va. Shepherd, Mrs. Terry Morgan, Mrs. Carmel, a trustee of Sutton TownRector, both Of Ravenswood.
All were attired in dusty.green ultra CaSandra Hutton, Mrs. Connie ship, is a patient at the Holzer
The double-ring ceremony took suede floor-length gowns with mat- Staats and Miss Sandy McClure.
Medical Center. His room nwnber is
place in the First United Methodist ching long-sleeved jackets. They White wedding bell mints, green 225.
Church, Flinn Street, Ravenswood, each carried Coto~al bouquets of
leaves and yellow rose mints were r~;;;;;;=======;;.
·with the Reverend Ronald McCauley rust and ·gold silk flowers with mat- all
made for the reception by. the
Qfficlating. Church decorations in- . ching long ribbon streamers.
·bride's grandmother, Mrs. Keith .
tltcrc be
eluded several large bouquets and
Ted Rector, brother of the groom, Suiter.
baskets of rust, gold and green silk served as best man. Ushers were
For her wedding trip, the bride
flowers plus the addition of spiral Jeffr~y 'Jay Waugh and John An- wore a three piece wool. knit beige
a
lighted candelabra. Contributing to drew Waugh, brothers of the bride, suit with a corsage of rust silk roses.
the beauty of the nuptial scene was Roscoe Taylor, Ripley and Bryan The couple left for a honeymoon at
the newly planted live green altar Canterbury, Ravenswood. The ring- The Greenbrier, White Sulphur
garden.
bearer was Master CUrt Bobo, . Springs, W.Va.
Mrs. Connie Somerville, H,aven- Ravenswood. All the male atFollowing their honeymoon, the
swood, provided traditiopal organ tendants wore gray tuxedos that couple reside at 40 Regency Apartmusic the half hour preceding the matched the groom's.
ments, Ravenswood. ·
wedding and accompanied Mrs. SanThe flower girl was Miss Margaret
Grandparents attending the weddra Moore, Cottageville, who sang Chapman, Ravenswood, whose ding were Mr. and Mrs. 0. Keith
the musical selections of "If,'' "The white organza dress was trinuned Suiter, Mr. and Mrs. C. J . Waugh, all
Wedding Song" and "The Lord's with an embroidered bodice and of Gallipolis, and Mrs. Carl Reed,
PraY.er."
tong full sleeves. her floor-length Ravenswood.
Given in marriage by her parents dress was edged in Chantilly lace
Out-of-state guests included: Mrs.
and escorted to the altar by her and she carried an open basket of F. W. R. Price of Bronxville, N.Y.;
father, the bride wore a gown of rust silk flowers. She also wore a Mr. and Mrs. Jack Darnell of Las
'Cri/JIIfc
white organza and Chantilly lace rust rose in her hair.
Vegas, Nev.; Harold Armstrong,
Own~
with
appliques
of
tace
For
her
daughter's
wedding,
the
designed
Mrs. Harry Waggoner, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Timothy Rector
·flowers accented with seed pearls. bride's mother wore a full-length Thomas Tipaon, all of Portsmouth;
•
·'
Several rows of lace trinuned the pale gray dress with a 'Pleated skirt Betty Keith Stiverson of Chevy
Wri,te or call for booklets
'
chapel-train length full skirt. which · and she wore a corsage of rust and
s how ing me moria ls in full
color with si zes and prices.
was gathered at the waist. · The gold silk carnations. The groom's
bodice had a high neckline of lace mother chose a long green gown and 1 1
,
and a ruffled lace front. The long she wore a corsage of silk rust roses.
; POMEROY - Chrisbnas project Week.
leg-of-mutton sleeves were tapered
The reception following the wed• work was started at the Monday
The jwtiors worked on Christmas · and the inner sleeves had lace ding ceremony was held in the
: night meeting of the Junior stockings for the Chillicothe bir- flowers appliqued with an overlay of cafeteria of the North Elementary
! American Legion Auxiliary, Drew thday party, Dec. 18, and on organza. TheJulletcapheadpieceof School, Kaiser Avenue, Raven~ Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, held at
crossword puzzle books to be used at matching lace was accented with ·swood. Decorations for.the reception
seed pearls from which extended followed the fall theme and included
Offers
Pomeroy, Oh.
the home of ·Mrs. Harry Davis, &lt;:;hrisbnas.
! jwtior advisor.
.
Mrs. Davis was assisted by Anna layers of lace-edged illusion.
the four-tiered wedding cake topped
Leo L. vaughan, Mgr.
~ ' Robin Campbell presided at the Wiles. pjzzaandpunchWe!1lserved.
The all-silk bridal bouquet was by the traditional miniature bride
Ph. 992-2588
~ meeting with Megan Clark .being Next meeting will be on Dec. 3.
comj)oaed of rust and gold colored and groom. The cake was surrounVinton, Oh ,
flowers fashioned in a flowing ded by silk flowers in rust and gold
James 0. Bush, Mgr .
: welcomed as a new member. A box

�---·-·--

.,.

-- --

..••
u

..•

84-TheSunday'l'iJnes.&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, Nov. 23,1980

Meigs ACS discusses quitting cigarettes

Katie's

Korner
By Katie Crow
Tlm.&amp;nlinel writer
Would you like to do something
real nice? Sure you would.
Volunteers are needed to assist in
a swimming progrl!lll for toe mentally retarded.
The Thursday
swimmingfrom
program
is held
each
10 a.m.
to 2
p.m. Volunteers Will assist one person in the pool at a time. Those of
you who are interested are asked to
contact Carol Layh at~ . ·

A-reminder that the Phoenix Choir
of Baltimore, Md., wilt be featored
at the Racine First Baptist Church,
Racine, this evening at 7:30p.m.
Understand the large group is out·
standing.

irritability, agg~ession and anxiety. failure of furtber attempta to give uP
They cite the works of others which stnoklng. . ·
·
·
add changes in metabolism, weight,
Among tho8e who quit "cold
brain wave characteristics and ex- · turkey", on the other hand, the
cretion of hormone-like substances
find an eaalng ol withtotheUst.
drawalsyptomsdurlngthefirstfe_w
The .most important withdrawal days which makes It easier to hold
problem, Identified by about 90 pen- out unW the withdrawal pains bave
cent of the ex-smokers in the Shiff- run their course.
man-Jarvik study said Mlchael, . is
The scientists suggest !bat
" a severe craving for tobacco" probably continued smoking ol parwhich manifests itaelf at various tially abstinent smokers maintains
times of day but particularly arowxl their withdrawal symptoms. "Thus,
7 p.m. The craving lasts for ap- craving leads to smoking, to
proldmately two weeks, and is so craving, In a cycle of.dependllllce,"
powerful that it not only induces says Michael.
relapse but ·virtually assures the
It was concluded by Shiffman aJKI

researches

....

J81"Cik study tbat gndual with- '
drawal, while proven effective In
breaking other drvg bablta, 8ppeln.!
to be Jess SUitable for brealduc.
addiction to clprettaL
;:
"What this bypotbella sugelltl,'
Michael po1nta out, "ia tbat a"'
smoker who cuts down on tbis .
cigarette lllllOidllg pnclpttalal a_:
chronic state of wltbdrawal ... ud.:
thatcontinued~atarw.red;

level results In prolonptlon of the .
syndrome's duration."
The American Cancer Society:·

says that switching to !Ow-tllr, low-:·
nicotine cigarettes for awblle alaoeasels the strainll ol quitting.

uwy search for Wll)'B w rat!onaUu them ~way .
Too bad. but this pr&lt;&gt;cfduntwon't - . . .
' PISCI:S (J'eb. ZI-M8rt!ll ZOI Thi.nga which ap_pear to be good buys or bargains today rnlltbt not

ASTR0
.
U
. 1.1
CRAP

"•

r----==----------------------------------------------------'---

be sogrealonceyouscruUnir.ethemclosely. Ose

~

your maonlfytnnlua.
AlliES IMarc• Zl-Aprll

·

·

and yournwte don't dia'JJ.SS isllues today where

·

T111opln whlchyouplacedcooalderablestock
In lhe put may not be Ill that Important to you .
tlia ccmtnc year. , _ changing values are to
y.r bonelll and will give you ...., .,...,. of

e

za...oe.:. tU

tnt that you

your views are strongly in opposJUon. Neither 1s

Nn1!!1Dber24,lllt

mind.
SAGmAR.IUS (Nov.

It) It'•

llkelytocoocedeorcornpromlH.
· TAURUS (Apriiii-May Zl) Coworllera could

Pall won' t

y.r pot\ng your oooe Into their
atn today any,_ than you wooid 11
•. . , - Jnlo youn. Eacb ohould keep hU or
bet; dlltaKo. Find our mroe of what lies ahead
lflr ,.. In lhe year lollow\ng your birthday by

prove a triflo clilficult today, eooecillly If they
think you ar&lt; puotna on work which you should

be handllno!.
GEMINI IMay 'Z I.J- Ill Subdue urges 1,0
f!amble or !~~)end beyond )'()W' means today. In
matters where you feel you ""' lucky, un-

lortWiatoly,the.....,...C&lt;lllldbe true,
CANCER iJ... U -Jaly Ill Timing Is . ••·
trernely ~ today on the manaaement or
d&lt;llcate~ituatlona. H you try to lon:e things, you
may jam the machinery.

- f o r y&lt;lW"""''Y of Aoln&gt;Groph. MaU$1 !0&lt;

LEO (J111y Z:S.Aq. ft) Someone with whom

eaehtoAaroGnph,Bq:l:41t, RadioCityStation,

BHCC Annow\Cel ita honor Mlll for lhe first
nine wefta:
.
Southweat.em Hi&amp;h School - Kel.!!ty White.
lAxi Carpenter, x- Shirley Blackburn, x • Lilla
Green, :1 • UN Miller, Cindy Spires, Connie
Perry, Htn,- Bartels., Steve Forgey, Slim Hale ,
Jeff McGinnil. Marty Shefrleld, s · Brenda Zinn ,
x · Troy Roach, Dayid Johnson, Tcny [)()tson, x •
Ronald Trout, :1 - Ray Stephena, Ronald Darnell,
x • Donna Shato, Roger. Cren, Roy DwnmJU,
Tim Miller, Jell Seagraves. Judy Dam, Scoll
Donley, O.vid FerreU and Doug Bklomer.
North Galli High School - .Palrici.a Cains, 1: •
Vicki CampboU, Anlia Canaday, I· Terry Dot·
. son, Kartl\ Hurt, x • Becky Jones, Linda
,Reynolds, Teresa Roach, Diana Sheridan, Patty
Denny, x ·Glenna MWer, J: - Lorrie Pope, Lesa
White, Anna Glbom, z • O!eryi .Wbite, Ellzobetll
Nibert, Earneatine Blackburn, Lori Miller, :1 •
Robin. St:J.nson, Mlluretm Young, Jeff Warner,
Mark Wllfong, Jeff Mullin!!, I - Yvonne Jacobs,

you haw doa1lnjp who Is an e&gt;pert at
manipulating Ollie,. may try to J)llllthe etrtngs
on Yoo today. Don't be hU puppet.
VIIIGO CAq. ~ ZZ) Should your bank
balance be a bit out cf whack In this period
perhapo It's time to revise your budget. L.ook
ciQSely. You'Useewherethefatneedslrinuning.
LIBIU. (Sept. ZS.O.t. 131 Objectives must~

N. Y. IIIOII.IIuure t01poclly blrtlJCiato
CAI'IUCOIIN (Doe. IWu. It) .Sometimes
you'rt ...,. lldllltll at making de&lt;hl"" under
~.but this may not be one otu- days.
1lefore voldnl Jlldclmon... lmow w)ltreol you
- -·
AQVARIU.S (Jut. »Feb. 111 Rather than
.taekleyourdutlound.._wbilluestoday,you

Honor rolls announced

clearly defined today, or else you might make
whictl could be COW\terproductive.
Guard a~~:ainst impulsiveness.

some moves

SCORPIO (Oct. !4-Nov. 22) ScmeUmes it's
best not to make strontc statements about thing.!!
that are on your r'nind. This il'l one those days

or

w~re it's wiaerto count to 10 before speaking,

Jwmes Ellkltt, Gre~ Hurd , Kenneth Gray, Don

Smith, Ruth Sowardll and x- Rubert Galdwell.
Kyger Creek High School - x- Fred Crouse, 1 ·
Debbie Rouah, x - Brenda Taylur, Laura Pairiler .
John Fellur'e, x · Kelll Lemley, Linda Wheeler
Mark Price , Todd Rothgeb , Terry lhe.s, Terrf
Dillard.l.buis Bri.Jter, ChriM Fetty, Hell!fl Wilson
and Mike Walla ce.
Gallla Aca~my High School - Mal")' Gilbert

J11nette Martyn, x • Paula Pullins, 1 - Lorett~
Powell, Brenda Hood, Kathy HWlt, Tande Pope,
Wayne Schoonover, 1 - James Fountain x •
Kevln Pai'IOill, 1 • Brian Harold, x • David
Whaley, Cannel Lons, Danny Wr:lgtlt, Tom
Saunders, Scott Mahan, 1 · Preston Jordan,
Johnny Dil:on, MarcShockley, x- Jim Roberts, x
· Saru:ti Roach, Scott Canaday, :1- Kevin Arthur
Noah Friend, Brent West, Randy'I'hivener, JoeY ·
Myers, Mike Craft, Judy Heck, Sue Price, Tammy Sbggs, Karen Jacka&lt;ln, Cindy ~
Teresa BW'1lett, Greg Gallagher, JaJIEIII King
Jody Plymale, Dwayne Beard, Mike Pasquale X
• Mark Ree.!l, Ronald Tawney, Justin OOyie
Keith Miller, WaJter Pugh, 1 • Dennla Stover'
Eugene Adkins, Rob Ninert, Mart Haner, Mit~
Ellis, Charles Sanders, · Manica Angelo, Usa
Kin~, :1- Ladawna Carter, J: ·Teresa Taylor, :1 •
Jaruth Thomas, Mike Dennilon, Allen "Wau8h
Michael Maynard, Kenneth King, 1. - RageD ·
Brumfield, Rodney Pack, Jack Northup, Carolyn
McCombs! Tim Stanley and James Black.
x;-Denotes aliA's.

ECW meets recently
GALUPQUS - Episcopal Chur- briefly of the early days of the local
(ECW) met in St. Peter's chnrch, pointed hlstorlca\ly to the
.Parish HAll for its•regular monthly "Laying On of Hands" a.s a symbolic
meeting 011 Nov. 17. Hostesses for chain from the present time, bact to
the 12 noon luncheon meeting were the early prophets of Chriltianlty.
Beth Cherrington, Dot MacKenzie Noted also was the democratic
and Henny Evans. Twenty·two nature of the national and local churmembers were present, and two new ch structure, and he dlscusaed the
members, Nancy Haus and Gerry different groups in the church body
Bowman were welcomed. ECW of St. Peter's.
Chaplain, Beth Cherrington, offered · ·President Bobbie Holzer presided
an appropriate Thanksgiving over the business meeting; minutes
prayer. Invited speaker for the oc- of the previous meeting were read
casion was Father AI MacKenzie, by secretary, Nancy Evans, and
who was presented with a gift book, particular plans were made for the
as this date was his birthday. The coming Dec. 6 bake sale where in adtopic for his talk was the "Overall . dition to the offered baked goods, hot
Picture of St. Peter's." He spoke vegetable soup, chill, coffee and
children's beverages will be served,
beginning at 11 a.m., for the convenience of Santa's parade watchers.
Henny Evans reported that the
new order of the reprint of the 1881 ·
Hardesty's History of Gallia County
is presently available at the sale
price of $8.50. She may be reached at
446-1775 for orders.
chwom~n

Pennufare

James C. Fugate, 19 East Locust
Street, Pomeroy, was entertained
With a surprise birthday party Sunday, Nov. 16, by a host of friends and
relatives.
Jim, a retired employe of the
Colwnbus and Southern Electric
Company after 25 years of service,
makes his home at the Mary Young
Nursing Home in Pomeroy.
Friends are always welcome to
visit him at the home or remember
him with a card.
We send belated best wishes.
Speaking of birthdays, Norma
Goodwin is celebrating her day
today and Larry SpeQcer, clerk of
courts, celebrated his birthday last ·
week.
Congratulations to both.

"Two studies by two ·scientists,
Shifbnan and Jarvik, of California
indicate that quitting cigarettes
"cold turkey" is better than trying
to cut down on them a tittle at a
time," says S. Mlchael, public inforination chainnan of the Meigs
County American Cancer Society.
The scientists say that tobacco
withdrawal effects are a "major
barrier" to smokers trying to give
up cigarettes because they "encourage relapse."
·
Michael pointed out that their
measurements show that Withdrawal symptoms include inability
to concentrate, along With increased

IH-11le Sunday Tlmee-&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1~

SU~E .. MARKETS

Rehearsals underway
for annual Messiah

. Turkey Selected for extm
while meal and deep -basted

jorextmjuletness.

Argo

Lite
Fluff

Basted Young

Peas (I Carrots
or Mi1ed Vegetables

Tur•e,s
n•. 67~

Biseuits

18 to 24·1b.

HOMESTYLE
or BUnERMILK

, Avg.

AGAR
Full~

Cooked

Canned Bam • • • •

8Y2·0Z.

Can

SJ 39

111010fARE "Deluxe" liEF • U.S.D.A. CHOICE

' ; CENTERCUT

PESCHKE
FULLY COOKED - SMOKED

lb.$ ~ 4lt 79
.
. •.~-

.

.

.:r !.~~!·1•.~1 •°"!!..:.,-:l,:.. •

e e •

CUBE STEAK. ·.....1•.

2.59

69
IIUI1 LUIIMOUIID lEU
$ .
GIOUIID .OIUCI ~ 1•. 1.89

CHUCIROAST ...•

.;ll:~~TCUT •

8-oz.
Tube'

SHOULDERROAST. J.~2.29 CHUCKROAST .... 1.~2.29
$

nNDII·CIIOitE

RIO GRANDE - Rehearsals' for
Handel's "Messiah" were still being
held at 3 p.m. at the Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis. The
event will be co-directed by Mrs.
Ann Fischer, vocal music teacher,
Gallia Academy High School, and
Merlyn Ross, Director of Music, Rio
Grande College. The performance
will be December 14 at 2:30 p.m. on
the Rio Grande campus.
The choruses being performed are
as follows: And The Glory Of The
Lord, And He Shall Purify, 0 Thou
That Tellest Good Tidings To Zion,
For Unto Us a Child Is Born,
Pastoral Symphony, Glory To God,
Behold the Lamb Of God, Surely He
Hath Borne Our Griefs, Lift Up Your
Heads, and The Hallelujah Chorus.

Annual Stellfz Fuller

IOIIIUSS

STEW BEEF ••.•••• 1
•.5 2.49

Settlement Thanksgiving
dinner set Nov. 27

Seven Seas
Dressin1s

Briannaand
.Brandee Gtimore

Two ladies
turn one year

HERBS &amp; SPICES, ONION &amp; CHIVE
or VIVA ITALIAN

8·0%.
Bottle

MRS PAUL'S-FROZEN

VAN DE KAMP • FROZEN

69"

FISH, FILLETS .•. 12·••· ,.,.'1.79
FISH FILLETS 1·•·•·••· ,.,:s3.49
FAMILY KITCHIN.fROZIN
ARMOUR

•

* STAR VIII-liST PORK

"•·

-

SUGARDALI
* STAR
F!JLL Y COOKED SMOKED
Genuine XuiiJassJ .Semi-Boneless Bam
ROPI
$., . ,
u~~• . SJ ~, ·
._.sm£ IIJ • . ,• . ,
\. ....
·~
~

Pork Chops

s-. 69

:~~~~· . . . . . . . .
•211.toio

....

9

ARMOUR* STAR
1
SLICED LUNCH MEATS ~;:· 51.69

DINNER BELL
ARMOUR * STAR
PLAIN
OR
GARLIC
$
BEEF HOT DOGS • u .... ~'~~•· 5 1.49
RING BOLOGNA .. 1~.
HOT DOGS ••••• 1·•· ...,. s1.79 REGULAR or THICK
BEEF HQT DOGS •• u . ,.,, s1.89 SLICE~ BACON 1·111.

7 · YARIETIIS

DINNER FRANKS. }·.~!:"· s2.89
SLICED BACON •• 1-•. ~'~~•· 5 1.99
12-o• .....,.

f.::- I HOT DOGS
. .. . II·••· $119

·

2. 19
,.1,1.89
RliG LIVER .. - . . 1~.5 1.89

JUMBO BEEF HOT DOGS~.~·- s1.89

SMOKED HAM SLICES •..• 5 2.69

BUnEIFIELD-FLAVORED

Croutons ... •

recent scout meeting

(

C

43 Karo Syrup
mu.
c
Gravies . . . . . u-oz..... 55
$
Dish Detergent.. . :;:~· 1=

ofdiscussion at

iJ

SMOKED SAUSAGE ••• lit.
U.S.D.A. _,KiiU

SJ19

a....... M011

liEF PAm MIX ... ~~-

IAMILTPAI

,CHICKEN PAm ...

-

'\Turie~ wHitE $~ 69
~

-

69C

lit .

$2·99
OYSTERS •••• 12-oz. c.n
SELECT

GENERICS

LANDO LAKES

....... u. ,..,

STIWING
$289
$)99 OYSTERS .•• _12·••· c.n
-

-

lnaperial
Mllr8arfne
l·lb. Qtn. Pkg.

69t

PENNYFARE OFFERS YOU THE ALTERNATIVE
WAY TO SAVE. NO FANCY PACKAGING, NO
FANCY LABELS, JUST HONEST TO GOODNESS
SAVINGS OVER TOP QUALITY COMPARISON
BRANDS. AT PENNYFARE WE WANT YOU TO
SAVE ~o. •EY EVERYTIME YOU SHOP.

MIXED TUIIIY IOAST ~~ 53.19

·DINNER BELL

51 • 79
..... IIUIAD
51 89
IUF WIENERS ••• ,.•. ,... •
5 1 89
.....
SLICED WNCH MEA1St·•·"'· •
III.•IIUIAII

.WIENEIS ••••.•• t ·•· ,q.

Brouehton
lee Cream
HaHGal$
Ctn.

Fire fighting topic

POMEROY - Melvin VanMeter
and Gary Snouffer of the Pomeroy
Fire Department outlined aspects ci
fire fighting equipment and their experiences with local fir.es at a
meeting of Pomeroy Boy Scout
Troop 249 Wednesday at the
Pomeroy junior high bUilding.
Snouffer .demonstrated the gear
tllJit a fireman wesrs and pennitted
troop members to try on the various
pieces of clothing.
Preparation was made for. the
adults and leadership patrol to at·
tend a leadership training camp this
weekend at Camp Kiashuta.
Seventeen members of the troop
attended the session plus adults, ·
. Ray Lauderrnilt, scoutmaster; Bob
Anns, Fruk Casto and Danny Will;
WIBiBtant scoutmasters, Lynn Arms .
and Marie Snyder, committee members.
Boys between the ag~s of il and 18
are invited to attend the meetings.
The troop meets at 7 p.m. each Wednesday at the junior high building.

up
· 1-1~99c
PORK SAUSAGE ... "•·

ARMOUR

VARIETY

POMEROY - Brianna and Brenda Gilmore, twin daughters of Mike
and Deborah Gilmore, celebrated
their first birthday recently with a
cookout held at the home of their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
D. Black.
A Raggedy Ann cake was made
and presented to them by their
father. A great·aunt, Miss Louise
Gilmore, also presented them with a
cake inscribed "Happy Birthday
Twins." Gifts were. given to the
children. Attending were Mrs. Nora
Gilmore, a great-grandmother; Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Mr. and
Mrs. Warren D. Black, grandparents, Miss Gilmore, ·Mrs. Marjorie Kapple, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Black, Tammy, ChMs, Mandi,
Laurie and ·Angie, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Black, Missy and Keri, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Black, and Shelley,
Bonnie Dillon, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Black and Jason, Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Faulk, Mrs. Sandy McDaniel, Jackie
Fredrick, and Kenny Sue Thomas. .

ARMOUR* lUI

FISH KABOBS 1o.... "'· 1• 79
FISH STICKS .• 1..... ,.,. 5 1.89
FISH FILLETS •• 14·"· ,.,,5 1.89

$1 49

SUPPERS l·VAI. II·••· ,.,.

$.

SUPIIIMILIOifT IIA m1

DINNII'•ll
KIELBASA or

HEINZ-HOME

Shasta
Bevera

SOL0-5-VAIIniES

a-oz. ..... .

4 VAR

PALMOLIVE.UQUID

RED LABEL

·

16·oz.J5c

• • • • Bot.

·

3

:-a

U

•CHICIIN • 25-ct. Jar

Herb Ox Boulrlon Cubes

10-o:r:. J.-

MAliA • S1UFRD

Pastry-DeSSerf

5 VARiniES

42c
Sandwich Bags .•••
Po:;s:U~.~~o:· 68c
GLAD • ao~ct. Box

5.75·•·

Manz. Ohes ..

Jllr

SUGAR n' SPICE ,,

Ham Glaze .. 9.5-oz. Jar

UGU. 3-YAR!El'ES

SpagheHi Sauce ..

sse Ready-to-Spread
68C

2-Liter
Bot.

FOOD Gin

sse

51 a

BmY CROCIER•ALL VAR. 16.5-ol.$125
FrostingCan
~
THOIOFARE • 2-VARimES

Peanut Buffer ta.oz. J•
lfEISHH . .

THIS at•ISTMASUT
SA VI Y.OU TIMI AND MONIY
'GIVIA

· Qt.
Jar

98c

lot.

It

Js

held

free

at

noon,

Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, Nov.
'J:l, in the Fuller Gymnasiwn, rear of
126 Washington Avenue, Huntington,
W.Va.
Bob Whisnian is president of the
Jaycees and together with Mrs.
Stella Fuller, Settlement director,
extend an invitation to anyone not
expecting a good Thanksgiving
Feast to come to the Settlement at
11:30 a.m. Thanksgiving Day for the
free dinner.
·
A public Praise and Thanksgiving
service will be conducted at 11:30
a.m. in the Settlement Chapel, With
the Rev. Charles Mullins, of Ranger,
W. Va. delivering a short mCSS!Ige
from Holy Scripture and long experience in the ministry.
A Sing-A-Long of seasonal ·
Thanksgiving Songs will be conducted by the Campfire and
Bluebird Chorus of the Settlement.
Members of the Jaycees and the
Settlement Boy Scouts and campfire
Girls 1Vili serve the traditional
torkey and all the extras.
The Settlement is a member- ,
agency of Cabell-Wayne United Way
and receives partial support from
the public fund drive now . in
progress.
To those interested In seeing
where the contribution dollar goes,
Fuller-Wise, observe this annual ac. tivity, which is one of the Settlement's year 'round services- all
free to the needy.

Lamaze classes offered

SEALTEST

Cottage
Cheese
_2.4-oz.

SMALL CURD •
- ' 24-ox. $1 !~~~

Chocolate Syrup

65

HUNTINGTON - The Stella
Fuller Settlement's annual Free
Thanksgiving Dinner for around 400
underprivileged children and
elderly, will be sponsored by the
Huntington Jaycees Club again this
year.

CTN.

ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes, ;
sponsored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Wednesday,
Dec. 3. This class is for couples
whose expected date of delivery is •
prior to Feb. 9, 1!1111.
Class participants will learn ~
breathing and relaxation techniques ~
for first stage labor, effective ex- '
pulsion technique for second stqe. !
labor, physical and emotional aspee. '
ts of the birth process, and bod,yconditioning exerciaes to protnOte •
comfort during pregnancy and post. ~

partwn.

The-',:W for the series ia t!$. To

pre-~ for this aeries, or 11o '
requeat a schedule of future c:IM u,
contact Pamela Collier, mWondol!lt •

Drive, Athens, OH 45701, or
5049. .

call-

80NGFESTSVNDAY

I

A1IOilllfest wW be blld &amp;tnda711&amp; f •.
p.m. at the S)JIICQie Cl!aNb Ill . . .
Nuarene, Brldleman SL, Sya , g ...
with the Amhrmdon ~ (J
Rutland, to provide tiM

•

~TbeRev.J8illll
putor, invites the public.

,
(

•
(

*

�&amp;a-The Stmday Times-Sentinel, Swtday, Nov. 23, 19110
homldde joke over a COl'pl!l! and who through at the temple wiUt a acarred
lives wiUt hill dear and mute wife, tuft of white - which ls just how It
.
Teddy, wiUt whom his com- gotthere.
munication ls deeper than words; . McBain tells his stories with a .-nthere's Detective Meyer Meyer, . dpaper-gentle style that baa becQme
wlxJee cross ,to bear is hill name, a hill trademark - the stories .that
lire-curse he shoUlders with the coUld happen, that )'OU wish
aame grim llllnor JM~ does his wouldn't happen, and thai are hapb&amp;idlng pate, a man wlxJee done pening in clUes all over the U.S. '
pollee work all his lire and who right now- and of the men who deal
shrugs when ~ suggests with them every day.
Ed McBain (one .of several
doing anything elle, even though at
paeudon)'lllll,
8IJI(JIIg willch Ia Evan
times he'll wllh he swept Doors for a
ll,vlng; there's Detective Cotton HWlter, another name feCOilJibied .
Hawes, a lu.sty man whole eltplolts for its popular serious fiction) writes
both in bed (IIOID8times described in mysteries - a tenn I use loosely
McBain's books, bUt not with TOO because hill novels escape the " nowIJIUCh detail) and on the force defy that"you-know-all-the-facts, canhis fire and brlmatone Puritan name you-guess.w!Jo..dld-lt? " syndrmne. ,
...., and have earned him a reputation Moreover, Ed McBain wrl~ GOOD
mysteries. ·
to go wiUt his fiery red hair, shot

Engagemenu·---------------- BOOKS
B~SALLYANNE'HOLTZ '

LIFESTYLE WRITER
CALYPSO, by Ed McBain - the
master of the·poUce story-mystery.
McBain has done it again wiUt hill
latest effort, yet another book about
the 87th Precinct NYPO: The novel,
moving swiftly, is identical in format to all his other 87th Precinct
mystery series - jut u readable,
just as bloody, and just as realistic.
The realism ls the novel's "grab"
- and its horror. The stories are fictional, if all too possible, wiUt the
police procedure based on
established NYPD practices - not
on an author 's too-active
Imagination. The main characters,
of whom there are 8everal, the same

"'ItIll

Teresa Meadows
and Jamie Coon

. Cheryl j ohnson
and ]en-y Holley

liJDonna Plants

in every
mystery,
are
more
real87Ut
thanPrecinct
some people
I know.
There's Detective Steve Carella a gentle man who likes hill work, but
not the messy details, who grimaces
every time a co-worker cracks a bad

rr=====================;
a tof=h of CONNIE

conn1e·

johnson-Holley

Meadows-Coon
PORTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
James Meadows are annoWlcing the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Teresa
Dawn, to Jamie Coon, son of Linda
Coon, Wellston.
The bride-elect will graduate in
1981 from the Holzer School of Nursing. Her fiance is employed by Van
Bibber's of Wellston.
The "blue jean" wedding will be
an event of Dec. 6 at 1:30 p.m. at the
Bald Knob Freedom Gospel Mission.
The Rev. Woody Harper will perform the ceremony. The gracious
CUBtom of open church will be oi).
served.
A reception at the Portland
Elementary School auditorium will
follow the wedding.

POMEROY - The open church
weddfug of Cheryl L. Johnson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. f:iotrley K
Johnson, Pomeroy, and Jerry G.
Holley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
Holley, Minersville, will take place
at 7:30 p.m. on Dec. 12, at the Zion
Church of Christ, Harrisonville
Road.

Mr. Bob Purtel will perform the
ceremony. Robin Harder will be the
maid of honor for the bride-elect and
the bridesmaids will be Tammy
Jolmson, Donna Little, and Rhonda
Haning.

Best man will be Leslie Frank,
with ushers, Mitchell Holley III,
Mike Shields, and Terry Johnson.

HOLIDAY POOLS

SWIMMING POOLS

Black Urethane Uppers
Spice Tan Urethane Uppers
Wine Urethane Uppers

WHOLESALE - RETAIL
lnground and above
ground pool kits of any
type. ·
100% PORTABLE
FIBER GLASS
SPA · HOTTUB

meant for each other .. ·.
in a K &amp;Khome meant
for them.

.Reg. $27.00

•Seats 4 Adults Comfortably.

•Fits through almost any door.

·uset)lem.

•68 Air vents.

,---u-:1l---;;-- ----~

·~}
·!

Just Plug It ln.

Buy all your needs from

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene L. Plants of Bidwell announce the engagement and upcoming wedding of their daughter,
LaDonna, to Franklin Durham, son
of_Mr. and Mrs. Edsel H. Durham,
Vmton.
The wedding will take place at the
Plants' residence on Nov. 26 at 2
p.m., with Rev. Jerry Neal performing the ceremony.

local warehouse and save.

•

VISA'

•

•

''We've got a Mobile Home for you."

SUNDAY HOURS

1:00 TO 6:00
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Cindy Brockmeier
and john Clark

VISA'

What's Your Choice?

Brockmeier-Clark
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Williwn Brockmeier of Marietta Rt.
7 announce the engagement of their
daughter, . Cindy Kaye, to John
Eugene Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Clark, Middleport, Route 1.
The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate
of Marietta Senior High School and
is a student at Marietta Memorial
Hospital, School of . Radiologic
Technology. The prospective
bridegroom attended Meigs High
School and is employed by the
Talbott Drilling Co. of Pomeroy.
The wedding will be at 2:30 p.m.
on Dec. 'ZT at the Gilman United
Methodist Church. There will be a
reception lnunediately following the
ceremony in the educational
building of the church.

ONE DAY ···
NEW
SHIPMENT

JUST
IN.

Honor rot/announced
'l1le filii nine - k honor roll for the Eastern
JWI!or and Senior IIJih School baa boon .,.
~-

~a grade &lt;i

Beth-·

Beover, Carolyn Bowen, Sheryl Blllh, AlUoJI
Cauthorn, Tanuny Cozart, Scqtt DWon, Roger
Goul, Renee Riebel, Lena Sarn,oon, c.s.Je
Sl!o&lt;u, Jan Smith, R-y Wood.
TweUih 1rade - Carla &lt;lli-r, April

JEAN'
S
.
'2600

2~

YEARS

··

Annual Rate

Annual Yield

THRU WJ:D,, NOV •. 26 _ _,.

5 POCKET WESTERN STYLE

Get Yours Today..This WiH Probab~
be our Last Shipment Before

Christmas.

3~

YEARS

.

CENTER CUT RIB . . .

$} 69

.

Pork·Chops ........ ~! ..
CENTER CUT LOIN ·

$·

USDA CHOICE . .

$} 99

Pork Chops•....... ~; .. I

~

••

For those investors who preter a .
longer term this certificate earns
the same rate and Is Issued undttr
the same regulations as the 2112
Year certificate. 1nterest is com·
pounded dally and paid monthly
quarterly; seml·annually, or an~
nuallv.

Infont Manley

.11.75%

Baby arrives

Annual Rate
Annual Yield
THRU WED., NOV. 26 .

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Steven Manley are amiOuncina
Ute birth of a lion, carl Steven
Manley, Jr., bum Nov. 1 at Ute
Holler Medical center. Tbe Infant,
lint for the couple, weighed 11eve11
pounda, 14 ounces, and me8llll'l1d 20
Jnc:la lllft8.
I
Palenlll ............. ere Ute
HeY. IIIII Mn. Odell Mallley, MlddltpGrt, IIIII till maternal p-andpma~~ ..t111Re9. aodMn. David

I

..'
••

---6)~~ir&amp;mk---·
F-loullo•lo oerwo

'·'

PRICES EFFECTIVE ntROUGH SATURDAY NOVEMBER 29, 1980

79

Round Steaks....l!·...

SWIFT'S BUTTERBALl

.

Turkeys ...............~·.
SWIFT'S BUTTERBALL
.
Hen Turkeys........~·
GRADE A FLAVORITE .
·
k
·
7
Hen T.ur eys ....... ~;
16-22 LBS.

8-14 LBS.

.

.

8-14 LBS.

.
~L&amp; 4
0n1ons .............. ~!~ ..

YELLOW

.

.TROPICANA

•
J

Orange

EACH DEPOSITOR INSURED UP TO $100,000 BV\THE FDIC AN AGENCY OF
THEFEDERALGOVERNMENT.
'

. lllolllber:FDit

CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY

·

•

Interest must remain on deposit • full yur to urn annual ylelcl.. lfhere 11 'I
substa.ntlal penalty for premature withdrawal of Certificate funds. Minimum
Depos1t ss,ooo for Monthly Interest.
.

MADE OF RUGGED 14 OUNCE
INDIGO DYED DENIM.

298 SECOND Sl.
POMEROY, 0.

:

Minimum Deposit $500

11.75% 12.65%

LEE FITS AMERICA .

Mon.-¥. 8 am-10 pm
· Sunday 10 am-10 pm

lh GAL

UICe••.c!~~~.

THRU WED., NOV. 26 _ _..,

The rate shown below for this
Certificate is applicable this
period and is related to the
aver""e 2'12 year yield of
treasury securities. Interest is
compounded daily and is paid
monthly, quarterly, semi·
annually, or annually.

COTTON DENIM

·-~u

Store Hours:

14.167%

Annual Yield

Minimum Deposit $500

Paner, Kathy Poolor, Broncio llucker, TUlUJIY
St.rcher.
.I

5.46%

___.

100% PRE-WASHED

u..

Minimum Deposit $10,000
This Money Market Certificate
rate is effe&lt;:tive every Thursday.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding
of
interest
Automatically renewable ·at
maturity af the prevailing rate
The actual return to investors ori
Treasurv.'s.Bills is higher.

_______ ___
Annual Rate

SIZES 3 TO 13

.

"8" or above In all their
aubjectl w be named to the ron wert:
&amp;venth gade - Dawna Grue.er, John Rice,
Me- Batter, Royce s•n. Joy Brannon,
JirnmJ' Caldwell, .
llendenon, Alesbla
. Hollinger, Br1d Holsinl:er, Betty Jo Hunt, Roo
Jacobo, An1ela Pooler, Potricla Sanu, Kimberly
Scllul, T1&gt;m Smith, Terri Stout, Arl8lo v...,,
Teni Storcber.
'
EJshtb
grade Tammy
Cala111y, Jay Carpenter, Tracl Schul, Ansi•
Spencer, Tera~ Barringer, Brenda Berta:,
Anaola Colllna,l'llul Collinl, DollllieCraft,lteYtn
Fid, Joffreyllaft, Lila Hawt, D. J. Randolph,
Anita Reed, Brian Reed, Jimmy Schaeiel, Kevin
Venoy Jimmy Weber.
·
Ninth grade -Beretta IJeetor, Aaron Parker,
IW&gt;dy Bahr, WI}' Cowdery. Ann Diddle, Paula
Fnder, Victor Gillilan, Allall JIICb, Bobby
Jom.oo, Robert Lal&lt;, Virlll Miller, 11m
- . Pam Rltbel, Lori - · Mellau
Scarbrovch, Fnnklln Smith, Krla wu.m.
Tenth jp'ade - Nathon Bootriaht, Jackie BtannonLEIJabeth Collinl, Dove Goul, Tina Spencer,
Ed weny Mellua lll&lt;mu.
.EievOilth grade - Soroh Goebel, Terry
SnOWden, KDa YCJUnM, John Be.IIVet, Tiu

5.25%

JUNIOR SIZE
GENUINE LEE RIDER
STRAIGHT LEG

...

SIX MONTHS

Earnie's checking-savings plan
earns you Slf..% interest every
day on your total savings account
balance. Write checks as . you
need to..Savings account interest
- checktng account convenience
Ask for "Earnie!"
·

~ j cMct.r

• GALUPOUS - Exhibit for the
month of November·_ 40 Sepia Prints l)y Robert DeMachy 1&amp;1936. The
' Wldisputed leader of the pictorialist
'movement in France at the turn of
the century.
• · Gallery Hours - Tuesday an"
Thursday, 10 a.m.-3 p.m.; Saturday
8nd Sunday, I p.m.-5 p.ni.
November 25, 8 p.m. ..: FAC
Trustees Meeting, Rlverby .
November 211, 7:30 p.m. - F AC
Deck the Halls Party. Members,
come ready to get Rlverby
decorated for the holidays. Bring
refreslunents to share afterwards.
Rlverby.
December Exhibit - Original
Christmas Cards and a Japanese
Paper Making Exhibit.
December&amp;, 1:30-4:30 p.m.- Two
wo~, each I~ hours long. To
be repeated at 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m.
10 that people may attend both. ( 1)
Christmas Gift Wrapping by Lady
Bessman from the Apple Tree
Gallery In Jackson. (2) Christmas
Card ~g by Corinne LW!d.
Rlverby.
December 7, 4 p.m.~ p.m. Family Christmas Party for F AC
members and their lnunediate
families, Rlverby. Chaired by Pat
Martin. Note change in time from
original annoW!cement. Special entertainment planned.
December 17, 6:30 p.m. - Vocal
recital by students of Ed Harkless,
Rlverliy.
December 21, I p.m. - Workshop
for the pre-high school piano students of Marion Ford. Parents and
friends invited, River by.

lll.J\1t'l ( ~\,ll&lt;jt'

868 CAMDEN RD.
HUNTINGTON, W.- VA.
429-4788

~

POMEROY Bookmobile
i!chedule for Monday, Nov. 24 Darwin, Dwtcan's Store, 2 : ~
p.m.; Pligeville, Church, 3:3G-4;
Hal'flsonville, Sohlo Station, 4:104:40; New Lima Road, 1 mlle S. of
Fort Meigs, 4:~:40 (short film at
6:15); Rutland, Bank One, 5:50-6:35
(short film at 6:15); Rutland, Depot
Stret, 6:40-7:15 (short.fllmat 7).
. Tuesday, Nov. 25- Long Bottom,
Post Office; 3:2:).4:10 p.m.; Reedsville, Reed's Store, 4:30-5:45 (short
film at 5); Tuppers Plains, Arbaugh
Housing, 6:15-7 (silwt film at 6:30);
, BawnAddiUon, 7:~.
Wednesday, Nov. 26- Torch, Post
Office, 3:45-4:15 p.m.; Hockingport,
• Community Bldg., 4:40-li:25 (short
film at 5); Coolville, School Lot,
5:45-6:25 (short . film at 6);
Rlggscrest Addition, 6:45-7:30 (short
fllmat7).
Thursday, Nov. 27 ~ Closed for
Thal!ksgiving.
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
stOp for free entertalrunent and information. The bookmobile has
paperbacks, 45 and lp records,
magazines, large-print books, and
how-to-do-it help for everything
:from car repair to dieting.
Please remember to return those
' forgotten books and records. No
,fines will be charged for overdues.
The bookmobile needs them hack so
that someone can have a chance to

•Stays hot 24 hr_s. for pennies.
•Has all features including
. therapy.
ALL ELECTRIC
110 v.

Plants-Durham

8-9--The SWlday Times-Sentinel,

rou lletler.

'

u-. .._. ...

Arllona. Great-

I!Pfl ...... Mr.llldMn.Imn
and Mr. and Mn. ftobelt
. . . bDtla al "-'!a". 1114; Mra.

•....-wn

J'riaell Dmdlao, ft-Henc!,llld Mr.
... ...... Clell ftllllbum. Oollllablll.

'·
T

/1

$} 69 .

LIBBY'S

DARI.ORESH •

Pumpkin.......~.a:.
KELLOGGS
' T.
Pop arts .. ~ .... :~2~ ..

2% MIlk .........G!~~~ ..•

PlAIN OR FROSTED

FLAVORITE

$} 09

.

~ Ice Cream ...•....~~ ...
I

COUPON

MAXWEiliiJUSE

KRAFT

COFFEE

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

3-LB.CAI

ALL ~RINDS

'699
.

LlmH 1 Per Customrr
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov•. 2t, 1tl0

7l5ol3/894
Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
, , 1980
Offer

OUPON

FlAVORITE

HYlAND CHUNK

SALT

DOG FOOD
25 LB.
• BAG.

$349

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

I
'

RegUlbfOr
lodi7"tl

26

oz.

15t

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Nov. 29,

.

�B-10-The Suhday 'I'imes-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

B-11-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

Cheshire PTO stages successful effort
L

CHESHIRE- On Saturday, Nov.
15, Cheshire-Kyger PTO Held a chili
and hot dog supper, sweet shoppe,
dance, games, ·and book fair at
Cheshire-Kyger Elementary School.
Music for the dance was furnished
by The Alcove. Selling tickets were
Brenda Johnson anrl.Je"" Pnwnrds.

Disc jookeys were Bill Ross, senior,
and Annette Sission, junior, at
Kyger Creek High School.
Gamesmen were Bob and Carolyn
Holland and Bob and Donna Waugh.
Prizes for games were furnished by
parents and friends of Cheshire-

TO MEET TUESDAY
The next meeting of the Meigs
Area Holiness Association has been
set for Tuesday evening at the
Chester Church of Nazarene at 7:30
p.m. The Rev. John Coffman will be
speaker. President, the Rev . J. W.
Broome, invites the public.

SPECIALSERVICESHELD
Residents of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center shared in a study in the
14th chapter of John, led by Rev.
William Newman, pastor of the First
Southern Baptist Church . of
Pomeroy on November 15. Plans are
that Rev. Newman and members of
the church will share with the Health
Care residents on a monthly or bl· ·
monthly schedule.
Special music was presented- by
Lisa and Jennifer Newman, and Mr.
and Mrs. Troy Zwilling.

TO MEET TUESDAY
RACrNE - The Racine' American
Legion Auxiliary will meet Tuesday
at 7:30p.m. at the hall.

Kyger ~tudents and local businesses. Penny Preston and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Kline. The fair was held to enThose helping in the kitchen were
courage
student Interest in read4Jg
Betty Moles and Shirley Jones,
and
1n
building
home libraries and to
cooks. Other workers were Marilyn
to
a
worthwhile project.
contribute
Reese,· Belva Shuler, Doria Fuller,
All
profits
from
the book fair are to
Karen Kidd, and Shirley Doss. Supbe
used
for
the
school
library.
plies for the kitchen were furnished
Gorden
Aleker
sold
tickets for the
by the PTO and Krogers, Barr's,
Johnson's, A . &amp; P, Foodland, shotgun. The PTO is selling chances
Heiner's Bakery, Gallipolis. Also, on a Remington 1100 Shotgun to be
Scott's Grocery, Cheshire, and given away at a drawing on Dec. 15
following the Christlilas Progl'afll·
Holsum Bakecy of Middleport.
Sweet shoppe workers were Mary Tickets may be purchased for a
Bradbury, Connie Aeiker, Carol donation of $1 from any PTO mem·
Aoush, Ruth Curfman ,nd Brenda ber.
Other workers for these special
Jenkins. Items for the sweet shoppe
were furnished by parents and R. C. · events were Betty Edwards, Janet
Bottlers of Middleport. Other local Thomas and Freda. Davis.. Budget
food businesses also made con- and Finance conunittee members
Carol Roush, Ruth Curfman, Belva ·
tributions.
Shuler
and Mary Bradbury Would
Nancy . Preston, school librarian,
like
to
thank
enryone for their supserved as book fair chairman. Her
port.
' .
corrunittee was Roberta Zdepski,

...

•

Now Everyone Can
Afford a YAMAHA
Music System

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Eichinger .

Late summer vows
unite Kear, Eichinger
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Kear, South Plant Rd., Til·
fin, announce the marriage of their
daughter, Gail, to Dennis Roialnd
Eichinger, son of Opal Eichinger
and the late Henry Eichinger.
The wedding took place on Aug. 22
at the Chester United Methodist
Church. The Rev. Carl Hicks perConned the ceremony.
The new Mrs . F:ichin ger

graduated from Hopewell Loudon
High School and has been employed
by the School of Opportunity in Tiffin.
Eichinger, a graduate of Eastern
High School and Ohio State University, is presently head coach at
Eastern High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Eichinger reside at
Riggscrest Manor.

If you're planning to spend more
than $600.00 on a stereo system, make
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Couple plan to wed
GALUPOUS - Plans have been
completed for the open church wedding of Miss Diana Lynn Kessel,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Kessel, Gallipolis, and Eddie A. San·
ders. son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl R.
Sanders, Gallipolis.
The wedding will be an event of
Sunday, November 30, at the First
Church of God with the Rev. James
Rainry officiating. ./1. half-hour
musical prelude will begin at 2 p.m.
with Mrs. Debbie Rhodes, organist,
and Jeff Rhodes, soloist. The double
ring ceremony will begin ai 2:30
p.m.
Mrs. Beverly Baylor of Gallipolis
will be the rna tron of honor, Miss
Colleen Turner, Westerville, will be
the maid of honor, Miss Kelly San·
ders of Gallipolis, sister of the
groom, will be bridesmaid, and
flower girl will be Jeana Rainey of
Gallipolis.
'- Tom Jones, Colwnbus, will serve
as best man. Ushers will he Jeff
Kessel Nelsonville, brother of the
bride,' · and John Sanders of
Gallipolis, brother of the groom.
Ringbearer will be Chris Sanders,

Social Calendar
MONDAY
· MEIGS COuNTY Grange officers
conference 7:30 p.m. Monday at
~ock Springs Hail; all members and
(lfficers urged to attend.
: MEIGS COUNTY Grange officers
:COnference 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Rock Springs Hall; all members and
Qfficers urged to attend.

·
aEVIvALTO BEGIN
: A revival will be held Friday and
Saturday, 7:30p.m. each evening, at
the Bradbury Church of Christ with
Jeff Ranson, evangelist. He will also
speak at the Sunday morning serVice 10:30 a.m. after which time
the~ will be a potluck dinner in the
church dining room. Special music
.will be featured at the services. The
:Public is invited to attend.

Gallipolis, cousin of the groom.
Mrs. Carol Adkins, Crown City,
will preside at the guest book.
A reception will be held in the
fellowship bail following the
ceremony.

.

• .. , do

-&lt;

By Charlene Hoeflich .
Ufeatyle writer
POMEROY - AB the holiday
season fast approaches, . gift, food
and decoration Ideas . abound for
thole who are willing ttl invest a lit·
tie time and a lot less IIIQIIey.
'lbla ' year's "Hints for the
ijolidays," sponsored by the Meigs
County Extenaiort Service and attended by women_from over the tricounty area, offered something for
everybody.
·
The day not qnly included tips aQd
demlilistratiOIIS on creative and
uniiiUIIl ways to remember a friend,
decorate the borne, and entertain,
but also included a mini-course on
asnertive behavior for . today's
woman, and tips on energy saving
window treatment
Vlrgln!a Salser of the Third Wednesday Hmnemakers Club and
, president of the Meigs County Ex~on Homl!!llllkers Council introduced the demonstrators for the
.program which had botb full day and
,evening aCtivities.
.
.: There wq a potluck of favorite
,fooda at noon with each one at'tending prepsrlng her own dessert
~crepe after Mrs Diana Eberts,
'Meigs County Extension Agent, had
'gtven a demonstation on creative
;etepe cookery.
: ,Sharon Stewart of Syracuse
'1lhowed leclmiques for making
-:OOliday petits f~With several par:tlclpating in the dipping and
'decorating. Bessie Hudson of the
;llomemakers Unlimited Club
:demonstrated how to make festive
Jllled. cookies, and Patty ABbeck,
)ll,9o of the Homemakers Unlimited
:club, talked about homemade
master mixes and her way of
')lreparlng the mix in large batches
·tosaveUmeand money.
; There was a demonstration by
~era Van Meter of the Pomeroy
:Flower Shop on creating beautiful
·bows for holiday packages and
:Loretta Rogers and Juanita Core of ·
.Jiomemakers Unlimited demon-

strated· how to make "expelll!ive
candles Inexpensively."
In duistmas- decorations, IriB
Baker · and Shirley Huston,
Syracuse, talked about eoot:dinatin'g
holiday decor, while Sonia Parsons
demonstrated how to make attraCtive, yet inexpensive, home
decorations.
All sorts of decorations and glfty
items for (pe holidays were
displayed by area women.
Merle Howard, Gallia _County Extension homemaker, presented a·
slide presentation on "It's Your
Choice" and then led in a discussion
on expressing YOI!J'Stllf 88Sertively
with positive · behavior and confidence. Her program dealt with the
three types of behavior - passive,
aggressive and assertive - their
constructive and destruCtive results,
teclmlques for changing types ri
behavior to become a more effective
person, with role playing from those
attending.
Mrs. Howard - said that assertiveness Involves standing up for
your personal rights, expressing
.your thoughts, feelings, and beliefs
in honest, appropriate ways that
don't violete . another's right, and
valuing yourself as being eqlial to
others and hurting neither yourself
or others.
She noted that assertiveness can
be expressed verbally or can be expressed non-verbally through the
use of gestures, looking directly at
the other person, facial expression,
and even body posture. ABser·
tiveness, Mrs. Howard said, means
"honest communication.''
Mrs. Stewart distributed instructions for her "Easy Holiday
Petit Fours" as follows:
1 box of Bundt pound cake mix (24
ounce), 2 26.5 cans ready-tG-spread
vanilla frosting. Make a currant
glaze by combining I \2 cups currant
jelly, \2 cup water, and 12 cup water
in a medium saucepan. Bring to
boiling, lower heat, simmer five
minutes stirring frequently. Pour in-

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~:

-table settings. ~same printed malarial and colors were used to make
•• 'the table accessories and centerpiece as well as a wreath for use in the
•'

D

I

I

to a bowl and cool. ·
glaze to coat top and sides cornPrepare cake mix following label pletely or spoon the glaze over the
directions. Pour into a greased 15 x ca!les . . Plac~ in wire rack over
10 Inch jelly roll pan. Bake at 325 waxed paper and let stand one hour
degrees for 35 minutes or until cen- or untlf sticky-firm.
ter springs back when lightly
To frost melt frosting in double
pressed with fingertip.
· boiler over simmering water;
Cool10 minutes and invert onto a heating until frosting is melted. Hold
clean toJVel. Let cool completely glazed cakes one at a time on a fork,
then chill. Cold cake will cut spoon on frosting to cover corn- .
smoother.
.
.
pletely, letting excess drip back into
When ready to cut, trun crusts and the [ian. Use a toothpick to slide each
cut Into small (ectangles, triangles, cake onto a rack set over wax paper.
or shape with sharp knife or cookie Let cakes stand one hour or until
cutter.
frosting is firm.
Prepare currant glaze, hold cakes
Decorate wilh piping geil, candies,
one at a time on a fork over the bowl, or ready-niade icing flowers.
and either dip till' cakes into the
·
·

CREATIVE CREPE COOKERY - Those attending the "Hints for
the Holidays'' program at St. Paul's Lutheran Church in Pomeroy made
their own dessert crepe for the potluck dinner of favorite foods.

THIS MAN
HASN'T MISSED A SALE
YET.

HOUDAY PETIT FOURS - If you've considered petit fours a pain
to make, you might like to try Sharon Stewart's recipe. Mrs. Stewart
demonstrated the technique for making the tasty and attractive cakes at
the "Hints for the Holidays" program of the Meigs County Extension
Homemakers Club. And it looked so easy!

HE
HAS

MIDDLEPORT - Members of Mrs. Kathryn Miller read an article
Group 2 of the Middleport First on the West Indies by Dorinda M.
United Presbyterian Church en- Sawpath.
Mrs. Fae Wallace, Mrs. Rue and
joyed a Thanksgiving dinner at the
Down Under in Gallipolis Tuesday · Mrs. Mildred Bailey were appointed
to the nominating corrunittee. Mrs.
night.
Following the dinner the group Bailey presented the program using
returned to the home of Mrs. "Thanksgiving, the Gateway to
Mildred Karr for a meeting. Of· Christmas" from the book, "Come
fleers' reports were given and Mrs. to Christmas."
Plans were made · for the annual
Vebna Rue gave devotions using
poems on Thanksgiving and prayer. Chrl8tmas meeting with a $3 gift exchange to be held at the home of
Mrs.
Harry Moore with 'Mrs. Bailey
PTO plans auction
and Miss Kathryn Hysell to assist.
· CHESTER~ An auction to be held Mrs. Margaret Butcher was a guest.
in the Chester gym in early December was planned when the Chester
LONG BO'ITOM
Pl'O met recently at the school.
THANKSGIVING
SERVICE
Mrs. Esther Mays presided at the '
The annual Long Bottom Commeeting during which time it was
noted that the PTO and the safety munity Thanksgiving service will be
patrol will jointly participate in a held at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at the
spice sale in May. A report was . Long Bottom United Methodist
given on the recent carnival. A vote ·Church. This will be a candlelight
_of thanks was extended to the service and will fnclude a
Thanksgiving message by the
businesses who contributed.
Winners in the costume judging pastor, the Rev. Richard Thomas.
were Sara Harris, MeliSsa Miller The public is invited.
and Brian Reeves, most original;
Tracl Heins, Susan Wolfe, and Jill ·
Moore, prettiest; Penny Aeiker,
Donnie Spencer, and Joel
McLaughlin, ugliest; Andy Wolf,
Monica Adams, and Russell Keller,
funniest'

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and newoomer.

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With thfi.tJCtofsharingofthe harvest of a bounti-

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THURSDAY - TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING BUFFET

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Spring Valley

TodtJv. 'in observalioo of thia rommemorolive
dav ofThanksgivin~. we shall be gathered together
again in thanks for the ble88ings_ofa land bestowed
upon apeople and shared bv a people. as ilooce 1008
and is nam

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The
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�B-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

Bucks bow 9•3 to Michigan team

Anniversaries-~--------.-------

.

RACINE -" Mr. and Mrs. Fem Joe (Carolyn Lee) Massie, ColumNorris of Racine will cele.brate their bus; Mrs. Gary (Shirley) Hall, West ·
50th wedding anniversary on Nov. 29 Palm Beach, Fla.; and Norman Ray
with an open ceremony of renewing Norris, Orlando, Fla. They have
\tleir marriage vows and reception.
eight grandchildren and one greatThe ceremony will take place at grandchild.
Norris who retired from the M. G.
6:30p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
Church, with the open reception to Transport Co. at Kanauga and
follow inunedialely in the church worked many years on the river, and
social room. The couple requests his wife are lifelong residents of the
Racine· commUnity. They have
that gifts be omitted.
Mr. l!Jld Mrs. Norris are the parell- resided for the past 40 years in their
ts of five children and they are present home.
Friends and relatives of the couple
hosting the anniversary celebration.
They are Mrs. AI (GlQ Jean) Alto, are cordially invited to attend the
Lantana, Fla.; Mrs. Lynn (Doreen) celebration.
Skow, North Branch, Minn.: Mrs.
Veterans Memorial Hospllal
Admitted - Anna Grimm,
Pomeroy ; Goldie Clenderiin, PorUand; Salem Yates, Racine; hazel
Ferrell, Middleport.
Discharged - Carrie Bearhs,
Phoebe Lee, Donia Will, Ardith Proffitt, Nancy Pullins, Olive Winebrenner, Anna Wheeler; Nora Carroll,
Arthur Spencer, Hattie Roush,
. Charlotte Eakins, Norman C&gt;rueser.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sporll Wrtler
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - John Wangler's !~yard
touchdown pass to Anthony Carter gave loth-ranked
Michigan a 9-3 v!ctory over No. 5 Ohio Stale Saturday
.for the Big Ten Conference football tine and ac- companying Rose Bowl berth.
· The Wolverines, running their winning streak to
etght games afler a 1-2 start this season, will carry a ~
record against Pacific-10 champion Wnshingt~ in

a

the New Year's Day classic in Pasadena, Calif.
The Buckeyes wound up ~2 and will face Penn State
in the Fiesta Bowl Dec. 26 in Tempe, Ariz.
An all-time Ohio Stadiwn crowd of 88,827 and
millions more on regional television watched Wangler
find Carter for the game's lone touchdown on a thirdand-11 situation.
The Wolverines' quarterback found Carter just inside the end zone. The Michigan sophomore wide

receiver jumped and caught the ball as Ohio State
defensive back Bob Murphy cut in front of him, trying
for an interception.
The bitter rivals traded first half field goals for a :hi
standsUll.
· Vlade Janakievski, a senior specialist, gave Ohio
Stale its only lead. He kicked a 33-yard field goal into
the wind for a 3-() advantage with 12:11 remaining in
the first half.
Ali Haji-8heikh. a sophomore from Arlington . TPxa•.

c-1-~Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

GOOD IDEAS
,BORGER, Texas (APJ - Kenny
0 . Klepper, an analyst at a refinery
here, knew his energy-saving idea
for using exhaust steam could pay
big money, such as $2,500, because
his idea wasn't rejected by his company right away.
After all, be had already picked up
$730 for five of his 17 suggestions in
the past seven years .

Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris

. Mr. Lemley is a retired State
Highway employee. He has one
sister, Mrs. Alberta Tribble, Houle
I , Gallipolis, and two brothers, Ray
Lemley, Route I, Gallipolis, and
Ralph Lemley of Palmetto, Florida.
Mrs. Lemley is a retired_ school
teacher, having taught 38 year5 in
the Gallia County and Pickaway
County Schools. She has one sister,
Mrs. Mildred Luellen, of Prospect,
Ohio. They have two sisters-in-law,
Mrs. Leslie (Pearl) Lemley, Route
1; Galtipolis, and Mrs. James
(Thelma ) Ward, Marysville. They
have many nieces and nephews
living in Gallia County.
Mr. and Mrs. Lemley are members of the St. Patil's United
Methodist Church, at Circleville.
The couple equests the omission of
gifts.

LINCOLN, Neb . (AP)
Oklahoma freshman Buster Rhymes
ran 1 yard for a touchdown with 56
seconds. remaining Saturday, lifting
the .ninth-ranked Sooners to a
dramatic 21-17 victory over fourthranked Nebraska that gave them at
least a share of the Big Eight championship but left the conference's
Orange Bowl representative up in
the air.
Rhymes' touchdown capped an ~
yard drive that began after
Nebraska took a 17-14lead with 3:16
to play on quarterback Jell Quinn's
touchdown plunge from less than a
yard out. Rhymes set up the touchdown with a 43-yard gallop to the
Nebraska 14 five plays earlier.
It was Oklahoma's ninth victory in

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FRI.-SAT.
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CLOSED SUNDAY

CAN

College offers Recent History

RIO GRANDE - Senior Center
Bill Kolterman's free throw with
eight seconds left to play assured
visiting Findlay College a 60-58
basketball victory over Coach John
Lawhorn's Hio .Grande Redmen
.
Saturday aflernoon.
It was the season opener for both

99
Fut/y

Cookect

Ready To

those whose prior liistory courses
never reached that point in time. He
is particularly interested in attracting World War ll or Korean
War veterans who might be interested in sharing their own experiences with today's college-aged
youth.
Those interested should register
for History 294, "Topical Studies."
Class will be held on Monday and
Wednesday evenings from 6 to 7:50
p.m.

Eat

teams.

GROUND -

BEEF

DRAGGING A LOAD - Michigan
Stan
Edwards !!rags Ohio Stale linebacker Marcus Marek
:~ (36) and others as be goes for a gain in the first quarter

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) - Phil

:·Carter's &amp;-yard touchdown run cap-

Hollywood

: ped a self-propelled 76-yard, tiebreaking drive in the third quarter
. Saturday to lead second-ranked and
Sugar Bowl-bound Notre Dame to a
, ~10 victory over Air Force.
,_ carter gained 71 of the 76 yards in
. ;13 carries to finally put the Irish
ahead In what had been a defensive
.struggle untll the smaller Air Force

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Michigan won, 9-3, to claim the Big 10 tiUe and a trip to
the Rose Bowl. (APLaserphoto).

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WEST LAFAYETTE,Ind. (AP)'- Steve Corso, capping a ~yaid drive
Purdue linebacker Mike Marks bat- in the closing minutes. After Marks
ted down Indiana quarterback Tim -broke up the conversion play, the
Clifford's Conversion pass attempt Hoosiers had one more chance when
with 17 seconds to go Saturday, they recovered an onside kick at
saving the Boilermakers' 24-23 Big midfield.
Indiana reached the Purdue 42,
Ten conference football victory over
but
Don Geisler's ~yard field goal
· the Hoosiers.
try
failed
as time ran out.
The Hoosiers trailed 24-17 but
The
Boilermakers
trailed 1().0
pulled within one point on a 1()-yard
early
in
the
game
but
rnde the
touchdown pass from Clifford to

.
.
passing of quarterback Mark Herrmann to victory in the second half.
Hemnann, who completed !9 of 23
passes for 323 yards, rifled a 20-yard
touchdown pass to Bart Burrell and
set up two short touchdown runs by
Ben McCall.
The Boilermakers trailed 10-3 at
half~e before Herrmann started
his aerial show, hitting 11 straight
passes at one stretch.

team simply tired out.

irish 21.
A pass interference call against
Jim stone's 7-yard touchdown run
Notre
Dame's John Krinun gave the
in the closing seconds of the third
quarter gave the undefeated but on- Falcons the ball on the 1-yard line
. re-tied Irish breathing room.
•1 from where Charlie Heath punched
Notre Dame, which had not it over for a touchdown with 7:04left
allowed a touchdown in a school- in the game.
The Irish clinched it on Stone's
record 23 quarterS, finally yielded in
second touchdown of the game, a 2the fourth quarter after Johnny
Jackson inlercepted a Blair Kiel yard run with 1:51lefi to end an 80_pass and returned !1,6 yards to the , yard drive.
· The Irish boosted their record to~
_Il-l and have a Dec. 6 date against
Southern California before going on
to the Sugar Bowl to meet topranked Georgia.
Until Carter, who finished with 181
yards· in 29 carries, put on his oneman show in the third quarter, the
Irish had been hard-pressed. Carter
carried five times before John
Sweeney broke ·the spell with a [).
yard run. Carter theh carried · the
final eight times to put the Irish
ahead.

Bearcats
upset Miami

Holsum

aoz.

.

The Redmen trailed 31-28 during l.'ead with 40 seconds left on the
the halftime inteimission.
clock.
After falling behind five points
After Greenwood's tip made it 59midway in the second half, Rio 56 with 17 seconds left, Kolterman
Grande came back to take a 50-49 was fouled with eight seconds left.
lead on Grant Greenwood's tipin The Oiler ace sank his first shot,
missed the second, then Rio's Tim
with 5:30 remaining in the game.
.The Oilers, however, hit two quick Clark scored at the buzzer to make
goals, then pulled away to a 59-54 the final score read, 60-58.

~

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period.
Oklahoma moved quickly down
the field for its winning score,
covering the 80 yards in eight plays
that used up two minutes and 20
seconds. A 2-yard run by Rhymes, a
personal foul against Nebraska and
a fumble by Stanley Wilson - which
tackle Louis Oubre recovered lor a
&amp;-yard gain - put the ball on the
Oklahoma 43.
Rhymes then took a pitchout from
Watts, circled right end and made it
to the Cornhusker 14 before Sammy
Sims bumped him out of bounds.
Two running plays failed to gain
but Watts lire!! a crucial 12-yard
pass to Bobby Grayson at the 1 and
two plays later Rhymes took another
pitchout around the right side for the
winning touchdown.

Boilermakers edge Indiana

fresl\
Gr 0 und 1'i11'es
1
se"eril
OilM

:Notre Dame tops Air Force, 24-10

OUR SELECTION OF CHRISTMAS GIFTS

the last 10 meetings with Nebraska
in one of college football'~ great
rivalries and gave the Sooners at
least a tie lor their' eighth consecutive Big Eight champions)rlp
with a 6-0 record. However, they are
8-2 overall to~2forNebraska, which .
finished its regular season Saturday,
and the Sooners must defeat
Oklahoma Stale next week to meet
Florida State in the Orange Bowl.
That would send Nebraska to the
Sun Bowl against Mississippi State.
The last~minute touchdown
brought Oklahoma from behind for .
the second time in the game. The
Sooners earlier overcame an liS-yard
touchdown dash by Nebraska'S Jarvis Redwine and erased a 1().0 deficit
on 3-yard scoring runs by J .C. Watts.
and Chet Winters late in the second

Redmen drop opener, 60-58
5-lB.

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College will offer a Recent
American History course in the Winter Quarter which will span the
yean of 193~1960. rt will cover such
to~ics as World War II, the Cold
War, and the culture of the 1950s. Dr.
Ivan Tribe, professor, said it will offer interested persons, including
those who lived through those turbulent years, an opportunity to
review events of the recent
generation and also accommodate

·c

Late Sooner score
topples Nebraska

Mr. and Mrs. Rex Lemley
Mr. and Mrs. Rex A. Lemley, 8207
Stoutsville Pike, Circleville, Ohio
will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Sunday, November 30,
from I to 3 p.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center, Circleville.
Rex A. Lemley aJ]d Carrie Ward
Lemley are former residents of
Gallia County. They lived in
Cheshrie Twp. and operated a
general merchandise· store at Kyger
for many years.
They were married by the Rev. A.
L. Cooper in Greenup, Kentucky, on
November 19, 1930. They are the
parents of one daughter, Mrs. James
(Kathryn Je'a n) Shaw, of
Marysville, Ohio; and two grandchi ldren, J . Steven Shaw, Delaware,
Ohio, and Stephanie Harrison, of
Junction City, New York.

matched it with a 43-yard field goal with the wind less
than six minutes laler.
Although Ohio Stale became the first learn in four
games to score on the Wolverines, Michigan's defense
was dominating. It marked the fourth straight game
that an opponent failed to muster a touchdown against
the Big Ten champions.
·
Michigan's effort over a four-game stretch was the
best for the school since the 1931 squad pos1ed six
straight shutouts.

SHOITINING

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CINCINNATI (AP) -Sophomore
quarterback Danny Barrett fired a
!~yard touchdown paas to tight end
Bo Green and Rich Karlls booted
three field goals Saturday as the
University of Cincinnati upset·
Miami (Ohio) University 23-13 in a
IICJIIoCOIIference football ganje.
Allen Harvin raced 21 yards for a
fOUI'IIM!uarter touchdown following
an lnterception to Ice the victory.
Don Treadwell retumed a kickoff
. ioo yards and caught a 17-yard
touchdown pass for Mian.i's two '
scores as the Redaldns, 5-4, pos1ed
only their second laelng season in 39
yeai'IL Clncinnatiflnillbed at 2-9.
After 1 scweJ• flrat quarter,
ClncinnaiiiiHIIIbled 1 II!Venoplay,
DO-yard touchdown drive jlllt before
the half.
Barrett threaded 1 pass to Green
down the middle for ·a !~yard
ICOrin(c play.
Treadwell brought Miami back
quickly, taking 'the enawng kickoff
in his end zone, dashing through a
}JJle to his left and racing down the
llldellnes for a touchdown.
The extra point kick failed .

PULUNG IT IN - Ohio State safety Bob Murphy
pulls in a pass from Michigan quarterback John
Wrangler In the end zone as intended receiver Alan
Mitchell move sin to grab him in the second half of
I

''

.

-

Saturday's big Ten tiUe game in Colwnbus. The 111o
terception broke up a Michigan scoring play. (~
Laserphoto).

�C.2-TheSWiday T!Jne&amp;.Sentinel, SWiday, Nov. 23,1980

Southwestern, Southent,
.-.
·Eastern cop ·preview wins

C-3-'lbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWiday, Nov. 23, 1980

Alexander edges Meigs
in Athens cage .preview

A'

•

.•

Southero (G) - Roseberry 2-0-4; Ga!Ua17.
RIO GRANDE - Southwestern,
Southern and Eastern captured vic- R. Wolfe 1·1·1: K. WoHe ~2-12; Curf.
tories bere Friday night in the an· man 1·1-3: B. Wolfe 1·2-4: Rees 1-4-ll; Eutero (ZI) - Cole 1·2-4; Lcng 1+:
Teaford ~1-11 ar.d Brown 0-1·1. 2; MaUhewsl·M; Wigal1·1..S; Greg:
nual SVAC Cage Preview.
Southwestern dwnped Hannan Totals 11-IWS.
Cole~andDi113-U. Tollllt+a=
Trace 22-H: Southern whipPed NorNortb Gallla (34) - Black 1·1-3:
ltyter Creek (U) -Porter 14'7:":"
th Gilllia, 45-33 and Eastern beat Blackburn 1·7-9; Deel1·M; Howell ' sands 3-U: .Price 2+4; Waugh 1).2-:
0-1-1; Payne ~2-12; . Qu!len 1.().2 and 2; MolesO.O.O. TolaiiUpU.
Kyger Creek, 23-19.
~
In the opener, Coach Uoyd Myers' Shriver 1·1-3. Totala l"lwt.
Reserves - Kyger Creek 11 · ·
._.
Reserves - Southern 29 North Eastem9.
Southwestern Highlanders led by
Dale Newberry's eight points topped
•
Hannan Trace, 22-14.
Todd Baker ancl Scott Russell had .
four points each. Rodney Pack led
Coach Mike Jenkins' Wildcats with
three points.
mGHESTRATINGEVER
'lbe prucedun Will a bon.
Southern again looked like the
NEW YORK (AP)- ABC-TV m- pared to the boopla that ac.":
team to beat this year in the SVAC
nounced ThUI'IIday thlt last Satur- companied their pn-IJgbt pb,Jik:ala,:,:
race as the Tornadoes rolled a §.34
day's.
nationally televt.ed Notre in Mootreal in JWie wlw!D WcDuC
win over North Gallia.
Dame-Alabama
game in Blr- blew a ldaa to Danm · ~~~c~ · DariiiC
Kent WoHe and Dale Teaford who
mlngham, Ala., received higber questioned Leonard's !Ninhood ill-'
are expected to lead the Tornado at·
ratings than 811)' l.'l!g1l)aNeuon SpaniJb.
·
:
iack this winter had a fine half with
collegefootballgameinblatory.
Leonard didn't even look 8 12 and II points respectively. Jay
An
ABC
spokesman
said
the
emDuraD,
and tbe ...._....,011 froni;:
Rees had six points.
test
the
aecond
IBlf
of
8
-.....
Pacing coach Paul Pettit's Pirates
doubleheader - "delivered more Panama remained quiet durlllc th&amp;were Keith Payne with 12 points
TV households" tJwi any game sin- examinatiODa given by Dr. A.J:::
while Bill Blackburn added nine.
tbe National CoUa"'••• Athleti ItallanO, although Duran llid as IK::
Big Tim Dill dumped in eight poince
._
c left, "FourmoredayiiLeanard."'A()o-:;::
Association beglili IIi televlalcn .....,v It 11'88 five more da,.. belen.--·
ts to lead Dennis Eichinger's Eagles
package in 1952. ABC has been - .
,.
to a 23-19 win over Keith Carter's
televising NCAA football since lt68. . he defends the World BoxiDg CowlclJ,;:= .
Bobcats of Kyger Creek.
'lbespokesmanaaldthegamewas welternigbt title he woo hawTerry Porter and Dave Sands led
seen in 14,331,000 hOllies. At an Leonard 011 a cl011e, but ~ ·
KC with seven and six points respecaverage of 1.6 viewers per hOme, ·decision June 20.
tively.
that translates Into 23 million
BOX SCORES
viewers. Nielsen estimates there are
UP'IDOWNERS
Hanun Trace (U)- Pack 1·1:3:
78
million TV homes In America.
TORONTO
(AP) - U major
Angel1·M: Petrie ().1-1; Waugh ().2league
bueblll
wants to CODtrol. the
2; Webb 1.().2; Sheets 1.().2 and
PASS
EXAMXNATIONS
rlalnc
CCJIItll
of
free
agency, then the; .-~
James 1.0.2. Totals $+14.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Roberto solutlm moat come fnm the _ .
Southwestern (22) ..,.. Baker 2-0-4:
Duran and Sugar Ray Leonard, who owuen, aays baseball CommlaionetBurleson ().1·1: Newberry 448;
had physl~ probleiiiii or jll"Oblema BowleKulm.
•
Russell 1-2·4: Sizemore 1-0-2 and
with
PhYslcala
before
their
first
Kubn,
in
town
as
a
guest
apeaJrer
Sterrett ().1-1. Totals 7-&amp;-22.
fight, passed their pre-fight to the Empire Club, told ~"
Reserves - Southwestern 26 Han~1101111 Thursday with flying . that ODe of bla main COIIcel'IIS for tbe"
nan Trace 20.
colors and a minimum ol fuss.
sport was the CUlt of free agency.

THE PLAINS - Friday evening a
much improved Meigs Marauder
squad bowed to a very tough Alexander Spartan team, ~22, in an annual cage preview at Athens High
School.
Despite falling short in the scoring
colwnn, the ·initial outing for the
Marauders proved to be a success.
Every Marauder got to see action in
the contest contributing to a .well·
knit team effort.
In the first period of the contest
Meigs put together a great floor
game and tough defell$e to lake a 12·
8 lead. During that canto, two year
lettermen Steve Ohlinger emerged
as the team leader .for the
Mara1,1ders. On the night Ohlinger
pwnped in eight points to lead all

~

·~

--

Sports briefs. • •·.

UNEXPEJCfED BOUNCE - Hannan Trace's being defensed by Southwestern's Mike Sterrett (34)
Mike Waugh (32) gets an eye and nose full during this and Dale Newberry (42). The High!ander:s won the two
Brenda Wilson action shot taken Friday night in the quarter contest, 22·14.
SVAC Cage Preview at Rio Grande College. Waugh is

com:.:-

Reds name

Woodward to
key position

UNDERHANDED TOSS - Kyger Creek's Terry
Porter (12) leaves the four for an underhanded layup
against Eastern in Friday's SVAC Cage Preview at
Lyne Center, Rio Grande. Porter who had seven points

CINCINNATI (AP) - WOOdy
Woodward, the Cincinnati Reds'
minor league field coordinstor the
.last two years, has been named
assistant general · manager of the
National League club, Reds
president Dick Wagner said Friday.
"Woodward's field experience
makes him an ideal backup man for
our key people in the player per·
sonnel and scouting departments,''
Wagner said. "Woody has had a
solid baseball backgroWid with
valuable experience in many areas
of the game...
WOOdward, 38, spent eight seasons
as an infielder in the National
League. He was basi!hall coach at
Florida State University for four
years before joining the Reds
organization in September 1978.

in leading KC drives past Eagle defenders, Mike
Bissell (33) and Paul Sprague (41). Looking oil are the
Bobcats' Tim Price (22) and Dave Sands (10). Eastern
won23-19.

(

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: HOUSTON (AP) - A lawyer
ti'ylng to oust' John McMullen as the
general manager of the Houston
Astros says he ~ ask a federal
judge to temporarily prohibit the
l:Jew Jersey shipping magnate from
li!lnducting any team business.
• Attorney Joe Jamail, representing
;; group of limited partners who
Mready have voted to dissolve the
ifrangement, says he will ask MonDy that U.S. District Jul,lge Carl
ztUe issue a temporary injunction
JIIW a receiver can be appointed to
vrersee the team's assets.
• The limited partners, angered by
le Oct. 27 firing of Tal. Smith as
.jenera! manager, are attempting to
'ltor!!anize under a new general parCDer.
·

~cMullen, who purchased the
hnchise a year
. ago,. has declined
eemment smce receiving the
lsso!ution notice from a majority of
lie limited partners on Thursday.
-Jarnall, a noted Houston claims at·
tomey, filed . suit in federal court

HOUSTON (APl - HuglrGreen of
·Pittsburgh, E.J. Junior of Alabama,
Ron Sinunons of Florida. State and
Mike Singletary of B;lylor were
named Saturday as finalists for the
11th annual Vince Lombardi Award,
symbolic of the nation's outslanding
, football lineman.
The wiruier will be anhounced
DeC. 12 at an awards dinner with
proceeds going to the American Can·
cer Society for research.

POMEROY - Details for the
Meigs Local Elementary basketball
program are now being completed.
All people interested in i:oaching a
team must attend two of the
·following training sessions. Dates
and places fCJI.' these sessions are
Monday, Dec. 8, Salisbury Elemen·
tary 7: 30' p.m., Tuesday, Dec. 9,
Pomeroy Elementary 7:30 p.m.,
Saturday, Dec. 13, Meigs High
School 10 a.m. and Tuesday, Dec. 16,
~Elementary at 7:30p.m.
Seu101111 are for all individuals interested in coaching within the
Jll'08l'8lll. Students wiahing to partlcipelte are not to attend.
' · ·
Registration for stuilents who wish
·to · play will begin after the
''I'hank.tlllvlilg vacatloll. To register,
. the atudent mu1t pick up the proper
form at bla lchool. Practices wiD be
held twice • week beginning Dec. 18
llid pme11 wiD begin on Jan. 5.

weather fluid far Instant OC·
lion frcm ·S0°F to +300°F.

.

.' ...

u"'''•4 co.... ra~~~•,
ti~Mt)

UP IT GOES- Kent Wolfe (14) junior guard for the Southern Tor·
nadoes, displ~ys his layup fonn in this Brenda Wilson action shot taken
Friday nght at Lyne Center, Rio Grande. Wolfe had 12 points to lead the
defending champs past North Gallia, 4~34 . Matt Queen (33) blocked out
by WoHe awaits a re~?oi!Jld.
n

._.,•.

W•rr•nty. Worronteed
01 lo ne o' rou o"n yo~o~r ur
D•rolltintlor•

~
Memlllr ft.D.I.~. '

FIGHT FOR BALL - Meigs' Randy Murray, 6-1
junior, and Alexander's Mike Bobo (22) go up for a
rebound during Friday's Shrine Preview in Athens

·

,_

.'.
.•.'

.c

no

8 25
Bo x S,core

Meigs - Steve Ohlinger 3·2·8;
Mike Mill er 1·0·2; 6rian Swann 0-0·
0; Dave Ke nnedy 0·0·0; Roger
Kovalch ik 1·0·2; Chr is Ju dge 1·0·2;
Jeff Wa y land 2·0·4; Britt Dodson 0·0·
0; Ke vin Smith 0·0·0; Tony Scoll1 ·0·
2; Ra ndy Murray 3·2·8. Totall0-2-22.
Alexander - Jeff Sk inner 2-1-5;
L ee Ra ines 2·2-6; Brian Garrett 1·2-

4; Dan Peyton 1-4·6; Mike Bobo 1·2·
4. Total7· 11·2l.

County. Clo~ing_in are the Spartans' Donald Lee (20 )
and Alex Lee Raines (24 ). Alexander won ~22. (Dave
Harris phQto).

-----------1
GOLD BUYERS . J
I

.-----------CLIP &amp; SAVE

Meigs-Eastern

I

MEN'S CLASS RINGS

50 to 5165

5

girls' box score

WOMEN'S CLASS RINGS
5

Meigs (42)

15 to

Kristin Anderson 7·2 16; April
King 0·0·0; Andrea Riggs 9·6·24 ;
Shari Dre hel 0·0·0; Vick i DeBord 0.0.
0; Pam Crooks 0-0-0,· Laura Sm ith 0·
0·0; Lynne Oliver 0·2·2. Totals 16· 10·
42.
Eastern (38}

last season as a junior. Sinunons, a
nose g~U~rd, was a Lombardi
semifinalist last year and the only ,
Laura Ei c hlng ~ r 3·0·6; Tammy
lineman in the top 10 for the
Hudson 2· 3·7; Cassie Sheets 1·0·2;
Heisman trophy voting.
Patty Edwards· 4·0·8; Sarah Goe bel
Singletary, a middle linebacker, 4-3· 1l; Becky Ambrose 2·0·4; Rhon·
anchored the Baylor defense to the da Riebel 0·0·0. Totals 16-6·68.
Southwest Conference title this
By Quarters: ·
season.
Eastern
12 21 31 38
10 21 29 42
quard Brad Budde of Southern Cal Meigs
Season Record : Meigs 1· 1.
won the lOth Lombardi Trophy last Eastern
0· 1.
January.

GLENBROOK, Nev. (AP) - The
' llhaUered Dlat-owm 1 II rucht boat,
l,loldlnc the body ol racer 1M
slippid fnm araPPUnc
boab after being bauled Into
llhaDonr Lake Tahoe waterl.
··
A lalvage bup wu mabie to.
..-. IIIOther ri!C.'Oiei'J ~~tempt
. _ _ of tdrGnl wlndll!ld niUIIh .
water. Another attempt wiD lie

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Prices subject to market fluctuat~'!S:·
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The ·trophy, a 45-pound block of
granite, is named in honor of the for·
mer Green Bay and Washington
coach who died of cancer in 1970.
Green, an All-America selection
last season, was a finalist for the
Lombardi award as a junior and
earlier this week was named winner
of the Outland Trophy, which also
honors linemen.
Junior, a defensive end, was a
second-team All American selection

•

,

18'&gt; UPPE_R RIVER ROAD. GAl Llf'OIJS OHIO

Thursday claiming McMullen had gambling casino in Atlantic City,
mismanaged the team and was un· N.J., where be was a vice president.
worthy to continue as general partRosen, who has not been charged
ner of the Astros.
in that case, said he approved $2.5
The suit was filed after McMullen million in bad credit at the casino
refused to resign at the request of but that his only crime was that of
the limited partners.
poor business judgment.
Jamail said McMullen was offered
The ownership squal)ble began af·
"the easy way out" by resigning or ter McMullen stunned the limited
becoming a part. of the partners and many Astros fans by
reorganization under a new general firing the popular Smith, recognized
pal'\ller, but he refused both alter· as one of the top baseball executives
natives.
. in the COWitry.
Jamail also played down
spec.ulation Friday that Smith might
Limited partners also have comstep in as receiver, saying that he · plained of not_being able to get in·
doubted Smith wouid be involved in formation about the operation of the
that aspect of the reorganization.
Astros during the year since Mc"The receiver coUld be a banker Mullen took charge.
or attorney with knowledge . of
McMullen currently controls a 34
baseball," Jarnail said
percent interest in the Astros, in·
The reorganization also left· un- eluding 25 percent in his name and
settled the status of AI Rosen, who ariother nine percent spread among
replaced Smith as general manager. family members and friends. The
In addition to tile Astros' oW!ter· other 66 percent is controlled by
ship controversy, Rosen has had to various limited partners but under
contend with his name being men· the arrangement, McMullen had
tioned in connection with a scam at a control of the team's business.

~

· --loiCOI1H...t e -

.-trite~

Alexander

Marauder Coach Gordon Fisher
was well pleased with his team's
performance and corrunented on tbe
fact that every team member saw
action. Although the Marauders
didn't win they showed signs of a
bright future. Seven of 11 players
broke into the scoring colwnn for the
Marauders.

Temporary injunction sought

1111 - · - l t y ....

$28Selaf4
In Sl1e1 for Many U.S.

win , ~22.

training sessions set
-,

••

111 the past, put togeUler another
From the field Meigs wa.s 1Mor-24
super team ~fort that makes them for a 41 percent ·and was 2 of 4 from
one of the premier teams in the area. tbe foul line. ReboWiding-wise
The Spartans first five produced a things were pretty well even as
well balanced scoring attack to pave Meigs collected 12, while Alexander
the way to victory;
had 15.
.
During the second sll!nza Meigs
Jeff Wayland had five caroms,
played well, but Alexander came Kevin Smith and Ohlinger 2. No
back with a potent attack of their other statistics for Alexander were
own to ·overcome the locals .. Alexan· available.
der used their well balaQced.scoring
Score by Quarte rs :
attack to prist the come from behind · Meigs
12 22

Basketball coaching

26 WEEK .
CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT

·~.

JUMP SHOT - Britt Dodson (25) of Meigs goes up Alexander. The Spartans posted a ~22 win. (Dave
against Alexander's Alex Lee Raines (24) for a jwnp Harris photo.)
,
• shot during Friday's basketball preview against
•

Name finalists' for 11th Lombardi award

c:8
. -.....
I'M S.vi"ll ,.,.,__

0urReg. 22.77

Coach Bill Whaley 's Spartans, as

-..

am
Rt. 7

scorers.

'

l

Gallipolis, Ohio

PH. 446-0090

AMERICAN GOLD &amp;
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1-----~-----~--~---------~-----J

�-.-.
••

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c-4-TheSundayTime&amp;Sentinel,Sunday, Nov. 23,l!IM

AGE

29

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~~-

TALE; OF THE TAPE - This is the tale of the tape the Superdome in New Orleans. Duran holds the title
for welterweights Roberto Duran, left, and Sugar Ray from their June 20 fight which was a unanimous
I..A!onard who will meet for their rematch for the World decision. (AP Laserphoto).
Boxing Council welterweight championship Nov. 25 at

.

are ir the division's cellar.

"'They'll come in with no feelings
as far as the playoffs are concerned,

except to Win as many games as
they possibly can," Rutigliano said

of the Bengals. "They consider
Cleveland an Army-Navy game."
The Bengals have had two straight
4-12 seasons and face an equally
dismal 1980 record unless a turnabout occurs. Forrest Gregg, the
fanner Browns' coach is in his first
year at the hebn of Cincinnati.
"If you believe In· what you are
doing, you just continue with that,"
Gregg said. "We have to continue to
work and get ready for a football
game.''

To their credit, the Bengals this
season have authored two victories
over the defendirlg Super .Bowl
champion Pittsburgh Steelers.
Rutigliano described the Bengals as
an interesting team because they
have had a strong defense all
season.

'

. ·-·

Cincinnati's problem has been a
lackluster offense. It is averaging
just 12.9 points a game. The Bertgals
have scored more than 17 points only
once in 11 games, a 30-28 victory
over the Steelers.
A wi~ely publicizied undercurrent
for this contest is the bitter feelings
between Art Modell and Bengals
owner Paul Brown, who was fired by
Modell as coach of the Browns in
1963.
In a book published last year,
Brown accused Modell of
questionable and unethical actions
as owner of the Browns in the early
1960s. Modell filed a complaint with
the league office basing his beef on a
rule prohibiting football executives'
public criticism fl. other teams'
front office operations.
Based on that complaint, Brown

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar took things
into his own huge hands Friday night
as the Los Angeles Lakers evened
the score with the Phoenix Suns.
AbdUl-Jabbar scored 29 points
and, perhaps more important,
pulled down 20 rebounds to spark the
Lakers to a 116-38 National Basketball Association romp over the Suns
just 24 hours after Phoenix handed
Los Angeles a heart-breaking 102-99
.'loss.
In other NBA action Friday night,'
Chicago beat New York 13~121 ;
Philadelphia topped Indiana 97-88;
Boston stopped Golden State 100.106 ;
Washington ran past San Diego 10290; Houston ripped New Jersey 11&amp;108; Seattle toppled Dallas 101-91,
and Denver pounded Kansas City

'

6 oooli~:~\'
20~acn

V4l\\lEWAll
SMOV4 l\R~
RElREADS

was fined SJO,OOO.
Gregg was also fired by Modell
before the end of the 1977 season.
If Gregg holds any resentment, he
has not vented it publicly before the
game. Rutigliano said any grudges
others may hold have no bearing on
his preparation of the Browns for the
Bengals game.
Three Browns- Lyle Alzada, Cleo
Miller and McDonald Oden ·- will
play despite injuries suffered in a
loss to the Steelers last week. Keith
Wright, a kick returner and
receiver, is doubtful because of a
knee injury:
The Bengals listed four offensive
starters as questionable for the
game. Don Bass, Pete Johnson and
Dan Ross have knee injuries. Quarterback Ken Anderson is nursing a
sternum

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NEW YORK (AP)- Fred Shero

•

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lllllilager af the New York Rangers

·.

League team announced.

Sab!rday, the National Hockey

was
leaving
teamtobecause
he felt
he was
nottheable
achieve
the

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates
(AP) - Romanian llie · Nutase
dropped a match to Stan Smith H, 28, &amp;-2, but Blipped into the semlflnaJa
ar the round-robin $880,000 Golden .
TeMis Tournament on' a better sets
average- hill competitors.
In other matches, Yannlck Noah
ar France .~ Marty Riessen 8-3,
4-8, &amp;-3; VIctor Amaya beat J011e
Hlgueru of Speln &amp;-4, &amp;-4; and Bob
.tutz defeated Tim GnU!hon 4-8, &amp;-1,
8-2.
BUENOS' AIRES (AP)
Uf118111Y811 J01e Damiani ~dvanced
to the aemlJina1a of the Republic ar
Arpntlna Open b7 beatlni thirda.ded Han1 GUclemUter of Chile 7·
I, 1-4.
' Second-leed VIctor Pecci of
Parquay, beat Ecuadorian Andres
,Gomes, &amp;-1, &amp;-3 to allo move Into the

t.
II',

•129'8

wl.

Sports
briefs• .

past the tenacious Mavericks:
Geoff Huston led the Mavs with 20
points, with Abdul Jeelani contributing 16 points, most of them at
~ end of the third quarter and in
the fourth quarter when Dallas was
battling back.
Da ~a s rallied to pull to within two
points at 91-89 with 2:43 to play, but ·
Freddie Brown hit from outside, Sik·
.rna hit on a jumper and Bailey added
a stuff on a fast break to start a
streak of 10 straight points to put it
away.

HOT BUYS
FOR
COLD WEATHER

"Wood" You Believe

ability.
Shero took over as coach and GM
of the Rangers .in June 1!178, but his
front office duties were virtually
stripped from lim last summer
when the Rangers hired Craig
Patrick as director of operations.
No replacement for Shero was immediately announced.
Herb Brooks, who coached the

,•.

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unavailable for comment.
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greatest potential and motivate the
playing personnel to the best of their

"He used to tell me that he hated
Buffalo, Houston and Oakland all
to come up to get William," Bar- bave lf..3 records and one-game leadl!
tkowski said. " All he shows you is in their AFC divisions. Philadelphia,
helmet, shoulder pads and knees. 1~1. leads Dallas by two games·in
There's nothing soft there. He's like the NFC East and Detroit shares the
tackling a bowling balL He doesn't lead in the NFC Central with Mingive you anything to hit."
. nesota.
them."
Other NFL games Sunday have
Andrews wasn't drafted until the · Baltimore at New England, Pit·
third round in 1979 before the tsburgh at Buffalo, Cincinnati at
Falcons took him. He had spent most Cleveland, Detroit at Tampa Bay,
TENNIS
of his career at Auburn as a blocker Houston at the New York Jets,
BOLOGNA, Italy (AP) for Cribbs.
Oakland at Philadelphia, Green Bay Sweden's Bjorn Borg was withdrew
"We knew he was an excellent at Minnesota, Kansas Ci~y at St. .from the $75,000 Italian Inreceiver, a great blocker and that he Louis, the New York Giants at San ternational Indoor Tournament
was very tough," Falcons personnel Francisco, Seattle at Denver and because of a respiratory causing
director Tom Braatz said. "But we Washington at Dallas. New Orleans breathing difficulty.
didn't see him run the way he has. plays host to Los Angeles Monday
On his doctor's ordef'S, Borg canOtherwise, he would have been a No. night.
celed exhibition games in
1.11
In a Thursday night game, San Strasbourg, Grenoble and Milan and
Ahead of Andrews in the NFL are Diego beat Miami 27-24 in overtime.
an appearance at a party in Milan:

It

In a short statement, Shero said he

U.S. Olympic championship hockey
team earlier this year, reportedly
will take over as Ranger coach next
season.
Brooks currenUy is coaching in
Davos, Switzerland, and was

• Parish's five points keyed a 14-0
spurt that sent the Celtics ahead 84.81 with 9: 17 left in the game.
·
Rockets 116, Nets 108
Moses Malone pumped in 33 points
to pace the Rockets, but it was Mike
Dunleavy ·who sparked a fourthperiod surge when he scored nine
consecutive points.
The lead changed hands six t[flles
in the second half until Dunleavy's
one-man drive tied it again at ·101-101
in the final quarter.

Bullets 102, Cllppen; 90
'
.
Elvin Hayes and Kevin, Grevey
Nuggets 134, Killgsl21
each popped in 21 points to help the
John Roche threw in a season-high
Bullets to the vi.ctory over the slum· 30 points and rookie Cedric Hordges
ping Clippers. Hayes also grabbed 10 contributed career highs of 21 points
rebounds and blocked seven shots to and 15 rebounds in Denver's victory,
134-121 .
help deal San Diego its seventh which ended an eight-game losing
The defeat was only the fourth of straight setback.
streak.
the season for the Suns and the most
San Diego made only 12 o.f its first
The Kings, who ended a six-game
one-sided viciory ever by a Los 50 shots and 25 of ~ through three
trip
having played a league-high 14
Angeles·team over Phoenix.
quarters while falling behind 7!Hi2. road games, bad not lost to Denver
Los Angeles took command of the
Supersonics 101, Mavs 91
since JarL2, 1969, amf had beaten the
game by scoring 12 of the final 17
James Bailey scored 22 points and Nuggets five straight times in Denpoints of the first half and 13 of the· Jack Sikma hit 20 to pace Seattle
ver.
first 21 points in the second half,
· stretching a 44-43 LA lead to 6~56.
Jim Chones addedl7 points for the
Lakers, 16-6. Alvan Adams paced
the Suns,17-4, with 21 points.
The loss cut the Suns' lead over the
!..akers in the NBA's Pacific Division
to I \2 games.
·
Bulls 130, Knlcks 121
Artis Gilmore scored four of his 29
points and Ricky Sobers added six
more in the final 90 seconds to help
the Bulls avoid blowing a game in
which they led by as much as 20
points, 104-34, late in the third quar- ·
ter.
76en; !17, Pacers 88
The 76ers overcame a 14-2 deficit
at the outset to pick up their fifth
straight victory and 17th in their last
18 outings.
Darryl Dawkins scored 23 points
and Juliils Erving added 18 for
Philadelphia, while George Johnson
topped Indiana with 19.
Celtlcs 108, Warriors 106
Larry Bird's T1 points helped the
Celtics rebound from a !~point
deficit and go on to gain a narrow
' : victory.
HALT- Indiana Pacers' Mike Bantom (42) runs out of room as he
, Boston trailed 81-70 with 1:52.
meets Sixers' Darryl Dawkins during Friday night's game in
remaining in the third quarter, but
Philadelphia. In the background are 'Sixers' Julius Erving and pacers'
came roaring back as center Robert
James Edwards. Sixers won, 97~. (AP Laserphoto).

Shero resigns New York posts ·

runner Walter Payton Sunday. "It
makes a defense give a lot more
respect to you. It also keeps you
from getting hurt. If you let the
defense come to you, nine times out
of 10 you' re going to get hurt. I'd
rather deliver the blows than take

Campbell,
Payton
and I'm
St.
Louis' Ottis Sims,
Anderson.
" I think
in their class," he says.
Quarterback Steve Bartkowski
quoted former Falcons defensive
back Ray Easterling about Andrews.

FLYING ATTEMPT- New Jersey Nets'• Darwin Lea1(ell,left, of the Houston Rockets during first quarCook, right, flies throUilh the air before passing off to a ter NBA action Friday night at Rutgers Athletic Ceoteammate to avoid having ihe shot blocked by Allen ter. (AP Laserphoto).

•'

Falcons, Andrews face Bears, Payton
By WILLIAM R. BARNARD
AP Sports Writer
Real quick, try to name four
National Football League running
backs who bave played the key roles
in putting their teams in first place
in their respective divisions this
season.
Earl Campbeil of Houston is an otr
vious answer, and Billy Sims of
Detroit and Joe Cribbs of Buffalo
bave gotten lots of attention as
rookie stars who have turned around
their teams' fortunes. That's three.
Stuinped? The fourth is fullback
William Andrews of the Atlanta
Falcons, who are one game ahead rl.
LosAngelesin the NFCWest.
Andrews follows the Campbell
mold of punishing the tackler and he
has done it well enough to be the
NFL's No.S rusher. He has 843
rushing yards in 165 carries and his
average of 5.1 yards per carry is
second only to Campbell. .
"What I try to do is take the fight
to them," says Andrews, whose
team plays host to Chicago and star .

Lakers whip, Suns, 116-88

l

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Sugar a conlinuing ring rivalry. They don't
Dwidee and Morton bave COil·!
Ray Leonard skipped and danced like each other, and they don't hide vlncedLeonardhemustusehiiiiiiOit:
over the jump rope, putting on a their feelings. ·
effective weapons. "I can't forget_
show. Every so often, he'd steal a
"Mr. Leonard is going to kiss the technique and ·movement," SupP; •
peek at the crowd of school kids floor of the ring," promises Duran, Ray said.
· them a who outpointed Sugar Ray for the
packing his workout and gJVe
Duran scorns Leoliard, often
wink and a wave as they squealed crown In 15 gruelling rounds at Mon- teas'"" the ex-""·~ft with. word aiid •
'thd li ht
trealonJune20. _
-..,
~-·...
WI
e g ·to the people, and with
He plays
For his part, Leonard thinks he action. "He tries to psyche yoU,"
-··
. the f'-t
581
, 'd Leonard; .
-·~
,.
his cover-boy gilod looks and . knows what went wr0 ng m
.. •
··~charismatic personality, he .wins fight.
them overin no time.
"I didn't !llilize my skillS," he
Arcel and Brown Bllllure you tha£'1 :
Roberto Duran ignores the crowd. said. "I was determined to stand my not necessary at all.
;;::
There are no winks and. no waves. ground and fight Duran his way. I
"When Duran walks in the riJJf,::
have conque red mYst ubborness."
Instead of a smile, he wears a scowl.
he's the '--·,"
"""" Bro" .. said.
·-He is a boxer busy with the
That would Indicate that Leonard
Duran and LeOnard are a ~business of preparing for Tuesday plans to use his speed and agility contrasting styles and approaches to
night's defense of his World BOlling against the champion. But in their work. And that contrast Ia wMT' • ·
Council welterwe'•ht championship sparring sessions, he also has been makes their second confrontation sO..·
bout against Leon;:;u.
..:.w..:.orking=·
.::J):..n:..ro.:.ug::.::hho_.:.use...:...:ta.:.:.ctl:.::.:'cs_._ _.;._f_asc_ina_ting_::._'--::---:---:~:;:
The differences between these two tfighters are vast.
Duran is a squat, compact puncher who loves to stand toe-t&lt;&gt;-toe
and slug it out. Leonard is taller,
more angular in build and a more
. stylish, classic boxer.
.
Duran learned his craft in the
streets of Panama City. Leonard is a
gym fighter who grew up in suburban Palmer Park, Md.
Both of them have ring-wise handlers. Working in Leonard's corner
are Angelo Dundee, who masterminded Muhammad Ali's career,
and Janks Morton., For Duran, it's
Ray Arcel and Freddie Brown, who
bave, oh, a century or so of boxing
savvy locked in their fertile brains.
The contrasts are so great that
1:
G71·1S
Doran-Leonard seems a natural for

Bengals take on role of spoilers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Th~ Cin·
cinnati Bengals .take on the spoilers'
role in the renewal of a rivalry with
their Ohio counterparts in the
National Football League - the
Cleveland Browns.
" If we win OUf last five games,
we'll win the division," said Sam
Rutigliano, the easy going Cleveland
coach before the sold-out clash in
Cleveland~s Municipal Stadium.
The Browns. with a 7-4 record, are
tied with the Pittsburgh Steelers for
second place in the American Football Conference Central Division.
The Houston Oilers lead the division
with an lh"! mark. The Bengals, 3-8,

C6-'111eSlladly 'J'Imei.Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23,111M

Differences between Duran;: I
Leonard vast; bout Tuesday_
I
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�- - - - - -----c.&amp;-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

Cincinnati hurlers, wives
escape fire by helicopter

Rej_ect ·compro~ise, auto
•
racmg camps are divided
PARIS (AP) - Grand Prix auto
Chapman of Lotus, Ken TYrrell,
racing has spUI into Mval camps Teddy Mayer of McLaren, Emerson
following the world sanctioning Fittipaldi, Morris Nunn of Ensign,
body's rejection ilf a "last com- Gunter Schmitt of ATS, John Macpromise" offer by rebel teams.
donald of RAM Racing, and John
The International Auto Sport
Woodington,
whose
B.S .
Federation (FISA) announced Fabrications has built many top
Friday it would go ahead with the
race cars including the Chapparal
1981 .world championships as planthat won the Indy 500 this year.
ned, starting with 15 cars from
Their drivers include the top three
·Ferrari, Renault, Alfa Romeo 1 this year, champi,on Alan Jones.
Osella, Talbot-Ligier and the new
Toleman team.
Drivers will include · Mario Andretti, Gilles Villeneuve, Jacques
Lafitte, Rene Arnoux and Didier
Pironi.
MARQUETTE, Mich. (AP) Bernard Ecclestone, ownet of Bruce Martin scored two goals to
IJrabham and president of the For- give Northern Michigan a 5-4 triummula One Constructors Association ph over Miami of Ohio in a Central
(FOCA ), said in view of FISA's ac- -Collegiate Hockey Association game
tion, he could see no alternative to Friday night.
going ahead with a planned rival
Martin scored in the first period
and again in the second. Northern
world championship.
In Paris with him, and conunitted Michigan also received fallies from
to his series, were world champion Jeff Pyle and Walt Kyle in the first
constructor Frank Williams, Colin two periods, while Dave Robinson

'

CINCINNATl (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds pitchers Tom Hwne and Bill
Bonham and their wives escaped the
MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas,
Nev. by helicopter will! nothing but
the clothes on their backs.
Hwne telephoned fellow pitcher
Paul Moskau late Friday with their
story. They had planned to join
Moskau in Tucson, Ariz., for a
charity golf match Sunday but were
not Cl!rtaln they could make It after
the fire.
Moskau, contacted In Tucson by
The Cincinnati Enquirer, quoted
Hwne:
'"I heard thiB guy in the ball
hollering fire, fire," early Friday
morning, ·Hwne told Moskau.
Hume said he awakened his wife,
Sussn,,donned jeans and grabbed his
wallet She put on a pair of jogging
paints and they awoke Bonham and
his wife, Dona, across the hall on the

Carlm Reutemann and Nelson
Piquet.
Both sides have issued calendars,
in many cases claiming the same
event. FISA President Jean-Marie
Balestre has support from most of
the national sanctioning bodies and
many-Qrganizers.
FOCA has contracts for all ·the
races in question and insists.they are
valid and must be honored.

R echkins drop hockey tilt
..

.. .....
~

scored for Miami to make it 4-1.
Vern Sketchley, Steve Morris and
Rick Kuraly scored for the Redskins
in the third period. But Eric
Ponath's goal proved to be the
game-winner for the Wildcats.
Northern Michigan outshot Miami

• .JMII

511-21.

The Wildcats now are ·1~ in the
league and 4+ I overalL Miami of
Ohio dropped to 04-1 in the league
and 3-6-1 overalL

goaltender
· a shOt. Buf·
falo won the National Hockey League contest 4-2 in
,Winnipeg. (AP Laserphoto).

TOUGH PLAY- Winnipeg Jets' Danny Geoffrion
is in toug~ position in front of the Buffalo Sabres' net as

Here in Gallia County

Slip some
excitement
under the tree

Allstate can save you 10% ·
on ~~Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

Scanning excitement from the
innovative Bearcat"' 211 . Scans 18
channels at once. 6·band coverage.
Keyboard
programming. Even a
digital clock. It's
where the action is!

For years, you've
seen and heard
advertising about
Allstate Homeowners insurance.
And now, it's available here , at our

agency. But, did you know that if
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211

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24th
floor.
"'We
walked do~ the stairwell to
the 16th floor, could get no farther
and went up to the roof. We Sjlw the
helicopters. They took women and
children first, then the elderly. Then
we were evacuated. We're all right
now, but tired: My pants are black
from the smoke, I guess, and so is

'•

..•
'
·..•

..

~

LOOKING DOWN FIElD - Lebanon Warrior
quarterback Ty VanDeGrift (12) ~the blocking of
guard Gary Sizemore (57) as he prepares to throw in

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

saving!:\!

RANGERS COACH RESIGNS - Fred Shero resigned as coach and
general manager of the New York Rangers Saturday and was replaced on
an mtenm basts, by Craig Patrick, the National Hockey League team's
.director of operahons. Constdered among the leading candidates for the
job is fanner U. S. Olympic Coach' Herb Brooks, now coaching an
amateur team in Davos, Switzerland. (AP Laserphoto ).

Allll.ol~ I""""'"'~ l"mn pan'
Non h~"·"*

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By GEORGE STRODE
AP Span. Writer

Give us a call and get in on the

McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY INC.

Bpnhcnr

Nick Johnson, Accountant Executive
4~2 2nd Ave.
· Phone 446 · 1761
Gallipolis

SCANNERS

I

first quarter action against Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney in Division II high school tournament play.
The game was played at Upper Arlington High School
In Columbus Friday night. (AP Laserphoto).

Cardinals cop second state ·title

Allstate has found it costs less
to insure newer homes, and they're
passing this savings on to'you .

Y~ungstown Mooney boosters
think they're better than Division n
In Ohio high school footllall. They
may have proved lt Friday night,
thwnplnjj Lebanon 50-0.
After all, Mooney polished ~ Cincirln&amp;ti Moeller 34-7 1n the um Class
AAA aemlfinaiB. And that's the same
Moeller team that Will be playing
Masalllon for the Division I bonors

It was the second state playoff
crown for the Cardinals. They won

the big schoOl title in 1973, beating
Warren Western Reserve 14-J In the
finals.
"It was just a matter of strength,"
said Don Bucci, Mooney's coach, of
the rqmp aver Lebanon. "Our kids
are phyaically stronger."
Mooney wound up the 19110 season
wtbeaten with 12 straight trlwnphs.

Friday night
cage results
.

'

.

.

• Ohio High School Basketball
Friday's Results

Ashta bula Harbor 55, Jd£erson 52
Avon Lake 76, Brook~ide 43
Carey 66, Hi verda le SO
Cin. Seven Hills 62, Manchester ~7
Cleve. At.la m.s 87, Cle\le. Ea~l 49
Cleve. ColllnwOOd 54, Cleve. Kennedy 52
Cleve. Hay 82, Cleve. E. Tech fi2
Cleve. Hayes 80, Cleve. South 66
Cleve. Marshall 76, Lakewood 46
Cleve. W, Tech a:i, Cleve. Rhodes $2
Col. Brookhaven 70, Col. DeSales 46
Col. Independence 66, Re)'l1 old.sburg 49
Cuyahoga Hts. 79, Richmond Hts . 55
Day. Cham-J ul 34, Day. Oakwood 44
Day. White 79, CDl. Central 74
Defiance 7l. Tol. WoodwanJ ~7
E . Cleve. Shaw 86. Cleve_ Glenville 51
Fort f.A)ramie 67, Botkins 48
Fort Recovery &amp;4, Lmcolnview H
Geneva 54, Euclid -H
Greenville 70, Eaton &amp;6
Hawken 67, Independence 44
Hicksville IJ:j, I...ibertv Center 45
J ack.sun Center 71, Russia GJ
Uma Cath. 78, E lida 11
·
Lutheran East 54, Elyria Chris tian 50
Mentor Lake Ca th. 89, HaNey 62
Miller City 82, Ohio City 46
Minster 70, Spencerville 65
New1:1rk 76, Col. West 55
Norwood 59, Cin. Reading 52
Ohio Deaf 76, Zanesville Christ. ~2
Ottoville 72, Ayersvillc JS
Spring. Catholic $4, Spring. North--

A.parts

p\\\S

CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians have pulled out of
the bidding for free-agent slugger,
Dave Winfield.
After two discussions with Winfield's agent, AI Frohman, the In·
dians decided the contract demands
of the fonner San Diego Padrfli
slugger are too stiff to meet, said
Phil Seghi, general manager of the
Indians.
Winfield reportedly is seeking $13
million over 10 years.
Of the 10 players the Indians drafted in major league baseball's
·receni free agent re-entry draft,
Winfield will be the only one
Cleveland bas so far ruled out.
Seghi also said it's doubtful the
team will he able to sign pitcher Don
Sutton, . w)lo was the team's first
selection. Seghl said he has held six
negotiating sessions with Sutton's
agent, Larue Harcourt.
The Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher
!&amp; reportedly seeking $100,000 a year
for five years to sign with another

team.

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V&gt;'' DRIVE SOCKET SET
16 Pieces:.. t 1 S1d. ~kts .l{, .. through 1Y.",
Ratchet. s and10 Extension , Flex Handle.
Speed Handl e. Stee l Box

'!'a " DRIVE DEEP SOCKET SET
8 Pieces : B Dee p Sacke ts 12 Pt. .
J8 '' thro ugh 1)i6"', Stee l Box

_

SPECIAL $17 °

9

SPECIAL $63

19

====+----------

No.
2300A·SS

9 Pieces: 9 Deep Sockets 12 Pt.

Y," thr"· •gh 1" SleeiBox

'

SPECIAL$ 2 699
+---------------=~

SAVE

Model

Modol

No.
2410·SS

No.
2400MA·SS

% " DRIVE SOCKET SET

" DRIVE SOCKET SET

9Pieces : 9 St-'. Socketsl 8 thro ugh

Steel Tray

7~ " ,

~6f"eces : :1 S1d. Sockets Y,. through1 ".
J(, Spark Plug Socket, A~t c hel , 3" and 6"
E ~&lt; bms1o n . Flex: Handle , Steel Box

19

SPECIAL$

38

41

WARRIOR RUN- LeiJIIg Warrior I"UIIIIiDit.c:k Scott Brown (31)
pidll up a-few yards before beinC bnlalbt down by Younptowll cantlnal
~ taekle ~ 0n1111
1n DIYIIIm n high fiChool tournament
~ FridaJ
Upper ArllngtonHilbSchool (AP Luerphoto).

112 '' DRIVE DEEP SOCKET SET

54%
3/a

Ill! Deluxe Counter Saver'" microwave
oven installs over your present cooktop Ill Solid-s lat e touch con••ol pads
Ill Digital pane l m Built·Q! speed
exhaust fan and light llll
ra-wlde
16" oven inter ior.
Model A'(~54

II

Model

SPECIAL $11

'

We're open Mon.·Sat.,

Forget any ideas you might have about kerosene heaters being
smelly and old-fashioned . These Comfort Glow kerosene heaters
are ultra-modem with push· button starting, safety shut-off,
chromium irof) core combustion chamber, deodorizing catalyzer
and no-soot Polypropylene wick. Built by the makers of Panasonic
and Quasar electron1c equipment, more than 14 million in use. •
(28-0861' 2, 3)
Economy model GRW-8, Reg. $139.95 ... . . ... ......... . . $129.95
DeLvxe modeiGR-9, Reg . $179.95 .......... . • . • ..• .. . . $164.95
Deluxe w1th Fan GRF-9, Reg. $199.95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $179.95

Model

Wellington 54, New London 44
Woodland, Ind., 88, Antwe!l) 66
Young. Rayen 48 , Warrensville 46, 20T

r

\£) 1980 Hallmar K CarCIS. Inc

YOU'LL GLOW WITH COMFORT!

~~

CAIJ.ED ''KID GWVE"
ORANGE
The Dancey tangerine is called the
"kid glove" orange because of its
easy-peeling quality.

Create a beautiful Thanksgiving table. and m ake
clean-up easy, too, with Hallmark paper
partyware. Start with our colorful turkey
centerpiece and a complete range of matching
accessories - from
placemals to
banquet plates.

No.
. 2054A-SS

SPECIAL $27°9

GENERAL
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) - Dr.
Patrick Mazza was charged with
using ihe names of five Philadelphia
Phillies players to illega lly
prescribe drugs, the state Justice
Department said.
Dr. Mazza stands accused of
prescribing various amphetamines
by using the names ilf Steve Carlton
Greg Luzinski and his wife Jean:
Pete Rose, Randy Lerch, Larry
Chrtstenson, former player Tim McCarver and Sheena Bowa, wife of
Larry Bowa. None of the players and
wives were charged.
Attorney General Harvey Bartle
ill said the players and the wives
told state investigators that they
never were treated by Mazza and
never received the prescriptions
that he allegedly wrote.

Have a Nice ·and Easy
Thanksgiving

LANDMARK'S GOOD BUYS!
For a limited time only we are proud to oHer these .
Challenger Socket Sets at incredibly low prices.

eastern 49

Strongsville 57, Columbia Ji
Swanton 56, Wauseon 51
Tri·Village 97, Mendon-U nion -43
Troy ti&lt;J, Miami E. 40
Valley Forge 79, Cleve. Holy Name
Valleyvlew 53, Preble Shawnee 4ll

Lebamln suffered its first loss in 13
games this season.
The Division I championship bet·
ween Moeller and Massillon will be
~ed Sunday before a full house of
27,000 in Nippert Stadium on the
University of Cincinnati campus.
Moeller, bidding for its.fifth title in
the past six years, ~ risk a 32game winning streak against
Massillon. The Tigers, 111-1-1 this
fall, never have won a playoff cbftm.
plonahip althoUf!b they have collected a record 1.2 state poll crowns.
"I do feel the league (Steel Valley)
we're in is a llWe better," Bucci
said. "We knew we had to stop their
outside" game. Our defense put It
togetper."

,.&lt;'

s\ote tn

1\\8

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Indians pull out
of bidding war

'.

and Mrs. Toby Holland of Palmetto,
Fla.
"! was a little panicky for a
while," said Mrs. Holland in a
telephone interview. "I'd heard on
the radio aobut the fire at about 11
o'clock but Susan caled her father
about a half an hour later and said
they were all right. So I guess they
were among the first to be
evacuated.
·
"I talked to her later, but she
didn't have much time. Everybody
wanted to use the telephone. She
said she had only a nightgown and a
jogging suit and Tom had shorts or
something like that and they were
going out shopping.
"I saw them both on television
later. A camera wwas in the Convention Center. Tom had a blanket
wrapped around him . .
"Nothing else matters. They got
out safely," Mrs. Holland said.

my shirt, but we're safe,"' Moskau
quoted Hwne.
The evacuees were taken to the
Las Vegas Convention Center where
Hume called Moskaa.
" He said he bad trouble from the
smoke and was coughing. A little
later he called and said he, his wife
and the Bonbams had moved into a
private residence.
"He sowtdect tired more than
anything. He said he woWd wait until morning before deciding whether
they'd come on to Tucson. He said
they'd been told there might be a
chance they could come hack to the
hotel and see whether they could
retrieve any of their clothing,
" All they bad were the clothes on
their backs and they were going out
to do some shopping for a few
things," Moskau said.
The Hwnes ·bad left their two
children ·with her parents, Mayor

&lt;•&gt;

••t

12 Pieces: 12 Metric Sockets
Bmm t hrough 19mm, Steel Tray

4

SPEIAL '18°

.

SAVE '50
ON THE PAIR

~"

DRIVE DEEP SOCKET SET
7 Pieces.: 7 Deep Sockets Y. " through Y,",
Steel Box
.
·

SPECIAL

'12°1

'NEW YORK (AP) - 0..
"""'"1, fGIIowblllll the friltlpl ol
101111111, _,. . the ri* lllwwldna
fw New Yon YII!Del ·o-p
bat he 11YB
ll'a..nblt.
...... becemit the flftiJ field·
•MI JH ol tbe YenJre. Ill fin

WHILE THEY LAST

·-·

MktrigNtllac*lnllh. Mtt::U ~In

~--

,..,. Pridfl1, lllvinl 1111 JOb •
Jllllftl ........ to take - for
fllctanw, wbo!"'lped
,
1111ANA
• I Ip 'L1t WU an- ·

a.

Ia Plllllc ......• olftte It
y. . . • ...... tlu•dllllf.

han 11 sa II 'J'JD ' ,

I

IIDIM

a, I'll.

''I . . . . . . . . . . . . . I . . . .

·•

\l

Your youngster's eyes will light up at
first stght of this bright red, stake-side
coaster wagon. Fine features include
all·w~ther natural hardwood body
and stdes, Easy-Tum steering and
semi-pneumatic tires. (22·2651)
Regularly $46.95

Of'ive a little and save a lot-Free delivery wlthtn 75 mtles.
Yes, we service at y'o ur local Hotpoint Dealer.
Store Hours: 8:30 to S: 30. Mill Clo~ed at 5:00 P.M.
M
and Mason Counties.

·•1111==--1111 ....
.........

KIDS LOVE LITI'LE
RED WAGONS! -

POMEROY LAN_DM4RK

'1118 ... &amp; elf.iwDIDII newt Jilt.

G&amp;J AUlO PARTS ~~W~~s

10 INCH· DIAGONAl

$29goo
,,. _...._a Willi'"'

SAVE '100

00

COLOR TV

ste'"'•-,

%" DRI;.'E METRIC SOCKET SET

Quality 2-speed washer II Permanent Press
and Knits/Delicates cycles 1111 3 Water level se- ;
l_eptions II Blea~h dispenser Jill Matching dryer
Wtth up to. 90 mmute timer 1111 Up-front filter Ill!
Porcelain enamel finish drum.
·

l

·

I~

•

�. . .. .. . . .

...

'

e&amp;,..'lbe Sundayrm-sentlllel, Sunday, Nov. 23,

~

.....

~

... .

ueo

For the
record...
Buffalo

7

NewEncland
Mlarnl

N.Y. Jet.

7
37

' 0 .. . 3112111

'
a'

Night Quiet - Elevated view of the
MGM Grand Hotel an~ Casino in Las
Vegas Friday night showing the
)lotel, center, with the lights of the
famous Vegas striP around it. Early
Friday morning a fire broke out in
the casino and hotel kllling dozens of
people and injuring hundreds of
others. (AP Laserphoto)

O .PBU2213

o .1136 m
o .m 112

%17
201

w...
a 3 o .m m a
a • o .867 m 235

Ookland
.San Diego

Denver

KanauClty

Seattle

~

0 .545
0 •456
0 .t&amp;&amp;
'
7
Nadaaal Coaftaeke
Eall
10 l 0 .900
6
5

-

Waalllngton

Delnlll

5
6

2ll ZZl
'IJ1I 240
212 241

a3 a' oo .m
.m
3 &amp; o .m

N.Y.Glontl

St. Lools

3 8
Ceolnl
6 5

'I

Green Bay

•
•

Tampl Bay

C!licago

A RING OF CONFIDENCE - Philadelphia Phillles flrst baseman
Pete Rose shows off one of his two World Series rings during a news conference Thursday. He said the judges were right when they named him
"Most Valuable Player" iil 1975 and thinks they mistakenly overlooked
him in the 1900:ieries. (AP Laserphoto).

•'.

I 5 0 .545 131 110
6 8 0 ' .511llltDI
2 t 0 .112 200 274
c..tnl
a 3 o .m J» 114

~

o .m

292 136

!!Zt 211
115 :120
2211 251
111 m

0 -~ Zl9
0 .545 Ill
5B 1 .too l'le
6 l .4011 :Ml4
7 0 .964 175

w...
a ' o .m as
7 • 0 .&amp;36 294
3 a o .:m 226

Atlanta

LosAnseles
San Fran&lt;:i&gt;co
New Orleans

0 11 0 ,(OJ
ThorMay'aGame
San Diego 'll, Mlami 24, OT
Sucll:r'• Gamet
Baltimore at New England
Qllcago at Atlanta
CincinniU at Cleveland

Ull
210
. 231

231
182

· No warning, no alarm

202

228

310
181 341

ROOM Of CHAMP!ONS- The wrestjing team at
Lakewood St. Edward's lligh School is filled with constant reminders of past accompllslunents and future·

goals In the sport. ·Practice Ia seriOUB t.m._. and so ill ·
winning. St: Eil.'s bu won ~ stralgbt Ohio AAA
Hlgh School wrestling titles and ill shooting for a fourlb. (AP I.aserphoto).

Detroit at Tampa Bay

Houston at New Ycrl. Jets
Ookland al l'lliladt!lphia

Sports .Desk

P!itaburgh at Buffalo

Bar.

Gn!t!ll
at Minnesota
Kansa5 City at St.Louis
NY Giants at San Francisco
Seattle at Denver
Washington at ~Uas

Moadly'• Gamt
Las Angeles at New Orleans

Johnny Bench:

A highly professional athlete

Nati._t Rodte1 LeagUe
C8mpbeU Cotdume

hbictDivtlloa

By Dale Rolbgeb, Jr.
another route. He says money is mi
W L TGFGAPb
II 4 3116~31
A highly professional athlete the most important thing. He has Plllladelphia
N.Y. Islanders
l2 5 • 118 70 28
security,
fame,
lots
of
off
field
inCalgary
that's how to desaibe Cincinnati
8 7 t717220
WashJnitoo
6 6 7&amp;66119
Reds catcher Johnny Bench. The vestments and other interests.
N.Y. Rlnger'll
• 13 3!894 11
I believe those other interests speD
veteran showed lots of claas again
Smydte Dhilloa
Vancouver
ll 6 3826725
the difference between Rose, "the St.
this week when he announced he had
LouiJ
ll 6 378742$
high price superstar," and Johnny Colorado
decided to remain with the Reds
a 1 ' 118 73 20
OUc.ago
7 9 ~799019
··next season.
Bench the superstar not just in Edmonton
4 9 5S97413
Bench, hobbled by injuries the last baseball, but more importantly in Winnipeg
113 5 63 1111 7
Wale~ Conte~
four seasons, no longer wants to don· the heart.
Norris IH\Iill011.
Personally, I am glad Bench chose 1..Ds Angeles
the catching equipment more than
13 ; 1 866427
ll 7 2916124
to remain in Cincinnati since he, Montreal
twice a week.
HarUoro
5 10 1598914
In the meantime, Number 5 can Tom Seaver, Ken Griffey and Dave Pllt.sbw-gh
5 ll 3698613
3 13 3601149
remain in tip top shape to help the ,Concepcion are the only big name Detroit
Adams Dlvtlloa
·
younger Reds with more power and Reds' players:
MinnesOta
11 3 4714726
Buffalo
10 4 5705225
oOn't get me wrong, there are Toronto
leadership.
9 6 2 75 118 !II
The sure Hall of Farner again proven "garners" with the Reds Boston
6 9 3$98115
4 10 5666313
displayed his love for the game, love namely, Dave Collins, Rliy Knlgb; Quebec·
FrMt.y•• Game
for Cincinnati and desire to help his ani! Dan Driessen, but none has the
Buffalo 1, w5'::'"J:.' 2
y'tGamet
ball club even though Reds' flair and fan appeal as does Bench.
Torooto at Boston
management hasn't given him a
If Bench had left on his own or via
Wlnnlpeg at Plllladelphla
Vancouver at NY Raf18ers
definite position when he is not cat- a trade later, attendance will
Hartford at Chlcqo
decrease further than the 600,000
ching.
Buffalo at Edmonton
· M..ta;r'a GIIIDn .
Bench still has two years drop off since the World chamLoo Angel.. at Quebec
.
plonship
years
of
1975-76.
remaining on his f450,000 a year conWlnnipeg at NY lllanden
For Bench to really be effective,
tract. but flatly staled hls decision to
g!Ye up catching was not a power Dick Wagner, the man holding the
play for more money even l1 the organizational keys, must try to
~=~=
Reds has cifered it. That is · make room for hls talents on a daily
w L P&lt;L GB
Plllladelphla
t8
3
.157 remarkable when you co.naider the basis. Yes, we are pushing for a
greedy athlete of today.
trade and our choices are two, either ~....
~
!~
Waolllnglon
8 12
.100 9..,
Just look around ... two short Dan Driessen or Ray Knight.
I like both players, but one or the
New Jmey
Cealnl Dt~
·381 10
years ago, another favorite of most
17
5
.773 Cincinnati fans, Pete Rose, a other must go to provide a place for MilW.ukee
1
6\i
i ~ .521
hometown product, decided Bench. Driessen has speed, a lair
.100
a
.316 9\i
pastures do look greener when bat and ill great defensively. Knight
~~land
: ~
•273 lJ
million dollar figures are tossed in.
has a fair bat, great glove and no
Detroit
5 16
.138 llli
w..-Coal...,..
Even though Rose maintains he speed.
Players of their caliber could San AnlOnlo Mldweot ~~ .nl would have remained in Cincinnati if
11
a
.1100
2\i
Dick Wagner had shown proper bring a starting catcher, and Utah
respect and offered more money, It possible much needed southpaw pit.500
'"
Ctty
:
.4011 6\i
6\i
was ironic that he left for what at the cherthree. One dsal being rumored ill a ~·
; li .389
.113 l2
time, was described as the flrst
for one swap witb the CarPadfl• Dtvltloa
.150
11
3
million dollar contract for a baseball dinaJs involving future superstar PlloenlJI
Lcs Angeles
16
6
.711
2\i
T
player.
. erry Kennedy for Dave Collins, · , GoldenState
11 a .1100
5
.\78
7...
to 11
A few month3 later, Rose was Mike LaCoss and Doug Balr. If that Seatlle
PwUand
6 11
.
.31111 ll
second on the list behind Dave goes through, Kennedy naturally San Diego
8 15
.2811 ll ...
Frlday'aGameo
Parker of Pittsburgh and now is fur- would be Bench's replacement while
a switch In the
. outfield alignment
Booton toa, Golden state 101
ther behind.
Hooston 111, New Jersey 1011
l'llllodelphla 97, Indlana 118
Johnny Bench could be in that would put Bench shagging rues.
WWJln&amp;ton 102, San Diego !10
same boat - however, he chose Let 's keep our lingers CI'OIISed for
SeaWe 101. llallu 91
some type of accommodation.
C!licago 130, New York 121

i ::

=:,

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Local bowling

418 R. Hyatt; Euon, U5 V. Morpn, 311 C.
Reynolds; Babyland, 161 R Canailay, 404 C.
VanWinkle; ,.,.,_,.~ 173 T. Bibbee, ttl B.
Barnell; Credll Bureau, 156 LoveU (oub), _,B.

Sal!~.

convert..t ,

V. Pyles, K. B~, P.
F.,._, B. Gennan, D. Rainey ~10; Mev
Won!~; S. Barnetl7-3-l0; P. Fer,_, HO; C.
SpUta

Roudl s.a-7-8; K. Brown S-7 and l.:UJOj B.

Stover7-t-6.
Trib

. TueodayMominglloodljlglf,..Nov. u,u1811 ,
TOOID

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Commvclal&amp;$aYingsBank
PrncrlptlonShoppe

64
56

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Mo!ldav•nn

50
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Jeymar'a

l=ountaln Of Youth
cnv Ice&amp; Fuel
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lodlvl'*&gt;ol ' Comme"lat, 205·531 MeV Wa•d ;
· Prnc;-Jptlon. 117·44o 1 F . Riffle ; P.aptn, 201 P.
Fergutot'l, .s.et w. SC•rwrv; Holldlv. 205 It
""' , ....,, , ""' F. cott ' Joymar'o,' lto-., L. ·
SwiWr; Fountain Of .Youth, 201 P. AUC:rew, Jl•
M. Facemire; City ICI, 111-119 5. SPNI"I; Vl ' l.
•164·444 C. Reynoldi j aabyl.nd, 190-.1 8 . Fulltr
(IUbt ; TMtnpson' s, 152·.441 R. WaiiKt; Crtdlt
. 8ureeu. 1!9 J . SafforCI, 47.1 8 . S.flOrd.
Splits converted : D . Relrwy H-10; L . WhHier
H ; J . S.fford 7-6-10; M . Schuman. P. F.rou10n,
J . Greethous.. F. A:lfflt 3·10; V. GrOYtr, • ·7; T.
Summers, 4r5-7; 0 . Cnto5-JO, MllryWard 2·7. ·

D

classified

Nau.oil F - !ape
Alatrtcu. c.ternee
Eaat
W L
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a , o .m w 173

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Area cage schedules
November 2S:
Minford at Jackson
Portsmouth West at Waverly
Wellston at Vinton County
November 26:

Wheelersburg at South Point
November 28:
Kyger Creek atE ik Valley
Portsmouth at Miami Trace
Jackson at Meigs
1ronton at Waverly
GaiiipoiisatWeilston
Logan at Athens
November 29:
Southern at Miller
Athens at Portsmouth
waverly at Chi llicothe
LoganatCoiumbusCentrai
Nels-York at MeigS
CENTER CLOSED
RIO GRANDE - All facilities In
Lyne Center will be closed to the
public Wl~ December Jfor the quarte break •
sched
r
' "' J1eW
u)e will be
published when cJ•tes resume."
The Lyne Center pool will
be
closed duriJ1I the winter quarter.

hundreds injured at MGM Grand

All male Catholic school
seeks fourth title in row
LAKEWOOD, .Ohio (AP)
Howard Ferguson and his assistant
·wi'estling coaches at Lakewood st.
Edward lligh School wear sweatshirts in practice emblazoned with a
not-so-original slogan: "Go Four
It."
.
The misspelling is intentional. ·
Ferguson, a millionaire land
developer, wrestling coach and
athletic director at the all-male
Catholic school of 1,500 students, is
very serioUs about wrestling. So
serious, in fact, that tbllt he took a
tesm with an 6-10 record seven years
ago and has built a dynasty - three
8\l'aight Ohio AAA State Wrestling
titles, four district championships in
a row and countless tournament and
dual meet victories.
Hence, the "Go Four It" slogan.
For Ferguson, B former wrestler
himself, a year-round conditioning
and wrestling program Is aU
preparation for three weekends in
winter: the sectional, district and
stste tournaments.
"Our goal every year is to work
harder than any other team during
the off-season. What you do during
the season depends almoSt entirely
on what you do during the off.
season. In May and ~ugust. 30 kids
from Eds will tie cif at some
wresillng tournament somewhere,"
Ferguson said.
"I tell these kids during a tournament ... Where were the kids they
are wrestling during the off-season,
duringMayandAugust?"
·
. Treating wrestling as a yearround COljlrni~nt has made the
green, white and gold st. Edwards'
wrestling wiiforms as much feared
.as respected in Ohio.
Since 1978, when St. Eds won Its
first AAA title and posted its flrstindividual state champion, the feeling
of otber wrestling coaches around
the state has hardened. In the
southern parts of Ohio, some
coaches are reluctant to let their
wrestlers take the ~Dat against St.
Edwards. .

LAS VEGAS,

•

don't want to be surpriBed at tbe biueve In guilt by 811110Clatlon.
' state tournament," Fergt11101l1181d. ..----__;._ _;__ _-,Akron,Toledo and Colwnbus high
schooill will see st. Edwards in tournament competition this year. Of
southern Ohio schools, only Cincinnati Moeller, which has a dYnasty
of its own In prep ~n. will
wrestle St. Edwards.
The match between Moeller and
Sl; Eds is part of a football matchup
arranged by Ferguson and Moeller
coach and athletic director Gerry
SiAIR MNI•
Faust.
.
·
"Gerry is a claas guy. He's a winner," Ferguson says, "He~klds
Mu,.•rO...
up here and they stay with my
wrestlers at their homes. We do that
witb any team that cames in .."
If you'ro loal&lt;itll fDI tile best
"We have the state cbamplonahip
VIIUI in homiOWftll'l intllfiiCI
team cmnlng ft:orn Oklahoma over
- yGu'li find itot Slote Form.
the holidays. They will stay witb my
Givt m1 I etll today, You'll
wrestlers. 'lbere's no frlctiou. That's
di....,r wN(I lllldl Stlfl Farm
good for the kids and sport of
lfll OIIIRbor - '*-ntr1 jn.
wrestling," Ferguaon salcL
iurlf in the 11000rld.
Whether any team will beat st.
CAROLL SNOWDEN
Edwards before 01' during the state
meet in Mardi ill ' academic.
Ferguson expr e PS little concern
about It: Hll interest l!lll't 110 IIIllCh·
·for wlnnill8 u it ill for Wrestling and
the wrestler.
.
Ferguson said be demands quillty
from his wrestlers, not only on the
mat, but off.
,_
"I tell the ldds, be a good penGo,
fire M CIMh'l c.,i.,
then lie a good wriatler. l t:en them
'.
the llrst time they see me that they
It 18111
shouldn't ezpect me to be fair. I

-,.,..,...............
n. ........

Nev: (AP) -There was no warning, no
alarm as black, ~hoki!lg smoke from a raging kitchen
fire quickly filled the MGM Grand hotel-(!asino, trapping thousands of people, killing at least 81 and injuring more than 500.
. Firefighters, predicting the death toll would rise,
.combed through smoldering heaps of ash, charred
closets and blackened stairways of the luxury hotel
today in~ grim sear~h for additional bodies.
··
It was the nation's worst hotel fire in more than 30
years.
Fire officials said no alann sounded whim the blaze
broke out at 7: 15 a.m. PST Friday in a large kitchen ·
that supplies six of the hotel's restaurants.
Flames apparently destroyed the amplifiers on the
ipanually operated alarm system before they could go
into action, Clark County Fire Chief Roy Parrish said.
Gov. Robert List, who toured the burned-out area,
said he planned to appoint. a commission to study
whether the city's standards for fire alarm systems .
were sufficient.
Most of the viCtims on the upper .floorS of the ?.&amp;storY, 2,07l).toom hotel died of smoke inhalation after a
"wall of fire" roared through the casino below, said
Clark County Coroner Otto Ravenholt. Many were out
of reaCh of fire department ladders that could go no
higher than the ninth floor, authorities said.
Only three floors of the luxury hotel had sprinklers,
and according to the fire code were not necessary
higher up because the other floors were under 24-hour
supervision, Parrish said. "Very definitely it would
have belped," if there were more sprinklers, he said.
· "To the best of· our knowledge, all safety factors
were operational at the tlnie of the fire," said hotel
president Beman! Rothkopf.
.

....

--

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

'

GAWA OPI'ICAL aNTER
548 Jackson Pike

•
e
•
•

ERY

Prescriptions filled
DR. DOIW.D
Glasses repainlcl .
Eyes examin~ .
, . . '
DR. ROBERT TORY
Hard and soft c~~~ttact lenses
O_ptometrists
..,
Hours:~· &amp; Thurs. 9:00 to 5:00
· Tues. &amp;,)Y'C!· 9:00 to 7:3t
ClOSed f;(l., Sat., Sun.
Phone C'l4) 446-U60

Ferguson
says school
Ohio haswrestling
the best I~~====~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
overall
high
~
program in the country, but he has
scheduled five Pennsylvania teama
and several other out-of-state opo
ponents for his grappelers this

·~
.··. :}

season.

\' ~.(""'

He tells of St. Eds being uninvited

j~

to the Uruvel'Sl
·
'ty of Cln ·
.
cinnati In-

•

vitatlonalinDecember.
"We got an entryfonn.in the mail, .
returned It and '""''""'
......_... we were ,
going to the tournament. About a
week before the meet, I get a phone
caU and they said If we come down, t
hslf the teama won't wrestle ;ft the
·toumamenl What could we do?"
Ferguson a-.
....ed •
He quetions the coaches' rationale
in rejecting competition with hls
Ul

team.

"How would you like to be a kid
who wrestled for a coach that
·
avoided St. Edwards aU year and
~ be in the state tournament and
have to --''e oftolft.t st. Eds,?"
,.,.,.,. .._.,_
"I think lt'a 1mpoi1ant to get klila
exposure from all over Ohio. We

r-------------.::______;.,._____-1

Husband Comforts Wife - an
unidentified ·man gives comfort to
his wife after the woman was
rescued from the burning MGM
Grand .HoteL

Names of the dead were eKpeCted to be released later
today, Clark County medical examiner Dr. Sheldon
.Green said the identification ·process "is too slow .
We've got to go through wallets and other personal ef-

fects.,,.

.

Of the 534 peoJlle injured, 195 were admitted to local .
hospitals for treatment .
Only the Winecoff Hotel disaster that killed 119
people in Atlanta on Dec. 7, 1946 was worne.
Panicked MGM guests - some dangling bed-sheet .
ropes - jammed balconies and the rooftop as poliore
helicopters circled overhead and officers shouted over
bullhorns, "Don'tjwnp! Don'tjwnpP'

One elderly couple locked their hands together and
plunged 17 floors to their deaths, said Fire Capt. Wayne
Littlefield.
Another man used bedding and towels to climb from
the upper floors to the loth floor, but then fell to his
death, Littlefield said.
Parrish, who ruled out arson, said the fire spread up
through two floors and then it broke through "like a
ball of fire" Into the casino and the false ceiling above
it.

,

Within 10 minutes it had gutted the 14G-yard-long
casino, where about 10 charred bodies were
discovered. Casino sources said as much as $200,000 in
cash may have been bW'!led in the blaze as gamblers,
leavmg piles of money on the tables, fled the infe010.
Carolyn Hurry, of Milan, Ill., said she and her
husband were blinded by smoke as they groped
through the hallway outside their room.
"We couldn't see, so we felt (with our hands) for the
words 'fire exit' on the door," she said.
•· As they fled to safety, Mrs. Hurry saldtheyaawfran..
tic people trying to break windows and fashion escape
ladders from bed sheets. Some alao hurled furniture into the sealed windows of their rooms to shatter the
heavy glass and let In fresh air.
Fire Capt. Ralph Dinsman said the smoke spread
quickly because of open stairwells and elevator shafts
left by new construction.
· "Everything happened so fast," Dinsman said. "I
got the report, and I.was here in two minutes and it
looked like the whole building was on fire. Smoke was
coming out of every crack 8!ld crevice."
Dinsman said the flames were controlled Biter two
hours and apparently were confined to the lower two
floors of the pale-pink granite hotel.
Authorities estimate there were some 8,000 people in
the hotel at the time, including 4,500 to 5,000 guests, and
an undetermined number of employees.
Weeping and dazed, guests who had fled out the
doors wandered on the 43-acre grounds, many barefoot
and in smoke-blackened.nightclothes.
The four-lane street in front of the hotel became a
makeshift emergency room, as pliramedics and doctors, some in hospital scrub clothes, worked feverishly
over victims.
Damage to the building along the glittering Strip was
in the millions, and authorities said it might be a year
before the facility could reopen.
·
The $106 million MGM, which opened seven years
ago, was in the process of adding 780 rooms and 33,000
square feet of banquet and meeting rQOma. Rooms rent
for $55'to $207 a night.
Bodies Removed
- Firefighters
remove · the
remains of one of
the victims in the
· MGM
Grand
Hotel and Casino
fire Friday in Las
Vegas. Dozens
died when a fire
swept through the
26 story, hotel arid
casino early
Fridsy · morning
caualng hundreds
of hotel guests to
be trapped on the
upper · floors.
Many of tbose
trapped on the up' per noon died of
llliloke Inhalation.
(AP LaRrphoto)

bHot"""

w. bJecl tbo apUit al tbo
*'"'! Jlllr ci!M.
a-. S{lodolly tma&gt;od.JO~ IMthor uppon

w-·

with~

loethor llniDg ond 1 w&amp;IOotighl, Jlollbl., molded
aolo willioewp .,.... .... otep abNrl ol tbo ......

You'D tan to tbo ollldcori Ill COIIIkxt ond atylwln thOM
ruggedly handoomo Wol-• llootoi.

MGM Grand Burns - Side view of the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino as
smoke billows up from the casino area Friday in Las Vegas. Fire swept
through the cuino and lower portion of the hotel.

What happened?-- What failed?
LAS VEGAS, Nev ..(AP)- Shaken
survivors and worried officials were
blaming a combination of factors
today for the lack of warning given
thousands of sleeping guests as.fire
h the 1ower floors of
roared
throug
the
MGM
Grand hotel-casino.
"It juat shouldn't have happened,"
said Cesar Sanzaro, a Westbrook,
Conn., contrsctor who crawled
through a smoke-filled hallway outside his 1'00111 Friday morning to llull
a fire alanJL When he did, nothing
happened.
.
Not ·only were the manual fire
alarma anent, but most sprinklerslocated on only three floors - failed
to activate. Offlclals said the only
sprinklers worked were behind a
shoppmg arcade. Most floors did not
need qxinlders becaWie of 24-bour
!UperVilllon, ofllclals salcL
There 'it'88 no automatic fire
alarm system or smoke detectors,
although a new dty balldinc code
requires them in new buildlnp. Officials said liOflle smoke doon were
prq!ped open, allowing lllloke and
!Ire to pour into IIC8pe ltalrwelll.
. Hotel prwldertt Bernard Rothkopf
said in a statement: "To the beat of
our knowledge, all safety factors
were oper~~tional at the time of the
fire,
Authodties ll81d the blaze Ignited
In a large ldtcMII area. Flames
spread to an open catQlk Uled to
monitor gambling •bove the casino,
end the ceiling collapaed.
There was no sign the hotel, completed In 1113, had 'villiated any local
II

'·

fire codes. But Nevada Gov. Robert only to new structures, Clark Cowtty
List promised to appoint · a . blue- Fire Chief Roy Parrish said.
ribbon committee to determine
Parrish said the blaze apparently
whether Las Vegas standards for knocked out the automatic alann
hotelfirealarmsaresulficient.
system' s amplifiers in the
Officials said the facility was built basement.
The smoke spread so qw'cldy ·
to meet requirements of a 1970 fire
.code. Last year, tougher·regulatiom because of open slairwells and
were adopted, requiring hotels to elevator shafts left by new ~
have smoke detectors in aU guest. struction, spiraling up the shajts and
rooms and loud warning alarms in then back down, said Fire Capt.
,.an_ha
__
n,_._B_ut_the_n_e_w_rul_es_:app..i··:....~ed--Ral-ph.:..
· _D_insma
__n_._ _ _ _ _

1

worst fires list
Frldsy's fire at the lttGM Grand hotel in Las Vegas was the worst blaze '
in the United States in more than three years.
The worst !Ire in U.S. biltory was an 1871 blaze that swept througt
forests in Peshtigo, Will.,ldlling more than 1,150 people.
Fires in the illlt30 yean In which 25 people or more died Include:

Nov. 1, 19'19- 32 dead in a fire that followed a ship coUislon at the en-

trance to the harbor at G~veston, Taaa.
April2, 19'19-25 at a boarding houae in Fannington, Mo.
JWJe2111, um -42ata jail in Columbia, Tenn.
May28,197'7-165 at a nlghlclub in~te. Ky.
Oct. 24,19'16- 25 at a social club in the Brim, N.Y.
Dec. 20, 1970 - 29 at a hotel in Tucaoo, Art&amp;.
· Jan. I, 1970-27 at a nunlng borne In Marietta, Ohio.
JuiY.18, Ui87 -37 ataatatepriaoninJay, Fla.
Aug. 9, 1986 ~.1 tbe Titan milllle bue silo In Searcy, Ark.
Oct.10,11183 -"'n'it the state Fairgrounds Co1ileum in Indianapolis.
Nov. 23,11183 -83attheGolden AgeNIIl'llingHomebttltchville, Ohio,,
Nov.l8,1983 -211attheSUrfadeHatellnAtlanlieCity, N,J.
Dec.19,1880-50ootheUSSCanllallltianattbeBrooklynNuyYanl .
Dec. I, Ul58-96 atOurLadyoftbe.AngeiBSdloalinOlleqo.
. Feb. 17, 1967 - 72at a hctme for the elderly in W&amp;J 1a11to4 Mo.
Aprll16, 1953- 35 at a ailc:eco mataiW1II'kinll pial
Jan. 7,1950-39 atMercyHOiipltal lnDI!ttaljMt,lvwa.

�D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23. 1980

~--

•

II
I
1

Walnut va1uable
I tree for landowners

----------~· ----tBlack

Beat. • •

Bend
Of.the
.

I
I

.
By Bob Hoeflich

Ml"s· Sandy Cobb, Southern High
·School yearbook advisor, reports the
l980 yearbooks are now on sale at
the school for $10.50 each.
Now if you want a really good
deal, you can get copies of the yearbooks of 1971, 1978 and 1979 ai $5
each. These, too, can be purchased
at the high school during school
hours.
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club is a lively group. Twen~y-five of
them recently attended a dinner at a
Gallipolis restaurant. ·They
generally have some worthwhile
project underway.
The Rutland Gymnasium has been
deeded over to Rutland Village by
the Meigs Local Board of Education.
.The deed includes the ground in
front of the gymnasium, Village
Clerk Vernon Weber reports the
building is in bad condition with
broken windows, flooring which
must be replaced and a leaky roof.
The gymnasium will become a
community building with facilities
for village officials, the emergency
sq,uad and the public. The stage and
auditorium will be available also for
public use.
Village officials are currently
without funds to undertake all of the
work which must be done but are
hoping that, perhaps, some federal
program might be used to assist
and, of course, will accept contributions from individuals and
groups to help with the project.
Terri J o Wilson, a graduate of
. Meigs High and a great ball player,
will enter Holzer Medical Center
Sunday for surgery.
Terri injured her knee in a motorvyc)e accident the last week in May,
a week before the Ohio Softball
Tournament at Ashland in which the
Meigs Girls played.
The daughter of Marlene and
Geoffrey (Jeff) Wilson, Route 3,
Pomeroy, Terri is a student at Rio
Grande College. She will be in a cast
and on crutches for several weeks
following her operation but she is

1
1

hoping to be.home for Thanksgiving.
Copies of the 1981 edition of "Need
a Lift" were placed in all Meigs
County high_ schools and in the
Pomeroy. and Middleport ·Public
Libraries last week by the auxiliary
of Drew Webster.Post 39, American
~gion, in observance of American
Education Week.
The publication is the scholarship
and career handbook published an-·
nually by the American ~gion and
is '.'lluable for use by students, counselors, parents and others searching
out educational opportunities. It is
an excellent source of infonriation
on financial aid which is available
for students.
Missing a cat'
Friday afternoon, a black and
white cat, which apprently has had
good care, unknown to the driver,
Marvin White, hitched a ride in the
Long Bottom area Friday, The
animal got off the truck at the
Lawrence Grocery and the family is
caring for the feline until the owner,
hopefully, can be located. If it's your
cat, call843-4743.
Ora nge - Township Volunteer
Firemen will be holding their annual'
fund drive next Saturday in an attempt to raise funds to,pay off their
fire truck. Firemen will make an effort to contact every home in the
township and an envelope will be left
at every residence where no one is at
home on the day of the drive.
It'm not an avid television viewer
but did happen to catch appearances
by vocalists of yesteryea r, Margaret
Whiting and Helen Forrest on the
Juke Box Award Show. They're still
real speciaL
Just wanted to ll)ention to you
folks of the " working class" that after the big upcoming Christmas
rush, Uncle Sam will be taking a
bigger tax bite out of your paycheck
come January. Now you just keep
~miling ...

COLUMBUS ~ Blac.k walnut is a

treasured tree species in the United
States," Shaw said. Its rich, brown
color patterned grain are sought by
(urniture makerS and novelty buffs

sar\andowner might plant black
walnut spaced IO X 10 feet apart.
This would yield about 450 trees per
acre, but each tree required 50 years
to grow to maturity (20 inches in
diameter),

FREE CLOTHING DAY
CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency will hold
its Ire clothing day for Jow income
persons on Wednesday, Nov. 26,
:from 9 a.m. untill2 noon. The agency's clothing bank is located in the
old high school buildi"f in Cheshire

Eight juveniles
draw court fines

6 th

FATHER "

" LIFE

at

BYFREDJ.DEEL
EJ:teuloa Agent, 4-H
GalllaCounly
.
GAWPOIJS- The new Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp Dining Rec.reatloh
Lodge was ·\ISild for the first time
this past weekend as 72 4-H members from Gallla, Jackson, MeigS,
Lawrence, Highland, and Adams ·
Counties enjoyed a two day campirlg
experience.
Twenty-four 4-H members from
Gallia County participated in the aCtivity during which time they had
the opportunity to enjoy the new

WITH

the Mountaineer

992-7680. Give someone special a

l~sp~e~ci~a~ln~ig~h~t~ou~t~!=====~~~G~a~~~·~·~·~Oh~io~===~~=~~:~~~~~~~

.

From Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan ....

FREE
CANDLE

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

With Any New Savings
or Christmas Club Account

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
Office Hours by Appointment Only

. ~
..,..,......

;t

6 Month
Money Market

(Canclts locallr M.de ly Horltelt Ev... ,
7 Ohio Ave. ; Attt-, Ollie)

1981

CHRISTMAS
CLUB
·Bonus 50th Payment

or (304)-675-1244

I

glf~

.

There's an ext.ra Christmas
tucked into your J9tU
Chri!ltmu Cl ub al Athem1 Count~ Saving• and Loan. lt"1
a free - 50th par,ment. No _gimm1cks! Nothing to buy! To
qualify fo r your ' bonu:~ · all you need to do is make all the ,
first. 49 of t.he scheduled payrnenu in your Chriatmaa Club
co upon book . We will than add the ~Ot.h payment as a
"bOnu~ ." It 's our way of say inr "thank you" for com·
pleting the rirst 49 payments .

.

_.,

Hill'S MT AI'PUCATIOII IIITII MT

11m DIPOSIT TO THI CtUI CHICIID:

:J .o:·J

·

~

c

@... St• 11 '2 ij 111 '20
a-. (WM ..... , •. . •u •se•1ot •no 'SM •1 ,oot

.... .....

-

THIS WEEK'S RATE

•
182 DAYS

THROUG" NOV. 26TH

$10.000 MINIMUM

'

3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
41 W...ly hltNit•

•, 14.167%

_....,

. Remember ...
Ahens County Savings 6-month
"Money . Market" certificate
matures after December. Income tax on the interest will not "
be reported uotil 1982. (Your
1981 Tax Returrii·

a., -- - ""'• - --- - - llfC..O ----·

Gallipolis, Ohio

.....

COOK WHEN SERVING
TURKEY?
GALUPOUS - Turkey for
Thanksgiving .. . tender, moist,
delicious - what a great tradition!
How about "risky?" Sorry to spoil
the picture. But turkey provided
many opportunities for careless
steps in preparation, the kinds of
errors that expose your family to the
risk of food-borne illness.
Do not assume that aU products in
the retail market are safe and
wholesome. When you buy your
turkey, it is as weU protected from
contamination as possible; but
salmonella bacteria can be present
in over one-third of aU poultry, including turkey. Proper storage and
thorough cooking will kill the bacteria and prevent salmonella from
spoiling your food. So why take
chances when you can do the job
right?
To be sure your turkey is safe to
eat, follow these recommendations:
- Buy a frozen turkey early
enough to thaw in the refrigerator10-12 lbs. , 2-3 days ; lf&gt;-20 lbs .. 3-4

days before you need to cook it. (Do
not boy a bird that is already stuffed
and frozen. )
- If you need to thaw the turkey
faster, place it in cold running..
water .
- For a.bsolute safety, cook
dressing or stuffing in a separate
container. It is very risky to stuff
your turkey the night before yoU'
cook it. Bacteria that causes food
poisoning will have a chance to
grow.
- Roast the turkey long enough
for the temperature to reach 165
degrees F. in the thickest part of the
meat. (That will ensure destruction
of salmonella bacteria.)
- Roast the turkey in one step.
1
( Do not cook partially and then complete the cooking at another time.)
- Once the turkey is served,
refrigerate or freeze leftovers promptly. Store the stuffing separate
from the carcass. Refrigerate the
gravy also.
.
- Allow turkey leftovers, san-,
dwiches, and similar items to stay at
room temperature no longer than
two hours, including carving and
serving time.
- Wash your hands thoroughly
and scrub the cutting board with
soap and water then rinse with
scalding water between each handling or cutting of raw or cooked
turkey.
Why not become a "lc•w'•cisk:" •i
turkey cook, and have a worry free
enjoyable Thanksgiving.

•

•

!'•

'

Stohonor.,. Occlvdtd

--- ===

: WEATIIER FORECAST - ·The National Weather Service forecasts
~rain in portions of the Great Lakes Region on a line through the Ohio and
t Mississlppl Valleys. Showers •are also expected in parts of the Central
~Rockies with flurries in northeastem Willconsin. (AP Laserphoto) .

•

:
CANNIBALISM???
~ TOlEDO, Ohio - Infonnation
~ollected . from several ar.lChaeolog!cal sites in the Maumee .
tRI.ver Valley reveal a widespread
:practice ·of cannibalism among the
~·s Indian groQPS.
• David Stothers, associate
of anthropology at the
University of Toledo, said sites in
itliree spots on the river's southern
banta have produced evidence of
~- remAins that were ap;parently cannibaliZed in religious
:'marital rituala- The people perlJonning the canniballam Uved in the
~between 1,400and 1,800 A.D., he

, NEARCOMPLETION
WASHINGTON (AP) - Final
detalls remain to be worked out, but
it appears Congi'ess will approve a
total of about $7.9 billion in federal
budget savings before adjourning
Dec.5.
House and Senate conferees
agreed Friday on about $4.4 billion
in spending cuts and about $3.5
billion in new t8x revenues from a
variety of tax code changes.

A GOOD

NAME

who liked IIQt to be lden-

• State Department apoltuman
~ohn H. 'l'rllllner 8lllllllllleed·Friday
Prelidenl Carter Ia not cia. to
aclloo m the reqlllll, wblcll
dllclCIIedlaahreek.
,, ·

=

HOMELITii:e SUPER E-Z
•16" Power Tip guide bar and chain
·•Automatic and manual chain oiling
• •Rubber cushioned handle bar
•Cornpreslon release
•Rugged 2.5cu. In. engine (40.9cc)

•Chromed chill n

...

~

NODAYOFF
~ An old, old-timer Ia • penan who

:t:aD -'1 n.. 1bln~'Yfnl
pan't • daJ orr tnm Cbrlatmal
llllopplnB.
~ ···

Model 532

BALER Low As

s445']00
New Model 3600

FORD TRACTOR ·
Large Selection of

FORD MODEL
CHRistMAS TOYS
992-2668

Pomeroy

-

plus

$1,000
'

M F iooo Series tractor

WAIVER
of finance charges.
until March 1, 1981
on all tractors
·

Don't wait to buy a new MF tractor
Don't miss this chance to cash In on some special
off-season savings. Buy a new MF 2000 Series
tractor,. or an MF 34-81 PTO hp tractor, and you 'll
get a cash rebate direct from MF, plus you'll pay no
. finance charges until March 1, 1981 if you finance
with MF. The earlier you buy, the more you 'l l save .

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
CHISJIR, OH.

$350
Cash Rebate

Special Factory
Allowances too!

le!

~clall

CALL FOR
SPECIAL PRICE
ON' COMPLETE
OVERHAULS

Early Buyer Bonus!

Buying new equipment now may also
help reduce your 1980 income taxes .

ANittHER DECISION
.:; WASHINGTON (AP)
tpresldent-eleet Ronald Reacan Will
llkely be left with the cledllon
i,CIIi Poland'• recpjellt for "' llOlion ill

tJifted.

LAWN AND GARDEN .
TRUCKLOAD SALE
PLUS ADDITIONAL
20% .DISCOUNT

r•••;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll

,
••
·~

tlow-interest lOIIIIS, aceordiD8 to U.S.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR
SPECIALS

JAMES R. WILLIAMS

Cash Rebate

\professor .

Certifi~es

ARE YOU A IDGH·RISK

cent income tax this month.
· The latest layoffs cut the Jackson
County city's total work force
almost in half, with the Wellston
Police Department hardest hit. Six
of nine uniformed officel'll and an
five dispatchers were dismissed.

INDEFINITE LAYOFF
WELU;TON, Ohio - Twenty
workers who are paid from the city's
general and street funds received indefini~e layoff notices Friday.
The layoffs, effective in tV(o
weeks, stem from a money crunch
caused by a repeal of the city's 1 per-

·

CALL (614)-992-2104

453 Jackson Pike (US 35)

'•

A GIFT TO YOU!

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

GARDEN CENTER AND FUMER SHOP

GALLIPOLIS - James R. ' and president of the Gallijiolis bank.
Williams, President of the Central
A graduate of Cleveland West
Trust Company, Southern Ohio 1High Scbool, the American Institute
Division, at Gallipolis and Midof Banking, the Ohio School of
dleport, will address the Gallipolis
Banking and the Ohio School of InRotary Club Tuesday evening at
stallment Credit, he attended
Oscar's Riverboat Room.
· Marietta College. Throughout his
Williams' subject will be "The
career he has been actively Involved
Economic Impact of the Reagan . in bo~ civic and professional
Electric During the Next Four
organizations. While in Marietta he
Yea~-"
was president of the Marietta Noon
Williams became the president of
Lions Club, director and treasurer of
· the local bank in Gallipolis five monthe Marietta Chamber of Comths ago, eoming here from Marietta
merce, director of the Greter
where he was the vice president and
Marietta United Appeal, president
eomptroller for the Central Trust
of the Washington County Arthritis
Company, Marietta. He joined ~!l"
Foundation, and a member of the
1rt1 Trust in Its bookkeeping clepart- Washington County Heart
f!ent. He has held responsible Association and Marietta Comptlons in a nwnber of de~­ munity Foundation.
pints, qualifying him to now hold
He and his wife Jennie are now
the position of chief executive officer residents
of the Gallipolis area.

one reasonable price. For il)·
formation &amp; reservations, Call

NOW OPEN

Angie Dennison, Sherry Hardyman, Natalie Shong, Cheri Houck,
Kurt ~ntz, Dreama Rutt, Tammy
Knox, Missy Oliver, Shari Howard,
Roberta Hamilton, Kelly Stowers, .
Amy ROUllh, Linda Fulton; Terri
Corbin, Mike Stowers, Bill Swisher,
Ken Jenkins, Ed Moore, KeUi Kern- ·
per, Gary Caldwell, Paul Duncan,
Sandy Petrie; Mike Shoemaker, and
Keith Ann Oliver.
· Fred Dee!, Gailia County Extension Agent, 4-H, and Extension
Agents from the other counties involved supervised activities.

I '

Dinner Theater in Hurricane, w.
Va . luxu.ry bus from Pomeroy
and Gallipolis, dinner, and show

,...-------------1

lodge facilities as well. as the other
camp facilities at a different time of
year from what they had been used
to in the past.
It was a new experience for these
youth to walk the trails with the
leaves off the trees and to sit.around
the fireplace in the cool of a fall
evening sharing their experiences
that they have had since sununer. In
addition to these things, they also
liad a chance to enjoy recreation,
dancing and other fun activities.
The 4-H members from Gallia
County who' participated In the activities included:

Williams to address
·Gallipolis Rotarians
I

'

Homemakers'
.......
.........,..,
Circle

New 4:..H lodge used first time

DINNER THEATER
HOSTESS TOUR
Dec .

USE NEW FACUJTY - · ParticipaDts from Gallia County are shoWn above in the fall weekend camp at
the new dining recreation lodge at Canter's Cave 4-H Camp.

Once again h.i.s.
is offering a $5
Rebate on Chic,
the world's
best-fitting jean.
Come in
for details:

private woodlands,'' Bema say~.

POMEROY - Eight juveniles
were fined recently when they appeared before Probate Judge Robert
E. Buck.
Fined were David Nance, 17,
Syracuse, $15 and costs, costs
suspended, no registration; Brian
Gheen, 17, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $10 and

SMELTZER'S

"r eal-life" experiences.

back
on die

done evey 5 to 12 years depending on
soils and growth rates.
"The goal of the Soil Conservation
Service in providing planning
assistance is to increase productivity and to improve the quality of

SCS conservationists can also help
landowners in plannin~ woodland

Free carnations - Door Prizes
Many new items to chose from . Straw, w'i re ·and
styrofoam wreath forms. Make your own wreaths and
decorations or choose ·from our wide selection of handmade and ready-made items.

4-H 1 ers learn many neY skil ls where they "Learn By Do lng" pr o jec t s whic h
are of inte'l'est to them. In addition to making things, 4-H ' ers learn about
differen·t c&amp;Tfl'ers and vocations they ~ight enjoy as an adult. 4-H projects are

$5.00

this, 51 million acres are in private,
nonindustrial use.
To improve quality, poorly formed, scarred, forked and insect or
disease-damaged tree s are
removed, often for firewood,
Increased productivity is achi~ved
by providing proper amount of space
to allow the maximum of growth for
each tree. Ellcess trees are also
removed. The thinning process is

at least four feet deep, with good
water-holding capaoity," Berna

Thanksgiving Day

:§L

·~0~~

planting and timber stand improvel)lent programs throu~;~h the
Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service.
Woodiand in midwestern states
has decreased in recent years
replaced by cropland, pasture, and
industrial sites. There are 80 million
acres of commercial forestland. Of

are sometimes cut into sheets 1/32
inch thin," Berna said,
The ODNR Division of Forestry
took cuttings of the Williams County
tree to propagate for future use.
Good soil is vital for good growth
of walnut trees. "Walnut is very
selective in the type of soil it needs
for adequate growth. It requires a
medium-textured, well-drained soil

We will be open

~'

says-

OBSERVEA~RSARY r;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
DALLAS (AP) - The 17th an- I
·niversary of the assassination of
·John F. Kennedy was marked
quietly, but the controversy about
who shot the president still rages.
A memorial service Friday at the
site of the Nov. 22, 1963, slaying attracted only 25 people, including II
high school choir members who
were to sing hymns.
"People are more interested . in
'who shot J .R. than in who shot
JFK," said Bill Stover, one of those
who attended the service. He was
referring to the "Dallas" ·television
series, in which the assailant of oil
tycoon J .R. Ewing was revealed
Friday night.

.,..

at

Emergency squad runs
POMEROY - Local units made
six runs Friday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services repor·
ts. They include Middleport, 8:55
p.m., Roy Boggs to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport,
6:42p.m., Hazel Ferrell to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse, 3:08p.m., Ernest Collins, Rock Springs Road, to
Holzer' Medical Center, Syracuse,
I :(Y/ p.m ., Julia Hysell from residence to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains, 8:48 a.m., ~onard
McGUI, Hickory Lake Road, to Camden-Clark Hospital; Racine, 12 :29
a.m., Goldie Clendenin, Portland
area, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

.•

Golden T,an, Rust, or Dark Brown

•

several years ago - an aU time
record," says SCS Forester David
Berna. "T!Jatsalewasexceptional,"
Berna · say,s, " but black walnut
usually markets for about $1 per
boar.d foot. The better quality trees,
like walnut, are used for veneer and

Participants must follow
·WIC coupon· instructions
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Health Department reminds WIC
:participants that it is vital that they
follow the coupon distribution
schedule.
. Due to the ever increasing number
of WIC participants in Meigs Count&gt;:_
the coupon schedule must be
followed ,
The WIC staff is doing its best to
accommodate •~ many persons as
possible.
In order for the department to serve as many persons as possible the
participants must either pick up
their coupons on the date assigned or
tJ!ey may have their designated

•

300 Second, LLII)elle M..
regarding choice of trees for tree
planting, proper spacing between
trees and related infonnatlon.
The local soil and water con- t-' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ••
servation district office may be con,.
tacted to assist in the planting of the
trees. SCS also cooperates with
other agencies in assisting the Jandowner with his forestry crop.
Cost-stiarmg· is available for tree

worldwide.
"One black walnut tree in
Williams County, Ohio, near
Pioneer, marketed for $30,000

volved;
Middleport,
Chris$10Capehart,
and costs,
17, speed;
Rt. 1,
DaVid Nance, 17, Syracuse, $10 and
costs, $5 suspended, no motorcycle
endorsement; Michael Baker, 17,
· Rt. I; Long Bottom, $14 and costs,
speed; J oe Hemsley, 16, Syracuse,
$13 and costs, speed; Carleton
Smallwood, 17, Rt. 2, Albany, $50
proxy pick up the coupons.
and 'costs, operator's license suspenIf they fail to pick up the coupons, ded for 30 days, DWI, accident inthen the participant must wait until volved.
the following month.
If participants feel that they have
been treated unfairly, they may file
a complaint with the Ohio Department of Health WfC Division in
FOR FALL SEASON
Columbus, Ohio.
Large selection of house
Thuse who are to pick up Decemplants and hanging
ber and January Coupons are to do
baskets.
so as follows between 9 a.m. to 11
a.m. and 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. I thril M,
Monday, Nov. 24; N thru R, Tuesday
(9 a.m. till ll a.m. only), Nov. 25; S
992-5776
thru T, Wednesday, Nov. 26; W thru Syraucse, Oh.
Open Daily Mon.-Sat.
V, Friday (9 a.m. till il a.m. only),
Nov. 28.
9 to 5

The Oh io State Unl,.raily ,

practices like harvest cutting, ~iniber stand improvement and tree
planting. ODNR foresters help landowners with more intensive
management plans and with
marking for harvest cuts.
Harvest cutting creates openings
in the stand for reproduction.
SCS checks soils · and gives
technical advice to the landowner

valuable tree which rrudwestern Jandowners should consider planting
for profit, ·according to Robert R.
Shaw, state conservationist in Ohio
for the USDA Soil Conservation Service (SCS )
"Black walnut is the most

costs, llllSafe vehicle; · Menifee
Blevins, 17, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs, no operator's license, $5 and
costs, unsafe vehicle, accident in·

Cooperative Extension Service

MF 34-&amp;1 PTO hp II'ICtor

Save even more. We've been
allowed some special factory
allowances on these farm
tractors and other Massey
equipment and we're passing
them along to our customers .
We're ready to deal, so stop
by soon for details on all &lt;&gt;f
our Early Buyer Bonus
specials.

Offers end January 30, 1981 and may not apply to all units In Inventory.

Shinn's Tractor Sales
446-1044
240 Upper River Road

G'ipGis

�---~~-~.,_._- ---~-_,..,-._-

M-The Swiday Time&amp;-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980 •·

D-4-The Swlday Tlme&amp;-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

Recipients to get .raise

County agent's corner

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
unemployment may be at about 8
percent and the fuhd for jobless
workers broke, but those eligibly
unemployed in Ohio will receive a
raise next year.
It's the law.
A 1975 amendment to the 44-yearold Ohio Unemployment Compensation Law ties jobless compensation to the inflation rate of
wages for covered workers. The inflation rate climbed 6.61 percent in
the year ending June 30, so unemployment compensation will rise a
similar amount Dec. 29.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment
.Services sai~ unemployment
benefits in the state will rise from
· present maximwn levels. of $128,
$193 and $202 per week to $136, $206
and $215, The new rates will apply
only to people establishing their
eligibility for compensation on or after.the effective date.
The law fixes compensation at 50
· percent of an unemployed person's
average weekly wage in the

oats and hay ~.ooo.
. not spray so heavily as to produce
Greenhouse and. nursery totaled run-off.
Another County Agent In our area
$205,000. I look for thi8 to increase In
the future. In 1978, Meigs County is looking· for good qUality hay for
was not even listed for greenhouse dairy COW!!. U you know ri any,
and nursery crops. We now have please call me atm-a.
several growers in floriculture.
. BY DIANA s. EBERTS
Have you noticed more spiders
ExteosioQAgent
this year? This seert1s to be the year
STEAM COQLED
Home Economics
of the spider. Many pellple have a
ATLANTA (AP) -'- ·Tile WOrld's
Meigs County
fear« spiders and the first qlleltion . largest airport terminal II keepinc ,
POMEROY - Every year the
asked, "Is is poisonous?" Pracits cool - even thoulb It's ·
market is flooded with new develoP.
tically all spiders in Ohio are har"steaming."
ments in the area of small apmless
and
beneficial
to
ID8IL
Spiders
The new $600-mllllllll Ha111fteld
pliances. Many of these new billion. Soybeans brought the most,
feed
on
insects,
small,
~.
and
Atlanta
International Airport bu
developments can result in time- $870 million with com ran!dng
second, $639 million. This of course other spiders. They ae.ldom bite,~ or . one ~ . the l~e,
saving and energy-saving ap- does not include the com fed to become &amp;ggreiiSive, except when
steam·drlven
alr.condltlonlng
pliances for the consumer.
.
livestock which is a considerable trapped or injured. Theyellow.house
sntems ever built, sa:ys V; ·R. MeHowever, there . are several amount. Dairy products were third, spider enters homes in early fall imq . Closkey of Borg-Warner, which suPfeatures you should check in selec- $507.8 million followed by cattle and are active for several months. Wolf ; plied the system.
ting small appliances. Let's start calves $402. 7million.
spiders and· other smaller wanIt uses hlgb-pressure steam to run
with the construction of the small
Mercer County was tops with cash dering spiders come inside where
one _ compon~nt of the.; airappliance under consideration. The receipts of $121 million. Meigs coun- they are found running on the floor. conditioning S)'Btem, called a ceoappliance should be heavy enough to ty had $8.5 mi1lion in sales with They do not stay in webs, Qui run
trifugal water chiller, and takes adsit firmly on a co~ter or l;lble. The livestock and livestock products ac- down their prey. Some are quite
vantage ol low-pressure exhaust
body of the appliance sh?uld be counting for $5.6 million. Dairy large and have a frightening ap- steam to run a second component, ·
lightweight but of a 'ilurable products led the way with $2.6 pearance. They, also, come indoors called an absorption water chiller.
. material. Check th~ app~ce to. be . million dollars. Cattle and calves most frequently in the fall and are
This combination of component.s
sure 1! does not lip or til~ eas~y. brought in $2.3, million and best controlled by excluding them by reduces by nearly 20 ~ the
Check f?r sturdy_ constru~tion With vegetables $1.5 million. Other in- tightening up around doors and winamount of ~ pressure required
well built fasterungs holding parts come was from hogs $120,000, · dows. Chemical controls inside the for the total system to 8S8UI"e the
together. Ask about the msulatmn, poultry $560,000, sheep $50,000, home consist of chlorpyrifos (Our- comfort of the 42.5 million
which w1ll protect hands and body as so beans and wheat $9:i 000 and ban) used as a spot spray in a coarse. pllll&amp;engers expected to pass through
well as table or counter top.
y
' •
droplet fonn. This spray should be the tennlnal 81Ulually, McCloskey
Many times you cannot actually
applied around irifested areas. Do says.
operate a small appliance in the . circuit.
store, but you can consider some
But only appliances and cord sets
ease of operation features.
carrying
Underw.riters'
First check the controls. They Laboratories (UL) seal denoting apshould be easy to see; operate, and proved standards of safety for fire
understand. If is is a heating ap- and shock. Look for the UL label on
pliance, handles should be made of the name plate, bottom of the apheat resistant plastic and they pliance and/or the hang tag.
flowers, shrubs, trees and garden
should be large enough for easy
If we are selecting an appliance to
aids.
Plus dozens of helpful hints for
carrying without danger of being meet an individual's or family's
a better, more productive garden
burned. Also look for an easy-to- needs, there are additional questions
from Burpee's horticultur~rs. It leaclean finish on the appliance.
we should ask.
You can't buy finer seeds than tore&amp; many new, exciting vegetable
Be sure to look for rounded corBurpee seeds. And every seed you and flower varieties for the home
Expected use is a primary conners, freedom ·from cracks and sideration. Ask: what jobs will the
buy from Burpee is backed by this · gardener.
crevices, easy-to-clean surfaces, appliance do? How often will it be ·
guarantee:
Since 1876 Burpee has be&lt;n deand all parts in easy reach for used? Will it save time, effort or
If for any reason you are not ydoping new vegetable varieties
cleaning, and there should be no un- · money? Will different electrical .
satisfied,' you may have your full that are easier to grnw and produce
necessary paris to clean.
purchase price refunded Dr a re- more, as well as new and better
outlets be required? And, finally, is
From the name plate of the ap- there convenient storage? Rememplacement anytime within a flowers. Today, Burpee is America's
pliance, find out rated wattage ber, poorly chosen appliances can be
year.
1 leading breeder of ve~etables and
(many appliances today use 100 or more of a nuisance than a help. So
Send for your FREE
flowers for the home gardener. This
more watts). Remember if the ap- select appliances carefully with the
Burpee Catalog now
is Burpee's best catalog ever, with 50
excl usive Burpee varieties. It's the
pliance uses 1500 watts or more, it user's needs as a nwnber one conThe 1981 Burpee Seed Catalog is a only catalog you really must have..
should be used alone on a separate sideration.
comprehensive planting and growAnother consideration Is cost. In
ing guide with over Z,QOO v~etables , o '"'"" S&lt;«l Co. tllll
fact it is always in the forefront.
Send for yourfree copy of Burpee's Catalog today.
When deciding on . a small apperhaps we should treat in Itself.
pliance, ask yourself: will it con- .,...~W~i~lll,!!:be:~m~;a~il!~ed~!2.~t~'!l~~~~ - - - - - - The second thing is the feed
BURPEE SEED CO.
tinue to be useful for several years
program and the feed supply. A far25·621 Burpee Bull_!llng, Cli~ton, IA52732
or is it just a fadi Will it pay its way
mer needs to always make sure that
0 YES, Rltase stnd me tht 1981 Burpc:c: ~f'J Catalog FREE.
his cow numbers match his feed sup- in time saved, energy conserved,
ply or vice versa. It's poor convenience provided or better
management to try to starve profit quality products?
Contact the Meigs County
out of beef cows.
Cooperative Extension Service at
The third thing is the nutrient
Cit y
Sute
ip
requirements very · dramatically · 99U696 for additional infonnation.
over
the course
of For
the 365
days r------------..L_____________________...:.___
reproductive
cycle.
instance,
BY JOHN C. RICE
ExteDI(OD .\gent
Al!'lculture, Meigs County .
POMEROY - 1979 Ohio's Farm
Marketings set record in 1979. as
mentioned previously, 1980 harvest ·
for Ohio looks good. However, a new
record high was set ·in 1979. Cash
receipts from farm sales of crops,
livestock, and livestock products
topped $3-47 billion in 1979·
Sale of crops accounted for the
biggest portion which was over $2

ANDY PJ.,YMALE (right) receives plaque from Dr. Richard Fisher,
Rio Grande veterinarian, for his state fair senior showmanship with Ayrshire cattle. While the plaque was awarded during the 19llll state fair , it
was delivered only this week to Dr. Fisher and presented on Friday.
Dono_r of the plaque is the Ohio Veterinary Medical Association. Andy is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Plymale, Rt. 3, Galtipolls, and is a senior
at Gallia Academy High School.
·

Agriculture and
•
our community
By Bryson R. ~Budt Carter
Gallia County Extensior, Agent
GALlJPOlJS -' Gallia and neighboring county dairymen are invited
to a two-day dairy school, scheduled
for Dec. 2 and Dec. 9, 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. each day at the Jackson Area
Extension Center, located on State
Route 93 south of Jackson.
The Dec. 2 meeting will include
these topics : Dairy Heifer Health,
Interpretation of Records, Dairy
Production Goal and" Ration
Evaluation,
The Dec. 9 session will include
these topics: Selecting Bulls and
Cost of Semen, Housing for Raising
Repl ~ cements, Handling Dairy
Wastes, and Applying the Lessons to
My Farm.
Speakers for these sessions will include Ohio State University Elltension Specialist, Dr. Larry Heider,
Dr. Robert Porter, Ralph Porterfield, Dr. John Staubus, Dr. ·
Harry Barr, Dr. Mike Brugger, and
Dr. Richard K. White.
The event is sponsored by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service and I
encourage dairymen in our area to
att•nd because we feel that it will be
a top notch program.
How ca n a cow-ealf producer know
if his nutrition program is adequate?
We have, perhaps, the best rationevaluation progra at the Ohio State
University that exists anywhere in
the United States. A cow-ealf
operator can work thrOilgh his county agent, get a feed sample, send it

to our Ration Evaluation Lab at
Wooster. It will be chemically
analyzed, the results will be put in
the computer, and the printout will
come back and tell the man exactly
what he is ,feeding his cattle and
what he needs to supplement in order to complete the ration. And it's a
relatively cheap operation. We call
it taking the · guess-work out of
feeding cows.

What management factors does
the cow-ealf operator need to consider in the fall to improve his calf
crop percentage?
A very timely management
procedure currently would be to
have the cows examined for
pregnancy. We carry too many open
cows over, and this becomes increasingly important as production the nutrient requirement in a comcosts go up. At the present time we mercial cow herd, considering Marare thinking in.terms of $200 to main- ch 1 calving date, and during March
tain a brood cow over the course of and April the nutrient requirements
the year. If a cow is open this fall, in a brood cow herd will be just
and she does not calve ·next spring, it about double what it is from now unwill be two years from now before a til Jan. !.
And the fanner or cow-ealf
farm~r can realize a dollar return
operator
needs to work that into his
from that cow. During that time he
management
system. If he feeds the
will -invest somewhere between $300
same
from
now
right on through
and $400 in maintenance. So it
·
next
spring
during
that period of
makes all kinds of economic sense to
high
nutrient
requirements
and he'll
palpate the cows to determine
have
several
cows
that
won't
breed.
pregnancy, and send the cows to
So
we
know
a
lot
more
about
brood
town that are not working for you,
cow management or particularly
that is the open cows.
A pure bred breeder is a little bit nutrition now than wa did 10 or 15
different situation. That's one years ago.

BEFORE. TilE TRIAL- Wang Kuang·mei (right ),
wife of fanner Chinese President Uu Shaoqi, talks with
• Huang Ganying, vice chairman of China's confederation of women in Peking Thursday. The two

p
'

GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE!

I I
• •

•

•••

....

. WE ARE OFFERING All TRACTORS AND FARM EQUIPMENT
IN OUR. INVENTORY ·AT OR BEUM COST. NOW IS lHE TIME

•\ '
,·••

..
,.,

FIRE CHIEF HElD HOSTAGE - Fonner St. Petersburg, Fla.,
fireman Hugh Chambliss (left) holds Fire Chief Zeimar Greenway
(right) as hostage ashe points a gun at the chief. Greenway was reieased
about 40 minutes after he was held hostage Friday. Police said Chambliss
was angry because the city turned down his application for a fire department pension. (AP Laserphoto) .
'

I

~-:

Iraq
steps
up
war·
.,,
(',.; on n·o rthern front

TO BUY THE TRACIOR OR EQUIPMENT YOU'VE BEEN WANTING
. BUT FELT YOU COULD NOT AFFORD.

'

&lt;'

..•

WE HAVE EXCELLENT PRICES ON THE FOU.OWING:

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Iraq
reportedly stepped up the battle on
"'• the northern front Saturday with a
" missile attack on the Iranian town of
",. Gilan Gharb, and U.N. peace envpy
Palme left Tehran for talks with
,.'•• . Olof
the Iraqis after being told by the .
••
" Iranians his mediation efforts were·
•

••

.

.

'

*HAY BALER'S (Round and Square)

NEW

*LAWN and GARDEN EQUIPMENT

TRAILERLOAD

*TRACTORS
*RAKES

SHIPMENT

*PLOWS

Get 10% off .Gates
· "Steel Jewel"
7 Rail Tubular Gate

"Steel Jewel"
5 Panel Gate _.

! ' a "waste of time."

~·.
;
1

*MOWER-CONDITIONERS
*TEDDERS
*DISK HARROWS
*GRINDER-MIXERS .
'

*CHISEL PLOWS
*CORN PLANTERS *CORN PICKERS
.PLUS MUtH, MUCH MORE

:•

~\

,,", '

::
••
.,
~·.

:.
: .\

1'·
••
~:;·
••
••

.,

•) \
::
~;

);
•,

:1

1•

In addition, IHCC Is offering Wolver of Finane. on
Tractors and most machinery• .Some Machi.... hiterest
Fr• until ..1-1_1 . A~ cash rebates are being offered-.
on many machines (In lieu of waiver of flnanc.)
Specifications: Height of gate - 50 inches.

Specifications: Height of gate - 48 inches.
Available in widths from 4
through 18 feet.

amounting to as much as S900 In November and

THIRD &amp; SYCAMORE

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

PH. IIZ.Zllli

~'.

:;
;•
~·.

• •·

••
'•
t\

1

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
3rdSTREET

j

~.•
I

SIOO In December on som .. machl.....

Boso Agri-Center Inc.

!&gt;

, .,
~.:

POMEROY, OHIO

~)

••,

•

t{

. ,.

I

Iran said the Iraqis launched
Soviet-made ground-to-ground
' missiles at residential sections of
Gilan Gharb, escalating a running
battle for the heights that command
the main highway routes to Baghdad
from Iran's weStern border. It was
unclear If there were any casualties
In the attack on the town, 20 miles
eastofthelraqlborder. ·
It was the third time Iran has accused Iraq ol using surfaOO.tosurface missiles since the war between the two Persian Gulf oil states
erupted 62 days ago. The previous
two attacb by "Frog-7" missiles
cla1med 255 Iranian lives In the
sOuthwestern army garrison town of
DezfulinOctober,lransays.
Iraq said l~ air force and helicopter gunship!! struck at en~y
posiUona throughout the northern
sector of the 300-mile war front,
where Iranian paratrooperS have
been trying to wrest the strategic
· heighta and three other Iranian bor~
der towns from the Iraqla.
Iran claimed a total of!, 700 Iraqis
ldlled in 1~ week-old countereffenslve on all fronta, and Iraq
claimed 1,071 Iranians killed.
Aa the war moved Into Its third
lll&lt;llth, Palme, a fonner Swedish
prime mlnlster, set out on the second
1111 ria peae&amp;-lnaldng effort already
' IICUttled by Iran.
During a meeting with Palme in
TeinD thil morning, Iranian Prime ·
· Minllter Mohimmad ~ Raja! accuect the United Nations ~
11Jpocrl8y, dlamlsaed Palme's
rec.'llllciliation efforts and demilnded

pensation law has an automatic
escalator to adjust for inflation,"
said Bill Papier of the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Service. " It
provides that the average weekly
wage of all workers covered under
the law in the fiscal year ending
June 30 be compared with the
corresponding average weekly wage
of all covered workers in the
preceding fiscal year."
Average weekly earnings of
covered workers during the. state
fiscal year ending June 30, 1979,
totaled $257.n The corresponding
average for the year ending June 30,
1980, was$27f.76, up6.61percent.
Under the present Iiiie, those
qualified with no dependents draw
up to $128 per week for up to 2Al
weeks. That will climb to up to $136
per week after Dec. 29.
Unemployed Ohioans with one or
two dependants now can draw up to
$193, rising to $206 next month.
People with three or more dependents, who now draw up to $202, will
receive $215.

were awaiting the start of the trial of 10 people referred
to as the "Jiang Qin~." Jiang Qing is the widow of Mao
Tse-Tung. (APLasel'photo) ,

.," 't

Approve
record
spending

.,,,.•

preceding 52 weeks - up to the
maxirnwn payment.
The demands of ·higher unemployment and lower jobless tax
collections contributed to Ohio's
federally controlled Unemployment
Trust Fund going broke during the
past swnmer. The state received a
$200 million advance last swruner
against future unemployment tax
collections to keep it going.
On Thursday, Gov. James A.
Rhodes wrote U.S. Secretary o{
Labor Ray ·Marshall, asking for
another $270 million advance to
carrythestatethrough February.
The fund is supported by a tall:
paid by an estimated 197;ooo Ohio
employers on the first $6,000 of annual wages paid to 4.2 million ·
workers. l'he trick to qualifying for
higher compensation rates is to apply on or after the adjustment date.
People who apply for compensation
before Dec. 29 will be compensated
at the old rate for up to a year.
"The Ohio Unemployment Com-

anew that Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein be tried before an in·
ternational col!rl, Iran's official
Pars news agency said.
Rajai asked Palme why
"freedom-seeking
organiz.ations ... inade such an
uproar in the (52 American)
hostages' defense" but remained
silent about alleged Iraqi · war
atrocities, Pars said.
"The nation then asks me what is
the point of these comings and
goings (peace missions) and these
sessions which are only a waste of
time, which only seem to justify
these (Iraqi) killings," Pars quoted
Rajai as saying.
E:arlier peace-making efforts by
Arab and non-aligned nations and by
the Palestine Liberation
Organization also failed.
Both Rajai and President
Abo~ Bani-&amp;dr announced
after their first meetings with
Palme on Thursday that Iran would
consi~r a cease-fire only when
Iraqi troops leave all territory In
western
and
southw
estemlran.
Palme, personal representative of
U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim, is due In Amman, Jor·
dan, later today for talk.s with Iraqi
FOfllign Minister Saadoun Hammadeh, who Ia attending a conference of Arab foreign ministers.
Palme then drives to Bagl)dad, the
Iraqi capital, to confer with the Iraqi
president.
DONATI!'S CHECK
WASHINGTON' (AP)
Prelident-elect Ronald Reagan's
Inaugural conunittee has received a
$100,000 check from President Car.
ter's 1877 inaugural committee aa
part ol an old tradiUon.
Tile paymerit was made Friday
ft:om the money received in excesa
of expenses for the 1977 festivities.

,.

WASHINGtoN (AP) The
Senate, reflecting the new national
mood in favor of a stronger defense,
has passed with only a single dissenting vote a bill that calls for spending a record$161 billion for the U.S.
military.
The bill, approved · 73-l by the
Senate on Friday, provides for $6.2
billion more than President Carter
asked, including $5 billion extra for
more ships, planes, tanks and other
weapons.
The bill also Includes $1.5 billion
for the MX nuclear missile system
and almost $1 billion for incre811ed
benefits for military personae! in an
effort to stop the drain of skilled
career officers.
The bill now goes to a conference
conunittee to be reconciled with the
$157.5 billion bill approved by the
House. A single version of the bill is .
likely to be approved before the
current lame-duck congressional
session ends early next month.
John C. Stennis, D-Miss., floor
manager of the bill, said he believes
the vote reflects a concern with
Soviet military !JlOVes.
PRESIDENTIAL REMEMBRANCE - Sen. EdAghanistan is what tipped off a lot
ward M. Kermedy (!&gt;-Mass.), places flowers on the
of it," said Stennis, referring to the
gra_ve of his b~other, Pr~sident John F. Kennedy, at
Soviet military takeover last year of
Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington
that country. "Everything was go
Saturday on the anniversary of JFK's assassination.
after that."

Experts say
•
zncome
taxes
could help

With hi!n at the gravesite are (from left) Patrick Kennedy, Sen. Kennedy's son; Christopher Kennedy, son of
the late Robert F. Kennedy ; and Ethel Kenaedy,
widow of Robert F. Kennedy . (AP Laserphoto).

Jury visits site of alleged crime

ss

CANTON, t.hlo (AP) -A defense adult on charges of aggravated ar•
attorney for a teen-ager accused of son and aggravated murder.
arson and murder told a Stark.CounThe trial began Thursday in the
ty jury that the death of an elderly conunon pleas courtroom of Judge
couple was the result of "a prank William A. Morris, who earlier
that got out of hand.''
·
rejected defense motions for a
Attorney Judee Genetin-Pilawa change of venue. Morris also rejecsaid in opening statements to the ted a motion to bar cameras from
eight women and four men that · the proceedings .
Keith Leonard admits to being at the
The jury visited the residence
scene and setting the fire that killed where the Broglios died July 30,
Julius Broglio, 82, and his 78-year- which is located across the street
from the Leonard home.
old wife, Sylvia.
Alicia Wyler, assistant to Stark
But Ms. Genetin- Pilawa said there
was no intent by Leonard and County Prosecutor James Unger,
said in her opening statement that
another youth to kill the Broglios.
Leonard, 15, is being tried as an the state will prove Leonard, along

WASIUNGTON (AP)- Two pen. sion experts say Congress could use
income taxes to bail out the financially strapped Social Security
system over the next 25 years.
A third expert told a Senate committee on Friday that the retirement
age should be raised and other
changes made in the system to avoid
future conflicts between retirees and
wage-earners who support them
with payroll tall:es.
Robert M. Ball, who served as
Social Security eonunissioner from
1962 until 1973, told the Committee
on Aging that Income taxes couid be
ECONOMY WEAKER
used to pay all or pll!'t of the cost of
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.
the hospital insurance portion of the
economy from July through Sepsystem.
Ball said Social Security taxes tember was slighUy weaker than firscheduled io go into the hospital fund st estimated, although corporate
could then be transferred to the profita rebounded frcm a dismal
other two parts of the system - old showing eai-Uer this year, officials
age and ·survivors' insurance and said today.
The Conunerce Department also
disability insurance.
reported
that Inflation, as measured
Henry Aaron, chainnan of the 1979
by
the
overall
economy and not just
Advisory COuncil on Socta1 Security,
consumer
prices
accelerated faster
told the committee he was in general
than
orlglnally
believed:
agreement with Ball's plan.
The department said the economy
Ball's plan would cost $11.4 billion
grew
at a 0.9 percent annual rate
in the current budget year - money
that would have to be raised by in- during the third quarter, a downcreasing the federal deficit or by ward revlaion from its earlier,
cutting spending for other govern- estiJiialed 1 percent rise.
ment programs.
Old-age and survivors' Insurance,
the biggest of the three parts of
Social Security, faces a short-tenn
OVERTURN SENTENCE
lack of cash despite the blgi-er tai::es ·
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Four years
that will go into effect on Jan. 1.
ago, Larry Smith of Akron, now 33
Michael J. Bolldn, of the National years old, was . found guilty of
Bureau of Economic Research, in- aggravated murder and aggravated
dicated he was pealmistic about the robbery.
future ol the Social Security syxtem
He spent four years in prison until
in the first half ol the next century.
that verdict was overturned Friday
"If we walt unw the baby-boom In a re-tria,l in Swnmit COunty Comgeneration retires (at the turn of the mon Pleas Court.
century) before we begin to eWe~
A jury of seven ·women and five
'with the ll'emendous long-term men found Smith. innocent of both
deficit In Social Security; we Will see counts.
.the greatest tax revolt and age warSmith was charged and convicted
fare In the history ol the United In connectivn wi\h Ltt• shooting
States," Bollltin said. He noted that . death of a reputed Coventry, Ohio,
statisticlahs pl'elllct a great rise In drug denier. but he kept insisting he
ratio of retirees to workers.
was innO&lt;'ent
\

with two others, siphoned gasoline
from a truck at about 5 a.m. the day
of the fire and filled two half-gallon
bottles.
Ms. Wyler said the contents of the
bottles were then poured onto the
front porch of the Broglio residence.
She said Leonard fashioned a fuse
from a piece of cloth, placed it on the .
porch and ignited it. Leonard then
went home and fell asleep, she said.
Ms. Wyler said the porch caught
fire quickly and was followed by an
explosion. The fire spread through
the home and reached the secondfloor bedroom where the Broglios
were sleeping.

25 people die when
two trains collide
VIBO VALENTIA, Italy (AP) cutting through the crumpled coaches of two wrecked
passenger trains reCovered five
more bodies Saturday, bringing to 25
the death toU in the bizarre chainreaction collision near this southern
Italian town, police reported.
More than llO other people were
injured Friday when two high-speed
trains slammed Into a string of boxcars that had been lost by a passing
freight train. Nearby hospitals
reponed many of the injured were in
grave condition.
·. Police say they believe there are
more bodies in the twisted steel
wreckage.
A heavy-duty crane was brought
in today to lift a 126-ton locomotive
which ended up on two passenger
coaches, police said, adding that
searchers were still using blow torches and crowbars in an etfort to
retrieve the victimS.
·
The hospitals were packed
throughout the night with screaming
and crying families of the victims,
police said.
"It was the most painful sight I've
seen in my 12 years in service, to
lead them (families) to a makeshift
morgue to identify the bodies most
Searcher~

of which were terribly mangled,"
fireman Vincenzo Evangellsti told
an Italian interviewer.
A Commission of national railroad
and police officials began a .
preliminary inquiry .
Conunission members questioned
two engineers of the freight train in
an effort to determine how they lost
28 of the train 's 41 cars and continued on through two other stations
without anyone noticing the cars
were missing. Police also interrogatet the station masters of the
two stations.
. The crash occurred about 3 a.m.
local time \llll$ide this town near
Catanzaro. Railroad officials said
the 16-car express train 587 from
Rome to Siraca, Sicily, slanuned into the detached boxcars, throwing·
some of the cars onto an adjoining
track where they were hit by the 11&gt;coach Rome-bound 588 express ftom
the opposite direction.
With more than two-thirds of the
victims identified, police said tbet:e
was only one foreigner - a Spullh
woman list~ among the Injured
It was the worst train wredt In
Italy since 1978 when two &amp;qli-.
trains crashed near Bologna, ~
43 people.

�.

,1&gt;-7- lbeSullday 'l'lme&amp;&amp;!ntlnel,Sunday, N~. 23, 1980
I
Announcemenls
Giveaway
4
SWEEPER and -lng ANY PERSON who has
machine repair. parts, and anylhlng to gi ve away and
oupplles.
Pick up and does not offer or attempt to
delivery, Davis Vacuum offer anv other mlng for
Cleaner, one half mile up sale may pla ce an ad in this
Georges Creek Rd. Call column. There will be no
446·0294 ..
charge to the advertiser .

.

"THE BUTCHER'S SHOP· USED green carpet. Call
PE" · freezer beef, swift +16·3961.
sides, custom work done,
call 446·2151 , Bulavllle· F REE
FIREWOOD 1o
Porter Rd . Owned by Bar· anyone who wil l cut ft up
bare Glassburn.
and haul it awav. 667·3593,

•

Fiddler, silversmith, Latin scholar raised rare onions

TODAY'S CWUDS - Sunday's satellite cloud picture recorded at I
p.m. Saturday shows thick overcast clouds covering Texas and the
southeast states. Frontal band clouds extend from the Northern Plains into the Central Rockies. Clouds associated With an Atlantic low pressure
system covers eastern Maine and Nova Scotia. High clouds spr ead across
the Pacific Northwest. ( AP Wirephoto).

WGHER DEFENSE BILL
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate
subcommittee

has

mformally

agreed on a defense bill that's $6.4
billion above the Carter ad·
ministration's original request.
The defense appropnations subcommittee at a meeting on Thur·
sday agreed to a spending level of
$161 billion for the current fiscal
year, according to members and

staff.

They said they hope to get final approval of a defense bill for the 1981
fiSCal year that started Oct. I before
the current lame-&lt;luck Congress ad·
journs early next month.

SIX REPUBUCS
Yugoslavia is a federation ol six
r epublics Serbia , Crbtia ,
Slovenia , Montenegro , Bo~ nia·
Herzegovina and Macedonia .

BY JAMES SANDS
GAUJPOUS - I n 1798 when the
future k ing of F r ance (LouisPhilhpe) VISited Ohio, he asked Antoine Claude Vincent of Gallipolis to
return to France and becom e one of
Louis's a ssociates. Vincent, a silv.ersmith, Latin scholar , and musician
declined the invitatiqn and stayed m
Ohio.
Vincent was born at Gentily ( south
of Paris ) in 1771 and studied in his
early y ears to enter the priesthqod.
In his teens, Vincent became a
liberal thinker and left the chur ch to
take up work in a calico f actory. H e
then became apprenticed to a silversmith by the name of Antionme.
IT WAS ANTIONME who
suggested that he and Vincent go to,
America with the " French 500" to
sell their work for three years. They
both concluded that the F r ench
Revolution would be over by then
and they could return to France.
In 1790 Antionme and Vincent set
up a jewel ry business at GallipoliS,
but in a year became discouraged,
They loaded a large piroque with
watches, jewelry, crystals, firearms, rilles, muskets, pistols, powder,
bayonets, swords, and daggers. In
the fall of 1791 they left Gallipolis for
New Orleans.
At the mouth of the Big Sandy, In·
dians appeared on the river bank.
Antionme panicked and picked up
his rifle to shoot, even though the In·
dians had no way of reaching the
boat. The two guards that had been
hired told Antionme not to inflame

the Indians or they would shoot Antionme.
ANTIONME
BECAME
so
frightened that he turned his rifle to
his own breast and killed himself. At
first the Indians turned away. Later
downriver they seized the boat and
threw all sorts of valuables overboard, taking only what they
recognized. The Indians did give the
three white survivors a blanket and
three loaves of bread.
Later that fall Vincent made it
back to Gallipolis to relate his hairraising experience, and was per·
suaded to remain at Gallipolis,
becoming a chicken farmer. He also
taught school and operated the first
rooming house in Gallipolis called
Bachelor's Hall.
IN 1'198 VINCENT had another

"frontier encounter" when he was
bitten by a copperhead. He had to
crawl several miles to Gallipolis
with a swollen leg, where he lay in
bed for three weeks. During this

time he COI)Sumed several jugs of
whiskey for the pain, which was so
severe that he gnawed his blanket to
pieces.
The following year Vincent took a
canoe for Marietta and ran into a
snow storm. His canoe was capsized.
He made it to shore but the snow was
so strong that he lost his way, and
collapsed in a drift. About an hour
before dark, he spotted a campfire,
and crawled to that place. He was
taken to Marietta and treated with
lime water by American doclors.
Vincent insisted that ·with all due
respect he preferred to be removed
to Gallipolis, where there were
French doctors. Because of this experience Vincent lost most of the fir·
st joints on his fingers and toes.
VINCENT CONTINUED to play
the violin even without his first joints. In his life he also learned to play
the flute and the piano and was
probably Gallipolis' first composer.
Vincent also had what was

perhaps the best llbrary lil·aouthern
Ohio being an expert on Voltaire and
Rouaseau. He moved to the French
Grant in 1'!911 and by -llllll became
kind of a misfit. Methodist
clergymen had preached against
dancing and the reading of certain
classics. Such prea~ often
elicited sarcastic remarka from VJ.n..
cent who dearly loved both of these
pursuits.
IN HIS LATER years VIncent
became known for his cig81'1 and his
French onions. Vincent's rare onion
was so popular around Portamouth
that Vincent had almost a monopoly
on the onion market.
It was often IBid that Vincent
could have easily lived at any royal
court in Europe with his many talents, but he choBe Instead to remain in'
Ohio, a place that he had originally
plarmed to stay in for only three
years.
You may write to James Sands at
Box 92, Clarksburg, Ohio 43115.

Bears va Atlanta Falcons
CIJ IIA TINEE AT THE BIJOU
'Flying Deucea'Laureland Hardy
star m one ofthe•r all-time funniest
adventures. with the finale finding
them high In the a1r in a pilotless

8:30

CHRISTOPHER CLOSE
UP

CD HARVESTER HOUR
GCIJ ABETTER WAY
@J TREEHOUSE, CLUB
7:00 Cil8 THIS IS THE LIFE
JAMES ROBISON
EDDIE SAUNDERS
; C1J OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
CONNECTIONS
BAN LEAGUE
ACTION NEWSMAKER
7:30
UNITED CHRISTIAN
INTERN AnONAL
CIJ DAWSON MEMORIAL BAP·
TIST CHURCH ·SERVICE
CIJITIS WRITTEN
CII OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
CD JIMMY SWAGGART
MES ROBINSON
BIBLE ANSWERS
8:00
MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN
WORD
CD THE LESSON
(1)
THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
.CIJ DAY OF DISCOVERY
C1J (fi) SESAME STREET
@) ITI!i_WRITTEN
GlJ 18
EVANGELISTIC
Ql.ITREACH
8:30 ([).@) ORAL ROBERTS
CIJ CHAPEL HOUR
CIJ CONTACT
EN BIBLE
REV. LEONARD REPASS
tiOWER LIGHTHOUSE
9:00
U
GOSPEL SINGING
JUBILEE
CIJ
ROBERT SCHULLER
APnONED)
LOST IN SPACE
REXHUMBARD
JLLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
Cll NEW LIF! TEAM
3·2·1 CONTACT
CBS SUNDAY MORNING
MISTER ROGERS
WIB REV. JIM FRANKLIN
g:30 8 C1J
ROBERT SCHULLER
ApTIONED)
'
BIG BLUE MARBLE
ECTRIC COMPANY
REV. R.A. WEST
10:00
REXHUMBARD
CHANGED LIVES
(1) HAZEL
CliClClLESNORTHOTEL
KENNETH COPELAND
(fi) SESAME STREET
18 JIMMY SWAGGART
10:30
SPIRITUALAWAKENING
MOVIE-(MUSICAL)"' " Alex·

I~
li

li

i
i

~
~I

I

ander'• Ragtime Bind'' 1&amp;38

I

KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
C1J ERNEST ANGLEY HOUR
,
MOVIE -(COMEDY) "\lo "Ar·
.
rtv'lrcl, Bobr" 111116
11:00 ~
TV CHAPEL
IN TOUCH
REXHUMBARD
ONCEUPONACLASSIC'Nighl
Ferry' Part II The mystery of the

stolen

mummy

Ia

unra&gt;Jied.

(l;looed·Captioned; U.S A.)
(fi) MAnNEE AT THE BIJOU
'Flying Deuces' Laurel and Hardy

etar In one of their all-time funniest
edventuree, with the tlnalefmdlng
them high in the air in a pilotlei!IS

plane. The aaaorted ahorte1nclude
chepler twO of the aerial 'Zorro'a

,
'

~I htlngLeglon', (90mlno.)

IREV.HENRYMAHAN
ATISSUE
ANIMALS, ANIMALS,
•
ANIMALS
.CIJ FACETHENAnON
(I) PEOPLE OF 'THE FIRST
LIClHT

11:30

12:00
•
•
.
•

MEET THE PRESS
nME OF DELIVERANCE
(IJ) •
ISSUES AND

~Ofi!RS
CIJ VIEWPOINT

MOVIE -(W!STERN) " "Trig-

12:30

plane The auorted shorts include
chapter two of the seriai 'Zorro ' a

~

·
-12:56
· 1:00

etolen mummy 11 unravled
~o.JOCI·Coptloned; U.S.A.)

• COLLECll! FOOTBAU '80
lfLF'U-1!1
NFLFOOTBALLC.i!lpinnall
naall Yl Clevlllnd Browne
D. JA-S KI-DY
OHtO
UNIVERSITY

m

~TIALL

Cll NFL FOOTBALL Plllaburgh
!ltot!_ero vo -lo Bile
• ()) NFL F'OOTIAU Chlcogo

8:30

~min~
NBC NEWS
ORAL ROBERTI AND YOU
NEWS
CNI!W8

7:00

i

I~BCNI!WS

CliDIINI!Y'SWONDERFUL
WDIILD
CD JIMMY BWAGGART
@ FLIP WILSON SHOW
(j) !BJ •
THOSE AMAZING

Pies. S-4.00 per bushel and
up. Fltzpalrlck Orchard,
Stat~ Roule 689. Phone ~9 ·
3785.

.•

~

l

OPI!NUP

BENNY HILL SHOW
NBCLATENIGHTMOYIE'The
Drowning Pool' 1175 St•r•: Paul
Newmon, Joonne Woodwllrd.
• C1J MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) "
"SIMN01Evll"11173
FACE THE NATION
• ABCNI!WS
11:45
•
PTL CLUIIooTALK AND
VAIIIETY
12:00 Cil MOVII! ~COMEDY·DRAMA)
••Y. ''TIIIM•rt.veDoUePart"
C1J IIOVIi ·(THRIUIR) 00 10
........ Cur.... 1t7•
iBl MOYIE ·(SUSPI!NII!) 000

I

~ltJP-"111111

r

12:30 Cll MOYIE -(DRAMA) "'I&gt;. .. _
ll"1942
1:30
ABCNI!WB
.
NEWS
2:30
MOVII·(HIBTORICAL) "I&gt;
"IM•Mch From Reutere" 1i40
4:30 (1) MAVIIIICK
1:30 C1J RAT PATROL

{

8

-

Be paid
to Jearn
a &gt;valuable skill.
Mllilory Police, Admlnlslrallon, Food Service, Mechanics. Good
llenems. Advancemenl
opportunllles. Must be
high
school
11·34,
graduale or higtt school
senior. Army Recrui1·
ing - m -7113 or 594--43238
collect.

•
•

.Yard Sale

-

I!j Gold
• silver or foreign
coins or anv gold or silver

SWAIN '
AUCTION. BARN
'

We ••II anything for
anybody 11 our AlKtlon
Barn or In your home. For
inform•tian and pickup
I service coli 2U· 1f67.
Sale Every Sa1urday
I
Night o17 p.m.

.
'

.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SWAIN

TO
WAN T ED
BUY '
SILVER ,
GOLD ,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS ,JEWELR·
Y , MISC . ITEMS. AS SOLUTE
MARKETPRICE GUARANTED . ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, Ml DDLEPORT ,
OH I 0 992·3476.

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swain, Auct.
Corner Third &amp; Olivo

'

OLD COINS. poc ke1 wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A . Wamsley ,
742·2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592 ·
6462.

Club Calf Sale
Saturday, NcMmber 29, 1980
1:00 P.M.

'

'

j

II~~
l(.

A

'

"

'",,

SEWNG 65 CWB STEERS
15 SIMMENTAL HEIFERS

•

Night
1-614· 596·5564

Night
Terry 1-614·596·5552

i

.

\

Gas circulating heater,
65,000 up. 992·3876 ,

Auctioneer- Merlin Woodruff
oay-1-614-596-4274

I

l

WANTED TO BUY: Class
rings, wedding ' bands
anything slamped 10~. 14k
18k, gold. Silver coins
pocket watches. Call Joe
Clar~.
992·2054, Clark' s
Jewelry, Pomeroy , Ohio

BenediCI Sale Barn
Across from Vinton ~ounly Airport
McArthur, Ohio

•

E"::!:t::"'

FARM MACHINERY AUCTION

.

3f4 Mile west of Tuppers Plains, Ohio on
State Rt. 681 at 10:30A.M. Nov. 29.

SURVIVORS HEAD HOME - Wally and Sue Harris
of Hobb, N.M., survivors of the MGM Grand Hotel and
Casino fire in Las Vegas, head home with a few of their
belongings Saturday. The Harrises were trapped on

zt

PARTLY CLOUDY

we'll be where the partly cloudy par·
tsare.

Crunchy peanut butter was obviously developed by someone with a
good set of original teeth.

-~

tlassified
••
_,,,,,.,

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

• . ~.Ho

11

• • ..r,o

• • • · ~'

.- -'7'---:---;-,=:--:---

l_ _.!:
C,_
a r,_,d,_,o,_,f_,T_,h,a,
nk
,s~THE FAMILy of Harold
Ebersbach wishes to express their sincere thanks
1o the personnel of Ewings
F unera 1 chapel,
to
Reverend W. H Perrin and
Reverend William
R.
Newman for their con·
soling words, to the
pallbearers, Pomeroy Fire
Department for their im·
pressing
service.
Ameri can Legion Pos1 No.
39 for their graveside ser·
vi ces, Pomeroy Sheriff' s
Department ,
Pomeroy
Emergency Squad, and 1o
1he many friends and
rela1lves tor their cards,
food, flowers, and prayers '
during the Illness and dealh
of our loved one. Your kind·
ness and thoughtfulness 1
Will never be forgotten.
Ruth Ebersbach, James
Ebersbach and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Slley,
IDarlal and family.
THE FAMILY of Donald E .
Grene would li~e 10 e•press
their appreciation for. all
the kindness shoWn during
his Illness and death . Drs.
Shultis, Prenderga51, nurses, and staff at Holzer
Medical Center Also 10
mln1s1ers, trlends, and
neighbors · of th"' GreenP
Fam1ly
Wife, children,
Mother , Father , Brother,
anc Sist er.

2

In ancient Rome peachea sold for
the equivalent of about $4.50 apiece
- but then their Inflation wasn't as
bad as ours.

..
•·

SIGNED: ETHELM.MORLAN
&amp; CLYDE J. MORLAN

iutth~ 1I'ime!l- ientin:ei
I&gt;-6-Nov. 23,ls.l

.--

In Memoriam

we've loved,

Still oast1helr gentle glow,
To grace our days and light
our pathtl,

Wherever we may go .•.''

Sadly missed, but never
forgollen by wife, children,
end grandchildren .

3

I PAY h lghesl prices '
POSsible for gold end silver :
coins. rings, jewelry, etc. i
Contac1 Ed Burkel1 Barber
Shop, MlddlePOr1.

~

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting ot
7: 30 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.

:,

MATERNITY
1ops:
velour, flannel, turtle
neck, blouiet. long al""",
lhort Sleeves, mltwnlty

•

.

WatermelOn PilCh, Sm St.,
New Haven,IN.Va,
'

Deer' Slug shoaling ma1ch,
Sunday. I p.m . at tne lzaak
Wolton Farm.

'

LOG CABIN Gift Shop IS''
reopening December 4.
Open Thurtdly, Fr~y.
and SaiUray from 10-3. ,
TWD miles ftOrlll of Cllelltr 11

KJ'CIQ

Model

"MISC."

home. AcCIDtlnv

--------- ..

1980

22 warfl rifle, hand lools, lown mower • o1her .
MYULI L. ABELS: EXEC.
CHeNO.UIIf
Jo...-O'Irlln.A-f
Aucll••r•
Jim Cllr-MMn

frorft Lot Clbl~

llema on consignment
Thurlday, FrltMYI Nowm-"
,lllr 21 ancl 29. For more In· •
lorm1tlon call Norma al
1115-4133, Llll It 915-3951 or ·
Janut985·G27,

29r

The personal property ol lhe late Mr. and Mrs.
Louis A. OeLuz will be sold. Localed from Racine,
Ohio on Sl. R1. 124 take co. Rd. 21 (Bashan Rd.) 4'1z
miles 1o Co. Rd. 31 lhen 4'1z miles 1o Sllversvllle,
Ohio. Wotch for sale signs .
"HOUSEHOLD"
G.l! . gr_, washer &amp; dryer, Frigidaire frost·free
green Slde·bv·slde, dining room !able w/6 chairs,
china cabinet, living room suite, bedroom sul1e,
chesl of drawers, nl!lhl stand, bed, desk, sewing
machi(MI, Royal typeWriter, clocks, books, linens,
storage cablnel, radio &amp; Slereo. lamps. pictures.
mirror. polS, pans, dishes, and olher mise, Items.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Oil lamp, 8 place setting Wl111e china, coffee grinder,
clear long slem glasses, 7 pc Roger's Silverware,
wood handles silverware, Hlesy glass, sterling
silver set, 19 jewell Illinois lpockel wa1ch, dishes &amp;
trunk.
,.JEWELRY"
14 K gold wedding band, U K gold 3 opal ring, 14 K
gold engagement, 10 K blrthslone ring, 2 White
s - . lade pendant, gold filled locket w/green
atone, rod stone cllp-CIII earrings, simulated pearls,
14 K gold chlan, knol pendanl w/1 poln1 single cut
diamond. rosebud earrings &amp; necklace set, gold filled wedding band. assorted costume jewelry and
men's tie bars &amp; cufflink oets.

NO
HUNTING
or
trespassing dey or night on
1he Charles Yost, Ivan Will
or John Houdashell farms.
All violators will be
prosecuted.

ABSOLUTELY 1\0 hunllng
or lrespasslng on my
prQPertv any11me. Charles"
(Duke) Spaun, Route 2, ,
Racine. Ohlo-45771.

ESTATE AUCTION
SAnJRDAY, NOVEMBER
10:00 A.M.

Announcements

' 1••ns,
slicks, dr....a,
lngerle end more al !he

SHOOTING MATCH al.
Corn Hollow in Rutland.
Every Sunday slerllng at
noon . , Proceeds being
donalcd to lhe Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only I

.·"
~

GUN SHOOT: SaiUrday . SLUG anc/ Buckshot.:
evening sterling at 6:30 shooting match. corn
p.m. SPOnsored by lhe , · Hollow, Aulland Ohio ··
Recine Volunteer Fire Every Sunday 12 Noon:Deparlment, at building In Turkeys II Hamsll
Bashan. Factory choke
guns only.

Announcements

Auctioneer: 1. 0 . "Mac'' McCoy

'

LAFF ·A -·DAY

IN LOVING Memory of
James Wm. Montgomery
who passed away Nov . 22,
1978.
God hath not promiSed,
Skies always blue,
Flower-strewn pathways,
All our lives through ;
God hath not promised,
Sun without sorrow,
Peace wllhout paln.
Bu1 God ha1h promiSed,
Strenglh forlheday,
Rest for lhe labor,
Llghtfor 1he way.
"Can I hive onolller p1e&lt;e o1
Grace for the trials,
Clke, Mom! SorneboclyialltUni
Help from above,
on my lint piece."
Unfailing sympalhy,
Undying love. .,
"Memories of 1he ones

3

'

.

PEACIIESWGH

LIKES l'J'CRUNCHY

PREFERRED

U it's partly sunny, you can bet

Will sell the following: '73--180 Allis Chalmers 1rac·
1or, 1010 John Deere Tractor, 390·9 11. Allis
Chalmers Hayblne, 273 New Holland Baler, 7 fl.
Allis Chalmers Rear Mower, Allis Chalmers Side·
delivery rake, S ft. John Deere Brush Hog, 5 ft. Allis
Chalmers Brush Hog, 1 Cobey heavy·duly wagon
with flolatlon tires, 2 Flal·bed wagons, 1 David
Bradley wagon gear, John Deere P. T .0 . manure
spreader, Freeman front-end loader, Mathews 3 PH
Flail mower, 9 ln. Ford posthole auger. !lelt utility
elevator, 37 ft. Bale elevator, 60 ft. hay and grain
elevator .
NO SMALL ITEMS, BE ON TIME .
INSPECTION ANYTIME .

•

the 25th floor of the 26-floor hotel Friday as fire raged
in the building below them. They stayed on their
balcony for
hours before being rescued, and walked
down the fire ·escape when the smoke cleared. (AP
Laserphoto).

TO
BUY:
WANTED
Trailer lot in Racine, close
to town, within reason
please. 'Phone992·7720 .

AUCTION·

~

'

Items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay 1op
, dollar, or coniplete es1ates.
No item too large or too
11 smalL Chec~ pnces before
selling. Also do appraising .
Osby (Ossiel Marlin. 9926370,
1

3rd Annual

'.:

I RON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture. desks, gold
rings, jewelry, s i lver
dollars, stei-ling, etc ., wood
ICe box es, jars antiQues,
etc. Complete househol ds.
Wri1e M . D . Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·
7760 .
.

Public Sale
&amp; Auc1ion

Benedict, Inc.

•
•

$CASH!
FOR YOUR FURNITURE
ONE PIECE
OR HOUSE FULL
COME TO
420LIVE &amp; SECOND
OR CALL ·
-146 4775
OPEN 9T05

I·

=""

MH7tl

'ntll11 _.,niCe furniture, almost new. II in need of
llllillll... .. lilly.
Pl .. lllf WIH . . far 1111. 22 A. w/lh70 Hollyperk
111111111 trtallr. Contact James O'Brltn. Af1ornev.

..........,,Ollie.

,,

11

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE 1raining
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great g ifts as a Sent1ne1 route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility lisl at 992
2156 or 992·2157.
RNs and LPNS, IOO~ing for
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotaling
shifts? Fee I 1he need to
develop your ideas in
resident care with a highly
motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has 1he
answer for you Due to
achieving near maximum
census, we now have
openings for full and par1
time POSitions on day shif1
but will consider other shlfts. Compe1itive salary, ex·
cellent working condi1ions,
I i fe
i nsurance
and
diSabilitY POliCY a1 no COS1
to the employee, and
hospitalization insurance
available. Come visit us or
call : Nancy Van Meter,
R.N .• Direc1or ot Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cenler, 6 14·992·6606.
LADY FOR Housekeeping
for a retired man. Paul
Orr, 949·2W3 or 985·3586.
WOMAN TO l ive In with
elderly gentleman . Paul S.
Starcher. Stlversvllle, Rl.
3, Porlland, Oh. Bo• 162· B.
45770.
RIO GRANDE College and
College
Community
Secrelary I lo execute
assistant 1o the president.
Must show evidence of per·
formence of secretarial
assignments (schedule
typing and shorlhand
profeclency testing With
OBES office). $3.50 per
hour en1ry rate. Emplover
paid benet lis. Deadline
date for applicallon Is Dec.
lSI. Make application at of·
lice of Coordinator of personnel, Alan Hall, Room 1.
Include comph!11on ol ap·
plication form and submission of Iefier of Intern!
and resume. An Equal Em·
ployment Affirmative Ac·
lion Employer.
WANTED :
Managing
beauty opera1or with
following. Needed at once .
Call for apPOintment at 949·
2666,
~-

·-

-

--:;..

22

32

Money lo Loan

F HA·VA·Conventlal Home
'Loans, Columbus Flr~t
Mo r 1gage
Co .,
19an
representati ve,
V lblet
(Cook ie) VIers, -463 Second
Ave., GalliPOliS, Oh. , 446·
7172

~

I

Jt'MONEY · MONEY
JtrF ·
·
.'

RNor L PN needed to do in·
surance screen ing ex ams,
p1. t ime, flex ible hours, cal l If 1rst mortgages,
lnsur·A·Med Inc. 61H76· Jtsecond mortgages~
0155mornmgs.
*and
refinanc
..

I

,.cases. Call Com i lti
Jtlete ~ortgage Ser-.~
:vtces 10 Gallipolis,
,.ohio at 446 · 1517 to~
!"more information
' ~and your appoint· '
SALES PERSONS· Full or ;ll,_m ent •
par1 time. Apply Gherke's
BoutJque ,
downtown
GalliPOlis. or phone -1469332 for apPOintment.
23
Professional
Services
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE CALL
US for your
AND
COMMUNITY photographic needs. Por·
trait, passports, com ·
COLLEGE
·Accou
n11ng cle·
rk , mus1 show
evience
of mercia ! and wedding
accounting and typing pho1ography .
Tawney
skills (schedule typing tes1 Studios, 424 Second Ave .
wi1h OBES off i ce in
Gall ipolis ) , En1ry rate
53 .75 . Employer pa id COMMERCIAL and in·
photography .
ben1fits. Deadline da1e is dustnal
Phone
-146·2909
or -146-7226
Nov.UMakeappl1 cat ionat
office of Co·ordina1or .of atter4p.m .
personnel, Alan Hall, room
1. Include completion of ap- CUSTOM
BEEF
pllca1ion form and sub· PROCESSING. to your
m ission of letter of intrest specifi cat ions, available at
and resume. An Equal Em· French CitY Meats. Kill,
ployment Afflrma1ive ac- cut , grind, wrap and
freeze, Call&lt;-446·3472.
lion Employer .

EXPERIENCED Physical
TherapiSt , Wr ite bo• G19 c·
o Point Pleasant Reg. 200
Ma i n
St .
Giv i ng
qual if icat ions and expe r ience.

l

•************

" As bad BB Inflation Is, we're better off
than during thB depression. At least
now we're BOTH employed!"

1~~=::;:;:;:~=;::;==r:;:::::-;:;~:;;;::::;::;:~~1
Help Wanted

11

11

BRAKE MECHANIC, must
be qualified, salary based
on experience. send com ·
plete resume to Box 729 K
c -o DailY
s entine l,
Pomeroy, Ohio45769 .

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED Physical
Therap ist. Write bo x G19 c·
o Pomt Pleasan1 Reg. 200
M a 1n
St .
G iv in9
qua li f icati ons a nd ex. per. ence.

TltE GALLIA-JACKSON-M EIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEAL11t CENTER
is currently acceptmg applications tor a Reg1stered
Nurse for the Psychiatnc lnpa1ient Hospitalization
Program . Previous psychiatric exper1ence not required, but desirable. Medtcavsurg1cat exper1ence
helpful. Fixed n1ght shift and possible rotating
shills.
The Menlal Health Center is a priva1e, non-prol11
corporation and an Equal Oppor1un i1y/ Affirmattve
Action Employer. Please contact the Personnel
Department, Gallla-Jackson-Meigs Community
Mental Health Center, 412 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio45631; or call446·5500.

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY

r~==================~

follow ing positions open in
SERVICES
has
the
Gall
Ia County , Part·t1me
!8
hrs. wk.) community serVIces worker. contact John
Lehew, -146·1642, e•t. 332,.
Relief
Houseman.!!lger
(weekends) ,
contact
Beverly Johnson, 338·8195.
Buckeye communi1Y Ser·
vices is an equal oppor1unity employer .

REGISTERED NURSES
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Position available for part-time or full-time nursing
a1 Oak Hill commun1tv Med1ca1 center, Oak Hill.
Available on all three shifts . Excellent salary and
benefi1s, good life insurance, retiring benefits, SICk
benefits, holiday pay &amp; shift differential.
If interested please call D1rec1or of Nurs1ng SerVICe, 682· 7717 ,

r~========j=========~
SCOTIEN 1 DILLON
Manufacturers of chewing tobaccos since
1857 has an opening for a tobacco leaf
specialist responsible for the grading and
procuring of various types of tobaccos.
Knowledge of tobacco leaf quality and
grades is a necessity. Good pay and fringe benefits. Send resume to P .0. Box
201 c/o Daily Tribune.

services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century!
Farm , home and personal
property coverages are
avai I able to meet Individual needs Contact,
Lewis Hughes, your neighbor and agent

FOR
INSURANCE
REPAIRS · caiiD if&gt; FCon
tractors, -146·3407 ,

rr=================::;i
;
LOCAL MANUFACTURING PlANT

IN ·
TOMO B I be
LEen can SUURANCE
your
celled?
Lost
operator's li cense? Phone
992·2143.

HAS AN OPENING FOR
ASSISTANT PRODUtnON SUPERVISOR.

15

Minimum of three years experience as
group supervisor and background in
meeting production requirements is a
necessity. Good pay and fringe benefits.
Send resume to P.O. Box 203 c/o Daily
.Tribune.

~~~~~~~~~~iiii~~~~~~~~~i1
RETAIL MANAGEMENT CAREERS

World Stores, Inc. , a major retail shoe chain,
has over 400 shoe stores currently in operation, with
50-60 new stores opening each year.
eManaoemen1 career Developmenl
elncentlve Bonus·paid quarterly
eCompany Paid, Group Insurance. Including Mal or
Medical
eAdvancement/ Promotlon from Within
• Paid vacations

Schools Instruction

MAKE your own macrame
hanging tables for Christmas. For lessons call 446·
9408 af1er 4,

16

Radio TV
&amp; CB Repair

RON' S TV SERVICE
specializing In Zenith .
House Calls.
Now servicing
Motorola
Quazar
. Call 1·
304·576·2398 or -146·24.54.

18

Do you want your shoes planted securely
in a company with which you can grow?
Do you desire self-satisfaction from
building your career in retail management from the ground up?

Wanted lei Do

INTERIOR PAINTING
Charles W. Kuhn, call 2-15·
9533.
CARPENTER, 20 yearse•·
perlence. Would like lob by
piece or hourly. Exc. at
finishing. No job too small.
Call4.46·0310.

Sh~

You must have .he fle•lbility lo relocate upan com·
ple11on of 12·16 weeks of training and be excited
about working with people. Relall e•perlence
helpful, but nol required. You should have excellent
character and the desire to excel.

W•nt to compare your present position to this opPOrtunity? Applr in person to:
ALEX WOLFE, 307 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis
NOV. 241h, 25th, 261h- IO A.M.-5 P.M.

•
An Equal Opportunity Employer

\I

1968 HOMETTE Mobile
Home, 2 bedroom, ful ly
carpeted, part ially furnished ,
underp inning ,
blocks to level, with fuel 011
tank and stand. 992·3979,
FOUR bedroom house Call
992·5742 after 5 p.m .
1974 HILLCREST lrailer,
12x52, two bedrooms, fur·
nished.
underp i nn i ng,
awning, a 1r conditioning,
se1 up on rental lot in Mid·
dlepor1. 992·2885.
PRICES REDUCED · used
mobile homes and travel
trailers .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES . CALL
-146·7572.

1981 FAIRMONT
With 12ft. expando.
Only

ileal
31

estate

172.06 PER
MON11t

-- 1

Homes for Sale

1'12 ACRES · 5 rm . house,

Pomeroy
citv
limits .~
Asking 55,500. Would con·
sider land con1ract. Down
payment and terms
negotiable Call367·7428.

BY OWNER · In town,
L.R ,, 4 bdr ,, F.R.• 2 baths,
natural gas, central air,
full basement, 1wo car
garage, steel siding, storm
doors, and windows, k it chen with stove and dish·
washer, shown by ap·
pointment only . Call 4&lt;UI1223,

144 monthy months at
15'1&gt;% with 51420.80
down.
14 FeetW1de
Bay Window
To1al Electric
Furntshed
Delivered and Set Up
CALL

JOHNSON'S MOBIL£
HOMES
446-3547

RN , LPN. or CMA 10 work
in doctor 's offi ce. Ca ll 992 · 3 BDR ALL ELECTRIC
6601 Monday · Fnday 9 5.
home by owner, located 8
miles from Gallipolis.
Situated on 1 lfo&amp; acres,
THE OHIO Farmer Com· priced at 537 ,500 will help
finance Wllh suitable down
indiVidual
to payment and 10 IJ:~ percent
aggressive
pany
1S looking
for a sharp
serv ice our customers n th e interest. Shown any11me,
Meigs Gall 1a area. Group 446·0963.
insurance and retirement,
plus outstand.ng .ncome
potential. For personal 3 Bdr. home, south of
nterview send br ief resume Gallipolis , Children o.k .•
to M.S . Taylor, Route 1, dep. and ret. req. Call 256·
Box 247 , Lillie Hockmg, OH 9363.
--15742 ,
3 BDR . HOME · In Rio
Grande, near college. Gas
12
S1tua1ions Wanted
heal, city water, and
sewer . $150. mo. plus dep.
HAVE VACANCY in our Call the Wiseman Real
home for elderly people, Estate Agency, -146·3643 .
woman, women, m en or
elderly couple , If •n
terested ca II for more in· LARGE house on N. Main
St. in Vinton, needs some
repairs. owner must sell,
formation a1992 7314.
priced low, all serious of·
13
Insurance
ferswill be considered.

~===================~
SANDY AND BEAVER In·
LAB TECHNICIAN/CHEMIST
surance Co. has offered
Local manufacturing plant has opening
for Lab Technician or Chemist to manage
Quality Assurance/Qualily Control program.
Responsibilities
will
include
establishing standards for production,
monitoring quality of product and develo·
ment of new products. Good pay and fringe benefits. Send resume to P .O. Box
202 c/o Daily Tribune.

3 BDR . doublewide, L.R. ,
ki1chen, F.R. wl1h wood
burner, 2 ba1hs. Located on
lot in Syracuse. Stor.!!lge
bldg. included . $29,000 . Call
992 3382 or -146·6591 .

THE Gallipol is Recreation
Departmenl is st111 taking
applications for basketball
offictals and scorekeepers
for youth basketball Ther e
are paid pQsitions . Apply at
lhe City Manager' s Office,
518 Second Ave. , by Nov.
26 ,

.Have vacancy In my home
for elderly person, Room &amp;
board, laundry reasonable.

992 6022,

21

Business'
Opportunity
\

YOUR own Jeans and SPOr·
!Swear Shop! Offer lhe
latest In jeans, denims and
sportswear. $1~.850 . 00 In·
eludes inven1ory, fiXtures,
etc. Complete Store! Call
ALMA, TOLL FREE 1·800·
874-4780.

FOR SALE
GOODIE SHOPPE
446·3060 or 446·3896
II

PER MONTH

14' WIDE
Call Immediately
1981 OAK BROOK
MOBILE HOME
2 BR, furn,, $9,750, down
payment $985. (Apr.
15%%.

D&amp;W ESTATES
(Jim Elliott)
Rt. 93 North
Jac~son, Oh .
286·3752
35

10 ROOM brick, 3 ba1hs, 1'1•
acre , 6 rooms, 2 baths, 11/:1
acres; 6 rooms basemen1,
bath, 2 mobile homes;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres, John Sheets. 3112
m •les south ol MiddlePOr1,
Rl. 1,
Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm house located on Route 7.
992 ·2571.

HOUSE, 7 rooms. on bath.
full basement. large lot
with river frontage. After 6
992·7284.
Beauliful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addit•on, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Gas heat, central a1r conditioning Call 985 3814 or
992·2571.
FOR SALE : Two acres,
seven rooms, never Hved
in, two bedroom apar1·
ment, large garage. Will
take mobile home as part
payment. John Sheets, 3'1&gt;
miles south of Middleport
on R1. 7.
COMFORTAB L E three
bedroom home with bath,
storm windows and doors.
1nsulated, cen1rat heat,
carport and garage on
large lot. Low u1ilitles.
Priced lo sell at $12,500 .00.
742 3074.
31

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

1978 Duke, 14x70, 3 bdr.
1973 Crown Haven, 14x65, 3
bdr.
1973 Cameron, 12x60, 2
bdr., allelec.
1973 Mansion, 12l&lt;65, 2 bdr.
11173 Horizon, 12x65, 2 bdr .,
front den .
1967 Buddy, 12x50, 2 bdr.
B &amp; ~SALES, INC.
2nd: &amp; VIand Sl.
Poln1 Pleasant, wv
Phone 675·4124
MOBILE HOME · 8•42 · 2
bdr.• $1300. Cal1367-7824.
1968 MOBILE HOME for
sale - all furniiUre In·
eluded. Is now on rented
lot, may keep It !here or
move 11. Moving out of
lown. Must sell. $3500. Call
-146·-4677.
1971 2 bdr . mobile home,
price is $4,000, Call 446·
9235

For .1ppo1ntme11t
C .111 K. l tV N.1sk cv

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven, 1.4 x 65,
three bed jooms, new carpet. 1971 Cameron, 14 • 64,
two bedroom s, new carpet.
1972 Champion. 12 • 60, two
bedrooms, new carpel. 1976
Cameron. 12 • 60, two
bedrooms, allelectnc . 1971
Sky li ne, 12sx 6 ). l wo
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1!3, new
c arpet.
1910
PMC ,
12 • 60, two bedrooms. new
carpet B X S Sales, 1nc.,
2nd x Via1•J Street, Po int
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
4424,

r********-*ilpfl'
$ $ $
I
Jt,

WE WILL PAY you cash
for your diamonds, wedding bands, class rings,
pocket watches, dental
gold, anything !halls Hl· 14·
18
K gold . Tawney
Jewelers,

LOST ON JONES Boys
parking 101, social secur•tY
envelope
c ontaining
money. 379·2147.

)

!m

i

I

PATIO SALE, winter
clolhing, men's lge size In
lacke1s and shoes.
Chuldren•s
clothing,
sweaters and leans and
misc. Items, Nov . 22 &amp; 23
Sat and sunday , 9 to 5, -15
Lincoln Ave , just off
Eastern Ave.

••

~

~

·' THANKSGIVING BAZAA·
: R ·, Nov. 25, 26. Addison
Townhouse. homemade
• pies. cookies, candy, dolls,
decorations, books, other
, Items, Effie Martin.

;

•••1&gt;

~

7

Wanted 10 Buy

PAYING TO I&gt; PRICES
FOR u.s, silver and gold
coins. Due to 1he qui ck rise
In silver and gold bullion,
please call for buy quotes
for Your coins and sterling
silver, Also, buying War
Nickels. Canadian Silver
Coins, gold class and wed·
ding rings, dental gold . 333
Jack,son , Oyio, or phone
286·6663. Hrs : 10 a.m. 10 8
p.m . Monday thru Salurday •

Help Wanted

PART or FU L L t ime to
lease f armland f or oil and
gas dr i ll ing loca1ions, pay
ba sed on acr es leaSed. Will
give draw agai nst com·
miss[pn 1o those that want
to wor~ . Mus1 have a car .
Write
U ni v e r s al
Petroleum Co ., Leasing
Dept, P .O box 74, Ironton,
OH -15638.

GOLD. iOk, 14k, 18k, dental
gold and gold year pins.
Call675·3010.

YOUNG BEAGLE dog
found , male at Cherry
R1dge area. 985·4121.

•

}

ffi

• lbHNY RANDLE SHOW
LARRY JONES
MOVII!-(COMEDY)"IO "Door
Illite" 11186
COMMUNIQUE
NFL'80
C1J THE NFL TODAY
THE ISSUE
ONCI!UPOfiACLASSIC 'Nighl
Ftrry' Part 11. The myatery of the

SHOOTING MATCH ,
Every Friday, 7:30 p.m.,
Sunday 12 noon. Robert
Burns home, Harrisburg·
Adamsville Rd .

..
.
; ,APPLES - Sweet Cider:
. We still have plenty of ap·
•

~

ABCNEWS

•

'.

9

LOST : Male coon hound,
white with vel low spots.
Between old Rt. 33 and 681.
Call collect 1·304·675·2799.
$50.00 reward.

HUNTING Allowed,
day or nlghl on ilnv land on
• Cheshire Twp. (Gall Ia co.l
owned by J. Arthur Evans.

•
•

we

INSIGHT
ODYSSEY 'Key lo tho Land of
Silence'
® NOVA 'Wizard Who Spot on the
Floor' Inventor Thomas Edison ia
lhe out&gt;ject ollhla film portraH, nor·
rated by noted actor Barnard
Hughea, featuring unique archival
film of Edison explaining hieinventiona and interviews with Edlaon'a
fam1ty, employeee , and critica .
(Clooed·Cop11oned: U.S.A.) (80

·'

11

GIHFox

30~ · 675· 3.UO .

'

lost and Found

SIDE

THERE WIL L BE a Con
signment Auc1ion spon
sored by Siders Equ lpmen t
co.. Dec , l31h .. 1980, at
Henderson W.VA . Will ac
cepl cons ignments untl
sale day. For details cal

LOST : Black anp tan collie
between Racine and Por·
tland area . Male, answers
toSpanky . 843 ·2815 .

r , ~ NO

..•'•

;'M@) SO MINUTES
CIJ
EVENING AT SYMPHONY
Conductor Seiji Ozewalaada the
Boston Symphony Orchestra in a
program featuring the music o f
liazt and Brahms. (60 mina)
B:oo CIJ 8 CD THE BIG EVENT 'Enola
Gay The Men , The Miaslon. The
Atomic Bomb' 1980 Stars. Patrick
HI-Q
Oufly, Gregory Hamson. The
2:00 CIJ MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
behind-the·acenea preparation
(!) MOVIE ·(SCIENCE·FICTION)
and top secret training of the crew
••• "Log1n'a Run" 1876
on the hiStoric miS&amp;IOn that
C1J
MOVIE
dropped the first atomiCbomb on
00
·(ADVENTURE-DRAMA)
\lo
H~roahlma during World War II (3
' 'Bioodon the Sun"1SMS
hra ) (Cloood·Captlonod; U.S.A.)
(jj) I CALL THAT MIND FREE
CD
REXHUMBARD
li210J HOTFUDGE
(!)MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "10 "And
2:30 CIJ THE DEAF HEAR
JueUce For All" 1979
Cil MOVIE · (DRAMA) " ' \0 " A
(1) AGAINST THE WINO Swooping
Tree Grow1ln Brooklyn" 1945
drama of three people who try to
CIJ SNEAK PREVIEWS Crlllcs
make a better life forthemaelvea •n
Gene Siakel and Roger Ebert the rugged, harsh land of Australia
revtew tha recently released films
during i!!.early colonial daya
'Theldolmaker''TimesSquare'and
(j) (J2) 11J FROM RAOUEL WITH
'Song of the Souttl'.
LOVE Raquel Welch lights up a
IH&gt;ISUES: OHIO
lavish mualcal fantaay when ahe
li2l
TRI-STATE TODAY AND
stare 1n a dazz:l1ng hour of song ,
MORROW
dance and humor. The apec1ai
3:00
AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
takes a storybook look at a
VIKINGS! 'An Island Collod
mythical movie star who arrives in
Thule ' Known to the anc •anta as
New York City to claim her own
Thule, the ISland of Iceland providcorner of paradise. Guest stars ·
ed refuge tor thousands of NorMickey Rooney, James Coco,
wegians fleeing the tyranny of
Dou~a Fairbanks Jr. (60 m1na )
k1nga. Out of thiS queatforfreedom,
Ill lJJ @) ARCHIE BUNKER'S
narrator Magnus Magnusson
PLACE
shows how the rugged settlers of
CIJ!iDCOSMOS
'LivosoflhoStars'
Iceland went on to create one otthe
Or CariSaganeKploreamolecules,
world's
first
parlimentary
atoms and subatomic particles to
democracies
illustrate their relation to the hfe
:lD BODY IN QUI!STION 'Sioight ol
cycleofaatar (Closed-Captioned,
Hand' Host Dr. Jonathan M 1llertalka
U.S.A ) (80 min a,)
about the m.racle cures of scrofula
. 8:30 GCIJ ?l\14 / a?l014?!17WCBS
employed dur1ng the late eight@)
ONE DAY AT A TIME
eenth century and explores the
Unemployment1a drivtngAnn crazy,
queationofhowmanyoftheaetechbut it' s nothing compared to what
mque a are uaed bymodern doctors.
happens when she finally doe a find
(Ciooed·Ceplioned; U,S,A,) (60
a likely job prospect and meets her
minU
competltton . (Pt. I of a two-part
GlJ e DON NEHLEN SHOW
isode)
3:30 CIJ METHODIST HOUR
g:OQ
700 CLUB
(j) SOLID GOLD Co·hoola. Glen
AMERICA
Campbell , D1onne Warwtck. Gold
CIJ(IJ)IB SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
record winners perform their hit
'The Enforcer' 1976 Stars : Clint
songa.
Eastwood, Tyne Daly .
C1J ANTIQUES
a())@) ALICE
li2l 18 MOVIE -(TITLE UNANCIJ (fi) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
NOII_NCED)
'Pr.de and PreJUdice' EpiSode V.
4:00 CIJ B MOVIE -(DRAMA) 000 "AirKnowing now that her f~rst 1mpres·
PJlrl" 11170
a1one of Mr. Darcy were unJustified:
W HE LIVES
Elizabeth has begun to regret lost
(]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY)
opportunilles. ( Cloeed·Capllonod;
"Juol You And Me, Kid" 1g79
U S.A H.eo mlns.)
CD GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
g:30 aCIJ®&gt; THEJEFFERSONS
a C1J \la)
NFL FOOTBALL
10:00 CIJ KENNETH COPELAND
Washington Redakma va Oallaa
CD MOVIE -(SCIENCE-FICTION)
Cowboys
••• "Logan'• Run" 1876
CIJ HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH
(1) TBS EVENINCl NEWS
'Pain Management' (CiosedG C1J@) TRAPPER JOHN M.D.
Coplloned, U.S.A,)
Sexual misconduct with a patient,
(jj) UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS 'On
that' 8 the shocking charge leveled
with the Dance' The Great War 11
at young, freewheeling Dr Gonzo
over and Richard's personal plans
Gates. (Pt. l ola two·porteploodo)
cause anx1ety and uncertainty
(.S_eaaon·Premiere; 80 mint.)
around th'e Bellamy household. (60
C1J FIRING LINE 'Whol'o Happen·
mine.)
ing In Brazil?' Guests: Fernando
4:30 CIJ THINK ABOUf TOMORROW
He nri que Ca rdo 80, p rofes aor of
C1J MOVIE -(CRIME) " ' "Kiu
Politlcal Science, Sao Paulo
Tomorrow Goodbye" 1850
University; Ello Caatarl, t.A.inaging
KNOW YOUR SCHOOLS
Editor of Veja magiZine, the
5:00
WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
Brazihan equivtplent of Time ,
UNTOUCHABLES
George Ruaaeil, American Bureau
CD A RETURN TO FREEDOM
ChlefforTimeMagazlne.Hoat:Wil()) CIVILIZATION 'Worship of
llamF, Buckley,Jr .. (Biock ·Whlte)
Nature'
mina.)
® BRIAN BURKI! SHOW
5:30 CIJ OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
IWIIUN•' CII""'e
11:00
•CIJCD
""'
NEWS
(!) MOVII! ·(SUSPENSE) " '
"Min With The Goklan Gun"
NEWSIOHT '80
1974
AUFF'HOUSE
KANWHA COUNTY SCHOOL
!iD DOUAR STRETCHER
WG FRAN CURCI SHOW
;~-=~~NG
SOUNDSTAGE
EVENING
11 :15
PMAPIJLSE
8:00
iJli. NEWS
11:30
•MOVIE-(DRAMA)"' "Tho
CIJ
CHAMPIONSHIP
rd War" 11143
WRESTLING
THE KING IS COMINCl

~·~."11150

.
.

6

Sale

&amp; Aucti on

WIRE HAIRED Terrier
pup. House broken. Black
With white whiskers. 992·
5319 .

THE GALLERY at 407
Second Ave. Is now open
feaiUrlng brass and bisque.
China, pictures. arts, some
antiques. Come In and
register for a 31 day, $150.
clock to be given away,
Dec. 23, 1980,

'
ANIMALS
African termites f1ght to
the death to protect their queen ,
elegant Terne atruggleto aave their
chicks from predatory gulls, a
truck ·rlding racoon takes to the
highway&amp;, and a 11nglng dog goes
on the road with a rock band . (60

EJ.ghting legion'. (90 mina.)
UQJ NFL FOOTBALL Dotroll Lions
vs Tampa Bay Buccaneers
(fi)
WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
'
We ACTION NEWS FOR KIDS
1:30 (j) COLLEGE FOOTBALL '80
(jj)
ISSUES IN WORLD
COMMUNICAnONS

CIJe

-

.

Television Viewing
NOV. 23, 1080

DOG grooming, all breeds,
pick up and delivery, 379·
2191.

Pu~lic

8

Lo1s &amp; Acreage

3 LOTS in Village of Rio
Grande,. approx. 1 acre,
lg1al Cal l 245·5823 or 446·
SJ-15.
LOT City school distric1,
l lf:z miles out of city limits.
Ca II 446·9437

Houses for Rent

41

NICE 2 bedroom home
near town . 2 car carport,
na1. gas, refeences &amp;
dePOsit req. 5275 mo, Call
lhe Wiseman Agency, 446·
3643.
WE WILL be having 2
homes for rent or lease In
lhe near future. Each
requ ire 1 month 's rent in
advance plus a securitY
deposit, personal and
credi1 references. S1rou1
Realty. 446·0008.
HOUSE lor rent · ou1Side
CitY limits, 5 rms., bath and
ut ilily- rm., 5200. mo. plus
dep., call after 5. Call -146·

0458.
FOR RENT OR LEASE ·
Modern 3 bdr. ranch. car·
pet, garage, $275. per mo.
plus deposit. References
required. Strout Realty,
+16·0008.
VERY nice 5 rm. house and
bath. See J lm BaldWin,
Baldwlns Gun Shop . Call
+16·2227,
4 BDR. Home, nice kitchen,
fireplace,
basement,
garage quiet locallon, odge
of town. $350. mo. Also 2
bdr. apart., a blockS from
park, private, no ·noise,
w1m garage, $250. mo; Call
446-36-IJ. Ask for 1ke
Wiseman.
LEASE · Lovely v i - of
Ohio River, 3 bdr., split
level on 3 acres, located on
Rl. 7. 1 mile above ro.dllde
park. Wood ' " " - In
basement. Low utlllttea.
lotal eleCtric. Will ' fumllhod, aecurlty dlpaalt
and references. call .._

4962.

-

NICE 2 bdr. hOule In CriMI
City wllh b. .ernent •
slorage garage, OIIIIIRIII
child acceplecl. $110. •
mo.
Rena•
1fH
refrlgerotor evell.....
Phone Proc:tat Wille . . .

-

ewt~flllll.

'·

�I
0-&amp;-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 19M

Houses for Ren, - 4l___MObiiiHDmeS --

41

tar Rent
·- - - MOBILE HOME. f~rnished
utilities paid, no pets or
drunKs, one kid accepted.
One bedroom apartment.
furnl~hed,
utillttes paid.
John Sheets, 3'1• miles
south of Middleport on
Route 7.

TWO
BEDROOM
un furnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp;. one
bedroom furnished apart·
ments. Call after 6 p.m.
992·2288.
HOUSE for rent. Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis. Unt , 6753000.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BDR . and 3 bdr . mobile
homes, coi i .W.·0175.
MODERN mobile home in
city, cent. a ir, heat,
parking, 1 or 2 adults only
Call446·0338.

44

They'll Do It Every Time

--------~-

ffiCI&lt;i.EY WAS AI.• i.A1161fS ON

!(IS S11:&gt;&amp;'e'f OFF'!CE JOB ···

TWO BEDROOM furniShed
tra11er, three miles west of
Five Points. S12l .OO monthly, Sll.OO deposit. 949·
2461.

2 BEDROOM mobile home
446·9580.

mobile home that ts
m05tly furntshed . Real
nice with new carpet
and set up for wood
bu r ner . ONLY! 516,500
WRAP
AROUND
PORCH - Makes th tS
home look tnvt ting. A
1•12 story frame that has
.4 bedrooms, 11h baths,

paved parkang tor 4
cars, and an equtpped
kitchen . ver y clean and
nicely decorated. JUST!
$35,000
DID YOU SAY BRICK?
That is what th is
home has to offer and a
whole lot more. Comes
wtth 3 bedrooms. Ph
baths, btg basement ,
wood burn1ng f 1re ptace,
garage and a garden
spot Wha t more could
you ask for? Call today
to see $45,000.
NOT ONE , BUT TWO
FIREPLACES - Hard·
wood floors almost
everywher e IS one of the
n1ce th 1ngs about thi s
Ph stor y fra me home
with a full basement,
family
room.
4
bedrooms, and a big lot.
$27,000
FARM
WITH
MINERAL RIGHTS Approx imately 23 acres
with an 8 room farm
house set u p fo r a wood
burner . Has a n1ce kit·
chen, 5 bedrooms, 2
baths, and a full basem e·lt. ApproX Imately S
.acres are tillable and
about 8 are fence.

44

Apartment
for Rent

5 RM. unf. apartment,
adultsonly Coll446·1158.

General

FURN . mobile home, 5
miles from town. Ad~lts .
Call-446·1158.
Apartment
for Rent

44

NICE SMALL furn. ef·
fi c iency apart., for one gentleman only . Call446·0338.

LARGE downstai rs apart·
ment , in town . Dep .
required Call446·4471 .
2 BDR. unf. apart, in
Crown City, 1 child ac·
cepted Call 256·6474
FURNISHED apt., 1 bdr.,
$210. · Uttl itt es pd., adults
only. Near HMC. Call .W.·
4416 after/ p.m .
NEW I bdr. a par! .. call 446·
0390 .
2 BDR . apart .• tu rn .• adults
only . No pets. dep . reQ. Call
446 1945.

$44,500.

CASSADY REALTY
BELPRE , OHIO
A-FRAME -

Redwood

w1th shale shmgles, 3
stones, 3 bdrm ., 2 1!:~
baths, off1ce space 4
glass sliders, f ireplace
plus woodburner and
bar becue in k1t . Has 2
redwood decks and 2 ce
men t pat1os. Th1s has
well water, total elec.,
and sits on 9 acres w1th
fru1t cellar, lg. garage
and storage build1ng.
Many mo r e teatures to
see Priced m the SO' s.
TUPPERS PLAINS Arbaugh Add , 3 bdrm.
br ick . Has full dry basement w1th woodbur ,,er,
garag~ stts on 8 lenths
of an acre ver y well
kept ho me. Priced in the
SO' s.
VIRGINIA HAYMAN
PH . 985·4191

Real Estate- General

DILLON REALTY

FOR SALE - 3 65 acres of level land front1ng main
highway.
2 OR 3 B.R. HOME -Gravel H ill in Middleport
Ready 10 move 1nto condition. Fireplace &amp; wood ·
burn1ng stove Gas forced air furnace Close to pool
· park &amp; shopping.
2 OR 3 BE OROOM HOME - Can be used as duplex
or one dwelling New paneling, wall paper &amp;
carpe ting New gas fo r ced air furnace.

FAY MANLEY, BR . MGR . 992·2598
General

Furnished apartments, ~23129, 992·5914, or 1·304·882·

•

PT.PLEASANTINN - Naw
available, single and
double rooms at weekly
rates, 304-475·6276.

2 BDR . turn. apart., adults
only, no pets, $185. plus
•utilities mo. Dep. req. Call
.W.·3444.

2566.

--

Furnished Rooms

•

Roal Estate- General

Furnished downstairs 2
large room &amp; bath with
shower, clf!an, no pets, ref,
dep, req . Adui!J only. Ph
446· 1519.

..
•

•.
;

3
.
•
••
••
••

••

;•

1

1).8-TheSunday~,e_I,_S_un_,d_:_y':...N.,.ov....,.
a
23
_:_
,1
_9M
_ :_ 146 - -

45

Furnished Rooms
PI:!IVATE rooms
ki
' cooweeK.
ng,
cable TV, $40. per
773·5651.
SLEEPING ROOMS
rent, Gallla Hotel.

for

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light hOusekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.

44

FOR RENT · Trailer
spacet rural water, elec·
trlc, septic tank, on 8 acres
of land. Call-446-7699 or .W.·

9539.

•
~

WANTED to Rent : Garage
in M iddleport, preferably
the lower end. Phone 992·
2117 before 4:30 or 992·2528
after 4:30. Also 1968 Olds
Cutlass for sale .

Need a P.A. System for a
day or week? We rent them
at: Tom's Stereo Center,
243 3rd Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
446·1886.

Ill, J H•irston, Anoc., 4CH2o«&lt;, Eve.

.tim Cochren, Auocl•te, '"·7nl, Eve. Nancy Smith,Auoc., ..W·4t10, Eve.
D• n Evens, ASIX:,, 1111111 Eve.

Cly~ We lker, Assoc., J45·S'J76
Tom Holstem . Asoc ,lU·t 760

PHONE 446-3643

m

NEWLY t&lt;ENOVATED HOME IN GALLIPOLIS,
one bedrm ., liv ing room, kitchen, bath and utility
rm. down~tairs - two bedrms. upstairs. Painted
and refinished inside and out. New 1200 BTU F.A.
nat. gas furnace, new bath and kitchen . can be FHA
or VA financed. Price $29,000.00.
.-.

BEST BUY - Ranch with a brick front, only 3 years
old, 3 bedrooms, fully carpeted, garage, large lot,
only $38,000 on state road.
N1138

•

IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR ACREAGE, we have
just listed over 100 acres in Guy an Twp.ITopo, ron,
'ing to hillv. Own!!'r will ~rmlt core drilling. Call for
more information . price $300 00 per acre Exceller(t
buy!

. NEW
- ..
.
LISTING -

-~ ·

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots with 4
rental mobile home pads, all are rented, each pad
has concrete runners and patio, located In Rodney.
N2155

Investment property, three ren·
tals, one faces Second Ave., has liv. rm., din. rm.,
kit., bath, uttltty rm . down, 2 bedrms up. 1 bedrm
uttlity apt. back, and 2 bedrm. garage apartment i~
, rear. Call for more Information and appointment. ..

TO SETTLE ESTATE - This home has been reduc·
ed $10,000, fully carpeted, 3 BR brick, 2'.4 baths, for·
mal dining , fireplace, basement, 2 car garage, 1
acre land, has many mor e extras, between Rio
Grande and Jackson. Call todav .

R-IVERoYIEW - RIVER FRONTAGE.- car~teo ,
bedrm., home situated along Garfteld Ave . Family
rm., liv. rm ., formal dining rm ., Ph baths, city ser·
vices, lot eKtends from Rt. 7 to Ohio River. Detached l'h car garage . pncefor quick sale, $38,000.00. •

GOOD CITY LOCATION - 2 story remodeled home
w1th basement, double lot, and 3 car garage with
workshop.
N0514

MOVE INTO THIS 2 BEDROOM home conveniently
located to schools, ch.urches, grocery and downtown
shopping . Don't let " Old Ma~ Winter" bother you
anvmore . Buy now for $24,500.00.

:i

VA LOAN ASSUMPTION - Good home, care·free
aluminum siding, 3 bedrooms, bath with shower,
wood burning stove, garden spa ce. $26,000.
N0062

MODERN HOMC'OVERLOOKING the Ohio River,
3 bedrooms, fully carpeted, kitchen newly remoder:
ed, level lot w ith several fruit trees. 2 car detached.
garage Enjov the pride of ownership for onlv
$49,000.00.

MOBILE HOME LOT - Already set up, has water
&amp; sewage, 10x20 porch, located on Raccoon Rd .
N 1185

- ···--

--- - - ·.

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED on Lower River Rd. 2
or 3 bedroom home. Newly carpeted. Ri ver Iron·
tage, city water, nat. gas FA furnace. 2 baths, fami·
IV room w ith deck. Buy nawtor $42,000 .00.

GOOD BUY - 1970 14x70 mobile home and small
lot, needs repair but only $6,500 .
N0056
OVERLOOKING THE RIVER - Large building
lot, cl ose to Addison.
'
! 1117

LOOKING FOR INVESTMENT PROPERTYIII
We have several pieces of investment property with
two and three rentals. Prices range from $35,000.00
to $80,000.00. Call us for more Information, we will
be happy to shOw them to you .

EXCELLENT CONDITION - 1977 Kirkwood 14x70
mobil e home, 3 bedrooms, central air, n1ce carpet,
loca ted in Park Lane Court.
N0041

WOOD REALTY, INC.
32 LOCUST ST., GALLI POLIS

-

Real estate- General

Real Estate

.

'

-

... Ala-·

By o.w.wi J - y

It does mAe it impossible
for you to bid a normal two

'Ibis is IJIOiher artificial
coavenUon that is simple
"""""' to learn ODd to pbiy
wltbgCM&gt;d....Wb.
Named after the late Alvin
Landy wbo was tbe e1ecut1ve
oecrelary of the ACBL for
many yean, It 11 lhe use of a
two-club bid against a
notnunp opening bid to ollow
both majOr luib.
Here is a typtcal Lalldy
band: $-K 109 U H- K Q84
Z D- It I C- 7. Thil band is
· s::;:~ODCMI&amp;b to take octlon
~
r wlnenble or not,
opiDst • llaDdard notnun~.
It may get yoo
trouble if
partaer bu a bad baDe! with
daba alld dWnonlll, but yoo

clubs aaainst an enemy
notnunp. But unleoa you bave
eaoogb cluba to be willing to
compete to the three level,

there is little value in trying a
normal two-club bid So if rou
have a rea) cl•b band, you JUSt
bid tbree cl'ba right away.
Wben · your partner bids
Lalldy, you can respoltd two
diamondS to ask him to pick a
ma~r. You can bid thne of a
rna r to show pme interest.
itb better bancls you can
bid game or can iDvite game
llrongly by blddina •• artificialtwonotrump.
Tbe Lalldy coaVeoUon is
Important """""' for us to
devote two mCR"e articles to it.
Oae will sbow eumples of
can't afford to wear both Lalldy biddinc. Tbe other
IIISpenden and a belt. A w!D- defeuae apinot iL
We do recommelld il if you
ning pbiyer must lake occaand your parlnen will work
sional risks.
You can use Landy on on it eoougb so you won't get
either side of a notrump open- conf..,.J by IL
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
Ing.

••
•
••

•••
••
•
••

UPPER RIVER ROAD 2story
home on a double lot on R 7. This
redecorate~ home offers 5 bedrooms, 2
full baths, new k i tchen, diing room,
large family room, fireplace, full base·

. I
•I
~~~tin~~,~~; ~asn!~n3a~earn:-:'r:'~~·
i; II Ove~
lh ~ere w ith storage bldg. $50's.
!I
.I
:I
~ I
t I PAY $35,000 NOW OR $40,000 NEXT
YEAR - ThtS home tS priced at 1978
'. I prices
and owner needs to sell. Price
~ I lower but just as nice as other homes in
neighborhood. 3 bedroom, steel sided
1
ranch home near Rodney , equipped kit
•.
chen , bath w/ shower, utility room ,
elect. heat, garage
large yard. May
:~ I sell furn1ture also.
:
:

~

&amp;

.,,~ -I

18' MASTER BEDROOM - With your
own pr ivate bath &amp; dressing ara . En loy
large rooms throughout th is J bedroom
home near Rodney. Has large equipped
kitchen, family area with woodburner,
2 baths, utllty area, 11/2 car garage, central air plus 1h acre flat landscaped
yard . $50's.

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CENTRAL REALTY
NEW LISTING - Country Home on 1 acre lot.
Large living room , kitchen end den. Includes 3
bedrooms, laundry area, and outside bu ilding for
storage and car. Aski ng under S30,000.
" COMFORTABLE" 3 bedrooms, large liVing room,
also family room, storage bldg . and large garage
space. Asking $37 ,000. Give us your offer.

QUIET COUNTRY

SPRAWLING BRICK
RANCH - If your family likes elbow
room th~n you must bring them to see
this 2300 sq. ft., 4 bedroom home. 1n·
eludes large room, family room , 2
beautiful fireplaces, 2lf2 beths, equip·
ped kitchen, dining room, F tA. nat. gas
central air, detached 2 car garage, plus
.tlf2 acres w1th barn &amp; 10x40 insulated
dog kennel. There's someting here for
the entire family. $72,900.

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REAL

GR-EEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - 115 A.
M-L located on SR Ul approx. 6 mi. west of town:
Land is approx. 60% cleared ' &amp; 40% woods &amp; includes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn . Priced at ssoo per

VINTON - 543,000 - 4 yr old brick and cedar
ranch on a gently sloping lot. Mature trees, blacktop
drive, 3 BR , bnght l1v 1ng room, kitchen has r ange,
cabinets, dining area with sli d1ng glass doors
leadi ng to a patio Well msulated. Attached garage
Just listed !

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426 DEBBY DRIVE - L·shaped ranch, 4 BR, 11h
baths, LR, foyer, large equipped kitchen, nat. gas
heat, cent. air, full basement, 2 car garage, 16X32
heated pool &amp; large corner lot. Shown by appoint·
m en1 .

WILKSVILLE - 536,500 - The gr acea nd spa ce of
yesteryear, 2. story fram e, high ceilings, tg.
wallp~pered llv1ng rm., 3 BR, fa mily k1tchen .
There s also a 2 room and bath apt w1th pri va te en·
tran ce for extra mcome Completely furni shed
Beautifulllh acre level lawn
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FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unf1n1shed one story home with 3.4 acres on R.AC·
COON CREEK. Located on the Green Sounders Rd. ·
near Northup. $15,000.

EXCEPTIONAL DESIGN Cathedral cooling,
balcony overlookmg llvmg rm ., fireplace, screened
dining porch~ 4 BR , 21!2 baths, wooded deck, very
private back vard. Gas heat, $53,900 Just outside c1
ty.

40 ACRES NEAR VINTON - About t;, clear, some
timber reported, S2,000 down.
TWO MILES OUT STATE ROUTE 518 - Remodel·
ed home tncludes 6 rms. and bath, carport, stove,
ref rig .. dishwasher, almost 2 acres of land. priced
for quick sale.
CROUSE BECK ROAD - Restricted building lot.
1 22 acre, nice wooded setting, city schools. $5,950.

__ __

SANDERS HILL - $39,000 - Unusual desi gn atthos
low price! Cathedral open beamed ceili ng 1n living
rm ., kitchen and bedroom. Hardwood floors,newly
carpeted living rm . Forced atr gas heat. carport
Sloping lawn with lots of trees.

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PERRY TOWNSHIP 78 acres. 1.• o• Simms &lt;.:reek
bottom, balance ro'"e--ouce
woods, nice
modular home, lar1R
-· ~· urner buildings,
tob . base, corner ot&gt;" 141 &amp; the·vernon Woods Rd.
'NEW Ll:tiiN" Like new l4XIU WIOUWJ
mobtlehome with expando. This beauty Is complete·
ly furnished &amp; has a buiit·in stereo, radar range,
WB stove, covered patio &amp; all set up on a l~rge
shady rented lot In the Green School Dlst.
GREEN ACRES - $56,000 - Two brand n.W
homes, 3 BR. 2 full baths, equipped kitchen. Attach·
ed finished garage, full basement . Heat pum"
Owner will consider mobile home or other proper ty
as down payment.

BABY FARM NEAR TOWN - Approx. 13'/' acre5
on Kelton Rd ., mostlv pasture, nice 5 rm.'and bath
home, basement, barn, othei' buildings, assumable
loan .
MAKE US AN OFFER - MOdern 3 BR ranch, I
bath, laundry, LR. kitchen with range &amp; relrlg.,
tomily rm .• nat. gas heat, brick front, large back
oorch &amp; situated on a large flat lot near town.
NORTHUP Aki:A - Farin for sole, formerly used
as dairy, good 2 story hOme, lots of other blldlngs,
187 A . m·l, opprox. 35 A. It liable, balance pasture &amp;
woods, could e used for most eny type farming
o~ratlon or development. First ttme on the
market.

$6,000 - 1976 L oberty Mobile Home, 3 BR , storm
doors, w indows, drapes, range, refrig., washer and
dryer . Window air cond. Porch awning, underpi nnIng. Total elec;tric . Very good con d.

DAIRY FARM OR BEEF RANCH - This farm Will
handle both 15&lt;1 atres mostly beautiful rolling land.
60 acres tillable, 10 apasture. balance· woodland.
Some Raccoon Creek bottom . EKcellent fences.
water supply, pasture. Tobaccc;t base. Good barns,
milk house. verv nice 3 BR , tr• · leve~ home. If you
really want to farm call For an appo1ntment to see
this farm.

L

$12,500 - EUREKA - Cute as a button bungalow. 3
rooms plus lg . utility room, nice car~et, range, low
gas budget. Air cond., storage bldg,

LOG CABIN - Very unique, old hand hewn log
beams, sleeping loft, Iaroe &amp;tone fireplace, modern
barn , 14 acres woods, located In th• Wayne National
Forest. 20% down.

90 ACRES ~ Nearl y 2,000 ft. road fronage, 55 a,cres
pasture, 20 acres t1m,ber, rest t1 t Iable $74,500

CHESHIRE - ROUSH LANE - LovelyJ BR ranch,
l'h baths, 16x24 LR wtth WB fireplace, completely
equipped kitchen, lovely carpet throughout, full
basement [par!ly finished&gt;. nat gas heat, cent. air,
garage and patio.
55 ACRES NEAR OAK HILL- On county road 48,
close to state route 279 . Some gobd building sites.
Owner will finance.

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HOBART DILLON,
BROKER
BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER
Spring Valley Plaza

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TION- J things to look tor when buying a home. You ' ll find the location of
this lovely brick home hard to beat .
Located just oH Rt. 35, 1'1• miles from
H M .C. Includes 3 bedrooms, 1'/o .baths,
a warm &amp; tnvitlng fireplace. EQuipped
kitchen, din1nd area, laundry room, 2
car garage with loads of storage. 2
large lots and
back yard. $60's.

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Phone 446-7900
or446- 2730

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~- · sales Manilger
446-1049

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PRICE REDUCEDT0$67,9001 BrandnewTrHevel
features 3 BR's, 2'h baths, large LR, equipped kit·
chen, formal dining, large L·shaped family rm.,
utility rm. &amp; 2 car garage. Located In Ciearvlew
Estates. Calf STROUT REALTY at 446-0008 tor an
appo[ntment.
OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE- In the Wll.derness
of the Wayne National Forest. 5 to 8 ac-re tracts Of
woodland now available, adlolnlng thousands Of
acres Of government land . Public hunttng, fls~lng
and camping permitted. Prices start ·at $2500 with
financing available.
R:ACCOON TOWNSHIP - Excellent building sites,
approx. 10 aores on State Route 325, apprOK 2 mi.
south of Rio Gronde Rural woter and Gallipolis Cl·
ty Schools.
GREEN ACRES- Lovely 3BR ranch Is covered
with brick &amp; aluminum &amp; offers such features as 3
BR's, bath, kitchen with range, retrlg . &amp; dlsp., laun·
dry rm., with washer &amp; dryer, carpet &amp; HW 11-s
cent air, gas heat (hi. bill · S531, 2 car garage Iaroe
covered patio &amp; ulllily building. Call for an 1tlPoln1ment.
LAKE FOR SALE with approx . .tO acres vocant
land. Ideal recreation property. Located In Clay
1;wp. near Eureka. Asking 126,900.

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S35,000FARMBARGAIN-2~acresof
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fl~t to gently rolling land on Johnson
R~ .• 8 miles from town. Several large
buildings and sheds plus remodeled
bedroom home in good condition . If
you're looking tor
good inexpensive
farm let us show it to you.

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workmanship and family living space
in this 3 bedroom ranch . This home of·
fers klng sized bedroom, baths, large
family room , eat in kitchen, utility
room, central air, 2 car garage and
over 1 acre of flat yard. CitY schools.
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$61,900.
ACRES- EXCELLENT LOCATION
-QUALITY HOME - II you want city
conveniences and live on a country-like
setting this Wbuld be the perfect spot for
you. 3 bedroom brick &amp; trame hOI'(Ie
with 2 fireplaces, family room, dining
room, 2 baths, -equipped kitchen, full
basement, nat. gas heat &amp; garoge. 18
quiet secluded, wooded acres. S60's.
1Z9 ACRES VACANT LAND
5:14,900 Large highway frontage
(1050') on St. Rl. 7. Several good home
sites. Mostly wooded acreage, Rural
water available. Call for lnfortnation.

Ill
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~~~i~i;r~r~o~ldt&amp;:~c:ie~ani~a•orahunting
pin. Perfect
torSftualld
• small
loctge.

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NEAR TOWN - JUST OFF LOWER
RIVER ROAD - Convenient location
near Ohio River on Old Rt. 7. This 1'h
story home ha14 bedrooms, eat· in kit·
etten. bath, living room w/flreplace,
full basement, garage, storm windows
and city water. Priced low at 53-4,900.

JUSTLIKENEW - Youcanhardlytel i
this home has been lived ln. Clean In·
side and out. Includes 2 bedrooms, eat·
in kitchen, lhflng room w/ bookshe•ves,
bath w/ shower, huge roofed patio (east ·
ly expanded to add extra bedrooms),
detached llh car garage &amp; nearly 1 acre
flat yard Only $40,900.
·

2 FIREPLACES FOR SANTA - Ole St.
Ntck can choose which chimney he
wants to come down &amp; you can choose
which cozy fire to snuggle up to Your
family will love you if you choose this
charm ing home for a Christmas pre·
sent. 3 bedrooms, eat 1n kitchen, dining
room , elect. heat, garage plus a nice
landscaped and fenced yard. Near
Rodney. $41,900.
YOUR KIDS CAN WALK TO SCHOOL
- And your entire family will enjoy this
charming remodeled 3 bedroom ranch.
Vinyl siding, eat-In kitchen, huge living
room w/ f lrelace, all appllance5 in·
eluding washer &amp; drver, 2 1 baths, nat.
gas heat, garage &amp; large flat lot.
Assumable 13% Int. &amp; immediate
possession . $5&lt;1,000.
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY -;- A
well kept, well maintolned duplex In
tawn. Each unit includes 2 bedrooms,
bath, living room, kitchen &amp; laundry
area. Nat. gas heat, central air &amp; large
lot. Excellent Income opport,u nlly.
$37,500.

NEW HOME - S.R. 160 - For only
$37,1100 you can awn a new home. OWner
has moved &amp; must sell fast. Charming 3
bedroom, cathedral ceiling ranch. Nice
large kitchen, utility room &amp; garage. '4
2 ACRES- RT. 554- 2 story 3 or 4 acre flat lot.
bedroom home in good location. Home
InclUdes eat-In kitchen, dining room, MOBILE HOME &amp; 2 ACRES - 1972
utility room, Insulation, most , _ wlr· Elcona 1•X65 mobile home (furnished).
ing rereakers), rural &amp; well water, Hal2 bedrooms, equipped Kitchen &amp; 1'h
carpet and cellar house. Also Includes bath. The 2 atres include pond &amp; large
11Jxol0 barn, 11x60 chicken house, 2 room garden arJ!a. 32 additional acres
"Pouting House" lor the mother· In-law, available. • miles north of Rio Grande.
mobile home hook·u.P and 2 flat acres. S18,500.

139,000.

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2ND ,AVE. - 135,000 - Large 2
IIDrY brick home acr- from A&amp;P
....,.., ThllhomehMiePereleentranct
tor Olflce or beMIIY lhOtl plus •
Maroom&amp;. 2IHI!ha, dining room &amp; b ment. Nil. 11M 11Ht. Nice 101. lm·
ll'lldlate IIOIII'IIIon.

Rd.

MOBILE HOME &amp; J ACRES - 1969
Richard- 12X65 mobile nome with 3
bedroom, 1'h' bath and 4' tip-out on
lng room. Sits on blocK IOynctetlon. 3
acres lays very well enct Includes a 2
story block building &lt;makes a orut
_.ksholl&gt; plus an ·otd bam. Located
-tenth mile off Rt. 160. Only 114,500.

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GAWA OOUNTY'S ~LDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

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NEW LISTING- LAND CONTRACT ON OUT- Jt
SKIRTS OF TOWN - Large living room, 3 or 4 It
bedrooms, kitchen 11·1- 16-80 e, refrtgerator and Jt
di.shwasher plus cozy .u ..... , , uam In the basement JfBuy this one as cheap as you can rent. Bener Hurrv

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LAND CONTRACT - 10% INTEREST - one yr.
old 3 bd. frame ra1 11-15-80 hed garoge. Kyger
Creek Schools. In the.w ~. '
TWO BEDROOM FRAME - This home needs some
work but at this pric 11·14-80 afford it. Located on
Rt. 7 with over 5 acre:, or tano Super investment.

REDUCED TO $32,000 - Located in Gallipolis City
School District and oj'f 2o'"a"o"'iles from town, thos
3·bd. with full basem _.. : ·- :._.. dy to Holzer Hosp i tal
and the Rl. 35 west area . New maintenance free
Siding.·

II OLDER 3 BD. FRAME - V.ry good buy a good
**... neihborhood. Nice 1&lt;11·14·80 won' t find in a new
home. $35,000 .00.
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NEW LISTING - 3 BD FRAME .HOME AND
IO'x50' MOBILE HOME - Located in Kyger Creek
School District, ther- ....... "'~mes are presently
rented. Better yet, ; , 11 - 10·~0 house and rent the
mobile home. \'lilhln walkong distance of grade
school. Good buy at 521,000.00.

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OO!'I'T WASTE Tl ME - Call for an
to
I ltIt,.. day:
to see this eKtra nlc;e brand new home.
bedrooms. 134 baths, ............. - 'Nith formal d1nmg

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~ppolntment
Th~ee

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area, utility room, 16-31·80 ing fireplace. Ex·
cellent location for miners - Rt. 554. V.A. and
F.H.A . approved .
1!17412'x45' MOBILE HOME- BEAUTIFUL ACRE
LOT- $15,1100 00.

1!174 12'x.O' MOBILE HOME and drapes Included - $8,250.

2 bd ., appliances

'N EW LISTING - NICE 3 BD. DOUBLEWIDE Situated on Georges Creek Rd . In Kyger Creek
SChool Dillrlct, apx. 6 miles from town. A well·
cared tor home. priced right at $22,000.00.

1111-1

on.

NEW LISTINGTHIS ONE
tra nice, located .5112 miles from town in
I ,._
~chool District. Extras include 2 full baths, central
air thermopane windows, util ity room, fireplace 10 Jt
llvlng room, storage building, and a deck in the It
back . 1'h acres of shaded yard. Listed tn the 40' s.

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" " " ' - Nice 3 bedroom homt In Rio
Grinde. Dining room, kllctwn, full 62 LINCOLN ST. - 119,500 - Cozy 3
IHisement, nat.
city w1 ter, large bedroom 11'1 story home in lown. In·
ytrd. &amp;..:.eltentoppartunlty.
~ua':"~ ~~~t~~:.,'~.:l'e~c!~tchen, nat. gas. .

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MCliRG&gt;AN TOWNSHIP - Smai but nice, 2 BR home

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It is possible but you may have trouble gel·
ling rid of it.
To get the most money possible in the
shortest possible time call
THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY

E NERGY EFFICIENT
Three bedroom home situated on five
acres. Th1S home features aluminum
Siding, ut1llfy room , complete carpeti ng
and lovely modern kitchen E lectnc
furna ce and woodb urner Call for more
details about th1s Immacul ate home in
the coun tr y.
N 439

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LOw-cOST LIVING- MOVE IN CONDITION v ..y nice, nut home for the small family or'
MWI~. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room , kit:
ctwn, anct lUll basement. This home has been fully
inlllllted. Lergest heat bill for winter of 1980 was
162.00. IHullful big backyard. Price reduced to
$32,000.00.
EVENINGS
80BLANE
SUE ROUSH

446-1049

44H7n,

in cab1nets Tota l electnc , garden
space With in walking distance of
downtown
.¥433

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REAL ESTATE AGENCY

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NEW LISTING - L.Gvely redwood ranch must be
seen to appreciate. Very unique family room is
finished in cedar. Large LR, kitchen, bath, 2 BR,
laundry and over 1 acre of rolling land . Bargain
priced a'tS29,500 .

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

ESM.
Seclud ed, cozy block home wi th 3
bedroom s, li v tng room, dming room ,
eat tn kitchen, goad well, large tobac co
barn, 2 outbu ildings. Approximately
1050 lbs' tobacco base located on a Sf ate
Hoghway GET MORE FOR YOUR
MONEY when you buy th1s property
Cailtoday,
#460

DILLON

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446-0008
PERRY TWP. - 60 acres, about 12 A. tillable,
balance in timber, stvllsh older 1 rm. home with lot
of possibilities, barn, outbuildings, mineral rights,
fronts on State lid Cali for more information.

Agency

IN GALLIPOLIS

Printing Your Own Money

GALLI POLIS- $3S,OOO - Sparklong 2 BR home has
har.dwood floors w ith plush carpet in living rm .
Solanum vinyl in k itchen. Carport plus lg storage
bldg. Fenced level law n. Easy care vi nyl exter1 or .

·llstest Growrng Heal

3 Bedroom modern home w ith bU ilt

· Is l.llce

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
., 25 locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

• Joan Boggs, Realtor Assoc .
Ph . Home : 446-3294

available for only

4'12 ACRES -

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HOME

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers- Associate
949-2654

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General

ADDISON - 1'1• story, 2 BR , large bath, and laun·
dry, LR and kitchen downsta irs, 2 rms. upstairs unfinished, par basement, new carpet, asking $19.nnn

'G~tllia County's

$.40,000. 37 plus acres. Call now, th is one won't last.

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RACCOON CREEK FARM- 50 acres, 38 A. bot·
tom , 11 A. pasture, lovely modern b. ick home with~
· Brs., 2 baths, cathedral ceilings, fireplace, large
sun deck and tots of other extras, new metal pole
barn, cnb, loading chute, approx 1700 ft. creek
frontage, located 4 m 1 from Meigs Mine No.3. ·

Eunice Niehm, Realtor
Ph . Home: 446-1897

90 ACRES PLUS
2YEAROLDHOME
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, living room, din
1ng roo m with modern kitchen, 6'x24'
sundeck on side, B'x8' sundeck in front,
12'x20' basement Nice barn type
11.6'x 13 6' storage bulding Aporox. 69
acres pasture, some large timber All
mmeral rights goes Wi ll sell house and
2 112 acres or 89 acres of vacant land
Call for det ai ls

NEW LISTING -1 Acre level lot, gas &amp; water lines
in front of propertv. Close to schools, churches and
stores. Asking $6,500 .

Selling Your Home Yourself'

NEW LOW PRICE!- $33,000 - Beautiful ac r eage
plus 3 BR co lon•al style home 14 acres mostly leve l,
some wooded Kyger Creek Schools. Only few m 1les
from ci ty Better Hurry!

Norma Lee Kinnett, Rea llor Assoc:. l
Ph. Home: 446-712l

our Buyers Come From
All Over The World
We j:.QYfiJlY!!.r .7'..Mci!!!..2l!!...!!!lli!~l
to find you a home

THIS HOME has 3 BR's with hardwood floors, Iorge
eat· In kitchen, buill· in cabinets, full basement, has
been taken good care of and waiting for new owner
to give it equal care. $39,000.

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Real Estate - General

0

•Willis T. Leadingham,
Realtor Ph . Home : 446-9539

• l a. ttnll

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YOU CAN TAKE advantage of th ts stately 4 bedrm.
. home located along Upper River Rd. Property has
been renovated and anx 1ous to have a happy family
occupying the grounds. J·car garage. Call and make
an appointment. Good location . Price SS9,ooo.oo.

Landy convention bidding

"'to

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
Ike Wlsemen, llroker, ~·"n''· Eve •

Oswald Jacoby and Alan SOQtag

wanted to Rent

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JUST LISTED - Extra nice ranch, 3 bedrooms,
ba th with shower, den, central air, carport, located
close to Rodney In city sch. dist. Calltoday.
1 1014

Housing
Headquarters

BUILDING Wtth
1800
SQuare foot floor space,
toilet fac ilit ies, forced air
heat In Racine. Available
December 1. 1-614·423·8257
for appointment.

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IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Splil·level with a
great of the Ohio River, has a recreation room with
wood· burner . central air and nearlv 3 acres of land .
Priced In the SO's.
10535

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WISEMAN

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Evenings Call
Darvin Bloomer, ASsoc. 446-2599
John Fuller, ReaHor 446-4327

2

BRIDGE

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy.
.
. Large 'ots . Call
992 7479

Real Estate- Gene~al

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NICE HOME WITH RENTAL - Nice ranch, w .q.·
fi r ep lace in living room, full basement, 2 car
garage, also 2 bedroom house. 1.76 acres.
ff 0051

All
utilities paid. $125.00 per
~~~~:i ~;11 Cleland Realty

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Ken Morg;on
EvenlngsoW.-0971
Realtor

5 tree t .

- sP.-ce for Rent .

Equipment for Rent

S!!!celor Rent

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LETART - Good warm
6 room all one floo r
home Nice modern kit·
' chen, modern bath and
like new forced air fur·
nace. Excellent drilled
we l l. Asking only $12,000 .
POMEROY
A ll
utilittes in a 6 room
house, and a set· up for a
trailer. 2 lots . Just
$5,200, what would you
give?
POMEROY HTS. - 5
room frame home with
full basement, 3
be d rooms ,
bath,
carpeting, paneling and
large lot. Some storm
windows &amp; d09rs, and
gas furnace . Asking
$16,500.
2 LOTS
•
Near
Pomeroy
B ridge .
Util it ies available and
out of all floods. Will
take $3,500.
3 ACRS OF COUNTRY
- Large·1o roo m fam ily
home. Bath , dr i lle d
well, natural gas heat,
wood cabinets in the k.lt
chen and large fam1ly
room
with
new
fireplace. Good place
for the chi ldren. $39,500.
MIDDLEPORT
Here ' s something you
can afford to heat a.nd
buy . Has 2 bedrooms,
bath, ntce ca rpeting,
gas furnace, and 2 ca r
garage for only $16,000.
You'll like this.
GIVE YOUR FAMILY
A NEW HOME FOR
CHRISTMAS.
CALL
992-3876.

sycamore

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Housing
Headquarters

Phone
1- ( 614 ) - 992-3325

46
Space for Rent
TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mobile
fiome Park, Cheshire , Oh .
992·395&lt;1 .
OFFICE SPACE for rent,
in Pomeroy, 12 )( 20t 107

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E. Second Street

2 OR 3 B.R. HOME on 2 acres of la nd . Paneltng .
Eat· in kitchen . Meigs Sc system. 2 m1tes from M id·
dleport
•

_ _ _ _ _ __.R!.'e~a'!.l~E~s~
ta~te

ONE downstairs and one
upstairs apartment . Three
bed room.
Available
December 1st Phone 992·
5511

45

Real Estate - General

~~~~L~I ~16 ~:,Lli

paid, conven iently located .
Ca l1245-5818.

part basement, and a
large block storage
building Near the new
bridge $15,000.
AN ACRE IN TOWN Plus a 12x65 Holly Park

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.

Apartment
tor Rent

o&lt;usself D. Wooa
Evenings 446-4618
Realtor

2 BDR. furnished · util.

dining room, sunporch ,

____for Rent __ __

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

44

OFFICE 446-7013

Real Estate

NEAT AND NICE - A
small one floor frame
home with one bedroom,

- --A!l'lrtment
- - -----

BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

RENT OR SALE · Sma ll
farm , nice Ux70' mobile
home, elec with woodbuner stove . Ref and dep.
Call379·21 1l

POMEROY , O .
992-2 259

44

5 ROOM unfurnished apar·
tment. 992-5434 or 992·3129

3 RM . apart., util. turn .•
adults, no pets, call446·3733
or 446·0111evenlngs.

THREE
BEDROOM
tra11er tor rent. furnished.
$200.00 per month. Must
have
references and
depastt. No pets. 992 ·5511.

14 x 70 UNFURNISHED or
partially furnished mobile
home, pay own uttNties,
deposit and reference, no
kids or pets, .W.·0650 or .W.·
2192 after 5.

Apartment
for Rent

COUNTRY SERENITY
1 ACRE MORE OR LESS
You mu st see this !Ike new brick and
frame trHevel. Surrou nded w1th cedar ,
pines and nicely landscaped Entry
leads into l tV IJ'l9 room , 3 nice size
APPLE PI
bedroom s, 2'/J ba ths, eat· 1n kitchen
And sparklin' clean best descnbe this
w1th oak cab1nets , dis hwasher ,
trHev el three ni ce SIZe bedrooms, 2
disposal, counter top range. Large
bath hom e
Fam11 y room w1th
family roo m w1th stone fireplace Dou
fireplace, dining room, modern kit
ble car garage, centra l air. See this
chenwith built-ins, natural gas central
lovely 2 year old hom e toda y .
11 457
heat and a1r. Two car atta ched garaeg.
liKE
NEW
81
-LEVEL
Located in Spring Valley on a beautifU l·
7 roo ms, 1 full bath, 2 1/ 2 baths, tner·
ly landscaped large lot. M1ss th 1s one
and you've missed a good one.
# 450 • mopane windows, modern k i tChen w1th
M agic Chef range. lots of bu1tt· 1n
RUSTIC STYLED CEDAR
cabinets, dishwasher ommg room ha s
Ranch , situated on acres of land, thr ee
patto doors leading to sundeck .
bedroom s, 2 baths, lar ge kitchen , with
Fireplace and a1r cond1t 10ntng. A
lots of lovely bu dt· in cab1nets,
garage
New landscaped l awn
· di shwasher, range, garbage disposal,
100'x 300' A home you should see H424
and d1n 1ng area Call for even more
d eta tl s.
N37S
WANTE0! 1 !
ATTRACTIVE , LONG, LOW,
A new own er to prov 1de lov1ng care f or
BRICK and FRAME RANCH
a 2 story country home, p,. acres, 5
ANOTHER EXCEPTIONAL BUY!!
m1tes from Gall ipolis, part 1al base·
Enter into a spacious 11 v1 ng room
ment, fuel oil F A furna ce, rural water,
with a beautiful bnck f 1reptace,
Gal li POliS School 0 1st Garden space,
large well equ1pped k1tchen w1th
frontage on Rac coon Creek
N458
dining area, three bedrooms, two
EVERYTHING
YOU
NEED
WITH
baths, garage, patio w 1th lux unous
ONE PURCHASE (PACKAGE DEAL)
wall to wall carpeting throughout.
Three bedroom . atr cond1 tmneC
Situated on a corner lot with approx
home 2 baths, 11\nng room , ea t tn kit1 acre of la nd. you can' t afford to
chen, laundry room .or off1ce, plus
pass th iS one by ...See it tod ay. Ask
closets gallore. Metal storage bllding
ing $51 ,900.
M378
on concrete base, heated garage, paved
ATTENTION CITY COWBOYS
Sidewalks &amp; drtveway . Furn1ture Ln·
Have horses? See this fen ced 1n pasture eluded plu s washer. dryer &amp;.all k1t chen
with 4 acres more or less, 1nc tud mg a appliances Move 1n w1th rust your
three bedroom ho me, just a few m1 tes clothes. Many extras we w111 tell you
from Gallipolis Excellent land for far
about w1th a S1mp1e phone call . Plus ci ·
m 1ng as well as new hom e construcTIOn ty schools .
1407
Large barn plus t\vo storage butldmgs
QUALITY BUILT ALL BRICK HOME
w1th large concrete dnve. Cal l tor a Warm
and lmnt ing large rooms 1n this
pe rsonal showing and be surpnsed II 411 pleasing to the eye three bedroom
DUTCH COLONIAL
ho me. Conven iently located on 1 acre
Style , beauty, cha rm, com fo rt ~ all
approx. artfully la ndscaped grounds
describes this home, 4 BR, 2112 bath s, w 1th abundance of trees tncludmg
equipped eat In kitchen, fam ily roo m beauti ful walnut, pines and much more
w i th fireplace, formal livmg &amp; din1ng Ca ll today for more Information and an
room You won't believe thiS ho me appointment
N451
unless you see it for yourself. Ma ke
ATTENTION HOBBY FARMERS
vour appo1ntment today to walk 1nto th e
Mini fa rm , located on a State Highway .
entrance of one of th e most lovely
Approx 4lf' acres with a 3 bedroom
homes 1n th e a~ea
N322
home, ga r age, l1ke new barn and sma ll
BRICK RANCH
tobacco base . Th iS propert y also has
Three bedroom br ick ranch with in
12'x60' mobile home with a
walking distance to Hannan Trace
burner, so you can live in one
Schools This home has ~ l~ rge. back
theo1her . Callfordeta ll s.
#461
yard, some fruit trees, bu1lt·m kitchen
and din ing room, carport, front and
NEW LISTING
cack porch and is reasonabl Y pnced.
Stucco ran ch situated on five ex·
#432
c~llent bui ldi ng lots w tth fruit tree~ ~nd
SPRING VALLEY
garden spot, t1 ve bedrooms, llvt~ g
SUBDIVISION
room eat·ln ktlchen with bullt· 1n
vacant lots, n1ce size building lots with cabin~ts and pantry, _full bath, family
al l uti lities th ere. L ot s1ze 101.8 by 171 .2
room with wood burnmg st~ve, ~ata~e
Betterget 'u mnow.
_
114 56 and three outbuildings Pnced m m1d ,
" NOW " IS THE TIME
fort ies
I 442
26' Trave l Trailer - N1ce level lot with
water, sewer, and eledncity, with Ha r1 ACRE 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
ri s Flote Bote (Pontoon Boat), 6 h. p.
Mercury motor, shelter house, 8'Xl2' Nice comfortabl e home with nice large
r ed barn storage building . Located by shade trees, concrete front porch, lots
Blue Lake and Raccoon Creek. What of fruit trees (apple, cherry, plum and
else can you ask tor? All of thiS for ON· peach ) Grape harbor, raspberry vines .
l.V$12,500.
!444 Good garden land all level. In Green
Twp. Rural water. 2 car garage, fuel oil
FREE NATURAL GAS
F A furnace. Basement, barn approx.
143 ACRES
1304
Approx 10 m1 from Gallipolis, lots of 16'x24'. PRIC ED IN THES20's.
Raccoon Creek frontage . Approx. 30
ONLY $1,700.00
acres Raccoon Creek bottom land . wooded lot, almost an acre, 200' of road
Total of 60 acres tillall/e. Noce 40'x60' frontage. Suitable for .development, or
barn . 6 rooms, 3 bedrpom home with a camp ing tot on Da-w1s Road . Cali for
free natural gas to heat your home in details .
I 431
w inter and cook you food . Lots of fruit
tr ees Ni ce country setting. See this
LOVELY SETTING
_
t 419.,. Lovely 3 bedroom
one.
home, almost 1 acre
.
IMMEDIA-TE POSSESSION
of land (.92) . Central air, heat pymp, 2
(Only $15,500)
baths, front and back porches. Lovely 1
Home neechi some loving care Ranch "'~"'" kept home IQ,slcle and out. Thla
house with two bedrooms. Living room . home can be sol~ 'tomletely tumllhtd
Eat·in kitchen, and bath, located In with expensive furniture or without fvr·
crown City . Excellent extra lot includ· nlturf!. Whatever you desire. It's a
ed . Make a great beginning by ca l) ong that you see this home on the
f&lt;&gt;rdetalls.
#443 Call for an appointment.
2'h ACRES VACANT LAND
MOBILE HOME HOOK·UP
2 lOT$ GREEN ACRES
Levello rolling land w ith electricity ,
Lot N23, Sidewalk, 75'x148'.
well and pump house and electnc
Lot # 23 Vacont 88' frontage by
septtc lank. All for
depth. Price to sell.

�-0.1G-The SWlday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, Nov. 23,1910
S4

OUR BOARDING

CRAFTSMAN 10 in. deluxe
radial saw with 3 drawer
roller ·cabinet, like new,
$300. Call 446-4167 after
6pm .
RUGER No. 1, 6mm cat. ,
Ruger No. 1, 220 swift cal.
Ithaca mod. 37.20 ga . 28 in.
full and deer slayer barrell .
Remington mOd. 10. 12 ga .
32 in. barrel. Ca11446·3.t13.

.40 INCH electric range,
$85. 30 inch elec. range, $95 .
36 inch elec. r:ange S65 .
Refrigerator, harvest gold,
$75 . Refrigerllfor, 2 dr .,
copperton ,
. $125.
Refrigerator side-by-side,
coppertone, $195. Hotpoinl
auto., washer, ·S95. Skaggs
Appliances, 1.918 Eastern
Ave. Caii446-739S .

FOLD up ping pong table
and accessories. Like new .
575. Caii446-067L

51

Household Goods

G'OOD
USED
AP PL I ANCES
washers ,

Household Goods

refr igerators,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sofa , chair,

Skaggs
Ap 1918 Eastern

rocker, ot·

loman. 3 tables. $500. Sofa ,
chair and toveseat, $275.
Sofas and· chairs priced
from $275. to $550 . Tables,
$33 ;-$60 .-$75 . and $85 .
Sofabed and chair, $150.
H i de-a·beds,SJOO ., queen
size,
S325 .,
&amp;
UP .
Recliners, $125 ., $150 ..
$160., $175 .. and $225 . Lamps from $18 . to $50. 5 pc.
dinettes from $69 ., to $325, 7
pc ., $149. and up. Wood

USED FURNITURE. Plalrm rocker ; electric
range, like new; bridge
tables; dresser.
Corbin
and Snyder Furn., 955
Second, Gallipolis, 446 - ·
1171 .
FROST FREE 1979 Ad miral refrigerator, $200.
Call446·0558 .

table and 4 chairs, $235.

Table, two leaves, 6 chairs,
(h igh backed), $400. Hutches, S300. and S350. , maple

or pine finish . Bassett Oak ,
$550., Basset!Cherry, $675 .
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, $175., $25() ..
$275. captain' s beds, $275 .
complete.· Baby beds, $85 .
Mattresses or box spr ings,
full or tw in, $55 ., firm , $65 .
and $l5. Queen sets, $185. 5
dr . chests, S..C9. Bed frames,
S20.and $25., Gun cabinets,

$195., dinette chairs $15.
and $20.
u 5 E 0 . Dressers. , Ranges,
refrigerators,, TV ' s, head·
boards and beds.
3 miles out Bu laville Rd.
·open 9am to 8pm , Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am to 5pm , Sat.
446 0322
SEARS

upr ight

freezer,

COMPLETE
Kroehler
bedroom set , dresser ,
m irror, chest of drawers,
book · case, head board,
mattress &amp;. frame. excellent condition, 388-9876 .
C B, TV, Radio

S2

Equipment
TV ' s, 19" portable, black 8.
white, S-49 . each, with base.
446-3384.
Antiques

53

ATTENTION :
( IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or cer tified check
for antiques and coll ectibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. A lso,
guns, pocket watches and
coi n collections. Call 614 7 6 7 3 16 7 0 5 57 3 11

ne;w~$c-200;·~:;.;:~~;r:::-:"=·===

15.9 cu446-1316,
. ft. almost
phone
after:_ 5.
R:ea·l Estate

Genera_l_

LIFETIME metal social
security cards. Any type
wanfed . Call 446-756.1. Ask
for Debbie.

HOOVER Sweeper
Upright, self-propelled.
Like new. Cal/367-7766.
ONE lad ies coat, brown,
mink collar, size 16, like
new. One ladies coat,
black, tur collar, size 16,
like new. Call446-3404.
MUST SELL Immediately!
Franklin
woodburning
stove, exc. cond. , used 2
years. Call 388-9636 or 9925911.
FRANKLIN heater, grate,
screen, $175 . Call 245-5491
or 245-9201 .

Now At :
Pomeroy
Landmark

FORCED AIR fuel oil furnace with tank. $199. Call
367-7690.

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

Misc. Merchanise
-

Firewood for sale, Mixed
types of wood. 535.00 per
pick-up load. Delivered,
will stack for Senior
Cit izens. ~43_- 4951 .
CAKES decorated for all
occasions . 992·6342 or 9922583.
UTILITY TRUCK toolboX.
$50.00. 985 - 421~ TWO C. B.'s and power box,
car mount. S80.00. 985- 42!~ .
WASHER AND DRYER ;
$100.00 for the 'palr. Call after 5 at949-2155.

2 FCILL BEDS with mattress and .springs, 1
dresser, 6 dining room
chairs, 1 gas heater, 2400
BTU, small couch, 1 con sole ra~:tio. 992·7309.
FIREWOOD for
Phone 992-7567

sale .

ANTIQUES, lamps, picture frames,
metal
shelving, oak dining table.
992-3403 .

GETAJUMPON
WINTER

Holpolnt M lcrowave Oven,
· Reg _J4lt
13'9

Homelite Super2 Chain Saw
l21·2000)
c Price lnc:ludes Free ca rrying .
Ci1511o)

Comfort

Hearers,

Glow Kerosene
Economy {21-G,.J),
Now $129.95

Reg. S139.U

I

coas Ter Wagon
02-2652) , Reg : s••.ts Now "2.U
1 Good Used Dryer
S7S
Sfa~e - BtCI

-

GARAGES ANO BUILDINGS ANY SitE - BUILT
TO YOUR SPECIF)CATIONS.
FALL SPECIAL
20'x30' 2-CAR GARAGE - S•600.00
MOOELSIN MEIGS, GALLI A
AND MASON COUNTIES . PH. 367-7560

POMEROY
L.ANDMARK

E . Main St.

S4

Misc. Merchlndlse

FRIGIOAI RE refrigerator, coppertone , electric
stove, coppertone, dresser
bureau. conlact992-2288 or
408
Spring
Avenue,
PomerOy, OhiO.
KING SIZE handmade
quilt . in Meigs Local
Schools color, marroon and
gold, Call949·2110.

REESETRENCHING

Pomeroy

•

Broker.- Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Servi119 6,000
Communities
428 Second Ave.
Caii446·0S52 Anytime

56

1&gt;-11-Tbe Swlday 'l'lrne&amp;&amp;ntb\el, SWlday, Nov. 23,1980

Pets for Sole

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·

7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY 1 - KENNEL, AKC
Chow C - dogS. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Available
now, Himalayan and while
Persian kltlens. -coming
for Christmas, Siamese -·
snow Shoes and oriental
sh&lt;irthalrs. Call 4-16-3144 of·
terJp.m .

BEAUTIFUL
la'roe
macrame table, srnall
ones, pot hangers, Wall
hangings, purses, lots of
cera mics, chenille items, HILLCRE,ST KENNEL • ,::
owls,
grapes,
flower Boarding all breeds, clean •.
arrangement'S, fish, etc. Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Stop n across from ' the · Also AKC Reg . Oobermans. Caii«&lt;-7795.
Minersville Ball Park . .

55

Building Supplle~

KACH -ALL PORTABLE
BLDG . All Sizes, 6xJO' lo
12x&lt;IO. See i11123'h Pine St.,
4-46-2783.
, ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, wlndOYIS, lin·
leis, etc. Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0. Call 2455121 after 5 p.m.
56

BRIARPATCH
KEN- '·
NELS .
Boarding and, •.
.grooming. AKC Gordon,"
Setters. English Cocker
spaniels. call 4-46-~191 .

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything
imaginable In horse equipment. Blankets, bells,
boots, etc. English and
western. Ruth Reeves
(614) 698-3290.

12 · Wontedto8uy -- ·
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
dlan1eter 10" on largest
end. Sl2 p-er !on. Bundled
slab, $10 per ton. Delivered
. to Ohio Pallet c;o.. Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

7_( :__ vanS:.&amp;~_!i-'-~ =:
1973 CHEVY VAN - custom
paint, carpeted and
panelled, 307, 3-spd. Exc .
cond ., 153 Burger Ave., or
· call446-3862. $1.000.

Kennels
Rods 8.
Just 3,
up. 446' '

~-

Bickers Addavllle
Double B
buii.
-Ben
Farm,
_.tte
SchOOl. Call367-7727.
SIXTY POUND- feeder
pigs, have had shots, tall
docked, and wormed.
S24.00 each. · Howard Caldwell at 61~-667- 3493, Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

. ..

...

~. "

71

KA::::~;
:z 65/J .
color · blue.

GO CARTS - New 1980's,
Call367-0482 after 5.

AKC Reg. Great Dane pup.
Call-«8-4922 or 698·8'169,.,

"

. 19UCHEVROLET Vega, 4
cyt., std. shift, good point,
new tires, good cond.,
reasonable. Call 388-9879.

Gulbrea organ. double ,
keyboard, Leslie speokersr
.suoo. 446-1316 after 5.

1%94-dr. THUNDERBIRD
- bad frame, SJOO. Call 3889692.

· Musical
Instruments

...... ....
..... ..
-__..........
.....
..
-. . .... . . . .......
_, ,

====== .,,

............
........., ........... ."

69 PLYMOUTH Satellite,
fair cond., like new tires s.
battery, S117S. 256-6582.

1980 OODGE Omni 024, 4spd., p.s., · am-fm radio,
rear defroster, Arrlva
tires, tow mileage, call 446·
4160 alterS p.m.

~

72
Trucks for Sale
REGiSTERED
RED- 1977 CHEVROLET 4-W-p,
BONE puppies. 843-3421.
pickup truck, •.CS,OOO. miles,
$3,000, Call&lt;l-46-1437.
SIX AK'C regisler~d poodle
puppies, three black males
1978 FORD F-100 Ranger
and three chocolate XL.
T, exc. · cond .. 30,000
females. Call992-7102.
rrilles. $4100. Caii367-775/J,

197~ MONTE CARLO · Landau. Brown with cream
top, loaded, gOOd I nterlor.
New steel radials and bat-•
!ery. $975. Call406-4741. . ,

1976 v.w. Dasher wagon,
exc. cond., $36011. Call · 4462300.

AKC Registered sitvertoy . 1974 TOYOTA truck In good
poodle for stud service. shape. See or coniact T.O.
Cal1992-7l02.
Stewart at 742-2421.

SALE OR TRADE- for I
truck In good shape.
Plymouth Fury. Call .u.s4730.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

,'

BMR 139 - Older two story home on Second Ave. 3
BR ' s, LR , FR , k itche n. Aluminum sidi ng. $29,900.
BMR 149 - 30 Ac res on Cl ark Chapel Rd . M ineral
rights are included . 2Vz miles tram Porter . $14,500.

I

NICE TO COME HOME TO... 3 BR
ranch, FA natural gas furnace, new
vinyl siding, city water. Green Twp.
Cenentary .
1510

CHARMING Is the word for -this 3 BR,
LR. ranch style home IC!Cated at Green
Acres Subd. Large well kept lot. One
,c ar garaeg.
1 st.t

76

77

Auto Repair

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAE . ·24 hr. wrecker
service. All types of repair.
Upper Rl. 7 Call 446' 244.5
days and 4-46-4792 nights.

NOT THE LAST WORD IN STYLE but
located in a warm and friendly village.
Enjoy the comforts of modern day liv~
ing in this older 3 BR home, with dining
roorri, kitchen, living room , bath, carport, plus a front porch.
II 579

Ml Nl FARM - Treen TownShip, 3 Br.,
vinyl siding, Storm door• •"ld windows,
7.41 acres. CREDUCEQcres woods,
pond, barn, hn"1 IDS. tobatco base. Less
than three miles from GallipOlis. N495

LOOK NO LONGER- Thlslsthe farm
you've been looking for. 111 acres . .&lt;IQ
acres tillable, 2 ponds, good pasture
with excellent fence, 2 barns, tobacco
base, modern house with nat. gas heat
and Woodburner. 2 car garage, Citys
chool district.
f566

RELAX In the quiet of the country. LR,
3 BR, balh1 kite- (eonent and
screned back ~REDll .,.....,,- tg. shade
trees. Many new features.
1 SS9

·-

•••

V.C. YOUNG II

1----------..,..--------....,
81

11

Home
Improvements

BMR 378 - 11h story frame home _situated on 5.3
acres m/ 1. City schools. Call for deta1ls!

Home

992-5682
10-7-tfc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

VIsit our showroom and see
the • 1981 Coachman Camper, equipment, Saturday
lhru Friday, Ph Jackson
286-5700.
2 U.SE D 22 ft. Coachmen
mini homes, like new, well
equipped, inquire at Apple
City Auto Sales, Rl. 6 bo•
42, Jackson, OH. 45640. Tel.
286-5700.
35 FT. 1978 camper - call
Porter Te)(aco, brand new
awning and lip out room,
call -388-8646.

Home
Improvements
BEST

In

FOR ALL your ex 1erminating service, call
extermltal Termite service. Your local man that
lives. In the counly, free
eS!imates.
William
Iio_m_a_s._406_·_2ao_t:-:_::-:::::-:-::-::
.T__
STUCCO PLASTERING,
plaster repair, commercial
an·d residential. Free
estimates., call256-1182.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
AA6-4208

Ph. 9\12-7583
10-24-1 mo.

~::;~4~46~-~40~6~6~o~r~44~6-~2~7~7~6§:~:

f

RemOdeling repair, new
constructl0f1, all types.
Fru estlm•tes, all work
fully .. guaranteed.
Residential, cDmmer·
ctal, Industrial &amp; minlng, electric work.
MSHACert.
446-4627

SANDERS CARPENTRY
SERVtc;E - Home Improvement, Interior and exterior. 15 yrs. experience.
Caii«&lt;-2787.

-------,----- ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~§~~~~

Need
help
with~
redecorating? Rearranging? Picking out wallpaper,
paint, furniture 8. ac'
cessories? Call Becky at
949-2534 for 'Country Style
Sublle Hints.'

C&amp;W
NTRACTORS

!976

FORb Granada,
Low mileave, excellent condition. Reason
for selling, no longer drive.
Pll0ne992·551-1.

s2,250.00.

RESIDENTIAL
BET YOU'LL LOVE IT TOO - - Your
first peek In the front door·wlll convince
you there Is nothing better on the
market. Llvtng room with fireplace,
.family room, 3 BR, 2'h baths, 2 car
garage and MORE . Priced In the m id
$50's, lflould sell on land contract. I 601
JUST LISTED ~ Along SR 7. 15 min . .
from town. 5 room house with full size
basement situated on 3 acres. Good
barn. beautiful view of the Ohio~iver.
537,500.
1597
lDEAL for the young family or an older
couple. 2 BR home In Rutland. LR, FR,
bath, basement, nat. gas heat. Storage
b)dg , Nice lot. $27,500.
M572
111')(. INTEREST, $24,900 - Owner iS
willing to sell this 2 BR homeon a lahd
contract to qualifying buyer. Natural
gaa heat. VInyl siding. Garden area.
LOc:ated nextto town.
'
• 1$91
THE RURAL TOUCH OUI of the city,
but just a short distance, 5'1• acres. LR,
4 BR, bath, kitchen, fuel oil heat. 1587

F-ARMS

-

1479

CLOSE IN - 13 level acres In an excellent location on 4 state highway.
Cloo:e to everything, 5 room house,
basement and front porch. Barn and
outblldlngs for raising your own
livestock .
1477
BI·LEVEL IC!Caled on 37 acres of Wooded land and a beautiful 2 car yard on a
quiet country road. 3 or 4 B R, LR, F R,
w. bath. Lots of extras. Coal or wood
shed, . large garden plol1 and small
creek. 2025 lb. tobacco base. • sw
·schools.
14U
IF YOU ARI LOOkiNG FOR A
BARGAIN look no further. 53 acre farm
offers everything you'll need. Remodeled 3 BR home with alum. siding. 30x~2
metal bldg. with concrete floor. Barn,
858 lb. ldbacoo base. Pond. Tractor and
other machinery can also be purchased, $42,500.
I 4M

Home

Improvements
GENE ' S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu· look back in
your carpet, highly recom mended, reasonable rates,
Scotchguard .
Free
estimates. Gene Smith, call
now992-6309or 742-2211.

"·' ACRES of land. Tobacco base,
cistern, spring, well. Electric Gralnery,
barn.- some timber. Good fences.
Mineral rights. $16,000.
1M2_
ALMOST A STIIIALI .33 acre tot, all set
up for -Your home. Cheshire Twp. Electric on log. County tap paid ancr
available. Beatthta for $2,500.
1" '
COMMIRCIAL PROPIRTY - Approx. 7 acres, tevet land located on
Route 35. Green and Springfield Twp.

ISM

.ncr

151 ACRIIIS localltd at St. Rt. 233
Bull Run Roed. $37,750.
t1t

METAL ' BUILDING J0x41. Conc.-.t.
floor. Over 1 acre of ground: Hook·up
tor mobile home. Count~ water.
1 111

1

•PRICI

IS RIGHT If you llke a modern
home clooe"' town with 5 ecres fenced
ln. Home features ~ c~Ol, FR, full
basement, ta,;O\L.~&gt;&lt;e kitchen,
1natur11 g•s ~Tnece, new drculer ,
-driveway,~ mile from city limits. 1 " '

1

•..
'I
J

'

'ONVENI&amp;NT LOCATION -

experienced carpenters,
aluiTlinum, vinyl siding, installing,
cabinets,
paneling, general car·
penter work. Phone 1-304882-2090 cir 1-304-773-5678.

BILL'S
Home t_
m provemonts
Nu·Prlmo Rept1cement
Wlndowa, Storm WIn·
dows &amp; Doors . . P1tto
covers,
Corporu.
M 'o bllt Home Accessorlea. Fru Estl·
m•t... 691
Miller DRive

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Rooting, siding, ..,ner,
bulld·up roof, home
repair.
Fru Estimates
.311-9759

STANDAR.D
Plumbing-Heating
215 Third Ave., 406-3782

~~~========~SOUTHERN
SERVICE
CO. - Heating • mobile
home furnaces, electric hot
water tank repair. Call offlee, ~46 - 3008 night,
emergency no. 367-7131.
o&amp; J Heating - and air con11!~-~~:~~ - Call 256-155/J or

home, full baMment, harcttuoou fl~

$26-dOO.

ISM

!

Do YOU NII!D a 3 bedroom home With
a carport and a nice garden lfiOI, then

thla Is lite tlome for you; Ct- "'schOol,
churchel-.rd Ill _,.,, 127,500.

'

''•

Aluminum

Sizes
" From lOx:JO"
SMALL

Shop

We offer a wide selec- ·
tion of personalized
Cttristmas gifts. And
Christmas ·stockings,
shirts.1
hats,
and
jackets.
Ph. 614-949-2358
Evenings &amp; Weekends
10-9-tfc

"Your Needs

ArePh.4•
My· ~;'.~~~~"'"

Utility Buildings
Sizes ffom 4x6 to l2x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

RI. J, BoxS4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614--843-2591
6-15-tfc

J&amp;L BlDtYN

All types of root work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, guHer
cleaning and painting ..
All 'fiOrk gua'ranteed.

It~~~~~

l~~~~~~~~~~
CLEANING SERVICE ,
--3915

Modern
Potinl and embroider roses.
dallodils. blossoll)s of all kinds
a qui~ as colorlul as sprin&amp;timt. Pattern 7383 : tissue tran~
ler cf 12-molils far 15-in. blocks.
~harts, directions.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
IT1akes1 992 -2 284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors .

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
eln,ulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. \1\12-2772
11-19-1 mo.

'

Grear jacket. slurt. ~ants!
lmo&amp;ine the total cost &gt;I rou
them. When the
this eaS}. you

87

&amp; Refrigeration

~

ELWOOD
REPAIR - , BOWERS
Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

WATER WELL Drilling
and cleaning. Pumps sold
and Installed, Call W.T.
Grant, 4-46·8508.

•

lxcaftltnv

1

Reese Tr.Rchina Seniee

HEATING
12 park St.
Middleport, Oh.

MASTERCRAFT UPHOLSTERY SHOP · Com mercial and residential. 32
years experience . Call 446 2301 or 446 - ~971 .

General Hauling

Ph. \1\12-6263
Anytime
11-16-1 mo.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;:::;:::;:::;=~-----.;_----

LIMESTONE , gravel and
sand. All sizes . At Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Call 4-46·
7785.

SOLUTION

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery. tall 2569368 anytime .
NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.

Call for estimates 367-7101
COAL hauling, 3 to 5 tons,
ca 11 388-9329 .
-

BROTHERS UPHOLSTE RY, Gallipolis, Ohio, 2561562, all work completely
guaranteed.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
1 nem of

po-_.,

6 Pour fonh
10 Ness
14 Out of dale

19S21 Haw on

22 23 24a..cc-.

26 ~"""

73Hol
75 Starin Dfa·

135-Ouowt port
137 Send forth

77Stupoly
78 land maps

140!Wiboll

80 T.-es

141 Rogions .
143 Food (ln&gt;-

canis

81 legal mai-

,_.
82 Encountw
84 Docanw
86 l11le Of

32 Enclunld

33Pit
~--

-40 Tab

41 ShOp.....,__

,...
-12 . . . , _
'" Fuss
-46 OUp;
Ic 1
47 Irishman
48Ptlon
tll)lfd

55 Oo!Jooils

DOZER - backhoe. dump
truck. c;all 446-~537 .

102 Tardy

36 Hawaiian

trees

9598 Doles!

153~

d!y

9!1tOIHob
103elf

10&lt;1 Hall!

'

105 lWIII

106

Con,._,,

rootslock

154TVsGriflln
156Suddos
157WOmls
158 Pull
159 Ptnt.il duck
1&amp;0 CUbic meter

Abbr.

107--

T-

101 Vwve
l 10 Min's nie*-

.-.ne
Ill

.,.,_
112 Oruoun;e
113 Segiadous
1!5 . _

c --l

58 Fon;e
59 fioby's bod
60( --)
112eo64 W.; ..

120- I
121 l.otllnfl go
124.....,.
126---

e1 Molol
1U c.pud'*l

33 Clue

.0 Twisted
41 Outfit .
43W....,
allowanc:e

87 Lobor

''7"**-

68fl' g ,,..

......

145~Hom

119~

p1.

wort

DOWN
1 Trwnuklus
2Grudgos

3 ~4 -.- poriod
5 .-..cl: Fr.
6 con.,...

P'-

7
BJug-

t1-

t Corupww
lO"'""'

t2F..,..o
pwt

127 . - . .
121s.rc.n
130 W•god

t3 _ , ,
,._..
t4-

132 RIIMCIIDMB

15 EIMI)'OI•

t:M • •

t7 Clll4longof
.t8CUI

-

97- qua non.
100 Pronoun

38 Diminutive

s7r_, -

. . Sun god

grom

/&lt;bbr.
93 Enthusiasm
94 Yes: Sp.

25Halt
27 Decanted
28 Slupid one
31 P.ortico

148Hamg
toothod
edgo
150 Alii IIKIWS
onllln
152 W • IW$$

92Gonnon

30DinE

plOy

18 Build
20 Choir
23 Narrate

146"'-5

-

29WWll-

52 PU
S3-

139 Gift"s Mme

89Employ

28Soy

71

i:.:·•

PLUMBING
AND

Upholslery

:~5~~-~i33Hn ..-.;........-,..-

cond., un.W.OS15.

KAUFPS

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
446-7833 or 446:J_II33.
-

RUSS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox heating and air
condition ing. Rapco Foam
insulafion . Electrical work,
call 446-8515 or 446-0445 af ·
ter 4:30.
85

Free Estimates
Reason_a ble Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1-22 -tfc

· eoozers
eBackhoes
Hourly Contract
L.arge or
small jobs.
Ph . 992-2478
11·2o-3 mo. pd.

Electrical

84·

50 llocoudu--

APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges, dishwashE)rS,
disposals, water tanks. Call
Ken Young at 985-3561
before 9 ll.m. or after 6
p.m.

, ',

PUWNS
EXCAVAnNG

INSULAnON

3511ody37 C«Ty
39 '--"'90 c:asl&lt;

197.JEEP CJ·S, Renegllde,
3CW V·l. m111 wheeta, exc.

IPd., a.100 mileS.
Call.,.121111ftwr I.

Print

~CROSS

Vlft1&amp;4W.D.

1910 Jl!ll' CH - 6

2 BR

i::tty water lnd - • · ll• heltl.

7J

FREE ESTIMATES

Farm Buildings

AGRI-LIME Spreading,
Plumbing
limestone and fill dirt
hauling . Leo Morris, 742&amp; Heating
QUALITY
MAIN · 2455.
TENANCE - Electrical,
plumbing, heating, and air ·
87
Upholstery
conditioning . Call388-9698.

Rf'SI OEru fiAL

NEW-LISTING To acres of land located
along SR 7 near the Ohio River. Some
timber and a real hunter•a parldlse.
Call for more details, before trs too
late.
IBI

ALL STEEL

Custom

82

' COUNTRY STYLE 68 acre farm, barn,
tobacco base, small pond and Other out-·
bulldi'l!ll- 3 BR home, large bath, complete! )I remodeled.
1 szt

ACREAGE

SMALL FARM with outbuildings_ 561
acres. Several acres tillable, productive farm land. Some limber. _Septic
lank. Electric available. 4;100 lbs.tobac·
co base this year . 2200 lb. normal base.

I

MARK
thiS 3 BR
Ill-· lev~!
value. Better than
equipped kitchen,
beautiful fireplace. 2
garage, central air anct
fr•. Priced In the SSO's.

81

CO
Homt Improvements,
exterlcir &amp; Interior,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
vinyl aiding &amp; soffit,
AND HEATING
roofing &amp; gutter work,
Cor. Fourth and Pine
r.. tdenttel &amp; comm•rclll.
work -fully · Phone 446-3888 or 446-4-&lt;177
guor1nteed &amp; lnau red.
Clll collect onyllme
DEWITT 'S PLUMBING
:W7-D1M or U7-GI41 or
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
;:) F'hOI,e 446-2735.

Carpel

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER 8. DOOR, INC.
Overhead Garage Doors,
E leclrlc Door Operators,
continuous no-leak
guttering
Day- 6~·8205- Nigh!

•New Homes - ex·
tensive remodeling
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
-12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush

INSULATION
Blown cetutose
Insulation
Estimates Free
GALLIA
REFRIGERATION CO .
PASQUALEELEC.

No Answer

3796. ,

ENJOY THE ABE LINCOLN LOOK In
this original log home along with' 51
ACRES: 3 BR, bath, gas furnace. Good
fences, tobaccO base, barn, lots of
virgin timber, and plenty of water. I 415

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission·
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.· Fri.
9 A.M. -5:30P.M.

PAINTING - Residentiaf
and commercial. Interior
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free estimates. 17
yrs. exp. with references
ca,ll367-77114 or 367-7160.

1976 DODGE Aspen RT, 318
V-8, power steering, power
·brakes, automatic, good
(Ondltlon. Local car. 6671972 TOYOTA Corrola
station 'wagOn. fair condition. call anytime 992-

CALIFORNIA BACK YARD with a
beautiful lnground pool, plus a stately
older home in the city . 3 BR, 2 baths,
·FR. formal dining, kitchen, 2 marble
fireplaces and so much more.
II 544

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

.I

3410.

BMR 377 - In Centenary, 3 lots, each 80)(180, in·
eludes 1970 mobile home. 2 add itional trailer pads.
Call today!

t

-

good

BMR 372 - Flor al shop incl udes build ing , eQuipment and inventory plu s renfal properfies. Call!

446-0551
446-0552
245 -9507
446'-0552

IH~THEM.

•

!979 DIESEL Rabbit,
deluxe model, A5to.5/J mpg.
Silver gray, excellent condillon. Under 10,000 miles. ,
57,000.00. Phone 614-3786226.

1978 PLYMOUTH Fury
Salon, air tondlllonlng,
eight cylinder, fourdoor. tn
A-1 condition. Phone 9853900.

EVENINGS
STEVI McGHEE, ASSOC.
DONA McGHEE, f\SSOC.
BETH NULL, ASSOC .
BUD McGHEE, Broker-Auctioneer

CAN SEE ~I&amp;HT

·

992-621S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh. . ·

EIGHT FOOT white
fiberglass topper for Ford,
~liding glass; like new.
$300.00. Phone 949-2631.

FOR

converllble

Pltone985-3823evenlngs.

BMR 313- For Lease- 4,800 sq . ft. lighl in•ustry,
warehousing with retail or wholesale possrble. Call
now.

- -

Auto Parts

1977 M.G.

BMR 371 - Large restricted buildi ng lot, 2 miles
from Gallipoli s. Call for complete details!

BMR 382- New Lis tin~ -;- Frame h~use in C~eshi.re
includes 4 bedrooms, llvmg room, krtchen w1th d1n·
ing area and full baement. Situated on large flat lo,t .

XX_ I I

1979 FORD L TO with low
mileage, air conditioning,
1111 wheel, black with
orange _ stripe, . factory
mags. excellent condition.

BMR 370 - Building site 2.33 acres 11fz mile from
Southwestern High School. $5,000.

BMR 334 - 1.3 Acres of land, owner very anxious to
sell. Call for details.

A6 AIC'STO
5ALISMAN5HIP, YOU

&amp; Siding

Installed
&amp;
Repaired
12
ye _a rs
ex·
perience

&amp; Accessories

81

1977 CHEVETTE,
cond. 985-4256.

3 BR mobi le home in Centerpoint on 2
large tots . 2 stora ge bu ldi ngs, Call today! $2 1,500.

BMR 36SF - 69 acres MI L., vacant land . Mineral
rights, and timber. Land contract.' Call tor complete
details!

[

-Addonsand
remOdeling
-R9Qflng and guher
work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimitea)

1976 CHRYSLER Cordoba,
tow mileage, all power. 74227&lt;16.

BMR 366M -

BMR 381 -- New Listing - Two story fra'!'e home in
city, includes torm"'l Pnt .. , ......... t'N
' ' ··G- room with
fireplace, diSALE PEND
. basemen!,
family room "rnr nrep1ace. I nis one won' t last lo~g.
Call for an appointment.

t

I. _SISALA
. ~_

RAFT - fold
S1500. Call

1978 · TOYOTA Corolla
auto., call245·9182.

1976 LINCOLN Mark IV .42,000 miles, Landau
(Cartier edition)
sound system. Exc.
~.ISO. Call256·6758.

Home wjth 3 BR 's, L R with fireplace,
DR, equiPPed kitchen , FR .w ith fireolr:t ce. 21J' b.::tths .
6 acres more or less in ci ty school disfri ct. Call!

BMR 380F - 100 acres MIL bare land, mostly clear,
frontage on Rodney Cora Rd. Call for details!

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
. SERVICES"

..

BMR 336 -

BMR 379 - Brick ranch Includes 3 BR's, 11h baths,
LR , DR, kitchen, 2 car garage. Situated on lg. flat
tot. City schools! Call today!

J I J

"'.:O.;..o::.:.-·-- ...

I NEECH
1978 SUZUKI RM 370 dirt .
I_- -I
1
· - 'i&lt;!
=~ gOOd condition. 7~2 --

75

Gutters,

Business Services

1---tl

THE
MEIGS . County 61
Farm Equipment
Humane Society pets _of the
week are: Russian blue INVENTORY reduction• •
cats, tabby cats, or\e black . sale - Fulton· Thompson
and white cat,one labrador Tractor Sales, Pomeroy,
puppy type, four black and OH . M.F. 65, $2,000.
!an puppies, one bLack and Gravity bed, $450. New ,
tan adult, one spepherd Idea picker-grinder. $1,000.
type, one miniature collie. New equipment at lnyolce ,
price.
, :
992-6260 .

BMR 344 - Brick ranch includes 3 BR ' s, FR with
fireplace, l'/2 baths, cerytral air . Loca ted in Rodney .

BMR 376 - 3 BR , situated on larqe lot. Located in
Ewln~ton . $27,900 . Near mines. Call for details .

[

Call9~9-2649.

Autos for Sale

1979 ODYSSEY - $!,000.
Exc. cond. Call 4-46-1262.

BMR 375 - Brick ranch, inc ludes J Bfs .. bath,
equipped kithen. New carpet . Call!

I_ GANQW

::78
motorcycle,

2096.

BMR JS1 - 3 BR horc · -L OR . D R, lg_k itchen. 2
miles from Gallipolis SO - -~~ available . S32,500.

tourordinarywordl.

.

1976 .TRANS AM- - Good
cond., call AA6-41l2.

A GREAT BEGINNING In thiS 3 BR
home slfuated on .6 of an acre. 3 BR,
LR, bath, kitchen, fuel oil heat, $31,900.
1511

"""'"""'loeoch-.lolonn

.

POLLED Hereford cotves,
one 'llo polled stmmental

t

;,-,_,_andBoi&gt;LR

e

\

Real Estate-General

IDEAL LOCATION ... only a stroll to
schools, shops and downtown. LR , FR,
3 BR , 2 baths, kitchen·dining combined,
utility room, forced air gas heat, front
porch, fireplace In living room . City
water and sewage. ·
t 589

e

Untcfamb6tlheMfour..Jun'IIMI,

1

Livestock
·
2 PUREBRED Hampshire
hogl, call 37'1-2658 or 379-

good cond., 52995. call Ron Cleanli'lg - Call Smeltz@r's
Sheets, 256-1414 after 4.
Sleamway. Call . 614·406·

BMR J39F - - 30 Acres in Rio Grande with 2 story
home in need at repair Call for complete deta ils!

~1J)}l00l!3.,r!J]TltATIICII*-EQWOIID- ·

.. . '- .. r-._, . • .. • • • • •

DRAGONWYND
has new puppies,
Slackr, Chows,
hurry . $225. ond
38« after 7 p.m.

57

Pets for Sale

2 COON DOGS. 1 black and
tan, 2 yrs.old. 1 Walker 4
years old. 742-2176.

Now 1165.95

Reg. 195 .95

CORBIN •nd _SNYDER i
· FURNITURE
. ....
955 second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
45631
PHONE 614-446·1171

-

54

3·8 Inch rebar- l7 cents per
ft. by 20 fl. section~ only-. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Noble · 12x12 BLUE CARPET, like
summitf Rd., Middleport. new for $80.00. 12x10 one- ·
half red carpet for $80.00.
Call992-5724.
Four white spoke wheels.
Ford one-half ton truck,
TEN NCR cash registers, five holes for $85.00. 1978
Apeco 100 bond copier, two F150 Ford Ranger while, VSt)aw Walker fireproof 8, 2,&lt;100 miles In excellent ·
card files, Burroughs, ·condition, $4,500.00. Cobra
NCR, calculator•, Olivetti radio 139 with side band
Dlvlsumma, 26 GT, sen- like new for $150.00. Phone
core TF151 transistor 992-5388.·
tester, C.B. base station
with antenna and coa)(, call
388-8204.
.,

FIREWO.OD
split,
stacked, delivered SJO.,
pickup
load . · Coal
delivered, $45. ton, Locust
posts, 7 ft., $1.75. Land
cleared by job. Call 2-455478.
FiREWOOD
all hardwood, split, delivered and
GAS cook stove, $50., gas slacked. Call 446-0414 after
heating stove, $75. Call-1-46- ~p . m .
1526.
LARGE selection of case
lf• HP MOTOR, 85 ,000 BTU knives. Many limited
all f ired space heater, Tyco editions! Also Carter and
tra in set, heavy duty Reagen Issue knives. 446·
upright sweeper, heavy 1615. Tawney Jewelers,
duty vinyl luggage, storage Second Ave., Gallipolis.
cover for station wagon, all
Custom
in e)(cellent condition, 245- FRIGIDAIRE
Deluxe
portable
dishwsher,
9132.
harvest gold, cherry formica top. Used very little.
'$250.00. 992-5163.

SONY T.V . recorder, 1 yr.
old . Exc. cond ., 446·4676.

TRY THE NEW
"PIL.L.OW SOFT"
. , SERTA
PERFECT
SL.EEPER
THE ULTIMATE IN
SLEEPING COMFORT

S4---Misc.
Mercha"ndis8
--------

COLOR FI LM - 126·l2or20. BURROUGHS Bookkeepin·
a,uy 1 .at regular price and o machine,. sso. Call .&amp;46get I FREE while sup pi v 2342 .
lasts. Tawriey Studios, 424
2nct Ave ., Gallipolis,
D
BUMGARDNER
SALES,
TH .E
POOL
Stoker and lump coat, call PEOPLE 31711 Noble Suxmll Rd. Middleport, Ohio
446-1408.
992-5724 Sales, service and
supplies.
In ground and
THINKING OF WOOD above ground pOOlS.
·
HEAT? I have a complete
line of stoves, furnaces,
fireplace inserts, at· good TRUCK LOAD of Wood and
prices. I also Install stoves, coal burners mfg. by the
reline chimneys, clean Unlled States Stove Co.,
fireplaces . Call the Chim- special summer price thru
Auoust.
1980 . Call
ney Sweep. Ca II 373&lt;6057.
Gallipolis BIQCk, 406-2783. ·

OLD brass kettle, copper
kettle, glass coffee grinder,
oak furniture. old kitchen
items. Simmons in Bidwell,
across from past office on
Route554 open 10-5 Monday
through Sat.

51

Misc. Mercha~~se .

sutfik

45Hideous
46 Signify

96 Algefian

105 Eat

109 Bright star
112 Partner
113 Part of shoe
114 Simpler

116 Clip
118 Existed
120 Melllcan
shawts
121 Rage

47 Profit
•9 Let it stand
51 Collter

122 Oriental

52 Hags

125 Peni1ence

530vw

126 Thooo borne

54 labor
S6 Winter won-der
59 Felons
60 Satyr
61 Clfde
63~
65W~

ptanl

67Patdnolioas
69Negapiofix
70Mixed
72 Blmlt slat
. 74 Scale note

78-

ns-

79 h. IIIIo
83 Greek Mltt8r
85 Helping
86 Simple
87 Pronoun
tl8 Ront

salutes

123 Grating
127 ChiCkens

129 Geralnt's

wile
131 Tram.gres·

sor
132 Big
133 Regrets
13-t Oart

136 Numericol
suffix

138 Cup: Fr.
140 Fruit seeds
141 DaniSh
~
142 Stalk
144 In this ny
147 Confederate

-~~
148 Sodium
chloride

~~151
WorthleaYing

89-

153Tu,.....,_

91 Wlpoout
92Sbdh-:

155 Odin's

900fotdoge

~~--=---

--·
OIS(obbr.)

�D-12-.The Sundav.~ntlnel, Sunday, Nov. 23, 1980

Several Ohioans survive Vegas fire
•••

LAS VEGAS (AP) - An Ohioan
who survived the MGM Grand hotelcasino blaze says she awoke to yells
and pleas for help - her first inkling
that the building was in flames.
"She heard people say, 'help me,
help me,"' said Mrs. Charles Greim
: of Lima1 Ohio. Her daughter, Sheryl

~allipolis

118iarp
Dr J. Samuel Peeps

1- 19?6 artist : ErMst H. Shtparct)

. 'GALLIPOLIS - . Beatrice Clark
made a report last Sund~;~y to the ·
board of directors of the Gallia
County Historical Society, meeting
in the new addition of St. Peter's
Episcopal Church. Subject of the
report? The Ewington Academy.

EWINGTON ACADEMY, as
seen by camera in spring of 1980.
Mrs. Clark, with the assistance of
some writing by Opal Callihan, Rt. 1,
Box 16, Ewington 45627, said that the
job of restoring Ewington Academy
building started July 4, 1978, the concerned citizens of Ewington doing
the work.
Here's what they did :
TREY REPLACED 22 window
panes.
They hired someone to paint the
roof.
They repaired the soffit and
siding, and replaced them where
neceSS!lry. Soffit? 01' Peeps had
never heard of a soffit before,
wouldn't have known one if he'd run
into it face to face, and tried to
visualize its size and shape! Trhonda Callihan, who is on the verge of
committing matrimony and had a
party in Ewington Academy Monday night, looked soffit up in the dictionary. It's that part of the roof
which overhangs ~ sticks out beyond the wall. That's a soffit.
The complete exterior got one coat
of-white paint, and Mrs. Clark said
that it took 36 gallons of paint at $15 a
gallon.
They replaced the large center
beam from the ground up.
They cleaned, painted, and
repaired the main front room. Clifford Callihan inspected and repaired
the heating stoves.
They mowed the lawn all summer.
THE FUTURE FOR · Ewington
Academy includes :
Repair and paint the remaining
two rooms - these ar-e all on the
ground floor; they're not doing
upstairs after

the windows, for they need a new
floor upstairs; in the old days, when
the roofleaked, the floor rotted.
. They're going to replace two
doors.
They'll construct an outside toilet,
and do some repairs on the current
outside toilet. And they'll paint the
exterior with.a second coat of white.
At present Pearl Twyman is
secretary and Opal Callihan
treasurer of the group which has
restored Ewington Academy.
Donations have totaled $965.30, but
proceeds 'above and , beyond the
dol18tions - from bake sales and
other c)vic activities- are $1,533.94.
Expenses to date have been
$2,231.22.
MARGARET BRIM made a
donation to the Gallia · County
Historical Society which evoked all
kinds of e.xclamations of pleasure at
the Nov. 16 meeting. She has already
contributed her talents as an artist
not only to this society but also to the
Gallia County Senior Citizens Center, where she is art instructor, and
the French Art Colony,
GEORGE CARROLL wore shoe
chains - or did they call 'em foot
chains? -a few years ago when ice
covered streets and walks. They
were little chains just like the tire
chains you once used on your
automobile, and they served the
same purpose - kept you from skidding.
·
MIKE REMPIDLL, tailback on
the 1980 Blue Devil gridders, rated
not only the All-Southeastern
District football choices, but also
back of the year in the AAA division.
Mike Rowan, offensive tackle and
AI Evans, linebacker, also made the
AP dream team. Bill Trent,
Gallipolis pigskin coach, yielded
coach of the year honors to Tom
Redman, Lancaster. Trent said he
made coach of the year down in Kentucky a few years ago.

IF YOU HAVE a couple of dollars
left over when you've finished your
Christmas shopping; please consider
mailing it or a little more to Parents
Volunteer Association, Gallipolis
Developmental Center, Gallipolis
45631. It'll go to purchase Yule
presents for clients at the State
Hospital - excusively for that purpose, says Jane Ann Denney, director of volunteer services. "Clients"
are residents; back when we called
it the ORE, they were " patients."
PLANS ARE in the works to honor

Albeu u ... ~oc• Sales
November 15, JMO
Total Head: It!
CATI'LE PRICES:
Feeder Steen: (Good and Choice) !00-5001bo
13-77; IOG-700lbo. ~9.50.
Feeder Heffen: (Good and Choice)~ lbo.
S3.51H!4; 100-700 lbo. - .15.
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Oloice) 300.500 lbo
• 62.75-73.50; 500-700 lbo. 56.~.50.
'
.
Sillughter Bulls: (Over I,OOOibo.) 47.75-53.50.
Slauchter Cow21: Utilitie3 41.15-47.75; Canners
and Cullers 3UH3.10.
SpMnger Cows: ~1.
Cow and C.lfpalrs : (By the Unil) 375-595.
Baby Calves: (By the Head) 2112.50.
!lOG PRICES:
Hogs: (No. I, Bam&gt;"" and Gilts)~~ lbs.
&lt;6-46.110.
Butcher SOws 34-36.
Butcher Boa., 34.5(h'l4.110,
Feeder Pig" (By the Head) 11-!1.
SHEEP PlUCES: .
Feeder Lambs 47.75-50.
0

LOW COST MEI&gt;ICATIONS
WASHINGTON (AP) - Despite
the volume of minor illness treated
with non-prescription medicine, the
cost of over-the-counter
preparations remains among the
lowest of all medical treatments.
The U.S. Conunerce Department
reports that 75 percent of all
illnesses and injuries. are initially
treated through self-care and nonprescription medicines. Yet, according to Nathan J . Stark, Undersecretary of Health and Human
Services, only three percent of the
nation's total heal~re costs goes
for over-the-counter medications.
Stark made his conunents before a
recent symposium here on selfmedication sponsored by the
Proprietary Association, which
represents the 1.1 .S. non-prescription
industry.

The hotel's manually operated fire
alann had not gone off to warn
guests of the blaze.
Smoke seeped iltto the couple's
I'OOm, and Wehner broke a window
for air after failing to open the
room's door, Mrs. Green said.
Firefighters later broke the
Wehner's door in and led the couple
down 20 flights CJf stairs to the
ground.
·
The couple and other MGM guests
rode a ~hool bus to a nearby hotel.
Cincinnati Reds pitchers Tom
Hume and Bill Bonham and their
wives escaPed the MGM Grand .
Hotel in Las ·Vegas; bY hellcopter ·
with nothing but the clothes on their
backs. ·

The Ohioans at the hotel also in-

clu~ed Vince and Mary Tumeo, Gino

Bracaloni and Juido Fontanarosa,
all of Columbus. Twneo, ·the city's
assistant city clerk, and his wife
were lifted off the roof by bellcopter.
It was not known how the two others
escaped.

rvan Mathis of Newark, Ohio, was
staying at Caesar's Palace near the
MGM Grand wben the 'blaze erupjed. Mathis, who was attending a
ml)virig company ~. said he
watched the fire and rescue efforts.
Helicopters ·were used to reacue
people .on the hotel's roof, he said.
Other guests, standing at their windows, tied bedsheets together to use
as ropes, he sal'd.

PICTURE FRAMING
The Right Background

Gerlach addresses

Makes the Difference

Rotary Club

Paintings, photographs,
precious documents ...
all can be preserved,
"enhanced with expert
custom framing. Call :

MIDDLEPORT.,:_Mike Gerlach
was '!he guest speaker at the Friday
night meeting of the MiddleportPomeroy Rotary held at the Heath
United Methodist Church.
Gerlach gave and interesting ac- .
count of his home which is listed in
the National Register of Historic
Places, and the renovation of the
honie over the past four years.
The annual christmas party for
members, wives and families was
set for Dec. 5, at the church.
Approximately 22 persons attended. Hank Cleland, president
presided ·and dinner was served by
the ladies of the church.

WHITE'S
DEAN AND BARRY'PAINT TOWN

MUSIC DEPARTMENT
ON THE 2ND FLOOR

HOLIDAY SOUNDS '80
·'

SEE OUR NEW
SELECTION
.
'
OF CHRISTMAS MUSIC
CASSETTES - ALBUMS

45's· DiiLDREN'S RECORDS..d.IIX)KS
You'll like this new selection - many of the old ,favorites plus many new
·
recordings.
Stop in - Browse around through the ,usic departm~nt. Make your selection early.

ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

. Call 675-1333

On the spur of the moment you decide to
se.e a show and have to run out to get a
paper to find out what's playing, where,
when and what time at the last minute.

~-························~

I
I

1So, before that next time fill out this
I coupon and mail today for your very own I
l .convenient home delivery. The best part
labout it is that it will cost less for the ad- I

]6,

Those three teams (two coached
by Dick Shrider) established the
Southeastern Ohio League's all-time
winning streak (49 in a row).
Waverly came close to equaling the
mark, but GAHS snapped the
Tigers' 4!&gt;-game winning streak, 6457, in 1974, at Waverly.
It is hoped Coach Shrider will
return along with players of those
three great teams of 25, 26, and 27 .
years ago.
Pete Nibert (53-M) and John
Milhoan (55-00) are among those
trying to get things set up for the occasion.

It's times like these you
wish you had home
delivery of the. • •

The Daily Sentit1el

the GAHS championship cage teams
of 1953-54,1954-55, and 1955-56.
Tentative plan·s call for a
gathering, prior to the GAllSWellston basketball game here Jan.

ELBERFELD$

8 1RD TAPES

Wehner, was among at )east 10
Ohioans trapped in the flaming hotel
Friday.
.
Mrs. Wehner spoke to her mother
by telephone following the blaze
which erup.ted at about 7:15 a.m:
PST.
At least 81 people were killed and
aoo injured in the fire, which apparently began in an exhaust fan in a
kitchen. Most of the victims died of
· smoke inhalation on the upper floors
· of the 26-story hotel, officials said.
Mrs. Wehner and her husband,.
Gene, also of'Lima, were rescued by
firefighters after being trapped inside their 20th-floor room for three ·
hours. They ch~ked into the hotel
Wednesday artd planned to stay until
Saturday.
.
Weluier's .cousin, Kevin Clay of
Lima, said he talked to the Lima
couple by telephone following the
blaze. The two were trapped in their
room by thick, black smoke before
being rescued, Clay said.

lded convenience.

I

; : :____________________________
City ________ , - - - - - - -

., s~~

ZiP--------------

1978 BUICK LESABRE ·2 ·oR.

~~~~~:i ~wcne1 r, • 5w0h1 d• nlew h.ere.' Brown metallic paint with saddle landau top and chrome wheels.
,

,

11

e , cruose. Buy quality.

•4995

!

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

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