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                  <text>12-'lbe o.ily SenUnel, Middleport-PomeroY,. 0 ., Friday, Sept. 2, 1917

Fuel economy important
to just about everybody
WASHINGTON, D.C. More than 93 percent of the
respondents in a recent
survey by the American
Autmnobile Association say
that fuel economy is important to them in purchasing
a new car according to John
P. Irwin, President of the
Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio. ·
Nearly half of the
respondents say that their
new car gas mileage results

are

close"

Hvery

or

" somewhat close" to the
government estimates appearing on new car window

MASON DRIVE IN
Wecbtesday lhru Moltday
Aug. 31· Sept. 5
ROCKY
PG

AU&lt;&gt;
" TilE MISSOURl

BREAKS"

•
stickers as required by the
Environmental
Protection
Agency (EPA ).
And nearly four-fifths of the
AAA respondents would
make no change in the threepart labeling of fuel economy
for city driving, highway
driving and a combination of
the two.
The AAA survey, states
Irwin, was undertaken at the
request of the EPA and was
conducted through the
publications · of
AAA·
affiliated auto dubs. There
were nearly 1,600 respon·
dents who chose to fill out and
return the questionnaire.
Questions and responses
(with percentages rounded
off) are as follows :
- How important Is fuel
economy in selecting a new
car? Very important, 66
percent: somewhat im·
portant, 27 percent ; not
important, 6 percent.
- How do the gas mileage
results you are getting with
your new vehicle compare
with
the
government
estimate? Very close, 14 pet.;

I.O'ITF.RY WINNERS

Tbls \H"ek's "inning Ohlu
Lutte-ry

numbets :

5.
Gold number White number - 58.
Blue number- 795.
ExtraCISh
89U78.
Lucky Buck
Three-digit number
757.
Siu-digit number
069914.

somewhat close, 33 pet.; not
at all close, 37 pet. ; do not
know, 11 pet.
- Did your new car dealer
have the 1977 gas mileage
guide available in the
showroom as reqtlired by ::::::::::;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;
law? Yes, 51 pet.; no, 79 pet.;
did not notice, 35 pet.
- How important is the
estimate of annual fuel cost to

you in selecting a new car?
Very helpful and important,
32 pet.; somewhat helpful and
·important, 34 pet.; not at aU
helpful ·or important, 31 pet.
- How important is the
classification of vehicles by
interior size? Very helpful
and important, 39 pet.;
somewhat helpful and im·
portant, 32 pet.; not at all
helpful or important, 26 pet.
- Are the fuel economy
labels, required to be affixed
at the factory to aU new cars,
helpful or confusing' Helpful,
58 pet. ; confusing, 19 pet.; no
opinion, 17 pet.
-The current labels list
MPG estimates for city
driving, highway driving and
a combination of both. What
changes would you like to
see? List city only, 3 pet .; list
highway only, 2 pet.; list
combination only, 7 pet. ;
retail aU three, 80 pet.
In addition, respondents
were asked to write in
suggestions for other fuel
economy related information
that the government might
provide. More than 44 percent
of the respondents took the
time to offer suggestions. The
suggestions were then
grouped
according
to
similarity. Although there
were nearly 20 different
suggestions in all, only four
were mentioned by at least
three percent of the
respondents. · These are as
follows:
-Tests should be more
realistic, with actual and
testing (17 pet .).
-List fuel economy gain or
loss by optional equipment (7

.....,. of the rtghU of 1111kln
organizers.''
Stevens' battle with the
Textile W&lt;rkers Union and II!
court fights dating baclt 10

Stevens &amp; Co •.rapped
with contempt charge

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

Carpenter
Personals

employes seeking union representation .
Noting that Stevens had
been cited for contempt in
1972 on similar grounds, the
court said : "The company
has flaunted its disobedience
of. our orders, undermining
respect for this court and for
the rights of employes
recognized in the National
l.abor Relations Law.
· The court said it was
considering a proposal In
the company $120,000 for each
future violation plus.a fine of

!me .

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
and granddaughter, Anna
Stanley visited Mr . and Mr$.
Reece Prather, Wester::-ville,
and Mrs. Manford Smith,
Carroll, and called to see
Manford Smith at Crites
Nur$ing Home in Lancaster.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Bragg
and daughter, Charleston, W.
Va., visited with the Dana
Bailey family and their
guests, the Richard Jeffers ·
from Illinois.
Edith Talbert, who lives in
Arizona but has been here
with relatives for several
weeks, called on Ida Denison I. The winner of the 1904
on Sunday afternoon . Mrs. World Series in baseball was
Denison accompanied her to (a) American League Boston
Salem Center to visit Mrs. (b) National League New
York (c) no team; there was
Talbert's sister, Alma Smith, no series in 1904 .
thentothehomeofMrs. Anna 2. The 1914 World Series in
Halliday and sons where she ~aseball was won by National
stayed until Wednesday.
League Boston over American
Columbia Grange No. 2435 League Philadelphia . What
held a joint meeting .with was the outcome of the 191S
Harrisonville Grange No. World Series?
1734. Plans were made to . 3. Han1t Aaron and Babe Ruth
exemplify ·the third degree bold the record for all-time
for Degree Day which will be home run leaders (755 and 714
held in September.
respectively) . What two
Mr. and Mrs. Murrell Bai- players rank third and fourth
ley announce _the birth of a . tn home runs?
daughter, Tonya Melissa,
ANSWERS:
born at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital in Athens. Area
grandparents include Mr. 98'J 'U"'UJqOlfl(UB,Y pu1l 099
and Mrs. Dana . Bailey and ·s.&lt;ew amlNa ·t ·eJ11dlaP•Il'ld
Mary Erickson ..Helen Queen anJII!a&lt;J {euO!lt!N JOAO S3!JBS
p(JO,Y, ~I61 31f1 UO... U011108
is a great-grandmother.
anJIBO'( tn!OJ.I&lt;&gt;WV 'Z ( ::1) 'I

THE

WORLD
ALMANAC'S

$:&gt;,000 a day for each day the
violation continues.
"We are determined," the
coorl said, "that Stevens~
its supervisors shall comply
with the provisions of the
National Labor Relations Act
and that the decrees ol this
court ordering them to do so
shall be obeyed."
As one means of achieving
this goal, the court .directed
that the company develop a
program Hfor · the proper
education of J.P. Stevens
management personnel in the

School board
asks rn~eting

years, the court said, have
earned the CQmpany Its
reputation as the "most
oolllrious recidivist in the
field &lt;X labor law."
'"!'he evidence or anti-union
action is overwhelming in
some instances and nearer
the borderline in others," tbe
court said. ''There is the
~trong
possibility that
Stevens deliberately took
their chances in ignoring our
decrees because they thought
it profitable for them to do

GALLIPOLIS - Tom Hairston,
auperintendent of Gallla County Schools,
Saturday told the president of the Gallia
Local Teachers Assn. the district board's
negotlaling team "will be pleased to
meet" with the association's committee
early nexfweek, hoperuUy to "resolve 811Y
mhmnderst,ndings 11 concerning the:
board's final offer.
The letter was directed to Howard
Neekamp, president.
Earlier, th.e teachers' group -had announced it would meet the evenli.g of
Labor Day to decide · whether or not it
would strike.
The letter in full:
September 3, 1977
" The Board's negotlaling team will be
pleased to meet with you and the
Association's committee for further

so."
The contempt order spplied
to the company and 23 of II!
supervisors -at the s.ix
company planl! in Walla C.,
S.C., and at Roanoke Rapids
and Turnersburg, N.c.

-

VO. 12 NO. 31

CLOSED MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 - LABOR DAY

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

OPEN HOUSE -Lafayette Post 27, American Legion,
· Will obServe open house today ft:om lin 5 p.m. at its. new hall
on Bob McCormick Rd. off SR S81!.
Members of the post have been active since the organization
was chartered in 1920. Veterans of World War I, World War

'

.

6TH
BIG
WEEK

CARIA•E

•

MIDDLEPORT - The threat of a
strike by appro•imatel)' 100 non-&lt;!ertified
employes of the Meigs Local School
District has been averted.
Friday night the district 's board of
·education, meeting In special session,
approved a new two-year contract with the
employes. Earlier, members of Meigs
Local Chajller 17 of the Ohio Association of
Public Scbool Employes had approved the
agreement. The board had been at impasse with the non-&lt;!ertified employes
since May.
The new agreement gives all of the
employes a pay Increase of 29 cents an
hour effective Sept. I, 1977 WJth an additional 10 cent an hour adjustment for

LAFF - A - DAY

~$2J,

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

.

STILL HAS TOO MANY USED CARS ON --THEIR
LOTSO WE ARE CONTINUING
GREAT
USED CAR
--- OUR
---..
SALE FOR THE 6TH BIG WEEK TO BRING YOU

~ -" ·:·

76 CADIUAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

·~- · ·

!t•J. · - - - --- - - -

"So much for the area code."

Q make the clfference·

.· 75
COUPE DEVILLE
Full powe-" &amp; air.
Was ~800

Fullpower&amp;air.
WasS8900

. 75 PINTO

74 CADIUAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

SOLD

Full power &amp; alr.
Was 5550Q

WAGON

•

"INN PLACE''

SOLD

NOW 12995.

'1395

72 DELTA 88
CPE.

72 FORD

COUNTRY SQUIRE

Alr, automat ic.
Was $1695

Was S1095

NOW 1495

NOW '795

•1695

73 PONTIAC CATALINA
2 DR.

72 CHEVY IMPAlA
HT CPE.

. 70 CUTLASS CPE.

1

71 PONTIAC

'CHALET

CATALINA
4 dr .. .alr, vinyl root .
WasS895

5 PIECE GROUP
.FROM BELPRE, OHIO
.

•

Air.

.-

NOW 13400

75 CHEV.Y
MONTE CARLO
Power &amp; air.
Was $4695

. 74 P.IJ)S_88
ROYAL CPE.
Power &amp;air.
Wa&gt;$3595

74 CHEVY VEGA
GT CPE.
4speed
WaU199S

'

.NOW *3995

NOW '2995

NOW '1695

72 BUICK ELEC.
HT CPE.

73 CUTLASS
4 DR.

72 OLDS

WaU2295

Air .

SOLD

2 DR.

•

•'

•
•
•

'495

'1995

••
•

•

VISTA CRUISER

74 QtEVY
NOVA
4

dr ., V-8, auto., vlnyi roof.
Wal$2795

NOW '2495

73 OODGE

CHARGER

NOW '1995

THE MEIGS INJ\r
POMEROY
•

•

. 2 OR.

SOLD

membership by a three to one majority.

Dowler 'thanked the non-teaching
representatives for helping arrive at the
settlement.
Meantime, teachers of the district
remained on strike.
However, representatives of the Meigs
Local Teachers Association and the board
met Saturday evening to rurther discuss
the problems in an attempt to come up
with a solution to the strike which got
underway Tuesday When schqols were to
have opened for the new year. Schools
were "officially open" the first two days of
the strike, but few students and teachers
were on hand. The last ·two days of the
week schools. were officially closed.

Pomeroy

1

Labor unions · under new, heavy attacks

•

• SATELLITE

Was $2495

NOW •1995

•

NOW '2595

EXTRA SPECIAL SPECIALS AT I&lt;ARR &amp; VAN ZANDT'S

.

10 TIL 2

.72

1895

'

Was S1495

'4395

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY

1

maintfmance employes. The agreement
gives the empl_oyes an additional23 cents
an bour on Sept. 1, 1978. The board
unanimously approved the package,
According to the terms the board also
agrees to pay 100" percent of the Blue Cross
and Blue Shield insurance or employes.
Previously, employes had been paying a
part of the cost. There are also provisions
(or adjustment for extra bus trips, duties
and assignments.
Charles Dowler, superintendent, said
the agreement in a major breakthrough in .
collective bargaining between the board
and the employes. Dennis Whalen and
Dowler negotiated. the agreement ~h~ch
was ratified by the local assoctalton

6cy.
Was$2995

NOW 12795
):{~:~~~~:~)//)//i~~:n~:~:~:))J~~:~:~~~ I-.:;:N:;:O:;,:W~·:;8::,500:.::,._+-~N;,;:O~W~·~64~0~0~+-,.;,N;.,:O;_W;,;_'.;:,5.::2.::00.:;__+---------t--~~=-=~--t
72 CHEVY
73 BUICK REGAL
72 CHEVROLET
72 PONTIAC
73 CUTlASS
1
· HT CPE.
LeMANS
4 DR.
IMPAlA
IMPAlA 4 DR • H•T.
Vinyl roof.
Was $3495
Air.
Air .
APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
w.. s279S
'1395

II the Korean Conflict arid Vietnam, all have an active role
in' the Legion today. Commander_ Glenn Baird was
instnunental in erecting the new building altls present Site.
The Legion had been meeting on the second floor of the city
building. The American Legion Auxiliary will serve
refreshments. The public is welcome.

Contract reached in• Meigs
·with -non-certified workers

OUR

DEMANI))

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Bridge will be closed
additional 2-3 weeks

'

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

OUR GREAT

---..

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1977

Take time to look around all over the store for new
merchandise arriving in every department - You'll
enjoy it.

(BY

~

GALLIPOLIS POINT PLEASANT

Our Two Day September Sale brings you big savings
on new Fall and Winter Merchandise.
.

Johnson, Charles Roberts, Glen Rizer, Bill Bird, Jack Lyons and Ken Hoffman
from the Middleport department. Others not present were Roy Dowell, Doug
Johnson, Sr., Robert Johnson, Jr., Mitch Nease, Randy Pyles, Chester Rose,
Charles Shain, Ralph Shain, RobertS. Shain, Gary Wolfe, and Danny Fink, from
Middleport.

tntint

tmts

'

- List octane and fuel
grade requirements (4 pet.).
-And,
inevitably,
Government shoUld get out of
Uti$ business (S pet.).

~GO

..-::r. • • .

+

OPEN
FRIDAY
NIGHT
TIL
8
Q&amp;A·

~~ ·

a ' a a•

INSTRUCTION TAKEN - Nineteen Racine firemen received certificates for
completing 36 hours of instrtJCtion in fire fighting and techniques at the close of the
last class period on June 23. Individual cards were presented to each m3l\
completing the training. A department certificate was presented to Chief Robert
Johnson by Pom•roy Chief Charles W. Legar, instructor. Shown are, 1-r, Gary

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

pet.).

Need money'&gt;
That's what we have it for!
If you didn 't make the difference;
do you think you'd be our boss 7

discussions concerning the teachers ·
contract on Tuesday, September 6, 1977 in
the Administration Building beginning at
7:00p.m.
" It Is our hope at .that time to resolve
any misunderstanding concerning our
final written offer to the teachers which
has been outstanding since Thursday
August 25, and to agree In full on a contract
during the evening of September 6:
Naturally, we will also be willing to listen
to anything else the Association wishes to
say at that lime.
"Until then, we strongly urge you and
the teachers to extend any deadlines the
Association may have set for itself for the
resolution of this contract.
"We have been most pleased with your
cooperatoin during the busy past week
Continued on Page 'A·2

t:4•..::o... - 11

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Labor
Day 1977 finds the American b'ade
union movement battling a
resurgence of wtti-uniOh sentiment,
both in lhe workplace and on Capitol
Hill.
Evidence of this exists in the high
number of labor law charges now
filed against employers, and the
recent focmation of a big new
coalition of business leaders to lobby
against lab..- bills.
"Anti-union feeling certainly is
stronger," an AFL-CIO official
remarked.
The backlash has developed at a
tlnle when ocganized labor has been
weakened by unemployment.
Economic pressures have caused a
drop in union membership In 19.4
mlllioq, only 20 per cent of the labor
force.
But labor has responded by
pressing harder for changes that
would gi_ve· unions a stronge~
position In the workplace including a revision of federal labor
law designed to get tnugh on
IIIISCI'1IJllllous employer~.
The· AF'IA:IO ' also has tried to
make an oblei:t lesSOn of one anti-

union employer, J.P. Stevens and
Co., which has resisted a union
organizing for IS years. Stevens now
is the target of an international
consumer boycott.
AFL-CIO President George
. Meany believes the nation's h1iqt
unemployment rate has fueled antiunion sentiment. "Union busting and
high unemployment have alw~ys
gone hand in hand," he said in a
Labor Day statement.
He claims employers can
intintldate workers with impunity
when jobs are scarce.
But UnitedAutoworkers President
Doug Fraser sees this as a result of
labor's image as a violent, corrupt
movement. The Labur Department
currently Is .investlgaling two union
elections and numerous other union
pension funds.
,
.
Fraser has called labor to 4Dprove
. its image by repudiating corruption
· within
its
ranks.
Unions
traditionally have been reluctant to
mention such things.
The extent of 81111-union sentiment
on Capitol Hill surprised labor
leaders earlier this year when
Congress defeated a cmttoveroiai

-. Unusual exhibit coming
POMEROY - The .Meigs County Since 1953 she has been living in Athens
Museum will be the scene of an unusual where she received a B.F.A. degree,
dlaplay from lin 5·p.m. on Sunday, Sept.
Mrs. Roberts aworda include the John
11. .
Marin Award for some of her drawings
The display will be a striking collec- and watercolors. The works to be shown
tion of aprlng wildflowers done in locally have been exhibited In several
watenotors. '"'- paintings were done states and some of her paintings are in the
from llvinl plantlin minute detail by June permanent collections of the Butler Art
C. Roberta. Some of the flowers deplete&lt;) Institute and the Huntington Galleries.
"" native North American wltlle others
All vialtnrs are welcome to attend the
have been imported into the country over lltowing and refreshments will be served.
the years.
. The paintings may also be seen d~ring
1be utili, reared in New England, regular museum hours throughout Sophal had an lntenH inlerelt in drawing and tember.
PII!Dtlnc outdoor nb)ectl lor many years.

The Silver Memorial Bridge will remain closed indefinitely
as a result of discovering additional defects on It, West
Virginia Department of Highways Conimissloner Joseph
"Speed11 Jones said this morning .
Besides keeping ll)e bridge closed indefinitely, the commissioner also said there is a strong possibility that a toll will
be charged on the n~w free ferry crossing lbe Ohio River here.
additional seven defectS
were discovered on the bridge,
Meanwhile, the comwhich now brings the total to
missioner
indicated that
IS. Conunissioner Jones said
providing
free
ferry service
that repair crews from the
here
may
have
been a
American Bridge Co. were
mistake.
working on the fifth and sixth
The ferry landings have
defected areas this week.
been
the scene of long lines of
''They are moving as fast ~s
can be expected," stated traffic ever since the service
Jones in reference to the started a couple of weeks ego.
Jones said he has rect!jved
progress being made to
several
complaints on the long
cOrrect the·span.
delays
in
molnrists being able
The comissioner did in·
get
across
the river and said
to
dicate It would he at least a
that
he
is
studying the
few more weeks and said it
poSsibility
of
charging
for the
will extend past the original
deadline of September 15 by at service in order to eliminate
vehicles that do not actually
least two to three weeks.
Fifteen may not even be the need to take the ferry.
The bridge has now been
total number of defects as the
closed
nine weeks due to these
bridge inspection Is still
cracks
and as of the present
continuing. However, Jones
time,
It
still has not been
said the inspecUon has moved
detennined
what cause the
from the upper pOrtions of the
cracks.
bridge to its underside.

An

Abuse program
gains funding
GALLIPOLIS The
Alternatives Program of the
Gailla-Jackson • Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center has been awarded two
grants (4119 and '410) through
the National Institute of Drug
Aboae and the Ohio Bureau of
Drug Abuse.
The lirst grant, 4119, was
granted In fund the Alternative's prevention senices
to hire a prevention-&lt;!ducatnr,
an
alternatives-recreation
services provider and an.
outreach worker.
The prevention educator is
responsible to provide
education, workshops and
training to all Interested
parties. 1'llio worker is also
responsible to go out in the
community and work with
various agencies In providing

preventative treatment to
developing substance aboae ·
problems.
·
An altematlveo-recreatlon
services provider is a novel
position in the prevention
field.
This worker Is responsible
for coordinating the com·
munity to try to open closed
recreational facilities as well
as &lt;.Teate new recreatiOnal
programs throughout the
Gallia'Jackson-Meigs . catchment area. 1'llio worker
will also provide coordination
and program development
for outings, over:Oight
camping trips, developing
workshops and continuing the
Alternatives Camp on a
yearly basis.
·
The first such camp was
· Continued on Page A·2

'

No winking Racine man facing
anymore
8 court charges
at violence

and Young were arrested ·following ~
scuffle
near the Greenwood Cemetery at
cortstruction industr)' pickeling bill
Racine.
Ciark was arrested on two counta
that was expected In pass.
of
resisting
arrest, one charge of in-.
Employers fought the bill with
terfering
with
the arrest of another, two
tons of anti-union material,
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UP!) cuunts
of
assault
on officers, and one
including slick pamphlets with
Labor Day weekend finds West Virginia's
Charge
of
disorderly
conduct. Both subgruesome pictures of union violence.
strife-tom coalfields slowly coming to life
jects are confined to the Meigs County
That campaign was so successful it
after a!O-week wildcat strike amid • stern
Jail.
·
is being revived to battle the labor
warning that Gov. Jay Rockefeller won't
Clark
will
also
be
held for the Adult
law bill.
be winking at any labor violence.
Parole
Authority
as
he
is on probation out
Business groups including the U.S.
Only 8,400 miners cuntinued to boycott
of Meigs County Common Pleas Court on a
Chamber of Commerce, the
the pits Friday in a walkout that flared :::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::;;:::~:::::;:::::::::::~;::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::: prior forgery charge.
National
Association
of
after the United Mine Workers union made
The Sheriff Department also inManufacturers and. the Business
HOLIDAY MONDAY
cuts In health care benefits.
vestigated two traffic accidents. The finlt
Roundtable also have formalized the
Employes of the Ohio Valley occurred Fridsy at 9:30p.m. on Royal Dak
From the Greenbrier in White Sulphur
lobbying coalition they put tngether
Springs Friday night came word that the Pllbliahlllg Co. wW be OD holiday
Park property. James Nixenbaugh, 4i, of
for the earlier fight.
Rockefeller administration wouldn't Monday, Sept. 5, Labor Day. There will New Plymouth, in parking, bicked his
In the workplace; one of the
hesitate to use state pollee to maintain be no publlcoUou thai day of The
auto into a utilitY pole. Then Loda F.
biggest anti-labor campaigns has
Galllpoll• Dally Tribune or the
"the common peace."
Turner, 33, of Point Pleasant, backed her
been waged by small businessmen
Meeting with the state Chamber of Pomeroy-Middleport Dolly Seutluel.
autn
into the front of Hixenbaugh's car.
against the health and safety
Commerce, the governor emphasized he Regulllr publlcotloa of bolh aeWllpapers
There
were no injuries and no citations.
standards. The National Labor
wasn't about to step into any labor- wm reiume Tlleoday.
The second accident occurred at 3:41
Relations Board's case load also has
oriented quartets.
· .
'•
' :::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;;:::::;::::::::::::::: a.m. Saturday on ' S. R. 124 west of
11
increased with worker complaints.
The law is very clear on the point/'
Syraewte.
Despite this b'end, labor still
he noted: "No officers of the state police
John West ol Racine told deputleo he
.enjoys a good relationship with
may aid or aSsist either party in labor
was
traveling east on 124 and fell asleep,
employers in heavily unionized
disputes.
causing
his truck to go off the ·highway.
lndusb'ies like steel and aulns. Wage
"Having said that, let me make this as
There
WI!$
slight damage to the truck, but
settlements in these leading
clear as I can.! will not tolerate violence in
~eavy damage to the topper whleh was on
industries have been averaging
the name of any cause. If it should become
his truck. The truck was owned by .Jack
increases of 10 per cent a year. with
necessary for the state to intervene in
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County CUmmins of Route 2 Racine. The driver
better job security guarantees.
order to protect lives, we will.
sheriff's deputies arrested three people was not injured and no citation was Issued.
." The law will be enforced - not as Saturday and charged them with aasault
· partofalabordlspute, whicbwe carlnotdo and battery and destruction of property.
- but as our responsibility to keep the
A man and his mother were beaten,
CHEAP DRINKING
common peace."
taken to Holter Medical Center, and
SACRAMENTO, Call!. (UP!) Rockefeller said 95 percent of the released. A house on SR 325 near Rio Members qf the Depar:tment of Alcoholic
miners preferred to work and that a few Grande was "tom up", Slteriff James Beverages Control reportedly have been
malcontents were trying to fan the flames Montgomery sald.
getting drunk in hotel bars -and the state
of dissent throughout the coalfields.
The injured man Is James Koontz, Rt. of California is picking up t1ie tab when
"Those who stand to gain the most 2, Bidwell, and his mother is Elsie Roush,
GA-LLIPOLIS - Game Protector from the nation's increased emphasis on sameaddress.JailedwereRoberUi Beach, they sleep it off. It was reported Friday
Kenneth Tomlinson Saturday morning coalarethosewhoarebelnghurtthemost 29, Coalton; Melvin E. Riffle, 30, Rt. 3, that the department Is aportOOring controlled drinking sessions for Its top omcen
arrested two Oak Hill men In Greenfield by a handful of dissidents," he said.
Wellston; and Harold W. Mattox, 40, ao that they can learn "to aenae for
Township on charges of hunting squirrel
U. S. Attorney General Griffin Bell Coalton.
,
themselves" the effecta of consuming too
out of season. Another Wildlife officer · who met with the Chamber and West1
An Instance of beer boWe vandaliam much alcohol.
orrested another member of the party on Virginia Bar Association atlheresort, said was reported Friday to tbe lheriff. John
the same charge, and neither officer nor the Justice Department could do little to Carroll, Jr., complained ·,that someone
alleged hunter was identified.
COFCTOMEET
end the strike.
threw a boer bottle throll8h biB two-ton
'lbe men Tomlinson arrested are
POMEROY -1be Pomeroy Qlambor
"Our sole coqtsct at the Justice pickup truck parked at home on SJt 518.
Donald Vititoe, 21, and Lonnie E. Simpson, Department has l&gt;een to send the FBI as The beer bottle btvke a window. Scene of 'of Conunerce will meet Tueoday It noon at
23. Hearing for the trtci Is docketed ' for observers," ilel~sald. "They're not taking the. incident was 210 mllea from the the Meip Inn. Goeot speaker will be AJ1c17
Sept. 12 in Gallipolis mun!clpal court.
Lyl~ who will apeak on.llluo n, trlpplna.
over the cases but they are obServers." . GaUipolls Public Square.
POMEROY - Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt said Saturday J. F.
Young, 18, of Gallipolis, was arrested
Fridsy night on a warrant ehargiJ!g
criminal trespass resulting from his
driving an automobile across the front
lawn at Southern High School on July 25.
Young was also eharged 'with reolsting
arrest.
Charged with Young was David
Wesley Clark, 22, of Route 3, Racine. Clark

Three jtd}ed
after beating

Two arrested for
hm1ting squirrel

.,

•

�·,

•

A·Z-The Swlday 'l'irnes-&amp;ntinel, Swlday, SepU, 1!1'17

GOP leaves judge
without support

Paper war may be slowed down
B)'

WESLEY G. PIPPERT

WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Carter is expected
tD announce major reforms
on paperwork that will ease
the exasperation or state and

local a pplicants a nd save admimstration during the
hundred s of millions of comin ~ week, the source
dollars, an ad mi nistration said.
source said Saturday.
The reforms will :
Carter may announce the . - Allow fed eral funds desmajor reforms on federal aid tined for state a nd local

•
•

FOOD IITOAii
•

(Formerly Big Jim's)
407 PEARL STREET-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

WILL BE OPEN lliEIR REGULAR
HOURS MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 5th

•

•

.

.
•

'

9:00 AM to 9:00 PM
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

governments tn t.:- kept in the
U.S. Treasury dra wing
intere,1 fur lon ~er periods of
time. This will save up to $400
millic'lfl .
- Reduce the number ol
federa l a udits l&lt;• whi ch sta te
and local programs a re
sub jected. ''The savings here
are primarily in a hwna n
' hours and in exasperation,"
the source said .
- Consolidate the number
of a pplications state and local
governments must fill out for
federal funds.
· The source said about $72
bill jon is transferred from the
federal government to state
and local governments each
year . The reforms seek to
refine the regulations ,
guidelines · a nd
rules
governing the use of these
funds .
There are at lea st 80
separate plans for the state
and local governments to
qualify for federal funds. In
its study, the White House
asked executive departments
and agencies to conduct a
"zero base review" to' see
whi ch plans c ould be
eliminated .
F or state and local
programs funded by federal
government ,
the
U.S.
Treasury now issues checks
to
state
and
local
governments.
" Delays in receipt of
federal grant payments have
led many state and local
officials to recommend that
letters of credits be used
instead of checks," a draft of

th ~

reforms said.
" Le tters ••f c redit alluw
g r un t rel'i pi ents to draw
funds from the Treasury for
a ppr..ved grants at the time
the money is actually needed
... The Treasury Department
is expanding t he use of letters
of credi t throughout the
Execut ive Branch. This
actio n
will
impr ove
monitoring of federal aid
fund s a nd keep mooey in the
fede ra l Tr easury longer ,
earning interest. ''
At present, the source said,
a state .or local government
wanting to set up a program
in juvenile deliquency, for
instance , might have tD file
separate applications with
HEW, the Labor Department,
the Justi ce Department 's
·t.aw Enforcement Assistance
Administration " and maybe
llie Commerce Department."
The reforms will seek to
implement a law passed in
the Nixon administration to
permits
the
various
applications to be combined
into a single form .

GOLFER KIU.ED
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) Columbus businessman
Thomas R. Benua, 55, was
killed while golfing Friday
when a large tree fell on him .
A strong wind gust snapped
off the trunk, about teh size of
a telephone pole, as Benua
was retrieving a ball from the
17th fairway of the Little
Turtle Golf Course.

I

SALE ENDS SAT. SEPT. lOth
OPEN SUNDAY 1 to 6 UPEN MONDAY 11 to 4
'

MOSSBERG MODEL 600 AKT
SLIDE ACTION• SHOT GUN WITH
26" C-LECT COKE BARREL 12 AND 20 GAUGES
•

•

A

. --REGULAR 1109.96

•

WINCHESTER SUPER X SHELLS

12 GAUGE •••••••••••~~~~~~~~~~~.~!.~~!~~. $4.44

BOX

2

GAUGE •••••••••••~~:~~~:~~ ~.~~~~.~~~~~. $3.99 BOX
1
20 GAUGE ••••••••••• ~~?~.~~.:~~~.~~~!.~ .c.E.,$3.99 BOX
410 GAUGE .••••••••• ~~?~.~~.:~·~~.~~;.~~~~. $3.99 BOX
16

LIMIT 2 BOXES PER CUSlUMER - NO RAIN CHECKS

Ohio Squirrel Season Opens Fri., Sept. 9th
MODEL 190
WINCHESTER
22 CALIBER SEMI-AUTOMATIC
RIFLE WITH 4 POWER WEAVER SCOPE

$59 QQ
. REG.

KE'ITERING, Ohio (UPI) - Municipal
Court Judge Jack Berger, areused of
keeping for himself thousands of dollars In
fees collected for marriage performances,
has lost the support of the MootgM'lery
County RepubHcan Party.
The judge, up for rHiectioo in
November, is required by law to tum over
marriage fees to the clerk or courts, but it
was reported this week he had failed to do
so. Berger was criticized earlier this year
for being unusually lenient with a traffic
offender who appeared before him. The
offender turned out to be the judge's
daughter-in-law.
.
Berger's campaign manager, Dwight
Brannon, quit this week, and said he has
urged the judge to resign as well .
·

Poet in residence
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Robert Fox has
been appointed poet-in-residence of the
Ohoi Arts Council.
In the post he will coordinate the state's
Poet-in-the-Schools Program and act as a
liaison to other literary programs spun·
sored by the OAC.

(Continued from page A·l)
while schools were being O!M:fied for the
1977-78 session, and we 'hope this
responsible and professional attit11de lrill
continue !iO that we may finali2e our
contract with you as school continues in
session. - Very truly yours, Tom Hair·
ston, Superintendent; William E. iBilll
Carter , board member, and James V.
Blevins, board member.

G A 1.1. 1 PO l. I S- D oris

~ .. ;

· OFFICERS ELECTED a t the seventh annual meeting of COAD , at the Holiday Inn ,
Mart~ Ita , August 25-26,1eft tD right , are Anthony Mele, treasurer ; June Vernon, secr etary;
MarVIIl J . Hustoo , resource consultant ; Keith Molihan, chairman, aud J oseph Barsotti,
vice-chairman.

Molihan of Radcliff named ·

services.
The 410 grant, known as the
Statewide Services Grant ,
will fund two counseling·
therapy positions. These
people wiU be responsible to
provide counseling-therapy
services to individuals,

families, and couples who ·
have developed problems in
conjunction with or as a
direct result of substance
abuse . All modalities oC
therapy are avallable to
provide clients with the best
services possible.
The Alternatives Program
is working quickly to fill all
the positions and it. is ex·
peeled that the program will
be in full operation by the end
of September.

regional COAD chairman

By JOAN MOWER
United Press Iuteruatlonal
The health debate swirling
around cigarette smoking for
the last decade has inspired
more than 30 million,
Americans to quit and
prompted millions or diehards to switch to lowiar,
low-nicotine cigarettes,
statistics show . .
And, in the 13 years since
the U.s. Surgeoo General
warned .or the health hazard
in smoking cigarettes, a
vocal anti-&amp;noklng lobby has
evolved, pitting Itself against
powerful tobacco supporters
in Congress and the multibillion dollar cigarette
industry.
.
Health experts continue to
predict the number of
smokers will drop off
dramatically in the next 10
years - despite only a small
decrease in the smoking
public over the last decade and hold little hope that
technology willi!Ome up with
a "safe" cigarette in tbe
future.
. "! doubt very much if you
can burn anything and take it
deep into your lWlgs witbout
it hurting you," said Dr.
Daniel Horn, director of the
. National Clearinghouse for
Smoking and Health in
Atlanta . .
Lastest statistics indicate

that smoking is still · "At this point we see
pervasive, with about 47 continued growth for the
million Americans over 20 company, and that's the
years old, 34 per cent of the bottom line at Reynolds," •
population, lighting up said David Fishel, a
spokesman for R.J. Reynolds
cigarettes regularly.
In 1965 there were 49.7 Tobacco Co. in Winston- .:
million
smokers, Salem, N.C., the largest
representing 42 per cent of manufacturer in America. •
the population which has The company has about one· ,
!bird of the ind~ry's annual ,;
grown by 20 million.
_
Federal doctors, however, $600 billion sales.
Warning labels on cigar~.tte ·•
believe several trends
indicate smoking will decline packages and a partial
even more in the future. They .advertising ban have made ;,
point to a recent study only a slight dent in the •
showing a dramatic nine per number of cigarettes smoked cent drop in smoking among per capita - from 4,195 In ·
bealth professionals between 1964 to 4,110 in 1976. The 121967 and 1975, about one-half year low was 3,895 per capita
of the doctors to one-quarter. in 1970.
As
far
ils
the
"What has happened to
them (health professionals) manufacturers are
has been a pretty good concerned, low-tar and low·
indication of what will nicotine cigarettes are tbe
happen in the general wave of the future.
population 10 to 12 years from
"Low tars have been
nowl" Horn said.
coming on in the . past six .
If the general population years. We're concentrating
follows tbe example of health our efforts in this area," said
professionals, smoking Fishel. Reynolds, which .
specialists predict only 25 per markets several "low"
cent of the population will be brands, including Vantage, smoking by 1985, acording to the ninth biggest selling .'
Dr. John Witte, another cigarette, believ~s such ~
clearinghouse official.
cigarettes will mak~ up 25 per Cigarette companies, while cent of total sales by 1985. :::
scurrying Ill come up with
William Hobbs, Reynoldsi.:
newer and better low-tar and board
chairman,
told:,
low-nicotine cigarettes, stockholders recently that;;;
forecast no financial doom. "durirtg the periud 197().76, we "
have con·c entrated our efforts::.
in the low tar area. Seven
our new products have been ·:
low tar because we feel the,;:
company which leads the "
industry in low tar, leads theindustry."
•
Health expe,rts usually .
classify a low-tar and lownicotine cigar~tte as one with-.
less
than 18 milligrams o[..
11
Here's the biggest Trinitron color TV yet-21
nicf&gt;tlne
and less than one;,
[measured diagonally ). And it has a big plus-milligram of tar.
Trinitron Plus. Trinitron has always been known lor a
Compared
with
the"'
"
' great picf.ure but J rinitron Plus introduces you to an
cigarettes of 30 years ago'::·
even greater picture. Sony engineers found.Oway to
which regularly contained &amp;S~
i nten~i~y the electr.o n beams which 11 paint'1 the picture .
much as 42 milligrams
·•
Also, the surface of the tube is darker ro heighre~
nicotine and 2.9 or tar, abnost ~;
in -betweens. ,

Come see the biggest, brightest, sharpest Trinirron
ever. You'l l believe it. Tr initron Plus. 11 1t'so Sony."

Sunday Tln.es-Seotlael ·•
"
Publi.shed every Sundo ioy ..,.,_,

Oho Vall•y Publishing Co. y
.
GAILIPOLJS

Freeze on oil
prices lifted

.'

WILL .BE
OPEN
LABOR

DAY

TRINITRON

' •!J

"ITSA SONY:

RlrLIKIT

•

REG. '68.88
Complete kis. .AS caliber.

10 A.M. TIL 6P.M.
.

..

....,

class mailj.nJl m1Uer at .Polne&amp;o.i
Ohio Polt Office
.. '
By tarrier daity ond Sunay 7k
per week. Motor route Q.25 per month.

•

" \ . Dolly - . . -

,_

Lhl f7 .•. 1!:1••'-• . . ., Ilia

-u.m•:t.hne-••·
The Ulllld .,...
I' ..

CO. • W'H. FRI.NDLY SW'OR.W

(

-·11 - "' :·JJ::
I

Gallipolis, QtJio 45631

3

~=u::.;;:

"

t

...

/"""

/

At the ·Amsbarv Eye Clinic, 543 Jackson
Pike , Gallipolis. Ohio, in early September.
Anyone wanting an appointment may call
1-446-4351

LABOR DAY
TWO DAYS ONLY SUNDAY SEPT. 4th
MOND4 Y LABOR DAY SEPT. 5th
WINIUK*
KNiniNG

SA VI ON THIS fAMOIIS NAMf

12" DI....•IMHswn

YARN
REG.

SOLID SlATE
BLACK &amp;WHnE TV

Sl,l\

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'14

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Widf! an gle pic tu re l ube .

UHF and VHF a n tenna s.
Smart l y styled c ob il'let.

90 DAY CARRY·IN SERVICE GUARANTEE

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AM/PM STIRIO

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SAV£
$15.00

1
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1
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MARK40

ILICTRONIC
POCK IT
CALCULATOR

I

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$

REG.

I

'8.88

I

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I
I
I
I
I
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5

Ar i thm e t i c, algebrai c lo g ic,
pe rc en t key: floa ti ng decima l.
chain , rrl i x ed col cu lofi on s, 9 V

bottery (ex lrll ), odopter

16

oz.

BAG

(e ~ tro ).

AC•ADAPTIR ..•••

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$}17
REG. 11.69

Open Sunday 1 To 6 P.M. Open Labor Day 11 To 4 P.M.
· POLYESTER
MURPHY'S OWN
DOUBLE KNIT
LATEX FLAT INTERIOR
MATERIAL
WALL PAINT

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In White and
Lovely Decorator Colors

E-RCALLED
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport · Emergency
Squad was called to Williams
St. at 4:55 p.m . Friday for
Hannah Greenlee who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.

9" ROLLER AND
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POniNG.
SOIL
REG. 1.47
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SET

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.IUMIIO •OLL

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REG.

52' .

38

C.

LIMIT3

G.C.MURPHY
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE • DOWNTOWN

fir

t.he local- polllllbod-.

"

OPHTHALMOLOGY

5

1111 -

,!.- - '

DO-ITYO{JRSELF
SAVE 75%

Plastic Core

•

exc.pl Saturday. Entend.,

.....

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cabinet....

Roller' Has Smooth ·S!nface
Polyester Cover and

.•

Lhl J7.1i0; ....... - - -

r oom

Pe rsomtl lll! vour room ri{'C'Or
with m o ul rlin~~ fur pirt ure
and phnt«1 frA m e!'~-, Arounct
fir e pl ::tn· ~.
mirr ors a n d
med id ne ca l&gt;in et!'. o r '""'
ehair ra ils, ('t.&gt; i l in~ a nci rl oor
trim . . · . to\l~ n on. ki tc he n

Will be opening his office
for the practice of

•.

THE DAD.Y SErmNEL
Ill Court Sl., Pomeroy, 0 . .0788.
Pub!ithed every day
·

MAIL
SllBSCRJPI'ION RATES
Tho G a - Doi1J Tribono In
Ohio Md 1t'tll Virlinie one ,_.
~.00; obunont.ho"[JO; t.hne...,.
Lhl f7 .00. Eloowhore AI.DII
)'oar; m mont.ho fU.It; .:::

. your
room 1n
home. • •

HARRY L. AMSBARY M.D.

....... •

m.oo, .. ....-.", .... !!irim~

243 Third .Ave.

WASHINGTOJ:I (UP!) - A
14-month freeze on domestic
crude oil prices was lifted
Friday by the Federal
Energy Administration.
The action will have litHe
effect on consumer prices for
petroleum products, the FEA
said. The agency estimated
that gasoline prices will
climb no more than two·
tenths of a cent per gallon.
The FEA plans to allow
upper-tier crude oil prices to
rise 78 cents over the next
three months to a toal of
$11.75 per barrel and lower·
tier oil prices to climb nine
cents to $5.26 a barrel.
After three months, the
FEA said, domestic oil price
rises will be limited to the
rate of inflation.
The agency said the In·
creases will put prices near
the level they would have
reached had prices not been
frozen in July 1976.

TRUSTEES TO MEET
SYRACUSE - A regular
m eetin g of t he Sutton
Township .Trustees will be
held at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Munici pal Building.

. MORE COFFEE
WASHINGTON (J)PI )
The Agriculture Department
Friday estimated 1977 world
co ffee production at 69.9
m illion bags - 14 per cent
above last year's small crop
of 61.1 million bags which
sent prices soa r ing. Th e new
estimate was slightly below a
previous forecast of 70.37
million bags.

Postqe Paid at Gan&amp;o.nlis Ohio

45631.

Officers said a fa rm tractor
operated by J ames Norman,
57, Vinton, crossed the
highway into the path of a car
operated by David L. Sexton ,
22, Bidwell. Sexton swerved
his vehicle to avoid a COlli·
sion , but sideswiped the tractor.

GALLON

DAO.Y'111IBVNE
825 Third Ave., Gollipo!b, Ohio

KEIIIICKY

blems. He predicted lower of the Hocking-Athens-Perry
unemploym~nt rates in County CAA, asking the Apsoutheastern Ohio, said the palachian Regional Commis,.
legislature is accountable to sion to extend its Child
the people, adding that " The Development Day C;lre fWl·
general assembly is doing all ding program which expires
it can to solve your in October.
problems."
Marilyn Grant, WellstOn,
Riffe closed with the reported on the Senior Nutri·
remark, " l will be a can- lion and Meals at Home pr&lt;&gt;dida~~ for som~ office in grams saying it serves 2 ,~9
1978.
.
meais daily at 59 congregate
Pl~ques recognozmg the · nutrition sites with a total
servt ces of John Tmgle of budget of $1, 553,057. In the
Cambridge and Robert periud ending July 31, 316,675
Wmd1sch, Zanesv_tlie, were meals were served to 4,270
pr~s~nted .earher . . The participants. COAD's meals
rettrmg chatrman, Tingle, at home program served
S81d that COAD represents 52,113 meals at home for the
one·thtrd . of the state six month periud ending June
geographically, and one 30 Mrs Grant stated
fourth of Ohl?'s pop.ulation.
GOAD's energy program,
In Thursday s meeting coal inclUding its home winteriza·
planner Ro~erMcCauley sa1d tion activities showed 4,586
the agenc1es food stamp . homes winterized last year
outreach program was lind this year's program will
funded for .only 20 outreach include weatherizing another
workers, wtth 35 needed. H1s 1500 to 2 000 homes in ·the 28
recommendation for solving ~unty COAD area and prothe fundmg problem was vide emergency assistance to
referred to the COAD 750tol,OOOfamilies.
executive COilUIUttee.
Reports for other COAD
M~rvin J. Huston, COAD programs were swnmarized,
program director, reported including the Senior Compaon the foster grandpare,nt nion Program, Health Educaprogram to serve 165 low- tion News to older perosns,
income persons, age 60 and the COAD member agency
over and was authorized to group insurance plan and the
apply for a continuati.on Head Start Training progrant.
gram, plus the COAD plann·
Unanimous approval was . ing and development report.
given to a proposal by Roger
F. Patton, executive director
•·

·'

••

KV-2101
21'' screen measured diagonally

.c. MURPHY

Riffe spoke orr Ohi' s
energy and educational problems and the state 's
economy. He said Ohio' s coal
is the key to energy pro-

all cigarettes are "low," nr..Wltte said.
.::
James
Bowling,
a':
spokesman for Philip Morri.f;
Co., in New York, said low- '
tar
and
lownlcotlne •
cigarettes were "the fastest.
growing category."
;:
Besides specific lo'l(;
brands, manufacturers haV~r,
started producing sister low:
tar and nicotine cigarettes fo(i
their regular brands.
· ::

45631,
•
Published eYI!!I'f lfeekciiY even
exctpl Sotunlay. Second

$53

Tbe election of officers
highlighted a two-day annual
meeting at the Holiday Inn
here August 25-26 with over
100 persons in attendance .
Vernal G. Riffe Jr .,
speaker of the O!llo House of
Representatives, was the
guest speaker at .the annual
banquet and was introduced
by Rep . Ron James.

SONY'S
BIG ONE.

45 CALIBER KENTUCKY STYLE
LONG RIFLE .PERCUSSION TYPE

88

tant.

or:..

CONNECTICUT VALLEY ARMS

lock ignition .
Hardwood stock
and butt. 45 cal·
iber dovetail sights, l

MARIETTA
K~ith
Molihan of Radcliff, head of
Lawrence
County
the
Community Action Agency ,
was elected chairman of the
Corporation
for
Ohoi
Appalachian
Development
(COAD ), a 28 . ~ nty
organization of Community
.
• Action Agencies.
Molihan , former vice·
chairman, succeeds John
Tingle, former C3l'llbridge
mayor. Joseph Barsotti,
Gallipolis, is the n.ew vicechairnlan. He heads the
Gallia-Meigs CAO.
Anothony Mele, Marietta,
Washington County CAO
he.ad, was re-elected
treasurer and JWle Vernon of
Jefferson County CAO was
re-elected secretary, with
Marvin Huston, Radcliff, retained as resource conslll·

Anti-smokers are winning

contrast. Whiter whites. Darker darks. More subtle

State troopers said Repass'
truck sideswiped an auto
dama ~e .
Bar t on
Re pass,
30 , operated by Donna Childers,
Gallipolis, was cha rged with 22, Vinton. There was minor
drivmg left of center follow· damage .
ing. a truck-car accident at
No charges were filed as a
4:30 p.m. Fnday on Coal result of a tractorcar acciValley Hd. , we&amp;'t of Mt. Tabor dent on SR 160 at 5:30 p.m.
Hd.
Friday.

'

SHIMODA , Japan (UPI ) - Sen. John
· Glenn, D-Ohlo, told a ltlll)or. gathering of ·
American and· japanese leader~ that
~Japan should intensify its economic efforts
on behalf of other Southeastern Asian
nations and assume a greater economic
share of its defense costs.
"Japan has the potential for being a
pivotal nation in a new diploma~y em·
phaslzing cooperation and peace 111 East
Asia," said Glenn in opening the fourth
Japanese-American Assembly.

Services Program of the
Mental Health Center to be
able to provide continuous 24·
hour drug crisis and outreach

Ga llipolis. There was mmor

Wamsley, 31, Ga ilipohs, was
•·harged with fail ing l~ slop
w1thi n the assured clear
distance foil owin14 a tra ffi c
acctdent a t 3:35 p.m. F riday
on SR 7, north of Galli polis.
The Gallia-Meigs P ost
::0'\&lt;Jte H1ghway Patrol said
the Wamsley car struck the
rear end of an auto operated
by
Brenda
Burdette,

Japan has key role
in Asia says Glenn .

'69.99

SHOOTS 17 LONG OR 15 LONG RIFLE SHEU.S

Driver cited in backing incident

School board

Abuse program
(Continued from page A·l )
held August 14·20. It Is the
program's feeling that these
added forms of therapy can
be used to help children and
adults to identify and avoid
developing problems as well
as dealing with existing
problems.
The outreach emergency
services worker will be added
to the existing Emergency

A-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sundav

•

-'

UMR. COFFEE"
FILTERS

I

REG. 84'

58

l·

c ·~~·

' Pkg. of .. '

100

FRI.NDLY SW'OR•r

�Paramedics keep people alive
Paramedics continually
find new ways to .keep their
patients alive and those in
Gallia county are no exception. The latest way is to
teach the public how to help
victims of heart attacks,
chokiJJ&amp; and other emergencies unW the Paramedics
reach them.
Twelve Paramedics of the
Gallia County unit of the
Southeast Ohio Emergency

R udolfo Diaz of Mexico ::e
:~~~r ~~::~r:
reached several last winter.
•

introduced to Rotary
RECEIVE KEYS- Mr. and Mrs: Dick Vaughan, left,
receive the keys to the Meigs Plaza Cardinal Store from
Bill Childs, president, of the M. and R. Corporation, and
vice president John Musser, right, looks on. The Vaughan

Family will operate the grocery store beginni_ng
irrunediately from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 7 days a week. The Ace
Hardware Store and the Radio Shack, also in the Meigs
Plaza on Locust and Pearl in Middleport, will remain
under the operation of theM. and R. Corp.

Indians demand homeland
Montana and Wyoming.
Russell Means, an Oglala
Sio41&lt; leader, said at a news
conference the Indians
instead would accept $30
billion plus an additional
$1,000 for their claim to the
lands.
The $30 billion, Means said,
would be compensation for
alleged federal violation of
the ' Ft. Laramie Treaty of
1868, violation of the Indians'
constitutional rights and for
envirorunental damage.
The additional $1,000, be
said, would be .for "gross

By ELMER W. LAMMI
WASHINGTON (UP! )
The Sioux Indians asked for
the return Friday of their
"homeland" - the states of
North and South Dakota,
Nebraska and parts of

.-M•ASQ-•N•D•R•J•VE-JN-.
Wednesday thru Monday
Aug. 31· Sept. 5
ROCKY
PG
Al.'iO
"THE MISSOURI
BREAKS"

SATURDAY

COLO\'
·
I h.·atr
r.

•

t

tHE
HITCH~
;K·.·f .R•·s· ·OO
HI

;

Tonigh11hru
Tuesday

. ,'

. ·,,

'

CDL~R

sl•rri"'

r-- lfs a-....,

Misty Rowe-Norman Klar
PLUS

HERBIEDERBY!

WALT DISNEY '"IOOUCT!Ot&lt;S'

'\
- ' /-

Sunday &amp; Monday

ORCA

GOES TO
MONTE CARLO
.. _

.. Eio.f .... , .llOHCOIOI•
, . _• ..,. ~")o.CO ""'

c .... .... ~-

PLUS
Bur1 Reynolds
In

~
G

violation of the Teo
Commandments."
The demand for the return
of the . original Sioux
homelands in the five states
is contained in a petition to be
filed with the U.S. Court of
Claims by the Indians'
lawyers John E . Thorne, San
Jose , Calif., and Vine
Deloria, Golden, Colo. The
petition will be filed as soon
as the law.yers are admitted
to practice before the court :
The petition charges the
United States has taken
Indian lands in violation of
the 1868 treaty. To help back
up the charges, the petition
cites a 1974 award by the
Indian Claims Commission of
$17.5 million for the Indians'
claims to the Black Hills area
of South Dakota.
The petition also contends
court rulings upholding
federal jurisdiction over
individuals charged with
crimes in the Wounded Knee,
S.D., seizure were violations
of the Indians' treaty rights.
Means, a key In d ian Iea der
at Wounded Knee, said the

HUSnE

Cartoon

U.S. government
for "one
Sioux
were approaching
the •
last time" in filing the suit
with the Court of Claims.
If the suit fails, Means said
the Indians had only three
alternatives.
One, he said, was "to roll
over an.d let them ... stomp us
until we're extinct. ~~ The
second.was to take the-case to
the United Nations.
"The third is to stand up on
our · hind legs and act like
human. beings and go to war
- which would be a futile
war," Means said.
A key objective of the suit,
Means said, was to halt
further development of
Missouri
River
water
resources and the strip

,-CLEARANCE SALE · · ·

mmmg of taconite in the
Black Hllls.
He said the water development and the strip mining
would be "genocide" because
the resultant pollution might
shorten the 47-year life
expectancy of Indians in the
area by 20 years.
Brent Blackwelder,
Washington representative of
the Environmental Policy
Center, backed the Indians'
charges
the
.federal
government was responsible
for environmental damage in
the area.
· Blackwelder said federal
construction of dams on the
main stem of the Missouri
and other development was a
"form of colonialism" and
would be "devastating" to
hoth the Indian and wllite
populations of the area.

Diaz, who is preparing for a
MiDDJ.EPORT-- Ruuolfo
Diaz, a lanky (6-J ), thin, son career in business in his
of a Mexican rancher, was in~ homeland, is the house guest
traduced to members of the of Rotarian and Mrs. Robert
Mlddleport-Pomeroy Rotaey Buck, Pomeroy. He is from
Club Friday evening at Heath Torreon, a city of ahout
United Methodist Church 500,000 population .
President Carl Den,ison
following a dinner.
presided.
Rotarian Jack RobDiaz is the second Rotary
son
showed
a slide program
exchange student the local
based
on
the
magazine ol
club has sponsored for a year
Rotary
InternationaL
LadieS
of study at Meigs High
SchooL Only last month, of Heai)l Church served din·
~'wniko Iwasaki of JajJHn ner. Two guests introduced
returned to her homeland were William Knight and
after a year in Meigs County James Buxton hoth , of the
Buxton Point Pleasant Club.
attending schooL

CON

Wheel

•
•
•

Canes

Wallets

Crutches

I
I

Traps looked by flashlight
Dear Sir:
I've been reading all the letters and articles on trapping and
anti-trapping in your paper. I would like , to mak~ ~ few
comments on some or them. ·
I would like to cc:mmend the county comrtlissioners for
their articles · in Thursday night's paper proclaiming
September 24, " Hunting, Trapping and Fishing Day."
In response to the people complaining ahout young people
trapping, I personally know that my sons get up and look their
traps by flashlight, before breakfast, and before school,
because I get them up and take them. Aslo if a boy does not
know how to prepare the traps and sets, nothing much is going
to bother it. Besides a properly prepared trap and set is less
llkely to attract a tame animal.
My sons and husband have been fortunate enough to have
received quite a bit of information from my father. Many
people have called . him requesting their land be trapped
because of .the damage prOds tors have done to their land,
crops and livestock.
I believe the increase in small game (quail, rabbits,
grouse, etc.) in our trapping area, intbe last two years, proves
that the traooing of !lfedatorsis a worthwhile cause.
Some people have stated that trapping was for a "paltry
dollar or two". I can tell you "that paltry dollar" has brought
Christmas for four ymmgsters, or to pay the taxes , or some
unexpected expense, as everyone knows can occur when there
ate four children.
And quite frankly, "Name, Withheld on Request", maybe
you couldn't get any names on your petitions because people
"did understand what no trapping would mean."
Please think about it and vote "No" on the amendment in
November. "Let's keep trapping rights.''-Mrs. William
(Martha) Durst, Rt . 1, Reedsville.

make the dec·i5ion

summer IJfe sty le A

• Flowmeters
• Bedside Commodes
H 'dif'
• uml leiS
• Respiatoty Support

·~..-::.V

1111--fVI

/Po l'!"~';.'" Pool lr'l your Wck
Polynesran Pools come
rn the Standard, lo-Huna
.m d Delu:n • Concrete mOOels_
They come rn an rnfinite
vanety of sizes and shapes

Ca ll or wrtte today, our lr1endly
i&lt;t les peop fe wiii&amp;!Vt' you any

mforma tton you l!ke with
absolutely no ob lt gatlon

~-s

•
MStrut

JRI.COUNTY HOME
MEDICAL SUPPLY

•

Plannms lw ava l l•bl~

' St-t&gt; ho wth elt ~e&amp; s hal)f:
pool V~X~ d'IOO!ot would look
lr\ a ,l ~e td'l ol yc;~ut o ~ bKk yard

Gillllpolis,

·855 Second Avenue
Gallipolis , 446· 7900

Mrs. Ronald L. Saunaers

You are a little late in th~ season now but get vour po.ol
· rta dY 1or use
in, Enjoy it some this year, and have 1t
next spring.
_.

MaM•ger
&amp; "·les
Representat 1·ve
•ra
~
........
........:
614 .....,. . ......

•--llllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllll~;;::;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~~. . .;:;~;~~;;;;;;;::::::::;~~:;:~

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ROOM GROUP

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REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

SOFA .BEDS
Coil Springs Constructed
With Nylon Floral Cover

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1extured steel doors, 2 separate
1emp. controls, tempered glass
shelves.

3 PC.

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100% POLVESTER

PADDOCK

GALLIPOLIS- Dr. George
Greaves, Director of the
Gallia.Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center has announced the
appointment of Jeffrey B.
Paddock to the Emergency
Services staff.
Paddock , a native of
southern Ohio, received his
B.A. degree from Baker
University in Baldwin,
Kansas and his Masters of
Social Work from the

University of Kansas in
Lawrence, Kansas.
His
previous experience while
enlisted in the U.S. Army
includes drug and alcohol
rehabilitiation, mental health
consultation including in·
dividaul
and
marital
con use ling and crisis in·
tervention .
Pad doc ' s
primary
responsibilities include
working with community
agencies in the three eounty

made on nutrition site
GALLIPOLIS - Joseph
Barsotti , director of the
Gailia-Meigs Community
AL1ion Agency , Saturday said
that tile line of authority for
the new nutrition site to start
next Wednesday at Vinton

goes back to the _CAP. .
Carol Davis ts the sate
manager of the Gal!ia County
Senior Nutrition program ,
which is funded by a grant
through the Corporat ion for
-0 hi o
Appa I a c h ia n
Development and is operated
locally by the Galiia-Meigs
Community Action Agency.
An earlier report in the
POLLUTION COSTLY
Gallipolis Tribune said that
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI ) she wa s site manager for the
- Air pollution costs billions Gallia County Senior Citizens
of dollars each year in terms Center . Another error in the
of crop lo sses, human health, same issue was identification
deterioration . o! paint and of Judy Jones, Mrs. Davis's
zinc coatings and household · .assistant s ite mana ge r
soiling, according to a study · assigned to Vinton , as Mrs.
released Friday by the Jones I. Imes; she is Mrs.
Midwest Research Institute. John I. J ones.

instrumental in obtaining the request. the extra food for
food donation for Gallia Gallia County. In discus.•ing
County, Previously it had his request for the food with
. gone to other communities in the Revs. Frank Hayes and
southeast Ohio. Jeff's in· Tura Hayes of the First
volvement with community Presbyterian Church, it was
services made him .aware of approved
subject
to
the Food Pantry designed to providing necessary tranprovide a three day supply of sportation to Gallia County.
food to needy familits in the
As a result, Jeff and David
community on an emergency D e Rita, Director of the
basis.
Emergency
Services
A recent trip to visit his · Program at the. Mental
brother at the summbr youth Health Center, . made a
camp prompted Jeff to weekend trip to the Vinton
County camp, picked up the
food and delivered it to the
Food Pantry to await
distribution to needy Gallia
County families.
area to identify individua!s
r------·-----------~,
who may bendfit from mental
health services. In addition,
he will be involved in
ONE MORE LEOPARD
outreach activities. Potential
CINCINNATI (UP!) clients who are unable to Cincinnati Zoo officials
obtain services because of report that the world's small
transportation difficulties population of
Persian
leopards
has
been
increased
and or health problems, may
h~ counseled through the by one with thebirth of a male
Center's Outreach Program. cub at tile zoo. Cincinnati is
Jeff and his wife, Ruthie, the only zoo in the western
hemisphere to breed the rare
· reside in Gallipolis.
cat, an endangered species.

Emergency seroices staff enlarged

l SENIORS I
!
I

Cooperation at local level needed

COLUMBUS- The president
of the 335,000.member Ohio
Give the kids a chance ·
Parent-Teacher Association
Dear Sir :
,
Some kids d&lt;iti't have schools. But we do. There s only one believes that all members of
problem tbe one's who have school in Meigs County, can't go. the school community must
I am' a very good student and I would like to stay that way. cooperate at the local level if
I would also like to graduate in 1983; but the way thmgs are the urgent financil problems
of education are going to be
going, it will be 1984 oc 1985.
Put it this way, if there wasn 't any educ~tion for the kids or solved.
Dr. Robert E. Lucas,
if the kids weren't willing to Jearn. where wtll the adults be by
president
of Wilmington
the time I graduate? There wmlldn't be any doctors, nurses or'
College and the first man
.
·
etc.
My mom and dad work very hard. They put clothes on my elected preside~! of Ohio
back and shoes on my feet. They buy paper and pay taxes. for PTA, said the State Auditor·
predicts up to 55 school
books and f&lt;r the teachers and board of education.
districts may close for
Btrr YET THAT 'S NOT ENOUGH.
periods in the 1977·78 school
It's not hurting any one but the kids and their future.
People in Meigs, you have got mouths, open them. Please, year because of financial
give kids a chance. -Roberta Myers, 12 years of age, Langs- problems.
"Ohio PTA has forcefuUy
ville.
advocated increased state aid
to elementary and secondary
education, and in the biennial
Whose fight it?
1977-78 state budget the
legislature
and the governor
Dear Sir:
.
responded
with additional
The teachers are oo strike. The bus drivers, cooks, and
funds.''
Dr.
Lucas
janitocs say they might be striking within 30 days . The Board
" Unfortunately, this
of Education says there is no more money for higher wages. said.
increased
state money won't·
.The taxpayer says "no" on bigger school levies.
Heard around Meigs County are phraseS such as: "I have
no kids in school, why should I worry ahout it?", or "Why
should I vote to raise taxes for school levies, all I do is pay
salary to a bunch of lawyers and people for doing nothing."
FUNDING ANSWERED
Then a direct turn around is heard, when the situation
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio
involves your child. "Being kept back a year because he can't
read, when he brings h&lt;me outdated hooks or one poorly taken will receive at least. $3.5
care of to study from, oc he cannot graduate because of too million in initial federal
assistance for the operation
Uttle time spent in a class room."
People used to have to fight to ge't an education. Now we of the civilian conservation
hove to fight to get our children educated. We can not do it by corps, House Speaker Vernal
fighting school levies, not with picket,lines, and not by ranting G. Riffe Jr ., D-New Boston,
and raving . about what should have been done. The only reported Friday. Riffe said
solution is to use common sense. For your child 's sake, spend a assurances of the funding
little time to know what is going on in his school. Go to, and were made earlier this week
participate in the school board meetings. There are two edges in Washington by officials of
to every sword. Yo\11' county school system needs your voice if the U. S. Department of Interior and theU. S. Depart·
it is to stay on an even keel.
It feels very odd, indeed, to be the only person , parent, ment of Agriculture.
teacher, board member~ or otherwise concerned adult, to sh?W
up l«r a discussion of the fiscal budget for the upcommg Me~gs
Co. school year.
·
Doesn't anybody care? -Concerned and worried, Mrs. Rita
F. Maust, Langsville.

be sufficient to close the
financial gap most school
systems race," he added.
"The schools must count on
taxpayer support at the local
level." Dr, Lucas said Ohio
PTA has also strongly ad·
vacated loca l cont rol of
schools. Along with local
control, he explained, comes
the responsibility of the
community to provide
adequate local revenues · to
support the schools.
Dr. Lucas lamented that
some voters turn down
operating levies because they
blame the school system for
problems the schools can't
control, such as mandated
costs resulting from court
decisions and state and
federal legislation, inflation,
·and extreeme weeather
conditions·.
41
This voter resistance can
be. overcome," Dr. Lucas
suggested, "only throljgh a
cooperative effort involving

the school administration,
teachers and other em·
ployees; parents, and con·
cerned citizens."
As a former school
superintendent for 20 years,
Dr. Lucas urged school ad·
ministrators to set an
example of efficiency and
openness to the public.
''Even more important,
however , are the PTA
members, school employees,
and ·parenis who live in the
community and who are
knowledgeable about the
schools," he said. "They can
explain the effectiveness and
importance
of
school
programs, and the need for
additional money. They are
out there in that community
36~ days a year."
Dr. Lucas said that, in
addition to the S&lt;!hool finance
concern, Ohio PTA convetl~n
in Columbus Oct. 23-25 wall
feature .a · parenting conference in cooperation with
the Nationa l Foundation

Lear-Photography ls Now

A.ccepting Appointments For

I

Senior Portraits

I
I

Call early to ger lhe most conven1ent
time
I appointment
·If you did not receive our mailer
I ne sure to ask about our special
li mited time discount coupons.

I

lEAP

lt.

1
1

1
1

March of Dimes.
As part of the National PTA
Television Violence Project,
convention delegates will also
be trained to monitor violent
television programming and
will be given information on
how to influence the
television industry to reduce
violence and to improve
program diversity and
quality.

I

PHOTOGRAPHY

I

I
~

.
j

Spring Valley Plaza-Gallipolis

vto-7494

1

1

I. _ _ _, _ _ _ _Closed
Mondays
.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,_ _ -

-

1
I

_,J

PION

CAR STEREO

ALE

HIGH·

Gallipolis

446-1611

Rt. 35 Wes1

It
1

I

if money problems are to be solved

is

'98 \ '598
'499
PLATFORM
$6
8
BEDROOM$148 25" COLOR ssgg
ROCKERS
SUITES
CONSOLES

SELECTION

GALLiPOI.JS - Rev . John
Paddock, director of the
Episcopal Diocese's Southern
Ohoi Summer Camp in Vinton
County,
donated
approximately $150 worth or
food to the Gallipolis Food
Pantry spoHsored by the
Gallia County Ministerial
Assn. located on Third Ave.
Rev . Paddocks' brother,
Jeff, a clinical outreach
worker with the Gallia Jackson-Meigs community
Menta! ijeaith Center, was

that wrll change your whole

• Oxygen Regulators

.6 State Str-.t.

1

I

' Last year vou thought
about it but then just never
got around toft Th is

HOME DELIVERY AVAILABL
JOBS FOR ALL
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sept.
4-10 will be FUJI Employment
Week in Ohio under Gov.
·James A. Rhodes' annual
Lahar Day proclamation.

1

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Lady Bird Johnson has accepted an invitation from
President Carter to attend
Panama Canal Treaty
signing festivities next week.
Mary Hoyt, Rosalynn
Carter's press secretary, said
the widow of Ly~~Con B.
Johnson will attend the
Wednesday night state dinner
honoring Latin American
leaders.
Mrs. Johnson wiU spend the
night at the White House,
staying in the Queen 's
bedroom . Down the hall, in
the Lincoln Bedroom, will be
former President Gerald
Ford, who also wiU attend the
treaty signing.

~ ummer

by Episcopal camp director

:

I
I

••

SELECTION OF

I

'I

this summer,
eft

"Ptmll

Your Choice of Early
American or Con1emporary

SPECIAL

We. hope more will call as
vacations end." ·
The course iS available at
n&lt;&gt;-C08t to any interested
group or persons. Inlorma·
tion can be obtained by calling oW;-9tJ40,
The Paramedics in the recent course 'I'ere Sager, Ric
Bolin, Steve Fisher, Ed Ken·
nedy , Peggy Call, Dot Neutzling, Bob Bailey, Bonnie
Zornes, Jeff Golomb, Darrell

Food gift ntade to 'Pantry' Correction of report

1
1
I

Mrs. Johnson
•
at the signing

VALESQNT
EQU' IPMENT
RENTAL &amp; SALES

• Home .Oxyl'fl
• ~ Beds
,.....,...,
•
Chairs

LftWI of opiDiola are weleomed. They &amp;hould be
1- thaa 308wordlloag (or be subject to reductioa by
the editor) aad m..t be signed with the signee's ad·
dreas. Names may be withheld upon publication.
However, on request, names will be d!J•Iosed. Letters
should be In good last•, addressing Issues, not perJOnalities.

Wasmer, Roger Deardorff
and Jack Basil. Paramedic
Mike Zornes was the instroo.
tor for the course.

medications " countershock·
'
'
ing" and other
techniques
designed to restore the person's heart and lung functions.
Gallia SEOEMS Station
Chief John Sager said, " Each
person always carries
everything that is necessary
to save a life with CPR, and
can learn to use this techni·
que in only a few hours. Unfortunately, verY lew people
take the time to Jearn. VerY
few groups in the Gallia area

Medical Services (SEOEMS)
have just completed a course
that taught them how to teach
members IX the general
pubUc a technique caUed
cardi&lt;&gt;-pulmonaey resuscita·
tion (CPR I.
CPR is an easily-mastered
technique which anyone can
use to extend the life of
anyone whose heart and
breathing has stopped, until
Paramedics can arrive with

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

TP-9005

16 FLAVORS

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BAND TO DRll.L
.,.ROCK SPRINGS - The
Meigs High School Band will
hold a practice session (this
practice. bas been approved)
on the high school parking_Jot

ADMIRAL

Tuesday, Wednesd ay and
Thursday from 4 p.m. to 7
p.m. This practice is mandatory in order for the band
to be ready for the first
. football game .

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
SEPT. 4 • SEPT. 10

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Why are so many drivers swi'tching
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We'll give you lots of reasons . .
Alistate offers lots of special
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We thi nk you'll· find a ·
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hands." Ca ll or come in.

•'•
•

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0

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OFF

•

•~••

I
t

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YARD
•

(SALE ENDS SATURDAY, SEPT. 10, 1977)

KNIT ·MILL STORE
Gallipolis, Ohio

Spring Valley Plaza

"FLEXSTEEL"
.FINE UPHOLSTERED
FURNITIJRE AT SPECIAL
AN,NIVERSARY

SALE PRICES

Handle
Despite its stylish appearance,
1his chair is a genuine rockerrecliner. Rock away to your
heart's content, then a mere
touch of the handle and ,you can
recline and relax ... at least
until some other member of
your family clamors for this
favorite chair. May we show it
to
today?

•••

•••
••
.
.•••
·,

•
'

.
T

•

•

.

' ..

·~

,•

..

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•

._:,

I

(

(

(

DINNER BOX
· 3 PIECES CHICKEN .
.
•MASHED POTATOES
·&amp;GRAVY

·•sLAW

McGINNESS-STAHLEY AGENCY:INC.

...,

4S22nd AVF

Gallipolis

REG. 1189.95

NOW I

NOW I
5

'149•

WSffi( WITH FM STtUO
· SUPER TUNER
· Phue Lotk Loop Multrplu OtmodulatOt
· Loui/Dtstillltt S•ul{h
• Aut01111!1C [Jt(\
· Loudnt'il Sw•lt~
· !lutlnl
• StPar1te llln &amp; Treble

PO'I'tl lllll't.lfiU -ll Wut
~ • to Watt Mu. RMS p~, i Channd
• • Autcm,llc On/Oft ~1¥1r Swtl'h
• Mlrwlt By-PIS! Swittll

• Car Stereo l~wl

l ·l~ACJ. WITH FM SH RIO
• SUP£RIUNEA

· PhaJe l 1Xk Loop ~ ul 1 t p lu Ol!!ru)dulilcr

· m rroot End
•
.
·
·

li!CII /O•ITinte Swrtc h
laul;!nn$ sw.tch
MU\tnl
Stpar att Bu,, l rt b!t, &amp; Bal~nct

FREEl

INSTALLATION. DURING THIS SALEI
SALE ENDS SAT SEPT. 10THI
POPDUJ

'

unu

Galipolis, 0.

2nd &amp; Olive
p ....

Phone 446-1761

49

REG. 1199.95

'15995

'4995

GALLIPOLIS STORE ONLY

NICK JOHNSON
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

REG. '59.95

NOW I

'1

PUUl

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE

AD-304

'

No Subt
No Coupons : NoUmit

TP·900

KP-500

---

~otn'd.

SieM.o.

243 THIRD AVENUE . . GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Phon., (614) 446-7886

'

..

�,
A~ The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. .:, 1977

This 'll make man .of you,
•
so thought Shawnees zn 1720s

CHALLENGE MADE

Court hears 31 cases

A-7-The Sunday 'l'lme&amp;&amp;ntinel,Sunday, Sept. 4,1977

Ballot initiatives offered on traps, instant registration

TO DEBATE MNOALF.
C'OI.UMBUS (UPI) POMEROY - Twenty-&lt;l!le Rutland, costs only, failure to Melmeta G . Jackson,
\'ice President Walter F.
~lundale
has
been delendants were fined nd 16 yield; David R. Hannum, Rt. Florence, Ky., Earl R.
cballenged to debate the others forfeited bonds in I, l.ong Bottom, $25 and costs, James, Jr., The Plains, $30.50
Issue of eledlon day voter Meigs Cuunty Court Friday. left of center; Randy Tolley, each, speeding; Stanley G.
Fined by Judge Robert E. New Marshfield, $20 and Wells, Rt. l, Long Bottom,
reglstraUon when he visits
By JAMES SANDS
this sept was at Chillicothe that the Shawnees made their raids
$4{1.50, excessive speed; Mar·
Ohio
Sept.
17.
Buck were Harold D. Swart- costs, assault.
"Every new moon they drink, for four days, a decoction or into white territory. It was also here that the shawnees voted to
shall
Drake, Parkersburg,
Forfeiting bonds were
The gauntlet was thrown zendruber, Berlin, Ohio, $11
the bultm snakeroot, an emetick, and abstain from all food
go to war against Dunmore. This led to the battle of Pt .
$3'1.55,
speeding; William J.
down_ Friday by Ohio House and costs speeding; Harry C. Johnny Berry, Killen, Ala.,
except il] the evening, when they are pennitted to eat a little Pleasant.
Reitmire,
no address recordMinority Leader Charcls r .. Smoot. Ill, Princton, W.Va.,' William Lee George,
boiled corn. The twelfth moon they perform for lour days what
KJsklmenilas was the only Shawnee town In Gallla
ed,
$28.50,
consuming alcohol
$19 and coots, speeding; Cheshire, Roberta Hodge,
Kurfess, R-8owUng Green,
they commenced with on the first four days; the fifth day they
Cuwlt)' that we have record of. However, lu 1740 and 1750
in
vehicle;
Robert Cowdery,
a candidate for governor in Clarence Lee, Rutland, $15 Malta, Chester P. Hughes,
come out of their house, gather corn cobs, burn them to ashes,
there was a vutage of a few miles north of Ewlngton, IUlOWll
Neware,
$28,
speeding;
1978 and an opponent of and costs, unsafe vehicle; Ironton, Daniel A. Herron, Inand with these, rub their bodies all over. At the end of the
as White Woman's Town. The town was named after Mary
Thomas
E
.
Vaughan,
Michael Barr, LangsviUe, $10 dustry, Pa ., Allen W.
eledJon day registration.
mooo , they undergo perspiration in the sweat house; then go to
Harris who had been captured by Indians In New England
and
costs, left of center; John Daws&lt;ln, Wheeling, Thomas Pomeroy, $30.50, speeding;
" If you accept. I believe
water, and thus ends the ceremony."
and bad been suld twice to dlllerent tribes. In 1756 we have
0.
Marlin,
Gay, W. Va ., and Shilot , Bidwell, Jim Benny Higgenbottam, SprIt will he a healthy exThe ~""ve is taken from the writing of Jchn Heckewilder.
learned that Mary Harris was living lu Montreal. By the end
speeding.
Willie L. Benton, Jr. Bristol, Robinette, Ft. Gay, W. Va ., ingfield,
change on the 'merits, or
It is a description of the Shawnee custom of initiating a boy into
of her days she had mothered numerous Indian warriors.
Tenn, $3 and costs each,
what I consider the clear
manhood . It •s very likely th;lt one or more of the great .
No doubt, however. numer.ous Indians crossed through
lack · of merh, ol Instant speeding; Ray Allen Baker,
Shawnee leaders was initiated to manhood in Gallia County. Gallia or came there to hunt. There were two Delaware
registration before the Sr., Athens, $10 and costs,
Recent studies of old maps and journals has uncovered the
Villages close to Callia - Wanduxales on the Hocking River,
speeding; Kermit Gilkey, Rt.
fact that there was a fairly prominent Shawnee village
voters
of Ohio sink It In the
and Lower Delaware Town, in what is today Scioto County.
I, $10 and costs, speeding :
N~vember
election."
around Cheshire (on the Cheshire plains) from 1720 until
In additioo many Indian tribes were attracted to the area
George
Cozart, Coolville,
Kurfess
said
tn
.a
telegram
about 1738.
because of the salt licks in what is today Jackson County as
Haning, Rt. 4,
Mildred
to
Mondale.
The Shawnee nation originated in the eastern part of the well as the flint quarry in Jackson County and the lead mines
Pomeroy
and
Terry Adkins,
United States but was pushed westward by the more powerful m Ross County. These lead mines were listed on numerous
Rt.
2,
Pomeroy,
$13 and costs
Iroquois. Of course the Iroquois were pushed westward by the maps, but no white man has ever found the exact location of
each,
speeding;
Clell
these Shawnee mines.
whites .
LaBonte,
Rt.
I,
Long
Bottom,
About 1700 one of the 5 "septs" of the Shawnee tribe built a
$25 and costs, illegal hunting;
village about the forks of the Ohio. But by about 1720 this sept
Thomas Bay, Rt. 3, Pomeroy
and
John Harden, Columbus,
Webster says that a sept Is a branch of a family,
$9 and costs each, speeding;
especially one lu .whfch all members are descended from a
.
• '
a
a
David Ellis, Rutland, $150 and
single ancestor, but the dictionary doesn't say why the
costs,
attend school, licertse
ancestor can~ be married.
suspended 30 days, driving
while intoxicated; Michael
was pushed out by the Iroquois. lt was then that they settled on
Codner, Rt. 2, Racine, $15 and
the Cheshire plains.
.
costs,
speeding; Ernest RichThe name ol the village was Kiskimenitas 2. Kiskirnenitas
provided
enjoyable
musical
mond,
Rt.l, Rutland, $100 and
1 was their village above the forks of the Ohio. It was in Ohio GALLIPOLIS- The alterentertainment.
costs, 90 days probation, $75
that perhaps Cornstalk, Red Hawk, and Black Snake grew to natives Program of the
Also, thanks to Denise suspended, no cycle endorseGallia-Jackson · . Meigs
manhood .
Radcliffe and Marcia Payton, ment; Gary Evans, Rt. 1,
The Shawnees left the Cheshire plains about 1733, moving to Community Mental Health
Rio Grande College students. Raci ne, $15 and costs,
the mouth of the Scioto. Moving with the village of Center has completed its first
Bessie Saxton, cook, Susan ~g; Dwight Kennedy,
Kiskimenitas was an unnamed village where Pt. Pleasant is week long summer camp al
Frazi~r.
R .N. , Ma rty
Asbury
now located. The two villages located north and south of the Camp Fran cis
Gillespie
and
Mr. and Mrs.
Ohio at the Scioto. Tbe riame of this town becllme Shawnee located near Rio Grande,
St
apleton,
Camp
Asbury ,
Town. There were approximately 300 people in this village in des1gncd for youpg people of
.
whose
help
and
assistance
1751 when Christopher Gist and George Grohan visited there. Gallia, Jackson and Meigs
Going back to school is just the nght time for
CG CLASS WANTED
was greatly appreciated.
There was also a 90 foot long council house. It would be lo•ical Counties between the sixth
a Seiko. Give them automation -age accuracy,
The
United States Coast
In
addition
toe
·following
to assume that this sept that once lived in Gallia w·a s the most
plus an hlstant-set day/ date calendar enand twelfth gradees.
area businesses: Kroger's, Guard Academy haS ancased in a smart Seiko design There 's a Se1kq
The camp offered a unique
irnpcirtant of the septs.
for everyone ... so many models to choose
Johnson's Market, French nounced that it is now ac·
In 17:il! Shawnee Town was destroyed by a liood. It was then experience of living and
from in our fine selection .
City
Mea ts,
Gallipolis cepting and processing ap.
that Cornstalk,' Red Hawk, Black Snake,' Silver heels, and sharing for the 37 young
Wholesale, Convenient Food plications for a ppointment as
Nonhelema settled on th e Ptckaway plains. Nonhelema was people in attendance.
Mart,
Heiner's Baker y a nd Cadet, U. S. Coast Guard,
reportedly a bout 6 and "' feet tall and and presided over Counselors were recruited
Bob
Evans,
Inc. all of Gallia Class of 1n2. Applications
numerous men. She was also Cornstalk 's sister. It was while from the Mental Healtfi
County donated or provided and additional information •
at a r educed cost much of the may be obtained by writing
.:
to: Director of Admissions
food needed fo r the camp.
Un
ited
States
Coast
Guar
d
404
SECOND
AYIHUI
• ......,
Campers and counselors
Academy
,
New
London
agreed that the Alterna tives
_MEilollltA- - OEIIIDCiiTY
'
Camp was a success. In fact, Connecticut 06320.
-, .. .l;. '
' :' ,,
th e verbalized complaint was
,, .W..•.
41
•
Why wasn't the camp
scheduled for two weeks?"

~~I L:;!=A~
COLUMBUS
(

WESTERN TOUCH
by

auditions .
t.!Af·£ , ... l•'l Ao

Dress or casual- the swing is to boots
with the western influence. They're
great with skirts, gauchos, slacks or
jeans. Come in and select your favorites fro m our complete selection.

SEIKO

smart and up-to-date {or school

Alternati·ve-s p ...o,ur.nm
e.

)

ha~ been 28 years since
Oht_oans
approved
an
ml ttatlve on the statewide

BOOTS with the

na:

..

_ r It

UP!

carried out at first ·camp

II
It's
New,
We
Have
It!

.

3 Generations of Service

GALUPOLIS - Opening a
car door whi le pa rking
resu lted in a minor traffic
accident t II :30 a.m.
Sat urday, according to
Gallipolis police.
Paul C. Chevalier, 63,
Eur eka
St a r
Route,
Gallipolis, opened the door "to
see his way to back into a
parking space on Third Ave.
above Co urt Street . A passing
car dr iven by Gay M. Circle,
Gallipillis, st ruck the opened
door .
At JJ :02 a.m. Randy E.
McDaniel, 21, Rt. 2, Cheshire,
driv ing his semi·tra ctort railer toward the Ohio River
on Pine Street, turned to the
right to drive down Second
Ave.
Police said he cut too
sha rply and the right side
duals hit th e left rear corner
of a car pa r ked ,by Eugene H.
Gloss, 53, Gallipolis. Only
visible dama ge was on the
ca r's rubber bumper gua rd.
At1 :50 p.m . 'Friday just off
Eastern Avenue, John D.
Adkins, 53, Kenova , W. Va .,
drove his van truck through
the pump area of the
Gallipolis Terminal and was
backing up for a delivery at
Voto . He hit a car back of him
driven by Nonnan E. Trlnlin,

:
I

50, Huntington, according to traveling toward the river on westerly direction on the
Court and was turning ;·ight traveled portion of the street,
police.
Two cars, the drivers of - down Third Ave. U!na and traffic was congested.
which both "saw" the Pleasants, 68, Gallipolis, was The back e~d of the pickup
truck was off the ,road
automatic signal as green, driving down Third Ave .
Then,
back
in
the
fog
at
7:
43
pavement with the front end
collided a t the Court and
a.m.
Frida
y
on
State
Street
at
on
the pavement.
Third intersection at 1:07
The
front end was struck by
the
curve,
police
•reported
p.m. Friday.
westbo
und Ellen J. Glockner,
Police said that Thelma K. that Edward H. McGovern,
23
Ga
llipolis.
16,
Lower
River
Road,
was
Woodward, 49, Patriot St ar
Ro ute, Galli vo!is,
was backing his pickup t ruck in a

WASHINGTON (UP! ) The carter White House has
compiled a file - including
an allegation of campaign .
" dirty t ricks" ·
on
D e m oc ra t ·tu r n e d
Republican John Connally
that could be used to blunt his
national political ambitions,
sources told UP! Saturday.
The heart of the file is an
Aug. 10, 1976, letter from Rep .
Paul Findley, R-Ill ., to then·
President Ger a ld F ord
ca uti oning ag ainst letting
Connally get on the national
Republican ticke t, the
sources said.
UP! obtained a copv of the

I

NORFOLK, Va. - Mrs.
Frank Adams, 67, a native of

•

Ga ll ia Cou nt y, Oh io d ied
Thu rs da y eveni ng in a
hospital near her home here.

She wa s born October 25,
1909, nea r Bladen, t he

YOU CAN'T DO BETTER
ANYWHERE

REG. '33.99

l

NOW FOR JUST

daughter of the late Bruz and
Vesta Caldwell Walters .

She mar ri ed ·Frank Adams
in 1928 In- Hunti ngton, W. Va .
He $urvi ves, al ong wifh two
sons, Joe and David, both of

Norfolk : two sisters. Mrs.
Emma Strong, Canton, and ·

Mrs. Sadi e Riehl e, Bladen,
and several cousins in ·the
Gallla area .

Funeral ser vices were held
Saturday in Norfolk .

It Comes T o - -

'2490

•SAVING WITH GROWTH
AND SECURilY
•HOME IMPROVEMENT

SAVE '11.09

Our Finest .

LOANS .

Western Style

JESSIE HOUDASHELT
MIDDLEPORT . - Mr s.
Jessie Houdashelt, 78, Grant
St.. . M i ddleport ,
died
Saturday mor ni ng In the
Holzer Medical Center. She
was born Oct. 13, 1898 in
Racine, daughter of the late
Charles and Cora Smith
Houdashelt.
She was pi"eced ed ln death
by her husband, Harry in
1970, two sons, a daughter
and three brothers .

letter.
In it , Findley s aid
Connally 's "Democrats for
Nixon" effort in behalf of
Richard Nixon in the 1972
c ampaign in c lud e d
disseminating a letter that
contended Democratic candi- ·
date George McGovern was
using a " Greek Communist
journalist" as his spokesman
on Greek matters.
The reference was to Elias
Demetracopoulos, one of the
leading opponents of the military leaders of Greece at the
time.
Findley also pointed out
Connally was investigated for
campaign donations from
lliilk producing interests.
Referring to the letter
about
Demetracopoulos,
Findley told Ford, "John
Connally' s association with
this episode and it.s link with
the dirty tricks uncovered by ·
the (Senate 1 Watergate
Committee make him a
liability for any positon in
your administration."
Spokesmen for President
carter' who is spending the
weekend in his camp David
retreat, told UPI they knew
nothing of the letter. They
also de~ied Carter is
compiling a file that could be
used to hurt Connally or
!lepublicans for whom he
campaigns.
But sources familiar with
Senate
inqutnes
into
Watergate and into the role of

A Hard Wooden Heel.

Men's Sizes
Fashions from j ack &amp; j ill's Southeastern Ohio 's
Largest Children Store Featuring Fashions for the
'

Young

•PERSONAL LOANS

Drew Webster Auxiliary Post
39.
Survivors lnc lude two

·-·

.

WALKERS

.

"

REG. 19.99

..

,•

S]77

Infants to Size 18

)AC.K&amp; )ILL'S

Infants to Size 14

SAVE 3.11

I

CEDAR CHEST
BY LANE

You Can At_..,

3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE .YOU!

"fuhioru hr tho Y•~Ill "

•

GaUipolis

326 Second Avenue

~~~~~----~~--~~~--~--------------------------~~-----------·
r

r

f

r

(

.

'

•MAIN OFFICE • SECOND AVE.

1

•lHIRD AVE. BRArtai ·THIRD AVE.
•VIIUON BRANDl • VINTON, OHIO

G.C. MURPHY CO. tHE

'.,tlr)ll'

AS

•TRAVELERS CHECKS

~Than

......-· ···-~-- .

REG. 19.99

NOW ~·

STARTING AS LOW

the funeral home from 2-4 and
7.9 p.m . Monday.

SLIP ONS
GIRLS SIZES

STRAY.Q..LOUNGER

held at 2 p.m . Tuesday from
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with Rev . Robert Kuhn
officiating . Burial wtil 6e In
the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Colling hours wtil be held ol

'.

WOMEN'S

Use Our Layaway

RECLINERS BY
BASSETT, LANE
&amp;OTHERS

Mrs . Marte Theiss of Racine.
Funeral services will be

atECKING AttOONlS

MON. THRU. SAT. 10 to 9
SUNDAY 1 to 5

SHOES
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

great-granddaughter,

SAVE 12.22

BOYS SIZES

SEVERAL STYLES .

Amrea Place and a sister,

•NO SERVICE atARGE

See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340
Gallipolis. Ohio

Girls Oxfords

I Becky) cargill of GrotQn, N.

Y. a

MOBILE HOMES INC.
Sunday Only

Place of Groton, N. Y.; four
grandchildren, Steven and
Gregory Place and Miss
Louise Place and Mrs. J~mes

•BANKAMERICARD

9~~~

BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL

daughters, Miss Freddie
Hovdashelt of Middleport ·and
Mrs . Ronald (Margaret)

•MONEY ORDERS

WOMEN'S
ROLLER BOIIOM

NOW

of Middleport and fast
member . and preslden of

•AU10 LOANS

6%-12.

OS~.

•BUSINESS LOANS

GreekAmericans in Greek
affairs told UPI that the
White House has obtained the
F indley , . le tte r
a nd
informa tion on the milk
contributions.
McGovern h~d sent a copy
of the letter m ore than a year
ago to the Senate Intelligence
Committee, which at the time
wa s looking into Greek
matters .

TODA Y'S BEST
BUYS IN HOMES

FOR

M iddleport Baptist Church
and a past matron of

Evangeline Chapter 172

ARE

LAYAWAY

. She was a member of the

Boot. leather with

pass State lssue 1.
probably bring money from
.Board of ~lectioo members across the &lt;;oun.try into .both
will be working lor passage in ~'amps. They Will need 1t. If
their own self-interest. they spend too much this
Election day registration year, traditional sources may
r!Uikes more work for tbem. run dry for the gubernatorial
Businesses,
campaign in 1978.
manufacturers utilities and
As a twO&lt;iided, evenlyothers friendly to the matched fight, the campaign
Republicans will probably be may rival the eflorls In
helping out with campaign preserve and repeal the
contributions. While they income tax five years ago .
cannot donate to political
Somwne who's keeping a
candidates corporations are low profile on the issue is
allowed to 'contribute toward Gov. Rhodes. The governor
the passage or defeat of took a beating on his own
issues.
initiatives two years ago, and
For Democrats, eleetion is nnt about to get' out.front
· day registration is a key to , this time.
.
signing up at the last minute
Moreover, he is thought Ill
voters who haven't thought take the view that his support
about or gotten worked up might detract from rather
over political campaigns than help the cause. The
until the end. It could mean a cause might also detract
larger sha re of the vote for from him. He does not need Ill
them.
run for reelection next year
opponents
Republicans view election with
his
day r egis tration as a complaining that he tried In
crippling, if not fatal, blow to keep the poor and minorities
their party.
from registering and voting
Nationa l interes t will on election day.

MODULAR HOMES

Connally file note's
election dirty tricks

Area Deaths
MRS . FRANK ADAMS

Sept. 3 thru Wed. 7

F EWER P UPILS
WASillNGTON (U P[)
School enrollme nt will
decline slightly this fall while
spending .on education nearly 8 per cent of the Gross
National Product - incr eases by $12 billion, the U.
S. Office of E ducation said
Saturda y.

The ualiUnal spulllghl will &lt;O'gahi'led labur had election
he "" Stat&lt;• t&gt;;.,uc I. which il da~ rel(istration at the top of
adupted wuuld re111stato the thclt hsts &lt;~ prHll'llles. They
30-day prc-registratintl made il sli(·k by overriding
perind and requJre a voWr to \ Hhodcs' veto and getting a
re-&lt;cgisterif he failed to vute friendly l"urt decision.
fur f(lur y~rs .
Although
the
Ohio
'l11e results are expected to Hc~ublican party is not going
serve as a barumeter fur 111 be formally involved, a
action by Congress and other great number or Republicanstates on s&lt;Kalled " instant" oriented groups will be
voter rf!lislration.
helping Ohioans for the
Heavy-handed
Preservation of Honest 1
campaigning is anticipatf(l. Elections COPHE), which is
Ohio
Democrats
and spearheading the drive Ill

~----------- ---- - ------ ~ ----I

Sale For
The Whole
Family

Washington.''
Dr. J ohn Najarian, his
doctor , said the Minnesota
Dem ocrat can go back to
Washington "whenever he
wants.''
Najaria n performed a
colostomy on the sena tor
Aug. 18 ·and discovered he
had an iJ)opera ble malignant
tumor on the pelvis.'

ho the offite tl~&lt;·y wt·re
S(&gt;eking.
Tw&lt;&gt; years b&lt;'lur&lt;· that, the
v41tt:~r~ had appn1ved an
initiative amending the Ohio
C'Hnstitution h• require that
motor vehicle license fees
and fuel taxes HI&gt; toward
highway·related
purposes.
Most recent failures were
th(· in&lt;'ulll~ tax repeal in 1972,
Guv. James A. Rh•od es' multimillion bond issues in 1975
and the utility reform i5sues
in 1976.

Police list minor traffic .accidents

W'DS

...•.

bailul, ~ul u1ey are gu 111g t&lt;J
'""re &lt;'hant-es "n tl~&lt;
Nuv . B ballot.
Opp4~ttents of eletti(ln dqy
Vt1ler rc..:islraliou and steeljawed leghold traps have
pluced initiatives on the
ballot to prohibit eath.
The last time an initiative
was approved was in 1949
wh&lt;ll voters outlawed the
straight across party-line
vote and created an "officetype" ballot with candidates'
names appearing accordin~

get twu

I

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R inl(s You'll.
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Love

"Wiien

STARTING AT
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• BA""K AUEAICAP:O

• Att.tEAICAN EXPRESS

Gl~.~.~~1.~~~\t.. ~~

HOURS:
Mo" .• Frldoy

TAWNEY'S

Tuts.·Wtd. &amp; Sot.

JEWELERS

• MAS 'fEA CHA~E
• DINERS CLUB
• c::•~TE aaNCHE

8:00-t:OO

""' .... Quoi&gt;IJ' ""

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8:00·5:00
Thurs •• : oo.noon

..ITANI' Cl

422 S.cond Av•.
G.oiUpolis Ohio

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�A.._ The Swlday Tiffies..Sentmel, Sllllday, Sept. I, 19;7

Lamb buyers honored
POMEROY - One hundred
and twenty-five people attended the Meigs C'ounty
Shepherds 4-H aub annual
banquet Saturday night at
Royal Oak Park n.creabon
center when special guests

Employes at

were bUlWS of lambs in the
Me1gs · County
Junior
livestock sale at the Me.~s
County t'air.
Offlcrrs of the ~lob
rt't'o~niz~ wert&gt; Terf'sa Carr,
Tuppers Plains. now ·a

Stauffe~

improve

reading speed, comprehension
GALLIPOLIS F'ERRY Employees at Stauffer's
Gallipolis Ferry Plant have
completed a course in speed
reading to improve their
reading skills. Each employee attended a !': hour,
afterhour class. one day a
week over an eight-week
Period. The instruction was
given by Mrs. Sharon Yates,
reading instru ctor at Rio
Grande College.
Mrs. Yates obtain ed
through the Gallia-Jackson
Vocational School (Buckeye
Hills Career Center), used
reading techniques that included speed reading, but,
survey reading , phrase
reading ,
comprehension

while increasing reading rate
by reading ideas, inquiry,
critical reading, and esthetit
reading, the latter lu expand
awareness and enjoyment of
literature.
Besides the classroom
instruction. the employees
were required to practice and
do homework at least I''
hours a day .
The employees increased
their average reading rat e by
approximately 360 words per
minute and comprehension
was improved by 20 per cent.
Also,
speed
reading
tehnicques have been found
most helpful in day-to-day
paper work and oth er
readings.

Sl'n;ttur l •akiC&gt;v ( 'c, lhn~ . :mil
.f&lt;lcksuu Prutiut·tlon ('rc&lt;ht

Mtturl·h~tad

llwnk!i wt•n• extended tu
tht• fulhmm~ f11r SI)OOSI.ll·ing
truplm:s iJild uwords for thP
Mt•lgS ('uunty Junior Pair

ut

dub sec-retary: Sonia Carr.
first runncrup . and rlub
trea surer : Rodney Tripp,
reporter:
Dan
Dailey ,
presadent ; SeoU Bcarhs, vice
presidrnt: Tammy Erwin,
Racine, princess. and Angie
Spencer, runnerup. and Mr.
and Mrs . N1ck Leonard,
advisors of the 4-H Club.
Buyer$ in troduced were ,
Wesley
Buehl,
county
engineer;
Dale
Kautz .
Chester Agrico: D.ick Gaul.
- Gaul'~ Market : Roy Holter,
Holter's Holstein Farm ; Ray
Riggs, Riggs Used Cars;
Warren Pickens, Tuppers
PlainsBranch of the Pomeroy
National Bank and Pickens,
Farms; Bob Moore. TriCounty Meats: Tom Wolfe,
Racine Home National Bank;
Fred Alvis, Green Acres
Farms; Art Hartley and Tom
Staats, City fee and Fuel, and
John Colwell.
Other buyers were Kroger
in Pomeroy, Ohio Valley
Livestock Sales, Clark Oil
Co., Dayton : Diamond Stone ;
Kyle Meat Packing ; Braggs
SaJes : Five Points Grill ;

Sheep Show: Nationwide
lnsuran(·e Co .. P. J. Pnulcy~
a~cnt; Strout Realty. Inc ..
Lois II . Pauley. manager :
and

Crarty Ladtes

H:Hl·

di&lt;'r ;t fts .
Spcrtal thanks were gh·en
Tri-County Meat•. Ri~gs
Used Cars and Chester
Agrico for donatin~ lambs
they had purchased for the
lan1b dinner: Tri:Counly
.Meats for processmg the
lam~s: Jim .Carnahan for
announcing the sheep show
and auction for the lamb
show: Horace Karr for the
use

of

the

MunidpHI
Judge RobertS. B&lt;'lZ Friday
dJSIIHS1'!Cd
ttn
aUfda\1it
31-!.&lt;.iinst Gl-urgt.• Franklin HiA
winch char~('d a~gravatf'd
tllt&gt;nacing. TI1c dismissal was
based ·on the condition that
Hix be comm1tted to a
Veterans Admini stration
husp•tal for treatment. Costs
were suspended.
One defendant in Gallipolis
Municipal C'nurt posted bond
t o appea r in Sprin~field
Muni ci pal Court He is
(;1\J.IJI'OI.IS

As&amp;1C1:1thm .

College, SheJ&gt;herd Queen and

stud(.•nt

Defendant will be treated

recreation

building: Jean Spencer, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Carr, Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Tripp, Mr.
and Mrs. Byron Miller. Mr.
and Mrs. James Bearhs and
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Leonard
for preparing the Iambs for
the dinner and all members
of the club and their families
" for a job well done!'.
Pictures and awards were
presented following the
dinner.

Hershel William Abrams, for

whom hond was set at $5.000
ror .his . ·appearance in
Springfield at 10 a.m.
Tuesday on a charge of
unauthorized use of a motor
vehicle.

Nathan Stedman pleaded
not guilty to a charge of
assault and battery. Bond
was set at $1 ,000 for his appearance at 9 a.m. Sept. 13.
Billy J . Byerly, 22, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, cha rged with
reckless operation . pleaded
not guilty ; his trial was set
for 9 a.m. Sept. 13 .
Ross C. Fulks, 40. Grove
City, charged with permitting
a minor to operate a motor
vehicle, pleaded guilty and
was fined $10 and costs.

Charles ('anter forfeited
twobondsuf$120.50each: one
was on a charge of trespass
and the other on a charge of
assault and battery.
Thrill Randolph Sr. forfeited $70.50 on a charge of
insufficient fllllds.
Larry Lane forfeited $71 .25
on a charge of disorderly
conduct .
Clarence H. Fisher Jr.,
forfeited '$74.95 bond on a
charge of drunk and disorderly.
Michael Long forfeited $32
bond on a charge of drunk
and disorderly .
James
Collison ,
24,
Gallipolis. forfeited $112 on a
charge of possession of
marijuana in a quantity or
less-than five grams, and he
forfeited $212 on a charge of
under
driving
while
suspension .
Other forfeitures, all purely
traffic charges were :
Ralph L. Stover, 38,
Galli polis, ass ured clear
distance, $32; Norman J . Hill,
20, Rt. I, Thurman, stop sign
violation, $22; Clarence R.
So uthern , 38, Rt. 4, P:;rkersburg, left of center, $32;
Jeffrey D. Simms, 18, Rio
Grande, stop sign violation,

$32 ; David A. rreeman, 23,
Cheshire, left of center, $32;
Randy A. Hunt , 21, Rt. 2,
Crown City , altered rear
POINT PLEASANT
bumper, $22.
Howa rd W. Montgomery, Games will be available for
20, Rt. 2, Crown City and persons planning to attend
Douglas E. Young, 28, the Republican family style
Cheshire, both following too get-toge ther at 2 p.m .
Saturday, Sept. 10, at the
closely, each $32.
All other charges Friday Stauffer (1ubhouse.
Tennis
players
are
were speeding. Name of the
defendant and the amount reminded to bring their own
rackets and balls. Volleyball,
forfeited :
Clifford R. Hedden, IB, softball and horsehoes will
Piketon, $27 . Keith H. also be avaialable. The event
Stewart, 18, Rt. 2, Sciotoville, will be held on the spacious
$27. Joseph Santini, 21, Rt. 1, pi cnic gro unds . Persons
Stewartsville, N. J ., $27. . attending are asked to bring
Steven P . Mullins, 18, their own lawn chairs.
Hotdogs and hamburgers
Gallipolis, $27. Lorna E.
Auger, 47, Chamblee, Ga., will be served from an out$27. Thomas M. Katus, 37, door grill at 6 p.m. Adults are
asked to bring a covered dish .
Crofton , Mass., $32.
Minimum bond of $22 was Country music, consisting of
forfeited by each of these, fiddling, will be provided in
the afternoon.
charged with speeding :
Brady J . Angel , 33, Rt. 2,
Cro wn
City.
Richard
Lavig ne, 20, Lino Lakes ,
Minn. Harold C. Oxley, 57, Rt. Stanley, 20, Pinkerington , .
4, Pomeroy. David R. Wilson, Ohio. William J. Davis, Jr. ,
30, Huntington . Gary T. 25, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. Marcus
Bryant, 31, Rt. 3, Gallipolis. T. Block, 34, Charleston .
William D. Adams, 25, Roger D. Jenkins, 28, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis. Samuel L. Ben- Wellston. Ronald L. Norris,
nett, 36, Gallipolis. Carlos N. 33, West Carrollton, Ohio.

POMEROY
LANDMARK'S
HOTPOINT
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0 2 Heat timed drying selection 0 Porcel.ain enamel drum
0 4 Venting options .

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Dryer Mode l DLB1250T

'50 DISCOUNT

20 Cu. Ft. Chest
Holds 710 lbs . Two sliding
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10 • 15 and 25 cu . ft. sizes .

25 DISCOUNT
ON ANY FREUER
5

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IN STOCK

DELUXE SELF-CLEANING
30" RANGE WITH LOADS
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SAVE $50.00

LARGEST SELECTION IN THE AREA

POMEROY
LANDMARK
DRIVE A LITTLE AND SAVE A LOT- FREE DF.UVERY
I

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WITHIN 75 MILES- YES! WE SERVICE AT YO_uR
LOCAl, HOTPOINT DEALER.
STORE HOURS: 8:30 to 5:30 -

MILL CLOSES AT 5:00 PM

DELUXE 10 CYCLE CONVERTIBLE WITH THE DISH &amp; POTWASH CYCLE TOO!
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SERVING MEIGS, GALLIA AND MASON COUNTIES.

CUSTOMER CARE

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Charlene Hoeflich

446-:2342

. 992-2156

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

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DONATION MADE- The l'l!diatric Toy Fund at the
Holzer Medical Center is completing its first full year,
with a donation from Joan and Fred Wood of the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Direcklrs, Inc., located at 810
Second Avenue in Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Wood have also
been contributors to the Television Fund in past years.
For the fifth consecutive year, the Emblem Club No. 199 of
Gallipolis has given Ia the Pediatric Television Flllld to
· provide free television to all of the children who are
patients on the Pediatric Unit during the inonth of
September. Donations kl the Toy Fund provide n~ and
replacement lays and games for the children Ia use in the
Playroom located on the fifth floor in the pediatric unit.
Also lays and games are available for children who are
confined to their beds and unable to go to the Playroom for
relaxation and entertalrunent. Presenting the check to
Earl Neff for this month's Pediatric Toy Fund was Mrs.
Wood. Anyone interested ln contributing to the Holzer
Medical Center Pediatric Toy or Television F'ul)d should
contact Earl Neff at 1113 Teodora Avenue .in Gallipolis.

REUNION ·SET
The descendants of Henry
11 Doc"
and Angeline Tope
Cre1,11eens will gather for
their annual reunion Sunday,
Sept. 11 at the Kyger Creek
Shelter House. There will be a
basket dinner at noon
followed by a time of
fellowship. All relatives and
friends of this family are
invited to attend.

SUNDAY DEADLINE
Tbe deadline for wedding
and engagement notices
and society news items for
the Sunday Tlmes.Sentinet
is 12 noon on the Thursday
preceding publlcatlon .
Information may be turned
In or mailed to the office of
the Galllpolh
Dally
Tribune or Pomeroy Daily
Sentonel. Engagement and
forms
are
wedding
available upon request.

REUNION PLANNED
POMEROY - The Moore
Family reunion will be held
Sunday, Sept. 11, at the
Sutton Church on the RacineBashan . Road . A basket
dtnner at 12:30 p.m. will be
followed by a program.
Family friends are welcome.

GALLIPOLIS
Art
classes for children, covering
three areas, will be taught at
the F rench Art Colony during
the coming moqths. They will
be in mixed media, print
making and sculpture. Mrs.
Corinne Lund will be the
instructor for all three series
of classes.
.
The mixed media art class
for children four years old
through kindergarten will
start on Wednesday, September ·7, and meet every
Wednesday for 6 weeks. The
morning session will be from
9: 15 a.m. until 10:15 a .m.,
with an afternoon session also
available from t p.m. until 2
p.m . The fee for the class is
$9.

$50

DISCOUNT

NEW MICROWAVE OVEN
WITH TIME OR TEMPERATURE COOKING!
MOdel RE9lOT

Print making for children,
age 6 and over, will begin on
Monday, October3, and meet
every Monday from 4 p.m.
lllltil ~ : 36 p.m. for 8 weeks.
The fee for the class is $16,
plus $S for materials.
Sculpture for children, age
6 and over, will also begln the
first week in October, on
Wednesday, October 5, and·
meet every Wednesday from
4 p.m. until5:30 p.m. f9r eight
weeks. The fee for this course
Is · also $16 and $5 for
materials.
Those lnterested ln having
their children re_J~ister for
these art classes at the
· French Art . Colony should
contact Mrs. Janet Byers at
446-1903. All classes will be
taught at Riverby.

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

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Exhibit for the month of September:
Gallery Hours: Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until 5
p.m.; Tuesdays and Thursdays,!Oa.m. until5p.m.
Sept. 8, 8 p.m. - Ballroom Dancing Classes begin, Gerald
Powell of Pomeroy, Instructor, Anita Tope, Dance Committee
Chairman, Riverby. .
Sept. 20, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. Interdepartmental Meeting
Riverby_
'
Sept. 25, 2 p.m.-4 p.m. - Parent Child Workshop, Class and
lnsturctor to be announced, Penny Moore, Chainnan, Riverby.
Sept. '1:1, 8 p.m. - F.A.C. Trustees Meeting, Riverby.
Oct.l4-15 -Seventh Annual Antique Seminar. Conducted by
Mrs. Orva Walker Heissenbuttel of Washington, D.C.
Reservations to be made with Mrs. Sue Beverly, phone 440-1906
or_ 446-'1819. $7.50 registration each day includ~ lunch at
R1verby . Special exhibits to include Antique Kitchen and
antique pottery, pre-1900, from Southern Ohio. Contact l'l!ggy
Evans, Chairman for October exhibit with items to loan for
display; phone 446-1819.

•
Joy " and it was placed in the eluding one -by Mrs. Ada
blue bedroom. She used a Holter titled " Something
small baby cradle as a cpn- Religious" which took the
tainer with small yellow best of show award. It was an
daisies and green holly leaves arrangement of pink and red
and received a blue ribbon.
rosebuds with one paim leaf
For the ·green bedroom, dyed brown in a tall container
ANGELAWILEY
Mrs. Susie Grueser's blue rib- with a brown Madonna all
bon arrangemen.t was titied placed on a brown mal. ·
Mrs .
Erma . Roush
"Memorium" and included
Hosting the celebration will
GALLIPOl-IS - Mr. and
an antique glass container displayed a pink rose in a Mrs. Lester Davis of 431 be their nieces and nephews.
with fern, colored marigolds, while milk glass container, Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, will
Mr. Davis and the former
goldenrod and pompon grass. receiving a blue; Mrs. Helen celebrate their golden Gladys E . Clyse were
POMEROY-Angela Wiley,
In the same bedroom; Mrs. Nea5e, a white gladioli in wedding anniversary with an married on Sept. 24, 19'1:1 in granddaughter of Mr. and
Mae Holter placed an ar- milkglass, receiving a red ; open reception at their home the parsona ge of the First Mrs . Wilbur Bailey,
rangement, " Green Envy", and Mrs. Susie Grueser an ar- on Sunday, Sept. 18, from 2 to Baptist Church of Chillicothe, Pomeroy, celebrated her
using boxwood leaves, snake rangement on "Candles ~p.m.
with the Rev . J . H. Deemer third birthday Sunday with a
GALUPOLIS- Mrs. Orva Victorian Kitchens.
plant leaves, and other Glow" using fern , greenery,
party at the home of Mr. and Walker Heissenbuttel, a
officiating.
Saturday's sessions will be
greenery. She also received a orange marigolds, and and
Both are natives of Gallia Mrs. Harold Blackston.
on
antique furniture, in·
nationally recognized antique
blue ribbon.
orange candle, awarded a red
. Angela and her parents, authority, lecturer and eluding cabinet woods,
Co
.
.
and
after
teaching
for
yellow dai sies ,
"Music, Music , Music" was ribbon. There was also an ar- lace,
David and Ruth Ann Wiley,
.
goldenrod,
and baby's breath many years in Zanesville and both former residents of the co!Qillllist from Washington, construction and restoration
the theme for an arrange- ' .rangement . of small
Lancaster, they retired from
D. .C., and a native of in the morning at. 9 o'clock,
ment in the den with Mrs . marigolds in a low green con- with a white · ribbon being the Lancaster City School area, now reside in San Fran· Gallipolis, will be conducting and at 1 o'clock, a practicum
Evelyn Hollon using a _tall tainer made by Mrs. Hilda awarded.
cisco, Calif. Wiley·, ·an
The reserve best of show System and returned to their employe with Kaiser the Seventh Annual Antique in refinishing and restoration
green coof,ainer with small Yeauger in the cla~ "Li~tle
native county.
Seminar for the French Art of furniture . Participants
yellow dahlias. She bent Bit . of Summer' wh1ch went to Mrs. Harris lor. her
Alwninum, is a member of Colony on Friday and should each bring one small
After
retirement
Mr.
Davis
honeysuckle vine to use in the recetved a red ribbon, and ~~ summe r Harvest " design, spent some time in the Kaiser's Corporate Staff at Saturday, October 14 and 15, piece for consultation.
arrangement to represertt another by Mrs. Mary Nease \\ith an honorable mention building industry and Mrs. their headquarters in at Riverby.
Reservations for the An·
music symbols. · Her ribbon using roadside materials of going to Mrs. Susie Grueser.
Oakland.
tique
Seminar may· be made
Davis
did
substitute
teaching
Chairwoman for the
Devotions· were given by
was red . Mrs. Doris Grueser goldenrod, cattails, and iron
Theme
of
the
party
was
in local public schools.
seminar, Mrs. Sue Beverly, by calling Mrs. Beverly at
displayed the kitchen ar- weeds in an old fashioned jar Mrs. Arnold who read a poem
"Winnie the Pooh" with the has announced the schedule 446-1906 or calling PJs at 446are
now
active
in
the
They
rangement in the class, " A for the fireplace, also receiv- by Helen Steiner Rice, "Look Salem Baptist Church, cake baked by Mrs. Wiley, for the two day event. Em- 1819. Cost for the Seminar if
on the Sunny Side".
Blue Kitchen Using Blue ing a red ribbon.
Teachers and party favors carrying out phasis will he on the fur- $7.50 each day, which inMr s. Arnold asked Retired
Flowers" and received a blue
Mrs. Carrie Grueser's corOrganization, Gallia County the Pooh theme. The decora- nishings of a Victorian Kit- cludes lunch served at
ribbon for it. It featured dyed fee table arrangement was a members to take a picture Council on. . Aging, and the tions included two large chen, and Stoneware 'and Riverby.
Queen Ann's lace, blue shasta mass arrangement of salvia, frame and materials to make local Hist.orical Society. ·
pinatas stuffed with candy Yelloware, pre-1900, from
October's
exhibit
at
diasies, white_ ·lilacs and -zinnias, and marigolds with dried flower plaques to the
and coins. They were pur- Southern Ohio.
Riverby
will
be
a
Victorian
Friends
and
·relatives
are
greenery.
baby's breath and was a blue next meeting. Mrs. Pat cordia ll y invited to call chased on a recent tour of
Friday morning, October Kitchen in Gallery I, and
Marcia Arnold's dinner- ribb&lt;in winner. Also on Holter was a guest. Cake, · during the open house. The Mexico made by the Wileys.
14,
froii1 9 o'clock until12:30 Stoneware arid Yellowware in
Mrs. Wiley and Angela will be a session on Gallery II. Anyone w~o has
time arrangement was also a display were two dried flower punch and mints were ser:- couple requests no gifts.
have been here visiting the Stoneware and Yellowware any items to loan for display
blue ribbon winner. Multi- pictures of butterflies and ed.
Baileys during August. One of from the Ohio Valley area. in either gallery should call
colore d zinnias, baby's plant material made by Mrs.
the highlights of their vaca- The afternoon session, Peggy Evans at 440-1819.
breath and euonymous leaves Marcia Arnold.
tion here was a trip to starting at I o'clock and Asslstlng her will be Ruth .
were used with white candles.
Mrs. Betty Milhoan made a
Jane Harris' " Summer patio arrangement of dried
Florida.
lasting until3 :30 will focus on Tap and Eva Mills.
Harvest" arrangement used materials in a large brown
on the buffet was of woven basket and it received
GALLIPOLIS - New books Perrone; Needleplay, by
vegetables and fruits · and a blue. She also received a released by the Gallia County · Erica Wilson ; The Con- ·:o:::~~w.&lt;m::·~--«-l&lt;l
" l&lt;l'"'i"0..;:;:-~~
Mrs.
Virginia Fisher white ribbon for an old District Library on Sept. I, sciousness of Joyce, by
·~ ·
displayed a lilac specimen fashioned arrangement of 2343 :
Richard Ellmann: Black
and Mrs. Ada Holter, a dahlia zinnias, canna leaves and
FICTION
Ohio and .the Color Line 1860·
.
specimen, with all three canna seeds in a stone jar. An
~TKIQ.
Whisper, Whisper , by 1915, by David Gerber ; Small
receiving
blu.e
rib- arrangement for a p1cruc Katherine Court; Look Away, Blessings, by Celestine
bons. There were several table made by Peggy Moore Beulah Land, by Lonnie Sibley ; Microwave Cooking
1
v
i
n
g also had a brown basket con- Coleman ; The Raincrow, by in 3 Speeds; Lemon-Aid, by
POMEROY
Meigs
GALUPOUS - Plans are for both organizations is Joy
room
arran~ements
intainer filled with Queen Ann's . Jane Rushing; Members of Phil Edmonston ; The Birth
rangement was " Children's
Senior Citizens Center ac- underway for a Benefit Atwood. Representatives
the Tribe, by Richard Control Book, by Howard I . tivities located at the Fashion Show and Card from the Welcome Wagon Kluger: Always is Not Shapiro, M.D.; Rainb.ook : Pomeroy Junior High School Party to be presented by the
NewComers Club and the
Forever, by Helen VanSlyke; Resources for Appropriate isopen9a.m. -4p.m. Monday Welcome Wagon-Newcomers Gallia County Cancer Unit
The Man from Lisbon, by Technology ; Queens of through Friday.
who are assisting include
Club and the Gallia County
POMEROY--Mrs. Mat·y executive vice presid~nt of and Esther Edgar of Rich- Thomas Gifford; The Devil England, by Norah Lofts;
Pam Terrizi, President of the
Monday, Sept. 5 - Holiday Unit of the American Cancer
Welcome
Wagon
Martin, a member of Meigs the national Jewish Hospital mond, Ohio, past chapeau of on Horseback , by Victoria The Hot &amp; Spicy Cookbook, by • Closed.
Society on Thursday evening,
the Departemental ·of Ohio, Holt ; Rekill, by Ian Martin ; Moira Hodgson ; The Masters
County Salon 710, Eight and in Denver.
Tuesday, Sept. 6 :.... Speaker Sept. 22, 1977 at 7:30p.m·. the Newcomers Club; Susie
The area chairpersons are and for Mrs. Audrey Glaub, Death Knell, by C. Terry of the Dry Fly, edited by J . on Arthritis 10:45 a.m. Craft the Elks Hall, 408'h Second Bailey and Lois Pl!leger,
Forty, was a_ppointed naMichael Migeul.
tional children and youth Mrs. JOhn Silvay, Connec- Ohio Chapeau by Franklin Cllne, Jr.
members; Teresa .Bihl,
Mal\ing 10 a.m. Chorus 12:15- Avenue in Gallipolis.
NON;FICTION
County
Salon
333.
The
Eight
_
ticut,
Area
Ai
Mrs.
Edward
chairperson for the 1977-78
1 p.m. Kitchen Band 1·2 p;m. Chairing the total planning Welcome Wagon Hostess for
~e&lt;Juiem, by Len O'Con·
this area, along with Cancer
year during the 56th a!lllual F. Lynch, Syracuse, N. Y., and Forty members held a
Wednesday, Sept. 7 La Marche Nationale held Area B; Mrs. James Martin, shower of checks during nor; The Oswald File, by
Unit members Kathy Bostic,
Social Security Represen·
GALLIPOLIS - Members tative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
last week at the Denver Louisville, Ky. Area C; Mrs. Chapeau Day with over $1100 Michael Eddowes; Beginning
the Special Events ChairCORPS TO MEET
George Gould, Jackson, being contributed.
. the Five-string Banjo, by of the French City Campers Games 12:30-2 p.m.
Hilton Hotel in Denver, Colo.
CHESTER- Members of man; Judy Warehime ,
.Miss Julia Mullan , Jerry Silverman; The New Club met at the Kanauga
During the past year Mrs. Mich., Area D; and Mrs. John
Crusade
CoThursday, Sept. 8 - the Riggs Royal-ettes Baton Cancer
Marlin has served as finance Klenun, Midway City, Calif. Sagamore Beach, Mass. was World of Crewel, by Lisbeth Roadside Park for the Sep- Horseshoes 12 :30-2 p.m. Sing· Corps wlll meet at the Chairman, and Charla
elected nationale chapeau
tember meeting with a a-Long, 12:15 p.m.
.. . chairperson for the organiza- Area E.
Chester Grade School at I Evans, Executive Director of
·the
convention
it
was
At_
along
with
other
and
installed
potluck ·dinner served to 12
tion on the national level.
.
Friday, Sept. 9 - Art aass p.m. Monday to march in the the local unit. _,
families and three guests, . 10-11:36 a :m. Craft Making 10 Labor Day Parade. Also
A:t the convention, Mrs. reported that 18 nurses new officers during the conFall fashions from PJ's,
Kristi and Wayne Amsbury a .m. Bowling 1-3 p.m. Square starting on Wednesday, the Carl's Shoe Store, The
Martin appointed her area :;cholarships were awarded · vention.
ln awards, Ohio took first
and Virginia Howell.
chairperson
and outlined this year. Volunteer hours in
corps Will be accepting new Bastille and Jack and Jills
Dane 8:30-11:30 p.m. ·
The meeting was held
plans for ~he all partner's respiratory disease work . place for scrapbooks. Mrs.
Senior Citizens Nutriton members for the fall classes. will be featured. The fashion
under the direction of Art Program, 11 :30 B-!Jl-·12:30 For more information, thO.e show will have family appeal.
project to be carried out. The lataled 38,437, while the Eight Charles D. Smith of Latrobe,
Wroblewski, president. p.m. Monday through Friday interested may call Judy
project will be purchase of a and Forty contributed to the Pa. opened the meeting with
Donations for admission to
·Jewish
HO!&gt;pitlil
a
of
the
of·
national
the
introduction
LKB Fraction Collector for .
Harland Sanders, the Gallia except Monday, Sept. 5 closed . Riggs, 985-3595 .
the show will be $3.50, with all
fleers and chail'lllen. Paruse at the · National Jewish total of $163,291.57. ·
County F'ield Director, gave a for Labor Day.
proceeds going to the Gallia
Chapeau Day at the Na- ticipating in the ritualistic
brief talk on what N.C.H.A.
Hospital. She described it as
Cancer
Unit.
County
Menu for Sept. 5 through
REUNION SET
a specialli:ed piece of equip- tional Jewish Hospital was opening were Mrs. Herman
stands for with demon- Sept. 9:
Following the Fashion Show,
JWTLAND - The sixth refreshments will be served,
ment which allows the study observed with the children, Reimink, l'aumonier; Mrs.
strations from a nip chart.
Monday - Closed for Labor
annual
Wood Family reunion door prizes awarded and a
A campout was held Day . .
of the imer action of protein long-term patients, entertain- · Ronald Aichholz wllo led the
will be held Sunday, Sept. II
and blood cells involved in the ing the Eight and Forty pledge; Mrs. Melvin Good,
recently at the Gallia County
Tuesday -: Baked pork at Forest Acres Park on the card party for those who wish
the
national
Anthem.
Ohio
endowed
its
members.
inunnnoloti;c disease pr~
Fairgrounds with the Hit· chop, whole kernel corn,
to stay.
• cess. Mrs. Marlin stressed 26th bed with a $1,000 con- "Flanders Field" was given
chum and Pitch urn Club from turnip greens, spice cake, New Lima Road. A picnic
Tickets will be avallable at
lunch. will be held at noon .
her objective of promoting tribution. Fifteen other bed by Mrs. Lester Mack, with
the
merchants participating
Ironton .
carmel icing, bread, butter,
more work in children and endowments of $1,000 each Mrs. Herbert Robin!!On givin
the
Fashion Show: PJ's,
milk .
peas,
mixed
fruit
cup,
mllk.
youth programs on the local were made. Members toured ing " America's Answer."
Carl's,
The
Bastille and Jack
Wednesday - Beef stew,
REUNION SET
the hospital which a research Fifteen nationale chapeaux
Friday
Baked
turkey,
and state level.
and Jills; from members of
POMEROY - The Warner carrots, celery, onions and spanish rice, cole slaw with
She will work with Mrs. -and c.a re center for passe were introctueed and
the Welcome Wagon .. /II .
potatoes,
pineapple
slice
family reunion will be held
John Hadden of Lakewood, respiratory dieseases.· Pla- there were greetings from the
greet• pepper bi!S, apricots, Newcomers Club committee
Sept. 11, at 12:~0 p.m . at the sa,lad with cherry, Ice cream, bread, butter, milk.
Colo. Uason lltflcifior the Na- ques were presented · in Hon. WiiUam H. McNickles of
and
Cancer
Society
Bedford Youth Center. All combre&amp;d, butter, milk.
Coffee,
tea,
buttermilk
and
tional Jewish Hospital, and memory of Brian Marshall; Denver, and Vinton Guy,
representatives,
or
by
calling
Thursday.:... Hamburger on
relatives a1,d friends are
of Colorado,
juice
served
daily.
with Richard M. Bluestein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
446-7.79
or
446-3943.
bun, potato salad, ~ered
MARY MARTIN
wel~me.
~
J
Marshall, Hemlud&lt;

POMEROY--Flower arrangements for the home was
the theme for a show staged
by the Wildwood Garden Club
Wednesday night at the home
of Mrs. Carrie Grueser.
Members of the club made
numerous arrangements and
placed them throughout the
Grueser home . Mrs. Bunny
Kuhl, director of Region ll ,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, judged the arrangements and awarded ril&gt;bons. Mrs. Evelyn Hollon was
chairman for the show. Mrs.
Kuhl was presented a gift.
Adorning tbe front door of
the Grueser home was a
wreath of straw wrapped
with brown gingham and
decorated witil dried yellow
straw and statis made by
M{s. Betty Milhoan. She
received · a blue ribbon . A
large Boston fern in a
macrame covered ·planter
was exhibited by Mrs. Jane
Harris who received a white
ribbon .
For her floor arrangement
of red and pink gladioli in a
tall black metal container,
Mrs. Ada Holter received a
white ribbon. An antique
rockwood -vase was used by
Mrs. Kathryn Miller for her
"Sunny Day" arrangment in
the bathroom. The arrangement featured winged' elm,
red dock, and yellow yarrow
with magnolia leaves and got
a red ribbon from the judge.
Mrs. Miller also displayed a
crown of thorn plant receiving a blue on that.
" Sununer Heat" was the
theme of an arrangement for
the red bedroom. Mrs.
• Virginia Fisher used a brown
and gold container with
bright red dahlias, dried
dook, and leaves of the
dahlia . Her ·ribbon was red.
Mrs. Diane Bartels' ar-

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Davis

Davis to celebrate

Turns three

Antique seminar set

New books released

Sr. Citizens
Ca'-- .1-r

Cancer benefit fashion
show to be joint effort

Mary Martin appointed chairperson

Campers gather

PHONE 992-2181

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

Catherine Benet

Wildwood Garden Club
show flowers for home

~-------

Children 's art classes
to be taught at Riverby

Woman 's -World

Saturday at 2

pt

IT'S TIME FOR

IH - TheSwldayTimes-Sentinel, SWlday, Sept . 4,19'17

Republicans
• 1'1ze on
· to socJa

••
••
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"

�B-3- The Sunday l'unes-Senlmel, Sunday, Sept. 4, 1977

B-2-Tbe&amp;lnday Times-Sentinei.SWlday, Sept. 4,1977

Mrs. Richard Stein

Girl Scout leaders to meet
POMEROY-A girl scout
leaders. organizational
meeting is scheduled for
Thursday at 7:30p.m. in the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
•
Mrs. Pat Thoma, service
unit director, urges all
leaders, assistants and others

interested in helping with the
fall program to attend the
meeting. Especially needed
are new leaders for troops in
the Racine and Middleport
areas. Those unable to attend
the meeting but interested in
assisting are asked to contact
Mrs. Thoma.

1888888!18!8ii8l
' ;-~ .. . ..

Sr. Citizens

'•

Calendar
The Senior Citizens Cente~
calendar of events for this
week is as follows:
Monday, Sept. 5, Closed.
Tuesday, Sept. 6, Artex
Painting Class, 1-3; Garden
Club (Bring small beads,
needles, crochet thread ,
large size paper, punch for
egg carton, necklaces), 1:152:15; Bible Study, 1:15-2:15.
Wednesday, Sept. 7,
Dabetea Education Class, I·
3;, Card Games, 1-3.
Thursday, Sept. 8, Northeastern U.S. Slides, shown

by Forrest Borden, I :30-2:30;
Potluck Supper (Program by
Kenneth Tomlinson, Game
Warden), 6;30 p.m.
Friday, Sept. 9, Art Class,
1-3; Nutrition Game, 1-3;
Cincinnati Reds Gallle (Bus
lea ves center at 3 p.m.);
Social Hour, 7 p.m.
The Senior Nutriton
Program serves the following
menu at 12 noon :
Monday- Closed.
Tuesday - Baked pork
chop, creamed com, turnip

greens with vinegar, bread,
butter, spice cak.e with
caramel icing, milk.
Wednesday - Bee£ stew,
pineapple slice salad with
.che rry garnish, potatoes,
cheese sticks, cornbread,

:;:,::~%.&lt;:"-::::X~:;.;;;.;.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·::~:·:·:·:·'

GALLIPOLIS
The
Elizabeth Chapel Church was
the setting for the July I
wedding of Miss Vicki Marie
Uoyd, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. J . Owen Uoyd and
Robert Eugene Grim, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John 0 . Grim,
all o! GaUipolis
Mrs.
Judy
Sanders
provided twenty minutes of
music prior to the ceremony
which included " Sunrise ,

GALlJPOUS - The home drfSSed like the 10"00m81nen
of Dr . and Mrs. Oscar W. in a urown cutaway coal and
Clarke was the setting for the dark striped trousers. The
marriage of their daughter, groomsmen, aU of Columbus,
Susan Frances, to Richard were Sidney Axelrod, best
Marshall Stein . son of Mr. man, and David Dachper,
and Mrs . Dick Stein of Jeff Smalley and Jeff HerBrookside Drive, Columbus man, designer of the florals.
at four in the afternoon of . The bride's mother wore a
August 21. Ferns and flowing, sleeveless gown in
marigolds formed an altar on shades of lavender and blue,
the lawn between large while a fitted aqua gown was
evergreen treees where the chosen by the mother of the
COUple inade thejr VOWS and groom:
.
were united in marriage by
An orchestral group played
the Reverends Frank and during the reception held on
Tura Hayes . The groom's the patios which were
father and Sandy Suiter decorated with dramatic
presented a prelude of vocal floral arrangements and set
and' piano music on the with tables for dining. The
terrace overlooking the river. wedding cake was served In
The bride's sister:s, Mrs. the indoor dining area.
Elizabeth Sayre of Pt.
The bride has a B.S. degree
Pleasant and Je1111y Clarke, in psychology from Denison
were her honor attendants, University at Granville and
and her bridesmaids were · Is employed as a para-Legal.
Mrs. Susan Eccard of The bridegroom received his
Hagerstown, Md. and Mrs. Juris Doctorate from Capital
Cathy Suiter Heinke. Their. Law School and is an attorney
gowns were pale yellow silk with Brakan, Barkan and
and their bouquets green Neff. The couple is honeyand white sprays of mooning in Martlnque and
stephanotis and gardenia . will reside . on Great Oak
The bride's niece, Tammy Drive in Whitehall, ColumSayre, wore a similar gown bus.
and dropped gold daisy petals
Among the many out-&lt;&gt;f·
along the 'grassy path.
town guests were three of the
The bride, wearing a bride's great aunts and a
· Grecian style gown and . a great uncle, Mrs. . Robert
wreath of baby's breath and Condrey and Mr:s. Raymond
also carrying a spray of Reese of Petersburg, Va.;
gardenias,
ivy
and Mrs. Milton Lukbard and Mr.
stephanotis was escorted to Richard Hall of Richmond,
the altar by her father. Va.; an aunt and uncle, Mr.
Jimmy Sayre, nephew of the and Mrs. Willlam P . Davis of
bride, carried the rings on a Southern Pines, N. C.; and
small silver tray and was the groom's uncle, Mr. Edward Rabin of Coral Gables,
Fla .

Daughter
.born

GALUPOUS - Mr. and
Mrs. John D. McCarty or
Gallipolis are proud to announce the birth of their first
child, Jacqueline Jill, born on
Aug. 19 at Hol2er Medical
Center . She weighed six
pounds, fourteen ounces and
was nineteen inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. J. Owen Uoyd
of Gallipolis. Paternal
grandmother is Mrs. Olga
Mae McCarty of Bidwell.

butter, ice cream, milk.
Thursday - Hamburger on
bun, potato salad, buttered
peas, butter, mixed fruit cup,
milk.
Friday - Baked turkey,
dressing, cole slaw with
green pepper bits, bread,
butter, lemon pudding, milk.
Choice of beverage served
with each meal. Services
rendered
on a
nondiscriminatory basis.

lfS THE
OFFICIAL
GRAND
OPENING

Sunset" .

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grim

•
+="~aW\:

Quote of the Week : Life only demands from you the
strength you possess. Only on leal is possible - not to have run
away. - Dag Hammarskjold.

School is starting for the kids so why not take a few courses
yourself? Senior Citizens and everyone else are reminded of
the literature for older adults being taught at Rio Grande.

Plans
completed

Mercywood, and covered many important politcal and social

September 4th
thru
September loth

FASHION
CENTER
On the Tin
Middleport

89~

Stop in .

and Rep
for the 1951
Kaiser to be
given away
September 15,

IN OUR STORE

1977.
NO

TRY OUR

$50 . $25 . $10

'

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I

GIFT CERTIFICATES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY

GILLIAN'S.
FASHIONtheCENTER
T
· On

In

•

·

MRS. JOHN (BARBARA) Weeks, Gallipolis, is a surgical
patient at Holzer Medical Center. She is the daughter of Mrs.
Frances Scholl, Pomeroy . Cards may be sent to her in care of
the hospital. May your recovery be a speedy one .

Social
Calendar

The Tribune sends special thoughts w our two employees,
Helen and Enuna Lou, who were injured in a traffic accident.
.

I

Have a safe Labor Day Weekend and relish on the thought
that on Sunday nights you don 't have to set your alarm clocks!

iI ...,..,....,,-,.,liVE RFTWI
DOI.UU
OIIIEIISOI
PB111
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..... ..,..._ ......,
_ _
! ::- ··-·&lt;• . ~~
1

-

... · - - ......... _

..... ... . ...... ........ ._.. -

..... .. _ " " ' _ ....

_-·-

noon . Afternoon services at

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In the September issue
of Cosmopolitan there's a
coupon worth $.15
towards The Perfect Perm.
Bring it to us.
As a p.'lrtiClpating Se nsor Perm
Salon we'll allow you $15 tov.-ards
a Se-nsor l'rrm:.. •
It take5 a perfe&lt;.t perm to create
a perfec t hairstyle. And becaust
Sensor Perm ltit.s u.s give you a
perfect pe·rm eve ry umc, we
mighr just be able co give your
hait the kind of styling flexibility
it might ncwr had before.
So cut ou t the coupOn and cal!
us for a Se-nsor Perm ap!X)int·
mem . Seeing 1s believing.
Sensor Pe rm , by Rcvlon Rea!i5tk .
f!. perfect p.·rm every rime,

CAROL :S CQIFFURES
nJ-5352.or 992-3829
MASON, W. VA.
-~tmlk.:l A.:iJ rH Perm

r-.-. -..-.. .
.! Nat-uttal

decor
I with cia

I

I.

STILL THE BEST
CHICKEN DINNER
OFFERED ANYWHERE.

Qd
' 1s
' Ie ~
A
17 atry
locust Str.e et ·

.....0"""""""'--··

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(

1:30 p.in. Speaker will be 0 .
G. McKinney. There will be
dedication
of ·
new
classrooms. Special singing.
Public invited.
OURS Family reunion
Sunday- at Rock Springs
Fairgrounds ; basket dinner
at I p.m.
BLACK LuNG Association
meeting · I p.m. Sunday,
Forest Acres Park shetlered
3; opened to everyone. Trip to
Washington, D.C. being
planned.
VICfOR C. Young, Jr.,
first family reunion Sunday
at 742 E. Main St., Pomeroy
with a I p.m. buffet luncheon.
Youngs also will observe
their 29th wedding an"
niversary with a party given
by their children. Relatives
and friends invited.
MONDAY'
, CHICKEN Ba rbe cue
Monday at Chester Fire•
' House. Tractor pull at 10
•a .m., dinner at 11 , parade at
, I. Games will be played in
afternoon.
• THE Southern Athletic
Boosters will meet Thursday
'at 7:30 p.m. ·at the high
'school. _
.
.
RACINE Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star,
regular
• meetil)g 7:30 p.m. Monday.
• Initiation bas been cancelled
and will be held at a special
, meeting to be announced.
TUESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,

j

'
J

lndividua lly styled
dried
or
silk
arrangements
customized to highlight
your home or office with
warmth and charm.

evening, Sept. 6, 7 p.m .

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Sunday at
Freedom Gospel Mi ssion ,
'Bald Knobs with all day
:services. Sunday School at
:9:30 a.m. Basket dinner at

r---- --- ------ ·------- ----------------- --- ---- _..

Hostess, Florence Willis; cohostess, Alma Caudill.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE
363, R. and. A. )'d. 7:30 Tuesday night at the Masonic
Temple. All master masons
·welcome.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. Guest speaker
Andy Lyles who will speak on
Issue II, trapping.
WEDNESDAY
MEIGS Band Practice at
h,igh school parking lot
Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday, 4 to 7 p.m. Ail
members urged to ~ttend .
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
CLUB, Middleport Fire Station social room, 7:30
Wednesday. ·
UN ITED METHODIST
WOMEN of the Letart Falls
Church, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Bert
Grimm. Members are to take
their thank offering containers. Mrs. Andrew Cross
wiJI present the program.
THURSDAY
SOUT HERN Athletic
Boosters ThurSday, 7:3Q p.m.
at high school.

CLASS OF 37 - The GAHS class of 1937 held a 40th
reu{lion July 9, at the GWl Club. Thirty eight . class ·
members were present along with their spouses and
guests. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brown were guests
representing llle faculty . Notes were read from Cbarolelte
(Cornwell) .Brown, Carl Askew, Virginia (Willis ) Easter,
Wilson Boyles, Gertrude (Collins) Evans, and Bill Wilson.
This class has mel regularly since the 25th reunion in 1962
when a three day schedule of events took place. Then the
class mel every five years until the 27th year and It was
decided to meet every year. Cards were signed by all and
sent to Carl Alokew, Bill Wilson and 'Faye Saunders Kruse.
Next year's date was set for July 8, 1978. Class members
attending, kneeling: Mrs. Marvin (Maridel Saunders )
Carter, Mrs. Wm. (Mildred Rice ) Scott, Mrs. Wm. (Betty
Pitchford) Hobstetter, Mrs. Bette (Leaper ) Ryal. Mrs.

Bookmobile winter schedule announced
GALLIPOLIS - School
bells will be ringing loud and
clear and the sights and
sounds of all will be experienced by all.
Fall is the time when many
things change, including the
Ga llia County District
Library Bookmobile
schedule.
Look lor the Bookmobile,
with Betty Lambert and Jim
Hall, and all the interesting
things they have to llffer.
Book-mark type schedules
can be obtained from the
Bookmobile simply for the
asking. Listed are the stops
and times for the months of
September through May .
WiNTER N0.1

Bool&lt;mobllo sct\ec:Mo
19?7;18
; IRST WEEK
MONDAY
'Srpt. 1 Je t. 3.. 17, }1 , Nov. 14 , 28 ;

M01r. 9. H . April 6.

2~

.

Cadmus

Dtc IJ , 23 ; Jan. 6 , 20 ; Fe-b . 3, 17 ,
M:n&lt;h 3. 17; April\4 , 28; May 12. 26
Cemervi!lc Ele . Sc hool
9 : 00- 2 ~ 00
Rodney II ..
. 2:20-HO
Quai l Cr. Trailer Pk..
. . 2:4H .OO
Rodne-y I
3:0H :25
Mabcline Dri~e
.. .\:45-4 · 30

May 4, IS
9 . 1~·2 : 00

2: I ').2 :30

Wurrloo
l"'onhup

00·} · 1~

)

U0·} :4)
3 : ~0-4 10
4:20 -4.40

Grern .'\urs .
MfGulrc Sub .
J\dda1de Dri~c
FRIDAY

Bookmobik stop~ are subject
tO cha11ge - due to weather

Sept. 9 , 2} : O~ t. 'T _. 21: Nov . 4, Ill :
Dec . 2, 16, W :J an . 13 . r ·, Feb . 10. 24:
Much 10 . 24 , April 7. 21 : May') , 19
)l.i oGrand~

Elc School
R111Grande Ap:u tJTntnts
Winters Stat lO ll
Lew1s Dr,..,.

GALLIA COUNTY
DISTRICT LIBRARY

9 00-2 :00
2 : 0~-2 : ~0

2 ·40-2: ~.,
~ · 00·1 :

PHONE 446·0642

1.,

WINTER NO. 2
Bookmobile Schedule

No~ .

'faJrfidd l\crr5
Ponrr8rook S1.1b .

: .i :D"j-}:20
3.2')-}-40

Pa rk Lane and
Park Lanr Trailer. Ct.

.4 · I ~·4:41

Elemem;~ry School
Chtsh tre Comm ..
George! Creek
Watts St1u ion .
Venz Road
Mary 's Markel

.

2 : 0~ · 2 : 20

2:40·2:n
3 : 00·3 : 1~

!}:20·3 :&lt;1')

. 4:00-4:30

TUESDAY

~ 1 dwdl

E\C' . &amp;hool

Eno ,

t\fric:1. Road .

.. 9:00-1:00
. . ~ : 20-l t ')O
. .. 3:00-3: 15
. . }: 2p :40

Sept. G. lO ; On 4 , I S ; NOv . \ , 1~ . 29 :
Dec. 1}, 27,J an . 10 , 24 : fe-b. 7. 21 ;

Spears.
Kanaug_a

. . . 3: '0-4 :00
. .. ."4 :20-4:40

THURSDAY
Sep t. 8. 22 : On. 6, 20 , No~ 3, 17;
De, , 1. 1,,29; Jan 12 , 26 , Feb 9 . 23 :

WEON'ESDAY
Sept, 14 1 28 ; Oct. 12, ;z6 ; Nov. 9. 23
Dec. 7. 21; Jan. 4, 18"; Feb. 1. I';
March 1. I~ ; t\p ril l2, 26; May 10. 24
. Green Ele . School
. .. 9:00·2 :00

Farvicw ... .....

SprinJ Valk y .1 ..

..

..

2 : 20 -2:~ 5

2:40-3 :00

Pk·a.sant Valley
.. . . 3 : 0~-3 : 2)
Bu la~ 1lle Mob . Park . .
3:40-4:00
PlamzSub..
4 :15-4:3) - I

THURSDAY
Sep t . I) , 29 ; Ck t . 1}, 27; Nov. 10. 24:
Dec.. 8. 22 ; Jan. ~ . 19; Feb. 2 , 16 ;
Mailh 2, \ 6; t\priii J, 27: May II , 2~
Ad da~ il! ~

Etc. School . . . 9:00·2:00
Tara Apanmems ...
. 2:15- 2:4)

FRIDAY
Sept. 16. 30; On , 14 , 28; NoY . I I , 2')

Meeting set
POMEROY - Opening
meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of America
Revolution, will be held at the
home of Mr's. James O'Brien,
Lincoln Hill, 'Fdday, Sept. 9
at 1:30 p.m.
Speaker will be the Rev.
William Middleswarth on the
topic of 'the . Constitution.
Hostesses will be Mrs .
O'Brien, Mrs. Nancy Reed,
Mrs. Larry Wtley, and Mrs.
A. R. Knight.

Open SUnday 1to 6p.m.• Stores Everywhere Open labor Day,
Monday. September Slh

NEW PNEUMONIA
ATLANTA (UP!) - A new
strain of pnewnonia resistant
to most common antibiotics,
including peniciUin, has been
identified in South Africa and
is under close watch by
health officials, the national
. Center for Disease Control
said today. The new str~ln is
caused by type of organism
responsible for most of the
bacterial pneumonia cases in
the world, the CIC said.

IN THE SILVER
BRIDGE PLAZA
4.4~1923

CLOsED LABOR DAY

Phone 992-2039
106 Butternut Ave.
992-5721
.
.
Pomeroy, o.
. We accept all major credit cards and we wire flowers everywhere.

'---

..

Third------•Gallipolis, 0 .

L

McCall'•
Sew"For Fun
. ~639 .

Save to $1.5 I 'ford!

Popular Printed Knits
100% polyester· \(,nit p ri nts ere fa vorites , for
those sea son -to-s eason dresses &amp; tops . Variety
o f colorful prints! Machine wash , dry , 60 " wide.

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100 % polyes ter crepe sti tch and premiu';' Pon te
de Rome d oub le knit solids f or pan ts , 1a cket s.
fumpers ! Mac h ine wash, dry , 58-60 " wide.

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$1!!

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100•;. co tton a nd cotton / polyes tertdenim s
for jumpers &amp; jeans , s k irl !;o &amp; vests !..h.ochine
wash , dry , 4S -48" wide .

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$ 6&amp;

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1

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fashion-Wale

Corduroy
Ribless or 7-w·Oie co tto n ·&amp; cot1on / po lyester
blend cord utoy solids for separates 1 Ma chine wash , dry , 45" wide .

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You •a•e ta $1 .01 yd.

Rollin' Along ... .

Tan Oxford w1lh Contrast
, Stitching a!'ld wavy Sole.
• Reg. $8.99 , SAVE $3.09

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$1.00 Yd.!

Just Arrived!!

Twenty Six Styles
Sizes S-M-L .."1

'

All-purpose Sport

Mrs. Millard VanMeter

MEIGS, VINTON
&amp;GALLIA CO.
f\14M&amp;-4208

Sove to $1.31 'ford!

• Men's&amp;

op

&amp;

..

'

Just in Time lor Fall Sports!
Black with White Stripes. S1zes

~

11-2 . 2 ~-6. 6)f 12 .. Reg. $6,97

$10.00 to $33.00

•

Pomeroy Flower

PROTECTION

us
you
our exciting
. of '
vanety
glass lites.

Reg. $3.49 to $3.99 yd.

I

·i

s· cot~bQi!Uf

JO·Artrl FABRICS
llas it all foi-

s:

Sepc· 13 . 21 i Oct. I I, n: Nov.
22:
Dec. 6, 20 ;Jan . 3. 17, 31 ; Fc b. 14, 28 ;
Marc h 14. 28 ; April\\ , 2~ ; May 9. 23

Kyger ..

WEDNESDAY
Sep1. 7. 21 ·, Oct . ~ - HI; Nov. 2, 16,30
Dec 14 , l8 ; Jan . I I. 25 ; Fe-b 8 , 22 ;
Much 8, 22: April ~ . 29: M:a y 3. 17
. 9:00-2 :00
Clay .
. 2: 1"1 -2. : ~0
Eureka
. 2 : }0-3 ; 1~
Crown Citr
Sh:1.ffm
} : 40-3 : ~' ···
. . . 4 : 1~ · 4 : 2)
Smi ths

FURNITURE STANLEY STEEMED

LITES

Peddler's Pantry

.. 9 :00· 2:00

TUESDAY
Ma-rch 7, 21 .: April 4, 18 ; May 2, Hi
1):00·2 :00
_'Ji n.mn Elemcnu"ry .
2m-2 :2o
Vinton Commun it y
2 : H~ 2 ~ ')0
Poncr
2 : 5~ · 3 : 15
B1dwell .
UO·l ,4l
Harrisburg
. 4:00-4 :30
Ken

2995

ICE BALL

ESTEP AT SEA
POMEROY
Navy
Aviation Boatswain's Mate '"-state
Ainnan Ronald R. Estep, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R.
Estep Sr. of · Route ·4,
Pomeroy, is curreritly on an
extended deployment in the
Mediterranean Sea. He is
serving as a crewmember
aboard the aircraft carrier
uss lndepen 1dence ,
homeported in Norfolk, Va.
His ship Is oper,ating as a unit
of the U. S. Sixth Fleet in the ·
Mediterranean.

C~e~h1te - Kygcr

Mar . 6 , 20: .\pill 3, 17; May 1, 22

9:00 -2:30

•Offor Indue[., Uvi., ...,. eM
... """ ., ,, 300 sq. ft.

7. 2 \ ;

Dec. 12 . 26 ; Jan . 9 , H : Feb . 6, 20;
Hannan Tr2Cr Ele

UVINGROOM &amp;HALL •

Follow the growing cult Of those
who decorate with light. Noth ing
holds a candle to it.

Where
else-

Dec._') , 19 ; Jan )6, 30; Feb. B. 27;
· Much 13, 27. Apr il 10, 24 ; May 1! . ·22

!

ANY

'6.50

SECOND WEEK
MONDAY
St-pt . 12. 26: Or~ . 10 , 24;

NEW HAVEN- The story
capsule will open its doors for
story hour beginning Sept. 6
rrom 10 a.m. to II a.m. lor
pre-sc hool children three
years and older at the New
Haven Ubrary.
The registration fee is $2
and co mmittee members
include Diana
Jeffers,
chairperson, Jane Bird, Joy
Russell, Branda Merritt,
cathy ·Rickard, and alternate
· Lois Robinson.
At the first session, children
·u
be presented with their
WI
•
·
own llbrary colormg book.

BRIGHT IDEAS

1977-78

· " Women's Sizes

Now featuring the
largest selection of
Dried-Silk and Feather
Flowers in the area.

will begin

Special
singing
and
preaching, all invited.
RICHARD family reunion at
Tyn Rhos, basket dinner at
noon.
McCALL reunion will be held
at Centenary Church ya rd ;
basket dinner at 12 :30 .
Everyone welcome .
HENRY AND Angeline
Cremeens reunton at -Kyger
Creek Sheller House. Basket
d1nner at noon.
MONDAY
A M E R 1 C A N Le g 10 n
Lafayette Post 27 . Duck
dinner at 6:30, regular
meeting 7:30. All members
invited.
OHIO Association of Public
School Employees Chapter
682 will meet at 7 p.m. at the
Holiday Inn in Gailipolis.
WEDNESDAY
THE CENTENARY United
Methodist Women will meet
at 7:30 at the home of Mrs.
Lakin on Route 35. Bring food
pantry items .

Robert (AlUla belle Bradbury ) Ball, Mrs. Mary Agnes
(Smith) Hush, Charles Brown, Mrs . Ruth (Venz )
Richards, Edna (Ward ) Vanco, Edith (Nuckles)'
Pridemore, Virginia (Fulton ) Sherlock, Jewel (Waters)
Evans, Martha Ann (McCormick) Haskins, Louise
(Gardner ) Sando, Wayne Trout. Standing: Max Rinehart,
Beman Fish, Mae Belle (Massie ) Pope, Nancy (Bean)
Reed, Thelma (Davis) Harrington, Bob Evans, Loella
(Belz ) Abblett, Ida (Fontana ) Cooney, Archie Priestly,
Justine (Jones ) Buller, Eleanor (Marsh) Scarberry,
Adelaide (J ohnson ) Waldenmair, Eleanor (N iday )
Barclay, Wayne Darnell, Max Elliott, Judy (Haskins )
Pollock, John Nibert, Stanford Cremeens, Blanchard
Hardgrow, Howard Sheets, Alfred Vance, George Boster.
Not pictured Frank .Valentine :

5.90
,.

J Events
a .m., basket dinner at noon.

I·

"Just.Arrived- Our

Story hour

SUNDAY
HOMECOMING at Prospect
Baptist C.'hurch, services aliO

' • '1"

Fall Shipment''
WIN .

CONGRATULATIONS TO Mr. and Mrs. Elber (Frances)
Johnson , Rt. 2, Pomeroy, who celebrated their 4oth wedding
anniversary on Aug. 31. Belated best wishes .

--~

ON EVERYTHING

TO

JOSEPH JOHNSON, A MEMPHIAN'who can be found at
many horse evants in Germantown, has chosen an East
Memphis location for his first Karnie's :&gt;-Way Chili
Restaurant.
Joseph is the son of the late Speed Johnson who was a
football coach at Pomeroy High School. His mother is Olga
Mathews of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and Rose Sisson, Pomeroy,
is his aunt.
Karole's 5-way Chili, the original feature of the first chili
parlor in Cincinnati in 1949, will be the specialty of the menu .
The chili is made of 100 per cent ground chuck, seasoned
with secret spices, and served five ways in any combination of
chili, spaghetti, kidney beans, shredded cheddar cheese and
copped onions .
Sounds delicious , and we hope he ~oes well in his endeavor .

7: 45 Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
ENGLISH CLUB, Tuesday

SCHOOL OPEN
GAWPOIJS - The Obi~
Valley Christian Scbo9l will
Book-of-the-week: Among Those Present by NBC reporter
open its door:s for the first
Nancy
Dickerson. It's one of those juicy inside Washington
time on September 6. Classes
begin at 8:45a.m. and end at books written by the women who dated JFK and Scoop
3:35p.m. Lunch will be from Jackson, purchued Jacciuellne Bouvier's cliildiiood· Jiome,
12:35 p.m. to 1:15 p.m.

SALE PRICES

COME IN a. REGISTER
PURCHASE NE CES.SARY.

BE~TED BEST WISHES to Ben Quisenberry, Syracuse,
who recently .observed his 90th birthday ,
·
·
Ben is very active, runs a businesS and drives his own car.
Almost every day you can see him helping others by taking
·them wherever they wish to go.
We wish you the very best.

BIRTHDAY WISHES go to Charles Cornell up Racioe way
who was 78 Friday. May you have many more.

Rio Grande is el!1barking on a new experience with a large
inflUJ: of foreign students. If you are interested in your family
hosting ooe &lt;1 the students call Rio Grande. Holiday and midterm lreaks can be vel')' lonely ~ remember to care.

TO BE CLOSED
The Gallia.Jackson-Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center will be closed Mon·
day, Sept. 5 in observance of
Labor Day. Services will
reswne on Tuesday, Sept. 6.

By Katie Crow

POMEROY - Joe Rosenbawn, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Rosenbaum, Danville, Calif., formerly &lt;~f Pomeroy,
graduated Wednesday in Accounting from Ohio State
University. Attending the graduation were his lather; his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs . Orin Smith, Middleport, and Mrs .
Louise Roonebawn, Pomeroy .
Joe returned home with his father for two weeks when he
will have dental surgery, !hen come to Columbus. where he will
enter law school Sept. 19, at O.S.U.
Congratulations and best of luck.

events.

t ~e.''" e, '"'-o(.J:~.~.w:~

THIS WEEK'S

~

table was covered with a
white tablecloth and centered
with the wedding cake baked
by Mrs. Denver Walker. The
three-tiered cake trimmed .
with daisies was decorated
with white doves and wedding
rings and was topped with
ki ssing angels. Daisies
surrounded the boi:\Om tier of
the cake and yellow candles
stood on each side of the cake.
For their honeymoon, Mr.
and Mrs. Grim went to Burr
Oak Slate Lodge. They are
now residing on Bob McCormick Road in Gallipolis.

Katie's Korner

RODNEY - Plans have
been completed for the
marriage of Miss Robin Lynn
DeLille, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Maurice Raymond
DeLille of Rodney to Steven
John Barhorst, son of Mr. and
Mrs .
Norbert
J oseph
Barhorst, of Dayton.
A candlelight wedding will
take place Saturday, Sept. 10
at the Rodney United
Methodist Church, Rodney,
with the Rev. Damon
Siapleton officiating . The 3
p.m. ceremony will be
preceded by a half hour of
music to begin at 2:30 p.m.
A reception will follow in
the church fellowship room.
The gracious custom of open
church wiU be observed.

j "'-~ ().. t\~e •• .

French Fries

GRAND OPENING

Heart," all selected by .the
bride.
· Given in marriage by her
father the bride wore a
square-necked while floor·
length dress with long puffed
sleeves. She also wore a white
picture hat and carried a
bridal bouquet consisting of
white
daisies,
yellow
sweetheart roses accented
with baby's breath and white
streamers.
Serving the bride as
matron of honor was Mrs.
Joey Wills, sister of the
groom. She wore a yellow
floor-length v-necked
sleeveless dress with a yellow
picture hat to match. She
carried one white rose with a
yellow ribbon.
The groom wore a dusty
rose-colored
pin-striped
suit with a white rose
boutonniere. He chose his
brother-in-law, Joey Wills, to
serve him as his best man. He
wore a gray suit and he also
had a white rose bouttoniere.
A reception followed the
ceremony at the home of the
bride's parents. The bridal·

POMEROY --.O lga J;t .
Mathews, formerly of
Pomer()y, and Esdale L.
(Pat) Gaudin, both of Ft.
Lauderdale, Fla., will be
united in marriage sometime
... to say good-bye to summer. The leaves bave already
before Sept. 7.'1'11ey will leave startad to fall ... can autumn be far behind?
on an Hawaiian trip and
return Oct. L
With the coming of fall we move into a new social season.
A private ceremooy is plan- Just from glancing at a few of the upcoming events the new
ned with only two attendants Se&amp;liOil shows promise of being great. The Cancer Society and
present. They will teside at Welcome Wagon Club will be sponsoring a Fashion Show later
Apt. 809, Ft. Lauder~e. The on this month. The Gallia Dramatic Arts Society will be
bride-elett is a sister to Mrs. presenting plays as will the Rio Grande College-Community
Leland (Rose) Sisson, College Theater Department. AI. an alumni from Rio's theater
Pomeroy.
department, I can well understand the work that goes into a
production. Support the arts, be it Riverby, a theater group or
whatever; your own e:listance will be enriched by doing so.

GllJJAN'S

9:30·5:30

Lord's

story" and HOne Hand, One

OF

OUR LAST BIG DAY
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 6th

"The

Prayer". " Theme from Love

Plans to wed

CLUB TO MEET
Senior Citizens Garden
Club will meet Sept. 6 from
1:30 to 3 p.m. to plan for
making articles to be said at
Bob Evans Fann Festival.
'n!e club will meet at the
S~nior.
Citizens Center·,
Jackson Pike.

I

Miss Lloyd weds

Miss Clarke weds
in out door setting

~fC()~i-ng ·::IJ

: 4.88
•

', Cuga Athletic Socks, 880

•
•
''

Beautiful Assortment
.

Get to know us; JOU'IIIIke.us. "
Open

303 Upper River Road
: Across From SiiW'er Bridge Pla11

:

•

I

•'

••

You'll kee11 warm
' n' cozy when you cuddle UJI in thest'
great baaulatol'l!
. next ~~eason !

.

Mon.-511.

9a.in.tl19p,m.

suri. t til6

Priees Good lhru TuesdaY• Ma51erCharat. VIse o~ Ask About Our Lly1w1y P11r1

•

.-

..

Krlnkle Bottoms

50 % polye ster/ 50 % capon solid s. Mr;J ·
c"hine. wash , dry , 44-45" wide . ..g. $2. 99 yd .

~
~

Decorator Fabrics

~

Entire Stock Sclssor.s

(JO[J

.

SaV'e 20% on, our en tire se lection of
d rapery &amp; upholstery fabri cs.

We 've cu t prices so you con save 1 Select ion includes Acme , Fiskors :!l and W iss®.

Polyester Thread
Tremendous

selection

of

%

20 OFF

ENTIRE $TOCK

20~FF

ENTIRE STOCK

polyester

thread . A ssorted colo rs , plu s block and

'-,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;,_~~{:;;-,

10 til 9 Monday thru Saturda y- 1 ti I 6 .
Headquarters for Draperies, Slip Covers and Upholstenn~

Is

.

Silver Bridge Shopping Plala-Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohio_
Putnom vmage Z•ne Piau
258 Grond Central Mall
11161h Ave.
Shopping Center Chilli~othe. Ohio Parkersburg, W.Va. ~untington. W. Va .
Hurricane, W.Va.
lSI
IIIIAIUICMl

NBRia

�B-4-TbeSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,Sept. 4,

tm

Mrs .

Bryant
Myers,
We~terville, Mrs. Joseph N.
Love. Ne .. ark : Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Rine, Searcy, Ark.;
Dianna Damron. Searcy,
Ark.; Mr. and Mrs. H. C.
Fraley, Texas; Mr. and Mrs.
John Cronin and Becky,
Pittsburgh, Pa .: Mr. and
Mrs. Leon R. Pauley, Lees·
burg, Fla.; Larry Carter,
Memphis, Tenn., and Mrs.
Frank Ellis. grandmother or
the groom, Little Rock Ark.

Couple united in evening ceremony

POW EL·L'S

and Mrs. Bob Woodroof and
Out of town guests included
Mr . and Mrs. David Tipps,
Mr. and Mrs. George Dober.
Vienna , W. Va . Soloists were
Mr. and Mrs. ~"loyd Rine,
Robert Cronin. father of the
Penny and Tim: Clyde
groom, smging " I Come to
Brothers, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Offer My Lcve to You", Greg
RoLcrt Riley, Mr. and Mrs.
Pauley, brother of the bride.
Louie Earlewine, Mr: and
singing " Sunrise, Sunset"
Mrs. Bill Beckett and Gary;
and Beverly Mayhall singing
Mr . and Mrs. Joseph
·•No Other Love,' ' the
Synowiec, Mr. and Mrs.
professional for the birde.
r Harold Yensen, Mrs. Keith
The processional for the
Herioniums, Sr. and Keith
bride's attendants, "Love
Herionirnus, Jr., all of '
Divine" and the recessional
Wheeling.
REAPPOINTED
for the wedding party
Parkersburg area guests
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
" Praise the Lotd" were
included Mr. and Mrs. David Duncan M. Baxter, Ports·
recordings of the · Harding
Tipps, Mr. and Mrs. Daryl mouth. has been reappointed
College A'Cappella O!orus of
· Mount, Mr. and Mrs. Bob to the Rehabilitation Services
which both the bride and
Woodroof.
Miss
Sally Commission for a seven~year
groom had been members.
Ingram, Mrs. Doris Mundy term starting Sept. 8. Baxter,
Given in marriage by her·
and Becky. Jon Galloway, a retired vice president and
father, the bride wore a gown
Mr. and Mrs, Keith Stotts, general manager of the
fashioned of candlelight.
Clint and Shane, Mrs. Donald Portsmouth Division of the
polyester organza. Sequin
Hellein and Kim, Angela Detroit Steel Corp. is already
studded, chantilly lace for·
De Leach, Mr. and Mrs. Kim serving an unexpired tenn on
med the high neckline, long
Law, Mrs. Pam Williams, the commission. He was
fitt!lll sleeves, and enhanced
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce May hall reappointed Friday by Gov.
the empire bodice. The skirt
and Marcus, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Rhodes.
featured a lace edged, rutned
Lester Gardner and MisS
overlay, and deep hem
Floris Whittington; Mr. and
flolUICe sweeping into an
Mrs. Glenn McClure, Tressie
;·
Mrs.
Patrick
Cronin
attached chapel train. Back
Price and Juanita Young,
INCREASE GRANTED
interest was provided with ' a
Madison, W. Va .; Ruth
COLUMBUS
(UP!) - The
deep flounce sweeping to a
Pauley, Charleston; Mr. and
Ohio and Debbie Mundy of centered with a chocolate Mrs.
satin bow at the waist.
Pauley, ·Ohio Insurance Department
Wilmer
has approved an average
cake,
with
chocolate
icing
The bride's veil of can· Parkersburg, W. Va. They
Fayetteville, W.Va.; Mr. and
and
chocolate
roses
fanned
d!eiight silk illusion fell from wore dresses idential to the
Mrs. C. L. Jarrell, St . Albans, premium increase of 29.1 per
into
a
bouquet
toping
the
the mantilla cap of re· matron of honor's with sky
Mr. and Mrs. Ronde! Givens cent for certain nongrotip
cake.
It
was
flanked
with
the
embroidered chantilly lace blue underskirts of polyester
and Stephanie, Pt. Pleasant; Blue Cross subscribers with
coffee
service.
Attending
the
accented by crystal sequins. c repe and carried vestal
Mrs. Linda Ja rrell and Hospital Care Corp., YoungsThe cathedral length tier, and lamps encircled with rainbow groom's table were Mrs. Paul Dedra, Hurricane, and Mrs. town division. Contracts to be
two fingertip tiers were asters, tied with orchid Gardner and Mrs. Dennis Jean Workman, Montcoal, W. affected are conversion,
Cox, sisters of the groom.
banded · in scalloped re· ribbon.
Va.; Mrs. Margaret Fetsko direct pay , student and
The bride's table had a and Michele, Rockville, Md.; complementary.
embroidered chantilly lace
The flower girls, Stephanie
back
drop of white lattice Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Cutts,
which matched the cap.
Workman, cousin of the
trellis
decorated ·with bridal Jr .. Vickie, Chris and Dan,
Her bouquet was a large bride, Montcoal, W. Va ., and
wreath,
bells and love birds. TabernacJe, N. J.; Mr. and
white catteleya orchid with a Angela Goff, niece of the
The
bride's
mother wore a Mrs. Bob Mount. Dennis
yellow throat surrounded by bride, of Flint, Mich., wore
Fr.fl"' 21 years I have fitted
length
green dress Mount and Miss Colleen
floor
white roses and ivory ribbon gowns identical to that of the
hearing
aids
always
with a cascade of white matron of honor carried topped with a matching Shaffer, Lynchburg, 0.: Mr.
combining quality product
rosebuds, baby's breath, and white rose petals in miniature accordion pleated capelet. and Mrs. Jack Shepherd,
and professiona I service
greenery.
Her only jewelry open lace baskets decorated Her corsage was of green Piketon, Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd
with reasonable cost. While
Sunday, Sept. 4.
cimbidium orchids with Whittington, Canton; Mr. and
pearl
earrings with asters.
were
we will continue to serve
Afternoon
&amp; evening.
those who cannot come to
borrowed from her mother,
The groom wore can- yellow ribbon . The groom's Mrs.
Lloyd
Morrison ,
live music.
our oHice we will now
and for something old she dlelight tuxedo, the grooms· mother wore a floor length Macedonia, Mrs. Pauline
reward those who can by
carried a lace edged han· men and father of the bride light blue gown topped with a Smith and Forrest Jordan,
fixing the pri~e at $275.00
dkerchief that belonged to wore light blue tuxedos. The scalloped edged long sleeve Elm Grove; Mrs . Roger
for the best known custom
her
maternal
great· best man was Kevin Haugh of . short jacket, Her corsage was Cooper, Aaron and Roger, Jr.
made and individual fitted
grandmother. . .
Mannington,
W.
Va.; yellow cimbidium orchids of Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
heari'nQ · aids .
Prior
The bride's sister, Mrs. groomsmen who also served tilid with blue ribbons . Mike Rouhana, and Mr. and
Rt. 7
Pomeroy
medical and a!)diological
Cecelia
Goff, Flint, Mich., as ushers were Dennis Rine, Registering guests was the
exa mination encouraged .
served as matron of honor. Searcy, Ark.; Daryl Mount, bride's sister-in-law, Mrs.
If you have a question or
wish an appointment call
She was attired in a long . Parkersburg, W. Va.; Jim Kathy Pauley, Zanesvilie.
me at 592-6238.
For their wedding trip to
gown of floral printed chiffon White , Fayetteville •. Ark.,
Black
Water Falls, W. Va .,
in pastel shades of blue and and Carl Powell, Florence,
the
bride
wore a white eyelet
'300.00
green. The flared skirt was Ala.
dress
with
tan accessories.
During the ceremony,
accented by an underskirt of
less '25.00
She
wore
an
orchid corsage
mint green polyester crepe. A Dennis Cox, Vienna, W. Va.,
Cash Discount deeply flunced capelet collar read a passage from "The from !her bridal bouquet.
The groom is a graduate of
enhanced the fitted bodice. Prophet", by Kahlil Gibran.
Harding
College,. Searcy,
Wide ties which cross-sashed The prayer at the concl11sion
Ark.
He
is employed by
the waist and forced soft of the ceremony was led by
Wheeling
Rubber
Produce,
bows at the back, completed · Paul Gardner, Vienna, Va.
Ttle
bride
also
att.encted
Inc.
her ensemble. .She carried a Both are brQthers·in·law of
Harding
College
and
will
basket of purple carnations, the groom.
asters, heather, candlelight
The vows written by the finish her education ,ai West
carna!ions and
baby's bridal couple were repeated Liberty State College.
They now reside in
breath.
during the ceremony.
Wheeling
, W. Va. at 20
Attending as bridesmaids
A reception was .held in the
Beehaven
Drive.
were Misses Amy Carter and fellowship room of the
Pre-nuptial
showers were
Debbie Barron of Gallipolis ; church. The cake featured a
given
by
Kim
Morrison and
Kim Morrison of Macedonia, fountain topped with the
in Searcy,
Carol
Loughmiller
bridal tier decorated with a
Ark; Patty Rine at Wheeling,
nosega y of white roses,
lavender asters and baby's W. Va.; Debbie. Barron and
breath. It was surrounded by Amy Carter at the Carter
circular cakes with two side home in Gallipolis; a tea was
cakes topped . with smaller given by Mrs. Bruce Mayhall
identical nosegays. All cakes at her home in Vienna, W.
Sitw (l· "" ·n - llnu l a tt~rer ~ ~u119e~t~!l
l&lt;sr l'' 'coo e o err .~"'9 lrenJhl a~oler wreu
Va .; and a bridal shower by
were
decorated
with
une &amp;l a lt;landl!;o;&lt;llr~ · e~ f&gt;orce~ub1ecr
ru th;tnge wr (hntr l
ladies of the Chapel HiU
lavendar and green. The
1
O!urch of Christ with Effie ·
bride S cake was on .a round
Trotter, Lcuise Kuhn and
table
flanked
on
either
side
Wishes to Announce the Relocation
Pauline Bush serving as
by tables for mints, nuts, a
Pomeroy, o.
large floral arrangement of hostesses . Dedra Jarrel ,
748 E. Ma in St.
of His OHice
cousin
of
the
bride,
the wedding flowers in a two
992-2184
Hurricane,
W.
Va.,
tiered crystal and silver
distributed rice bags.
bowl, and the silver punch
bowl. Presiding at the tables
GALLIPOLIS
The
O!apel HiU Church of Christ
was the setting for the can·
dlelight wedding ceremony or
Rebecca Jane Pauley and
Patrick Ellis Cronin, Friday
evening August 12, Rebecca
is the daughter of Mr. and .
Mrs. Ley W. Pauley, 75
Greenwood Drive, Williamstown, W. Va ., formerly
residing at 130 Bastiani
Drive, Gallipolis and Patrick
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Cronin of Wheeling,
W. Va. They were united in
marTiage by R. Michael Goff,
Flint, Mi., brother·in·law of
the bride.
The church was decorated
with a 15 branch arch can·
dlelabra, two spiral candelabras and two · large
cherubs each holding an
arrangement of
white
gladiolas, rainl\ow asters and
champagne carnations ac·
cented with baby's breath
and purple statice. Pews.
were decorated with single
candelabras decorated with
ivy and ivory ribbon .
Musical selections were
provided by vocalists LatTy
Carter, Memphis , Tenn., Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Mayall, Mr.

•

I

M-TheSWvlay T!Jnes.Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 4, .1977

STORE HOURS:

I

Store Hours
8 A.M.-1 0 P. M.
Mon.-Sat.
·10 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday

9 T\l 7 DA\l'f
ClOSED

I,

·PRICES EFFECTIVE
298 SECOND ST.
THRU
~ POMEROY. OHIO SEPTEMBER 10, 1977

SUND~'f

"BONELESS"

ROUND STEAK

24

PHONE (304) 428.0000

12

Summer~

,

Then on Tuesday ·. come
down to Kingsbury
Home Sales and look at
our display. of hous.es.
You are sure to find
one that suits your
needs . These homes are
better than ever and
deserve your ir1spection.
Whether you are buying
or browsing, you are
always welcome at
Kingsbury Home Sales.

3 LB.

32

5LB.
4 OL

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 10, 1977

400Z.

W/C
JONESBOYS

,,

I

2/$1

l

2

l Roof D
I

0

WiC

•

CITY

17 oz.

STOKELY

$

I

.00

FRESHLIKE

VEG-ALL
4

16 OL

$ 00

HOMOGENIZID

CABBAGE.
,

TOMATO JUICE-__ .. ___ 2 46 oz.' 1

MYSTERY
SPECIAL

I

17 OZ. CANS

YELLOW

LOOK FUR UUR

ZIP

SILVER BAR

·FRESH, CRISP

CANS

W/C

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

I

$ 19

KIDNEY BEANS.... _,_, ......4 ~:~ oz.

I

7'1• OZ. PKGS

5

GALLONS

CORN
.

1
I
I

'NAME

3 1-1.8. PKGS.

STOKELY

•

STOKELY

(Please Check)

·MARGARINE·

Mill(

I

I
I
ADDRE~S
II
I
L~~~-----~-----------1
Sidewall

49

HALF

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good. Only At Povvell's

r----------~----~---1
MAIL THIS COUPON
I
Hackett Granulated Roofing
1

GUARANTEE
ON BOlH
MATERIAlS AND
lABOR.

$299

SCOT LAD

VRAMIII D

DOG FOOD

Kingsbuey Home Sales, Inc.
"For the Finest In Manufactured Housing"
1100 E. Main St.
'92-7034
Pr&gt;meroy, Olio

MILK

SUNSHINE

25 LB.

·5

PEAS

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
Sept. 10, 1977

I
I
1

DINNERS

$}99

PORK &amp; BEANS

Middleoort, 1).
Please send me furttler inforrrlation on .
Granulated Roofing . II is understood I am
l.flder no obligation whatsoever.

PKG.

20-LB. BAG

oz.

$

SHOW BOAT

9~ 7th Ave.

WIENERS

FOR DISHES

TIDE DETERGENT

- Insulates against cold
or heat.
-Will not cliip, crack or
peel.
- No need to tear off
your roof to .repair any
slate, metal; shingle or
built"UP roof. Make it
leakproof with beautiful
Granules. ·
- Choose yours in any
color of your choice.
- Add years of life to
your present home or
building.

I

oz.

GENTLE FELS DOG FOOD

APPLES ... !.A.~.

GIVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW"
LOOK AND PROTECTION
TO YOUR OlD ROOF

'FREE
ESTIMATES

20-COUNT

'

·soLo

were Miss Dianni Davis,

Enia1 The IS Holiday of the

'

10' OFF lABEL

oz.

.09

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

TO 4542 EMERSON ·AVENUE

HOURS BY APPOINTMENT ·

TREET.

KRAFT

nuro~;e

Gallipolis; Miss Angela
DeLcach, Park~rsburg, and
Kim
Hellein,
Belpre.
Assisting were Mrs. John
·Haffelt, Mrs. William B.
Kughn, and Mrs . John
Trotter. Others assisting az
the reception were Mrs.
Kenneth Patrick, Mrs.
Charles Patrick, Mrs. Junior
Lear, and Mrs. Fred McNeal.
The groom's table was

•

FRENCH .CITY BRAND

ARMOUR'S

BEEF STEW

RED
,... or GOLD.
DELICIOUS

LB.

LIVER
ARMOUR'S

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINI.A

99~LB.

TENDER LEAN

PORK LOIN

TALL TIMBER
NITE CLUB

RT. 2 NORTH .

•

RUMP ROAST
HEEl ROUND
BE ROASl

CORN ROAST

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST

ROUND STEAK
LB.

FREE

•

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

•

1

OO

OO

ONIONS
3 LBS.

3
·l

'
LB.
SWEET, JUICY

NECTARINES

•'
J

.,

3 LBS.

�'
~The SWlday Tun...S..ntuwl, Swula) . Sept

' , 1977

l'ows spoken by Drs.Mize and Waikerschool's Picnic held at Mason
Gi\l .t.IPOLIS
marna~~' . vow s

of

The
Dr

Suwma· -..:1ze and Dr. Mark

.

..

' .\

•'
Mn. Mark Walker

O' DONNELL ILL
BOSTON !UP() - Kenneth
O'Donnell, 53, an advisor to
late President John F .
Kennedy, is in critical condition at Beth Israel Hospital.

br"tht·r·, ix'Sl l ililn . Stcv~n
Wa1kt•r .•.!'l~• , st ood wtth hts
Uroth('r

&lt;.~nd

Nf'rVC'd as uslwr.
M h· 1 t'· 11
b th ·

('ullt•ge uf Ohw .

Out --1afrluwn gUl'.')b~ ~.l'll'
Mr ;-enrl \1rs .1&lt;1111'•" 1·~. K:trT.

·
·
W• lk ,., ~·r~ ""emmzl'd
I
m
St. Peters Episcopal ('hurch
on August 20 at 3:30 p.m .

Ia~.

a :s. I'O er-m• f 1h• bwlc~room.
asSisted ~1th sea ling the

t'l k
, h
' ar st. ~n . 11 '"
lllilt&lt;'rhol
gran&lt;lp.rrnts
of
tit••
tmd"'(roo1~1 ; Mrs . 1 ('

Pastor James

guests.

Walker .

Frazier of

IC ...

.

~r:,

o·pen

drive carefully @;

Columbus, &lt;;a ..

Grace United Methodist
C'hurch offi ciated.
.
Dr. Nize is the dau~hter of
Mrs . Marilyn Mize of Nashville, Tenn. Dr. Walker is the
son of Dr. and Mrs. I. C.
Walker of Gallipolis.
Mrs. Merlyn Ross played
selections on the organ and
acco mpanied the soloist
Mrs . Michael Calles, sister of
the bridegroom.
The bride was given in
marriage by her brother,
Mitchell Mize. The bride's
gown was candlelight chiffon
with a lace-trinuned tiered
rt oo r length skirt. The
matching altar length veil
was attached to a lace crown .
Mrs. Fred Wrightam, si;ter
of the bride served as
matron of hono~. Miss Karen
Mize also a sister of the bride,
was the maid of honor . Their
dresses were peach colored,
they wore matching hats and
each carried a basket of

Mrs. Marilyn Mize chose a p;.otcrnal ~randmother of the
floor length blue dress for her bridegroom ; Mr s. Lola
daughter's wedding. Mrs . Christianson, Topeka, Kan.,
Walker wore a long , pale paternal grandmother of the
~reenshirtwaist dress.
bride; Mrs. Det' W1cks. Mr .
A buffet reception was held M1l!'h cll Mi t e ~nd Miss
at the home of Dr . and Mrs. Karen ~hze. all of Las Ve~as,
Wa lk er 1m mediate I y Ne' ad a; Mr. and Mrs .
foll owing
th e
church W1lllam M. J ohn son, Miss
ceremony.
Donna Johnson. Miss Susan
The bride's book was kept Johnson of AUanta , Ga.; Mr.
by Miss Mary Ellen Powell and Mrs. John Po"cll, Jr.
and Miss Camilla Walke r , and Mary .'Elloo Johnson of
22 MORE BODIES·
musins of the bridegroom . C'olumbus, Georgia ; Mr .
WASHINGTON (OPI)
The wedding cake was served John Powell !II. Charlott e, N. The Vietnamese will hand
by Miss Donna Jackson and C.; Mrs. John Mize, Miss over the bodies of another 22
Miss Susan Johnson, cousins Betsy Baehr. Dayton: Mr. Americans to a delegation of
of the bridegroom.
PaulArendacs. Wayne, N. J .; State and Defense DepartThe couple was entertained Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wooten, ment officials in Hanoi Sept.
at dinner by Dr. and Mrs. Mr. James G. Nibert, Mr. and :JO, the State Department
Kei th Brandeberry . Mrs. Mrs. Wayne Clark, Colum- announced Friday. DepartJohn Brown , Mrs. Donald bus;· Sara h Carsey, Mason , ment spo kesman Rodding
Lintala and Mrs. Charles W. Va.; Mrs. W. F. Walker. Carter said name$ could not
Holzer were hostesses at a Mr. Robert Walk er, Miss be released now, but that the
shower honoring the bride. Camilla Walker , Evansville, 22 bodies were those which
rollowing a trip to Colonial Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Vietnamese o!licials had
Williamsburg in Virginia, the Kern , Mrs. Leslie Patterson, promised to deliver during
couple will return to Toledo Mrs. Belly Srafe, Mr. Paul talks with U. S. officials last

mixed surruner flowerS .

where they are residents in

Carrier. Cincinnati; Mr. and

Internal Medicine at Medical

Mrs.
F red
Gerard, Ill.

Paul Walker served as his

POMEROY-Miss Rebecca
Elizabeth Roush and Lanny
David Tyree exchanged wed-

home of the bride's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. 'Albert Rou.sh,
C. K. Snowden
Bailey Run Road.
Mr. Tyree is the son of
24 State St.
Cha
rles Tyree of Chillicothe
Phone 446·4290
and Mrs. Josephine Tyree of
Pomeroy.
Mr. Dear! Porter officiated
at the double ring wedding at
.
.
3:30 perfonned before tall
L ikeagood00gllbor, standa rdso(yellow, blueand
8tateFanntSthere. pink
~
ca rna t i on
ar·
.
Stale fatm l1 fe lnslHan;;e CamP!Il\- range. mei)tS.
I NI ~ OUH~
tiQtrll! .QHICP' Blnc"r"Jr.r) I,O&lt; o IIIMo&lt;

"UFE insurance, too!
Call me for details!'

"A'"

ItS atime to remember.

And the easiest Way to save and preserve.the beautiful
memories of your happiest day is with professional
portraits.
We are experts at bridal pnotogr~phy . So you can
trust us to capture the true beauty of yotir wedding.
Remember your wedding for years to come-with
portraits.
Call today for an appointment. or stop by the studio
and view our bridal portrait samples and wedding
albums.
·

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
Spring Valley Plaza-Gallipolis
446,7494
Closed Mondays

A t · 0 f th
our
e groun . a
h?~se was enjoyed by the
vtstlors and the ne':" ttemsthat
have .been added smce the l~st
meetmg were viewed.
After the tour and singing of
grace, led by son_g l~ader Mrs.
~ucy Jo~son, a most enJOyable p1cmc was served by
the ladies..
Attending were Mary and
Freddie Thabet and son John,.

and Mrs. Dlc
r~ Belva
Yvonne, Gale G~ll, re and
Roush, Charlene GllmO
Mr. and Mrs. DarreU Jenk.s.
The September meeting will
be held at the hOme of of Mrs.
Lucy Johnson in West
Columbia with Bessie Ingels
as lesson leader. The meeting
will be held Wednesday, Sept.
Hat 7:30p .m.

Home

ca A.nn oungDo Silman Mr'
ds nd Jill Barton, . k~ . stead and

sleeves and a V-neckline , and
feat ured a softly gathered
white chiffon front panel
which extended from the
shoulder to the floor clinched
at the waist She wore a white
picture hal tied with white
satin ribbon, and carried a
bouquet of miniature blue

and yellow carnations with
pink sweetheart roses and
greenery. The bouquet had .
pink , blue and yell ow

wel~omed -

Miss Ruth Fiske
of Gallipolis and Mrs. Ruth
Shackelford of Huntington,
both of whom were former
langua ge teachers. Their.

j

1
I
I
I

1
1

I
lL

1

1
1

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE

lI

Call .7.5-5572 After 4 P.M.

I

·

CLAS!i OF '62 GATHERS-Front row, 1-r: Pat Rake, Charles Lupton,
Ora Baird, Kay Cox, Nancy Clark, Cheryl Roble, Betty Jean Christ,
Sherry Milstead, Patty Jones, Mary Thompson, Charlotte Seamon,
Harriet Evans. Secood row: David Tawney, Richard Harris, Bill
M~edy, Lyle .Sheets, Robert Armstrong, James Hedrick, Ronnie
Camuchael~ Darlene Carmichael, Marilyn Mayes, Carol Cremeans,

I

UMWmeet
0

.Eliminate The Negative

.L---·--------..

• • •

MM ERCIAL &amp;

SAVINGS BANk

Member .F. D.I.C.
Street-Silver Bridge Plaza-Spring Valley Plaza

Sept. 8- Cafis -call Debbie Tipple at446-1851.
Sept. 14 - Beginning Bridge - 9:31).11 :30 a .m. at Mary
Anne Januson. Call 446-2649. Babysitting provide\!.
Sept. I5 - Gi!t Acquainted Coffee - to am. at Lois
Phlegar's. Call Cindy Potter for information at 44&amp;-4460
Children are welcome.
·
. Sept. 19- General Meeting -7 :30pm. at Jackson Pike
Branch of Ohio Valley Bank.
Sept. 22- Welcome Wagon-&lt;:ancer Society Style Show 7:30pm. ai E~ Lodge.
Sept. 26- Card Group- 1 p.m. Call Susie Bailey at 446-

7785:
Membership Chairperson - Joy Atwood, ~.

10:00 A.M. to 9:15 P.M.
Sunday thru Thursday

10:,

0
'

A:M~o

"JlapPY BirthdaY "

11:00 P.M . .

.

NOW YOU KNOW
The baby rattle once owned
by Egypt's King Farouk had
~
a. jade handle lopped by a
diamond-encrusted
crown
. · ~nd the "pebbles" that mad~
1t rattle were rubies. ,.
·

I

(

.

.

1.;,)

~

"'.If

.~~
. . .,. ..fli '.i/.
~

.

Friday and Saturday

t

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

••

•

r. •~,

c--.

.. ,

-::..::. : -"- .
For a beau! l ful way to wish b~~th~:reg~:~;in~~~~
~:-...

that special .person or t or arrangement of
anniversary wlloth Fal ~~~~·· hav~ a variety of

flowers See

•

s

rs ·

.

flowers to choose from ... .

FLOWERS by
GEORGE
New ()Nners
George Adams &amp; June (Unroe) Adams

Formel'ly Ruths Floral

PHONE 446·9121
23 Cedar Street. Gallipolis. 0 .

LIMITED QUANTITY SAL.E!
Our finest unit construction

ANNOUNCING
NEW

BUSINESS SCHOOL
OPENING
"BRINGING BACK QUALITY BUSINESS
TRAINING FOR AREA RESIDENTS"

-

.95
TWIN SIZE

SOUTHERN .HIU.S SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS WILl BEGIN NEW
CLASSES ON SEPT. 14

' HAN fJ CR AFT£:0 CQ Mr/)R'T ~Q UAR E CO ILS
TWIN 7 18 fULL1JI:! 4 OiJH'N 12'26 KIN G 1654
"EXC LUSIVE FOUNDATIO N It LU)(U AI OUS
SL EE PING CO MFORT

Courses are available in Accounting &amp;
Business Management, Secretarial and
Genera 1 Office - at the college level. ·

Peggy Call, Sue rrancis, Julill Taylor, Henny Evans, D&lt;inna Smith,
Douglas Burton. Third row : Carlos Wood, Neal Moore, Harlan Pitchford,
Gary Porter, Louis Muell.... Lloyd Danner, Gordon Amsbary, Bob
Peppers, Don Call, Richard Campbell, Bob Cox, Brian Lanier, Jim
Morrison, Daniel Lee, Richard Haycraft.

at Poplar Ridge Church Oxyer, Barb Oxyer and sons,
Sunday.
Stephanie and Jennifer Peck,
Mrs. Ann Schukert and Sally Oxyer and daughters
ByRitaJ. Wbite
children, Jill and .Dane, . ,the hostesses and guest-ofKyger
Council
227, . returned to their home near honor.
Refreshments of cake, ice
Daughters of America, Murfreesboro,
Tenn.
cream,
Jello, coffee a~d Kool·
celebrated their 25th an- Tuesday, after a visit with
Aid
were
served, and Marie
nlversary, Aug. 23, wtth a her parents, Mr.' and Mrs.
received
several
gifts.
potluck supper at the Kyger !"red Sisson. Dane ·had spent
Mr. and Mrs . Ronial
Lodg.e Hall. Before supper, mu~h of the summer here
Jividen honored the 50th
the blessing was asked by with his grandparents.
Rita White. The remainder of
Recent' visitors of Mr. and wedding anniversary of her
the evening was spent Mrs. Ben Rupe were Mr. and parents, Mr . and Mrs. Ophie
playing games and singing Mrs. Dallas Williams and Casto, with an open house at
with plano accompaniment. Merrill Rupe, Indinianapolis, their home Sunday, Aug. 28.
Members
and
their Ind. and Lawrence Rupe and Many relatives and friends
stopped
in
to
offer
families who attended were son and daughter.
Dale and Mary Sisson, Ina P.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tate congratulations.
Rife, Christine, Lark and and son, Michael, spent the
Kevin Napier, Leo and Nine weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Rupe, Jim, Mary, J.D., Homer Tate and daughters,
Michael and Beth Ann and · Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Bradbury, Jim and Betty Tate, Columbus. While in
Conkle, Lucille MuUord, Cora Columbus they attended the
Rupe, Pauline Rife, and Rita Ohio State rair and saw
White.
.
entertainer Bob Hope pel'·
There were 61 charter rorm.
members when the lodge was
Sunday visitors of Mrs.
organized. Of the six living Allie Tribble were James and
members, two were present Goldie Hood and Rex and
for
the
anniversary Carrie Lemley, Circleville.
celebration. They were Ina P. Other recent visitors or Mrs.
Rife, Gallipolis and Mary B. Tribble were Jessie Lemley .
Sisson, Kyger.
and son, Jerry and familY,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald rostoria .
Sopato, (Ruth Rupe), Panna, . Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer B.
0,, are announcing the birth Halfhill and son, Tom, atof a son, Craig Evan, Aug. 23. tended · the . Cart-Cartmill
'He is being welcomed home family reunion at CommunitY
by a . brother, Scott and a Park near Hurricane, W. Va,
sister, Melissa.
Sunday, Aug. 28. A large
Grandparents are Mr. and • crowd of relatives and friends
Mrs .
Stanley
Rupe, attended. Also attending with
Cleveland, and Joe and Mary the Halfhills was Danny
Sopato. Mrs. Ruth Tate, Chapman.
Chillicothe, Is a greatRecent dinner guests of Mr.
grandmother of Craig Evan. and Mrs. Wilmer Halfhill and
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Oh- family were Steve and Fay
de and five children, Newark, Holley and family , Bob
0., were weekend guests of McCormick Road, and
his great aunt, Mrs. Cora Rachel and Bubby ThompRupe. Clarence is the son of . son, Gallipolis. .
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ohde, who
Seth Jenkins spent the
formerly resided in the weekend with his grandproperty now occupied by mother, Mrs. Peggy Barker,
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe.
Huntington, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph White
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
attended the funeral of his Bradbury and daughter, Lori,
uncle, Ernest Stewart, 77, at Columbus, were weekend
Ewing Funeral Home, · guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wendy
Pomeroy, Sunday.
Bradb~ry and Mr. and Mrs.
Weekend guests of Mr. and Wayne Sisson.
Mrs. Walter Jenkins and
Miss Kim Oxyer and Miss
daughter, Linda were his Sherry Harrison hosted a
brothers, Otho ~nd Ellner birthday party in honor of
Jenkins, Columbus and Marie Wheaton at the home
Danville Jenkins Marion. ol Mrs. U!ly Oxyer, Aug. 25.
Also visiting ~ver the Attending were Mrs. · Carole
weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Fitch and daughters, Mrs.
Dallas Williams and Merrill Shirley Oxyer and family,
Rupe, Indianapolis, Ind. They Mrs. Juanita Harrison and
all attended the homecoming family, Mrs. Lilly Mae

Kyger

....·ir;lpool
Chest freezer
Model EEH231 F
• 23.2cu. ft. of zero-degree food storage
• Easy-to-clean porcel ain·enameled finish
• Concealed torsion-bar hinges and Fl us~
Back.. . . counterbalanced lid
• Three sliding storage baskets and a divide r
tor convenient food-package arrangements

CHOICE

• Adjustable temperature contro l and
defrost drain

A GOOD CHOICE
.BIG. CAPACITY ... take advantage
of seasonal and quantity food prices
BIG. ~ALUE ..• a special, limited-time offer
BIG. SAVINGs ·... add them up. Save on
food costs; save on your choice of BIG freezers

... or witha Whirlpool Upright freezer

• 20.0 cu. ft. or zero·degree rood storage

with TEXTURED STEEL Door

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• Super-storage, 7-shelf door

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CORDLESS ELECTRONIC CAMPAIGN CHEST CLOCK

• Slide-out storage basket and
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• Interior light and power· inlerruption
light
'

A GOOD CHOICE
A magnificent clock,
inspired by the li n~ design.

of wood campaig n chests
sea voyagers used in days

!It old.

DAY OR EVENING CLASSES
Write, call 446-2239, or visit lor information
and our new catalog. All are welcome to see
our new facilities. located in the Business &amp;
Professional Bldg:, 414 Second Avenue,
. Gallipolis.

CHARGE IT!
If rov t-~ave Any 01
The.slll C,.d1t C6rd~ ·
• 8oi."''K ,.,._,EI-I W ~flO
• AMEFHCAI~ E.;tP'U; ~"·

'I'OLI ~hy

0..•1!/f

Approved By the Ohio State Board of
School &amp; College Registration. RN 0585B

FOI

1 750

,•

SOUTHERN HILLS
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS·

INSTANT CREDI•""'IT"'

Thomas C. Breech• Director
(

Duplicated in detail is the
solid wood cablpet, finished
in dark walnut and trimmed
wit/1 antique brass finish
corner plates.

Model EEV20tX

Impressive clock features:
Glass panel top, white metal
dial. Roman numerals end .
3 t -day calendar, spun·gold
pendulum. 21" x 12H x 3o/""

CHARGE IT!
II Y&lt;Jl..' f-Ill~&amp; Any

1flt1S6' CrecM

Fine furniture lor wall or

• MA &amp;TISR C ~~~&lt;..i
• OINERS CL!J8
• C.'.RT[ fn. Afto ::Hf.

-----,;...,;;..""'1!,-i-----.-.
(

Wekome Wagon
club activities

' 299 9.:&gt; s.er
399 95 :.er

KING S!Z t

THURMAN - The Thurman U.M.W. Society met at
Wanda
Terry's
with
Wilmence Carter as cohostess .
In absence of the president
and vice president, Mrs .. Jan
Burleson was in charge. ·
Those attending were Jan
Burleson, Henrietta Terry,
Janice
Layton,
Nancy

Massie, Josine Moses,
Margate! Thomas, Hattie
Saxton and Laura Terry. The
hostess served refreshments.
The next meeting will be with
Nancy Massie and Dawn
Walker.

We'll mess with
the In between.

1928

.. . ·' i 1'il.9~ea . pc .

OUEE.N SIZE"

evening.

I

ast IVe
a s!

FULL SIZE

1

Mayes . Committee members

thanked
were
Sherry
Milstead, Peggy Call, Henny
Evans, Carol Cremeans, Dick
Haycraft, and David Tawney.
t'ollowing the program, the
Rowan
Broth~rs
ba nd
provided music the rest of the

I

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Upholstery - Windows - Floors
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9lJiamwnd
$u!Hke

since Lhe lOth reunion . Brian
Lanier read letters from
those unable to attend . Then
roll ca ll was held to see if
anyone could provide in·
formation about those not
heard
from.
Richa rd
Haycraft related 'a few ex·
periences from the 60 s and
also
rememb ered
the
deceased members of the
cla ss, Chuck Neal and Larry
WQOten .

Prizes were presented to
Gordon Amsbary for having
lo•t the most hair; to Julia
Taylor for having come the
greatest
distance
California; and to Betty Jean
Christ for having the
youngest baby. Decorations
were furnished by Marilyn

DIRT EXTRACTION METHOD

Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Tyree

!ion table decor also mcluded. Mrs. John 'R. Miller,
trim. It had a V·neckline and a vase of blue ca rnations with
Rosemary and
J ohn ,
short sleeves. She carried a
Newburgh,
Ind.;
Mrs
.
Ga
rnet
two smaller side vases.
bOuquet of blue and yellow
Herdman.
Leon.
W.Va
.;
Mrs
.
Presiding at the table were
miniature.carnations and the Mrs. Judy Fl owers, Colum·
Mildred Meade and Brian,
streamers in blue and yellow
Colwn bu.s; Mr. and Mrs.
bus, sister of lhe bride, Mrs.
were lied in lover's knots.
Leonard Miller and Melissa,
· Janie Roush , s ister-in-law of
Kenny Roush, brother of the bride, Mrs. Herdman, and
Leon~ W. Va .; Oeidre Tyree,
the bride, was the best man
Middleport ; Kathy, David
Mrs. Gerry Kessinger ,
for the groom.
Lee and Heather Mitchell ,
Pomeroy, sister of the bride.
For her daughter's wed- They all wore corsages of · Middleport ; Arnold Priddy,
ding, Mrs. Rou.sh wore a
Middleport ; Tammy and
while carnations. All of the
street length dress in multiJohnny
BlHke, Middleport,
floWers for the wedding were
colored stripes and had &lt;1 cor·
and
Mrs
.
Dear! Porter.
designed by the bride's sister,
sage of blue carnations. Miss
Mrs . Kessinger.
Beidre Tyree, sister of the
The couple now reside on
groom was in a ·white cation
dress with embroidered Bailey Run Itoad, Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. Tyree .is a
bodi.ce and wore a white car·
graduate or Meigs High
nation corsage .
School, Class of 1975. She is a
A reception honoring the
member of Feeney·Bennett
couple was held at the Roush
Post 128, American Legion
home inunediately following
Auxiliary, and is employed at
the wedding. The bride's
Dudley Florists in Midtable featured a four tiered dleport.
wedding cake topped with the
The groom attended
traditional miniature bride · Pomeroy schools and served
and groom baked by an aunt in the 0 . S. Air Force with a
of the bride, Mrs. · Garnet
tour of duty in Vietnam. He is
Herdman of Leon, W. Va . a member of Feeney-Bennett
Blue, pink and yellow roses Post 128, American Legion,
trimmed the cake. The recep. w~
and is employed in
lheLeading Creek Conser"
vaton District.
Guests at the wedding and
reception were Mrs. Gerry
Kessinger, Kim and Lois
Ann , Pomeroy; Kev.in and
Christi Smith, Pomeroy, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Flowers, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
W. Roush and · Doug, Grove
City ; Mr. ·and Mrs. Roy
•
•
Miller, Colwnbus; Mr. and

visits were enjoyed by all.
All classmates introduced
themselves and guests and
told what they had been doing

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED

For a
a Triple Treat, Double
, or
DOuble . Hamburger with a large order of French Fries and a large
Soft Dnnk for $1.99 and take home a Whom· O Heavy Duty Frisbee.
You'll enjoy fine food and have hours of fun with your Country
Cousins Frisbee. Fresbees may be purchased separately for $1.49.

The Positive

'

Two surprise guests were

FRISBEE MEAL
DEAL AT
COUNTRY
COUSINS

Check
Deposited Directly Into The Bank.
0

GAHS class of 62 gathers
GALLI POLIS
The
Gallipolis Academy High
School Class of 1962 held its
fifteenth reunion July 30 at
the Elks Hall. A social hour at
6:30 was highlighed with each
member wearing his senior
class picture as a name tag;
these were furnished by Pat
Jones. After dinner served by
the Emblem Club, David
Tawney served as emcee.

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

Wrightam,

Given in marriage by her
parents, the bride was attired
in a floor length gown of sapphire blue polyester with an
overlay of blue and while
ch iffon. The gown was
fas hioned with long fl owing

H~e Your Social Security

I

Mr. and Mrs . l,awrence
Foreman, Tom and Robin ,
B 1· lnge•- ur. and Mrs.
esse
"'• '"
Delmer Alexander , · Lucy
Johnson Joy roreman, Lois
y '
Doris Roberts

· design with white lace accent

,,

'

MASON _ The annual
ranliJy
et·to ether and
plcn·1c fgth Hg 1 ·
H d
o
e e pmg an
Extension Homemakers Club
of Mason was held at the
Virgil Lewis Hift 0 ri 1

®

streamers tied in lover's
knots . ·
The bride's only jewelry
was a two st rand crystal bead
necklace belonging to the late.
Mrs. Alta Miller, maternal
grandmother of the bride.
Miss Lisa Ann Prater of
Pomeroy was . the bride's
maid of honor. She wore a
blue polyester gown in floral

,.

"

June.

8-7-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept . 4, 1m

Miss Roush weds
ding vows in an afternoon
ceremony on Aug. 14 a! the

Court

,

•.

rnantel.

Use Your :VISA oi tMster Ch•rge

0'

Ca r..tZ~

• B~&lt;.t-.11&lt; A.I.,~EHil· r. rW

lt9.81
HOURS :
Mon .. friday
8:00-8:00
· Tuos.-Wod. &amp; Thurs.
' 1:00.5:00
Thurs. 8: 00-~oon

1 AMtRI (-;.4./j O'P!=! t !\i)
t MA!:.TI;A C't-~Aq(., C::
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•

C.,: A~ T(

'I'QIJ """'

B.._ AP.. CI11

o... u, ,~,,

1 750

INSTANT CREOIT

�- ---- - - - - ------

HT seeks improvement

Miss Fultz
is married

MERCEIIVILLE - With 43
players, the largest HT squad
ever, CQach Larry Cremeens
enters his second year as
head football coach hoping to
improve the school's 1-7·1
mark record in 1976.
Cremeens, a former
Wildca t gridder, feels ex·
perience is perhaps his
team's biggest asset.
The Hannan Trace forward
wall will be huge with 260pound Ron McCoy and 237pound Ron Kingery leading
the way. other veterans ·are
seniors Jeff Halley and Tom
Wright.
·
Returning lettermen in·
elude Kingery and. McCoy
along with Frank Mooney, a
quick 152 lb. ·halfback; Mike
Daniels, 175 lb. end; Jeff
Halley, 180 lb. center; Steve
Beaver, 155 lb, quarterback,
and Tom Wright, 164 lb.
guard, and Loren Cox, senior
guard. All seniors .and Rick
Clary, 147 lb. junior.
Others vying for starting

POMEROY - St. Joseph
Cathedral, Columbus. was
the setting forth~ Saturday,
Sept. 3 wedding of Miss
Patricia A. Fultz., Columbus,

daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie F. Futtz. llO High St..
Pomeroy, and Alfred J.
Ferberdino, Colwnbus, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M.
Ferbcrdino. Ashtabula .
The Rev . Fr. George W.
Jones officiated at the nuplia l
mass fot tJ1e duublt· nng

· c~temony .

Organist

\\as

Gregory Luckhaupt, Coltun·
bus .
For her wedding. the bride
chose an ivory sta in empire
sty le gown with aecents of
embroidered laee on the

yoke. collar and sleeve edges.
Her headpiece r:onsisted of an
ivory satin Juliet cctp covered
by a veil of embroiderec) laee.
The gown was designed and
created by Mrs. l'hon\as H.
Becker or Johnstown. sister
of the bride, and worn on her
own wedding day . Mrs.

Becker was matron or honor
for her sister, and wore an
apricot gown featuring while
lace overlay on the bodice
and edging on the sleeves and
\\-'ide currunerbund.
Best man was Richard
Giancola, Elk Grove Village.
lll., cousin or the groom .
Grandmothers and god·
mothers presented flowers
were Mrs. Eddilh ~'u l tz.
Athens, the bride 's grandmother ; Mts . Angelin e
Ferberdino, Ashtabula, the
groom's grandmother; and

RC COLA

SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

ington, Ill., the groom 's gud·
mother.
couple was held from 2 to. 4
p.m. at The Christopher Inn,
Columbus.
The brde attended Ohio
Northern University, where
she was affiliated with Alpha
Delta Soronty . She
· graduated from the Akron
General Hospital School of
Cytotechnology and is cur·
rently employed as a staff
cytoteclmologist at Brown
Laboratories, Columbus.
The groom attended Ohio
State University and was
graduated from Kent State

1f3 OFF

BRAWNY
TOWELS

69(

Indianapolis, Ind ., wer e

·Saturday visitors of their
aunt, Mrs. Amanda Van Kirk
and their cousin, Mrs. Muriel
Spires.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Price and
children, Becky and Frankie,
visited the Columbus Zoo
Saturday.
Mr . and· Mrs. Mike
Sp.auldin·g and family,
Marion, were weekend guests
of his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Anderson Spaulding.
Mr. and Mrs. Owyer Short, .
Barbar.a 3nd Junior spent two
days with their son, Russell
Short and family , Columbus.
Sunday callers of Mrs.

.4

BARS

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INSECT
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Grillt&gt;d S&lt;lM .,.,id!t'~ .
in foc;1 anyfhi"g you con
put bt"Jwt"ffn two slioo s of bt.f'o&lt;l.

COSMETIC
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JEWELRY DEP'i.

MINI-PALMATIC

Vera Thomas was a recent

and

Mrs .

POCKET CAMERA
CLOSE-UP
TOOTHPASTE
15 1 OFF LABEL

e REG. e MINT

home near Chicago, ill., after

•

spending a few days with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Sisson. Phillip returned home
with his father, after spen·
ding six weeks with his
grandpa rents.
Olive Little, Chicago, Ill.,
was visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Owyer Short and family
recently.

METAL
DETECTOR

, ... ,, ........ ,, ..... it cl.,. . . ,..,
IIOII_. "';,.o ·IIM.

7X35
NO. 1111

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ba......_, far.......,..
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111:1~ · c~~r~ktr 1DIMt •

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88
'UIIVEISI~

CHRIS EVERT

TENNIS SHOE

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lou•.:! ha&gt;llt. c;...~~P to 100t.o..t~ol howr

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Persons and family, Chester,

were visiting their daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Geiger.
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Bradbury and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Bradbury attended
the outdoor drama "Hatfields
and McCoys" near Beckley,
W. Va. Saturday night.
Phillip Sisson and family
left Wednesday for their

TREA.SUIE SENSOI

.....,.. IMd ,..t.dr

6.40Z.

JASON
EMPIRE

JIWIUY
DEPT•.

II" 0 Wlgli

9-•alf

l'c.IRIQr

$2599

s1saa

can provide some power
running, a much-needed
punch in the Highlander
attack. Mark Banks, a senior
halfback, and Sherman
Potter, 171 lb. sparkplug-like
sophomore are expected to be
the other Southwestern
runners. They are being
pushed by freslunen Scott
Russell, Joe Potter, and
Ronnie Hammonds.
Wildcat linemen will be
Ron Jackson, 160 lb. senior;
Mark Carter, 162 lb. senior;
Steve Rawlins,-248 lb. junior;
Ben Woolum, .142 lb .
sophomore; John King, 181
lb. sophomroe; Brent Briggs,
150 lb. senior; Tim Davies,
180 lb. senior; Richard
Taylor, 150 lb. senior and
freshman Dale Newberry, 178
lbs. Another lineman propsect is senior Monte Blanton.
· Returning lettermen in·
olude the Carter. boys, Banks,
Mark Newberry, a 137 lb.

Others trying for varsity
positions are sophomores Jeff
Davies, Haskell Spurlock,
Steve Hill, Hobart Barker
and Mike Lewis. Barker and
Lewis tip the scales at 195 and
'lffl respectively .
Other freshmen players not
previously mentioned are
Roger Spurlock, Hayden
Uoyd, Jay Burleson, Stanley
Gregory and Steve Stover.
Southwestern is expected to
do nothing to surprise opponent&amp; offensively from its
straight T formation. In the
past, the Highlanders have
operated from a Power I, but
have molded this year's of·fense to fit the personnel.
Defensively,
the
Highlanders will use a 5·2
possibly missed wiih a seven
diamond. Last year with Kip
~wls doing most of the ball
handling, the Highlanders,
completed · a successful
season with a 5-4 record
senior; Rawlins, Jenkins, scoring 216 points while
. Layton, S. Potter, King , permitting 154 points. Inside
Davies, and Brent Briggs.
the SVAC, SWHS had a 2-1

record.
Graduation losses wer'
Keith Grate, Lewis, Do• ·
Bush, Larry Ruff and Davi·
Potter. In addition to losin,
Jeffers, another player, Curt
Nolan, transferred to North
Gallia.
Another Highlander with
potential, Ron McCartney,
suffered a fractured left leg
in a motorcycle accident last
weekend.
Southwestern opens its 1977
campaign Sept. 9 against
Southeastern of Ross County.
other non-league opponents
are Green Local and HalUl8n,
W. Va. Coach Ashley is tieing
assisted again this fall by
former head coach Mel
Carter.
SOUTHWESTERN
SCHEDULE
Southwestern
Sept.9
Rae in~
Sept. 16
at North Gallia
Sept. 2J
Kyger Creejc
Sept. 30
Symmes Valley
Oct. 7
at Eastern
Oct. 14
. at Green Local
Oct. 21
Hannan Trace
Oct. 28
No•. 4

Hannan, W.Va .

BY JACK ROGERS
and John Withers lor a 16Coach Steve Safford broke a jinx when his Point Pleasant Big Blacks
yarder.
won a season football opener, defeating Dink Allen's Class AAA Bar·
The locals sacked Buc QB
boursville Pirates, 14·0, down in Buccaneer land last night.
Briggs, Tim Davies, Ronnie Jackson and Mark Banks.
HIGHLANDER LETTERMEN - Southwestern
Craig once bug gave him the
Second row, left to right, Mark Newberry, Richard
And local fans got wet. As did the Pirate adherents. They got
hopes to improve its 5-4 record behind the leadership of
bums rush all night. He
Taylor, Larry Carter and Mark Carter.
thoroughly drenched . The skies turned as black as three feet up a stove
eight lettermen. They are, first row, left to right, Brent
completed two for 15-yds
'pipe before game time and the rain came down like gang busters. · It
overall.
poured for 27 minutes, delaying· the start of the. gamE! untiL 8; 11.
It was a team victory lor
All .the scoring took place in the second period, wlth the local offense
the locals, with both the · ofand defense each supplying a touchdown, and Rick Smith booting a pair of
fense and defense doing wbat
extra points .
,
·
they should.
Pete Sommer , fleet senior halfback, blew himself to a very fine 142-yd
So in three tries, Salford's
BY GARY CLARK
lndividuallly David Queen Wahama - . Smith 12-26; net rushing performance, and fled like a Seattle Slew for 41-yds and the
guys have pitched two
A third period roughing the kicker penalty cost the and Bryan Johnson were the Roush, 12·20; Holbrook, 2-17; first touchdown ofthe season. It came around RE on a Holland pitchout to
shutouta against the Pirates.
Wabanui White Falcons dearly Friday night as Scott Jarrells' leading rushers with 74 imd 72· Barnitz, 2·13; Hankinson, iHl· open the second period .
They did it 17:0 ·in 1975.
Wayne Pioneers dealt the bend area team a 13-7 loss in the yards respectively. For - Totals 33-84.
Senior John Withers broke it open six minutes later when he in·
Truth is, Salford's teams
season opener for both school.
Wahama Jack Smith was t~e Wayne ' - Johnson, 15-72; tercepted a David Craig pass and flew 51-yds down the east sideline, still
are really tough away from
The victory was the third consecutive year that the top ground gainer with 26 Queen, 16-74; . Newell, 8-4S; ~uring it on when he hit the end zone .
home. They are 9 for 10 in
Pioneers have spoiled the White Falcons season opener. In tough yeards on 12 carnes.
Newell8,45; H1U, 5-5; Totals,
The locals offense controlled
·
.
winning rosd games.
19'15, Wayne blanked the local by a 21:0 margin and turned
over BarOnly 10 passes were at· 43-196.
the ball and the defense did they threaten the PPHS boursville's first offensive Looking
the trick 12.() in last year's coroteS\.
play
of
the
game.
boursville's
stats
and their top
.tempted throug)lout the Passing - Hi)!, 1·3-10; controlled the Pirates. Such goal. That was set' up by Jeff
The costly penalty came late in the third quarter when the contest with
Wayne com· Newell, 1-1-16; Hankinson, 1-6- muscle men as Paul Krimm Black's fumble recovery on · There was very little attacker was junior Mont
Pioneers were forced to punt from their own 21-yard line. pleting twooffour for 26-yatds 12.
fwnbllngdespitethe wet grass Hunter (150) with36 yards in 9 ·
and
Timbo
Roberts the Red-and-Black ~7.
Warren Canterbury got the kick away but was hit by a
· slams. And senior Mart
and Wahama netting just one Receiving - Barnltz, 1-12; linebackers, were fierce. PI~
A Craig to Johnso~ pass for and slippery pigskin.
Falcon defender resulting ina l5·yard gift and kept the Wayne completion in six tries for 12 Newell, 1·10; Hill, 1-16.
Tim Nibert, Mike Martin, 14, plus short gains, got the · In the rushing departmen\, Beckett (155) had a scant 19 in
drive alive.
yards.
Alan
Whitman , Brerry Bucks to the local 19, but a the Big Biacks were almost 7 tries. They were pounded.
Meanwhile, Wahama's Kevin Roush fielded the punt and
Next week the White
Hudson, Chris Mahan, Stan final pass into the end zone four \0 one superior to their pretty good and must have
brought it back to the Wayne 29~yard line but it all went lor Falcons entertain the Kyger
hosts. Besides Sommer's giWJtlC headaches today.
Burdette, and others. The misfired.
naught as the penalty gave Wayne a first down on their own 36
STATISTICS
Creek Bobcats in a 7:30p.m:
smaller Pirate backs were
TimNibertsetthe~mpofor heroics (8.4 Ave. in 17
instead of Wahama having possession on the Pioneer 29-yard game at Bachtel Field as the
PPHS Barb.
living a hard lifer and only in the game when he pounced on carries), Paul Krimm banged Dept.
stripe.
two schools resume a long
CINCINNATI (UP!) - the last two minutes of play a Pirate fumble on Bar- for 39 in II bangs, &amp;n Newell 1st Downs
14
6
·
'to
standing
rivalry
after
a
two
Bolstering
their
roster
for
a
18
in
5
belts;
Scott
Net
Yds
Rush
210
61
belted
for
Fivep lays Ia t er, theVISI rs
Th
h
ill iastmonthrunatthedivisionHoward picked up 51n.one try; Passes
3-8 U
leading Los Angeles Dodgers,
took the lead for good when after through the . uprights year 1ayo 11 · e mate up w
QB
Jeff
Holland
netted
12
Intcpt
By
1
2
and
Rusty Newell scampered 24- giving Wahama a 7:0 lead with .be the . season opener for the Cincinnati Reds have
35 15
in 8 sorties. Jell was sacked Yds Passing
yards to pay dirt for the 3:43 left to play in. the opening &lt;;.."::;~h iC:c~~=~:ss i:~~C:~ called. up three players from
three times and It cost him Scrlrnniage Yds
245 76
winning score.
stanza
.
their lndinapolis farm club.
yardage.
Return Ydge ·
106 123 .
Although Wayne completely
Way~e ·Came right back be after his first win of the
Already in uniform for this
Fumbles
2
2 .
weekend's
games
at
dominated the final statistics after the ensuing kickoff to young 1977 ~rid season.
_ But Jell completed three Fwnbles Lost
2
1
Wahama was not without knot the score when .Newell
Philadelphia nre pitchers
Yds
Ave.
2-38
6-35.5
Punts,
aerials
lor
35
yards,
nailing
some stars of their own. David hauled ·in a 10 yard strike
STATISTIGS
Tom Hume and Dan
50 30 · ·
Frank Cook on 9 and 10 shots, Penal!., Yds
Elias was voted as the games from Pioneer quarterback
Wahama 'wayne Dumoulin ·and catcher Don
Offensive Plays
58 ~7
most outstanding player for Greg Hiil. The 14 play drive FirstDowns
7
12 Werner.
84 196
the White Falcons for his covered 62 yards. Can- Yardsrusbing
26
performance
from
the terbury's kick made it7-7 with Yards passing
.12
HOSPITALIZED
linebacker position. The 5'10"· 7:10 left in the fir.st hlllf.
Totalyds.
96 222
BURLINGAl!fE,
Calli.
160-paund senior kicked an
Neither team managed to Passes c-~tt
l-6 , 2-1 (U PI) - Carl Hubbell, a star
0 pitcher with the New York
0
extra point and made eight sustain a serious threat in the Interceptions
LYNE CENTER GYM AND POOL SCHEDULE
bone crushing individual second half 9i!ve for Wayne's . Fumbles-lost
2·1 .3-2 Giants in the 1930s and 40s,
MON'nl OF SEPTEMBER
DAY -GYMNASIUM
.
POOL
l&amp;ckles.
go ahead touchdown until the Punts·Avg.
4-37 3-31 has been admitted to
Monday--$-10 p.m. College Rec.
S-10 p.m. College Swim
Greg
Blessing,
Bret final ' minute of the game.
Penalbes-yds.
4-40 7-62 Peninsula Hospital here and
Tuesday410p.m.OpenRec.
· S.10p.m.OpenSwlm
45
52 is in the intensive care unit.
Holbrook arid Rick Buzzard Wahama began its last Off. plays
Wednesday-3-10p.m.
CollegeRec.
S.lOp.m.
College Swim
The Hall of Fame pitcher Is
also turned in fine defensive ditch effort on their own 19Thursday-Closed
Closed
performances with eight, yeard line and moved down to SCORING :
being
treated
for
a
Friday-u7-9
p.m.
Family
Night
l&lt;-7-9
p.m.
Family
Nigbt
and seven individual tackles the Pioneer 26-yard stripe
1 2 3 4 Total respiratory ailment and high
Saturday-Z-1
p.m.
OpenRec.
2-4p.m.
Open
Swim
n!spectively.
before.timeranouttoendthe Wayne
0 7 · 6 0 13 blood pressure, and is
Su!)day-2-4 p.m. Open Rec.
2-4 p.m. Open Swim
Wahama got on the contest with the Mason Wahama
7 0 0 0 7 reported in stable condition.
7-9p.m.OpenRec.
7·9p.m.OpenSwlm
scoreboard flrs1 by taking CounUan still in possession.
x-F
.AMIL
Y
RECREATION
NIGHT
Is
a
community
functiCII
WAHAMA
Blessing
advantage of a Pioneer turTeam statistics show Wayne
W.VA.
SCORES
created
by
the
majors
in
Health,
Physical
Education
and
nover when Buddy Rose . as the leader in every f urn ble reacovery in en d zone PPHS 14 Barboursville o
Recreation. This time block is open to involve studenll,
Wayne lJ Waharn• 7
rec&lt;ivered a Wayne fumble on category except in the punting (Elias kick)
faculty, and members of the local community - free of
WAYNE
Newell
10-yard
Ripley 18 Charleston Coth . 0
;1he. vlslton 11 yard line. It department where ~ack Smith
charse. All jlarticipants under the age of 18 must be
·pass from Hill (Canterbury· Beckley 25 Huntington o
rAUGIIt IN THE BACKFIELD - Fillc&gt;:m senlor
took the White Falcons ·bested the.visiting punter with
DuPont 24 S. Charleston 7
accompanied by a parent or guardian .
East Bonk 11 S. Jackson 6
safety Rick Buzzard nabs Waynes' sensatlo.nal running
!lillY t11ree plays to score when a 37-yard average · per kick kick)
WAYNE -Newell 24-yaro G. w. ~· SissonvllleO
back Rusty Newell in the backfield. Newell scored both of
Greg Bleuing fell on a Falc~n Including a booming 46-yarder run
(kick wide)
· HU111lngton East 13 Millon u
the Pioneer touchdowns,
fumble In the end zone lot SIX that sailed into the Pioneer
.
.
· Wlrt 44 Spencer 0
Individual Rushmg
Poca 7 Ravenswood o
po)j)ll. Ellall booted tbe point end zone.

Wayne defeats Falcons, 13-7

BINOCULARS

·

ARGUS

Holzer Medical Center.

Mr .

.FOAM COOLER

6-12

Cremeens has ooted that the
team's overall size has kept
them going.
Graduation losses were
Kim Waugh, an aU-league
halfback; Scolt Gibson, Rick
Whitt, Rick Sibley, Earl
Black, Tim Waugh, Mrirk
Cremeans, Scott Fulks,
Kevin Saunders and Bill
Wells.
Coach Cremeens and his
first year assistant, Cody
Boothe, feel that if injuries
don't take their toll, the
Wildcats could be a much
improved team.
Haman Trace opens its 10
game schedule at Hannan, W.
Va. Sept. 9. other non-league
opponents are Waterford,
Green Twp. and Fairland B.
HANNAN TRACE
SCHEDULE
Sept. 9
at Hannan
Sept. 16
Woterforc
at Kyger Cree~
Sept. 2J
Sept. JO
Green Twp
Fairland 6
OCt. s
North Gallic
OCt. 14
Oct. 21
East err
Oct. 28
at Southweaterr
Nov . 4
at Sooth ern
Nov. 11
Symmes Valley

Point breaks jinx, win 14-0.

30Qf.

IIOIISIWAI/E

40Z.

Price, is a surgical patient at

parents,

(

39(

Helen Kennedy and Mrs.
Myrtle Harrison, Middleport.
Cecil Price, father of BUI

Kenneth Brewer, Glenwood,
W. Va .
Mr . and Mrs. Robert

CHARCOAL

lll~l

[

. SEWARE DEPT

Louise Roush were Mrs .

caller of Mrs. Ruth Maag,
Middleport.
Visiting recently with Mr.
and Mrs: Bub Fife were Rev.
Clyde Ferrell, Paul and Jerry
Back, Langsville, and Tony
Fisher.
Mr. a,nd Mrs. Owyer Short
and family were visiting her

lOLB.

90Z.
FOAM CUPS

BATH
SOAP

Kyger

(

50 COUNT

DIAL

The team's morale could
have taken an early setback
since Southwestern lost one of
its most popular players,
senior fullback Don Jeffers,
fatally injured in an auto
accident earlier this month.
The Highlander attack will
be led by quarterbacks Gene
Layton, a hard-throwing,
junior and Barry Jenkins,
another junior signal caller.
Larry Carter, ·a 186 pound
senior, has been switched
from an offensive end to
fullback . It is hoped Carter

CHARCOAL STARTER

LOW PRICES

With 11
PATRIOT
returning letterman, a
succes~ful weight lifting
program and much improved
team attitude, the South·
western Highlanders should
improve upon their 1976 .fifth
plae&lt;l finish in the SV AC.
Veteran football mentor
&amp;bert (Bob) Ashley entering
his fifth yea r at South·
western , said "This is the
best group of seniors I have
hild here. There is a belter
team balance and the attitude
ahs been excellent."

GII.FLm

HECK'S EVERYDAY

IIOUSEWARE
DEPT.

GAUON

QUART

·rACKLE

ii S

Joe Halfhill was discharged
from Holzer Medical Cen!er,
Aug. 30.
Mr. and Mrs . Dallas
Williams arid Merrill Rupc,

•2••

DEPT.

All FISHING

2ROLLS

at
Metal Forge Co., Columbus.
The couple is residing at
12ii·C Lake Shore Drive, Col· ·
umbus, 43204. Mr. and Mrs.
F.uliz were in Col umbus for
the wedding. •

Halley, Loren Cox and Tom Wright. Second row, left to
right, Frank Mooney, Steve Beaver, Ron Kingery and
Rick Clary. Absent Ron McCoy and Mike Daniels.

COOLANT

JUMBO

engineering technology and
indQStrial management. He is

WILDCAT RETURNING LETTERMEN - Coach
Larry Cremeens, entering his second year as head
football coach at Hannan Trae&lt;l, will rely heavily on eight
returning lettermen. They are front row, left to right, Jeff

SUMMER

AUTOMOTIVE

mechanical

currently employed
mechanical engineer

DOW

WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST

SIX PACK

A reception honoring the

in

10 A~M. TO 6. P.M.

•

Saunders, Lee Mooney, Fred
Roach, Dennis Green, Mike
Dennison, Tim Murphy, Todd
Sibley, Greg Maynard and
John McGuire.
Hannan Trace has a big
battle shaping up for the
starting quarterback
position. Seniors Steve
Beaver, David Swain and
sophomore Archie Meadows
are fighting for the starting
nod.
The Wildcats will use a
varied offense which includes
the Power I, wing T and
fullhouse or straight T . .
Defensively, HT is expected
to employ a 5-f (Oklahoma )
or 6-3.
Coach Cremeens will be
looking for ·improvement in
both offense and defense.
Offensively, Haman Trae&lt;l
scored 134 a year ago while
yielding 361 points. The
Wildcats finished sixth in the
SVAC with a 1-5 record.
In two preseason scrim·
mages this fall, Coach

SWHS has lllettermeii

PRICES IN
EFFECT .

Mrs. Charles Guse. Wilm-

University

OPEN
LABOR DAY

positions are Donald Ours,
220 lb. senior; Tony Saunders, 150 lb. hailback; Eddie
Whitt, 148 lb. fullback; Allen
Waugh, 144 lb. end ; Ronnie
Pack, 198 lb. centcr~nard;
Earl Myers, 150 lb. halfbatk;
Mike Webb, 140 lb. halfback;
Brue&lt;l E. Waugh, 121 lb.
halfback , all juniors and
sophomores, Johnny Saunders, 13S lb. end; Tim
Beaver, 160 lb. halfback ; Tim
Wright, ISS lb. guard-tackle ;
Carlos Campbell, 160 lb. end ;
Kerry Ours, 200 lb. center·
tackle; Archie Meadows,. 12ft
lb. quarterback ; Troy
Delaney, 173 lb. guard·
tackle; Allen Fulks, 136 lb.
end and Randy Green, 124 lb.
halfback.
Thirteen freslunen for the
'nucleus for a future Wildcat
squad. Frosh players expected to see lots of reserve
action and some varsity time
are Tony Myers, David Montgomery, Craig Chapman,
bruce A. Waugh , Tommy

Three recalled
from Jn.dians.'

-

.

�C.l-'l1le Sunday 'l'imes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Sepl4. 1!177

Eagles' coach optimistic
PJTTSBURGH (UP! I Second-year Philadelphia
Eaglos' coach Dicit Vermeil

MIKE SWIGER

Midd le port, o.
992-21 SS

"I can help you
get the most
from your life
insurance dollar."
.... ,, ,.....
Likugood neighbor,
Stalt Farm is there.
s. r...., t tW: WWI'ICI! ~
lbfoe Olloee BIQom.r&gt;gton lll.noos

out. Pittsburgh got three
qu1ck touchdowns on a oneyard plunge by Reggie
Harrison, a 23-yard Bradshaw pass to Jobn Stallworth
and a 10-yard run by rookie
Sidney Thornton.
"I'm not at au dis&lt;ouraged.
We're a good football team,"
said Vermeil.
"When you make 199 yards
offensively against their firstteam defense (as the Eagles
did in the first half) and when
you shut them out for a half
with their first offense, then
you've played pretty good
football.
"We planned to substitute
lin the second half) and we
did. Some of our second team
wasn't as good as some of
their first team. I'm not at all

is feeling optimistic these

days- and wtth good reason.
After
back-to-back
nhibition shutouts over New
England and Denver, the
rebuilding Eagles came
wtthin two quarters of &lt;Joing
the same thing to their
crosstate rivals, the Pittsburgh Steelers.
The Steelers' 21-13 margin
of victory in a National
Football League preseason
game Friday night was not
indicative of the way either
team, each of which was a 3-2
record, really played.
The Eagles completely
dominated the ·first half,
running ·up a 13~ lead behind
Ron Jaworski 's 19-yard
touchdown pass_ to Harold
Carmichael and Horst
Muhlmann's fieid goals of 34
and 33 yards against a
befuddled and sloppy Steeler
defense, while Pittsburgh's
offense floundered behind
two different , quarterbacks,
Terry Bradshaw · and Neil
Graff.
The Steeler defense began
looking like its Stingy 1976
version in the second half, but
by t hen the Eagles' were
using several substitutes,
including aging backup
Roman Gabriel.
And by the time Bradshaw
got the Steelers' offense
going, the Eagles were worn

discouraged."

To be falr, it must be noted
that the Steelers' first-team
defense was not their usual
lineup. Missing with injuries
were safeties Glen Edwards
and Mike Wagner and
defensive end L. C. Greenwood. Right linebacker Loren
Toews was playing for the
first time since he injured a
·knee early in training camp
and middle linebacker Jack
Lambert, who ended a sixweek holdout just three days
earlier, saw only limited
action due to a lack of
practice time.

$1000 D·ISCOUNT

-Braves continue house sweeping •

•

BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!)The face-lifting of the Buffalo
Mlior LtiiQUt Results
8y Unit~d Press lntern~otion.al Braves continued Friday
No~lionill LeiltUe
Pitsbgh
000 100 001- 2 7 0 when reserv~ center John
LA
201 313 00•- 10 11 1 Gianelli was traded to the
Reuss~ Drmer-y f .. l. Forster
Milwaukee Bucks for a future
&lt;7l and OU ; Hooton. SO:u ( 8)
and vuger, Grote. w-Hootoo, draft Choice and an un10-7 l.-Reuss, 10 1'2. HR-LO$ disclosed amount of cash.
Angtlts, CtV ('2S).
II was the second &amp;raight
St .L
000200013- 6120 day that Braves owner Jobn
Saf'l Frlln
000 OlJ ooo- 4 8 2
Oe-nnv. Schultz (7), Metzgtor Y. Brown had taken personal
(9 ) and
Simmons, Rader : charge.of changing the makeKnepper-, Moff itt (Bl, Lavelle up of the team he bought in its
(t) and Sadek . W-!Schult.r:, 6-1.
L-Moffltt, 3 7. HRs- St. Louis. entirety last spring.
Cr-uz
(4);
San
Fnncisco.
In exchange for swingman
Thomasson (15).
Billy Knight of the Indiana
Houstn
002 002 001- 5 ' 1 Pacers, the Braves '!l!ut$daY
1\Mtrot
100 000 001- 2 B1
f th
R lcnord ono Ferguson; Bohn- gave up 1977 Rookie o
e
sen. Atk inson {tl ana Corter. w Year Adrian Danteley and
- Richard , 14-10. L- Bahnsen, 1
rd Mik B t
1·1. HRs- Hou.sfon , Cruz {13); lOrWa
e an om.
Montreal, Dawson (151 .
To obtain guard Nate
Clnd
000 000 ~ 0 50 Archibald, the Buffalo Club
Philo
001 010 lOx- 3 • o on Thuraday traded center
Solo, capHio m and Bench ; George Johnson and their
Lonboro
and Boone. w- 1979 first' roun d couege dr aft
Lonborg. 10-3. L - Soto. 2-4. HR
--Philadlphia, McBride 03) .
' pick.
Giannelli, part of a trade
( l·st gam e)
Atlanta
000 000 ooo- 0 5 1 last December which sent
N.Y.
10000300x- i91 Bob McAdoo and Tom McSOlomon , Collins C7l, Ol!vey,
(8) and Pocoroba : Zachry and Millen to the New York
Hodges. W- Zachry, 8-12. L Knicks,
was
worth
Soloman , .4 -A . HR- New York,
Milwaukee's
first-round
draft
Henderson ( 10) .
pick in either 1979 or 1980.
tl nd Ga m e&gt;
The trade of Gianelli leaves
Atlanta
000 030 DOO-:- 3 5 1
the Braves with only one
N.Y.
100001~271
Capra, Campbell (7) and center, Swen Nater, acquired
Nolan ; Todd, Apodaca {8) and from Milwaukee during the
Hodges . W- Capra , 3-10. L rodd, 2-4. HR- New York , off-season.
Henderson ( 11).
In announcing the latest
POO 000 ooo- 0 6 0 transaction, Brown said
Chicgo
San [)go
000 101 03~~: - 58 1 another trade, that for a
Krukow ,
Giusti . (7)
and
Mitterwal d ; Jones, Fingers Ul back-up center, would be
and Roberts. W-Jones, 6 -11 . L announced within the next

along wtth a 2~ lead and a
t W&lt;&gt;-hit shutout until Rupert
Jooes ~rted the seventh
with a double to right field
and scored on Bill Stein's
single. Stinson then put the
Mariners ahead with his
eighth home run of the
season, a line shot to right
field. The Mariners added
three more runs in the eighth
after Julio Cruz and Jones
reached base on wallts and
Stanton hit his 20th homer to
left field.
Toronto scored one run in
the third on AI Wond's two-out
triple, which scored Tim
Nordbrook, and another in
the fifth on Steve Bowling's
double and Steve Stagg's bunt
loss.
single.
Jefferson held the Mariners
hitless over the firSt 4 1-3
innings and was coasting
Major League Leaders
By United Press lnterniltional
8o~ lt i n g

(based on 375 at ba t s)
National Lugue
G. AB . H . Pet.
Parker Pit
133 543 188 .346
Stennett Pit
H6 453 152 .336
Simmns St.L
125 433 143 .330
Griffey Cin
129 493 I,SS .320
Tmpltn St .L
126 512 163 .318
Smith LA
125 418 132.316
122 455 142 .3 12
Luzinskl Phi
Hendrick SO
126 450 140 .3 11
Foster Cin
131 512 158 .309
Valen t in Mi l
10.4 422 130 .308
American League
G . A B . H . Pet.
1J I 52'2 196 .375
Carew Min
130 504 170 .337
Bostock Min
115 475 157 .331
Rivers NY
122 426 140 .329
Sing 1eton E!l
53B 1n .320
LeF iQre Det
108 435 139 .310
Bailor Tor
132 536 110 .317
Rice Bos
112 459 143 .3 12
Brett Kc
125 436 136.312
Hargrove Tx
118 454 141 .311
Zi sll. Ctli
Home Runs
National League : Foster. Cin
44 ; Burroughs , All 3S ; LOZ inski ,
Phil 33 ; Schmidt, Phil 32;

m

- Krukpw , 8-12 . HRs - San
Diego. Almon (2). Winfielcl

1231.

'19 .
~merican
L eag ue: . Net11es,
NY J.t; Rice. Bos and Bonds,
Cal 33; Scott, Bos 31 ; Hobson,
Bos, lisk, Chi and Thornton ,
Clev 27.
Runs Batfed In
Na-tional Lea gue: Foster , Cin
126; Luz inski , Phil 110; Cey, LA
99 ;_ BurroughS, Atl and Garvey,

pitchers
{AII ·Times EDTI

BO:\/NF\ ILlY JUWt 1r :IIA\14 ·1lH ~L!)AN

National League
Cincinnati &lt;Capi!la 6-6) at

Philadelhpla {Kaat 6·71, 1:35

p.m .

On All Pontiac Catallnas and Bonnevilles

..

in Stock. 9 Catalinas, 5 Bonnevilles To
Choose From
•

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

EASTERN AVEttUE

Finances

Getting
.
More
.

.

.

Am eri can . Lea gue:
H i ~le,
'Minn 110; Bonds , Cal 99 ;
Hobson , Bas and Thompson,
Oet 94 ; Nett les. NY 93.
Stolen Ba Us
National Leag ue : . Taver as,
Pitt 52;
Cedeno, Hou 45 ;
Morgan , Cin 43 ; .Y.oreno. Pift
41; Lopes, LA and Richar ds ,

(8 ), Hiller (9) and Wockenfuss .
W- Crawford, 6-5. L- Bi ue, 1013.
HR - Oelroit.
~od r i guez

(101.
N.Y.
Minn
Guidry

· Atlanta ( P. Niekro 13-17) at
40.
New York !Myrick 1-2), 2:05 soAm
erican League: Pa,ek, KC
p.m .
41 ; Remy , Cal 34 ; Bonds , Cal
Houston {J. Niekro J0.5) at and Page, Oak 32 ; LeFlore, Del
Montreal (Brown 9·111. 2:1 5 30.
p.m .

Pittsburgh {Candelaria 1541 at Los Angeles {John 16-51.
4:00p.m .
Chicago {R. Reuschel 19-5)
at San Diego (Shirley 9-16).
4:00 p.m.
St. Louis (U rrea 6·3) at San
Francisco ( MontefuscQ 7-10}..

4:05p.m.

Amer i can League

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Na tio nal ~e agu e: R .Reuschel ,
Ctii 19-5; Carlton, Phil 19-8;
Seaver, Cin and John, LA 16-5;
Forsch, St.L 16 -6 ; Rhoden , LA

C 1st game )
M ilw
000 000 01G-- l 4 0
K an City
001 0·10 0 1 ~~:- 3 9 2
Haas, McCl ure ( 8) , Castro (8)
and Moore ; Hassler , Bird (8)
and ,Por t er. W~ Ha s.sl er, B-5. L
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Mi!w
000 000 ooo-- 0 1 2
Kan City
()Q l 200 00~~: - 3 8 0 '
Tr aver s, Rodrlguez (6) ·and
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.il.tl~leFOUAfDEO

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THE ATHENS COUNTY
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MEIGS BRANCH

The Athens
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29M 2nll st., Pomeroy, 0 .
RICHARD E. JONES, MANAGER
Man.-Wed. ' to 3- Thurs . 9 to 12
Fri. flo 5-Sal. flo 12

71A
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Deposit
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%

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Day Certificates
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5

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74

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Jets

-

•

•
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IIHBR
ITD·V

John

Watson .
New

: See me about State Farm
llisability income insurance.

BY

end P.aul Sea l to San Fr ancisco
Wa i ved

quarte r back Steve Joachim .•
Ba se ball
California Bo ught the
contracts of left -ha nd ed pi t che r
Baler 1\t\oore and ri ght -hander
John Canei r a and recalled f ir st
baseman Wil l ie Aikens fro m
Salt L ake Cit y ; announ ced th at
pitcher Dave La Roche has been
sent home to be exa mined by
doctor s for a sore left shoulcler
an d s ide .
Chicago Cubs Rec alled
catcher Mike Gcrdar1 and r ight ·
handed p it cher s Jim Todd and
Donnie Moore from Wichita ;
purc hased the contract of
ou tf ielder Jim Dwyer from
Wichita; announced the sigrilng
of Tocld w rnterfeldt , a 15th
r ound dr aft choice.
·
Chicago White Sox Ac Qu ired ou tf iel der Henry Cruz on
wa ivers fro m Los Angel es;
assigned out fi elder Ny ls N yman
to New Orleans.
1-:-:~:-:::-::--:~:-::-~=--- ~
Ci nci nnati - Recalled pi t ch ·
er s Paul Caud ill, Raul Fer r eyr a, Joe Hender son, Mike

;Like a good

: tsthere.

•

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(UJ?I) San
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in thei r respect ive leagues in
the Rolaids Relief Man awards
competilion.
Fingers , with eight saves and
one win in August, passed
Chicago's Bruce !ufter as the
National
League pacesetter .
Through August. Fingers has
accumulatecl 30 saves and an B5 record for 71 tota l po ints on
the basis o f two points for eaeh
save and win. minus one pOint
for each loss. Sutter is second
with 61 to1al poin ts .
In the Amer ic an Le a ~ue, Lyle
collected five saves and four
wlns in Augus t to edge past
Bos ton's Bill Cam pbeH. Ly l e
had a . 12-4 r ecor d through
Aug ust, with 21 saves for a
total of 62 points, three more
than Campbell.

Buy famous
Olympic Redwood Stain
todayl You'll save $3 oil
the regular galion price!
This is the fines t quality
product you can use to
beauhfy d~cking, patio ·
furmture, fences . .. any
new wood you want to
give the lasting redwood
beauty and protection of
America's favorite
. redwood stain.
· Olympic Redwood Stain I Buy it now arid save
while supplies last. ·
·

M ike
and catcher
Werner
Ind ianapolis.
Sf. Louis - Recall ed pit cher s
Rand v

3efore you buy any stove - take the lime to examine a

•
,.
•

A FREE REGULAR
FRENCH FRY

FISH FILLET
PLATTER

'125

•

~~~::~Hu~Ee
~~~
t:-:W~O~O~D~A~N::=D:...:C:..:O:::...A=L:.
·
:B:U:R~N~IN:..:::G::.
..::S::T~O~V~E::S~I~N~A~M~E~R~Ig~-A~?._ _J
Grace ~W1~~};~~ .- Don
from
ANSWER ,' 1 ,
WHes and Steve Stan lALITY AND CONS.TRUCTIONI.

Ken Block and Rene Leclerc.
a ..ketball

•

Company

Homt Off.ce; Bloom1fl!tloi'l. lllmOIS

••

•

INIU~ "H CI

Qate Film ;MAUl l Au~ le lnsu&lt;iii!C~

-.

i n 1 i e 1de r s Tommy Sandt,

f.l.llll

•StateFann

WHY

Manny Castillo Bl'!d ~on Farka s
and outfi elder Terry Landrum
!rom minors ; pur ch ased outfielder's Benny Aya la and M ik e
Potter from •New Or leans.
Toronto - Si gn ed Ed Petrys chu k; caUH.I up pitch er s Tom
Bruno and Dennis· OeBllrr fro m
Toledo, Mike Darr from Jer sey
Cit y lind But ch · Edge from
Reno , in fielder Garth lorg fro m
Charleston and outfielder Ga r y
Woods from Toledo .
Hockey
lndi lln,polis (WHA ) An no unced the signing of ~ et er an s

P -" H

: nelchbo.-,

~

land , catche r Terry Kennedy,

BIG BEEF
PLATTER

SAVE 40'

FARMER/ FAIIMER
~
OWNED
CONrROllED :,

Pro Footba ll

Paul Forsythe, Jack Keller,
Doug Carr, Lew Coe, Chet
Harless, John Hatliday and
Bob LeBeau.

'{

1

COUNTRY COUSINS COOK SHOPPE SALUTES THE WORKING PEOPLE OF THE BIG BEND AREA
AND WISHES EVERYONE AGREAT lABOR DAY. COME IN AND ENJOYA MEAL WITH US ON
lABOR DAY. All DAY MONDAY ENJOY THE FOLLOWING SPECIAlS,

24 State Str ee t
Phone 446·4290

•

Oen\ler Acquired guard
Andy Mau r er from San F r an cisco for an undisc losed draft
cho ice .
Green Bay - Signed r et urn
special ist Rick Jennin gs .
New O r l~ans - Tr ad ed l ig ht

Bowhunters in particular
recognize the need to stay in
practice all year long. When
that 's not possible they must
begin months ahead of time
to get their eye and aim back
to a point where they can be
effective on wild game.
If you don't use a bow
you're stlll going to need w
check your rifle sights and
shoot a few practice rounds
before you become confident
again.
Sights get bumped and
jostled over a period of time
even when they're stored in a
rack or gun case. You'll save
a lot of time a nd
disappointment if you get
them back in or(,ler before
setting out on your first hunt
of the year.
It's usually not enough for a
hunter to get out on a target
course to shoo( his weapon .
He really needs to get into the
field and shoot at various
targets at varying distances.
It's best if the targets are
small and the distances unknown. This gets you back in
the habit of making accurate
range estimates and shooting
under less than ideal conditions. •
If you don't have your own
land, or know a landowner
who will let you use his, there
are some state-owned areas
that you can visit. Check with
the game warden in your
area .

&amp;

Mason Counties
•
Jack W. Carsey~ Mgr.
PH. 992.2181
POMEROY, OHIO •

Spo rts Tran sactions

THE MEIGS BRANCH OF

Press

·This time of the year, just
before the start of the fall
hunting season. is when most
outdoorsmen start to get
itchy feet .
It seems impossible to wait
the last couple of weeks until
you can slip into your boots,
pick up your gun or bow and
head for the fields.
Actually, there's no reason
you should wait. This is not to
suggest · that you go ahead
and start hunting a little
early. That could be big
trouble.
But you can start to get
your equipment in order and
your shooting back to an
acceptable level. ·
No matter how well-sighted
you rifle was last year, or
how proficient you were with
your bow, it's goi ng to take
some time w get back in the
slot for another year's
hunting.

Bv United P r e ss Int ernat iona l

I NEED

United

~~tternatioaal

·!" ..

FARMER

R I VER~ DE , Calif . (UPI) Mar lo Andrett i, Johnny Ruther ford and Benny Parsons Friday
acc epted invitations 10 compete
in the fiftl'1 running of the
lnteroallr;&gt;nal Race of Cham
pions .

&amp; COUPON SAVINGS FROM
COUNTRY ·COUSINS COOK SHOPPE

bas outdoorsmen itchy

I
I CARL'S 1:
1 SHOE StORE 1·
I - Gallirntis , Ohio ..I ·

A wider side-lap design has made the world 's largest
selling aluminum tarm sh~et even better by providing
greater .rigidity and leak resistance.
If you want an economical metlll building panel
J6.8:
Am er ica n L eague: Ryan, Cal
that's 66 percent lighter than galvanized, easie r to hand le, .
l7 .· 13i
Goltz , Min n 16 : B;
can't rust, keeps inte riors more comfortable, never needs ·
Roze, ma ~ De1 15-5; T . Johnson ,
Minn 15-6; Tarana. Cal 15-B;
paint and costs less to main.tain, then you want Ka iser
Tor r.ez , NY 15-11 ; Colborn , KC
Alum
inum Twin-Rib Plus.
15 13 .
E arn ed Run A ~ e r age
We've got it in 4-toot
( ba sed on 126 inni ngs p i.t ched)
Batt
000
022
OlD6 80
wide
sheets
and long lengths.
Nationa l League : Can delar ia, Chicgo
200 010 101- 5 9 1
Check Our Prices
Pitt 2.47;
John , LA
2.58;
And
it's
competitive
in price
Fl anag an. Drago
(7), T .
R.Reuschel, Ct"li 2.64 ; Hoofon, Martinez
{9)
an d
Skaggs;
PER 4'•8' SHEET
with galvanized.
LA 2.67; Richard, Hou 2.74.

Seattle (Mitchell 1-5) ai
Toronto {Jefferson 8·1 j). 1:30
p.m.
Oakland {Medkh · 8-6) at
Detroit {Rozema 15·5), 1:30
Renko, L aGrow ( 6) and Dow ·
p. m.
er i can League : . T anana, nin t .
W-Or ago.
6·3.
LCalitornia {Brett 11·10) at CalAm2.41;
, Tex 2.68; LaGrow , 7-3 . HRs- Ba ltimore,
Cleveland {Fi tzmorris 6-71. Ryan . Cal Blyleven
2.71 ; Rozema, Def L . May (21); Chicago, Zisk
2:00p.m .
2.82; T.Johnson, Minn 2.95.
{27) .
New York (Gul lett 10-3) at
Strikeouts
Mi nnesota {Thormodsgard
Nati onal L eague : Niekro, Arl Boston
001 000 102-4 8 1
219; Koosm an, NY 169;. Roger s, Te~~: as ·
000 121 llx- 6 13 o
10·10). 2:15p. m.
JenKin s, Stanl ey (6), Wil·
Baltimore {Palmer 14-11 l M_tl 168 ; Seaver, C•n ·. 167 ;
.
loughby (8) and Fisk; Blvl even,
at Chicago {Slone 13·10). 2: 15 R•chard_, Hou 165.
Amer.can L 4! agu e: Ryan, Cal • Briles (6)
Moret (8) and
p.m.
305; Tan.llna , Cal 20 1; Leon ard~ sUndb erc:;~. W- Biyl even, 13-11. L
Mil wa u.k~ (Ca ldwell 4-7) KC 185, Blyleven, Tex 172, - Jenkin s
10-9 . HR -Bosron
at Kansas City (Patt in 6·2l. Eckersley, Clev 169 .
Hobson &lt;in.
·
'
2:30p.m.
· Boston {Tiant 9·8) at Texas
(Perry 12-101, 7:00p.m .

Champ's
to he
honored

Fall hunting season

~

000 000 001)-... 0 6 1
and Johnson ; Goltz,
Burgmeier (81 and Wynegar. W
-Gu idry, 12 -6. L-Goltz, 16 -8.
H Rs-New York , Pinie!la {8),
White {14) .

Uoos Club and the Gallipolis
Masomc Lodge, the annual
awards banquet will start at 6 .
p.m.
The players, managers,
ump~tes. members of the
Gallipolis Recreation Board,
and other guests will be
recognized and trohies
awarded to 'the players.
Parents may ·pick up their
sons
after the banquet at 7:45
GAJ.f.IPOLIS
All
members of the three p.m .
Galtipoiis summer league
•'
baseball championship teams
will he honored Tuesday,
Sept. 6at Oscar's Restaurant.
'•
Sponsored by the Gallipolis

CUTTING CORNER - Ron Newell (22), junior
halfback for Coach Steve Safford's 1977 edition of the Big
Blacks grid team, attempts to elude a Barboursville
defensive player while cutting the corner on a run during
Friday night's season opener.

Oak.lnd
020 000 .101- 4 10 1
Det
003 100 20x- 6 121
Blue, Bair (71, Lacey (7J and
Hosley ; Crawfor d, Fouca ult

LA 98.

United Press lnterna t iqn a l

•

America n Le-ague
Calif
000 000 00 1- 1 6 0
Cleve
200 000 Dlx- 3 8 0
H a r t z e I I a nd Humphrey;
BibbyJ Pruitt (7), Dobson C7l.
Kern (7) and Kend all . wBibby , 12-10. L-Hartzell. 6-9.
HR-Celveland. Thornton C27l .

Bench, Cin

Sunday's

several days.
"You can let everybody'
know now." Brown nid.
"We'll be aMounclng a backup center within the nelt 10
days."

~

·"'flf'"~ and other
ad 1v1tics . 1\ \\oard~ were

mdudet.l

m•dc at a banquet foilow•ng
JAI'KSilN Ra&gt; Ot&gt;l•mg. net 64.
165..f.i9l \\Jlh i.•n 81. and Jim the tourmmwnt.
ln('iass K l:t~o·!i0-54 1 Paul f&gt;t•llurde. Portsnu.uth, won
Gallipoli&gt;. with a 75 " "" tow
Other prizes in the golf
gross hunors at lhr 11th t&lt;"ursythe. Jll&lt;·kson. Wdll h1w IO\\ net \ulh a 65.
tournament
were. a warded to
annual S.JUthrrn Ohio Seniors l{ross ~ilL HJJ 82 :md .J:~fk
H. 1&gt;. White. c:alhpolis. won Huger Hamsey. M1ddil1own;
Golf
luurnnment
held Rodt•o'itk, JaC'kson. "011 low Class II t70 and oven low Charles Neal, (;allipolis; Art
Tuesday at the Fairgrecn~ net with a 6!i. ·
gross honors with an 86 and Studuneister, Jackson ; AI
Class ll r55-59 1was a tie bt- Newt VermiUion, Jackson. Stewart , Jackson; Aven
Country Club in Jackson
('het
Harless , "&lt;iS low net with a 68.
County. A total of 107 male tween
l.usk, Gallipolis; Joe Carey,
golfers over f&gt;O years or age Wellston, and Hob Wagner,
Chet llarless. Wellston. and Wellston ;
Dr.
Homer
Portsmouth. with 8t 's for low John Lambt:rt, Jackson, were Thomas, Gallipolis:
participated .
Lew
Coe,
George Ramsey, Wellston, gross · while Doug Carr, co-&lt;·hairmen of the seniors Chillicothe ; Miles Smith ,
was low gross runnerup with l.ogan. w~s lvw net with a 65. e-ve-nt this
year,
and Waverly;
Tom
Delay ,
an SQ. Ira "Chet'' Davis.
Class C (6CHl5 ) "'" won by Lawrence Gill, Weiiston and .lackson; Or. John Shinn, Pt.
Zanesville, with a .net or 63 Lee Fitch. Portsmouth, with Bi ii Morrow. Jackson. golf Pleasant rw. Va.): Loyal
won the Joe Thomas trophy an • 81 and Brad Phares, t'O-chain• en. Martha Mur· Folden, Venice, Fla .: while
lor low net. and Carl l,ogan, won low net with 67. phy, Jackson, is the seniors' birdie awards went to Hobe
Bob Irons , Jackson, was secretary ; and Virginia Heiman, Ray De1,ong, Brad
Dahlberg, Wellston , was low
net runnerup honors with a low gross winner for Class B. Ackerman, Wellston, headed Phares, John Bierstecker,
,•

~

TORONTO rUP! 1 - Bob
Stinson belted a two-run
homer and Lee Stanton
slugged a three-run horper
Saturday as the Seattle
Mariners came from behind
w defeat the Toronto Blue
Jays 6-2.
John Montague, 7-10,
scattered nine Blue Jay hi\s
in striking out five and
walking two in his seven
innings of work. He was
relieved by Tom House, who
pitched to three batters in the
bottom of the eighth, and
Enrique Romo, who picked
up his 12th save in getting the
final six outs. Toronto starter
Jesse Jefferson, 8-14, took the

~,a i.-green:-) Wumcn '!i C:ulr
Ao.,sut'iatlon ~ct1viues which

thtt

Ray DeLong has low gross

•

Mariners defeat
Blue Jays, 6-2

WIN TITLES
MILAN, Italy (UP! )
Cindy Tndd of the United
States and Venezuela 's Maria
Victoria Carrasco won the
first titles up for grabs
Saturday in teh 15th World
Waterskiing Championships.
Todd, 21 , from Pierson,
Florida, won the women's
slalom title, with her better
performance
in
the
qualifications offsetting a
one-buoy lag behind Canada's
Pat Messner in the final
round.

c-:1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. S.,pt ~.1!177

Now Open Until 9:15PM Sunday thru Thursday and 11:15 PM Friday and Saturday
J

,,

.

�C4-The Sunday Times-Sentmel, Sunday, Sept. I . 1917

U. S. members
NEWTOWN SQUARE. Pa.
(UP!) - U. S. Walker Cup
members Michael Brannan,
John Fought and Jay Sigel
and three British Walker
euppers were fourth-round
~'iMers Saturday in morning
action in the U. S. Amateur
Golf Championship.
The three remaining U. S.
Walker Cup participants in
lhe field joined British
-- counterparts Peter McEvoy.
Michael Kelley and Sandy
Lyle arid 1972 U. S. Amateur
Champion Vinnie Giles in the
.fifth r o.und of play Saturday
afternoon :
BraMan, of Salinas, Calif.,
knocked off Warren Nelson of
Danvers , Mass., 4-and-3 ;
Fought , of Portland, Ore .,

defeated Doug Clarke of La
Jolla. Calif., 1-up; and Sigel,
playing on his home course at
the Aronimink Golf Club.
turned back Dallas Apelgren
of Nonh Palm Beach, Fla ., 3·
and-!.
On the British side,
McEvoy, the British Amateur
champion from Birmingham,
England, defeated John
Grace of Fort Worth. Tex., 2and-1 ; Kelly, of Scarborough,
England, eliminated Gerry
Simoni of Whittier, Calif., 4and-3, and Lyle, of Shropshire, England. ousted David
Ojala of Huinble, Te~.• 1-up.
Giies, of Richmond, Va .,
WiMer of the title in 1972,
defeated British Walker
Cu pper Ian Hut cheon of

Monifieth. Scotland, 1-up ,
with a five-fool par putt on
lhe llkh hole.
British Walker Cup per·
former Gordon Murray of
Barrhead, Scotland, also was
a fourth-round casualty.
losing to Ralph Landrum of
South Fort · Mitchell, Ky., I·
up.
In another fourth round
match of interest, Tim Bond,
conqueror of defending
c hampi on Bill Sanders
Friday, defeated collegian
J ohn Stark of San Antonio ,
Tex ., 5-and-4 .
Bond, a junior high school ·
tea cher from Aberd een,
Wash ., said he didn't play as
well against Stark as he did
against Sander but won ~he

•
Winners

12th. 13th and 14th holes to
take the match after making
the tum 2-up.
Brannan was 4-up at the
turn in his match but lost the
loth. lith and ' 12th holes in
succession . He came back to
win 13, 14 and 15 and take the
1
match .
Fought was 4-up with six
holes to play but then lost four
of the ne~t five holes to par.
He won the llkh to take the
match .
Sigel had some trouble in
his match, going two down
.after four holes, .but evened
the match with a birdie on the
si~th hole and a par on th e
eighth. He took the lead for
good with a par on the loth .
The best morning round

Green Speed has mile record_
DU QUOIN, Ill. (UP!) Yonkers Trot wiunner Green
Speed trotted a world record
mile I :55 3-5 twice on a fast
track Saturday to win the
52nd running of the 284,131
Hambletonian in straight
heats.
Going off as the 4,5
favorite in the first heat and
2'-5 in the second heat, Green
Speed took charge of the race
at the half mile in each heat
to give driver Billy Haughton
his third Hambletonian win in
the last five years. The
winning
co lt
ca nn ot ,
however, win trotting's triple
crown since he was not
nominated for the lhird leg,
the Kentucky Futurity, and

CaMot be supplementej as
in thoroughbred racing.
The clocking at the three
quarters was the same in
each heat, l :27 1..5, and the
finish was the same in each
heat. Texas finished second
and Native Starlight was
third.
The win gave Green Speed
a record first place purse of
142,065.50 fr om a record
Hambletonian gross purse
and boosted Haughton' s
Hambletonian earnings in
which he ranked first heading
into Saturday's event , to
478,889.07 in 18 appearances
in the stake.

It was the 30th tim e over all
but the first time since Flirth
in 1973 that a horse has won in
straight heats . Green Speed
was the first New-York-bred
colt to win the event.
Gr een Speed was part of a
Haughton entry with Cold
Comfort, driven by BiUy 's
son , Peter. Cold Comfort
went off-stride in the first
heat but finished fourth in the
second heat.
Green Speed paid 2.80, 2.60
and 2.20 ·in the second heat ,
Texas returned 3.40 and 2.60
and Native Starlight 4.00. The
muluels for the first heat
were 3.80, 3.00 and 2.80 for

Green Speed , 8.40 and 6.00 for
Texas and 10.40 for Native
Starlight.
The previous world and
Hambletonian record for 3year-old trotters was I :56 2-.'i
last year by Steve Lobell,
with Haughton driving, and
by Super Bowl with Stanley
Dancer in 1972.
The speed equalled the
world record for trotters of
all ages set by Noble Victory
with Dancer driving in 1966.
Haughton' s
previous
Hambletonian wins were with
Steve Lobell last year and
Christopher T. in 1974.

e+-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 4,1977

Wildlife offering two zones
&lt;'OI.UMBUS UPI ·In ..ct·
lin~ the 1977-78 waterfowl
n:guliltwns, the sUite Wlldhfe
Council has introduL'ed an ex·
p&lt;memntat program of(.enng
two zones, north and south,
w1th sepHrate season dates.
Dale HaQey, chief of the
Ohio Division of Wildlife, said
the idea is to "accorrunodale
as many waterfowl hunters
as possible in all regions of

was turned in by Allen
Powers Jr., of Aiken, S. C.,
who·shot an tv en par 70 in a 1up win' over Greg Young, of
Killeen , Tex.
.
Sixteen player s advanced
to the fifth round of the
t.Qumament and the winners
will adance to Sunday's Ohio."
quarter-finals.
1ntcr&gt;tate 1-70 w11l be the

•

•
R osewall e.a.
0'1Ven ovation
FOREST HILLS, N.Y. the heat.
(UPI) - Ken Rosewall, a . Too manY. factors confavorite here ever since he spired again$\ Rosewall-his
played in his first finals 24 age, courtside temperatures
years aog, bowed his head as over 90, the two sets · he
he left the stadiwn court to a played Friday and the youth
standing ovation for perhaps and talent of his opponent the last time Saturday when and in the end he could not
he fell to :!&gt;year-old Jose overcome them all .
Rosewall played here when
Higueras of Spain 6-4, 6-4 in
the U.S. Open Tennis Cham· there was grass, when lbey
opened it to prefessionals and
pionshipa.
New
Yorker
Vitas wben they changed to clay.
Gerulaitis, the eighth seed, Now, if the open moves from
Harold Solomon of Silver Spr- the West Side Tennis Club, he
ings, Md. , seed llth, Roscoe may never play here again.
" He 's not the fantasUc
Tanner, the 12th-seed, and
player
he once was, so that's
Poland 's Wojtek Fibak, No .
1
beat him," said
why
15, all made it to the round of
after his first
Higueras,
16, but he loss by teh 14
stadium
appearance
in his
seeded Rosewall touched
third
open.
"
It
's
a
big
everyone 's feelings .
The short but muscular 42- pleasure to beat a player like
year-old Australian , who won him. I feel sorry in a way to
this championship in 1956 and beat him. When he was a
1970 and who lost in the finals great player, he could heal
twice, made a game bid to players like me ."
· Higueras, a Davis Cup
come back one more time
after falling behind 0-3 in the · player, • was well aware of
first set. He squared the first Rosewall's age. " I tried to
setat4-4butcouldn'tholdhis · make long rallies, " Higlleras
serve in the crucial ninth said. " !thought he'd get Ured
. game. In the second set, this hot day with the hwnidiRosewall pulled ahead 4-1 ty. That's why l didn't go to
before virtually collasping in the • net at any time."

d1viding lines for the two
zones. North of 1-70, the duck,
t'OOt and merganser season
will run frum Oct. 13-Nov. 26.
South of the line the season
will run from Nov. I7·Dec. 31.
H w1ting hours wm Ill! 30
minutes before sunrise to
su nset. Sunday hunting is
prohibited and redhead and

LOS , ANGELES (U P I) Worlc:t BaKing counc il welter
weight
champion
Carlos
' Palom i no of Westminster,
Calif ,. was listed as a 9 S
favor ite Friday over lfallan
veteran Elferaldo Azeveco fQr
their Sept 13 lS round titl.e
fight at tile Olymp ic Audlror, .
um .
Danny "LiHie Red " Lopez , ~f
Alhambra, Calif ., will put k1s
W BC fea-therweight crown on
the line against Me~~:ico 's Jose
Torres and haS been made an
11 ·10 choice. Lopez is 31 -3 and
Torres 28 .5· 1.

Coryell

canvasback ducks may not be
taken in Er1e, Otlawa and
Sandusky counties.
A special statewide scaup
season will run Jan. 2-17. The
dally limits is five and the
possession !unit alter the first
day , IO .
The statewide goose season
will run Del. 13-Dec. 10 and
from Dec. 21-31. In
Ashtabula,
Trumbull,
Manon, Wyandot, Lucas, 01·
tawa, Erie,
Sandusky '
Mercer and Aug1atze counties, the daily limit on geese
will be five, including not
more than one Canada goose ,
two white fronted geese or
one of each.
The bag. limit is five in the
rest of the state, but may not
inclu de more than tw o
Canada geese or two white
fronted geese or one of each.

•

g~ven

relief

Economy and Fun on 2 Wheels

HONDA
First. For good reason.

NEW 1978 MODELS
ON DISPLAY
AND READY TO GO
SMAU SELECTION OF 776-A
GOOD SELECTION OF
USED HONDA BIKES

0

GOING STRONG

BETZ HONDA SALE
Phone 446-2240

Rt. 7

Gallipolis

Nuggets won't renegotiate
DENVER (UPI ) - Carl
Scheer, general manager of
the
Denver
Nugget s,
Saturday said the NBA team
would not renegotiate a
contract with ·Ted McClain
and, if necessary , would pay
off Fatty Taylor's remaining
one-year pact to get rid of the
two veteran guards .
Scheer said contract
matters with McClain, a six·
year veteran, were simple
becau,% he had played out his
option last season and now
was a ' free agent.
"We don't have to do
anythihg, " Scheer said.
However, he admitted
Taylor's case was more
complicated because of a
remaining year on his contract. He said the Nuggets
would rather pay off the
eight-year veteran than have
him report to camp.
" At the present time, to be
perfectly candid, we as an
organizatipn would prefer not
to have Fatty in ca111p,"
Scheer said.
McClain , who lives in
Nashville,
couldn't
be
reached for comment but
Tsylor said he believed His
problems with the Nuggets
stemmed from a New York
columnist's story. The story
quoted unidentified Denver
players saying the Nuggets

weren't as close as .believed. ·
The players also attacked
Larry
Brown's
Co ach
leadership abilities.
" My situation with Larry is
now a personal thing,"
Taylor said. "Personally, he
feels that I don 't respect him
as a man. And I'll tell you, I
never did respect him as a
man because he tried to treat
you like a kid .. . he wants
kids, he gays, and I'm not a
kid . I want him to treat me
-ljke a man. He wants it lobe
like at North Carolina. Well
this is no North Carolina."
Taylor · originally was
thought to be one of the
unidentified players who
attacked Brown's coaching
ability, but . he later was
cleared
and
. Brown
apologized.
" He (Brown ) said he
wanted to a-pologize and I just
left it that I didn't accept his
apology," Taylor said. "So I
still didn 't get (playing) time
... this is my job, this is my
· livelihood. I don't think they
should take it out on me lik e

this."
Brown , who coached a
North Carolina team in the
defunct American Basketball
Association, denied the
newspaper
story
was
responsible for his decision
not to invite Taylor ):lack for

the coming season ,
''That is not the reason we
are not asking Fatty back,"
Brown said, "Because I know
that he wasn 't part of the
problem last year in New
York.

" 'red's another case. I
think he may have been more
involved. But he's a free
agent. Also, he had a chance
to sing a contract with us last
yea r and he didn 't."

Boy, 14, hit by gunshots
CLEVELAND ( UP!) east side intersection. They
The
Cuyahoga
County said they began chasing the
Coroner' s office said a 14- car after receiving reports
year-&lt;&gt;ld boy died of a gunshot that a shot hat\ been fired
wound early Saturday as the · from 'it at another motorist .
car he was driving craShed
The coroner's office said
whlle police · were chasing the boy died of a gunshot
him.
wound in the head. There was
Police
said
Wadall no immediate determination ·
Trawich , Cleveland, ranuned on whether the bullet was
a police car and careened into from a police weapon .
a barrier of railroad ties at an
Police said a 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld
passenger in the' car who
suffered minor injuries in the
.
Sporh Bri efs
crash
denied
having
By Unit.ed, Press International
gun .
LOS ANGE L ES ( UPI I - The possessed or fired
Pa clflc -8 Skywriters Fr iday They said no weapon was
came with in one vote of
unanimousl y .pick ing Un.iv-ersity found.
Of Sou thern California's football
Pollee said they fir~ njne
team to w i n the conference shots at the car.
c hanipionship and go to the

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a

Rose Bowl .
Twenty -eight of t he 29 writers
who toured t he eight con ference
cities cas t thei r fi rst -place.
votes f or the Trojans, who were
runner -up to Pittsburgh In th e
f inal UPI coaches' ·ra tings last
season .
USC totaled 231 po ints in tne
vot ing whi le UCLA was picked
to f inish second w ith 1891f2.
wash ington· received the other
first -place
vote
and
1601h
points .
Cal ifornia re ceived 135 po.int s
and was fol lo wed by Stanford ,
w ith 120; Washington State ,
with 93 ; Oregon State, with 63,
and Oregon, w ith 35 .

MONTREAL {U P! ) The
Montreal Expos Fr iday an ·
no unced the recall of contracts
ot r ight -hander Larry Landreth ,
outt leldet' -thi rd baseman Gary
Roeniclt.e, and outfielder Jerry
White from the Denver Bea rs
of the c l ass AAA Amercian
Associat ion .
The Expos also announced
the purchase of the contract of
righthander Hal Dues from
Quebec Metros of the c lass AA
Eastern Leagl!e .

OFFICIAL NOTICE
of the

Go to work
in quality
Outdoorsman ... wo rk shoes
for wo rkm en . Qua li ty built
to stay "on duty" when
you're "on duty ."
Designed to keep you
comfortable all day , ..
and deliver the
kind of long· wear
you e&lt;pect lor your
work shoe dollars .

43rd Annual Meeting
Jackson Production
Credit·Association
Sunday, September 11, 1977
Canters Cave
(4-H Campground)

'I

I

S!x Miles Northwest of Jackson off Rt . 35
(Look for PCA Signs)
Dinner Will be Served: From 12:00 to 1:30

Adults-51.00
Children Under 12 Years Old- 50'
I

'

'

/

fJCkets will be available at your local county
office and also available at the meeting
.. when registering.

Be sure to return your r~tion cards
.__.-by...,Sep
,
16tember 6.'. . .:1::.:.:97-7.-....:,__,
,

PHli.Ail~:I.PHIA 1UP! I A last minut~ decision that
put Bake Mc Bride in the
starting lineup paid off for the
Philadelphia Phillies.
McBride drove in all of the
Phillies' runs with a homer
and two doubles in a ~
victory Friday night over the
Cincinnati Reds .
McBride said he was surprised to learn he was going

By GREG AIELW
UPI Sporlt Writer
Jim
Hart's
95-yard
touchdown pass to Ike Harris
sealed St. Louis' 23-14 victory
over the Chicago Bears
Friday night and provided
Cardinals' Coach Don Coryell
with some welcome relief .
" That's tbe first big play
we 've had this year," Coryell
said. " It let everbody know
what it's like. If you don 't get
a big play like Ike 's, you
won't beat a good team like
Chicago.'' '
· The Cards, with an
exp!osive offense that led the
NFC last year, had been
sputtering along without a
victory in four preseason ·
games, scoring only 26 points
in those games . It was a
mysteriously poor showing
for a team many believe
capable of challenging Dallas
in the NFC East. The
Cardinals, of course, had
been reminding everyone
that these were merely
exhibition games-.
Bob Avellini hit Johnny
Musso with a 39-yard scoring
pass to bring the Bears to
within 16-14 early in th~ third
quarter . Chicago then bad \be
Cardinals in a third-and-12
situation deep in their own
territory . But Hart rolled into
his end zone and found Harris
wide open for tbe clinching
TD pass.
.Hart played the entire
game, completing 9-of-13
passes for 184 yards .
St. Louis took a I~ lead
midway through the second
quarter on a pair of !~minute
scoring drives, capped Jim
Otis' !-yard plunge and a 2yard TO run by Terry
Metcalf.
Walter Payton ·completed a
76-yard drive with a 2-yard
scoring run . with 44 seconds
left in the first hair . But the
Cardinals responded by
moving to the Chicago 14
where Jim Baaken booted a
3!-ya rd field goal with four
seconds remaining to give St.
Louis a 16-7 halftime lead .
In other gam~s. Baltimore
downed Detroit 21-10, Pitts·
burgh rallied to beat Phila·
delphia 21-13 and Denver
defel!ted Seattle 2'1·10 . .
Colts 21; Uons 10
Second-year ruMing back
Ron Lee, Baltimore' s top preseason rusher, scored two
thirdperiod touchdowns to
spark the Colts, 3-2, pa;;t the
mistakeriddled. Uoas. Lee,
replacing
the
injured
Roosevelt Leaks at fullback,
scored on a 32-yard screen
pass from Bert Jones to
break a scoreless tie early in
the third quarter. Later, he
scored on a !-yard run to give
Baltimore the lead for good,
14-10. The Colts
took
advantage of five Detroit
interceptions and one fumble.
Steelers Zl, Eagles 13
Terry Bradshaw passed for
104 yards and a touchdown in
the second haH to bring the
Steelers back from a 1~
halftime deficit. Reggie
Harrison plunged one yard
for the Steelers first
·touchdown with 10;41 gone in
the third quarter. John
Stallworth scored another on
a leaping, end zone catclt of a
22-yard Bradshaw pass, and
rookie Sydney Thornton
scored on a 10-yard run with
:24 left in the game.
Bronoos rl, Seahawl&lt;s 10
' The Broncos, now 5·1,
capitalized on a penalty and a
fumble to strike for 10 points
in a two ·minute span of the
third quarter. Jim Turner
booted a 33-yard field goal
and rookie Rob Lytle scored
on a 4-yard touchdown run to
clinch the game for Denver.
In games Saturday, Dallas ·
was at Houston,New Orleans
at Miami, San Francisco at
Oilkland, Cleveland at Green
Bay, Minnesota at Cincinnati
and Tampa Bay at Buffalo.
The New York Jets visit the
New York Giants and
Washington travels to New.
England on Sunday while
Kansas City hosts Atlanta on
Labor Day.

tu Ill~, ··
don 't think
I'm das.~iru..i.l us u po\-\t.•rrul
hiU~r •• I'•" sw·t! I never
befHrc CU'i'"ltnted fur ev('ry
run in a ~·~nK~.''
McBride gnt lhe Phils off ~~
a 1-0 lea~ in the third by
doubling home Ted Sizemore,
wh&lt;1 had walked and mnved to
Second nn a sacrifice .
Mcilril.le hit his I:Jth homer

Wil!'t i1 SUiprtst•
~kll!idt• said . "I

start.
..1 d1dn't knuw if l was
~uinJ.: to play t11night unhl

t.u

batting practice, " said
Mt·Bride , who has ailing
knees . He was penciled'" the
lineup in cen terfield just
before ({arne time when
Garry Maddox said his.
inj ured
shoulder
was
bothering him .
" l~ittlng in all those runs

gfare
'lt.S.

~

inth&lt;• flflh tu 111ake it 2-0 and
lu· tl uublt'lllll Si1.emurP in the

to wind up the

St'\f•Ulh
!\('111"111~ .

·· 1 hit the hume ruH as well
as I c-dn hit " ball," McBride

said. " Although 1 have 13
hnme runs this year, I still
don't consider myself a home
run hitter. My i"b IS til ~et on
oose fur 1Mike) Sclunidt and
CG reg) Luzinski.

I
I t_ll 9

was al.-od nf the h1tters mf&gt;st
,f the ~!&lt;Jme which is really
the !;Cere! uf pitching."

gn l Ull· I&lt;JSI uut .''

Mari&lt;• SIJI.H, 2~, went six
irming..'i ~nd tvok the loss.

•

Jun I J•nb&lt;wg went U;e uis-

"''"''"r... the Phi IS, scattering

rive hits In p1dti11g up h1s lOth

The vitUory was the 15th
at hume for the
Phillles , breaking " dub
record set in 1890.

strai~ht

\lll'tnry in 13 deciSIIIOS.
I J&gt;llb&lt;•rg said he had good
stuff and ~:•~&lt;l cuntrol.
" I pitched around some
000 000 001 1 6 0
hille rs, made the I(IIOd COI!t
Cleve
'200 OQ(l Oh: 3 8 0
pitches when I needed them,"
Hartz e 1 1 and HumpMey ;
Si bby , Hood (7). Dob'iOn OJ.
he sai d. " I had a good fast Kern
(n and Kendall
W
ba II and als11 had good c-ontrol Bibby , 12 10 L Hartzell. 6 ~
of my off speed deliveries. I HR Celveland, Thornton (271

~CHAUM!IURG Ill IUPil
Seven 819 Tell schools report
1ncreased football 11Cket {ale~
lor- the
l971 season. th!"'
LOntercnce ottu:e reported
Friday, -w i th two other schools
keepinQ pace with sates ol
prelf10us years
Only Northwester-n reported a
sl1ghr dec I ine in tales
Micnlgan predicted se\len
games would draw mort! than
100,000 tans each
Purdue ,
Wisconsin. IJI1nois. Iowa In
d i ana an(f Mich i gan Starr
reported i ncreased sales Oh1o
State and Mrnne\Ota sa1d sale~
were eQuivalertl with last year
The nat i onal attendance
leader in 15 Of the last 20 years.
said ti'l e of rts siJ~. home qames
nave been sold out

I~ I I~*~'&amp;· 'But-- u.s 7),r£ ~.

BO ELESS
CHUCK STEAKS

SUNDAY

1 til 6

'J.up. ~ ,

Ground Beef

-::;tl.69"
Por•
5tea•s • • elb.99"
3

""'"'- 5 St.vr

~;rw

•

Armour

Jumbo

~

Bologna • • • • tJ.

Boneless Shoulder Steaks 51.29
51.49
Boneless
Cube
Steaks
•••
?o&lt;-4
Ground Chuelt ••••••••••• • 98t
It

6qc

aJlAUNSCBWaGD ••••••••••••••

11.

It

.(,o.,

ffo-1 ~

It

79'

·BANANAS 5

79e
Ciloc:tiiiP COOKIES,.&amp;~ 8qe
s..~.w~
.
.WINDOW
CLEANER
•· • •~1 79e
OOBARS ••••••••

1.&amp; ""-

1-11!.

&amp;.

.

...

p.m.

~

Last minute starter defeats Reds

.· ·u wa'i ('~rtamly a bt~ wm
fot· us. v,.u're&lt; n~vt'r sure
aj.!aill,!)l r:n('mllatl until you

..

VOTED IN
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
State
University
has
swallowed its pride, and
admitted it made a mistake
when it selected the first
class of Its Sprots Hall of
Fame.
The OSU. Hall of Fame
Committee met Friday and
voted In fanner Helsman
Trophy winner Vic Janowicz,
omitted from the orlglnalllBt

of

II

~.

!Jy acclamation.

••

,,

'

�'

~Thi!'Sunday Times-Senlmel, sw,day,SI&gt;pt. 4.1977

Nlinor league M.V P's honored by Stroh's
l'INl'INNATI
Paul Bre"en l'o al llll'erfront
H~rrw~. Gre~ Jijckson and· ~admn) nn Sunday, Ott. 2.

The Most Natural L'lwice
After Surgery

Tonuny Sohns, who wert'
teammutes at the- C'tnrinnati
R&lt;'ds' Billings fann rlub ill
1976, have been named the
Most Valuable Players on
three dtfferenl H:eds' minor
LeaguP teams in 1977 and will
be honored by the Stroh

®

SPENCO
BREAST
FORMS .

.
'
..

Deslg

the best choices after breast surgery They are now
ava ilable in ·two shapes, each to satisfy a specific
surg ical need. We invite you to come in and personally
rev iew these new forms. We shall be happy to help you
with your selections.

CERTIFIED FITTERS ON STAFF
We Honor Golden Buckey e Card

ffilnl!

Spring Valley
Plaza

Phone
446·2206

Gallipolis, Oh io
ASTA CERTIFIE D FACULTY
We accept VISA and Master Charge

PHYSICAL THERAPY SERVICES NOW
AVAILABLE
Mr~.

Herman Dillon, RN , Manager
Mrs. SusaQ
n Taylor, RN, A~st, Mana9er

()n

the Hl•&lt;l::;' Hadio Network,

will Lrmg the MI'Ps &lt;•f ails six
Reds' fam1 leams to fincmnati where !hey will be
honored
in
pre·J.(ame
ceremonies on tt}e final da}' or
the 1977 season. Each player

Herrin~ .

an oulftelder, was
selected as the Most Valuable
Playe•· al Shelby, N. C., of the
Class A Western Carolinas
l.eaf,!ue . Jac-kson. a first
baseman. earned ~is MVP
honors for Eugene of the
nass A Northwest League.

Sohns, a third baseman, was
MVP at Tampa of the Class A
f lorida Stale League.
Other winners still to be
announced will be chosen at
tndianaplos. Three Rivers
and BillinRs.
Herring . 23. hit a .306 with
17 homers. 85 RBis and 20
stolen bases at Shelby.

Herring, from Halletsville,
Tex., was selected in the 15th
round in the June, 1976 free
agent draft.
Sohns, 23, had 25 stolen
bases and 35 RBls while
batting. 264 at Tampa, impressing with his steady play
and leadership. Sohns, from
Dunmore, Pa., was selected

Everything You Never

m the 24th round or the sam&lt;

draft after graduating from
Scrantoo University.
Jackson, 20, averaged
nearly one RBI per game at
Eugene, knocking home 64
runs in 68 games while hitting
14 homers with a .323
average. He is from
Kankakee, Ill., and was
signed as a free agent after
playing at New Mexico
University and Thornton
( Ill. ) Community College.
At Billings in 1976, in their
GAllS was penalized once first pro seasons, Jackson hit
for ll'z yards. he Devils lost .275; Herring, .28:1; and Sohns
one of four fumbles ,
.293.

•
"'

•

GALLIPOLIS
passes for 30 yards. giving
Wheelersburg
blanked the Blue Devils 47 Iota I yards
Gallipolis five touchdowns to in 40 plays from scrimmage.
none in a
pre-season
Greg Harrington went the
scrimmage on Memorial distance at quarterback for
Field Saturday morning .
GAHS. Matt Willis. another
It was Ihe Blue Devfls• final &gt;OphomiJre signal caller, did
practice lilt before friday 's not play Saturday due to a
1977 opener at home against bruised knee.
Rock Hill.
Terry ·Davis, tackle,
The visiting Pirates scored missed the scrimmage after
on runs of 13, five, three nd suffering a cut loot on a piece
one yard and once on an of glass in the parking lot
eight-yard pass during the following practice friday
two hour scrimmage.
evening. The wound required
GAHS got as far as the five stilches.
Pirate 32 early in the battle
Sc 0tt (Bo ) Morrison's 42
after Ken Barcus recovered a yards in 13 trips paced GAllS
WHS fuinble.
runners.
After that, GAllS passed
Mike Staggs grabbed two
the mid-field stripe twice, aerials for 10 ya rds , Morrison
once to the Pirates 47 and one for 12 and Nick Robinson
laler to the 48.
one for eight.
The visito rs had 24 first
Coach Buddy Moore and his
downs and rushed for 317 staff feft the practice lilt was
yards in 59 trips. The 'Burg a " real goo d experience for
C&lt;Jmpleted six of 10 passes for our kids." The Pirates, 48-2-0
120 yards. WHS hand 437 lola! over the past five years under
yards in 69 plays from the Coach Ed Miller, executed
scrimmage.
well throughoul the scrimGAllS picked up three first mage and indicated they will
downs, gained 17 yards in 28 be one of the area's top Class
trips and completed four of 12 AA grid teams again this fall.

The aggressive Piral&lt;s
were penalized seven times

for 55 yards. WHS lost two of
five rumbles.

•

·,

FALL

M
~
o_
a_
N_I_
NG_
s _ _ __

' Principle• of Accounting I (C)
*Principles of Accounting III
•ouantit&amp;tive Methods I

9:00-9:~0

14)

*Fundamentals of Biology (C)

ART---------------------------------------------*Basic Ceramics
1:00-5:00
Th
(2)
*Ba sic Photogr.aphy (C)
M
1:00-5:00
(2)
•Mul tiple Images
T
1:00cS:O,O
( 3I
*.Cha" ir Caning
(l)
TBA
•easic Metal Sculpture
TBA
(2)
BIOWGY ______________________________________~-------

(C)

Lab IC)
•Anatomy and Physiology .
Lab

'
·,
'

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

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{4)

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*Principles of Business Manaqe.
BUSI~E~~

11:00-11:50
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*Gene ral Botany

11:00-11:50

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( 4)

EDUCATION

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------------------------MTW'I'h

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CHEMISTRY___________________________________________________
8:00-10:50
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ECONOMICS:--------------------------------------------------*American Economy {C)
11:00-11: so
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EDUCATION ___________________________________________________
.*Introduction .to Education (C)
*Principles of Teaching (C)
• Natural Science Methods Elem.
M~th Methods El ementary

8 : 00"- 8:50
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9 :0 0-10:50

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ENGLISH---------------------------------------------*Composition (C)
8:00-B:SO
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• c.omposi t ion
a,oo- 9 :so
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*Composition
9:00-10:50
MW
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11:00-12 : 50
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MTThF
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*Creative Wr i ting
11:00-11:50
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•American Literatu(e
11:00-11:50
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*Arneri ~:=an Literature
11:00-11:50
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10:00-10:50
MWF
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•selected Topics
(Women in Literature)
10:00-10:50
MWF
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*Selected Topics
(Li t. for Older Adults)
9:00-9:50
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131

10:00-10:50

MTWTh

( 4)

HEALTH , PftYSICAL EDUCATION, AND RECREATION,_~--------------•Foundations (C)
*Found ations: (C)
*Foundations CC )
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• Personal • Communit y Health
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enclosure and molded lattice work grill. Buy a stereo pair
tor the regular low price of one-only at The Shack®!
40-4025

SAVE EVEN MORE WHEN YOU BUY THE SYSTEM!

SAVE 229

Gloss

80

ABOVE COMPONENTS PLUS
MAG-PICKUP TURNTABLE!

• Our Best Gloss Paint-Quality House
• Super Dlmible Linseed Oil, Alkyq Fo rmulatio n
• Best Mildew Defia nce o f All House Paints
eA Proven Performer with Easy-to-Apply Featu res

{

• STA -84 AM·FM Sttnto Rec:elv•r 11 Abo.-e
•· Two Nore -T Spe•lc•t Sytfema 11 Above
•· t.AB-S. Multi- Piey Turntable on 8111 with Diamond
Elliptical Plclrup Completely ln•lllled, Reg. $19.95

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11:00-11:50

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SOCIAL WORK:,_-------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

.
be offered
W1/l not · ·ce this year
at a lower prr

CARTER &amp; EVANS
.

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*FreshmAn Orientation (C)
MW
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*Freshman Qrientation
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10 :0 0-10 : 50
*Freahman' Orientation (C)
MW
(1)
11 ,oo-11, so
*Freshmah Orientation (C)
(l)
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11:00-11: 50
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(1)
*Preahman Orientation (C)
8:00-8:50
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9:00-9:50
*Psychology of Adjustment (C)
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(4)
9:00-9:50
(4)
Educational Psychology
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SOCIAL SCIENCE:____________________________________________
*Introduction to Social Science
(S ystems of Man) (C)

Ea.

. Best Ouatity

Music I (C)
Practic urn
Practieum I
PracticUJ!'I I I
Music II

9:00-9:SO
9:00-9: 50
9:00-9:SO
11 : 00-11 ,so
il:00- 11 : 50
10:00-lO:SO

PHYSICS; ____~------------------------------------~-*Phys ical Science
ll:00-11: 50
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*Gene r al Physics I
9:00-9,SO
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PSYCHOU%Y____________________________________________

IMAGINE!.50% OFF ON A
REALISTIC HI-FI SPEAKER!

-----

Lab
Lab
*Immunology
Lab Techniques
LiifiilOlogy
Research

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* Introduction

to Social Work
Social Work with Groups I

10:00-ll:SO
10:00-11' 30

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SOCIOLOGY'--~-----------------------------------------------

..
,

*Introduction to Sociology
SPEECH_____________________________________________

* F. und.

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of Oral Communication (C) 9:00-9:50
,
(C) 10•00-10 :SO
•Fund. of Oral Comrnun i ca t ~on
*Fund. of oral communication (C) 11:00-11:50
•Listening ·
9: 00-9: 50
•selected Topics
(American Homiletics )
10:00-10: 50

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REGISTRATION INFORMATION
Number of credit hOW'S tar each cour11shawn above In par,ntheln . Alterlak (-l . l~lcates
Cou!'M Offtrld through Rio Grandi Community College. (C l afttr course title l_ndlcates that
cleu Is cloled .
Time o1 RttlttratiOn: Tuttday, September 6 at L'ff'M Center on the Rio Grande campus.
S~udentt are asked to register 11 the fOllowing tim• :
lft•tnemeMIIMwtth
. Time _
Ulestnamebttlnswnh
12:45-l
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Tllort II only o 10 I'Otllltor $1pttmblr 6. Full limo . , . , _ mull
conllctlng tho Offici 01 Mmlllloni ond Roccrdl ·at Rio Groncte

COllilt eclftlltlltudln• OIM'I'f' r.c». color, netl~l or •"'nlc

SOCIAL SCIENCE---------------------------------~------

!

Introd~ction t:o Anthropoloqy

2:00-2:50

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SOCIAL WORK---------------------------------------------*Social Work field Observation
&amp; Reporting
Midi-Practicum

TBA
TBA

(1-4)
(l- 4)

SOCIOLOGY __________________~~-----~---------------*Marriage &amp; Family
*Social Problems

2:00-2:50
2'00-3~SO

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SPEECH------------------------------------------------•Fund. of Oral Communication
12 :00-12'! 50
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"*Fun d. of Oral Communication (C) l' 00-l' SO
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*Fund. of Oral Communication
2:00-2: 50
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*Voice and Uiction
1:00-1:50
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*Lab in Communications
TBA
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*Debate
2:00-2:50
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Classical Rhetoric
1:00-1:50
MWF
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THEATRE'--------------------------------------------*Lab Drama
TBA
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*Introduction to Theatre
4:00-4:50
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*Selected 'topics
12:00-12 :SO
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EVENINGS

(3)
(4 )

CHEMISTRY------------------------------------------------

PHILOSOPHY AND REL!GION'--------------~----------------------

*.P rinciples of Chemistry I

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*Introduction to Philosophy

( 5)

PSYCHOLOGY_ --------------------------------------------*Freshman Orientation
7:00-B:SO
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9:00-10:50
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*Freshman Orientation
9:00-lO:SO
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7: "0 0-B:SO
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6:00-8:50
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(C)

*Genera l Chemistry I

Lab
Analytical Chemistry Lab I

12:00-12 :SO
12:00- 2:SO
4:00-4:SO
2:00-4:50
TBA

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ECONOM~CS'-------------------------c--------------~---------*M icroeconomics
*Wages, Employment &amp; Labor

2,oo-3,so
1:00-2:50

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6:00-7:30

MW

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SOCIAL SCIENCE'------------------------------------------

EDUCATION __________..,--------------------------------*Fi eld Exp ; : Conununity-School
•F ield Exp.: Agency-School JC)
*Principles of Teaching
*Elem. Methods - Creative Drama
*Social Science riethods-Elem.
*Pre-School Child
Field Exp: September Exp.
Field Exp: Teacher Aide
Human Relations &amp; the Tea~her
Reading Methods-Elem.
(Reading Methods)
ReaQing Lab (K-12)
La·n guage Arts Methods-El em .
PhYsical Education Meth.-Sec.
Intern Teaching-Elem.
Intern Teaching-Sec.
Music Intern-E l em .
social Science Methods-Sec .

TBA
TBA
4 : 00-5:30
5 :00 -6,SO
12:00-12:50
12:00-2:30
TBA
TBA
1,00-1:50
5:00-5 : 50
4:00-S:SO
4,oo-6, 30
l:00-2: 50
1,00-2 : 5o

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(3)

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ELECTRONICS ________~--------~-----------------------------*DC Circuits
1:00-2:50
M
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1 : 00-1 :50
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(Lab will be 10:00-11:50 on Fridays)

ENGLlSHI ___________________________________________________
12:00-12:50
1:00- 1 : 50
2:00-2:50
3:00-3 :5 0
12 : 00 - 12:50
4 :00-4• SO
Lab
4:00-4:50
• chi ldren ' s Literature
2:0ci-2:50
*Shakespea re
1:00-l : 50
*Backgrounds in Literature
12 : 00-12 : 50
British Lit. thru lBth Centur y 3:00-3,SO
Infor~ation Source ih Soc. Sci . TBA

*Ameri~an ·National Government (C)l2 :00- l2:5 0

*American Politica.l B~havior
2 :q0-2 :50
*Intra. to Public Administration 3 :00 -4:SO

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HEALTH , PHYSICAL EDUCATION , AND RECREATIQN,____~-------------'-*Le.adership I
•Be ginning Swimming (C)
·~orseback Ridinq
*Horseback Riding
*Horsepack Rid inq
*Folk Dance (C)
*Tennis (C)
*Advanced Horsemanship
*Canoeing
*Leadership II
*Movement Activity (C)
*Field Exp: Public Playground
*Field Exp : summer Camps
*Fie.ld Exp : .R ecteatior'l Cente r
• social Recreation
*Leadership III
*Commun ity-School Health Service
Inte rnship- Cornm . Recreation
Prog r am Organizatio n/Admin.
Internship- Recreat ion
*First" Aid and Safety

TBI\

"'00-l2:SO
3:00-5 : 00
1:00-3:00
3&lt;00-5 : 00
1:00- 1 : 50
3 :00 -3,SO
1:00- 3 : 00
1:00-3:00
TBA
1 2 :00- 1 :SO
TBA
TBA
TBA"
1:00-1: 50
TBA
2:00-3:30
TBA
3 :00-5 :00
TBA
2:00-2:50

7:00-8:50
7: oQ-s: 50

MW
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SOCIAL WORK------------------------------------~-------• social welfare Institutions

6:00-7,50

TTh

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SOCIOLOGY'------------------------------------------------

(2)

T~A

*Composition (C )
11o:Composition (C)
*Composition
*Composi-t ion
*Technical &amp; Report Writing
*Introduc tion to Journalis~

*Introduction to Social Science
{Systems of Man)
*Cultural Anthr.opnloqy

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*Introduct ion to Gerontology

6,oo-a,so

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SP~ECH----------------~--~~~----------~------------•Fund . of Oral Communication
*Se l ected Topics

6:00-7:50
6:00 - B:SO

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THEATRE:-------------------------------------------------*Acting
Rehearsals
*Pr oductiOn Seminar

TBA
7:30-10:00
6 '00-6 ,so

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ACCOUNTING _____________________________________________
*Principles of Accounting I (C)
*Intermediate Accou nting III
•Introduction to Taxes
•Quantitative Methods" I (C)
•Quantitat ive Methods III
Cost Account ing Principles

6'00-BdO
6:00-,8: 30
9:00-1 0 : 50
7: .0 0-8 'so
9:00-10:50
7,oo-e:so

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(4)

ART------------------------~------------------*Cha ir Caning
,
*Pe ncil Sket ch ing (C)
*Fundamentals of Design (C)
*Principles of Art Education
*Intermediate Photoqraphy
•sasic Wa tercolors
• Basic Oil s
*In termedia te Ceramics
*History of Phot ography
*Portraits (C)
*Calor. Slide Photog.iaphy
*Ba sic Wood Scu lpt ure
~Art History Thru Renaissance
Advanced Wood Sculpture

6:00-8 : 00
6:00 - 7 : 50
9 : 00-lO,SO
6:00-7:50
6: 00-8:50
9 : 00-10:50
9:00-10:50
6:00 -8 :SO
9:00-lO:SO
6 : 00-8:50
6:00-8:50
6:00-8:50
6:00-8:50
6:00-8:50

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BIOLOCY __~----------------------------------~------(4)
*Fundamentals qf Biology {C)
6:00-8:50
'T
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6:00-7:50
Lab (C)
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION __________________________..,--__________
•Real Estate Pricnipl~s
*Business taw I (Cl
Corporate Fi nance I

&amp;

Pra·ct. 6:00-8:50
6:00-8:50
7:00-8,50

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BUSINESS EDUCATION•------------------------------~----*AdvanCed Dictation &amp; Trans.
6:00•8,SO
w
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EDUCATD)N,___________________________________________________
*Deve l op Reading Ve~sitil ity
*Introduction to· Education (C)
Human Relations &amp; Teacher
Reading Methods - Secondar y (C)
Career Education (K- 1-2 ) ~

6:00-8:00
6:00-B:SO
6: 00-8:50
6'00-8:SO
6 :00 -8: 50

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•
HISTORY ____~--------------------------------------------

ELECTRONICS, __________________________~------------~-----

*Non- West History

*Electronic Commun icat ions

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Lab
*Elec tronics ApplicationS I

MATHEMATICS----------------------------~-------------------*Math Review
•Math for Elementary Ed I
*Pre - Ca lculus
Projective Geometry

2 :0 0-2: 50
i:00-1 :50
2 :00-2 :SO
1:00-1 : 50

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(3)

•• erne CDUI'III hive lllcfltlonll leb -....

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

5 :00-S:50
12:00-12: 50

MEDICAL LABORATORY TEC HNOLOGY __________________________________

•

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cou":'~01 courMI merked wltft .,. Mtwllk (..,,multiply the number In perentn.u (crlldlt
•
_.cltfttl Of JICkiOn; Gallle, Meigs and VInton Counties. Far all ottl•
3
: : : .r:u~~ pl*:'c~ldlt hOutl b'f' us.so. ·All fell are peyableat the time of regtltretlon. Somi

MOSt ottwnS
also avat lable lit

*Introduction to Shorthand
*Pe rsonal Typewriting

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~~----

....__
lltretlonwlll be hlldfrom 6-9p.m. torAa. who work c:lurlnq the day ar who cannot
...,....... reg
•ted thM ThOll r-oistering fli' continuing education, oft • .
=~~·;:..c:l:!';'r!:rs:':urlng opr1 ~1911tr1Uon or at lhl flnt meeting Of a pilrtlcular

-·

*Business Law I
3:00-6:00
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*Introduction to Business (C)
1:00-l:SO
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•Business Communications (C)
12 : 00-12:50
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Corporate Finance I
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3'00-3:SO
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!ndividual Studies
TBA
{1-4)
atJS.l NESS EDUCAT ION•------------------------------------------

GOVERNMENT'-------------------------------------------------

Ooela•il 11 "''" '"01'1&gt;1 lt0f8

MINNESOTA

12:00-12:50
12 : 00-l:SO
1:00-2:SO
1:00-1:50
TBA
TBA
TBA

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S~ I C - otore1
O!Pier C:rl!dot
pion• "''• 111.0 ·" . . a• llb""

C&lt;utom G&lt;&gt;IO(IIn&lt;;l
Oroentl) Rt~d
Sh~:~lltlv Htol!er Pnce

• Invertebrate Zoology

1:00-1:50
2:00-2,SO
TBA
TBA

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION'-----------------------------------*Organ ic Chemistr y Lab 1
*Organic Chemistry Theory I
Analytical Chemistr y Theory I

Le9islative Processes

Was$11.99

AFTERNOONS
*Intermediate Accountinq I
*Introduction to Cost Accounting
Special Topics
CPA Review I

l0:00-10:50
10:00-lO:SO

GOVERNMENT------------------------------------------------

A'kyd Oil House

OF CLASSES

ACCOUNTING'----------------------------------------------M'I'WI'hF

FINE ARTS·-----------------------------------------------*Fine Art s (C)
10 : 00-10:50
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11:00-11,SO
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On Minnesota s

SCHEDULE

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BIOU%i ________________________________~---------

• General Bioloqy (C)

'

QUARTER

ACCO&lt;JHTING. _ _

Lab

.-.

From A College

Rio Grande College and Community Coll~ge

•.

Wheelersburg blanks Big Blue, 5-0

a physicicm, the Spence Breast Forms are

Hours , 9-5 Mon . -Fri.-9·1 Saturday

Stroh's. pr1me sponsor

"til rt.'Cl'JVt.' a tmph} and
$250.

*Medical Technology I
~M edica l Techho l ogy semi nar I
"'"Blood Banking
• se r ology-Uri na l ysis
*Clinical: Practicum

1 :00-l,SO
TBA
TBA
TBA
TBA

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( 4)
( 4)
14)

Lab
*Compute r Theory

6 : 00- 7 : 50
6 : 00-6 : 50
81 oo·- 9 :so
6:00 - 6:50
6' 00-7 :SO

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141

ENGLISH--------------------------~---------------------*Composition
*Composi t ion : A Lab Approach
*Advanced Compos ition
*Technical &amp; Report Wri t ing
*Literature for Young Ad ul t s
*Shakespeare
•Grammati ca l Enqlish
* Backgrounds in Literature

9:00-10:50
6:00-7:50
9 :00 -10 : 50
6 :00-8: 50
8:00-8:50
.6:00-8:50
6:00-8:SO
6:00-8:30

MW
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GEOLOGY ____________________~----------~~---------------*Historica1 Geology

6:00-7:50

MW

(4)

MUSIC----------------------------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1• •

'

*Organ Lab Pract1cum
*P i arto Lab Practicum
*Chorus Lab ·Pra cticum·
*Voiae Lab ·
'
*Selected Topics
Field Experience
*Fundamentals of Music I
*Mu sic Validation

P H ILO~OP HY

ANri

TBA
TBA
3:00 -3: 50
TBA
TBA
TBA
12 :0 0-12 :5 0
TBA

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131
(0)

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RELIGIO~----~----~--------------------~-----

•Introduction to Philosophy
Introduction to Logic
Ethics

2:00-2:SO
12 '00-12: so
TBA

MWF

( 3)

MT!&lt;ThF

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14)

PSYCHOLOGY ______________~----------,-----------~---------*Freshman orientation
•Freshman Orientation
*Freshman Orientation (C)
*Freshman Orientat ion
*Freshman Orientation
*Freshman Orientation
•Preahman Orientation
*General PaycNoloqy {C)

12:00-12:50
l2:00-12:SO
l:00-1•50
J:00- 3 :50
J:00- 3 : SO
4:00-4:SO
S:OO-S:SO
2:00-21SO
:00-12:50

MW
TTh
TTh J

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HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCAT!ON, AND RECREATION,_'--~---------------*Golf
*TenniS
*T@nnis
*scuba Divin9
*Intra to HPER
*Drug Education Se minar
CoaChing Ethics &amp; Procedures
*Foundations

6:00-7:50
·6:oo-6 :so
6;00..:.6":50 .
6:00-10:00
6:00-8 :50
7:00-8:SO
7 :00-8: 50
8:00-10:00

M

(1)

MW
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{l)
(1)

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HI$TQ~----------------------------------------------*Medieval World
*American History IV
*Ohio History

6:00-8: SO
6:00 .- 7:30
6:00-8 ,so

w

{3)

TTh

(3)

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MATHEMATICs.·_--------------------------~--------------------*Technic a l Math I
*Informa l Geometry (C)

6:00-7 : 50
6:00-7:50

TTh

MW

(4)
( 4)

TTh

TTh

MUS IC---------------------------------------------*Band Lab Practicum

9:00 -lO :SO

M

( l)

�~The Sunday Times.SCntinel,SW&gt;day, Sept. 4,1977

Outstanding of the Day awards won

HOOFS •••and •..P AWS

By Marion C. Cra\41ord
Meigs C&lt;IW&gt;ty Humalll' Society
POMEROY - The past week or so the Humane Society
Thrift Shoppe across from the Pomeroy Post Offic-e has had a
clearance ""le and sold a lot of the 1ten1S we 'd had around for a
long time. The newer things will go out on display starling this
week, Thursday through Saturday.
!'low then, we need lots more itenlS to sell, folks, not only
clothes and shoes, but household appliances, books, sports
articles, glasses, dishes, etc. When you start to put your
SW11JI1fr clothes away, take a second look at them and if you
think you might be replacing some of your things with new in
the spring, bring lhe older tlungs to ourshoppe.
When you try oo your winter clothes and you find to your
dismay that they have ''shrunk" over the summer (ahum ),
bring those small items to us to sell. All profits go to the care of
our homeless animals and toward the building of our much
needed animal shelter.
Speaking of our'Thift Shoppe- we can sure use some help on
Saturdays, U you have a few hours to spare on·that day, please
call Mrs. Davis at 992~910.
And speaking of the animal shelter, another incident came
up this past week that is another good reason why we need lhal
shelter, and badly.
,
A gengleman called, worried because a dog or dogs had
come into his yard that he suspected ofhaving rabies. We
toldhim how to contact lhe dog warden, but he's a hard guy to
round up when you want him right away. He wasn 't found, so
the gentleman called us back and wanted to know about a vet.
That brings us to another problem w~ have in Meigs
County, no vet.
That we can't do too much about, I guess, as new young
vets don't think we 've got enough money in poor ole Meigs
County to make setting up a practice worthwhile. If the truth
· were known, if a check was made of all the vets in Gallipolis,
Athens, Parkersburg and points in between, I'll bet a vet could
get rich in Meigs CoW&gt;ty. Almost everyone has at least one pet,
some have more. Anyway, getting back to the poor guy will!
the dilemma. He never called back so I hope he found a vet
working on Tuesday afternoon.
If we had our shelter and a Humane Agent, it would be a
working combination 24 hours a day and we could have taken
the animals and secured it or lhem until a vet checked out the
situation. Well, it won 't be long folks'
Let me at lhis point remind you pet owners that water is an
important item to all living creatures. In visiting some of the
homes of pet owners in the county we find too often that water
disl!es are empty. Don't use those light plastic dishes for your
animals. They get pushed around and over too easily, Use
something large and heavy so that your pets won't suffe r for
lack of water.
:
For those of you who read ·my very first article back in
March of this year, remember I told you about lhe poodle
named Ka-Ko that I brought back from Vietnam? He aild I
have been together for almost 11 years, years during which I
learned to love that old dog . Monday morning, after he'd been
very sick for months, I had no choice but to take him on his last
trip to the vet. I held him while he died and it broke my heart.
So, the pet I'd wanted all my life and finally got when I was 36
years old, is gone now and , ohGod, How I miss him !
Sorry to end on such a sad note today dear friends , but I
gtiess maybe this Is the saddest thing truit has ever happened
to me, and since I'd told you all about my beautiful Ko-Ko, I
lhought you'd want to know the latest on him. He always
waited for me at lhe gate to our cantonment area in Vietnam, I

GM .J.Il'OJ.IS-Galha

know IH.•'II be waiting lor me agam by another gate in a much
bdter plaeewhen I join him someday. That will be ~reat!
September 8th, 7:30 p.m. 2011l.inceln Hill. Pomeroy. That's
the date, lime, and place of the next llumane Soc1ely meeting .
Let's see a lot of you there.
Anunals available for adoption this week are as follows :
(all nimals ~re free and please call us when these dogs and
cats are no longer available) :
English Collie, female , red and white, beautiful animal , 9923012.
German Short Hair Pointer, male, 5 years old, very nice dog,
needs place to run, 949-2593.
Peakapoo. female, young, good disposition, house broken,
oute 992-5807.
Beagle-Min. Collie, female, 3 mo. old, 992-7085.
B&lt;lrder Collie-Boxer puppies 2 monlhs old, male, day 9922192, night 94.9-2354.
Collie type puppies, male and female, 742-3162.
White dog with black over eye, short hair, nice, good with
children, will be large, 1l92-2548.
·
B&lt;lrder Collie Puppies,'male and female, 8 weeks old, '9492705.
Kittens, check Humane sOciety Thrift Shoppe Thursdays
through Saturday or call 99~2639. ·
Kittens, 1 gray, 2 gray with black stripes, wormed, 3 months
old, 992-2090.
Cats (2) and 2kittens, gray and black 742-2529.
To join the Meigs County Humane Society or to contribute
to our animal building fund, write to Post Office Box 682,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 (tax de&lt;luctable ).

FIFTH LEVY TRY
CINCINNATI (U P! )- Yet
another school ta&amp; levy is
going before Cincinnati
voters. The last four levy
proposals have failed, in·
eluding one less than five
months ago. School officials,
in order to offset a projected
deficit of $33 million the next
two yea rs, are asking this
time for 7.27 mill ($7.27 per
$1,000 assessed property

!'uunty 's three 4·H dub
reprensPnttttives at the Ohio
State F'air each received
"Outstanding of the Day"
recognition. Earh of th~ girls

\las selected at the &lt;'ounty
level by placement at the 19TI
Gallia rountv Fair
They were -Charlene While,
daughter of Mr and Mrs Paul
While, Cheshire : Charlene

CLEANING 1
On A II Buick Llmlteds In Stock,

1 p.m. ti

~ 1Jaf

•ll:&lt;t

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1ay at lhe office on the fairgrounds, probably to

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fll ar:.t 'ft!tlr'J event .

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•

2 Dr. Hdtps. and 4 Dr. Sedans.

-goose down vests and
jackets- farmers and
sportsmen .
- student daypacks and

un -

precedented, week • long
gathering of presidents and
prime ministers designed to
make the signing of the new
Panama Canal treaties an
affair to remember.
U.S. officials said they
expected this diplomatic extravaganza to generate some
of the Lightest security
measures Washington has
ever seen.
The Secret Service has
primary responsibility for
protecting
the
Latin
American, Caribbean and
Canadian leaders who start

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is our only roneern.
The Land Bank was estat&gt;llshe-d 60 years ago with
one goal in mind-to proof farmers.
Over the years, genera-

tions of farmers have come

to depend on the Land
Bank. So. today, as yester·

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March 1w 1978'

LOW DOD PAtJIBHTS, LONG TED
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lt'1 the pertect lime to move up to
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WASHINGTON (UP!) Internal Revenue Service
investigators have concluded
lhat "political reasons" led
federal officials to lift
restrictions on Bert Lance's
Georgia bank shortly . before
Lance was nominated to
become budget director, it
was reported Saturday. .
The l.&lt;Js Angeles Times
said a rough draft of a report
by IRS investigators, to be
released next week, was
highly critical of former
Comptroller of lhe Currency
Robert Bloom and the head of
the comptroller's Atlanta
regional . office, Donald
Tarleton.
Tarleton, according to
earlier reports, ordered
actioo to remove sanctions
prohibiting checking accoW&gt;t
overdrafts by the Lancecontrolled First National
Bank of Calhoun, Ga., oo
Nov. 22, 1976. A day earlier,
newspapers had published
the first reports that Lance
would be nomiilated. ·
Had
the
sanctions
remained In effect, it would
have caused embarrassment
to Lance · during his
confirmation hearings.
The overdrafts, including
one on Lance's personal
accoW&gt;t, are part of a broader
investigation under new
Comptroller John Heil)lann
which ·has kept Lance under
r~re for weeks. Lance faces
more hearings before the
Senate Governmental Affairs ·.
Committee this week on 'tlis
private banking deals.
lh spite of the overdrafts.
the Times reported, former
Comptroller Bloom said in a

Dependability
5~2*5

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UNTIL MARCH 1, 1978 ON ALL
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Enjoy an oven
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The rest ol the oven 15 easily ac&lt;:ess· l Uses less energy than
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letter to the Senate
supporting
Lan ce's
appoin1ment: .
"Mr. Lance enjoys a very
good reputation in the
banking commW&gt;ity and it is
my opinion based upon all the
facts available to me that Mr.
Lance is weii-&lt;JIIalified to
serve as director of lhe Office
of Management and Budget .''
The Times quoted a Capitol
Hill source as saying the final
ms report may not use the
words "political reasons" in
discussing the decision to
drop
the
overdraft
restrictions. But, a Times
source said, the action leads
to
the
" inescapable
coijclusion'' the comptrqller's

WASHINGTON (UP! } Supreme Court Justice Potter
Stewart Saturday refused to
temporarily bar further construction of a gymnasiwn on
the site where Kent State
student anti-war protesters
were killed by national
guardsmen in 1970.
Attorneys
for
demonstrators, angered over
the gymnasium plans,
immediately filed a second
appeal with Supreme Court
Justice William Brennan,
hoping to delay renewed
construction work schedule&lt;!
for Tuesday.
Anthony Walsh, attorney
for the

11

May 4th Coalition,"

said the Supreme Court
appeal process " had to begin
with Stewart because he
represents the 6th, Circuit"
. whi ch includes Ohio.
But he said, "Brennan is
our best bet, really ."
The coalition, comprised of
students and others who have
joine&lt;l in repeated sit-ins this
summer, wants the Interior
Department to declare the
Kent State scene a national
historic site. On July 25, the
department agreed to

officials were trying to win
favor with
the new
administration.
In a separate report, the
Washington Post quoted
so urc es as saying Lance
exceeded
his
lending
authority of $100,000 per
transaction when he first toOk
over as president of the
National Bank of Georgia.
Financial General Corp., a ·
Washington-based holding
·company which owned 6Q. per
cent of the bank's stock at the
time, challenged the loans
and other Lance dealings, the
Post said. However, Lance
and his associates bought out
lhat company's interest in the
bank.

conduct a study on whether to
take that action.
Stewart's action from his
vacation home in New Hampshire, meant the project can
go ahead regardless of the
results of the study.
Walsh noted that lhe appeal
process theoretically could go
to all nine justices, and that
no justice is under a time
constraint to respood to a
petition.
Kent State
attorney
Stephen Parisi said he
believed Stewart
had
"reflected again what four
previous
courts
had
indicated, lhat is, that tbe
university has the right Ill go
forward with the project and
that the procedures and
actions of the university were
lawful."
He said he expected "any
reapplication would be
treated ii1 much the same
way . That is, that it would bO
denie&lt;;I by the remaining
justices ori the same basis
lhat there just.isn't a federal
question involved."
Walsh said, "But lhe court
will be aware that on Tuesday
morning, if there is no stay,

Jenkins said he is not sure
if he'll be running as an
independent or as a
Republi can or Democrat.
But, he said he Is sure he'll
win .
He added that he has
already had thousands of
bumper stickers and buttons
printed up for his run at the
governorship.
Ills campaign was sparked
by the state's closing of his
Holy Hill Cathedral for
structual defects.

the construction equipment
will move and the substance
of our petition to the Interior
Department will start to he
destroyed ."
Stewart's decision will he
file&lt;! with the 6th Circuit
Tuesday morning, he said.
The protesters were unsuccessful in two lower courts in
stopping lhe bulldozers.
The group had asked
Stewart, who administers the
6th Circuit, to bold up the
construction pending an
appeal to the high court from
an adverse decision by the 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals:

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America

An·n·oyance:
Mark Twain, author and
humorist : " Few things are

harder to put up with than the

Weather ·
Cloudy and chance of.
thundershowers this af·
ternoon and evening, con·
tinuing into Monday. Highs in
mid 80s today and Monday.
L&lt;Jws tonight to mid 60s.
Probability of rain 30 per cent
today and Monday.

The circuit court said
federal courts have no power
to order Ohio "to construct or
not to construct a building."
Earlier U.S. District Ju9ge
Thomas
Lambros
of
Cleveland had thrown out the
case.
The pfotesters said their
right to petition the
government for a redress of
grievances
had
been
impaired.
But the circuit court said
the power to change tbe
W&gt;iverslty's plan5 rests with
state and federal officials, not
the courts.

Lance really is expendable
HOLLYWOOD (U P! ) Ruther Carter Stapleton said
Friday her brother, the
President, would get rid of
embattled budget director
Bert Lance " in a moment,"
friend or not, if he thought
that was best for.the COWltry.
"Jimmy has a commi1ment
to clean up politics," Mrs.
Stapleton told a news con·
ference. "!think that if he felt
there was any reason to ask
Bert Lance to resign, he
would do it in a moment. I
don't think friendship would
stand in the way of Jn.
tegrity."
Mrs. Stapleton said She and

her brother Billy "get along
beautifully together" despite
her being an evangelistic
faith healer and his much
publicized fondness for beer
and aversion to church
services.

"He loves me and I love
him and we see no division
with my religion or his non·
religion ... In fact, Bill said he
and I had the same kind of
religion ... he feels he and I
are not hypocrites and he .
feels many of the others are.
So I consider Billy's opinion
of me .the highest of anyone's
opinion."·

Previn wants to expand work

annoYance of a good ex-

ample."

.; ,

.,.,
....,
r ...

.

'~

- By Ross Mackenzie &amp; Jeff MacNelly / Cilf:l77. VniteO Feature Syndicate .

top frauar.
Rav..-u__.s.

Gibson

$359'5
1

WIT

to resign from the ptesidency Watergate just two days after
WASHINGTON (UP!) _ if the tapes had been the burglary that triggered
Former President Richard destroyed . The former the scandal.
Nixon said he once ordered ·president
made
the
"1 never touched it," Nixon
his chief aide H,R. Haldeman ' COillments in the last of five said when Frost asked him
to destroy the damaging int~rviews. with Frost for about evidence lhat he was
watergate tapes, and · in which he w1ll be pa1d $600,000 one of only three people who
retrospect Nixon said be and a percentage of the had access to the tape.
wished the order had been profits.
"I even suggeste&lt;l and I
carried out.
Nixon also said he has no believe directed that Mr.
Nixon
told
British idea who erased IB'h minutes Haldeman ... go through the
interviewer David Frost he of a tape of a crucial Oval tapes ... and 'destroy those
probably ,would not have had Office
discussion
on that ha.d no historical value ;
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,
•

Central Soya

PITTSBURGH (UPI) Andre Previn, director of the
Pittsburgh Symphony, said
Friday he plans to give up his
post as principal conductor of
the l.&lt;Jndon Symphony Or·
chestra in 1979.
Previn said he wants to
expand his musical work in
England and denied that
dissension with the l.&lt;Jndon .
orchestra had anything to do
with hi" decision to quit.
"I've spent 11 years with

them and it's been mar·
velous, but 11 years is a long
time," Previn said.
''There are other things in
England and Europe which l
would like to take advantage
of and which my contract
restricted me from doing."
Previn; now in the second

year of a three-year contract
with the ,Pittsburgh, Symphony, said he hopes the
contract will be renewed.

Chest

15.3 cU~ ft. 'freezer

those that involved the
family; those lhat Involved
politics or friends; those that
·really shol!idn't be in . the
pUblic domain," Nixon said.
He said he told this to
Haldeman In April 1973, a
time at which White House
involvement ln tbe Watergate
scandal was just beginning to
be reported.
" l wish that Mr. Haldeman
bad .. . destroyed those except
those that had major significance ·from a policy standpoint," Nixon said. 111f the
tapes had been destroyed, I
believe it likely lhat I would
not have had to go throUgh
the agony of resignation."
Nixon said he and
Haldeman discussed
destruction of the tapes and

Haldeman talked him out of
it, saying "you've got to have
a record in the event that
somebody says something
and it proves to be untrue."
"I didn't destroy the tapes
because first, I didn't believe
there was a reason to destroy
them,'' Nixon said. ''I didn't
believe there was anything oo
them that would be
detrimental to me" or that
"they were going to come
out."
·
"If I had thought that on

those tapes, that there was
conversation that was
criminal, l sure as the
dickens, I could use stronger
expletives, but not before the
home audience, I sure as the
dickens · would
have
destroyed them," he said.

Your

Headquarters

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SAVE

between him and Carter.
She said lhey were boll!
striving for more honesty In
goverrunent and she ' cited
Jenkins' concern for the
needs of Ohioans.
She said the faith healer .
she first Ie11rned about
through a national television
broadcast
was
a
11
tremendous leader."
Ms. Forbush is expected in
Delaware Tuesday to begin
organizing tbe campaign and
formulating a strategy.

ITS PLANTING TIMEI

17.0 Cu.Ft.

ls less of l! chore ,

guide drive by 'Leroy Jenkins

By CLAy F. RICHARDS

.,.., "'I•' ~ ... .....

0

Carter-trained, campaigner to

Haldeman was told to dest~;_ay damaging tapes

R!G. '799.95

SALE

annotince Tuesday whether it
will •·oosider the petition.
Torrijos arrives Monday
evening" and holds an
introductory meeting with
Carter
Tuesday.
The
President also has promised
to
confer
personally,
sometune during the week,
with every goverrunent chief
Who attends the ceremonies.
Former President Gerald
Ford, who supports Carter on
the tr eaty issue, and
Ladybird Johnson also will
attend
the
signing
ceremonies .and
stay
overnight at t·he White House

Political fact
assisted Lance

loan tailored to the needs

rucksacks.

bers of Congress who
consider it a give-away of
U.S. interests.
Conservative opponents
planned their own anti-treaty
functions during the wee~ .
Members
of
the
Conservative Caucus, which
is chaired
by
New
Hampshire's Gov. Meldrim
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!)
Thomson Jr ., planned to -Betty Forbush ol AUanta, a
demonstrate outside the Pa n former administrative
American Union as carter assistant and assistant
and Torrijos arrive for the national coordinator of the
Se~~;r and Gen. Omar
ceremony.
Jimmy Carter presidential
Ronald Reagan , who cha t· . campaign, has been hir.,ct to
Torrijos , Pana!lla' s
·
lenge&lt;l Ford for · the direc't the gubernatorial
government chief, will sign
Republican presidential campaign of evangelist Leroy
the pacts in the Pan
nomination last year, was Jenkins.
American Union building We&lt;lnesday ·
We&lt;lnesday evening .
The treaty, which U.S. expected to criticize the pact .
Ms. Forbush said in a
The atlorneys general of officials say would give Thursday in appearances phone interview from her
Iowa, Indiana, Idaho and Panama full control of the bef ore Congressional home that she felt Jenkins
l.&lt;Juisiana, meantime, asked waterwa y
a nd
the committees and the National had "great potential" and she
the Supreme Court Saturday surrounding Canal Zone in Press Club.
could see many similarities
to forbid Carter to sign tbe the y~ar
2000 while
treaties until constitutional p_reservmg U.S. defense
questions are resolved.
· nghts, has come under heavy
· The court was expected to f1re from conservative mem-

1969 flllleral of Dwight D.
Eisenrower.
President Carter, aided by
lhe Organization of American
States, organized the affair _
in effect the first W...tem
Hem isphere summit
conference of the decade _
as a means of dramatizing
international support for tbe
controversial treaties, which
may lace a long and bitu:r
rati(ication battle in the

May 4th Coalition to reappeal

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BOB SYLVESTER, SON OF MR. AND MRS. Arthur
Sylvester of Syracuse, was the big winner in the Pomeroy
National Bank's watenn~lon seed spitting contest. Bob who
lives in Delray Beach, Fla ., received $50 for being the weekly
champ of the contest which was held daily.

MEMBeRS OF THE MEIGS County Fair Board, who·
u.- be IIIII !ired from tiU year's recent fair, will be meeting

weekend

arriving Mooday to atteoo a
series of events surroW&gt;ding
the Wednesday evening
signing of the two canal
pacts.
But police will also become
involve&lt;!, and each national
leader has the optioo of
bringing his own bodyguards
as well.
The State Department announced Friday 24 Western
Hemisphere nations had
accepted President Carter's
invitation to attend the gala,
with the possiMity more
might join the list before
events get Wlderway.
·
U.S.
officials
said
Washingtoo has not seen so
large a gathering of state and
government heads since the

~

·

LABOR DAY OR NOT, the students of Eastern High
School will hold "Meetthe Team Night", at 6:30p.m. Monday
at !be high school. Admission Is a bar of soap. The event, of
course, is 1o get the team and fans up for Friday night's
opener.

By JOHN F. BARTON
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Security men and protocol
uperts set lhe stage this

221 Upper Rl•or Ro.d

AT LEASf ONE resident was more than pleased with
the recent health screening program which was conducted in
Middleport at the Meigs Junior High Scbool.

POMEROY meter patrolman Robert Hawley is about the
streets of Pomeroy 's business sectioo but not in official
capacity. Bob wok~ up one morning a month or so ago,
paralyzed. Hospitalization followed and surgery m a C!&gt;lum)jus
hospital. Allhough still in a neck brace,, Bob's making gop&lt;!
progress and is looking forward to sometime not too far away
wben he can' return to duty.
·

Washington braced for government heads

required to bring a plan of
food for one day written in
menu I'Onn and including
snacks, if any; their food
exhibit, one place setting for
service for that meal; and an
appropriate table cloth or
mat.
Card tables were
provided. The participanl.9
were interviewed to evaluate
their exhibit and their
knowledge of their project
area.

CARPET

active role in the Yesteryear observance to be held on the
groW&gt;dsofthe Senior Citizens Center from 11 a.m. lo 11 p.m. on
Sent. 17. The society will have a mockup on display of the
planned animal shelter and will be selling authentic Indian
jewelry, aU..handcrafted and at a reasonable price.

·IN CASE YOU'VE WONDERED about Norma Newland,
who used to write such interesting, chatting columns aU about
w)lat was going on in Tuppers Plains, Norma is "alive and
well."
Last Saturday night Norma entertained at her home the
queen candidates of the Ohio Valley Horse Show Association
ahd their cpaperones, judges of the contestants and some
friend s. --Norma finds so much interest in everyone and
everything, and never lacking for words. We were happy to
be on hand 1o visit with Norma whom we never see often
enough any more. Incidentally, Norma is a •grac.ious hostess
and a great cook.

examination. heel free,
recall, long sit (I minute off
leash) long down (3
minutes off leash}.
Miss Boslic represented
Gallia in the 4-H Food and
Nutrition show with her
bread project.
Also
representing Gallia County in
4-H Food and Nutrition was
.Charlene White in the Tasty
Meal category. 'They were

MORE
FOR

'I'IlE MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society will have an

"l want 1o express my thanks and gratituae on the health
screening program you recently ·conducted.
"I had my eyes examined in December, 1976, and just had
to have my classes changed. There was no sign of Glaucoma
lben. In your screening program pressure was found in my
eyes. I went to an oplhamologist and the pressure increased in
two weeks from the 20's to the 30's. My eyes are now being
treated. Where I possibly wouldn 't have had another
examinatin for two or lbree years without your program. By
then I possibly would have had eye damage."

Bostic, daughler ol' Mr 'and
Mrs .
Charles
Bostic,
Gallipolis: and Jane Ellen
Wood, dau~hter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Russell
Wood,
Gallipolis.
Jane Ellen exhibited here 4·
H dog project in the Novice
Oa~. In this class she was
required to demonstrate the
ability of the animal to heel
on lead, figure 8, stand for

$1450 DISCOUNT

NEW ADAMSVILLE
OUTFITIERS

valuation increase).

POMEROY - The Meigs Local School District is looking
for someone wbo travels to Rio Grande daily ·to provide tranS'
portation for one student who will be attending classes there
for visually impaired students.
The child, four years of age, is to be at Rio Grande from 9
a.m. to 3:30p.m. daily. Anyone interested in conctracting for
lhe job -that is, picking up some money for transporting the
child - is aske&lt;l to contact Dan Morris, director of curriculum,
at 99~2153. And - the sooner, the better.

She wrote :

1).!-TheSWidayTimes;&amp;ntinel, Sunday,Scpt. 4,1977

D E U T -®

For
Fall Seed Needs

SPECIAL
MODEL 5206

• Winter Rye
• Winter Barley ·
• Logan Arthur 7!

REG . PRICE $10,450

NOW
sgzoo-

• Abe &amp; Ruler Seed
Wheat
• Also Timothy
Orchard Grass

CU1RAl. SOYA

• Alfalfa

af OliD, Inc.,

G &amp;:•... Ohio

Check with Us

For Your
Fertilizer Needs

~----~~-"~:--~~~.~~------------~--~

BUY NOW- SAVE 1125()11
FULTON-THOMPSON
TRACTOR SALES
Spring Ave.

Pomeroy, Ohio

�D-3-TheSwiday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday,Sepl. 4, 1977

1&gt;1- TheSwlday Times-Sentinel, SWKJ.ay, SepL 4, 19'n

For Best Results Use Sunday Ti1.aes-Sentinel Classifieds

For .Best ReslJlts Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

.................
t

NOTICE TO II DOERS
PROJECT : DR . SAMUEL L.
80S$AR 0
MEMOR IAL
Llf}RARY

1977
SELL-DOWN

ust\\ Cl'\~a~~:~:..
AT
DAN THOMPSON
FORD

DISCOUNT PRICES
76 Cadilac Sed. DeYIIJe

'8500

Was $8900 NOW
Light blue, blue vinyl roof. de-elegance interior full
power and a ir, AM-FM stereo with tape T&amp; T st..;rl ~
wheeL
'
·~

75 Cadillac Coupe DeVille was

74 FORD PINTO 2 DR .............. s2295
cyl.. auto. trans ., vinyl top . Radio.

-4

NOW'S YOUR TIME TO BUY

74 CHEV. VEGA ESTATE WAGON '1995

$6800 NOW

'6400

Full power, factory air, leather seats, T&amp; T wheel,
stereo. 32.000 miles.

74 Sedan DeVille

Was

moo

NOW

'5200

Vinyl roof, leather seats. full power. tactory 'air. cruise
control, T&amp; T wheel, full stereo. 1 owner.

4 cyl. , auto. trans .. P. steer ing, radio.

72 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR .....'·.... ~1795
6 cyl. , auto. trans., radio .

73 FORD PINTO WAGON............s1895
4 cyl. , auto . trans., P. steering, radio, lug. rack. futone

74 cadillac Cpe. DeVHie ................... '5500
Cabriolet Roof.

73 cadillac Coupe DeVille

Was 53800 NOW

13400

Full power, air, stereo.

brown and tan.

72 FORD PINTO 3 DR .............. '1795

NOW IN STOCK

4 cyl., auto . trans ., radio, sha:rp with blue trim.

m1teri1t 1nd performing of
labOr for the tlCtcuf lon end
-tonstrucllon of or . Samuel L.

Bossard Memorial Library,
Gall ipolis, On to, i n · ac -

cordance with the draw ings·,

speclflcalions

a.nd other
contract documents prtpart(l

by Robert L . Grant &amp;
Associ ates . Archltetts.
fJropou Is w ill be opened
lmm ediltely thereafter and
publicly rtld at tht off ice of
the Clerk· Treasurer .
Separate proposals w ill be
received for General Con st-ruct i on ,
Plumbln~.
Mechan ic al
CHVAC }.
Electrical and Millwork.
The Instruction to Bidders.
Draw ings . Sptclf l cat ions ,
Proposal Forms and other
Contract Documents may be
obtained at the office of
Robtrt
L.
Grant
&amp;
Associates , Architects / 1515
Bethe-l Road, Colymbus, Oh io
•3220, (6.14) -'57-41.41 . Deposit
shall be $50.00 per set , which
will be refunded providi.nO
the documents are returned
sh i pping charges prepaid, In
good condition within ten ClO )
days atter the receipt of bid .
These documents are on file
tor examination at The Galli a
County District Library ;
Columbus Dodge Reports .
lOSO Freeway Drive North,
Suite 209 , COlumbus , OhiO
.&amp;3229 and The Builders Ex change of Columbus . 1175
Cub/In Road , Columbus. Oh io

6 cyl. , 3 speed trans .. on column, radio. SharP.

74 CHEV. NOVA 4 DR ............... '1995

3-1977 SEDAN DEVILLE$
1-1977 COUPE DEVILLE$
ALL FULLY EQUIPPED

6 cyl. , auto. trans., radio.

75 FORD GRANADA 4 DR.......... ~3295
302 V-8, P. steering, auto . trans .• A.C. rad io, vi nyl roof,

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete
Burris, Marvin KeebaUQh o.r George Harris.

reclining bucket seats .

74 FORD F-100 ........................ s2395
6 cyl., auto . trans.

76 FORD F-150 ........................ s3995
V-8, P. steering . 3 speed col. shift. 10.000 miles .

73 FORD F-100 ........................~395

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Uke Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992-5342
G~C FI_NANCING . Pomeroy
Open Evenrngs Tri6:DO-Til Sp.m. Sat.

Thursday and Saturday . Closed Sunday
Middl~port,

0. ·

Auto Sales

~

PARTS FOR !971 Galmcie Ford lor
5ole. Phone 992·S858 .

-------

.

-

1972 DODGE CHARGER . AC. ond
'-"

many mare options. S1495 . Call

1974 "VW THING"_ 49 ,800 miles.

992-5169.
-----

Hord ond soft top. S1495 . Coli
Sue , 992-7805 .
1974-P LvMOufH GOLD Duster .
318 V-8, .3 speed on the floor ,
AM -FM stereo. Tope Player.
35 ,000 m iles .. A ir shocks . Ex ·
cellenicandi tion. 985 ·3577 .

1976 M onte CARLO with fu·IJ vi nyl
r·oo f . AM. tape. P.S., P.B., A .C. ,
cruise s::ontrol. power door
locks , and more extras. Excellen t condition. 992 ·674.3 .
19b6 FORO . · 4 door , 6 cyl .. stan·
dord . Good condition . $.300.

992 -2849.

Local owner, 350, VC8, automalic, power steer in; and
brakes. rally wheels, chrome equipment. interior
paneled and Insulated, carpeted, ready to add your
own camping equlpmenl .

1975 FORD.............................. s2695
Torino 4 clr. , dark green finish, black vinyl trim. 351 V·

19b8 IMPALA STATION Wagon . 9
passenger . $500. 949·2144 .
1972 VEGA . $_100. Coll992-2892.
197 4 G ron d Pr .1x . .Low mileage .

B. automatic, power steering &amp; brakes , wheel covers,
radio, local 1 owner car.

w ill trade f.o r anyJhi ng of equal 1970 BI SC~YNE CHEVRQLET .
value . (614) 69~-3290 .
' Good c:ond1t1on . 992·5?84.

Fiberglass ra!sed roOf, bunks, screen, 12
V, electric refrlg., furnace, porta patti, stove, dinette,

-·"
----.
,__
1%7 CADILLAC HEARS.E". SbOO or

S3 ,200. 965·3SI9

)9-bS--FoRD- . FO UR - DOOR

1973 OlOS DELTA !18 Royole . 2
V·S, $145 . 19M)
door tlordtop. ~2 . 000 . 949-2014 .

automatic,
Chevrolet pickup f,-, ton, V-8. 1975 DODGE DART CUSTOM V-8
outomati&lt;: , power steering ,
auto ., PS, foe. air, vinvl ' top.
S-450. Charles Ru ssell . 8ashon ,
low mileage, ·e:octro nice. Call

949-2860.

368-9969

1976 FORD ELITE
P.S., P.B .,· air, cruise
cont·rol, n'"w radial tires,
exc. cond. Wi II sell cheap .
.(.

1976 CHM VAN G20 .............. '5695

Ph. 388-8244 .

1973 VEGA, good c:ondition ,
41,000 miles, auto . Also 19b9
Pontiot , good wnd . Colt
446-1 522 or 446- 1703

--

~

1974 GRAND PR IX. 26,000 miles ,
block on block , AM ·FM tdpe

player . AC . PS . $3895 . Ph .
44b-2816

1976 CHM G20 Van Conv•..... s7995
350 V-8 eng ., automatic, P.S., P. B.• air cond. , AM-FM
stereo radio and tape, W·W fires, red and whit~. Only
10,000 miles and clean as new.
·

1974 SCOUT II ...................... ..S2895
Travel fop, 258 cu . ln. 6 cyl. engine, auto. trans .. like
new tires. radio. 2 wheel drive.

1974 PLY. VALIANT 4 DR. ........ ;SZ495
Small V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes, air
conditioning, ..t new w-w tires, vinyl roof, custom vinyl
seats and trim, radio, real nice.

1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR ... ..S1595

BRIDGE

2 Dr .• small V-8, clean interior. automatic:. P .S.• radio.

1970 MONTE CARLO .......•.•..... s1195

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

Trump eases communication
3

NORTH
• K Q 84

• 73
• 10 8 i; 3
• K 54
•A 10 53
¥62
+A 64

EAST
• J 76
• 98 5
• Q J 97

• Q J 10 8

• 972

WEST

. SOUTH IDI
.92
¥A KQJ 104
• K2
6 A 63
•
Both vulnerable
Weot

North East

Pass

1•

Pass 4¥

Pass

Pass

.Pass

.

Sovlh
1¥

out three or four trumps and
leads a low spade toward
1dummy .
If West just ducks the hand
collapses. South will try to get
back to his hand with a diamond . His king will lose to
West 's ace and a second club
lead will knock out dummy's
king and South will wind up
losing one spade , two
diamonds , a club and his
partner's good opinion.
South can afford one trump
lead. Then he plays the spade.
West ducks, but now South can
use dummy's other trump to
get hack to his hand. He playa
a couple more trumps, leads a
second spade and eventually
will get to discard his poten·
tial club loser on dummy's
~ing or queen of spades.

1 owner, V-8 automatic. power .steering &amp; brakes, air
conditioning.

1975 CHEV. 1h T. PICKUP. ........ '2995
6 cyl .. std. trans., good I ires, oolld car. radio.

Try Us Fer These

Scarce New 77 Model Chevrolels
.

.

Nowa-6 cyl.
Monte Carlo

(

Sometimes dummy ' s
trumps are needed to rufl one
of declarer 's losers . On other
occasi0111 they may be needed
to keep the defense from getting control of the hand. A
third and rare use is to enable
declarer to &amp;et back to his
band in onltr .to lead up to
dummy for a second or third
time.
South. wlllfl the club lead
wiUI Ilia - · U be always
driws tniiDfM !when he had
full trump control. be plays

interior.

provemen
ts . on In
:
Gallia
County, Oh·io
County
Road
Nos . 2, 3, .46, 48 , ,.,, 52, 52A and
S?B in_ Addison , Gallipolis, Sp
r~ngf1elcl , Green. Raccoon
and Ohio Tqwnshlp$-._ by
resurfacing · with · a shalt ·
concrete. Pavemen t Width 18 feet.. · Prolect LenOth 38,227.00 _feet or 7.24 mi~e.s .
Work Length- 38,227 ,(W teel
or 7.24 miles .
..
The Ot'llo Department of
Trllnsportatlon
here-by
notifies all bldcltrs that it w'ill
affirmatively insure that in
any contract enterect Into
pursuant
to
this
ad vertisement,
· minority
business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids In response to
this invitation and wlll.not be
d iscrim ina ted aga lnst on the
grounds of rac:e, color, or
natural
origin
In
con si~~rat ion for an aWard .
Minimum wage r-ates for
this project ha~e been
predeterm lned as req~lred
by law and are set forth In the
b1d proposa 1."
"The date set tor com pletion of this work shall be
set forth In the bidding
proposal . 11 ·
•
Each bidder shall be·
required to file with his bid a
certified check or cashier 's
c_heck for an amount equal to
f1ve per cent of hiS: bid. but in
no event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Director .
Bidders must apply , on the
proper
forms,
for
qualification at least ten days
prior , to the date 'Set for
op_enfnliJ bids in accordlt\Ce
wtttt Chapter 5525 Ohio
Revised Cede .
Plans and specificat ions
are on file In the Department
or Transportation and the
Office Of the D istrict Oeputv
Director.
The Director reserves the
righf to reject any and all
bids .
DAVID L WEIR

Sept.

A New York reader wants to
know if anyone over 50 has
ever won the McKenney
trophy for most master points
won during one year.
The answer is that Oswald
Jacoby's four. wins were at
ages 56, 56, 59 and 60. Charles
Goren's last win came when
he was 49. No other winner
has come close to the 50-year
mark .
·
(For a copy
JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge, " 1clo this ·-~r.
P. 0 . Ba• 489. Radio City Station.
Now York , N_y_ 10019)

4,

DIRECTOR

11

~~£~:_~~~:~I~~
NEWGMC

t4 Too Pidwp 4 W. Drive

Hurry In For A Good DEAL

1974 Vo T. GMCPI&lt;kup
197" 11, T. GMC Pfckup
1973 Vt Chev . Pickup

·-----•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••-~

·~·

-~-

1973

DODGE CHARGER . oul .

Irons ., PS . PB. foe. air , .45,000
miles , good cond .,one owner

Ph 245 -5182 afler 5 P
..M
::__ _
·--------1971 PONTIAC CATALINA, oir ,

'----

PB, PS , Radio. Ptlone 446-0294

------- ----1971 PONTIAC CATALINA. Coil
446-4052
-~

---

~-

1974 CHEVHLE MALIBU . two tOne
blue , white interior. factory air ,
~xc
cond . Call 446-4380
anyt im e

..

-·---~--·--·

·-----

1977 DODGE DUDE PICKUP . Fully

customized, eKcelhml stlope ,
15.000 miles. Priced to sell. Coli

1974 MUSTANG II . PS.PB . AM-FM
radio. Viny l top. Call 4•6-3521
or 446-1099

·--------- - - - 1973 PLYMOUTH wagon, PS.PB.
air' nine passenger . $1600.
Also 1972 Plymoutn Sebring.
PS, $300. or best otter. Coli

._.38_1!:.~£5 oft~!..?£'!... · - - - - 1970 PONTIAC CATALINA,

-·
1970 CHEV~LLE , factOry ior, tope
-

Qp~n

Pomeroy
Evenings UntU I p.m.

4

-·-

-

Call

--- -.·

--~-

-- ·--

'

STANDARD

---'I! FOOT

-~--"

'

EVERYBODY
Shops the

-----~-----··---

-----·

NYVER

$1300, Ph367-7187 .
..... .. ..... -- . '"'
76 TRANS-AM SILVER, BLACK INl.
AT , AC , lope. $5000. Coli

-·----

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBoblae

.

.

·*~' leot.
engl.-.. . mony
more .,.. trot . Ph 367 ·

a.

I I

.

I

'

256·6541

----~

V

/\.._

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

_ApriiiS.

~-

r

I

SPQOP[bE

· '
\,

O!JTE~TIOU$7

•

Now IITange lhe -

--

lo

L-.11....:.'.1'-..U.~I:&gt;ooa.._J ...-bylhe--.
~tho ourpoiM . , _ , U ""!!·
Prlnt•••erhete: .. (

I I I I ]"
· (...._Monday)

.

t

.-yal Jumlllll:
JULEP
IW PEN · SOCIAL
~ lhlrullln jllwldti oa a ave lor • ..it..~
I..LI\MI

• piiiOii

PAJAMAS

AKC IRISH Setter. female. 1 •;,
yeor~ old . Obed ience trained .

992-7313.
DRAGONWVNO CAi li::H'i - KEN .
NEl . AKC Chow Chow dogs.
CFA Siamese and Himalayan
{Persians). Place Christmas kit ten and spring puppy orders
now . sian). Ph . 446·3844 .

WANTED! For a busy Hair Hop·
pening Styling ~lon. Ex ·
perience in following 11elpfu'l:
Unisex fam ily style salon . Coli
. 44()-3353 for o confidential in terview.

Giwaway

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4,1977
6 :DO-Thls Is the Life 10.
6 : 3~Jerry Falwell 4; Talking Hands B; American
Problems and Challenges ]0 ; Newsmaker '77 13.
7:DO-Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Thinking In Black 8;
Treehouse Club 10; Glen Molletle 13.
7 :3Cf-'This the Life 3; Your Health A; Show My People

..

Porky P ig 10.
7:5!&gt;-Biack Cameo 4.
8:(1()-Mormon Choir 3; Day ol Discovery 4; Grace
Cathedral6; Church Service 10; Dr. E. J . Dan iels
Presents Happiness Is 13; Sesame St. 20.
8 : 30-0ral Roberts 3; Jimmy Swaggart 4;
Celebration of Praise 6; Day of Discovery B:
James Robison Presents 10; Rex Humbard 13;
Open Bible 15.
9:oo-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Robert Schuller 4 ;
Oral Roberls 10; Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard
· Repass 8; Ernest Angley 15; Mister Rogers 20 .
9:3D-Whal Does the Bible Plainly Say? 8; It Is Written
10; Jim Franklin 13; Sesame St. 20.
10 :0D-Chrlst Is the Answer 3; Church Service 4;
Communique 6; Christian Center 8; Movie " Rocka -Bye Baby" 10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15.
10:3D-Big Blue Marble 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Hot
Fudge 6: Viewpoint 8: Garner Ted Armstrong ·13;
Zoom 20 .
11 :OD-Voice of ·Huntington Christian Academy 3;
Doclor6 on Call4; Rex Humbard 8,15; .Rev .Heqry
Mahan 13; Elec . Co. 20.11 :3D-TV Chapel i
Animals, Ani mals, Animals 6 ; Focus on Columbus
4; Bluerldge Quartet 13; Once Upon a Classic 20.
12 :DO-AI Issue 3; News Conference 4; Issues &amp;

An:

America 15; Nova 20; Eveilllig at Pops 33.
1: 31)-To Be Announced 3; Baseball 4; Aware 6; Medlx
13.
1: 3!&gt;-Baseball 3,4 .
2:(1()-1976 Pacific &amp; Highlights 6; : Dance In America
20; Hogan' s Heroes 13; Better Way 15; Dance In
America 33.
.
2:3D-Movle " Congratulations. It's a Boy" 6; Call It
Macaroni 13; This is the Lite 15.
3 :oo-U.S. Open Tennis Continues 8·.10; 1977 Sum '
mer nationals 13; To Be Announced 15; Montage 20;
Festival 33.
·
·
3:3D-It's a Living 20.
4:(1()-Golf 6,13; Adam -12 4; To · Be Announced 15;

ANY PERSON who hos onyttling to
give away and does not offer or
' ottempt to offer any other thing
far sole may pla(e on ad in th is
co lumn . There will be no
chorg~ to the advertiser

9 :3o-Movle ''Francis Gary Powers:'' 3,.4, 15.
10:00-Piccadllly Circus S3; Childhood 20.
11 :QO.:-News 13; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33.
11 :3D-Telethon Continues 3; News; News 4,8 ,10, 15; ;
'
PTL Club 13; Janakl 33.
11 :45-CBS News 8,10; PMA Pu.lse 15 .

H PUPPIES . female . pari Collie .
pori Elk hound. Col l 446-l l48 or
44 6' 7424
KITTENS lo give owoy . Call
446-4999
ONE MALE DOG , pari oirdole .

12;0D-Telethon Continues 3,4,6; Movie "The Hell with
Heroes" 4; Movie "The File of the Golden Goose'"
15 ; 700-Ciub 8; Face the Nation 10.
12 :3D-Hawall Flve-0 10; ABC News 13.
2:0C)-Peyton Place 4.
3:(1()-Telethon Continues 3,6.

good wdtc.h dog . _,
STRAY DOG . light broWn , terrier
m ixed . Also c:alico cat. Coli

388-8710

MONDAY, SEPTEMBERS, 1977
5:4!&gt;-Farm Report 13; 5:51)-PTL Club ·13.
6:00-Telethon Continues
6 : ~Columbus

Immediate openings in surgery for staff
RN's, LPN's and experienced scrub
technicians ·i!l a new JCAH Sub-Regional
Medical Center in South Central Ohio: 7
fully equipped modern operating rooms.
General, tlloracic and vascular surgery.
Aggressive atmosphere, . opportunity for
growth, specialized training program and
in·service education in surgery, excellent
salary and fringe benefits. For interview
appointment contact: Director of Nurses,
Medical Center Hospital, Box ]011,
Chillicothe, 0., 45601, area code 614-774-3311,
Medical Center Hospital.
Eaual-~
rtuntv Emoloyer

..

1h36
$250
16x:::=======·225
20x4 ·
$275

HARRISON'S
SERVICE
CENTER
447 Second Yt.
(1.

Phano 446·4233

.

lud Htrrison
E . .nrnvs 446~3750
John Fullor
DIY 446·3434
Evtnfnga 446-4327

.is heavy duty throughout.
4_ speed

transmission , 8 ply rough tread tires on rear•, 16.5 inch
wheels, 350 engine, rear step bumper, and sliding rear window.

SAVE BIG ON THIS ALMOST NEW TRUCK

Smith Buick-Pontiac, Inc.
Gallipolis, 0.

446-2282
l'els for Sale

Pels for SaJe

REGISTERED ENGLISH
BRtARPATCH Kennels. Boarding , AKC
COCKER SPAN IEL ,· femole .
Grooming , AK C Gordon set .
Spayed, 6 yrs . old . $75. Coil
lers . English Cotker Spaniels ,
446·7499
Ptl. 4.46-4 191

TV Log for easy viewing

7.: DO-World of Disney 3,4,15; ·Hard Boys 13;
Destination America o; 60-Minutes 8,1 0; Ohio
Writers 20; Onedln Line 33
7:3()-Antlques 20.
B:DO-Columbo 3,4,1 5; Six Million Dollar Man 6,13;
Rhoda B.10; Evening at Pops 20,33.
8 :30-Year at the Top 8.10.
9 :(1()-Jerry Lewis Telethon 6; Movie "The Getaway"
8,10; Dickens of London 20,33; Movie " Operation
Petticoat" 13.

::.. r-------~---~~~7:~7:~------------~----,
OPERATING ROOM

IT

~

t

AKC ENGLISH Spr inger pups . 8
weeks old. $50 eoc:h . 997-7JI3 .

COUNTY . 4 community Action
Agency Home Repori Program .
Applicant
mu st hove exper iente in program ad·
mini~trotion
and operat ion .
Must possess a general
knowledge of housing con-strucl ion
trades. · Will be
responsible tOr overall administrat ion and coord ination
of the progr·a m . Solory $10,600.
Documentary Showcase 33 .
Must possess valid drivers
license and reliab le tronsporto· 4:0!&gt;-Bewllched 3.
tion . Job will be located in 4: 3D-Movie " The Juggler" 3: ; Movie "'Birds of Prey'''
Attlens County. Dead line for
4; Movie "Suddenly Single" 6; Golf 8,10; Movie
submission is September 16.
" The Ladles Man" 13; Documentary Showcase
1977. Send requests and ·Or
20.5
: (1()-; To Be Announced 15; Spanish Dancing
resume to: Edie Chalfont, Tr i33.
coun ty Community Action
Agenc.,- . Route 3, Box 102, 5:3D-Americana 20.
A ttlens. Oh io 45701. (6 14) 6 :(1()-News 3,4; 1976 Big Ten Highlights 6; Andy
Williams 8; Americana 33; Hogan's Heroes 10;
592-6601
PART TIME TAX PREPARERS NEED Town Topics 13; Wally's Workshop 15; Sesame St.
EO. Contact H and R Block on
20,
Tuesdays only between 10 om _6.:._3_
G -NBC News 3,.4, 15; News 6; 30·Minutes 8; $25,000
and 3 pm . We train you . Posi - .
Pyramid 10; Newsmaker 7113; Will Strf!!et Week
t ions available January through
33 .

t;.

ORAWTIE
.:.:..;...:....;;=.-lo.-.....--.
I I I I' '""' '-VUL.i.o'
WHY ~ee?-

box. Coll446·13~3
.
1%4 CHEV. 't, t . Pkk~p . Col(
1971 FORO PINTO . Col! 379· 2250

SAVEMORE SERVICE STATION HAIR STYliST AND BEAUTICIANS

__
: ; ' lady or co~ pie to live in with
elderly lady in Crown City ,
1 ,
,, , Solar_
y plus room &amp; b:&gt;ord . Pn

-----,-·

\

stove, ic:e

4-46-34011 offer 5pm

WANTED : RELIABLE couple or
wOman to cook and keep house
for o retired man. Ever-;th ing
convenient. Paul O ~ r . long Bottom. Ohio. 457•3.

: LEASE LAND IN GAlliA COUNTY
- --· ---·- .
'
tor oil end gas commission per ·
WOULD YOU like on edra Income
otre. Universal Petroleum ,
,
f or things you wont for your
--~· &lt;?- Box 74 ,l:?~ton , ~io
home or vocot io,? Vou can
work as much as you like.
SERVICE STATION EMPLOYEE
Great opportunities . Write to
NEEDED .
Good
poy ,
hospitalization , mDjor medical
Box 729-A, c-0 •Doily Senti'lel,
':1
life ins .. time ond 0 naif for
Pomeroy , Otlio 45769.
over 40 hrs. Equal opportunity
employer. Apply in person at

1: .• J.n K~u~-~_:

-~~~~-22in _exc . ,.n~. _~~~ ~~-·..:B::;.:.A..::;IS::::!H..:-,._j.+-.........

camper. sleeps

•

demt;mstr,ote toys &amp; gifts , toP
cpmmission , no tollec:ting or
del iveri ng . Coli Fr iendly Home
Parties at , 44b·3492 betore 4
_ p_. m ., also booking ~o~ies

1

•

446·9•51
1974 MUSTANG MACH -I, loodod.
Also 196'1eloc:lro 225. loodod.
Also 1971 Joco fold·clown

.

ATTENTION PARTY PIAN DEMO

-· -

NEEDED! PERSON w ith at lea st 2
years of college and had some
oreos of" chi ld development.
Mu st h,pve proof! Needed for
day core operation! 992 -7608 .

~·

350 V8 eng. outon'lotic, PS, PB , ~ ~ ~~ ®
lndash 'AM FM Stereo with CB ,
23,000 miles, Factory rood ' Unscr.mtMe these four Jumbles.
wheels with new tires Ph one letter lo each square, 1o form
four ordinary words.
446-8693

-

.

'·
:

WANT AD WAY

.

1} ~~~~~ ~'if

197b ,Ch~vy pickup Custom ~elux ,

BABYSITTER , live in . PO Box 924
Gallipo lis, Ohio.
'

Route lbO at Evergreen
Phone 446-2735

I 973
TERRV Travel
Trailer . Self-contained , air con dilioned , roll-out owning. Good
Cond i tion , 992 -2496 or

992·3287.

CAR.ROLL NORRIS
DODGE
State
Gallipolis, 0.
Help~W~fl!f'l; .t~" ~~=~ '~~

Ph. 446-1637.
DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

..

-· .. -

.

GENE PLANTS &amp; SON
PLUMBING :-:---- Heat ing '- Ai r
Cond itioning , 300 Fo urttl Ave.

twice. $1 .800 . 992-2849
~-~----·

LADIE S NEEDED. Full or part time
positions available ~. for inte r·
view , co ll446· 1522

&amp; Third

Plumbing - Heating
215 Third Ave .. 446-3782

1972 SELf-CONTAINED CAMPER.
19fl . 742-2566 .
1977 APACHE FOlD-UP. Used

TO GIVE Away - 2 male dogs , 1
year old, part Beagle . Coli

Pontime pharmacist wonted fo r
swers 6; Testimony Time 8; U.S. Open Tennis 10;
weekel'1d and rel ief hours .
Evangelistic Outreach 13; Insight 15; Della Reese
Please co ntact Mike Bendinelli .
&amp;
Woody Herman In Concert 20.
Ph . 614 -992-2104 . Veterans
the Press 3,4,15; Directions 6; U.S. Open
12:31)-Meel
Memorial Hospiia l, Pomeroy .
Tennis 8; Willard Wilcox 13.
·· ·
Ohio . An Equa l Opportun ity
1:oo-Redscene '77 3; Sport of the Century 4; Americas
Emp loyer
Black Forum 6: Issues &amp; Answers 13; Music Hall

•

•

Cor . Fourth &amp; Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446-44777

fi.?fljl}!~~,.ii""T~F'£=c

0

No Ree~sonable OHer
Refused

CARTER'S PLUM81NG
AND HEATING

--

0

,,

traile r, $.4000. Coll-4-4b-4388

saddle tan inter ior. 30,000
miles. Wholesale price, $2525.,
will sell for $2300. Call245-5077

PHARMACIST
PARTT IME

HOME REPAIR DIRECTOR FOR 8

Save Up To
*100000

•

--- STARCRAFT DElUXE 24FT . trovel

388-8849
.. ·--------·--·--197S OLDS STARFIRE . yellow wilh

-...---------·-.,___.--

400 cu . in. *"Sine. $4995 . Coli

1%5 THUNDERIIRD. p.o.. p.b. air

nso

---~-·

1974 VW , exc:. cond., $1b50 . Call

Cail446·9868
1975 GRAND PRIX . loaded , ~;.,
!ires, low mileage, classic loo~.~

SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS. INC.
133 Pino S1 .
4A6·2532

m

·-------•·.,--

player . 4 spd . 3~6.
446-4085 or 4•6-3762

dr .

AM-FM5tereo and much more.

1976 11.. T.Ford.fW.D.·

.

-

AC . PB , PS , Auto, rtew radial
tires $400 . .446· i615 after b.
••b-1244

1977 FORD RANGER XLT F-250, 4
whl. dr .. 400V·8 . oulo .. AC. PS.

1974 t~roo ·fa..rt~ C~ov . PU
197•1~roo-foorlh t . GMC PU
1975 Vo T. GMC PU
1971 GMC 9500 TtOtiOI

992-2126
·

STARCRAFT
Al l 1977 mode ls reduced .. sOve
$1700. on 25 Ft'. 1978 units In
stock . New and used. We sell
· sen1ice ond qu ill ty. Camp Conley Storcroft Soles , Rt. 62 Nodtl
of Pt. Pli!!OSonr .

STARCRAFT lOth anniversary sole
on mini-motors. trollers, and
388-8120 - - folddowns. Travelstor 25 ft .
1976 MONTE CARLO , exc. cond.
$4400.00; 20 ft. mini -motor
17 ,500 miles. Call • .u6.9298
$10 ,850.00 . We sell ser.-ite and
quality . Camp Conley Storcroft
--~-!_e~'-.5~m
---Soles . Rt . 62 north of Pt. Plea1%6 FORD MUSTANG . Coli
san I .
675-5022

1974 COMET, exc . cond. $1700.
Also 195-4 MERCURY. 2 dr . hord
lo~ . $6()()_ Coii367-0S.1 _

•t, t . GMC PU

1972 % T Chev . pickup
1- 1973 If, T. Chev . PU
197_. 1J, T.Chev. PU
1973 EIComino with lop

IN PROGRESS

Aulo Sales

power windo'ws . PS . PB , good
ton d.. Bes t offer. Coli 367 -0..54

•

.CLEARANCE
SALE

992-2174

.

197.4 •t, T. Ford PU
197.3 thr ...fourth T. Ford PU

"Your Chevy Dealer"

'77 MODEL

POMEROY, 0.

1.970 LINCOLN CON TENENTEL. oil

446-2282

Gallipolis, 0.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

MAVERlCK 6 cyl . 12,000 miles .
S.T. would CDnsidet older car
on trod~ . Ptl 446-2995
··-.- -·- -· ---

6,854 miles.

Smith Buick-Po,ntiac, Inc.

We are running out of 77 models. We only have a few leH . So you
better ~urry and get your new Buick, Pontiac or G.M.C. before the 78
prrce hrk~. We are the Friendly Dealer. We can save you money, so
come on rn and s~e one of These Friendly Salesmen, Ceward Calvert,
J. D. Story or Btll Nelson . We .honor Senior Citizen Gold Card for
Parts
and · Service.
.
'

n

on~

owned car

It features the economical 260 V-8 engine, power steering. power
brakes. AM-FM radio and radial tires. Finished in bright red with a
matching top. Showroom Condition.

·-· -·-- -·- ··-·· ---1959 GMC BUS , 64 passenger .

1970 Olds O.lta 88

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

with

'1695

500 E. MAIN ST.

BOXER PUPS for 5ale. 949 ·7b44.

992-7332.

Come on in and ask for
Skid, Homer, John, Morris

a

Sport Wagon .

'895

AKC REG ISTERED Beag le pups . Pt .
Pleasant , W .
Vo .
(304 )
675-415 .. _

6 ; Jerry Falwell8 ; Amazing Grace Bible Class 13;

1966 PONTIAC•••••••••••. ••••••••••• •• MAKE OFFER

446·71%, or367 -7156

Truck HaodquQrter•

Open Mon.- Fri. 8 til8
Sat. 8-5
Phone 446-3672

AS IS SPECIAL

•

t

GALLIPOLIS MOTOR COMPANY

HATCHBACK

'1395
1971 Buick

L.emans 2 dr. Runs smooth.

1995

so we CCin make room for more.

C.talina 4 dr. Sale Price

'1295
1971 Pontiac

Gran Torino 2 dr. (green)

our Chevrolets for leu

'3195
1972 Pontiac

Impala. Only

'2695
1972 Fcrd

sa~llng

. . . . . . . . . . . "TWO NAMES YOU CAN TRUST"

NOTICI

Sealed proposals will be
received at the office of tne
D irect or
of
the
Ohio
Department
of
Tran .
sportatlon. Columbus , Ohio ,
until 10 : 00 A . M., Ohio
Stenda _
r d T ime. Tuesday,
September 27, 1f17, tor ·im -

1974

of

pricecl

1973 Mozoda, auto, good cond .

Opening lead - Q6

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

Apollo 2 dr. Economy &amp;

LTO 4 dr. Brown-buckskin

·

we•re

All SNEED dog grooming . J. and
0 . Kennel ~. Reo$onable roles .
No drugs usi&lt;Ki . Coli for OP·
poin tment, 742-31(»2.

owner.

1974 Ford

Electril, 4 dr.~ burvundy .

SHETLAND sheep dogs .
(Min .) Collies , 2 females . 7
weeks old. Shots and wormed.
Phone (b\4 ) 3b7 ·0292 or
3b1 7112.

Ak(

MEIGS COUNTY Hvmone S0&lt;1ety
Animal Coraline , 992 7680: or
after 6 p.m ., CXI2-S..27.

t

LeSabre 2 dr. Local one

'2395
1973 Chevrolet

white.

Notice 10 contractors
State of Ohio
Department of Transport• lion
· ·
Columbus, O.hlo
August 2,, 1977
Contr.act Sales
.
Levai .C opy No . n-1101
Unit Price Contract

505 -2701( 11

•4095
1974 Buick

1974 Buick

•4395
1973 Buick

Phone (614) 367 029?.

1....--11,---

t

The

'3395

AUg . U , 21, 28, Sept . 4

For a Good Deal on a New or Used Vehicle
Open evenings til7 : 00 except

~&amp;.¥'£?_·~-::.-

Grand Prix, a· good buy at

dr .

4

•4395

4195

1

LeSabre ,
sharpest.

Electra 225 4 dr . Buick's
Best.

1974 Pontiac

bids .

&amp;

1974 Buick

LeSabre 2 dr. (edra clean,
low mileage! .

1

wheels

•4995

1975 Buick

or Oarrel Oodritl

"2-2196

1 Ton (dual
loaded I.

TOn .

D

IT'S CLEANUP TIME AT

1975 Buick

1976 Chevrolet

•3995

Minnie W. Mackenzie,
Clerk -Treasurer
Gallia Coul').tY D istrict
Library Board of
Trustees

DAN THOMPSON FORD

~

1h

All Bidcters must be in
conformance with
State
EQual Employment . Op portunity Requirements and
inclvde EEO Forms in their
bid proposals.
A cert ified check pf!yable
to " Gallla Cbunly District
Library " or a properly
secured AlA Form of Bid
Bond , in any amount equal to
5 percent of the total bid shall
be submitted wlfh the bid .
The Owner reserves the rigf'tt
to accept or relect any or all
parts of any bids.
The successful bidder will
be required to furnish a
satisfactory performance
bond tor one-hundred percent
(100 perc:ent ) of lhe Contract ·
price . No bids may be with drawn for al leasl si·xty (60)
days after lhe schedule-d
cl os.! ng time for receipt of

V-8, 3 speed column shift.

H~pp

1976 GMC

ol3215 .

70 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR.........!1395

See Pat Hill, Rocky

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

D

I

t

ARE AT

RISING STAR Kennel Hoarding~
Indoor Outdoor runs , groomtng
all breeds . c:leon sani tary
foc.ilities oe 367 711 ' · Cheshire

f"1

t
t
t

sealed proposals w ill br
rec.tiVe&lt;l until 12: 00 Noon.
Local Time, Septembtr 21.
1977 at The Gallia Countv
Distr ict Library , Thl rd lnd
State Streets. Gallipolis. Oh io
4.5631 ror th• furn i sh ing of

l'ets for ~ale

3,4,6; Summer

Semester '10.

Today 4; Summer Semester 8; Medlx
10.
6:5C}-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55-Good
Morning, Trl Statel3.
7:oo-Today 4,15; CBS News 8: Chuck White Reports ·
10; Good Morning America 13; 7:0!&gt;-Porky Pig 10;
7:3D-Schoolles 10.
8:DO-Capt. ·Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9 :(1()-Telethon Continues 3,4, Phil Donahue 4, 13,15;
Family Affair 8; Mike Douglas 10; Elec. Co. 33.
9:~Andy Griffith 8; Zoom 33.
10:oo-Sanford &amp; Son 4,fs; Here's Lucy 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13; Once Upcin a Classic 33.
'
10:3D-Hollywood Squares 4. 15; Price Is Right e. 10.
11 :oo-Marcus Wlby, M.D. 4; Wheel ol Fortune 15;
Happy Days 13; Studio See 33.
11 : 3~1t's Anybody's Guess 15; Lovfl . of Life 8,10;
Sesame St . 33.
11:5s--(:BS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:oo-Telethon Continues 3,6; News 4; Shoot for the
Stars 15; U.S. Open Tennis 8,10; Midday 13.
12 :3D-Bob Braun 4:. Chlco &amp; the Mah 15; Ryan' s Hope
13: Maklnq Things Grow 33.

'

1:0D-AII My -Chi ldren 13; Not for Women Only 1S;
Antiques 33.
1:3D-Daysof0ur Lives4,15; Even ing at Pops33.
2:0D-S20.000 Pyramid 13.
2:3D-Doctors 4.15: One Life to Live 13; At The Top 33.
3: 0D-Telethon Continues 3.6; Another World 4, 15;
U.S. Open Tennis Continues 8.10; Lowell Thomas

75 JEEP .
CHEROKEE 'S'
Auto ., A.c:, t ilt wheel.
radials, chrome wheels.
roof r a ck, local, 1 owner.

5: 00----My Three Sons 4 ; Mister Rogers 20,3.3; Mission :

Impossible 15.
5:3o--0dd Couple 4; Elec . Co . 20.
6 :0D-Telethon Continues 3,6; News 3,8,10.13,1 5; Zoom
20.
6 :3D-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; News 6; CBS
News 8,10 ; Seabrook-Do We Nee!! II? 20 .
7:0D-Trulil or Cons. 3; News 10; Cross-Wits 4; Liars
Club 6; Marty Robbins Spotlight 8; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Writers 20; Know
Your Schools 33.
7:3D-T.h at Good Ole Nashville Music 3; New Truth or
Cons. 4; Bewitched 6; Match Game PM B; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 20,33; Price is Right 10; Candid
Camera 13; Nashville on the Road 15.
8:0D-Laugh- ln 3,4,15 ; Pilot 6,1 3; CBS Galaxy 8,1 0:
Upstairs, Downstairs 20,33 .

·

1:oo- Tomorrow 3,4.

'2795
74 CHM 1/z TON
PICKUP
Sharp, auto .. 8 foot bed .

l'e1s for Sale
AKC DOBERMAN PINSCHER PUPS
and _reg. Au stralian Blu ~
RISING STAR KENNEL

Concerns &amp;

.4; News 6; Summer Semester 8;

Comments 10; 6 :4!&gt;-Mornlng Repoort 3.
6 :SD-G 0od Morning •. West Virginia 13; 6:55-Good
Morning . Trl State 13.
7:oo-Today 3.4.15; Good Morn ing America 6.13: CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports .10.
7:0!&gt;-Porky P ig 10; 7:3D-Schoolles 10.
8: DO-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame St. 33,
Phil Donahue4,1 3,1S; New Mickey

Mouse Club 6; Family Affair 8; Mike Douglas 10.
9:3D-A .M. 3; Edge of Nlght6; Andy Griffith 8.
10:0D-10 :oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Here's
Lucy 8,10; M ike Douglas 13.
10:3D-Holywood Squares 34,15; Price is Rlght8,10.
11 :0D-Wheel oj Fortune 3,15; Happy , Days 6.1 3;
Marcus .Welby. M.D. 4.
·
11 :3D-It's Anybody's Guess 3.15: Family Feu&lt;! 6. IJ;
Love ol Life B,1 0.
. .
.
11 :5!&gt;-CBS News B; Loving Free 10.

3,4,6, 10; Shoot for th e Sta r s l Si Divorce

Court 8; Midday 13.
12:3D-Chico &amp; the Man 3, 15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1:DO-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News B;
Young &amp; the Resfless 10; Not for Women Only 15.
1:3D-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As the World Turns
8.10 .
2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 6.13.
2:3D-Doclors 3,4, 15; ·one Life to Live 6,13 ; Guiding
.
Light 8,10.
3:(1()-Another World 3,4,15; All In The "Family 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
3: 1~General Hospita l 6,13.

3:31)-Malch Game 8,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; GQng Show
15; Merv . Griffin 6; Sesame St. 20.33: Movie
" Hunters of the Wild" 10: Dinah 13.
4: 1!&gt;-Little Rascals 4.
4:3D-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4; Brady
Bunch 8 : Hogan' s Heroes 15.
5 :oo-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Nleghborhood 20,33 ; Emergency
One 13; Mission : Impossible 15.
5 :3o--0dd Couple 4 ; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33.
6 :oo-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,)5; ABC News 6; Zoom· 20.
6:3(}'-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13.; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; In Pursuit of Liberty 20 .
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; Billy Graham Crusade 6;
Cross-Wits 4; Pop Goes the Country 8; Lowell
Thor&gt;:' as Remembers 33; News 10; To Tell toe Truth
13; My Three Sons 15.
7:3D-Hoilywood Squares 3,4; Billy Graham Crusade
8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ; $25,000 Pyramid
10; Wild Kingdom 13; Marly Robbins Spotlight 15.
8:oo-Movle " The Hlndenburg" 3,4,15; Happy Days
6.1 3; Upstairs, Downstairs 20,33; Bugs Bunny 10.
8:3()-Washington : Behind Closed Doors 6,13; Movie
" LKogan 1 S Run" 8. 10.

9:oo-Qpera Theater 20,33.
11 :oo--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15 .

(cattle

388-9991

. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER6,1977
5:4!&gt;-Farm Report 13; 5 : 5~PTL Club 13 ,
.
6:(1()-Summer Semester 10; 6 : 3~Focus on Columbus

•

11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie '" Scenes from a
Myrder '" 6,13; U.S. Open
tennis Highlights 8;
Movie " It Happened One Night" 10; ABC News 33.
11 :45-Movle "Escape from the Planet of the Apes" 8.
12:00..:.Janekl 33.
·
·
· 1:oo-Tomorrow 3.4.
1:2!&gt;-News 13.
1:3D-Mary Hartman 10

ll

Aulo .. A.C .. P.S .. 8footbed .

""''tHeelers

1:3D-Mary Hariman 10.
1: SD-News 13.

12:0hNews

73 CHEVROLET
CHEYENNE
PICKUP

·

8:36--Baseball 6,1 3.
9: 0Q-Movie " James at 1sr• 3,4, 15; Mozart i n Seattle
20; Shdees of Greene 33.
·
10:0D-Raflerty 8,1 0; News 20; Austin City limits 33.
11 :01)-News 3.4,6,8,10,13, 15; Inner Tennrs 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Streets of San Francisco
6.13; U.S . Open Tennis Highlights 8; Mov ie "'The
Legend of Custer" 10; ABC News 33.
11 : 4!&gt;-Koiak B.
·
12:01)-Janakl 33.
12:4D-Toma6,1 3.
12:5!&gt;-Movie "'All My Darling Daughters" 8.

9 : ~rossWits3 ;

5

'

Remembers 20.

3:1!&gt;-General Hospital 13.
3:3D-lillas Yoga &amp; You 20; Olympic Falme 33.
4:0D-little Rascals 4; Gong Show 15; Golf 8.10: 1976
W.V.U. Foolball Highlights 13.
4:1!&gt;-Lillle Rascals 4.
&lt;:3D-Partridge Family 4; Golf 13; Hogan's Heroes 1S.

dogs}

Ph .

-- ---·

Bo5Jrding . Indoor-Outdoo r Runs .
Grooming, A ll Breeds. CleDn
Sanitary foc.ili ties, Cheshire , Ph

367-0292
CE NTENARY WOODS PET
GROOMING FA.CILITIE S. Pro·
fe_
ssional Services offered , oil
breeds , oil sJy les. Ph . 446-0:231.
--"-- - ,..... •..-

AKC

SHETLAND

--

SHEEPDOGS.

(Min . collies) , Shots and worm .
ed . Free Health Guo r. Ph .

367·0292.
AKC SHETLAND SHEEP DOGS .
Minotu re Collies, shots and
wormed .
Fu l l
health
guaranteed . Ph . 367-0292 or

367·71 12.

SWAIN
AUCTION 8ARN
We sell .anything
for·
anybody at our Auction
,B arn or in vuor .hom e. For
1nform ~tion and pickup
servic e .call 2S6-1967 .
·
Sa le Everv .Saturday
Night at 7 p.m .

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swain, Auct.
Corner Th ird &amp; Olive

MACHINE
SHOP
SERVICES
PORTABLE
WELDING
SERVICE
Public walk , in business.
industrial or construction
business welcomed.

Large lathes and boring
mills.
Metalizing , welding and
ba bbiting .
·
Steel fabrication , cOmplete
stock of steel : rounds,
plates and structua Is.

Free Estimates
No Job Too Large
or Too Small

M&amp;G MACHINE

SHOP
UpPer Roote 7
Kanauga, Ohio
61-1 6 ' I 4tilft~

�D-4- TbeSundayTunes-Senl.lnel Sundav !iept

1!!77

~

,

•

1»-TheSWldayTimes-SenUnel Swtday Sept 4 1977

For Best Results Use Srtn,day Times Sentinel Classifieds
ln \Jt&gt;m on
N LOVING

t r

me-mo~

ol ou

Mo v n McGv e who
owoy n ne yeo s ago

SO(i

po~seoJ

oday

long ng fo o sm le t on o o ed
one gone
None know he depth of ou dl'ep
eg et
we

ememQe

lo ge

Sadly

Mo he

Fo he

b others

t

SVvUPER ond sew g n a h ne
epO po t-s and 1wpp e~ t' \..
up Dnd dt&gt;l ve y Do'ol ) Vo uu n
cleonP
m le up C.eo 9E'S
( !,!ek. Rd Ph .:iA6 02'94

No h ng bul n emOt e) a~ we
ou ney on

8u

S rlt

E e I !Ol
.U6 27l6doyo ngh

PASQUAlE

sp ng &lt;. eofl ng by
nov ng yout co pe s c eoned by

.,..hen o hE' s
m $sed
by

bes

s ste s a d

m e hod known

Rem ove

a I he d
ook new

Mok e you
ogo n
Fo
esr mo e co 379 2681

N MEMORY of au be Olo' ed Mus
bond fa he and g ondfo he
Co Wo on wh o PO!IiS~ away
seven yeo sago Sep .. 1970
Sep embe b ngs sod memo es
of o oved one gone o est
Y-o\J w I neve be o go en By
hose who lo\led you bes !)ad
y m ssed by /'I .s w le V g n a
and th d e n and g and
ch ld en

C.AMPH-1
~
A so
ho se
o e S.JSO Phone t;,l4 O(,!fl

SI-'NING GA RDEN Supples

boge

Fo po of u.s wctn w h h m
The day God cof ed h n home
Sod y m ss ed
by w fe and
ch ld en

le tuoe pants
wh e and ed on o

l:lu k go den seed~ po ! ng sa
pea mos"&gt; f u f ees and ose
bushes
M dwoy Mo ke
Pome or
Oh o
991 2562
!:lobs Mo ket Mason W Vo
304 7TJ 572

Annual P1cn1e

hm
Bu he d d no t go alone

0( c.ol

heod

and Red losodo seed po a oes

Lodge No. 33

reo

b

Cob

yel ow
e s on on p on s Ke ebec
c.obb e Ko Qhd n Red Po!l oc

Ancient York

n memo y ot Henry A son who
el u.s Septembe 3 .s .11
s
ago f b ok.e oo heo s to ase

cou flowef

ond

HA~

I::Y
end

DAVIDSON

RACINE VOlUNTEER F e Dep s
a e spon,so ng a ch cken bo b
que on Sun Sep 4 slo ng o
I 00 om o he F e Sio on
The Lad es Au x a e sel ng
home n ode e c eam

TRADERS DAY
Eve y Sunday n Po e
S ng o
buy
anyhng o
everyth ng
A
o y l ely
e'5 dence
n Po e
Fo bw
s gn'5

WILL CA RE fo e de y n ou
home l o ned and expe enc
ed 992 73 4

Hea d
about
hem'
They nc ude 30 days
of pa d vacat on eve ..,.
yea
medn:a den a
ca e JOb secu y ad
vancemen opportun Y
and
a n ng The e s
moe to e
Ge
n
touch w th
he A
Fo ce so y oday
Serve you se! wh e
you seve vou coun y

Sgf E Ia ne ferns
USAF Recrutt1ng Offtce
221 N Columbus Rd
Athens OH 45701
Ph 614 592 4592

Aor Force

A

YOUR
own
ann ng
oes A so g een beans
con a ne And ew C oss
Fa s 24 7 2852

CANNING TOMATOES ond swee
c.o n o f ee1 ng P ~ you
Col
Bo ba a To bo
o wn
Po and 843 4515
NEW OEA No 7 Co np eke
G ood an d on Ready io p k
0 4 843 2286
SBE Touch Com 40 C B
ad o 40 honne Tenno e ec.
c e o ng on enno on en
no mo che { SWR J 3 me e
modu o on wo oge and SWR
gouge o I ob es and hook up
f ngs lo ad o and guage AI
egu pmen s l o mob e use
Col 992 2448 ofte 5 pm

NEW

FOR THE I nes n wood heo ng
s o es ooks aves and coo
s oves Co I Z on Heo Co t1
Pu nom D ve A hens ( ~ 4

696 I 87 o 6 ' 592 .079

Great way of l fe

7 F sh sauce
7 3 Mytho og ca
unde wo d
75 Lewmak ng
body
77
dge
781 a an seaoo
80 Excuse
a Bo he
82 Hem
84 Wooden SUPPO
86 Aepu a on
87Getngup

a

89 Ex s
92 Pe an ng !oUle

cneek

c ty

95 Mans
98 Ran

32 B b ca weeds

n~Jr'ne

c" e

40Wng ke
41 Rugged moun

a n c est
43Faceofwalch
4 5 Mak.e ace
46 Nal veo
Ca a on a
48 Schoo books
SOComb om

52 Foo ba eam

"

24 T ade

53 C ayey ea th

54 Ce emon'f
56Moeyupd
57Syetl auom o
b •

sao do anoun
59 P OJec ng oo
160 Co undLim used
fo g nd ng
DOWN

1 A ange nlo ds
2 Rep mand

w h de ght
9 Foot eve
0 Fa e gn

33 Eng sh baby

ca age
34 Un ol S amese
cu encv

S Na lo'emeta
6 Buvs back
7 Heal ng un Is
a Anc en cha o
20 Ease {p nl ng)
23Co n

I.HTED FEATURE SVNDtCArE 20C

p,, A

V s goths
94 Ch nesed s

46 fouaht
47 Ace om p slled
49 Wea 1J
5 Cap a o I be
52 Vene ate
SJ Was e me a
54 s 0 y

Pomeroy Landmark

9.-~ack W

Carsey Mgr

~ Phone992

2181

56 Rende ng n
sane
59 H nd a ne e
60 Accomo shmen
6 G s name
63 Though u
65 Pa o snoe
67G eek ele
e9 A con! nen
abb I

measu e

25 OdSoan sh
god con
126 Feas
27 sandot e
aod
29 Fo ay
3 T ade
32 Wa ks w t1

measu ed steos

70T ea ng

33 Scheme
34 Baby on an
abode ol (:lead
36 Burna bes

name
83Duch own
85 Bu es
86 Cave n
87 Sea nAsa
88 Eva ua e
89 Ma ns n ckname
)0 Ha ves ed
-J Chem ca com
POund
92 Pa en co oq
93Kngo he

ouo New Yor~ N

v

S l VER QU EE N Swee Co n P ck
you
own Cheap Cia enc.e
P oH
Po and Oh o
~

F001 BRU SH Hog w th II s
5. JOO o t ode o b ode Cal
742 2427

TOUC H AND Sew Doe.s AI
us
I ke new So d o $449 95
Cleo ng ou s ock Mus se I fo
Sft9 95
Cosh
a
te ns
992 s 146
SCHOOL
S NGER
Sew ng
Mo h ne5 Many tea u es Only
531 50
a sh
o
e ms
99"1 5146
HOOVER UPRIGHT Sweepe s
1977 mode W I sel fa $2:l SO
a ho ems 9925Jd6

hi N:k

HD 5 A C Doze 6 5 ons Good
cond ton $4 500 992 7847

ewf' p

{ ou&lt;1e
0 1-'hn &lt;'

In 1;'1

e

W
14

rl~o:

o

RIO G

~ J 1 of

GOODUSEO

965 &lt;2 2
CONN TRUMPET w h ose P

o se

NEW FARM MACH NERY
Geh Mower Cond one
$329'
MF 450 Round Bole
$4600
MF 560 Round Bole
$5350
MF'200 Choppe 2 ow
$5500
MF Ha y~ ead I a "100
$850
MF fi80 P ow S x I b
$4000
MF 520 0 sc 2 t cu
$2200
Bush Hog Ollsel D sc. 9 4 cut
$
2
6
9
5
SH INN S TRACTOR

SALES
leon W Vo

JU~

d 10
'i 4l/V (j~
rn k nu-. ell l or

Ueo ng

Cl

~kfl;l)

(Qh o

(!o

..

Co

~I NG!:H

SC HOOl

!iew ng
nac h ne mo y lea u es o I)'
SJI ::.0 Cosh o 1e n'&gt; Co
446- 11-176

UPR GHT

HOOVE~

~WllPl R~

'11
node
w II &lt;jfi! ll fa
51'/ 5(1 Ca":oh o
c m. Col
JJt; 1f! 6
!! CYCLE g ts :JO nth Sc.hw nn
eJ'C cond Co J.AQ 171
CHi::VJ.!O t:J 2H3 AN() 3'-16 b o k
eng ne po s Co l 446 0212
ONf: ROTOfll t:R
585
one
g o e o o e
lo o
ep ace
~ (0
one 16 f I o bed fo m
wagon S "}~ Cal 44 b 4537
APPlE S se e o \10
nebet:
pofo oe!o
S u ke 250 66fi3

es Ken
He mon

b 5 S628

GRAVE Y TRACTOR Model 52A
demon:i ala w h 30
o a y
REF~IGERA lOR
RANG!:: !)
mowe
new wo on y P e
Washe s a nd d ye s Gf:NE
$ '100 Sove o e $.300 OUT
SKAGGS
~4 Eos e n A e
DOOR EOU PMENT SALES &lt;1J
Ph 44b 7398
Syc.omo e
Go po !'.
Ph
44~ 3670
FOR THE BEST N FURN TUR~
UPHO STI:R NG F ee Es
o es 19 ~ KAWASAKI 5(.K) new
P ck up and de ve y e
e
n lud ng helme
elo!.c
ood
co Mow eys Upho s e y PI
Co 3BA 88 6
Pleoson W Vo 675 4 ~4

Rd

e'

MF B HP lawn T or. o
$850
MF 0 HP lawn T octo
$ 095
446 2783
We ds 4 HP lown T o o
S 095
5695
FARM FENCE POSTS All S IZE~ Bolen 0 HP Lawn T a to
NEW LAWN EQUIPMENT
eve 6 000 o hoOse f om
S650
Sl 99 and up sh ng es S A QS Mf- R32 R d ng Mowe
.S 090
pe sq
Ande son w ndows MF M5 R d ng 1 o a
S2175
s uds o he bu d ng no e o l M F 200 R d ng T oc o
S2790
Open do y 9 7 F on~s Ba go n MF 450 R d ng T at o
MF 650 R d ng T at a
$2950
(en e R 60 Po e Oh o
Mf- 655 R d ng T o o
~ 32 50
MF lown Sweepe 3H n
52 70
SHIN N S H1ACTOR SALES
Phone 4~H tb30 Leo WV

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
let POmeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond tton your
water and Coop water
softener

p.,\odel

UC XVI

Now On ly

•279.95
Let us
Free

tesl

your

wa t er

Pomeroy Landmark

9. ~Jack W Carsey Mgr

......

Phone 992 2181

SIGNS Hondpa n ed p oless an a
qual y bus ness s gns s ore

uck doo s bonne s

w ndows

pas e s
mo I
Phone 446 0 0
Th d A\le
H

box
on es
T m tope 525

Gl~Y

S NEW 8 USED BOOK
STORE
0 000 pope ba ck s
Bu~ se I 446 0002

GRAN rED r REEZER BEEF

Ph

44b 0760
BlUE PLUMS
B ucke 256 66fl3

He man

EARLY

POT BRY

URNS

CONCRETE

PLANTERS

CLAY

MEXICAN

H g ey ~ G f Shop uppe Rl 7
44b 000'1
HOUSE
COAL
m es t o ne
del \IC ed Co 1245 5309

4

k

5 S eel ad a
bo e y 446 0122

es

12 vo

FT

TRA ER AX ES
es
wheels
sp ngs
Mo o 1ed
b ke Col 256 1507

GRAVELY

MODEl 8 0 R D NG

TRACTOR w h 40 unde s vng
mowe
'5 $227 5 Save S400
One On y

OUTDOOR EOU P SA ES
60 Syc.omo e Go I po s
Co 1440 3670

TWO PON IES $25 eoc.h sodd e
and b do $30 Beagle pups
SIO each T uck oppe
Col 367 067b

S200

c
wo k ho !&gt;E!&gt;S. poll es and o k
o l a k ld
Co I 3(17 ~J3 o
JMk 9303

HHJUCt: sole a nd lo!o w h
Go8ese lobe!&gt; o d E Vop
wop p '5 G ln9homO ug
Y76 BA ~~ BO A I 1q77 MHKURV
o utboo d
ol ng moto
ve
wet 0 ve on
o e
Col
'lb7 'J477

NEW 2 P ECE EARlY AMERICAN
l VING NOOM 5-UIHS

!&gt;All;

AT
S 99 95
eg
$199 95 R Cl: S NEW AND USED

PRICHJ

f- URN fURl:
44.6 47'26

H!&gt;A S.e and Ave

9&amp;S 17 H THOMPSON WOOD
BOA I 100 HP Me tu y au
boadgoo l
o e andtom
p e e op C.Oio'e
S 000 Coli
4A6 4726

RAY HAWK INS AGENCY
I you o e o non smo lo: c co li us
lo spec o a es on p ope y
NS -l46 2300

Sho gun
] gouge pump 4 y
old
pe l e tend on
flh
446 f!b75 of e b pm o 205 K
neon D ve

s

Co

KElV NA TOR
REFR GERATOR
oppe one up gh t eeze
ex c
ond
Wh poo
ef ge o o I as I ee 2 doo
Wes nghouse
e f ge o o
May ag w nge was he Speed
Oueen w nge washer Hoove
Po a d ye
Gene S~oggs
294 Eos e n Avenue 44b 739H
We o e mov ng and p ces o e

ow
G RlS &lt; PC

WH TE BEDROOM

SUITE double bed w th conopy
Good an d
afte Opm

APP ES

NOW

on

Co

388 8606

P CKING

Red

del t ous yellow de c ous ond
on o hans WEllS ORCHARD
Hou s 8 o 5 Mon h u So and
oSonSun OPEN A80ROAY
TOLLY CRAFT CAS N CRU SER 24
f be g loss a Go1hp.9 s Boa
Cub Co II flfl5 7fl~

day of 1977 with 118

to follow
The moon ISJleanng tts last
quarter
The mornmg stars are
Venus Mars Jupoter and

Saturn
The evenmg

star

Mercury

Those born on thts date are
under the s1gn of Vll'go

German

composer Anton
Bruckner was born Sept 4

1824
On tlus day U1 hiStory
In 1609 Henry Hudson
discovered the island of Man
hattan
In 1781 Spanish settlers
founded the city of Los

Angeles
In 1971 a Jetliner crashed
m the Alaskan mountams

killing ll1

persons

Col 38$ 82•6
HAY Cc I ol e Spm 245 5 42

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Doc
21) Tl'l ngs done on you own w
v e d on v 1 m ed etu ns today
You stand to make you bg
sco e n a conce ted team effort

22

CU

FT

HO TPO NT

REF-R GERATOR
toppe one
top f ee1e left hond don y
o d Also 0 " 10 S!u d house
ed Ia e ec. c Ha 5 1 w n
dews
v o d A so
s e
v o n S od vo us co py I ne
tone new bow Ca 446 023A
w

For Sunday Sept 4 1977

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

~\70(!)[1
~UJnw!billmiJ
Sept 4 1977

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) You
a e qene a v ucky today n a I

you

CAPRICORN IDee 22 Jon 19)
A thouq h th s s no a business
l you have a good dea t y
o qet he ea ol you super or
wh e 1s f esh n you m nd
nay

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fob 1e)
You ma y ge a b a nsto m today
hal s a tile ov of your ne II
cou ld be a gold m ne I you get t
o the peop e who know how 10

ma kel

PISCES (Feb

20 March 20)

Yo u e ucky today but not n the
v av you expect Somelh ng w I
be eso ved n a manner
d lfe en t than you hought I
WOI,Jd

ARIES (Morch 21 Aprll19) You
have a ouch Ia mak ng fun ou t

eo

5 Loud no. se (co
IOq )
153 Mounts n abb )
55 Fo ej(amp e
abb )

10017 (212) 557 2333

973 FORD TRUCK Cus om F 00
PS Au oma c 30~ eng ne
Tappe
nc uded good t es
cond on 992 341 0
OlVER 10 Hoe G an D 1 S200
Pas D ve SSO (onto I Go y
M choe 985 A237
S X WEEK old p gs $30 70 000
gas
floc
fu note
B TU
alum num s o m dao s Co I
992 5947

55 500 (6 &lt;I 8•3 262 1
YAMAHA HARLEY DAVIDSON &amp;
n AM Mo a y es Comp te e
so es and fan os c serv ce
HousMT T96 WF 97 So
9 5 The Mo a eye. e People o l
Sou heoste n Oh o
A hens
Spa Cycles nt 20 W S mson
Ave
A the s Oh o
Phone
(614 592 1692

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS
Slrockly wholesale to all
Not less than h case

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden center

FARM SALE
Saturday, Sept 10, 1977
10:30 A.M.
LOCATION B moles below Galhpohs on State Route
218 Ha\'tng sold my Farm I wtll offer the followtng to
the H oghesl Bod de r
1964 Cock shut Super 570 w th R ce Patty T res (91 HP)
4 Row International Corn Panter SO Hay Rake on
Steel 26 Farm Tra ler 116 Ton Cap I •oo Gal on Corn
Sprayer w 12 Row Boom J D No 5 Mow ng Mach ine 7
Cut 12 01 ver Gran Dr II 30 Stat onary E evator
lnternat onal Manure Spreader (60 Bu)
12
Cult vator 11 12 lnternaftona Wheel D isc 5 14
lnternat onal Plow 500 Bu Grav fy Bed 6 Fergvson
Scraper Blade Wheel We ghls 1962 One Ton Dodge
Truck ( New Eng ne) Marquette 300 Amp Electr c
Welder Cuttmg Torch 4 Speed Chevy Transm sston
W~slern Saddle 2 Rol s of New Barbed W re Portable
Hog Crate 2 5 Bu•hel Automat c Hog Feeders Hog
Creep Feeder 2 Ton Hog Feeder w lh 1A L ds 6
Waters Electr c Furnace for Farrow ng House 10
Locust Posts 30 Ba es of Straw 700 No 4 Copper Wire
MF 7 Garden Tra ctor 13 Yrs Old) and Trailer 3 • HP
Roto T ller ( L ke New )
Go Carl and other
m scellaneous Items
HOGS- Ill D'uroc Boar (5) Hampsh re Brood Sows
(S) Yorkshire Sows (73) Feeder Pigs Theyre rang ing
In we ght from 40 to 120 lbs
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS
Washer •nd Dryer
Refngerator Portable TV Couch and Cha1r and other
tems
TERMS CASH
LUNCH AVAILABLE

1210 Washongton Bl•d
Belpre Ohoo

TAURUS ( Apr I 20 May 20)
Relu ns cou d come your way to
day n a eas tha you ve g ven
cons de abe hought to look
o ga ns he e a he t1an n out
and sh seMmes

GEMINI (May 21 Juno 20) A
pe son fond a you may g ve you
a t p today that cou ld make o
save you money L sten carefu
y
I be ex.t eme y wo thwh le

CANCER (June 21 July 22)
Sou ces you expect the east
from a e apt o do the most for
you oday You cou d even
ece ve a g fl om a sec et ad

m e

LED !July 23 Aug 22) I al a
poss be toda y a ange to
m ng e w h you most altluent
con ac ts Someth ng ve y sub
san al may ub off on you
~F\\SI

'1

T PICKUP Chrome Rev
mag wheels headers
s de
p pes e:o:c co nd l o I 446 7H2H
of e 5pm

nARL NG

"""""" ""' "" • · ·~·"' ........... ,,.,

flea! htate for Sale

IF YOU hove a service o olfer
wonl o buy or sel !.ometh ng
oe look ng fo wo k
o
whatever
you II ge esu h
fo~ter w th a Sent nel Want Ad

Coll9'12 2156
'f'ARD SALE Mon rhru F
m e
from Longs" I e on (R
0
Cloth ng
women s
s us
10 b I Hie g s sizes 4 7
smo I household ems Phone

742 2668
GARAGE SALE Sep 3 ' 5 6
Lee C rde
Rust c H )Is
Sy ocuse Glosswa e c oth ng
gos range
tems

end o he

REG STI::RtD fiOLU:O
HEf.IEfOf.ID I:IULLS call Don Co)(
:; 9 :.!6

Lee Johnson- Auctioneer
Crown C1ly 011oo- Phone 2l64740

m sc

HUGE YARD Sole Sept 5 6 7 at
Hudsort rtu dence 5th and
Peo I Streels Ro ne Oh o
Too s cole.:tobles co h ng
ond m sc. Sto Is 10 om eo h
day Ron co nee s
PORCH SALE Man and Tues
95
Ch ldren s and
odul
doth ng many p e&lt;:es of collet
tab ~s g osswere ond d shes
coo l m ner and j m Beam
decan!e s 66fJ H gh S e~
M ddlepo 1 Oh o
PORCH SALE Sep 3 10 o 620
locus
S ree
M ddlepo
Co h ng A\lon TV s come a
b eye e Fomr 12 7 pm
THREE FAM l Y Yo d So e Mon
lues and Wed 5 h 6th and
71/'1 I om 9 to 6 on S lh 124 n
M ne h lie
los of boby
women and mens do! /'I ng We
olso hove c::u e ns
clocks
Keys!one SX70 type come a
ope p aye s w fh speake s
M ens and worn ens mo ch ng
wedd ng bands never used
and m st te ms
TWO DAY Porch Sole Sept 4 5
A c ass f om Fog esong Fune o
Po lo Mason W Vo F om I
o 7 Some n ce an qulfi! d shes
e!c plus ossa ment of usab e
ferns cheap
YARD SAlE Sep 5th bth 7lh
Gas Heote
elec r c stove
tab e cho s new umpe end
lobes b and nome &lt; o h ng
ol s 1es baby to h ng oys
Roc ne on Rou e 24 I
m es
pas
h gh
school
Be ly
Co penle es dence
LARGE FOUR Fom ly Vo d Sole 6
7 B o Reeds" e Oh o Won

do K mes Fu n u e
amps
a ge wh e un fo ms c oth ng
of o I s z.es N ce ond leon No
unk Chr ome whee s Rou e
124 Reed sv le Oh p Tu n a
ReedB others Sio e

o every h ng today even wo k
Whateve you ay you hands on
u ns au we and you en oy it

~

FAMilY YARD SALE 25 Henkle
A ve
10 to S good school
clo thes women c o hes some
fu n m st terns

BASEMENT SAlE P on s Sub D v
Ma n s
C o!hes a I s zes
Thu s
thr u
Sun
Roush
res de nee

VARDSA LES al Co a Thu s F
Sot &amp; M an
so la bed fo m
rae o
doth ng
garden
veg obles
cho s odds and
ends Coli 379 228
'YARD SALE
Eve yn s Beau y
Salon Upper R 7 Sept 4 and
5
lOam
o Spm D shes
~ng msc

THREE FAMILY YARD SALE fr
Sol

and

M an

Mc N~~age

A

Rl 141

F ed

SlEEPING Rooms weekly
Pork Cent ol He el

Business Services

oleos

lOW week y and mon hly ales a
l bby Ho el ~46 17.4]

t GHT t'!ouukeep ng oom Po k
Cen Dl Ho el
SLEEPING rooms fo renl Go
Ho el

o

THE PHOTO PLACE

OVER 4 000 lb lobacc.o bose fa
lease o ent Ph dAb 0166

1otHicll Sl

FOR ~ENT OR lEASE O"e 4 000
b.s taboc o bose Robe t
Queen Ph A4b 0168

3 8EOR MOB LE HOME 4 x 70
$ 75" me p us depos t R I
B dwel
ova ob e
0~1
of
.August 6 4 772 2566
MOB lE HOME space wo e ond
sewe
lu n shed
Phone
A46 029-4
NICE MOB L£ HOME ove ool.. ng
he "'e One m e below t y
cen ra o
o 2 odu rs only
Co Ad6 0338
MOB lE HOME LOT 5 m es f om
c ty
B ack op
ood
Ru a
wo e coun v I v ng c tv on
ven ence (a 1446 A9q9

FURN SHED EFF CIENC ES SilO o
$ 10 U
es pod S ng e
Nee dawn own Col 446 4416
offe 7pm

FURN SHED APARTMENT F "
lloor Ut I es po d J bd
odu s
Nee
HMC
446 4416of e 7pm

Co

Pamoror

THE GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER

Blown
lnsulalton Smtus
fin,.&lt;lnJ Avaii.Jblt
81ow11 l•to Watts. l Attics

l'leddonp

~EPLAC£MENT

Portraols
Ann1versanes
Speco1l Oce~~ns

Bob llotffi&lt;h

Superoor
Steam Extraeloon

DAVID BRICKLES

o

._... or to 1M
C.ro

-•"!~

TWO BEDROOM MOB LE HOME
Adu Is on y uti es pad $50
a wee~ I m le abo\le S lve
Br dge Shopp ng P ozo Col
44b 8513

Phone Moke Young

At

992 2206 or 992 7630
1hf: Or cnators
Tho m totoB

Reeotmllo 0

N~

Vmyl &amp; Alummum S1dmg
Storm Wmdows &amp; Insula
t1on
Call Profess1ona Is

B1ssell S1dmg Co.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

The Ment'al Health 'Ce:nter IS a private non profit
Corporation and an equal apportuntty employer
Please contact fhe center personnel off1ce at the
Communtty Menfal Healfh Center 1n Galhpohs
Telephone 446 ssoo tf quahfted and Interested
Addtttonal tnformafton IS 1\'lllable through the Oh1a
Bureau of Emplovment Serv•ces

FISCAL DIRECTOR
We are a rapidly grow•ng commumty mental health
center tn Southeastern Oh1o currently w1th a staff of
100 and a budget tn excess of 52 000 000 We are seeking
an IndiVIdual to assume total responstblhty tor our
f1nanc1al reporting and grant management accounting
operations As fiscal dtredor th•s md1v1dual will
report dtrectly to the centers admtniSfrator
The•dealcandtdatewtllhave a m1n1mum of a BA BS
1n Accounftna w1th an advanced dearee it cleflntte Dlus
Expenence nd catlhg Hands on
Take Charge
management sk1lls ts essential And eKPOSure to
pubhc h&lt;allh fundong grant management an&lt;t data
processmg i1ccount1ttg systems 1s daslrable
For consrderaf1on send your detailed resume wtth
salary htstory 1n complete conftdence to Box No 805
Care Of The Galhpohs Trobune Gallipolis Ohoo 45631

An Equal Opportuntly Employer M-F

THE GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER
ts currently accepttng applications for the following
position

CLINICAL TYPIST Hogh school diploma traonong and
experoence In office work typong abohty at tho rate of
60 WPM accurately shorthand 1boloty preforrlil
knowledge of medocal terminology Position will
requtre long p..-lods of hme 'r•nscrlbing t•pes
onllolvong complicated chnocal terms
IG111ipolos
Offoce)
THE MENTAL HEALTH CENTER IS A PRIVATE
NON PROFIT CORPORATION AND AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER PLEASE CONTACT
THE PERSONNEL OFFICE OF THE COMMUNITY
MENTAL HEALTH CENTER OR THE OHIO
BUREAU OF EMPLOYMENT SERVICES FOR
INFORMATION
AND
APPLICATIONS
TELEPHONE «6-5500

JG

Ml Ill

ai~INftWIII

8His. Ill U 'Ill ftl 11.

lluq I.Uit triOG Hd 11 ~ I" nd ,o~u, p tin or
t

Phone 949 2801
or 949 2860

utH

poftJ

WI ~~~~ f" I ptr tR

IIIII!'" tl!11t

ltd

Ill

lilt ll~te

n l!llf. tru. Ill• o -... prod II qulliiJ lol

*"

nz

No Sund•r C.lls Pleast

10 ""

Hmo

LY
3 AND 4 RM lu n shed and un
~u

n shed
5434

op s

Phone

992

COUNTRY Mob e Home Po ~ Rt
33 en m es no h of Pome oy
La ge los w 1h cone ete po os
s dewol~s
unne s and olf
s ee po k ng Phone 'lf/2 7479
SMALL. APARTMENT 2nd St ee n
M ddlepor Su ab e fo I o 2
people 992 5262
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Po k
Rou e 33 no h of Pome oy
lo ge ots Co 1992 7479

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Restdenltal
and
commerctal
Call
for,
estimate 24 hour servece
Anyday anyttme
Phone 985 J806

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice
Chester Ohto
B 29 pd

BoxJ4

GUlTER
SERVICE

CARTER

AVAILABLE AT R ve s de Apls
bed oom S 05pe monh SISO
secu l y depos 992 b09R
THREE

ROOM

fu n shed

op r

992 6161
MOB LE HOME Phone A!be

a 9•9 2261

H

pwner wants f so ld now ( We are ta ktng
about our I st ng at 482 Kathy Dr
( Pleasant Valley Estates) This lovely
home has three BR s 1 , baths LR
comblnfltlon DR and kitchen plus a two
ca r atta ched garage a I s tuated on a
large f lat lot Call for an appo ntmenl

Lookong for a flat lot (120x220) with an ce
bnck ranch home This one has a f ull
basement part ally d lv ded LR woth a
very pretty br ck fireplace the f nest
k tchen n the area three BR s 2 baths
covered pat o front porch and a two car
attached garage This home a so has a
heat pump for year rovnd comfort Call
now for an appo ntment C ty schools

bv lden

Phone 949 2814

p..,.,,

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

or 992-6263
lAM to 4:30PM
SALES IND SERVICE

GEN ERA L Coli
masona y to
ng
ns ol
d lo'ewoys Ph

o lo s
Do o
pen e1 8. plumb
and
epa
ol
446 9587

\\anted

to

CONCRETE AND BLOCK WORK by
lhe hau o by he con o
F ee es me es Ph 367 0295 o

367 0676

LARGE ESTATE AUCTION

~~~

D. Bumgardner
Pool Sales

00 CH lD CARE N MY
HOME g een o es Rt '
w I
ons le
om Nu sey schoo
K nde go den 446 007

W ll

BABY SilT NG n my home P e e
2 o 5 y o d Expe en e Co l
446 679

Nob I Summit Road
~ll

Mddleporf, 0

992 5724
Complete Sales altd Semce and Sup-

plos

3 141

ffi(l

Uusmess Sen1-ces

STARTING THURS., SEPTEMBER 8, 1977
9:00A.M.
And conttnumg each day unt1l all personal property of the late
James Ray H1ll has been sold Located 25 m1les Southeast of Athens
Oh1o Route 33 to Pomeroy Oh10 then East on Route 124 to Racme
Qh1othengo6 mtles Easton Route~38to Letart Ohto
TRACTORS"
1976 J 0 2440 w1th 690 hours fully equ1pped deosel Ford 3000 love
PTO power steerong gas J D M w cultovators J D 140 garden
tractor Farmall A w cult vators &amp; s de dressers Farmall H w1de

&amp; s de dresser

TRUCKS &amp; TRAILERS'
1972 GMC random w 26ft van w Thermo Kong has new eng me 1973
Ford Pickup 1966 GMC Tandom 24ft bed 1965 GMC cracker box
l964Ford 18ft van bed 40ft flattraoler 40ft Hobbs Reefer
'FARM MACHINERY"
Kollbrosgravoty bed N I corn pocker 1 row 1 yr old heavy duty JD
cylonder 3 pt 8 ft dosk 3 pt Ford 6 It blade 2 J D and l Coly
wagons w1th 16 tt flat beds 10ft Harragator 3 pt wood brush hog
J D corn planter 2 row 3 pt Ford plows 2 bottom 16 &amp; 3 bottom 14
Champion aor compresser 3 &amp; 5 shovel Cultovators Ford 3 pt
subsooler 3 pt Cement Moxer 2 row 3 pt cultovator and sode
dressers
Fodeloty electroc alternator (new) cutting torch lone
welder N 1 loader J D washer double dosk for garden tractor
large asst new bolts saws large amount of hand tools and
miscellaneous Items too numerous to mentoon
'VEGETABLE EQUIPMENT"
Tomato or apple grader woth belt Ford ondustroal engone woth
Jrrlgatoon pump orrogatoon p1pe approx 50 101nts 3
approx 132
approx 30 Ram Bord spronklers PTO Marlow pump 5
1oonts 4
suctoon line 4 output 100 gallon fokyers Blast Sprayer 1 row N I
plant setter 2 row 3 pt Powell plant sette~ large quantity plastoc
trays &amp; 1nserts approx 75 000 tomato stakes large quantoty 5 &amp; 10
lb baskets 50 lb cabbage boxes 2 potato cutters PTO potato
d 1gger Gale Fork loft EZ Way Dolloe and conveyor
"HOUSE TRAILER"
14x70 Holly Park completely furnished electroc heat central aor
condohonong 60ft front awning and 20 It back awnong
"HOUSEHOLD'
Color Zenoth TV Gibson uproght 19 cu ft deep freeze metal desk
Victor addong machone Smoth Corona typewroter I mens sweeper
milk cans m1sc pots pans &amp; dishes
"MISCELLANEOUS"
250 000 fuel ool heater 1 000 bushel wore corn crob 2 platform scales
24 fans approx 1 000 bushel ear corn 4 gas over head Hothouse
heaters 3 boiler heated Hothouses large pole Stoker coal
Dav1d Htll, Admtntstrator
Lunch
Positive I D Cash
Not responsible for acc1dents or loss of property
L Donohue
0 smith
J Carnahan
742 3048
949 2033
949 2708

BRADFORD
Auc t one e
Corn
p e e Se 1o1 c.e Phone 949 2487
a 949 2000 Rae ne Oh o C
B odfo d

"anted lo J:luv

T MBER
Pom e roy
ducts Tap pr ce
sow t mbe
Col
Ken han by
44b

BOWERS RtPA R
Sweep e s oeste s
ons o
sm ol opp ances l awn mowe
nex o Slo e H1ghwoy Go age
on Route 7 Phone (6 4) 9H5

ELWOOD

CASH po d fo o
makes ond
made s of mob e
hom es
Phoneo eocode6 4 423 953 1
Fo es! Pro
fo sand ng
992 5905 o
R570

3825
REMODEL NG Plumb ng heo ng
and o types of gene a epa
Wo k guo on eed 10 yea s e)(
pe ence Phohe 992 2409

CURRENCY
okens o d
pocke wo ches and cho ns
SEW NG MACH NE Repo s se
s lve and go ld We need 964
v ce a I makes 992 2284 The

CO NS

and o de s ve co ns Buy se
o f ode Co I Roge Woms ey

742 233
OLD FURNITURE ce baKes bass
beds
et
conpee
househo ds W e M 0 M le
R 4 Po me oy Oh o o to
992 7700
CASH
Junk t':a s F y s T u ~ &amp;
Au o Ru land Ph ot;~e 742 208
o 742 9575 Closed M ondays

NO ITEM TOO Lo ge or co smo
W I buy
p ace or comp e e
household New used o ont
ques Ma I n s Fu n tu e 20 N
2nd St
M dd epa
Phone

992 6370
CLEAN MODERN Home w h 0
o c es or more
Co l
(b 4)

557 3382
PIG S WANTED Eve e t Ho comb

992 2737 0 (614) 69B 5025
WE WANT TO BUY LAND
I b o es 10ned nut l am ly w h
wote and sew&amp;
ohn W nke

(6 • )868 1986
JUNK auto and sc op me ol Ph
J~a

ano

Top p ces fo
Top Que y

POMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS

Owner w111 help finance the home at 354
Th rd Ave Ca I now for an appo ntment
you w I
ke what you see
Owner has moved out of state and wants to
sell the home on Rt 588 one m e out of
town If you have ca lled about th s before
call aga n t m ght be roght Ia you

Economy mtnded people w I want to
check our I st ng at 2127 Chesnut Pr ced at
on ly $15 500

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
Mobile Homes for Sale

Fo b c
Shn p
Pome ay
Au ho zed S r"~ge So es and
Se ce We sh e pen Sc sso s
EXCAVATIN G doze loa d~ and
bac~hoe wo k
dump
uc~s
and o boys f a h e w I hou
f I dr
o so
I mes o ne and
g ave Co l Bob o Rage Jet
fe s
day phone 992 7089
n gh phone 992 3525 a 992

5232
EXCAVATING
da1e
backhoe
and d the
Ch a es R Ho t
f e d
Back
Hoe
Se 1o1 c.e
Ru and Oh o Ph one 742 2000
W ILl do

aof ng

co ns! u t on

plumb ng an d hect ng No ob
l ao a ge o
742 234!1

oo SOlO

Ph one

CARPENTER
f oo ng
e ng
po ne ng P_hone 992 2759

AUCTION SAT

SEPT

0 9 30

AM Fo ow R
33 NW of
Pame oy o Ne sonv e Oh n
o de
o make mo re wok
spa e fo h s bus ness M
Ab ahem s se I ng con en s of
9 room hou se ITS FULL tem s
f om 2 old A hens homes and
o the eslo es LOTS OF FUR
NITURE OF All TYPES ndudes
eo I n ce 0 pc d n ng oom
su e
mahogany 5 $ett on
ook so ~ book cose mony
m a ny n ce p er.es and many
mo e lhot
need
es o ed
CRAFT 5tPPLIES (f un f m
decoupoge
p t u es
sp ay
po n
molds e t) COLLE(
TIB LES A ND M SC unusual a nd
ho d o f nd ems such a s ve y
o d camp e e home funeral
equ pmen (o no e and n ex
ce en and
d d S ndo
gas
pump coun y so e b I holde
Hulfy bo oon b ~e t e bobv.
buggy w one c od les w a
hmoke s tems (bench tom
p e e s ok ng
oo s and 5
d owe wood wo th c ysto l
t o'Se
o he
o d boxes w
d owes g b as'S ~ e le b ass
ho
ee 2 coppe wash ng
mak ng mch
mchs
key
vo ous o he mach nes elet
d te sta mp gumbol e c:: ) en
d ons lo s and o s more o
ve y pa a
s ng B ng o
cha and d ess fa the wea he
ou s de lun ch Te ms cosh o
Ck w FRED ABRAHAM ow ner
Ph 614 753 1302 C E and Po

PAT SHER DEN AUCT ONEERS

Husmess Opportunities
OWN YOUR

OWN

BUSINESS

A eo d s bu o
lo
Rand
McNally Mops No se I ng Ser
v ce p e es ob shed occoun s
ln\lesfmen l s $2 500 o $12 500
n en o y an d
secu ed by
equ pmen
W e
nc ude
name odd ess e ephone and
lh ee ele ences o Pe son el
0 re c o NAMCO 3928 Man
do
Rd
B m ngham
A
352 3 o co I to f ree (AOO)
b33 844 1

Mobile Homes for Rent

E et
MOB lE HOMES LOTS
Phone GREEN TERRACE MOBILE COM
MUN TY
E:o:
loco
ed an Rl 14 c y wote c y
AND MART N
HOWERY
sc. haols 5 m n f am Go I po s
co ve ng
sep t c sys tems
ond Ho ze Hasp a
doze r backhoe dump rue~
I mes one
g avel
b ock op JWO
2 bd
a ler s on
pov ng Rl r~3 Pt'rnm! 1 (61'1)
Ne ghbo liooa
Rd
Co I
698 733
675 4880

AUl T MOB LE HOMES SERV CE
S~

ng oncho ng and pp os
co 440 360fl of e ~
f

BANDS MOBILE HOME~

PT PLEASANT W VA
973 AI en 12K40 2 B
973V

o a 4)(tJ73

972 Mona

B

h 12x50 2 l:i

1 bah
en

0

972 Cone on 12xb0 2 B
958 Mo le t! Ox47 '1 B

BATHROOMS AND
K tch ens
be ween 6 and 9pm
e"'ode ed &lt;.e am t t le p um
b ng co per'!l y a[1d gene ol TWO BEDROOM goOd oco on
r-,.o ch ld en
no pe s Col
mo n enonce
13 years e x
245
5364
pe ence 992 3b85

Col 992 5965

TV SERV CE E ec on c TV Cl n c
~b
2nd
A ve
Go I pol s
OLD COCA COLA SERV NG TRAY
446 J9fl0 Se v ce co I $S 9~ p us
W I pay $ 0 o mo e Sto e
po s ond abo Se v ce col s
cond 1 on and descr be Ka
w h n 24 H s
Mote he!
420 Mo n S
T
S o e Upho s e y Shop
Jac kson 0~ a 45640
I b3 Se a d A \le ue Go I po s
USED PIANO Col "6 •99'1
446 783J Even ngs 44b 1~33
HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY o n lond
con i act Con mo~e down pay
men
I
eosonable
Col
\\anted to Hent
74"1. 307 4
ELOERl Y COUPLE ,
d I ke o
GOOD TOP SOIL Co l4".4b 4170
en o twa bed oom I I s f loor
HORSE S ANO PONES
Ca I
unfu n
oJpor ment
Co I
256 507
446 530

MOBilE HOME

2 )( bO

P ce

SS 500 Coll992 SBSB
1973Goveno 12 ~~: bO 2 bed
both A r cond w lh unde
p nn ng and u lty build ng
992 3702 of er 5 pm
NICE LOT n Pome oy w th bock
lop d ewoy Has a 65 x 12 2
bedroom t a e T91a elec k
w h cen t ol a
cond tion "Q
and wood bu n ng (F ank n)
t ep ace Ho5 o s of ex! as
Col 992 2438

•

DON T PAY he added expen se of
o Reo to Buy h s 3 bed oam
2
bo h b le e I o m h
owne and save La ge fam y
oom w th t rep ace eo n k
chen w h double oven onge
ond d shwos he to mo d n ng
roam wo co garage cen o
o
on oc e o N ce d ve o
powe
pons and
m nes
S43 000 992 '1492

2 x 6B Ho i y Po k T o e

w h
eKpondo woshe and drye
d shwoshe unde p nn ng 2 x
'1 ou bldg Ph 606 638 4060

G ll ~S

2 )( 55 2 bd
fu n shed ln qu re
256 364 any I me

camp e e ly
by co ng

97' FESTIVAl MOB LE HOME

Sernces OfferPd
PASQUA LE nsu at ng 03 Ced o
S Ga l pols Ph 446. 27 b o
446 092

•

CUSTOM REMODEl NG 20 yea
e)(pe ence 388 8308 New d y
wa I te ng w h sw rl o e)(
tu e des gns 0 he .1 y wall
256 1?&lt;2
epa
11 yl wo pope
g new
bo hs new k tchens An y lh ng
DOUBLE W DE 3 bd
cl e let r
w I sel o w I 1 ode fo Mason
n em ode ng o ej:la
County p ope y Pr ce ecu
BOB S
CB
Rod o
Equ p
ed See a S R
60 2 ten ths
eve yth ng n Twe Way Rod o
of om esou h ot Por t e
An ennos and a ces Gee ges
C ee~ Rd Go I po s 446 4517
1974 4 x 65 Mob le Home po
1 o ly fu n shed cent o a Co l
SM ITH EXCAVAT NG
doze
44b 46b0
backhoe enche dump uclo:
TRA lER
960 BUDDY
w w
wo lo: done o eosonab e a es
co pe
new gun o fu noce
Ph 446 3981 Jo hn Sm th J
Co 1446 7850 o 446 2637
x 70 l ke new w th new carpet
Awn ng and unde pe n ng
Can ! ol o
Too e ec c. Co I

BORDERS GARAGE DOOR SER

TR STATE MOBILE HOMES

V ICE Comme ol and res den
o spec o z ng n ope o o s
loco 256 6472

GALLIPOL S OH 0
970 12 X 60MAR ETTA 2 bd
968 12 x
966 12 x
l%310 :o:
1%0 10 x

bO VINDAlE 2 bd

47 CHEROKEE 2 bd
42 KAYWOOD 1 bd
50 R CHARDSON 2 bd

LUAUED 1972 2 X bO Be on
Mob e Home A I e ec r c cen
rol a and heo underp nned
and oil o g nol furn ure goes
w lh o le A ready set up on
lo ge lot n Mason W Va
Phone (304) 773 5438
COMPlETElY FURNISHED Co on ol
Mob e Hotne 10 )( 52 $1550
Con be seen on Rocksp ngs
Road o d Rt 33 pas Sowm I
f st oad on left oc ass
lie
b dge Gene Dunn

MOBILE Home Repo
plun b ng and heo ng
992 5858

GOOD USED FURN ITURE Ph
446 0322
HARRISON S T V Repo r Se v ce TRAILER FOR RENT Col 3!18 853
GOOD USED REGRIGERATOR
Co )s 276 Sycomo e Sl M d
TWO BEDROOM MOB LE HOME
AND FREEZER UP R GHT OR
dlepo Phone 992 2522
n c y Dep req Co 446 00 19
CHEST Ph "6 0322
TIMBER

L00k1ng for a place near Gall pol s to f x
up and make a prof t Or perhaps use t for
a h de away It s 6 m les out Cal now

428 2nd AVE.

SWIMMIN6 POOLS I

Uo

lot on Rt 141 l20x260 call now

7 28 I mo

6161 mo
~

Uo

lot 1n Charolats H1lls 2 98 acres call now

PHONE 446-0552-ANYTIME

992~212

1\uctions

\\anted 10

•

Lof on Debby Dr1ve 150x150 cal now

WE THANK YOU FOR LISTING WITH U5

lOO Man SL
Pomeo01 Ohio

9amto5pm

For the newlyweds or for an older coup e
Although the house looks small t has 3
BR s bath L R eat n k tchen and ul I ly
area It s located at 71 M II Creek and the
price s only $16 000 Call now for an
appointment

WE NEED LISTINGS

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC

Cont nuous one pece ptters We han&amp;
it, or do 1 rourse f Speclill prtees to

GARAGE FOR Rent .su abe fo
boa s o age o o he sto age
Reasonable en Co 992 2623

New 1tst1ng Doub e w de (24x64)
s tuated on 1 61 acres of and ocated on
Bulav I e Rd near the Shnne Club Th s
ho me s only 4 years old and It looks I ke
new Three BR s two baths LR with
formal entrance central a r cond tion ng
two car garage and much more Cal now
for an appo ntment

~,.. ~w.! ly •~np liiCI ta

.,. nte&lt;tt 11trnt ~~'~~PitllltllltM!olltlt rov
Nn• or S' L ~
Ol• lor • " m ,,., e 111
5fgp by 1100 E lib n SL r ~~mera, 0

fee Esl n illes

HANNAHS husband Het o hates
Pomeror
Ph. 992 2114
ho d wo k so he leans he ugs
w h Blue lu5 e Renl e ec c [ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____J
shompooe S CENTRAL SUPP

Kmgsbury Home Sales

dltDI. "

AIctal conlractor

New ltstmg - 011e acre of flat land
I 139x314) Located Just off Rt 141 on
P easant School Rd County water near by
No mob le homes p ease Call now

Ph 378 62SO
5 271FC

2 23- 1M

Is currently acceptmg apphcahons for the follown19

pos1t1on
Sentor Friend s Coordinator Metgs County
Th s person w1ll be resport stble for htrtng tramang and
scheduling Sentor Fnen,ds workers to provtde servtces
to S@ntor Clfizens 1n the1r homes and 1n$fttuf1ons Thts
person w111 coardtnafe elderly servtces wethtn the
Mental Health Center and wtll perform necessary
program back up funcflons

PARTS· LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES

Carpel &amp;UphOISiery

Pat os S dewa ks New Construct on
Remode ng

If you ha\'e cons dered our listing at 629
This s
ve ry I kely the best bvy In town The owner
s very anx ous to sell

Deen e Dr Give us a call right now

Automatoc
TransmiSSoon Servon

Roolol P~,o

R0111t2
PomorDJ Oh• 4l7&amp;9
Klctlen cab nets Roof ng Cone ete

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
S
ervicer - ttt. ....,. Trude or Sutlc~t&gt;~:•

SWAIN

Young's
Carpetmg

GENERAL
CONTRACT! NG

446 0957

M ddlepo
c ose
Co 992 2B64

1900 Sq Ft of beaut fu llv ng space Th s
lovely home has two complete baths
Throe BR s the LR s 28x14 ond the
family room s 24x2S Yes there s a
f replace n the F R The owner has dec ded
to nclude all of the k tchen appl ances
w th the sale of the house You w II also
like the lg uti ty room lnclud ng the
central vacuum system Th s home has a
two car garage with storage and heat
pump for year round comfort There s
much more Oh yes we nearly forgot the
lot conta ns nearly two acres C ty schools

Maktng
Phone 992 2176
Pome roy 0
8 7 1 MO

Ph 9921,.1

6 27- mo pd

gas fu noce
good
c ose o schoo bvs no

to your dQor by way of
u p 5
• custom Hydraul c Hose

s,racust Ohto

F now
s I oor
ovoeft
obc eenc_yNoopo7 ment
Call r~==========;

su o ed
loco on
pets In
Chesh e

Manager

r----------,

BRADBURY RENTALS

THREE BEDROOM HOUSE we I n

BUD McGHEE

• we can ship parts d recttv

LARRY LAVENDER
9!25292
0.12lmo

Branch

Rustoteum P•lnt Products

WINDOWS
ALUM NUM
SIOING SOFFITT
GUTTUs.AWNINCS

Pmporls

Real Estate for Sale

VS REALTY

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

I

WINDOWS UOOftS

Ph 992 711"r &amp;96-1005
Est1m1tes appl ed to tob

SMAll FURNISHED HOUSE odul s
only &lt;:o l44b 0338

...

FREE ESTIMATES
S!Oi~

APF R F NT Rl R S ~ ASS!\

DALLAS TAYLOR OWNER-256 66l1

&lt;

\a:rdSaJe

front w culto

973 OODG~ P CK UP Ex o n e
ow m leoge P S P 8
A C
w h 8
foe tempe

T

IS

nvolvemen ts You may
even ncur some es l dua
bene IS that w I pay Oil late

SEVEN GRAVE: OT n Modd e LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Us•
Ceme e y S 25 Co 446 04~5 the nd ect app oach today In
I he ong un you w I f lld
fa
of e 5pm
mo e success u han a f onta
BLACK ANGUS BULL 2 y s old at ack
De be t F she 44b 827

S40

the 247th

1974 1 o 90 eKt cond 367 75b0
of e 4 PM
FIREPLA CE WOOD
del e ed

a

ELECTRIC F REP ACE
4460526

The Almanac
Uolted Press Interuatloua1
Today IS Sunday Sept 4

ex
JANSSEN SP NET P a na
co nd Ph 4A 6 2H31 befo e 5 p

he com ng yea shou d be a fo
USED FARM MACH NERY
btJ 0 e 25() o o
S2995 luna a one lo you and you
7 MF lb5 0 ese 1
SSfiOO shou a en oy a se n sta us and
MF No 9 Hoy ~a e
$ 695 !;oc a pos 1 on Th s w be due
MF No I 0 Hoy o e
S 495 not on y o wha you a e but wt1o
Case 770 He e &amp; K ke
$995 you know
Mo hews Ro a y Sty he
S219S.
N 7 7 &lt;:hoppe
ow
S2695 VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Th s
s a qood day ro you Q be
NEW FARM MACH NERY
Gehl Mowe Cond one
$329 a ound hose who can g ve your
S4b00 caree ;; boos You I say and do
MFA 50 Round Be e
MF 560 Round Bo e
S5350 a he qht h ngs and make a
MF '100 Choppe 2 ow
S5500 ve y favo a b e mp ess on F nd
Mf- Hoy Head fo 200
$850 out more about you self by sen
MF880 Pow S )( 6
$4000 d nq o you c opy o As o
MF 520 0 s 12 f t u
S2200 Graph le er Ma 50 cen s o
l:iuhHogOlh.eOsc.94 u
each and a ong sell add ressed
7
q
5 slamped envelope to A st o
SHINN S TRACTOR
G aph P 0 Box 489 Red o C y
SALES
S at on NY
00 9 Be su e to
eo W Va
spec tv you b til s gn

WILKESVIllE OH 0

JAYCEE FOOD SOOTH 2b4 x H
Col 446 0365

HOM~l:'&gt; fOR ) All: P d ng ho

USED lAWN EQU PMENT

LIGHT WE GHT CH MNEY BLOCK
f!.lll3
BK8 Go I po !I' Ellock

742 2,667

USED FARM MACH NERY
2501 a o
S2995
7 MF 65 D e~el T
$5000
MFNo 9 Hoy8oe
$095
MF No 10 Hoy o e
$ 495
Case 220 Sa e &amp; K ~e
$995
Mo hews Ro a y Xythe
$2295
N 7 7 Choppe
ow
$2695

ol

~0

PW

440 1H7b

ems book cose ( 0 I 44b 032'1
9 I 8 p m 3 m oul 8u Olo' le

ed

USEQ AWN EQU IPMENT
MF B HP lown T oc o
$850
MF OHP Lawn T oc o
S 095
We ds .4 HP lawn T a l o
$ 095
Bolen 0 HP lawn T oc o
$695
NEW LAWN EOU PMENT
MF A32 R d ng Mawe
$650
MF85RdngToco
$1090
MF 200 R d ng T oc o
$2275
MF 450 R d ng T at o
$'1790
Mf- 650 R d ng T a&lt;. o
52950
MF 655 R d ng T ac. o
SJ250
MF lawn Sweepe 38 n
.$270
SH NN S TRAC OR SAL I::S
Phone 458 630 leon WV

/.~

0. e up gh
eeze
Pedes al FOUR U ESERT OOG Rt: ~ 0 00 )(
ob e &amp; 4 c.ho ~ ou d tab e 4
I; ve y good shape S SO Co
t eeze
ch o s gun cab ne
44b 39b0
d n ng oom su e ch no b uf
fel
2 mope pose
beds 1908 HARDl O fl CAMPER Ca
368 9036
pas.e bed TVs. ef geo os
d ye s
onge s
bed oom 197b
HARL~Y
DAVIDSON
su es beds c.hes s d esse s
5UPERGLIDE Fo Bob anks
omps cha s o he
ob es
me ol
toke g Qen
Co l

SNARE DRUM w h

ase $50
Conn A to So)(aphone $275

I OULH A NO Ot W lu£'1"&gt;

e !I

LAYN E: ~ Nl:W ~ U)I:O t U~N 1U Ht
N&gt;v.
NP.... o I p op rlesk " r.ho
!I ~ Mode
bE"d oom ~v e
$ ~ P l'lebed oon su e ~ JIJU
Maple bed cOlt~ su e ~)00
We ul fh•d oon su e :):t~
Meod e o eo sof a and ove
'i&lt;Nl ~J75 Eo Am sofa &amp; &lt;ho
wood
m $.1$0 ond ~ :JOO love
!ioeo ~ 150 made n sola c lO
Ia eseof $.1 5 ~ofo bed w h
rna h ng cho S. 50 ~ e£ ne s
~ 00 ond up Tob es Coffee
oa k He)(ogon map e o p ne
:!.60 each Roc ke S5S maple
abe 4 ho s :S.'n':J Hu h
~ 275 7 pt 0 nel e ) 09 !i p&lt;.
0 ne e $55 00 Bunk bee co n
p ie e ~ 50 mo t est o d box
sp ng .s SbO eo I m
hes o
d owe $40 Queen s 1e no
e~s &amp; bo)( sp ng"S se S 30

YEAR OLD eg s e ed Su fl o k
Rom P oven s e Good hea h
and tee 9fl5 A"}95

4

h clo.

~ow-.

BEAUTY SHOP ~qu pmen
4
Comb moun s o ons 2 Sl;om
poo s o ons 6 D ye s Un
pe m AI
ef o e supp es
99'1 7008

660 ve

4 Swss ve
5 Smal amount
6 Pa en! co oq
7 8 e ve ch
aT anspo ed

3 Con LJOC on
4 C cumspec

32 An me coa

25 Ea
27 C aw s
28 Stun ed pe son
301spngp
33 F ee eke
36Bdgeem
38 T ansae on
40 Hu
4 Unlo eec ca
measu eme n
43 Was e me a
45 Be spa e

3 Ep c poems

Inlets
2 Fema e co oa

26 ea
64 Deve oped
27 m taled
66 News ga he og
28 0 nk.o he
o Qan za on
gods
" I
130 Sk deled
68 Pad no ce

69 F n
70 Unto
J apanese cu
e11cy

135 Moun a ns ol
Eu ope
137 Emo oys
139 Mohammedan

de&lt;

M Names
33 ns an cant
10 F u I p
34 G s arne
03Heady
35 P eces ou
9 al ed
37 Mans name
104 Oelo'ou ed
39 La
OSWa dol
AD Ja gon
4 Un wanted o a nt 06 Nee
07 Pa en co loq l
42 Mo avs
08 W e of Ge an
44 Emoowe
100btan
46 Fa ugh
1 F encha cle
47 Accomp shed
2 F oa ngmass o
49 We a y
50 W nou s umne
3 Ba ocuda
52 Decays
5 Sun god
53 San abb
1 7 Seve
55 Se van
9 A con nen
57 Mans n ckname
abb
58 C ose
20 Reg e s
59 Oep ess on
2 Qua tvol be ng
60 Nole ol sea e
ne lee ve
62 Once a ound
ack

and
solleners model VC SVI
Only 5279 95
Save .... SSO 00 on a new
Hotpo nt Refrigerator
1 New 20 cub c II Chest
Freezer
S2S 00 Otscount
1 Good McCullough Cham
$8l 00
Saw
2 Good used X l2 Cham
Saws
1- $100 00 1-$80 00
Electrtc Trtm All cub w1th
nylon
S29 95
II) Good Refr gerator 5200

OCUST POSTS and I ewood
Phon e 7A2 2359 at e 6 pm

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

29 Sma dog
30 Anc en G eek

John

FOR SALE
New Co Op water

e•

EIU l T R TE PRAM E g sh s yle
naVy
good
ond on
SA5
Ko os on 0 en a Co pe 9 )(
2 woo c on be y coo ve y
good
and on
SI BS
Co
992 753Q

P CK
om a
B ng
Lea

Benefits
m the
Air Force.

FRENCH 500
FLEA MARKET
Galha County Fatrgrounds
US 160 35 Galhpohs 011
Sept 9 10 11
Fr Sal 9 6 Sun 9 5

IV son
6Sauc.v
!OJason ssh o
4 Moe e'll
9 Renune a ed
2 Sanda ac ee
22fasle
23P oo eade s
rna ks
24 Cu s t1o
26 Pa cu a
28 A ~ sc een

KI:NNi::8EC
POlATOH
Pope 949 1273

n

SENORS OF Me gs Coun y T od
ana and ouldoo se t ngs fo
you po a s Col The Pho o
P ace Bob Hoefl t h 992 5292

ACROSS

onng

l'WO ARA&amp;S AN Ho ses A l.so a
97-l TS ~uzuk
e y good con
d t on $5 2~ 492 7'&gt;59

IH:I:: R PtNED o tho d peaches
Wh eo yelowso ngMon
Aug
Mason Pea h 0 ho d

TH URMAN HOUSE on ques Fu
e en
on God has e~~:
n ue s ppng
epa
and
os
en han 000 m es
ef n "Shed Coun ty Rd 8 off 35
$2700 Co I 614 098 3190
Cen e v le V I age
C osed
Mond at &amp; Tuesday Even ngs A PPALA CH AN STOVE Co Sum
by appo n men 245 9479
me So e Ashley C bO Wood
Heo e s S340 arnple e w h
TREE HAVEN CERAMICS DAY OR
b owe Th u Sep
2 We a e
N GHT C asses Sep b Ph
he only au he z~ deale n
3RB 8B I
Me gs
County
We e
n
8 AND 0 TROP CAl FISH 823 4 h
Co pen e o ff 43 098 7 91
A"'e Go pol s H s 2 8 Sun
!)HOT S H E L~ S h gh powe S3 93
h uThu s BobG een
LR 79 2'1 magnum S2 90
C.ET YOUR EARS P e cedI ee w h
La s ol used an d new guns
he pu hose of S 0 pa o f
1 ode fa any h ng F fe s S
3 d M dd epa
eo n ngs Tawneys Jewe e s

$250 00 REWARD t o etu n of {no
ques ons asked ) o
nfo mo
on eod ng o he e u n of
wo mo e dogs ak en f om R
33 nee Do w n Ju y I P ease
ave and m ss my dogs e y
mush 992 58A8

23000 I:ITU AR t.ond
Good shope ~'1 77 55

(AN N NG OMA TOES PEPPERS
utumbe s
Cleland Fo ms
G eenhouse
Ge o d 11e
C e ond

97';,

~

MOTOROlA PORT ABU b at lo. Ol"'d
.... h te e ev $on Col 992 24.HI
al e ; 00 p n

E:CONOM'Y TRACTOR w h ol ol
oc.hmen s L ~ e new 0'51.. ng
52250 Phone 6 4) 69~ 3290

DEAO S ock emoved No charge
Co 1245 55 4

i'iot1ces

f.J7'&gt; CH 75 HONDA ~ 5 no e
eel/en 'ond on 949 "l A 0

hu ct q

AU IVPl \ d

II.

t"

PANA\ON C f.IANGI::K Auto HoD
Al Ouldoo b o k o d .,..h e
corn pot
ele s on
&lt;.:a
'l&lt;.J2 2.448 al eo ~ W p

31'10

o pe
t ee

Kyger Creek Red Center
Labor Day 1 p m until ?
Brtng coYered d sh of your
chotce meats &amp; refresh
furnished by lodge Gilmes
for the ch ldren wtll be
furmshed by the Lodge
Everyone welcome

...

eb\?
C..obbk' a d 5.up..,. l.lt
Ht JJf! a Nolll w 'Od fe y I
n loll H4:,1 /411 I n ~or P

Se v ce

BEGIN you

1..)~

f01A1VI

Kl Ul; til l.,.
J
oc lo. g
lC
o d okf''.o t.ol _.1.10 44lb

'•r '"'a It

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

DOZER WORK

excovat ng

and

c eo ng Ph A46 005
Dec.reose those fue b s and n
crease he value of you home
w th a f eploce f om LOGUE
CONTRACTING
FRE E
EST MATES PHONE 388 9939
STA N LEY

STEEMER

CA RPET

CLEANER Any I v ng oom and

ho I $29 95 vp ro 300 Sg F
Sou heos le n
Oh o
No
Co pet
C eone s
P
6 4 44b 4200
CHAN LINK FENC NG WOODEN
FENC NC.
AWN N GS
Po o
ove s
Au s
Ho-ne
m
p ovemen S Ph 446 3608 of e

'

BACKHOE DOZER DITCHER ond
dump
u k Cone e1e wo lo:
Half e d Ba khoe Se
Ru ond
Oh Ph 742 2008 or 446 2786

PE.NNZO l RUTLAND o pen do ly
11
0
Closed
Monday s
w ecke se \1 c::e t re epa
Phone 742 9575 a 742 2081
WATER HAULED 550 gol ons pe
oad
n Tuppers Pon s
Coolv I e a eo
Co
6 4)
667 3675 atle 5 pm

AllEN S GENERAL

STUCCO PLASTER ING and P os e
epo
Tex u ed ce I ng sw
f oo on b ush des gn 32 yrs
e)(p Wo k by he hou o by he
fob 256
fl2 T Co P as e
ng and S uc.co

DACK

CONTRAC

TORS emode ng house w r
ng
house p umb ng
f ee
es tmates 446 2910
WILL DO CHILO CARE n my home
G een Acres (I .til ) e)(c ef
Co
.446 0671 w I t a nspor
t om nurse y sc.hoo
or
k ndergorden

TERMIT NG

SPEC IALIST

PEST CONTROL l censed N
F ee
nspec l on
su ed
Membe NPCA and QPCA C
M HaJ W kesv le Oh o Ph
b69 4914
V

E FlLNGER Woe Delvey
Se vee
Ph
379 212 4 a

379 2 72
ROOF NG
HOME
IM
PROVEMENTS
PANT NG
Co pen e
wo k
ge e a
ep o
PH
446 8568

1146 43

~

o

SANDY AND BEA VE R IN SURANCE
CHA N LINK AND WOO~ FENCE
CO has offered serv ces fa
Roy Houck Fen e Ceater F ee
I re nsu once coverage n
est mo es Ph 1 77b 2237
Go I o County fo a mas o ce n
u y Fo m home and pe sono SEWIN G MACHINE REPAIR a
mo~es 44 6 4235
p ope !y
ove ages
ore
avo obl e o meet nd v duo
ECONOMIZE WITH A FIR EPLACE
needs Con at Don Polme
f ee es ma es LOGUE CON
you ne ghbo and ogenl

TRACT NG 388 9939

I

\

�1).6-The Sunday Times&amp;nti~el, Sunday, Sept. 4, 1977

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate for Sale

If pal l;state for Sale

R~al };slate

for Sale

Real ~&lt;:state for Salt'

H.. al Eslntt' for Salt'

Ht•al E•latf' for Sale

Rea! El;tate for~

Rea! Estate for Sale

Home

SEll NOW!
COUNTRY RETREAT

Li ke new 3 bedroom .

"2

bath ,
2A'102 '
V•nc:lale
Modular home with 8 acres
of land m Kyger ,Creek
School D•str tct . Klfchen
applJC!Inces go With sate

Th is 1S a large comfortable
home offertng central arr
and the best of con
s truct lon . Prtced at only
\29,000 00
GOING BUSINESS
AND GOOD RENTAL
INVESTMENT
'
At an Ideal locat 1on in the
city of Gatltpolls Thrs
business
has
been
estabi1Shect for 35 years rn
the area and has a. very
good follow ing We have
the r eal estate only ,
Pr iced . If you desrre to
continue the same business
at th is location, you can
deal directly w i th th e
owner on mve ntory and
supp lies
If
you are
th ink 1ng abou t your own
bus iness , you should check
into thls 1
COMMERCIAL SITE
...:orner lot on Second
Avenue where the old
Queen , Bee was located
(Hfr ce bulidmg on rear &lt;ll
tot Pri ce.d nt $50 ,000 00
LAND CONTRACT WITH
A GOOD DOWN PAYMENT
In th ts 2 bedroom hrdeaway
sett 1ng on Slue Lake near
accoon Creek and Route
Call us today fr more
,detatls

SEEING •S BELIEVING
- Once you see this 5 BR
bnck b• leveL you will
agree that 1t is priced rtgnt
et $56,900 Four yr old
buuty is jl.lst llke new &amp;
features a 14:~t30 family rm

With YJ 8 fireplace , 2 baths,
large laund ry , la rg-e LR,
k itchen w1th refrig, range ,
Cltshwasher &amp; dlsp ., quality

carpet, sun deck , heat
pump &amp; 2 car garage w i th
auto opener . Let us show
you thiS beauty &amp; you be
the JU dge ,

HUNTER ' S DELIGHT
M L. mostly
wooded , tdeal tor you r
weekend camp Located in
Morgan Twp , and prrced at
$12 .500
53 5 acres

NEAR LECTA - 101 acre
far m w1fh 45 A ttllable. 5
rm house, 3 barns . several
other outbuildings, cellar
house , spr~ng water &amp; a
3500 lb . tob base . $50 ,000
VACANT LAND NEAR
RODNEY - Approx 55
acr~s of level
&amp; rolling
tarm !and wtth pond , tob
base. barn &amp; co w~ter
Th 1S propert y fronts on 2
rds 1n a very des.rable
1ocat1on . Lots of potential
for $55 ,000
PRICED REDUCED TO
SI3,QOO - Owner says sell
this 6
and balh home
new a
inum siding,
LR &amp;
BR's,

LOTS OF LOTS - Locate-d
on Graham School Rei ,
Lmcoln P1ke &amp; Georges
Creek Rd Mobile homes
welcome
NEAR TYCOON lAkE 38 5 acre far m tS level &amp;
rollmg land with about 1$
a cres tillable &amp; the balance
in w oods l 1 1 story home
has been n1cely remodeled
&amp; offers 4 BR 's, nice kit
chen with stove &amp; refr ig ,
ad furna ce &amp; w w ca rpe t

LOCATION · VALUE ·
APPEAL - 24 acr e farm Is
mostly tillable &amp; features a
11ery nice 2 story home with
B r ms
&amp;
bath
The
downstairs 1S brand new
Also 1ncluded are a 50x60
barn. silo &amp; 3 small
bu•ld1ngs Th1s property 1s
loc ated :1• m• norfh of
HMC on Roufe 160.
OWN YOUR OWN CAMP ·
SITE 10 1he wilderness of
the Wayne Na t1o na 1 Forest .
5 to B acre tracts of
woodland now ava1labte
adJOining thousands of
acres of government land
Public hunt1ng , f1Sh1 ng and
camping perm 1tted Pr tces
start a t $2500 with fma n
c1ng ava 1iable
HARDWARE STORE
Here's your chance to get
start ed 1n you r own
bust ness Th Is propert..- IS
located in V1nlon , Qa,io &amp;
can be bought for $12 ,900
plus stock &amp; equipment

SWIMMING POOL -

New

level near town offers
lots of good l1V1ng tor ~ome
luck-y family Bnck and
frame beauty features J
BR '' · 2 baths , complete
k,1tchen w1th diShwasher,
range &amp; re fr tQ . 20xH
fi1m 1ly rm , '1 car garage
anct large lot near town
B .i

NEW LIST I NG - 3 miles
out Modern 3 B R r anch t!i
prtced to sell at S29,SOO
Spec ial featu res are 11 2
baths, cent a1r , k•tcl"len
w 1fh stoye &amp; refr 1g , n1ce
car pet throughout,
&amp;
family r m Located on a
large lot 1n the Green
School Dist Show n by
appo1ntment

LISTINGS NEEDED WE
ADVERTISE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
- SELL - TRADE

CO

BABY FARM - 22 acres
near Add•son , about 1 ~'2
t•llable, hke new 3 BR'
ranch style home , fuiJ
basement , good butlchngsr ·
S 4S ,OOO,
STROUT
REALTY , 446·000 8.

SfROUT

' NC OA~OAA.T-.C

No. 216 - Here 's your
c ha nce to l1ve 1n the
with
c ity
1a&gt;riveniences. 3 Bedrooms,
large kitchen , carpeted
throvghout,
attac h ed
garage, l00x400 lot Pn ce
$27.800. FHA approved.
No . 213 - 541!2 acres, 3
bedroom frame . la rg e
farm
gas
US AND CHECK TO
IF
WE
HAVE
SO ETHING
YOU
MIGHT NEED.
804 W, Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours Call
992-7133
CONTACT ,
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

GRADE A DAIRY , One of C.oll•o
Coun ty s best , 140 A fertile
land mostly til lable, a cow
parlor 18 x 50 $!Ia w1th
unloader and feeder 6() free
st alls, other barns cnbs end
remodeled home . $100 .000
Strout Realty 446 0008
4 BR HOUSE on one acre lot tn
81dwell Ph 388 8746
FIVE ACRE LOT OR MORE 1n c1 ty
school d1s tn&lt;.t. Two miles south
of R1o Grande on St Rt 325
Call245 5815

ELEVEN ACRES . more or less
House w1th buddmg Can be
bovgh1 w1th furnitu re and for ming equtpment. Coll379 2684
3 to 4 bdr full basement, 39 acres
wdh woods &amp; postures ot
Eureka $0 000 Ph 256 6594 after

•

THREE

BEDROOM

HOU SE

all

rebuilt hke new Near c1ty
l1m1tS Approx 2 acre!&gt; of land
$22 500
Call
44 6 194fl ,
A46 16 15 or 44b 1243
HOtJSE FOR SAlE 3 bdr Rench ,

1400 sq ft on flat 1 1 lot nea r
Rodney Additional ' ? acre lost
CJ\Ial10ble Coli 245 9375
FOR SALC BY OWNER two
bedroom home hke new mce
lot Owner an)I' IOUS to sell.
Crown (tty area Coll2569383
GOOD SIX ROOM HOUSE and o
two bdr goroge apartment m
town . Col/ 446 ·4327
THREE

TO

FOUR

BEDROOM

HOME tul l basement, 39 acres
wilh woods end postures At
Eureka $40,000 Coli 256 ·b594
after 4pm

NEW LISTING - Lovely brick home, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, 2 • fireplaces, formal dmmg , lull dtvided
basement, large 2 car garage. Located on 1 acre on 51
Rt 160 Loo k al this home before you buy
JUST LISTED New Ranch lUSt completed. 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths, carpeted, lovely kitchen ,
beautiful brick f~rep lace, carport, located on l lf2 acres
on Kerr Bethel Rd ., Kyger Creek Sch 01st t very good
buy . call today.

.....

MODERN BROOM
HOME
WITH SWIMMING POOL
REDUCED
Swim mmg pool worries are over look( Almost new &amp;
modern 1n every way, swimming pool tncluded !
Beau11fu t foyer. J bedrooms nice, large 4 dovble
closets, 1 smgle, L R }1Jxl8 1 , format D R., utility R.,
n1ce fam1ly R , complete k.1tchen, nice size &amp; handy,
large 2 ca r garage attached . These are a few of the
ins ide features Now the rest - Lots of shrubbery,
attract1ve gate entrance to beautalully f1nished
walkway leadmg mto a modern new oval pool, size
17 ' x35' wllh d 1v1 n~ board and n1ght light Pool
completely fenced m There IS plenty more. 2 extra
lots, plenty of yard or garden space, fenced in on 3
. Sides, apple trees, grape v1nes. central a Jr , gas forced
ai r furnace , lots of lnsulat•on , low heat bills, basketball
court I quit - please call for the r:est

STATE HIGHWAY 160
REASONABLE
PRICED
ISO tt frontage on Rt 160
Large !1vl ng room and eat
m k ttchen Two BR wtlh
closet. batn w1th shower
N1ce stream runs through
property . some trees. la rge
concrete f)oor ca rp or t Th 1s
proper ty only $18,900 00
JUST LISTED CA LL
ON RACCOON
CREEK , 3 ACRES
Budd your own home
Beaul tful but fdmg Sites,
w1lh maple shade trees and
cedar bushes already set
out Fronts on Raccoon Rd
wifh back ot tot on Raccoon
Creek 2 rura l water taps
pd for Clay Twp , C1fy
school dts t All real good
fenc1ng All mmeral nghts
goes A good bUy at ONLY
S9,000 00
S ROOM COTTAGE
CHILLICOT HE R D
Well kept 2 bedroo m home,
bath , Hvt11g room , format
DR. N1ce S1le kttch.en , full
basement . attached
garage . Two porches . one
tS a large front por ch, ntce
to en JOY There is also a
large garden area and
yard Th•s propert y must
be sold I t 1S pr~c ed r 1ght ,
can buy tf today Move

OVER 3145 SQ. FT. BLOCK BLDG.
Business or storage space. Nice 4 large _rooms on
approx. 150ft. fronlage on a State Highway by approx .
180 ft. deep All level, fuel oil F A furnace, Rural water
system , also well w1th electr ic pump Htgh overhead
doors for large trucks Office Is nicely carpeted and
paneled . CALL FOR OTHER DETAILS
REDUCED TO S39 ,000 00
One block below city park ,
2nd Ave This home can be
used either restdent la t or
commerc tal , 3 BR , 2 baths ,
n 1ce eat .m kttchen , new
modern
utll ttV
room ,
f1reJ;J iace All plumb tng ,
wJnng , sewers have been
replaced New F A tu rn .
Th 1s prom tnent fam ily are
leaving
area
Almost
immed1ate
possess ion
WE ' RE WAITING FOR
YOUR CALL

HERE IS ONE
YOUARE
OVER LOOKING
150 Acres This is a good
farm 85 Acres of pasture,
40 acres Of more tillable
land , BOO lbs. tobacco base
Goo d farm , wooded plot ,
fair amount of marketable
t1mbe-r . Lme fences are all
good , hatfoffencesormore
are woven w ire. Ntce large
co untry home In a beautiful
settmg 3 well built barns,
w ill hang lots of tobacco
and store lots of hay
Drilled well and dug well
All m 1nerat nghts goes
Th1s farm 1S for sale now It
1s r.easonably pnced CALL

COMFORTABLE; HOME
RIVER FRONTAGE
6 rooms &amp; bath , partial
basement. nice front porch,
beauttful vtew of river .
ThtS property 1S clean &amp;
attracttve It has had many
man hrs spent on it It IS
made more beautiful with
garden area , 1ncludes
raspbernes. strawberr tes ,
cherry trees and grapes
Less !han 4 m lies of
Gallipolis, south on Rt 7

SUPER BUILDING
SITE -27 ACRES
This 1S the one you ha!JE
been Jookmg tor Over 27
ac land Old hOmestead ,
very I!Hte value except
w.&gt;ndedul chotce area tor
bulld•ng . Rural water !me
runs the length of approx .
12 acres , ready to develop .
Approx . 15 acres timber
land a ll w1th1n 5 m11es of
Gali•POitS . Blacktop rd to
the area Th!S Will go fast .
168vAI..tfE S
WALNUT TWP .
Here ts a lot of farm that
can be bought a t a
reasonable pr1ce . Lots of
pasture. t1mber. 30 A
t1llab le, mostly level land,
pfenty ot water -stream
runntng through farm ,
tobacco base . 2 large
ba rns , several other out
buttdmgs Most rences are
good , some are new. lots of
road frontage . Bldg . area.
many possib111t1es Thts
man really wants to sell
we are ready to help . Call
Today

NOW

COUNTRY HnME
&amp; 40 ACRES
5 Bedrooms , bath , wh1te a 1
sid1ng, n 1ce country k1l
che n w1th butl1 m cabs
E !""c wall oven table top
raJ'lge F1Jel oil fur nace and
a woo d bu rn 1ng space
hea te r, also a wood
burnmg fireplace Drilled
well With elect r iC pump
Barn, corn CrJb, ch•cken
house , good
pasture ,
t encmg, 15 to :i'O acres of
t1mber , approx . 20 A
tillab le land , All mineral .
"'•ghts goes , se~eral apple
trees Call now .
180 ACRES PLUS
Vacant A woodland
wonderland
some
pastu re and tillable land.
Less than $160 per acre

9ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
W1th 3 acres , more or less .
of level land Less than ',
m1le off blacktop road . 5
bedrooms . I V2 bath , front &amp;
built 1n back porch. lar~e
16 lf? 'x22 v2 I1 YIOQ room,
automattc washer &amp; Cryer
goes, built .n cabine ts, s .s
dbl smk . elec . cook sfo~Je
Hot water c1rculatmg heat
,:&gt;Ius
wood - burn1n9
f1repla ce . Has lis own
water system Th iS 1S a
n1ce up to dette country
home

ASSC ~ IATES

VACANT LAND
3ACRESM OR L.
Lev al land In Gall iPOlis
Ctty Sch ool D1st . on Clay
Chape l Rd w, miles from
~ tate H1ghway 7. 750 ff .
fronta ge on Bu rnt Run Rd .
&amp; ISO fT fro nta ge on Clay
Chape-l RO Only $3.500 00,

SMALL DOWN PAYMENT
&amp; TAKE OVER
PAYMENTS
3 bedrooms, fam ily room .
12'x 24', to t a l electriC ,
thermopane
Windows ,
rural water system. n tce
metal storage bvl/d ing
located on a n1ce level
landscaped fenced 10 lot.
!=Oncrete driveway, Nice
home

EVERGREEN - Nice 3 bedroom home, has new
kitchen tabinets, new P /2 baths, new carpet
t hroughou t, alumtnum s1dmg. Located on nice lots
CLOSE TO HOSPITAL - Lovely brick home with &lt;
bedrooms, dming room , 2 fireplaces, newly decorated,
basement, 1 car garage , nice patio, 2 acres . Pnce
reduced, call today .

CLOSE TO TOWN - This nice older home has 3
bedrooms, bath with shower .. fully carpeted. din ing
room, fam1ly room, full basement, 1 car garage . Large
lot. Immediate possesston .

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

VERY GOOD BUY - Lovely cedar ranch, 3 bedrooms .
2 baths, n ice kitchen with range, dishwasher &amp;
disposal, fully carpeted, la rge 2 car garage . Located on
1 4 acres on St Rt. 160

CLOSE TO SCHOOLS - Excellent locat1on in town,
nice large house wtth S bedrooms, 21h baths, family
room, fully carpeted, beautiful in ground swimming
pool. let us show yo u this house tl)day .

MAKE US AN OFFER- Owner is leaving the state·
and must sell this fabulous country manor. Modern 4
BR bnck ranch features family room with fireplace,
formal dmrng, formal entrance, equipped kitchen, 3112
baths and double garage. Situated on 1D4 acres and can
be bought with all or part of the land. Strout Realty 446-0008.

Don't pay the added expense of a Realtor!
Buy this 3 bedroom, 2112 bath bi-level from
the owner and save! large family' room
with fireplace, eat-in kitchen with double·
oven range and dishwasher, formal' dining
room. two car garage, central air, on acre
lot. Nice drive to power plants and mines.

LOVELY HOME - Nice 3 bedroom home, bath with
s hower , famil y room, beautiful carpet, county water,
best buy around Located on St . Rt . 554 at Bidwel l.
KELTON RD. - Looking for your first home? Take a
look at this frame home w1th 3 bedrooms, bath, full
basement. large lot. Good buy for 518,500

543,000. 992 -2492,

.

Real' •~• late for SaJp

R.,a1 Estalf' for Salt'

Hf'al Eijtalt' for Sale

FOR SALE
· New brick home just completed. 3 bedrooms. 1'12 baths,
large living room , fireplace , large kitchen &amp; dining
room, dishwasher, elec range, disposal, carpet
throughout. heat and cool by heat pump, 2 car garage
with electric door opener. n ice lot 90x172. Located on
old Rt . 35 within 2 miles of HMC on Kristi Dr . Price
553,000.00. Inquire at Corbin &amp; Snyder F ur mture, 446·
1111. after 5, 446 2573 .

.

yr

WELL
ESTABLISHED
GROCERY BUSINESS for
.. lo, good equipment,
excellent location, livillll
quarters, prlctd to sell.
STROUT REALTY, 446-

Mortgage, 77 E Stat&amp;, Athens,
phone (614 )592-3051

WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS &amp; PICTURES OF ALL
OUR LISTINGS IN THE OFFICE . COME IN &amp; LET
US HELP WITH YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS .

2

WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
EVEN IN~ CALL
.
Jo~n Fuller--&lt;146-4327
Oscar Ba~rd--&lt;146-4632
Lee Johnson--256· 6740
Earl Wmters---446-3828
Doug Wetherholt--446-4244

m
REA~ TO'

446-3636

lt~al 1-.:Statt' for Salt&gt;

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

25'12 locust St.

Gallipolis. Ohio

Heal J..:Sta.te for Sale

p..;;;,lllll~--------------------------1

CANADAY REALTY
Ro.•oll D. Wood
Evenmgs
446-4618

Ken Morgan

Evenings

REALTOR .

GALLIA COUNTY'S lARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

446-0971

CALL 446-3643

RUSSEll WOOD REALTOR

~~

THIS ONE HAS IT ALL. S BR's, 2
1ly rm .
with fireplace , laundry, complete kitchen, c~rpet, heat
pump &amp; double garage Located at 450 Jerry Drive.
$56,900 STROUT REALTY, 446-0001.

STORY 3 bedroom frame
house, FA furnace , storm wm·
dows f1reploce lr:t Mlddlepol't
Phone 992·3457

0008.

':;;;;:;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;:;:;~;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;;:

59

ACRE 'FARM , l 1 milet from
new Ravenswood Br1dg•.
Modern home ~las 3 bedrooms,
livmg room with wood burmng
ftreplace and b.omed cetl1ng.
barn, outbuildings , ond fenc·
ing $43 500 949 2466

MAIN
POMEROY, O.
5 ACRES WITH LOVELY
BRICK
HOME
4
bedrooms. 2 baths, •ery
modern equipped kitchen,
Rec. room , large stone
fireplac e, perma payne
doors
and
windows,
carport .
Many
other
features . 545.000.00.
CLOSE TO MEIGS HI
SCHOOL - 50 acres lovely
for building sites Buy all
or half. 51 ,800.00 per acre.
RUTLAND - 4 acres with
home, 3 bedrooms. bath ,
patio, and porches, also
trailer hookup. Natural gas
heal. $15,500.00.
POMEROY - 5 acres with
3 bedroom home. bath. nice
kitchen, porches. natural
gas, clly water. 57 ,900.00 .
NICE KITCHEN - Dining
area, large master Bdrm .,
all east 2 other Bdrms Full
basement, newer ranch
type home. carpeting.
many other features .
$23,500.00.
COUNTRY
remodeled
floor
home, 2 Bdrms , barn ,
other building. 3'12 acres of
usable ground. $12,500.00.
NEAR CHESTER- Over 3
acres , 2 barns, cold
storage( garage, modern 3
Bdrm. ranch home , dining
room. large living room,
many features. financing
available. $34,900 .00.
•MAIN ST. POMEROY This 3 Bdrm . older home
has a touch of elegance.
Dining room. sliding doors
to living
room w ith
fireplace, basement.. A
GOOD BUY 512,500 00 .
WE HAVE MANY OTHER
PROPERTIES BUT ARE
IN NEED OF NEW
LISTINGS . USE OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
TO
YOUR
ADVANTAGE.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Katlly &amp; Leona
Associates
992-2259-992-2568

'

DON'T DREAM FOREVER, enjoy life now in
brick ranch,. l 1f:a baths, kitchen has custom
cabinets, snack bar, range, dishwasher and
22'x 18' family rm. w1th fireplace nearly covering one
wall. All electric .•. but wu heattcl . tast winter with
fireplace and Warm Morn.lng wood-burner. ~4 acre.

·------------S37~soo.

QUALITY HOMES $45,900 AND UNDER! 3 brand new
homes being built so you can live like a '&lt;:ountry squire'
in a quiet wooded seHing. All lots approw:. I acre.
Homes feature 3 BR. 2 full baths, 2 car garage, comb.
kitchen family or d ining rm . All over 1300 sq . ft. Heat
pump. Cen. air. Energy saving construction. Call soon
lor first choice I

·------------1-ll
COUNTRY PRIVACY - Wilhin walking d1slance of
schools and downtown shoppmg. Large wooded lot wath
excellent vie w , Eat· in kttchen, 3 BR, carport, and low

BEAT YOUR WIFE to lhe phone lo make an appoint·
ment to see lh1s l BR ranch on 1SO'x8D' tree shaded lot.
Finished 1 car garage. All electric, well insulated.
(last winter's heat bill was low) . Kyger Creek Sch~ols.
S2S,DOO.

SITE TO BE SOLD! ).8 acres, immaculale 3 BR, 1'12
bath newly painted ranch home. All electric, carport
for 2 cars, air cond. Best garden in the area. LOW
THIRTIES .
MINI FARM- JVa acres w1th modern S room ranch,
attached carport and metal storage bldg ., l lf:z miles
from city . $28,SOO.
WON'T LAST LONG allhis low price. 4 BR, 2 R. base·
menton 2.4 acres, 5 miles out, city schools . New Low
PriceS 14,000.
NEAR IT ALL - Schools, churches, shopp,ng, 3 BR, 2
story frame, LR has fireplace and open stairway . Formal dining rm . Full basement, nearly new gas forced
atr furnace. Grandma' s old fashioned front and back
porch for relaxing. VA available. LOW THIRTIES.
RENT BEATER! 11J, story, 3 Br, frame in city. 26'x32'
concrete block garage with cement floor. C1ty water
and sewage, Gas heat. Clean, well maii..tatned. S18,900.
REDUCED - excellent slartLr home, J BR, wetl plan
ned kitchen with snack bar. Yr. old forced air gas fur·
nace. Ne w p1umb1ng, modernized bath. 1112 miles from
c 1ty . N1ce netghborhood. City water, schools. 522,500.
BOATERS DELIGHT - River frontage wtth small
older mobde home with electrac hookup on.. tot 50:~~:220

JUST LISTED- Remodeled one story, 3 BR dw.e"..ng.
Aluminum siding with blown insulation, 2 outbUildings
on acre lot with large garden spot and several lruat
trees. 524,500.
29 ACRES - Plenty of road frontage wilh l~rge
meadow . Some woods. JUST LISTED. ns,ooo.
NEW LISTING- Neat 2 BR frame dwelling, large_ lot
with trees overlooking Ohio River, 10 miles from cdy
New Low Price $22,500.

ito

ACRES, 60 tillable, 100 acres pasture fenced,
ponds, tobacco base, some t1mber, 3 barns, other
outbldg. 4 BR brick home, nearly completed. Ftreplact
LR, full basement. garage. Perfect for best catlle.
11 tor appointment.

WE NEED LISTINGSI
RON 'CANADAY, REALTOR
Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate
446-3636

Hour

HOMESITE$ for sole , '1 acre ana
tJp , Middleport : near Rutland.
Ca11992 ·7 ~81 .

NEW 3 bedroom l'.ou se, 2 baths
oil elec , 1 acre , M1ddleport
close fa Rutland Phone 9Cil2·

HOUSE . 4 rooms and bath on acre ONE YEAR old house 2 miles on
of lond . Includes furn1ture .
New Ltmo Rd . 1n Rutland It's all
7~81.
S8 000. Ruby bush, 9~9- 2052.
paneled, with three bedrooms
SMALL form for sole, 10% down TWO BEDROOM homf! Situated on
and btg l1ving room oil
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
carpeted two bolhs. d1ning
1 acre 'lond Cqll 992 7294 or
ly , W. Va. Phone (30•1 772room, big k1tchen w1th bu1lt ln
'1'17-5502
3102 or (3Q.I) 772·3227 '
oven on 1sland slave end fam•
HOME wHh 3 bedrooms ,
ly room wtth f1reploc.e . One cor
couNTRY farmland Wllh seclud· NEW
bath
full basement . large
goroge. On two acres of land .
ad woods , water Of"'d good OC ·
garage , fully carpeted , Iorge
For more tmformotton, call
cess 1n Monroe County, W Vo
d1Kh
on bod\. Lwd1't9 Creek
Y49 2519
$1 ,000 down, &lt;all (304) 772
Rood
Phone
992
705A
3102or (3().1) 77'J.-3227

f

·I

yDU have tr~vel·
in Gallia county you have no doubt admlrtd this
hug~ plantation style home and the beautiful surroun·
dtng trees and meadowland. 4 BR, 2 story home en·
c~rcled with white columned porch. Central foyer, open
stairway. Family rm ., formal dining. Home needs
some rep.:,ir. Two good lg. barns. Smoke house, cellar
house. 110 acres mostly llat lo rolling. Some hillside.
Approx. 4.000' rd. lrontage on blacktop rd. Rural
water. S6S,OOO.

LOOKING FOR SOMETHING SPECIAL? We have
several homes 550,000 and up shown by appomtmenl
only. Call or stop by the olfice for more information .

R~~te for SaJe

14 ACRES -Very ni ce 2&lt;'x64' double w1de home, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, family room , kitchen with range.
refrlg &amp; disposa l, county water, nice wooded land on
Kerr Bethe l Rd

••

Real EAtate for Mle

heating costs. SlS,DOO.

I ROOMS
&lt;BEDROOMS
Gallipolis School D1Strtct ,
basement.
11;,
baths ,
modern k. tfchen , complete
w1th b~rch cabine ts , F A
furnace 1 carport , 2 wood .
burning fir eplaces, family
room , large tot With fru 1t
trees and a large storage
building Within S m1tes of
Gallipolis Nice home at a
good price ,

ATTRACTIVE
HOME BY
THE RIVER
Here 1S you r vacat1on spot
or n1ce home by the river
Lot 110ft . frontage on Rt 7
Appro"'mately 500 fl . oeep
Very nice and well kept ,
like new 5 R . mobile home
w1th many extras bUilt m.
Some extras outside , 10 ' by
10' utilit y build ing, like
new , on good concrete slab.
Mobile home under pinned .
Looks great. County water
ava1labte . Again , this 1S
very nice Selling very
reasonable
BETTER
CALL NOW .

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST - Th is beautifu l
ranch overlooking Tycoon Lake has 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large l1v1ng room w1th a stone fireplace, very
nice kitchen, lovely Lee carpet throughout. You'll be
happy yo u looked at th 1s

IN TOWN - Good home with 3 bedrooms. bath .
f1replace, parttal basement, 1 car garage Nice l,arge
lot at 821 Second Ave Imm ediate possession

NEW LISTING
3
bedroom ranch home,
bath, gas F A. furnace,
cop per plumbing and
hardwood floors . 150'x200'
foot lot. 519,000. In Tuppers
Plains
NEW LISTING
3
bedroom split level home
Has ba!h, equipped kItchen
with
stove
and
refrigerator , oil
F . A.
furnace and lA acre near
Shade. 521.500.
POMEROY - J bedroom
home
wtth
partial
l&gt;asemenl , full bath and 2
half baths. Central heating
and fully c arpeted . 525,000.
COUNTRY - 145 acres of
rolling land. old house and
barn . Two-thirds good
fencing and lots of fruit
trees.
PRIVACY - 45 acrh of
land wllh rural water .
electric and 2 bedroom
trailer for only 512,500.
NEAR TOWN - 1112 acres
on Rt . 33, 3 bedroom home,
bath, oil fu rnace, 2 porches
and garage. $23,000.
NO DOWN PAYMENT - 2
or 3 bedroom home wtth 11/:i!
baths and large lol Has
la rge shade trees , full
basement, outbuilding , and
garage . Needs some work .
but Its onl y 512 .000 .
WELCOME
NEWCOMERS. YOU CAN
BUY WITH 3 PCT. DOWN
IF YOU HAVE GOOD
CREDIT. MORTGAGE OF
516.000.
PAYMENT
S1S7.66 or SUJ. DJ.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD

•••
•' •••
•• ••••
••

PLEASANT IN TOWN LIVING - Th1s older frame
home on a half lot has 3 bedrooms, fully carpeted
downstatrs, open stat rwa y, large bath, lots of storage,
and is close to everyth1ng . Call for an appomtment to
see this beauly .

•

Real Estate for Sale

$31,500.

RANCH WITH ACREAGE - Lovely 2 year old ranch
with .4 bedrooms, 2 baths , la rge kitchen dtning,
basement, central air, located on Clark Church Rd .
close to Perter .

ECONOMY MINDED? Cook1ng , heat1ng &amp; hot water
are all inc luded for S26 per mooth In this modern 3 BR
ranch This home is in excellent cond1t1on &amp; located on
• a farge flat lot in Country A1r Estates Pr1ced to sell at
$29,900 . STRO UT REALTY, 446.0008

CHESTER - Large corner
lot with nice older home of
3 bedrooms, bath. natural
gas heat, for 514.000.
72
ACRES
N1ce
remodeled s bedroom
home with 2 balhs, oil F .A.
lurnace, modern kitchen,
full basement, good fences
and small barn. Want Only

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency'

6 ROOMS
!BEDROOMS
liKE NEW
To ta l e lectr1c, atr con
d 1 tioners ~ rura l water
system
Modern k1tchen
Wtth lots of cabme ts.
garbage d iSPosal, &amp; S s
doub le s1nk
Garge, no
maintenance , whde steel
S1dmg w1th black. shutters,
n1ce level land sc aped Jot.
IO'J: 10 '
metal
storage
bu lld l,g TH IS H OME CAN
BE
P U R c H A s E o
RE ASONABLY

-

MOR TGAGE

Merrill Carter • \onme Stutes
Associate
Associate

MORGAN TOWNSHIP 103 acres va cant land Lots
of bottom land a nd tots of
woods for $32,000.

Real Estate fGr Sale
IRE LAND

Willis T.
Leadingham
Realtor
Home 446-9539

GRAHAM SCHOOL RO earga.n pr•ced tor for s:ale
96)( 150 wt-h co water for
only $7500

Spec10IIz1ng m FHA and VA
Home loans Also Refrnonc 1ng
463 2nd A\le Located 2nd floor
Goll1pohs , Ph 446· 7172
.

ViRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
REALTOR
116 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 9t2 -332S

'

GETAWAY
FROM IT ALL 1
Very nice 3 bedroom br1ck
setting on 3 acres of land
near Rio Grande Th!s
home has a qu1et , sceniC
location and Is bargaIn
pnced at S50,000 00
OTHER COUNSELORS
CROWN CITY
Joe Crans
256-1456
National Advert1smg Wtth
C.allery of Hom es.

Real t :state for Sal..

IHA'lQU

446-7900
446-1049

WE N EED YOUR
PROPERTY TO

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
TEAFORD(B

80!11 LANE
BAANCH MANAGER
IS! SI!!COND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO

Office

D-7-The Stmday Times-SentJnel, Sunday, Sept t, 1m

Splendid Brick Ranch ln Town . Here is a
ver y comfortable modern 3 or 4 bedroom
home that can pu1 an end to your house
h unting: It mcludes a nice large eat -in
kitchen , l'h baths, 2 t:ar ca rport and is
located only 5 blocks from city park Pr ic e
$41,900.00.
NEW LISTING. Located on Lower River Rd, a
beautiful view with river frontage; 3 bedroom . newly
renovated, carpeted .. you must see to appreciate.
Wood burning fireplace, new hot water tank, F A fuel
oil furnace .e 4 acre lol , a II for $30,000 .00 .

Unusually Nice Home with Ex~ellent
Location . You'll get a wonderful fee ltl"lt
when you thtnk of your family ltving 1n th•s
beaul tful 2 story coton 1al The decoratlng
1s a pr ize winner a nd you' ll en joy 4 large
bedrooms , tam lly room with w b 11r ..., ptace,
formal d1n lng, Jlh baths , per fect k it ., rec
room, sundeck and cover ed pa 1Jo $68,500
This is a n1ce home that you should lOok at
before you buy .

--·-...- ----- --..

NEW LISTING, 3 bedroom brick home . centrally
located between Gallipoli s and R1o Grande. less than
one year old Gallipoli s City School D1strlct .. rural
wa1er, 1112 baths, nace .50 a cre lot . Buy th ts brack for
only 529,900.00.
MODERN 3 BEDROOM HOME in Green Acres S. D •
situated on 80' x125' corner lot. FA nat . gas furnace.
attached garage, nice garden area, Gallipolis Ctty
School Dlst Pnce 532,500.00.
NEAT CLEAN 3 bedroom home loca ted in Bidwell,
near s~hc;&gt;ol ; full basement, large lot~ lSO'x140'. Rural
water Price reduced, $28,SOO
COMFORTABLE 2 bedroom home in Kanauga,
sttuated on 3/" acre tot, nat. gas F .A furnace Kitchen,
bedroom and living room furniture goes with home,
mcludes refrigerator, stove, washer and dryer. Also Ig.
2 car gage. Could be used as a shop Prlce$2&lt;.000
FOR SALE OR LEASE' Modern -one.story brick
building, over 14,000 sq ft. , part bas.ement, na t . gas,
central air conditionmg Large recept1on room , over 60
rooms, varaous sizes. Ideal location, parking area
accommodates excess of 40 autos. Locate~ adjacent to
Gallipolis Golf Course. Call or stop 1n for more
information.
1975 Vindale mobile home, l4'xt7', all electric. The
average electnc bill for last year was $6~.00 a "!onth
This mobile home is on a large corner lof m the v1llage
of Vinton and in excellent condition throughout It has a
covered patio JO'x8' and air cond it ioning. Includes new
house furn iture, color T.V. and all the goodtes. Has
large garage and work area. You need to see th ts to
appreciate It. Priced at less than re placement cost
NEW LISTING, New 3 bedroom carpeted home,
constructed on .06 acre lot. Large 20'xl4' living room,
w·b l~replace. 1lf2 baths, heated &amp; cooled by hea l pump,
2-car garage W·auto door opener, loca ted wtthtn 5 mts.
Holzer Hospital Price S55,500 00
LOOKING FOR; 2 bedroom home. with furniture, ~~
Centenary area, Gallipolis City School DISI. 1 ~ere o'
land with in sight of Green School Also. 30 x30 ~ car
garage, could .be used for shop or storage . n ee
lncludtng furniture : $27,500 .00
FOLLOW RT. 218 : and Little Bull Skin Rd Ia
Macedooia Rd . and see th 1s 3 bedroom home Situated
on 3/• acre lot Call for an appointment to see Pnce
only 511,500.00.
TWO-STORY , 3 bedroom home mcludlng 3-50'x150'
lots overlooking Ohio River Price Sl 6.000
COMMERCIAL BUILDING , Localed 1212 Second
Ave , Gallipolis. Price $17 ,500 00.
10 ACRES, Fronts on Neighborhood Rd. Bui ldings lots
no mobile homes. Prl~e S15,000 00
APPROX. 3 ACRES,
On corner lot along
Neighborhood Rd . No mobile homes. Pnce $18.000 00.
MOBILE HOME, Clean 2 bedroom Fleetwood, located
along Kemper Hollow Rd .• 1 acre lot. Rural water, 2
outbuildings, A C., some furniture, all for only
$12,000.00
151 ACRE FARM, Near Vmton . Include~ llllable and
timber land. Also, 4 bedroom home, equtpment s hed
Bottom land borders Raccoon Creek. Call for more
Information.
THE DREAM HOME : Overlooking the Ohio Va~l~f'
this 3 bedroom carpeted home exhlb1ts many qu
Y
anemitles. 2 W·b fireplaces, formal ~ln.lng roomd ~
magnlfiCI!nt family rooms, nestles w1th~n a 7~ e
area 22 acres In all , however, owner wtll se 1
ouse
with ' s acres : Also, owner will help finance Pnce
reduced Contact for more information
.
kln lor 8 acres on Shoestring Ridge, we have '' ·
~~udl~g rural water, electric hook-up, fence and gate
Priced now for $10,000.00.
.
ST LISTED· ~bedroom. stately home Situated on
JU
1 t l~ated within the city at Gallipolis . 2'1'
l1f2 acre o
t
afural gas &amp; a1r
baths. 2 fireplaces, full basemen ,h n
hi h has had
cond , 3 car garage , a magnificent ome.w c
excellent care Call for more mformatlon
FIVE BEDROOMS, Centrally located along 400 block
of Second Ave. Home is divided to make rental
apartment If desired. 2 kitchens, 2 bathroom s, car~rt .
full basement. steam heat . Within easy walkmg
distance of downtown. Price $35,000.00
NEW LISTING: 4 bedroom carpeted home on
Chatham Avenue, 2 baths. lg. living room, 12'x22' city
w~ter1 cent. air, Jg . 14'x24' garage, 8 yrs. old, nat gas .
price 530,000.00. ,
NEW LISTING , Small cottage, located oo Rt. 160, just
outside city lim lis, nice garden area, fenced in yard,
a;oraae . Priced to sell 523.500.00.
\i\10 NEED Li&gt;TINGS' IF YOU ARE THIN""'" OF

SELLING GIVE US A CALL .... LET US HELP YOU!
IF YOU ' RE PLANNINQ IF YOU DON ' T SEE THE
TO SELL, CALL US , WI" PROPERTY YOU WANT
HAV~
A
LIST
OF 1N THIS AD , CALL . WE
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS , MAY BE- ABLE TO FINO
AND WE'RE ANX10US IT FOR YOU
TO SERVE vnu
....au Wood Insurance &amp;
Rpol Estat• 446-1066

--'----...,
HOUSE IN CITY
Excellent clindition, tX·
collent location. llaumenl,
garage, aluminum
sldillll, storm windows .
Priced In S2l:f. 446-1443,
9523.

BEEF CATTLE COUN ·
142 acres clean hall
pasture. wood fences . 2
barns, old house. tob base,
toh of rd. lrontage, Walnut
Twp . S4!,000. STROUT
REALTY , 146·0008.

TRY _

A country Showplace with 4 Ac . Thi~ •s a
fine br~ck ranch with 220 sq ft of l1vmg
space . Three large bedrooms , formal
entrance and dining , 2 bat hs, beaut1!ul
kitchen and breakfast area Huge fa mily
room with w.b firep lace ; attractive In
ter.or br1ck walls, p lush carpet
throughout Th1S 1S a fine cou.n try home
located m Gallia co School Dtstr1ct on a
state highway The big bonus 1S the small
livestock barn and beautiful land If vou
need more than 4 ac we can put 10 more
WJth It Priced with 4 a c. $69,900 with 14 ac
S78,000 . You'll be happy you looked at th1S .

Solid Quahty 1 Perlect Locat1on , River
Frontage. Th is ha nQsome 6 room qual1 t y
built brick home 1ncludes a la rge living
room w•th 2-b firep lace . beaut iful v rew
from dmmg room , very nice eat .in k1tchen
with all the appliances built 1n, 11!2
sparklmg baths , Anderson Thermopane
windows, 0'-&lt;ersl zed 2 car 9arage with
plenty of room for workshop - Concrete
crawl space Attract 1ve setting on a well
developed gently slopmg lot wh 1ch runs to
the riYer IF YOU ARE NOT LOOKING
for quality construction and qual1ty ne1gh .
borbood dOn ' t bother w1th th •s one

You Should Be Energy consctous by Now.
Save $50 00 to ~100 00 a month on you r
elec1nc b1tl eeautJful new 3 bedro~m
home- 1nctudes f 1reptace, '2 baths, very ntce
kitchen and has max1mum insu tat1on {6
1n ches
"

How About A Wonderful Surprise. You
would eiC pect to pay much more for a. 4
bedroom home that includes a fam ily
room, d lnmg · room and very attra c t1ve
kitchen (bu !lt .m range , dishwasher, etc l
plus 3 baths, heat pump and 2 c ar garage
Th1 s brick Is only 3 yrs . old and Is located
in th e city sc hool dist ric t, just Off Rt . 35
owner ha s kept 1f m beautiful condition but
has been transferred and must sell im .
mediately Prtce $49,900 00

Ask any good bu11der about building
Then tet us show you 2300 sCJuare feet of
very com fortable ltving space 4 unusu~lly
nice spaciou s bedrooms and formal dlmng ,
large tam 1ly room with a h.a ndsome W·b
fireplace. wife.approved bu11t m k1 tchen ,
21h bath s, 2 sundecks and 2 patios La rge 2
car garage Cer1tral a~r to keep you cool
see th 1s attract1ve home and make your
own decis1on
Just Ltsted. 4 Bedroom home , $29,000 00
Yes, 4 bedrooms, yet easy to heat . It's a 1112
story fram e with la rge Ji vi ng room , dmmg
or ta m tly room , big k1tchen and garage
Loca ted on a fla t sha dy lot.
want Some Acreageo Close to Town?
Here's 65 ac of beauttful wooded h ills and
valleys Build 1 to 12 homes - Perfect
v1ew and locat1pn
Attractive J BedroDm Ranch. ~ou ' l l en joy
this love ly big fam ,ly room Ntce kttchen,
home IS carpeted th roughou t locate~ on a
flat lot With garden Gra de school IS just
across the street

You Are Missing The Buv of a Ltlet1me . If
you want a quiet location, a very nice 11h
y r o ld 3 bedroom home with family room
and 2 baths , you must took at th1S one One
acre lot surrounded by woods , 8 m1tes out.
$35,000.00. Extra land availab le

( New Listing) Bric k a nd Frame Ranch,
with eye appea l. Th1s attract1ve 3 bedroom
home includes large k1tchen &amp; ta rn1 1y
room combu)at!on, good s ized bedroo':1s,
carpe t thro ughout and excellent tocat1on
on Lin coln Pk . at Centenary . Probably
wou ld v A or FHA
Ideal Wooded Building S11es Overlooking
the Rtver There are only a ~Jery few really
good bu 1ld1ng s 1tes left where you can
enjoy a great view or the n~Jer from a very
pnvate 1ocat1on in a wooded area tust I
mile fro m town Call l~e W1seman for
more deta ils
Beaut1ful Bu1ld1ng Lots - ~~.a ac at c.en .
tenary we t'iave 3 ac wooded lots 4 miles
from town Some w1lh lake frontage , 3 or 4
acre sttes at R10 Grande with lots or pine
and hardwood trees
IN MIDDLEPORT ....._ Two story home oh
large lot. Carpeted all over, format d1 ning
room , n1ce k1tchen , ba th W1th shower 1n
tub , cen tral a 1r , rura l water, basem ent,
one ca r garage S30.000 .

WE-NEED LISTINGS
A Gentleman's Farm - 117 Acres One of
the very best beef farms 1n southeastern
OhiO 90 Ac of highly improved hay and
pasture land and 30 a c of woode d pasture
Drive over all of 1f m your car. New fe nce
over most , 2 ponds, 6 au ton:a atic cattle
tountams , 3 new metal barns w1th concrete
loafing pads , built In feeders , gra1 n
storage load in g sh ute with head gate 3
bedroom home 1S like brand new and m
eludes large fa mily roomw1th handsome
wood -burning fireplace, modern k1tchen
with all the bullt·ms ,. 1112 baths, 2 car
ca rpor t It's a perfect spot located on State
H1ghway about 9 miles from. Ho lzer
Med1ca1 center
Home &amp; 11 Acres . Only $20,000.00 . Near
Danvil le in Me 1gs County . Two story
frame, fo ur bedrooms , dtning room , n1ce
k1lchen, cellar, basement. heated with
Ooxol gas . Barn also used as garage , land
lays good Work sh op and chicken house
Cal l Mr . Wtseman 446 ·4500.
owner Transferr ed , Must See Im mediately , There Is no better home buy on
today's market Th is splendid 4 bedroom
home Includes a nice kitchen, 3 bl!lths ,
family room. 2 car garage on a large
corner tot Enjoy a sun deck and central
air . Excellent house keep mg .
Older Home In Town - Excell ent con .
dll1cn with modern heat and arr con
ditionlng Th1S sol1d 4 bedroom Includes
breakfest room , 2 baths, shady Jot, largt
garage,

a Acres , wtth targe frontage on State Route
12-4 with nice tram€ building SU1fable for
commer c1al purposes , now completely
furnished ?tnd could be used as en apart .
ment for one or two peopl e Ha s two mob1le
home sites w1th sep t1c tank
Strlckly Designed to Su1t the Most
Discrlm lnahng . Rest1ng on a beautifully
elevated tree shaded , 11ft ac lot that otters
an, imposing view from eYery wmdow Th1S
most spectacular home tn the county of .
fers everythmg you have ever dre amed of
from a TV monitor of the front door to 6,000
sq ft of e legant . A c lass1c k.ttchen, break
fast room , formal dmmg, huge form a l
en trance, 3'12 baths, 2 w b fireplaces, 2 sun
decks, pan1c button den , eXpansion and
distincttve entertainment area w1th bar
lmpectab le ta ste d iscribes the effo rts of
the profeSSIOna ls who d1d the decorat ing
You won't belteve the amount of storage
Lighted circle d r1ve and mature land
scapmg puts the tinist·11n9 touches on .this
most handsome res 1dence
Th1s Old Timer Has Been Restored. Here
1S a beautiful old tim e 2-story sitting in the
m1ddle of a 17 ac. tract 1n the c1tv :school
dis1rtct on State Route 141 ~ B huge rooms
includes A bedrooms , dining room and
family room, 1 work..mg fireplace , -4 more
could be restored . ntce k1tchen, modern
heat ing , Jarge old time barn Is in good
condition Beaut1ful se tt fng With excelleht
view. 575,000.00 .

t. M. WISEMAN. BROKER 446-3796
E.N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500
500 2ND AVE.
, ;ALL 446-3643
GALLIPOLIS

�•

•
0...- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 4. 1977

~County agent's corner

Late FG wins
26-23 grid game
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Fred Johnson kicked a pressure-packed 26-yard fie ld
goal with just five seconds
remaining t o lift Miam i
(Ohio ) to a :IS-23 victory over
upset-minded Dayton in a
wild college football opener
Saturday.
Miami, heavily favored ,
found itself trailing 20-10 with
less than seven minutes to
play, but rallied for a two
touchdowns within 90 seconds
to pave the way for Johnson 's
game-winning field goal.
The Miami miracle started
when Rick Hyde took a short,
underhand, shovel pass from
quarterback Larry Fortner
and dashed 85 yards lor a
touchdown to bring the
Redskins to within 20-16 with
6:10 remaining . Johnson 's
extra-point kick was wide .
Just 90 seconds later,
Miami defensive end Greg
Sullivan intercepted a
deflected B.J. Dailey pass
and raced 25 yards for a
touchdown and a 23-20
Redskin lead.
But the F1yers refused to
fold and Harmut Strecker
booted a 22-yard field goal
with 40 secmds remaining to
lift Daytm to a 23-23 tie.
Miami, then starting on its
own 29-yard-line with just 3D
seconds to go; drove inro ·
scoring position on For tner's
44-yard pass to Paul Warth
with 15 seconds remaining.
With only five seconds
remaining, the lanky IHI, 200pound J ohnson calmly kicked
a field goal from 26 yards
awa y to give Miami the :IS-23
victory.
Dayton, in conunand most
of the way, got a 46-yard
touchdown
run
fr om
Sylvester Monroe, a one-yard
TO plunge from Mike
Watterson and field goSJs of
25, 34 and 22 yards from

POMEROY - I have rece.ved several calls abo ut blackleg
in cattle thiS;J&gt;ast week.
Blarkle~: is b~ no means a new disease. Prevention of
blackleg by vaccination is highly reconunended on all young
cattle (under two years of age l. Cause : a bacterium, and the
germs are dist ributed throughou t the bod)' of diseased
animals.
Spread of the disease - Genera lly through the swallowing
of germs. The ca rcasses of dead animals represent the chief
source of infection , for spores are formed inside and outside
the body. These spores will persist indefinitely in the soil.
Symproms - Lameness is apt to be the first one noticed ,
but general sickness is soon shown by goi ng off feed,
trembling, fever of 105 and higher, last. pulse, and la bored
breathing. Along with other symptoms, swellings appear in
va rious body. muscles, chiefly in the hips, flanks , and
Shoulders. These swellings are small and pafnful at first, but

Strecker.
Miami had managed only a
27-yard field goa l by Johnson
and a five-y ard TO r un by
Mark Hunter befor e it finally
el&lt;J)Ioded for 16 points in the
final quarter ..

Ohio trio in
daring escape
in Kentucky
.
.
PARIS, Ky. (UP! ) - Three
inmates, including two
brothers from the Hillsboro,
Ohio, area, escaped from the
Bourbon County Jail late
Saturday morning after one
of them used the cell keys he
had access to a s a trusty .
Paris Police Chief Johnny
Mynear said trusty James
Bryant , 'tl , apparently freed
Bobby Cole, 22, and Joe Cole,
32, from their second-Door
cellblock and the trio escaped
through a basement furnace
room window .
The chief said there were
no indi,cations the mert stole a
car in making their getaway.
"We think they'r e on foot
and we've issued a warning to
all drivers in the area to
avoid picking up any
hitchhikers," he said. " We're
making a pretty broad search
of the area , with the help of
State Police and police from
nearby counties."
Bryant , who had less than
90 days to serve of his, jail
term, was described as :Heel·
7 and 120 pounds, with brown
hair and brown eyes. Bobby
Cole was reported to be :Hi
and 135 pounds with blond
hair and blue eyes.
Police described his
brother as 5-9 and 185 pounds
with red hair and brown eyes.
The Coles were serving a
sente nce for third-degr ee
burglary, police said.

Experiments aid
tobacco farmers

Hy CHARLES PENTECOST
FRANKFORT , Ky. (UPI )
- Kenneth C. Hockensmith ,
31, is a good example or the
modern burl ey tobacco
grower who likes to
experiment with new time
and cost-&lt;lBving methods of
growmg and preparing leaf
for market.
Last year, Hoc kensmith
and his family produced
40,000 pounds of burley
tobacco on 16 or 17 acres of
rich bluegrass farm 'land i.n
Franklin County . Most of the
tobacco sold for $1.21 per
pound.
Thanks to recent rains
which ended a summer
drought, he expects to
produce aproximately 42,000
pounds this year . Until the
rains came, he had been
watering his crop with a guntype irrigator where it was
possible.
He participated in a n
experimental program on
prepa ring tile leaf for market
with his 1976 crop co·
sponsored bY the University
of Kentucky . Under th e
experimental program, one;
•
• • • e e e • · • e • e e • • e e e e e • e third was prepared by the old
~
hand-tied method, one-third
•
II:&amp;~
• bY baling a~d one-third by the
•
\..fU
•. sheeting method, in which the
•
leal is placed in burlap bags.
Any county farmers who
{le: wished to do so could partici•
pate in the experimental
program.
The Reynolds Tobacco
•
By
it Corp. co-sponsored the
. Willis T. Leadingham • experiment in cooperation
•
Realtor
with the UK, to see if tile leaf
e
• sustained
any damage in
e
Your
n ngs. the ove rhead lights in these e quality through the sheeting
elt Is your REA LTO R rooms for it co ul d be ha rsh e or baling methods. ·
e saying that he is coming and make the room look e Hockensmith said damage
• ri ght over with a prospect. uninvit ing . Turn on every e was negligible and estimated
e You hang up the phone. light in a storage room or • the shee ting a nd ba ling
• Wha t's the next thing you closet . Go al l out in • method saved 40 per cent in
e do? Turn or ever y light in illum ina ting the kitchen • the house. Why?
the cheerier the better. • time of prepar ation for
e Because you want to g ive Brig hten up the bathroom, e market and 8 00 10 cents per
• the prospectthe best image too - but ca refully choose • pound in labor costs. All of
• · you can of the comfort, the rig ht wattage for ·bulbs .: which definitely sold him on
• beauty and li vabil ity you by the mirror, pick the • the sheetin g lind ba ling
• are offer ing . In oth er most
fla tter} ng, one .
processes.
• words, you want to sell a ~· Remember, lt s JUst as •
"As far as the experiments
• home not a house. And full Im portant to have lights on • are concerned, 1 don't think
ill um ination is the best way in the afternoon as It is for • there will be any more," he .

•

1•

••

CJ::'

-LIS

•:

•

ta-1-

•

T0 ·d a. Y :•

tHERE BE' LIGHT

•

e

eto

gi ve your home that

: " lived-in" loo k. Fur niture
• and rugs and fixtures take
on a warm glow fr om the
• proper lighting . Here are a
• few " bright'' ideas:
•
Turn or every lamp in
• the living room , bedrooms
• and fam ily room . Be

a night-t i me showing.

11 there is anything we
can do to. help you in the
field of real estate please
phon e or drop in at
LEADINGHAM
REAL
ESTATE, 512 Second Ave. ,
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699 .
We' re here to help!

• · careful about t urni ng on • • • • • • • • • • • .. •

• said."lt's upto the individUal
• farmers now to get together
• and get something passed
• where they can strip and
• pre pare their burley fo r
• market any way they wa nt
• to ."
A business administration

1

HI SENORS and SENORITAS!
•

AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD
IS COMING TO

CROW'S

NOT FROZEN - MADE FRESH ·TO ORDER
1

TACOS • TASTADOS · BURRITOS · ENCHILADAS •
FRIJOLES • COMBINATION PLATES EAT IN CARRY-OUT OR HAVE A MEXICAN FOOD PARTY
Oth•r New Items Coming Soonf
WATCH FOR OIJR ANNOUNCEMENT

* THE FINEST AND MOST COMPLETE HOT DOG MENU
IN THIS AREA.
* niE ru:i HIGHEST QUALITY SOFT ICE CREAM TREATS.

graduate of Georgetown
(Ky .) College, he depends
mostly on his own family for
labor until it becomes time to
cut and house the leaf in the
fall . Then he hires eight to 10
extra workers weekly for a
brief period .
" It 's mostly a family
thing ," he s aid in an
interview. " I and my wife ,
my mother and lather and
father-in-law can handle it
pretty well until the time
comes to cut and hoUSt· the
crop."
Hockensmith, who bas been
growing burley since 1968,
coo cedes tbat the past four or
five years have been with
good growing seasons and
high prices.
He is particularly pleased
with the change in federal
allotment regulations from
the old acreage allotment
sys tem to . the poundage
system for each individual
crop.
" The poundage syst~m
gives you a chance to make
-up what you're lacking from
the previous year," he said.
;&lt;You've always got your
pounds . Under the old
acreage system, you never
knew how many pounds you 'd
have per acre .
"Now if I've got 5,000
pounds. more t han I'm
supposed to have, I can hold
over until the next year . If
you're light, you can increase
your poundage and make up
the next year," he added.

By JOHN C. RICE
Extenslua Aceat Alt"kullure

Seeding dead1ine
falls on Sept. 15

soon become extensive and painless to the thouch , Skin over
the center of lhe swellings eventually becomes dry and paper·
is agreed as the last of the
like . Gas in the tissues causes a peculiar cracking sound when
By Stephen D. HIbinger
the swellings are rubbed, and opening one of them usually
optimum dates . Since we
Conservalioll Servlte
reveals a dark, frothy liquid that has a peculiar sour smell.
GALI, IPOLIS
The &amp;ln't predict or control the
Muscles in the swollen areas are characterized by a metallic autumn deadline for seeding weather ,
playing
the
sheen that is easily seen. The disease is seldom seen in animals grasses and legumes is averages Is the safest game.
over two years old, but a milder form sometimes affects the almost here. The Soil Con·
When seeding hay fields or
older stock. Most of the young animals die within a day or two servatlon Se r vice and pastures can range in cost
after symptllniS appear, but lhose that ~over at any age are Cooperative Extension from S50 to $150 per acre, a
inunune tn blackleg for life afterward. The formation of gas Service mutually agree that lost seeding due to late
con.tinues even after death and blackleg deaths are noted for approximately September 15 planting can be a costly way
excessive bloating that causes legs to stick straight out and is a final date for establishing to learn a lesson.
forces bloody foam from the natural body openings . Blood ne w forage seedings.
The seeding deadline apclots in a normal manner and in this way is different from that
This established date is no plies to grassed waterways,
of anthrax cases. Outbreaks are COJlllll()llellt when stock is on magic number, but research too . Newly constructed
pasture,·but may occur at any time of the
are
very
and experience have shown waterways
Treatment : Contact your veterinarian.
that on average years, a·later s usceptible to extensive
Prevention : VaccinatiOil with bacterins has been proven seeding has ·a high risk of erosion. If the seeding fails ,
as very effective lor immunizing s~&amp;eptible cattle. However, winter killing the new pia nts. even more erosion is
for seven to ten days after vaccination animals are more A late. or extra mild winter probable.
susceptible to infection, •o losses may continue for at least ten season win permit a late
II you are interested in
days alter vaccination . Since they contain no living ge rms, the seeding to survive. In some building a waterway be sure
bacterins cannot cause the disease . ·
cases, though, even a Sep- that eithe.r construction and
location conditions will detennine the best time for tember 1· 15 seeding is seeding are completed by
vaccination, but in general, lour months is consider ed the best dama ged or r uined by a mid-September or ma ke
· age. However , if an ar ea is badly infected, it will be advisa~le harsh winter.
pla ns to wait until spring to
to vaccinate calves at a bout one month of age when immumty
The ·averages lie with a start coll!!truction.
given by antibodies in the colostrum has been lost. Such timely seeding. September 15
animals should then be revaccinated at weaning time because
the colostrum immunity may prevent proper action of he
bacterin. II an outbreak occurs, it will be desirable to
vaccinate all cattle less than two years old , with the exception
of calves less than one month old. Since mixed infections are
likely to occur, the use of a mixed bacterin gives extra
insurance. Whenever possible, vaccinated animals should be FUNNY BUSINESS
By Roger Bollen
separated from teh herd and kept on dry feed for at least ten
days following vaccination.
•
When animals die of blackleg, carcasses are best
CfFICER ...
· destroyed by burning. As an altenative, they should be buried
l::)QJlT
~IUE
deeply in quicklime. Such destruction is desirable because
infectioo is distributed throughout the body at the time of
death. Spores are highly resistant ro heat and cold, and may
persist in the soil for years. In a ddition, they can be carried by
dogs, wild animals, birds, and floods to infect a large area if
infected carcasses a re not completely destroyed . Small
patches of ground can be made fairly·safe by burning a heavy
layer of straw on them. It is believed that infe cted pastures
may eventually become clean if a program of vaccination is
followed ever y year to prevent the reintroduction of germs
from carcasses.

Neither side budging in Meigs Local
Progress toward a settlement is at an apparent standstlll
in the teachen strike which began last Tuesday In the Meigs
Local School District.
There was me discussion session between teacher and board
representatives Saturday and no sessions after that time, it
was reported.
Meantime, football practice and band practices are being
held to prepare for Friday night's opening football game which
apparently ls to be held, despite the closed schools.

Otarles Downie, president of the Meigs Local Teachers
Assn ., today issued the following update on the situation between the teachers and the board from the teachers' point or
view :
" Meigs Local Teachers' Association President Charles
Downie reports:
" ... The si,tuation remains unchanged between teachers
and the board of education. At a supposed ne~otiation sessioh

called by Superintendent Charles Dowler over the weekend , he association repeats their willingness to negoti8te at any time.
stated that nothing bad changed. The board's position remains
" Although OAPSE ( non-eertlfled personnel ) have settled
the same, even though they have admitted to errors in their their differences with the Board or Education, they have
calculations (of money on hand).
pledged their support to the Teachers' Association untll the
"Although the $8,1100 figure is the same one that caused strike is settled. This means that they will not cross teacher
teachers to strike, the board's position is to negotiate picket lines and schools will remain closed."
downward from that figure .
Downie urges coocerned citizens of Meigs local School
" Downie stated that the responsibtlity is still firmly on the District to call the board and make their views known .
Board of Education to call a negotiations meeting . The

•

at y

year.

A't.J Ctt\OJ\
IOHy'

YA

Nle A WARNINESr

Pollution Control Act
explained in Pomeroy

F

OKA'/. IF I CATCH YC()
~
~

~

SPEED IN~ MAIN I I'LL
61VE 'lt() A~E:I&lt;. 11 CKET.

Roush ; two Meigs Soil lind 1
ilyBOY!lRu m
Conservation Service
Water Conservation District ~
POMEROY - Ohio En- superv isors
Dave ~
vironment Prot ection Agency Gloeckner and Roy Miller, 0
(O.E .P .A.) representatives Mayor of Middleport - Fred l
Clare Puchy and Tina J en· . Hpffman.
e
nings explained "Section 208"
Other local citizens at·
of the 1972 Federa l Water tending included : Dave Fox,
Pollution Control Act at a Glenn Enslen, Mary HobWednesday night meeting in stetter, Robert Mattox, Reid ,....,-.;:
the Meigs Ag ri cult ure Young, Leota Youing, Judy ...._._
Confe r ence
Room
in Rutha nd TaJilltly Ruth.
Pomeroy.
About 20 ~rsonsheardhow . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,fut ure
water
quality
requirements might aifect
them , Meigs County, and the
entire nation. The goal of the
Act is to make all waters of
this country clean enough to
preserve fish and wildlife and
permit swimming by 1983.
Puchy pointed out that the
1983 date may have to be
extended due to the technical
and economical problems
that have to be over come.
Main Store and Mechanic St. Warehouse
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The.
Discussion included how
· Open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday 9:30
Colwnbus school board is "Section · 208" wauld affect
con sidering placing an 8.7 villages, r urallandusers, the
to. p.m. Friday 9:30 to 8 p.m.
·
mill operating ·Ievey on the mining industry and even·
Make Elberfelds your shopping center for wearing
November ballot to raise · tually everyone. A local
apparel for you and your familY and furnishings for your
$76.8 million in revenue over committee of people in·
th e next three years .
home.
terested in the Shade River,
Superintendent Joseph L. Leading Creek and direct
. Davis said Friday the extra Ohio River tributaries In
money was needed In help Meigs. Co unty was formed
meet inflation , restore cut with membership open to
program and meet special anyone.
1977 ALBANY COMMUNITY FAIR
education requiiements and
An el ection of officers voted
desegregation ,
·PROGRAM Jo'OR TilE WEEK
David Wright of Rutland as
President, Roy Miller of
SEPTEMBER 8-9-10.11, 1977
Chester .a s Vice President,
Gary ASpin of Dexter as
•
recording secretary and
,THURSDAY, SEP1'E!11BER 8, 1977
Boyd Ruth of Chester as
Gates Open - 4 :00P.M.
·
reporting secr'e tary (works
Hams ter Sweepstakes .. .... ......... ....................... .... ..... ............ . 5 :00 P.M.
with news media ).
Local Church Program ... ....... . ... .. .. .... ......... .... 4 :00 P .M. _ 6:00 P.M.
Next meeting will· be
Alexander Band Concert .. .. .......... ........................ 6:00P.M.•. 7:00 P .M.
Wednesday, 8 p .m . Sep·
Tractor Pulling Contes t and P owder Puff Pulling Contest .... 7 :00 P.M.
tember 21 at same location.
Gospel Ambassadors ................... ................ ..... 8:00 P.M. - 10:00 P .M.
Open to the public. Purpose of
meeting is to determine how
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9 1977
Gates Open - 12 Noon
·
.
'
to get elected officials to
represent Meigs County at
Judg ing -- Fruit, Vegetables , Baking, Sewing Art
regional "208" meetings.
Flowers and Hay ....... ... ................... ........... :........:......... .. 1 ·OO p M
Public officials attenidng
Bicycle &amp; Tricycle Parade &amp; Races - Fair Ground Only .::: 3
P:M:
were all three Meigs Co.
Hamster Sweepstakes ............................ .. .................... ... : .......... 5 :00 P.M
Commissi011ers - Henry
Les Young and Harts Brothers ... .... ,.. .. ............ ...... .... 6 ·00 - 7•30 p M.
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Billy Walker Show .......... .......... .. ........ .................. .. .. 8:00 - 10 ;00 P :M:
~

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Closed All Day Monday Sept. 5th

8.7 mill levy

CiLWBORVAY

is considered

s

By United Pres• Internadooal
m E NATIONWlDE muscular
dystrophy telethon, sponl!Ored by comedian J erry Lewis Labor
Day weekend, netted more than $26 mllllon in pledges- well
above last year's $21.7 million.
This year's telethon, which ran for 21 \i hours, gained a
record $26,M1,490 in pledges . The te~thon is to raise money for
research into the causes aoo cures of muscular dystrophy.
LAS VEGAS, NEV. -

PASADENA, CALIF - A "FLAWLESS" LAUNCH sent
the Voyager I spacecraft hurtling towards Jupiter and Satur n
today and scientists said there were no problems such as those
that plagued its sister ship and delayed this flight for lour
days.
"Voyager I deployed all booms and turned on various
scientific instruments as planned and on schedule without any
of the problems that plagued the Voyager 2," a spokesman at
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory said. The unmanned
spacecraft, carrying 254 pounds of cameras and scientific
measuring equipment, rode into the sky btop a Titan Centaur
rocket that blasted off from Cape Canaveral, Fla ., at 8:56a.m .
EDT Monday.
0

TRAVELERS HEADING HOME FROM LABOR DAY
tiips clogged the nation 's roadways and added steadily to the
week(!lld traffic death toll , but the three-day bollday period
wail much safer than Labor Day 1976 when 526 Jiersons were
,killed.
It appeared the final death toll would be close to - and
possibly short of - the lower end of the National Safety
Council's projection. The council had estimated between 470
and 570persons would die in traffic accidents from 6 p.m . local
time Friday to midnight Monday.
NAIROBI, KENYA - A UGANDAN MU..ITARY tribunal
bas sentenced 12 high-ranking officials and businessmen to be
executed with the very guns they had planned to use to
overthrow President !eli Amin. The · sentence, announced
Monday by Radio Kampala, ended a sensational treason case
that provoked li public uproar when Uganda's· Anglican
archbishop was Implicated in the plot and later died under
mysterious circumstances.
The radio Kampala broadcast said the head of the milil!Jry
tribunal that heard the case ordered the 12 condemned men
shot to death with the weapons they allegedly smuggled into
the country. Two other defendants were given IS-year prison
lenDs .

•

All mmers·
on.the job
CHARLESTON,
W.Va .
(UPI) - For the first time
since a wildcat mine strike
erupted 10 10 weeks ago in
protest of cutbacks in miners'
health benefits, all mines in
West Virginia we,re reported
working today .
West
Virginia
Coal
Association spokesman Dan
Fields Said some operations
were reported with light
crews but all mines were

open.
As of Friday the lingering
wildcat strike idled about
8,400 miners West Virginia
miners, all of them in United
Mine Workers rn,trict 17.
Vernon Maasey, the union's
International
Executive
Board member from District
17, had predicted during the
weekend that the strike would
end today. Massey said all of
the district's 104 locals voted
to return to work.
" There's been a lot of
confusion in the mine
workers, " Massey said .
"Now I feel our people have
realized they must return to

work."

board members from West
Virginia
and
eastern
Kentucky ;
and
UMW
President Arnold Miller 's
negotiating team were to
meet . Friday with Joseph
Brennan, president of the
Bitliminous Coal Operators
Association, to try to resolve
the conflict wer cutbacks in
union health benefits that
provoked the strike.
However, District ,17 vice
president Cecil Roberts said
he thought hunger pangs had
more to do with ending the
strike than helated efforts by
UMW officials to pressure the
industry into diverting money
into the ailing health benefit
funds.
•:J guess it's really been
just starved out, to be honest
about it," he said.
The 1G-week walkol'\ has
cost the union's henefit funds
$23 million in · company
contributions based on coal
production. Miners have lost
$73 mllllon in wages, while
the state of West Virginia has
lost $14 million In coal-related
taxes.

Massey said he. three other

;oo

·
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1977
Gates Open - 8:00A.M.
Cattle Show and Judging .......................................: ..... ........... :30 A M
Pet _Show _and Parade ...... ,........................... ... ........................... 9 ·OO AM.
J~~1or Fa1r Tractor Pu!ling,Contest ............ :.......... ....... ..... ..... 9;00 A .M:
S . ep Show and Judgmg ........................ __ " ........................ 10·00 AM
·
Also PeeWee Show
·.
·
"
.' .. · · .
She~p Sh~ring Demonstration .,.. ................ 11 :00 A.M. - 12:00 Noon
J~1or F~1r. Garden Tractor Pulling Contest ..... ...... ...... ...... 12 :00 Noon
Children s Matinee ..... .. ............. ,.,................................. 1 :00 - 4
p M
Mul~ Jumping Contest - Juniors and Adults .... 12 Noon - 3 ;00 P:M:
Jumor Fair Parade .. ......... ................ ........ .......... ..................... : •. 3
pM
~unior Fair Demonstrations .... ... ................ ............... 3 :00 - 5
P:M:
amster Sweepstakes .. ........................: .................. ,... , ............. 5:00 P.M.
W. 0 . U. ~· -T.V. Show ............................... .. ............... 5 :00 - 7:00 P.M.
Pony Pullin&amp;' Contest ..... .. .. .... ................. ............... ......... .......... 6 :00 p .M.
Sonnenschein, German iAmerican Music .................... 6 :30 - 8:30 P.M.
S9uare Dance- Frog and The Greenhorns .... 9:00 P.M. - 12 midnight
Fireworks ..................... ...... .............................. ... .............. ........ 10 :SO P.M.

Non-£ertified workers

.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
ADMITTED
Lula
Westfa ll, Long Bottom;
Hannah Greenlee , Mid·
dleport ; Cheryl Haning ,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Jeffrey
Cullier, Otis Knight, Kathy
Lawrence, Tina Pierce,
Linda Dye, Robert Dye, BiUy
Brewer; Dorothy Brewer,
Mar y Russell.

DRIVE-THRU WINDOW.
DOWN THE MIDDLE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) When Vonley Jordan Jr.'s
wile of · two years said
goodbye, she also said she
wanted what was due her
under law: half of everything
they had.
Jordan, 25, took her
literally and this week took a
saw to their 14-foot outboard
dividing it evenly from bow to
stem.
!

s

·oo
·oo
;oo

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1977
Gates OPen - 8:00A.M.
Parade Through Town ......................................................... .. . 12:00 Noon
(Parade MUST move promptly at 12 :00 noon)
ijorse Show ................................ ........................................ ........ 1·00 p M

.

Curfew,

all nl&amp;"lits of the fall"- 1 :00 A.M.

RIDES and ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL ,.AGES

..

granted pay increase
EAST MEIGS · - !'ion·
certified e!llployes were
awilrded a 3.7 percent pay
increaae when the Eastern
Local School District Board
of Education met In recessed
session Monday night.
It WIIB reported that the .
salary increale.lB required by
law In that non-certified
employes mll8t be given the
same percentage Increase
that teaching employes were
given last spring.
'nle board hired Edgar •
Pulllna u the new high school
custodian and Eastern
alum111 Dennis Eichinger, a
graduate of Ohio State
Unlvenlty, as physical
education,
health
and
driver's education inltrul:tor.
'nle board postponed the

r-a

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I

VOL XXVIII .NO. 100

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN GENTS

Justice Brennan
stays Kent Gym
· KENT, Ohio (UPI ) -Con"l am quite unhappy," c o uld
co m menc e
struction on the proposed Go lding told a
news construction prior to the
gymnasiwn at Kent State conference today when students return to campus so
University n ea~ the s ite informed of Brennan's that we could get back to the
educating
where four students were action. " I concede more or business of
shot to death was stopped less cheerfully the right of students and put this issue
again today, this time by a any group to follow any legal · behind us," he said.
U.S. Supreme Court justice. procedure to accomplish its
Parisi said he would file the
KSU · President-designate ends, wha tever they may be. university's side of the arguBrage Golding said he was Thus far it seems to me this ment before Brennan or the
" quite unhappy " with the has been strictly a legal set of court on· Thursday.
court action.
maneuvers. All we can do is
Anthony Walsh, counsel lor
Attorneys for the May 4th wait and be patient .
the May 4th Coalition, said
Coalition, which is opposing
" I am no lawyer and I may Brennan's decision was a
the construction, filed be wrong, but I don'tthink the temporary victory for his
requests today to stop the Supreme Court can tell us side.
construction in both the U.S. wh;;ther the gym can be built
" We're very pleased that
Supreme Court and the 6th on that site," he said. "I see we have still a further
. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals no constitutio11al issue opportunity to press our
involved here.''
in Cincinnati.
lawsuit," he said.
About 250 opponents of the
Stephen Par isi, an attorney
The double-barreled courtaction came ., alter U.S. for the university , ~d he gym marched Monday to
Surpeme Court Justice Potter \V a s
' ' e x t r e m e I y Golding's campus home .and
Stewart refused Saturday to disappointed" by Brennan's posted a, " people's injunction
issue ·an order . halting decision.
against the university." The
the
" We were hopeful that we placard was studded with
construction ' of
controversial $6 million
"moVe the ~ " bumper
facility, which is scheduled to
stickers.
be constructed near where
the students were shot ro
death
by
National
Guardsmen on May 4, 1970,
during an anti-war demonstration.
Attorneys for the Coalition ·
petitoned U.S. Supreme QJurt
Justice William Brennan,
who granted the request for
The long weekend activity
the stay. Opponents of the . CUFTON, w. Va. - Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
of
Middleport
log.
of Sheriff James J .
gym want the site declared a
said
today
William
Zuspan,
Proffitt's
office was more
National Memorial by the
Mason,
whose
bid
to
build
ll
than
enough
to keep every
.U .S. Department of the
coal
loading
facility
on
the
deputy
available
busy around
Interior.
Brennan's order may only Ohio River ·here was turned the clock.
Here's how it went:
halt construction for a short down , has filed a notice of
A teletype from Riverside
. time . He said the stay was appeal.
The appeal has been made County 'Sheriff's Office,
granted until he or the court
isaues a further order alter to the West ·virginia Air Riverside, Calif., reported
university attorneys file a Pollution Control Com· two Rutland area youths
response to the request to halt mission of which Carl G. were being held in a Juvenile
Hall
there.
Beard, II is director. It was Detention
construllon.
· Just minutes before Bren- Beard who ruled against Charges on file in the Meigs
nan's
decision,
gym Zuspan last month following . County Juvenile Court
opponents, who frantically an . open hearing in the charging these boys with
High
School delinquency. AllegedlY they
have been asking several Wahama
gymnasium
where
opinions
stole a 1974 van, several
courts to halt the work, also
asked the 6th U.S. Circuit were taken · from residents in handguns, a TV set, and
Court of Appeals in Middleport, Ohio , directly several stereo and record
Cincinnati to temporarily across from the proposed players. Juvenile Officer Carl
construction, and from Hysell said the parents of one
stop construction.
The gym opponents had lost Mason and Clifton in West hlld left lor California to
return the juveniles to Meigs
their case in Cincinnati two Virginia.
weeks ago, but tnday they
Beard ruled Mr. Zuspan County.
Sunday morning at 12:51
filed . a . "petition for had failed to include
rehearing, " . claiming the adequate measures for .dust a.m. sheriff~ s deputies took a
c i r c u I t
c o u ·r t control in his plans provided stolen auto report from Roger
" misapprehended" their · to the commission, to the U. Stewart, Rt. 1, Middleport.
earlier court arguments.
S. Corjls of Engineers, and In The car, a 1912 Ford Torino 4gym
opponents his own testlmbny ~t the door, was recovered at apThe
proximately 2:15 a .m . near
pleaded with the circuit court hearing before Beard.
to stop gym .construction witil
A new hearing will be
a rehearing is held, but Bren- seheduled before the West
nan's decision made such a Virginia Air Pollution Control
step unnecessary, at least for Commission. Its date. will be
The
Middleport
the time being.
announced.
Emergency
Squad was called
Mayor Hoffman parout
six
times
over the holiday
ticipated in the hearing
weekend.
before Beard, and the earlier
At 8:24a.m. Monday, Alma
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
one conducted by the Hun·
Mlller
was taken from her
Thursday through
tlngton district, Corps of
home
on
S. Third Ave. to
Saturday, fair Thursday ·Engineers. His statements
and a ebance af showers
made in both hearings Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 3:51 p.m . Monday, Mary
Friday and Saturday.
summarized people's ob·
Sue
Durst and Jan Durst,
Highs wUI be In the 70o or
jections to coal being loaded
low 80s and lows wUI be In across the river without Pomeroy, w~re treated at the
the 50s or low 80&amp;.
adequate protection from dirt scene of an accident on Route
7.
and dust.
At 2 p.m. Monday, Debbie
•
&gt;
'

Zuspan
appeals
ruling

Marion Crawford,
members of the Meigs County Humane Society, are
pictured with the SQCiety' s animal shelter !DOCkup which
will be on display at "Yesteryear," the observance being
held at the Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy on
Saturday, Sept. 17. The society will also sell authentic
bandcrafted jewelry made by the Zuni and Navajo
Indians at Scottsdale, Ariz. Proceeds wlll go to the Shelter
fund~

Sheri
the ··Hobson Br id ge. The
owner of the car, who knew
the persoQs that took the car,
refused to file charges .
Sheriff Proffitt said the case
is closed.
At 5: 3D p.m. Saturday,
Michael Pierce, 18, Rt. 1,
.M iddleport , was arrested
following a short chase out
New 'Lima Road. · Pierce,
o~raling ' a motorcycle, has
been charged and jailed for
operating a cycle · without
cycle endorsement, reckless
operation , and willfully
eluding an officer after his
signal to stop. Pierce will
appear later this week before·
Meigs County Court Judge
Robert Buck.
Also arrested at ap·
proximately 4:50 a. m .
Monday after the auto he was
driving struck wall on
Mulberry Ave.,' was Franklin
Giles, 20, Rt, 4, Pomeroy,
charged with OWl · and
contributing
to
the
delinquency of a minor by
furnishing beer to the minor.
He is being held in jail and

E-R goes on six missions

hiring of a secretary and
assistant to the board of
education clerk.
Shelia Fields was hired as a
full time bus driver. Em·
played as asSistant bus
James W. Farmer; 61,
drivers were Alan Holter,
Clark Lees, Mitchell Holley Middleport, was fatally in·
and Charles Estep.
jured In a traffic accident at
Due to the cash analysis to 2:10a.m . Sunday on SR 124,
be conducted In the district one and three tentha miles
bY the state auditor's office "~Jutheast of Pomeroy. .
The Gallia-Melgs Post
the.next regular meeting was
moved from Sept. 13 to Sept. State Highway Patrol said
Fanner, traveling east, afier
20.
Attending were board loslnc control of his car, hit a
members Doug Bissell, guardrail, then a telephone·
Done! Larkins, Bob Davis pole, before going over a
and Clifford Lqngenette, steep embankment. Farmer
county
superintendent was pronoun~ed dead at the
Robert Bowen; Principal scene by Dr. Ray Pickens,
Clark Lees, . Clerk Eloise Meigs County Coroner, Death ,
Boaton,
and
district ~waa due to a crushed chest
'
superintendent, John Riebel. and fractured neck.

log ull
''

will appear In Meigs County
Court.
Saturday morning deputies
took a report from Roger
Clark, Chester, thathe had a
CB set stolen from his auto
that had been parked near the
Vista Station at Five Points.
The l!Ccident is under in·
vestigailon.
A Rt. I Portland woman
has been cited for failing to
report an l!Ccident that
resulted in damage to other
property. Carol Mullins was
cited for hiptsklp in leaving
an accident on SR 124 at
approximately 3:20 a .m .
Sunday. Mrs. Mullins said
while traveling east her tire
went flat, she lost control,
skidded, and went off the
road and struck and broke off
a telephone pole. She was not
injured, and left the scene
with a passing motorist. She
will appear Friday in Meigs

~

.

.

'

·

Governor ~sks
support/or

Pomeroy E-R Caner program
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Gov.
called 3 times Jame
s A. Rhodes urges

Three calls were answered
Blair was taken to Veterans over the holiday weekend by
Memorial Hospital, and at the Pomeroy Emergency
2:45 a.m. the squad took Clay Squad:
At 7:03 p.m . Satdrday for
Burns, 648 ·S. Second Ave., to
Avanell
Bass, taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
Veterans
Memorial
with head
Saturday at 2:22 p.m . Ben
lacerations;
at
2:33
a .m .
Davidson, Walnut St., was
removed
to
Veterans Sunday io the scene of a
Memorial Hospital and at traffic accident in Miners4:41 p.m ., Glen Ledsome, ville where Eileen Swan was
Elizabeth, W. Va ., injured in injured, to VMH, and at 8:06
an accident on Route 7 and p.m. Sunday, for Tom
·County Road 5, was taken to Gasper, Success road, taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
VMH.

and Jonathan N. Ledsome, A. Malone, 22, Waterloo, off
age 8, were also injured. They the roadway. There was
were .removed to Veterans minor da!llage.
No one was injured in an
Memoria!' Hospital by the
Middleport Emergency accident at 11 :40 a .m.
Squad. There was moderate Saturday on SR 7, north of
Gallipolis. The patrol said an
damage.
l.edsome was charged with auto operated by Mabel
Harrison, 18, Bidwell, falling
stop sign violation.
Joseph P . Riee , 19, Camp to stop, hit a car driven by
Lyevene, N. C. was cited for Robert E . Walding, 18,
left of center following an .Racine, in the rear. The
accident at 4:40 p .m . impact knocked the Walding
Saturday on SR 141, at the car into a vehicle operated by
junction to SR 233.
Paul D. Swan, 22, · Rio
The patrol said Rice's car Grande. .There was minor
damage. Harrison was cited
went left of tenter forcing a
vehicle driven by Klmllerly for failure to stop within .the

.

Co unty Court,
.
Monday at 3:50 p.m. ,
deputies investigated an
accicjent on SR 7 below
Hobson that resulted In heavy
damage to a house owned by
F reda Clark, Rt. I, Mid·
dleport .
The driver of an auto, Mary
Sue Durst, 18, of 1 Cave St.,
Pomeroy, said she was north·
bound, attempting. to pass
another auto, when her auto
struck a water puddle in the
southbollnd-lane causing her
to lose control. The car,
owned by her father, Willard
Durst, went offthe road to the
right and struck the corner of
the Clark house.
The driver suffered minor
injuries but was no.t im·
mediately treated. There was
no arrest.

61-year-old Middleport man killed in crash
.A passenger in his car,
Eileen D.. Swan, 53, Syracuse,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for
treatment of a broken arm .
Three persons were injured
in an accident at 4:35 p.m.
Saturday on SR 7, one mile
south or SR 124.
The patrol said an auto
operated by Glenn . L. Led·
some, 46, Elizabeth, W, Va.
pulled into the path of a
vehicle driven by Timothy E.
Gillespie, 17, Gallipolis. '
Ledsome had minor injuries
· while two ·passengers In his
car, Wilma J. Ledsome, 45,

'

assured clear distance.
At 1:05 p.m. Sunday on the
Eno-Vinton Rd. one mile
south of SR 160, cars driven
by Hazel L. Nickels, 35,
Vinton, and Terry 0 . Russell,
20, Vinton, collided on a
curve. Russell was Cited for
having no license plates.
John T. Fisher, 59, Racine,
waB cited for driving left of
center following an accident
at 11 :35 a.m . Sunday on CR
26, two tenths of a mile east of
SR 7.
The patrol said Fisher's car
. struck a vehicle operated by
'I
(Contlnu~ on page 13)

,

support of President Cllrter's
recent programs, as he's
cancerned about unemployed
youth, Ohio large cities
deterioration imil the auto
and steel industry prospects.
"Our inner cities are pock·
marked with empty, idle
factories ," he said in a Labor
Day state ment. " These
facilities which once provided
hundreds of thousands of
productive jobs have moved
out, taking the jobs to other
locations ...
" The j~s are gone , but the
people remain without oppor"tunity. They are idle, not of
their own choosing , but .
beca use no industries are
moving in to replace those
which have migrated.".
Rhodes urged support for
President Carter's recently
publicized reconunendatlons
on revitalizing inner cities,
suggestions that Rhodes has
also championed. They
in clude Investment tax
credits, increased levels of
industrial revenue bonding
capabilities and other
fmancial incentives.
The governor also urged
quick action by the Congress
and Ohio General Assembly
to " provide the employment
opportunities for the young
peopl~ who now live from day
to day without hQpe.''

'

... .

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