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                  <text>10-the (laity Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Friday,Sept. %3, 1m

,---------------------------: HOSPITAL NEWS

!

Area Deaths

:

OWEN K. CORDELL
Owen k . Cordell. 71. a
resident of Porter. died at ;

.
I
Eight step-ctuldren survive.
One son and _three brothers
preceded hlm on death.

Medical Center lollowlng an
""lended Illness .
He was born July 3, 1906, In

ol the Gallipolis Slate lnstilufe.
Mr. Cordell served both as

Charles and Mattie Miller

Morgan-Bethe-l Church.

a .m .

Friday

Jn

Holzer

Morgan Twp. son cf the late

Cordell.

He married Sadie Mil lor on

He was a rettred employee

a trustee and deacon In the

Funeral serYices will be

Nov. •· 1925,in Gallipolis. She

held 1 p.m. Monday at
Morgan-Bethel Church with

and on~ daughter. Alfred

flciating . Burial will be In the

survives along with one so.n

Corde ll and Mrs Sadie
Coo.per , both of S idwell .
Seven grandchildren and five
great-grandch ildren survive.

Rev .

Vance

Watson

of-

church cemetery .
Friends may call at the
McCoy -Moore. Funeral Home
in Vinton on Sunday from ~ - 4
and J.9 p.m .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted Woodrow
Fortney, Long Bottom ;
Virginia Meagher, SyraCWIO;
Juanita Chapman, Clifton, W.
Va.
Dischsrged
Mary
Adkins, Edna Blumenauer,
Lore~a Bush, .Haul Ferrell,
Wanda Imboden, Elizabeth

u_

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Robert
Bennett, Letart; Mrs. Windell Gastln, Bidwell; Leroy
Croft, Bidwell ; Lora Mae
Brown. Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Will iam
Bemesderfer,
Mason; Diana Neal, New
Haven; Arnold Bush, Point
Pleasant ; Naomi Eckard,
Mason, and Mrs. David
Gibson and son, Gallipolis, 0.
Blrth - Mr. and Mrs.
David Henry, Gallipolis
Ferry, twins, a son and
daughter.

Local winners

annOunCed m'

Kaiser contest

The names of 12 visitors to
McClure's Dairy Isle In
Middleport have been
_A6J'Ii ...t~J
oa::~vuu it1f'a
selected for consideration to
by THOMAS JOSEPH
win a 1951 Kaiser automobile
to
be awarded at tbe finn's
ACROSS
4&amp; Become
national headquarters in
1 Incentive
more
Utica, Mich.
5 Pilot a plane
profound
The 12 persons will receive
11 Noted car41 Redolence
chicken
dinners and Ice
tQor.ist
DOWN
cream
as
local
winners. They
lZ Kind of count 1 Aegean
are
Sherry
Allen,
Charleston,
13 Newsman,
island
W.
Va.
;
Oma
Nelson,
Mid·
Roger 2 Prissy one
dieporl
;
C.
Ridenour,
twute
14 GoloMade
3 Secretly
I, Cheshire ; Samuel L
15 Poem
(3 wds.)
,., l
Hurlow,
New Martinsville,
II E'ond du
4 Gilbert of
.
Yesterday's
Answer
W.
Va.;
Gengln Fraley,
-:-, WIS.
hockey
17 - ctip
5 Horrify
16 Belonging . 27 Gain weight Ch~ire ; Diana Neece, JWute
4, Pomeroy ; Raymond
(2 wds.)
&amp; Utter
to Ullian
29 Fragment
Russell, Middleport ; A. M.
18 Subservient
7 Badly
19 Alben Bark- 30 Slow, in
Gryezer,
Pomeroy; Wanda
20 Ben or
8 Completely
ley's title
music
Lyons,
Racine
; Bob Parsons,
Bertha
honest
22 Ibsen
31 Glacial
Route
I,
Racine;
Robert E.
21 (llarrate
(2 wds. )
heroine
ridge
Hayes,
Syracuse,
and
Arnold
!% Cape -,
9 British
Z3 Wisbed for 36 Back talk
·Johnson
,
Middleport.
No
Alaska
ritual
24 Aseptic
31 Two musi.
purchase
was
required
for
13 Campsite
10 Infuriated
Z5 Knowledge
cians
participation in the program.
residue
r.--r::--r:--r..-

ts

Jenkins, William Searls,
Wilma Waterman, Floyd
McClellan , John Bader,
Dora stevel\ll, Okey Pullin$.

Holler Medical Ceoter
1Dlocbarges, S.pL U)
Scott Brinker, Aiel Bryan
Jr. , Mrs. Gregory Fife and
son, Jewell Fife, Mildred
Greer, Daniel Jenkins,
Harold Kennison; Connie
LaMing, Marcus McKean.
Kevin Mitchell, Keith
Montgomery, Carl Norton,
Mrs. Wayne Sheltoo and sOn,
Elizabeth Slaven, Della
Thompson.
(Births, Sept. %Z)
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Hartley, a daughter, Ravenswood, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Shain, a diiUghter,
Racine.

and

lost than
never ... "

News
.. in Briefs
(Continued ·fi'QIIl pege I)

16 Gait
!7 Duffer's
cry
18 - peeve
l9 Allegory
l2 Author
Levin
13 Resident
(suff. )
14 Western
Hemisphere org.
15 Cut of
ir)eat
37 Alvin of
baseball
18 Islands
north or
Fiji .
19 Compulsion L......L-.t......L.-1-...L.-

responsible for the degradation of the steel industry." Youngstown Sheet and Tube Co. told Gov. James A. Rhodes eartier
this week it would lay off 5,0011 workers in Youngstown and
would move its corporate headquarters to Chicago because of
the growing problem of imported steel undercutting U. S.
producers.

or

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, CAUF. - THE space
shuttle Enterprise makes another test flight tnday with two
astronauts aboard - this time to try out a sophisticated
landing approach system that puts computers in charge much
of the time.
.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X VDL B A AX R
It LONGFELLOW
One

l~tter

simply stands for another. Jn this sample A ia

used for the three L's, X for the two D's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of"the words are all

hints. Each day the cod.e letters are dliferent.
. CRYPTOQUOTES
WHCT

SQFV

ALTMV
MDFYLD
MSYQEV

DT

LMVT
MEN
YC

RTUV
HE

'

Astronauts Fred Haise ar\d Gordon Fullerton , who made
the first free flight on Aug . 12, planned to take the controls for
only about one minute of today's five-minute flight, the third in
the free flight test series. 'fhe automated system was to guide
it for the first four minutes.

QU

MV

YLPTL

M
VY

IYEFHPTLMDWT

WTMLEHEA . -

LYDTLV

CLYFV
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: COOKING IS ONE OF THOSE
ARTS WHlCH MOST REQUIRE TO BE DONE BY PERSONS
OF A REUGIOUS NATURE.-ALFRED WIDTEHEAD

C' 1977 Klnt Featuru s,.n~iu.te, tnc.

BANGKOK, THAILAND- THAILAND'S American-born
king and his beautiful queen escape&lt;) unhanned from an
explosion of two pipe bombs that sent shrapnel whirling
through a mass of 10,000 persons, wounding 52.
.
Military officers ·said tOday Communist terrorists
probably were responsible for planting the- two hom~ade
devices that exploded Thutsday between 50 and lOOyards from
King Bhumibol and Queen Sirikit. Neither was hanned in the
explosions at a meeting of the nationalistic and pro.rnonarchist
Village Scout organizatioos in Yala, a provincial capital 470
miles south of Bangkok.
.
COLUMBUS- FINAL LEGISLATIVE APPROVAL was
given to a bill Thursday removing civil service job protection
from 212 of the 920 employees of State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson. By a 21-lo-12 vote, the Ohio Senate sent the bill,
sponsored by Rep. George Tablack, 0-Carnpbell, to Gov.
James A. Rhodes.
Senate sponsor Robert O'Shaughnessy, D-Colwnbus, said
the bill would enable Ferguson to hire competent employees on
the basis of " hooesty and responsibility" because of the
"sensitive" nature of their jobs preparing audits of state and
local governmental agencies. Republican critics, led by Sen.
Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland, said the bill was a ploy to
fill Ferguson's office with "political hacks," each of whom
fund" or lose their jobs.
O'Shaughnessy disagreed: " I personally have the
assurance- whatever that is worth -of the- auditor of state
that no one will be flfed, " :1e said. " If such was the motivation,
I would not carry the bill.''
KIDS KRUSADE
MASON- Rev. and Mrs.
James L. Whisnant of Can·
nelton, W. Va. will conduct a
boys and girls "Krusade" at
the Mason Assembly of God,
Dudding Lane, from Sept. 26
through Sept. 30, 6:30 to 8
p.m. daily. There will be
choruses to learn and otheo
interesting things for the hoys
and girls. Everyone is.
welcome. For transportation
call 77~133.
0

:;:;:;;::::::g~~:;:~Jii'::;:;::::::

Area youth are remillded
that the NaUooal Huttuc
and Fublag Day 11 to be
observed at Royal Oak
Park Saturday bectJmlag
al 9 a.m. Free lucb ·will be
provided aDd door prizes ·
given. Spoii!IOred by the
Meigs Couty Sportsmen's
clubS, the day's events are
open lo aU persooa IJt.
terested ID the "outdoon."
;:;:;:;:;:;:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::~:~:::;:~:~:::::::::::::;::

UJT'S TRUE . • • "

Bids asked for
$2 million TC

Notices, local briefs
An urgent special

session of

trustees. members of the
executive commlttft and of
the committee for the rtew
post home has been callod for
6 p.m. Sunday al Drew
webster Post 39, American

Ed Burkett JnyJtes Interested
area residents to attend . New
members are being solicited .

Waterways

Carter

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

"INN PLACE"

QUINTESSENCE
FROM MARimA, OHIO

VALUES
ARE
FOUND

AT

BAKER FURNITURE
DURING THEIR 25th

ANNIVERSARY SAU
--NOW IN PROGRESS--

FRIDAY

or

&amp;SATURDAY

10 TIL 2

THE MEIGS INN

l.
J

t

ll

1

' • ea

DUcKs AND SHEEP NEVER wander too far in the
presence of Carl Bradlord's .Border Collies. Bradford, from
Wooster, Ohio. has trained dogs for 43 years and laughs, "If

_

'

'· t J

.t

they need obedience dogs ln heaven - we'll put togetber
quite a team!" The team will be a highlight of Bob Evans
Fann Festival Oct. 14, IS, 16at Rio Grande.

Work 'Til Age 70 Bill may reach Carter's desk
before end of the year, Se1111tor Byrd predicts
lly t; LMt:ll W. l.AMMI
WASHINGTON fUPil - /\ lluusepassed bill to prohibit tho forced
retirement 11f workers under age 70
may reach President Carter's desk
before lile year lS out, Senate
Denut~tratic leader Robert Byrd said
Saturday.
"I haven't discussed this with the
chairmen of Ule committees, but I
should think that it's a possibility "
the Senate will approve the bill
before itadjooms for the year, Byrd
said.
The West Vlrginia Democrat
noted that the House had passed the
measure
Friday
by
an
overwhelming margin of 359 tD 4.
"I woul!i think the vote in the
Senate might he very similar," he
said.
Although the measure is not on

+

VO. 12

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

NO. 34

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1977

Steel layoffs hurting
all way to Washington
By STEVEN PROKESCH
PITTSBURGH (UPI ) Pressured by steel industry
layoffs and coalitions pushing
for checks on steel imports
and changes in other federal
steel policies, politicians are
losing their patience with the
Carter administration.
Major steelmakers have
announced.over 15,0011 layoffs
since early August - almost
6,000were disclosed this week
- and mote are. expected.

U.S. Steel, for instance, has
announced that 3,1100 hourly
employees in the ChicagoGary, Ind. area will be
furloughed or will have their
work hours reduced by the
end or the year.
Sources close to Coogress
say, "Congress is losing patience with the Carter
administration."
Despite the layoffs , the
Carter adminstration still
maintains the.re is no

Inj~nction

pressing need to immediately
change federal policies.
While many in the House
want an import quota of 10
percent of the domestic
market imposed immediately
or some action taken in an
upcoming meeting of the
Organization for Economic
Coo peration
and
Development, adminstration
officials still maintain the
iudustry's main problem i$
nQt unfair trade practices.

asked

•

rn sewerage case

Industry leaders say they
expect little from the OECD
meeting next Thursday in
Paris. Their pessirnisn.l was
wost recently supported in an
interview with Assistant
Special Trade Rep . Richard
Heimlich, who will represent
the United States at the
meeting.
" Our position has stayed
the same," Heimlich said.
"There is a feeling that this ~
Continued on pa ge .\·1

$340,000 will
be used for
home repairs

••
G,\LLlPOUS - The Gallla 'County
Board of Health Fridsy went to court for a
preliminary injunction that would stop
Denver and Janice Lively, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
using their sewer system .
•
In the .complaint to GaWa CoWitY
Common Pleas Court, the health board
claimed the defendants since Nov. 1975
have continued 'to maintain a nuisance in
discbsrging or permitting or causing to he
discharged Untreated sewage and the
drainageofasewagetankontothe surface
of their property and neighboring
residents In violation of the Ohio Sanitary
Code. The complaint further holds :
"Sewage and drainage from defen·
dants' malfunctioning sewage treatment
device is an attraction for flies and
mosquitoes and emits a rank and putrid
odor; both of whic~ create a hazard to the
health of the neighboring residents
especially those of tender years who may
come In contact with said nuisance. The
continued drainage of sewage and contents
of a sewage tank from defendants'
malfunctioning sewage treatment device
is a nuisance, the maintenance of which is

detrimental to the public health and
GALlJPOUS _ As many as 2IICJ
welfare ol the citizens of Gallia County."· barnes of lpw income senior citizens in an
The defendants were ordered by the eight county area of southeastern Ohio are "
plaintiff on or aboul!ast May 25, to abate expected to be repaired.under a national
the health nuisance conditions by June 24, research and demonstration project
and defendants have failed to do so, the recently awarded to Tri.County
suit claims.
Commumty Action Agency in Athens.
The plaintiff further states that the
Funding for the program wiD be
defendants have continued and will con· $14110011 from the Community Services
tlnue to m~intain said nuisa~ce, all of . Adndnistration; $120,0011 in Appalachian
which constotutes a public nu183nce and Regional Commission Funds; and
enda~gers the health, safety and welfare approximately $80,0011 in state money.
of citizens and area reSidents, and that
The project is scbeduled to run for
said nuisance will cause ir~parable injury three years and should be under way by
· and hann unless and until said nUisance the end of October. The eight counties
conditions are. stopped.
. .
affected ty the program are Meigs,
. The plaintiff asked for a preltminary Athens, Hocking, Perry, Morgan, Noble,
Uljunction and upon later trial ofthe cause, Monroe and Washington .
a permanent injunction ordering defen·
Under the program, a home repair
dants to : .
.
. crew will be operatihg in each of the eight
- RepaJr or replace the malfunc· counties, doing minor work on the homes
tioning sewage treatment device.
of se 1,ior citizens. The Gallia-Meigs
- Te':'"inate the discharge of sew~ge · Community Action Agency will supply the
or other discharge from the sewage device repair crew for Meigs County. The agency
upon the surface of the ground.
is now accepting applications for a crew
- Maintain the property in a nuisance supervisor. Applicants should have
free condition.
carpentry and supervisory experience.
Anyone desiring to apply lor the
position should stop by the agency's office
in Cheshire and fill out appropriate forms
no later tban Sept. 28.
.
When a house is determined to need
rna ior repairs, CAA wiU help the
·homeowner apply for a Farmers Home
Administration. 5o4 loan or grant. The
loans are made on a low-interest rate.
Loans and grants are available for up to
$5,0011.
ill
If the funds are· approved, CAA w
•
I
make minor home repairs while major
By Boyd A. Ruth
County or
township zoning repairs wit! be made by private
Soil Co111ervallon Service
proposed as a means to Insure quatity contractors on a contract basis with CAA.
POMEROY - Towns and other growth in91ead of just quantity growth.
political and subdivisions in the future will
This could protect many landowners
receive federal money in solving water from possible decreasing land values. For
problems, including sewage treatment example, if an .undeslral!le business were
facilities, only if they are under the urn· established adjacent to one'• property, or
brella of the "208 Water Quality ifthe neighboring land was unwisely used,
Management Program."
the property value might suffer.
Sediment ordinances to help reduce
That became clear - and was a
COLUMBUS - . Checks totaling
''surprhdng discovery' ' - when the Shade runoff rrom construction sites Was 81so $117,294.83 were mailed to the Gallipolis
Creek, Leading Creek and District Ohio suggested. .
.
City School System and Gallia County
River Tributaries •ubcommlttee met
An agriculture and' urban sediment Board of Education under the State school
Wednesday evening In the Meigs bill is now being considered by the state foundation program for September.
Gallipolis City Schools received
Agriculture Service Center conference legislature which would help solve some
roon! In Pomeroy.
water quality problems. Also, local $104,041.45 while the county board got
The subcommittee is the ·local voice leaders plan to meet with Division of $13,253.38. In addition, the state paid
representing this area In the 208 Water Reclamation persOnnel about a new law $19,837.49 to the school teachers
Quality Management Program. Proposed which offers financial assi•tance to retirement system and $3,685 to the school
projectsnowmustbeincluded In the "208" reclalin private and public owned aban· employees retirement system.
Plan of an area.
doned strip mine lands.
Problems that cause or might cause
The date for the next local "208"
water poUution In the future were meeting will be announced after the
discussed as were po.pible solutions. regional watershed meeting on October 26
Water quality problema Included were at Rio Grande. The public is encouraged to
unsafe water wells, unreclaimed surface send any problems or sugge91ed solutions
mines, buDding stte runoff, on..Ute sewage pertaining to water &lt;!1iallty to : Soil Con·
disposa~ and agriculture runoff from servation Service, )lox 432, Pomeroy, Ohio
overgruln&amp; or cuhlvatlon on steep sloP.,s. 45769.
RACINE - Homecoming activities
Some alternatives for dealing with
Attending the meeting were Henry
will
be held · at Southern High School
the8e problema Included a soU survey for Wells and Richard Jones. Meigs County
Friday,
Sept. 30 during halftime. A parade
the county which would provide basic Commissioners; Mayor Fred Hoffman,
ln!OI'IIlllllon to help solve the majority of · Middleport; Davin Wright, Chalnnan; wiU be held Friday afternpon at 2 p.m.
the problems. The proposed road from Roy Miller, Vice-Chainnan; Gary Aspln, starting at the high' school.
Everyone interested in particiapting
Roclo: Sprlnjjs to Ravenswood wu one recording secretary; this reporting
in
the
parade is asked to call Donnie
project which could probably be speeded secretary, and Karin Aspln, concerned
Dudding
at the high school. The parade is
up II a soU survey of that area were citizen.
open
to
anyone.
available.
.

Area 208 Plan key to

receiving federal aid

Foundation funds
come to schools

Homeooming will
be held at game

•,.

Byrd'' Ill!\ ol "IIIW&lt;I" legisllltion,
which is headed by energy
measures, he said It might be P"ssed
this year because it is relaovely
oonc..'Qlllroversial.
The House bill would amend the
Age Discriminatioo in Employment
Act of 1967, which prohibits job
discrimina lion against people over
the age of 411 and the forced
retirement of people under the age
of 65.
As passed by the House, the
legislation would extend protection
under the law up IJl the age of 70.
The bill would not prevent those
who wish to retire earlier from doing
so.
The legislation also would
eliminate mandatory retirement at
70 for most federal workers.
It would not affect the retirement

age for certain government
workers. including air traffic
controllers, .firefighters, law
enforcement officers and Foreign
service personnel.
The legislation also would not
apply to airline pilots, whose
retirement age is subject to Federal
Aviation Administration
regulations.
While the upper age limit of 711
would apply immediately to most
people , the House bill would
temporarily exempt existing labor
contracts which provide for
mandatory retirement between the
ages of 65 and 70.
The exemption would be for two
years or until cootracts expire,
whichever comes first.
The legislation would have. no
Continued on Page /\·2

ttttint

tmts

ELBERFELDS

4 PIECE GROUP

AtoUI' bank ... you're a lways the boss:·
Our Auto Loan rates a re low.
And ou r service is fast!
We know who's boss I

~

The Southern High School
marching band under the

direction of Jesse Browning
Services Legion Home. West Main St ., will PArticiPAte In the ~e
Administrative
Festival In Jackson on
I.
Oirector Richard D. Jackson Pomeroy.
Approval for the con · ,__ The bitnd PAr11ciPA
sa id this will be the first
recenttr, In lhe Band-A· Ramo
of the new pot.t
building for the community stryctlon
home In the Rock Springs at Mar ett11.
college which is now holding area hes been received from
Band boosten have purclasses In Rio Grande College the· slate and a decision on chased and PAid for per·
whether or not to proceed cusslon Instruments valued
facilities.
be made Immediately . at $1.200.
The
combination mvst
All Interested post members
technology building will have are also lnYiled to attend the
The
Tuppers
Pla ins
Community Club will hold Ito
laboratories for several special meeting.
annual Thanksgiving turkey
technice,l programs, in·
dinner Oct. 22 at the Orange
The
OH-KAN
Coin
Club
will
eluding natural science,
hold a regular business Township Fire House In
business,
health
and meeting Monday In the social Tuppers Plains.
engineering. The on~ory rooms of the Columbus and
A meeting of OAPSE
building with 4&amp;,000 square Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Chapter.
Local 17. will be
Bldg
.
on
Mill
Sl.
In
Mid·
feet of floor space will also dleporl. A social hour and held at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at
have faculty offices.
trading session precedes the 8 lhe Meigs Junior High School
Bida will be opened October p.m. meeting . OJt-of-town In Middleport .
13 In the Colwnbus office of coin dealers wlll be present to
Past Matrons of Pomeroy
the Division of Public Works, buy. sell, and trade collector Chapter
186, OES, will meet
Items. A 30-lot coin auction
a part or the Ohio Depart· will follow . R11freshments at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the
(Continued from pege 1) ment of Administrative will be served. Club president home of Dorothy Woodard In
Langsville.
impact of user charges on the Services.
inland waterways.
"The steel industry In the New jobless
United States is in real
economic trouble. It was no at · 11 480
accident that steel mills
The ~umber of newly
located along our rivers • unemployed persons filing
where there was cheap water initial claims for benefits
O~EN
tral\llportatlon and nearby under the regular Ohio Law
raw materials. Taxes on ~ny reached 11,480 during the
FRIDAY
part of the steel makmg week ending September 17, a
economy wtU f~er errode slight 1.9 percent increase
TIL 8 P.M.
~. U. S. competltlveneS$. .
over the previous week's total
J.a~anese
steel
IS of 11,265, according to Albert
providing ov.er 20 percent of G. Giles, Administrator of the
our domestic steel needs. Ohio Bureau of Employment
That IS equal to two-thirds of Services
the production from the Pitts·
burgh district. Taxes and our
TO HOSPITAL
governments policy could
The Pomeroy Emergency
cause the loss of over 90,000 Squad went to the Ar·
jobs In our area.
mentrout residence in
"Dave Roderick, president Naylors Run at 10:11 a.m.
of United States Steel also Thursday for Julia Spencer
complains · of government who was taken to Veterans
action as he explained that Memorial Hospital.
the Japanese steel industry is
leveraged With an Indebted·
E-R CAU.ED
neSl! thai exceeds 80 pet.
The
Middleport ER Squad
Obviously the Japanese
was
called
this morning at
Central Bank has given Its
O.K ., because nowhere else in 5:19 a.m. to Storys Run for
the world would a banker, Joe Leach, a medical patient,
outside of Georgia, in his who was taken to Holzer
right mind lend money to a ·Medical Center.
cyclical business with a
ASK TOWED
capital stl')lcture that con·
i\ marriage license was
sists of 80 pet. indebtedness. issued to Roger Thomas
" It Is very ·important to all Pullins, 22, Athens, and Susan
of us in this area who depend Henderson, 18, Alfred.
on water transportation for a
healthy Industrial economy In
· the Ohio Valley. Gallipolis
Locks and Darn's future will
(Continued from pege I)
be determined by what the
Congress and the DOT does in imp.lrtant tieCause it has
the next year.
returned to democratic rule
"Gallipolis Lock Is the only after the authoritarian
•
remaining bottleneck be· regime of former Prime
tween Cairo and Montgomery . Minister Indira Gandhi.
Locks just below Pittsburgh. .Brzezinski pointed out the
All you aU know we had United States respects
serious delays that are ex· India's neutrality.
ST'iiE #9020
tremely costly at Gallipolis
-In Iran, Carter wiU lunch
the last few years. The last with the shah during a brief
fran the
repair work at Gallipolis stopover on the way to
CAMPUS rollection
caused a back log of some 32 Europe. The United States
~&lt;~,ws at an added cost w has been contributing to
shippers of nearly $2 million. Iran's military and economic
"The Corps of Engineers buildup while Iran has been
It looks like rugged corduroy ... but it's a knit shirt in
have a good practical plan to sympathetic to U.S. oil needs.
brushed nylon! Plaid Inside trim adds to the masculine
look.. Pockets balance out the detailing -of the four~
· upgrade Gallipolis Lock by
-France constitutes a deli·
button
plaCket front . Another innovative look from
constructing a new 1,200 foot cate stop because of t~
Campus
.
·
lock on the West Virginia side forthcoming French
that will more than double the parliamentary election.
capacity of· the lock artd
-In Brussels, CArter Will
provide a safety factor that Is call on Belgium's King
Men's and Boys' Department, 1st Floor
a must to Insure future traffic Baudouin and hold meetings
needs. The construction of with NATO allies and
this new faclllty at Gallipolis members of the European
depends on the Lock and Dam Common market.
26 Issue and on the
precedences that wlll be set
by the Congress In the next
several months.
APPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
"In facing this Issue the
Waterways A•soclation of
Pittsburgh solicited . the
senators ·and congressmen
from the tri-state area and
asked their advice. The
general overall answer
alway• seemed to be, 'get to
the grass roots.' The
congressmen told us, 'If my
constituents make noises and
are asking for things, then I
pay notice. I am their
representative and will
support their declalons.'
"So the ' Waterway.s
Association Initiated a
community
relations
program. We solicited In·
dustry for fWlds and got a
budget together of about
$47,000, hired a professional
.
public relations firm and got
to work trying to teU the real
river story to our 'graas
roots.' The results have been
good so far, In our limited
area of influence. Both the
Pennsylvania aenators and
aU the western Pennaylvania
congressmen have come
around to support our
waterway billa.''
In order to get this message
to local audience, a llllde
presentation,
''Common
Gift," tollowed.
It wu announced by
Matthew Redllng, COVIC
president, that Gallla 's
representative on the COVIC
board wlll he Paul Knotts.
President Redllng also
8Mounced Lou Plllltl, retired
chamber of commerce
mllnager In Ashland, will
992-3629
Pomeroy, 0.
serve u a c1nsultant for the
COVIC.
Governor James A. Rhodes
announced today the state is
taking bids for the projected
t2 million technical career
center for Rio Grande
Community College in Gallla
County.
" This new. facility will
bring improved . vocational
education opportunities
closer to persol\ll In this
southeastern Ohio area.
Vocalional education
adequately prepares the
Individual to hold a job so he
can take his righUul place in
society," the Governor said.

.......

MIODLEPORT-POM EROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Southem
to vote on
6.5 mills
KACINE - Voters of the Southern
Local School District wiD go to the polls in
a special election Oct. 25 to vote up or down
a 6.5 mill school operating levy.
This was the decision of board
members who met in regular session
Thursday night to discuss the problems of
the district since it was annowtced last
week the district has only enough money to
operate Willi Oct. 6, according to a
financial cash analysis conducted by the
state auditor's office.
Voters of the district turned down a 10
mill new tax resoundingly at a special
election in August. This time the millage
has been reduced and the state auditor's
office has decreed that the closing of the
. sehools of the district due to lack of money
is nece5$lry. The proposed operating levy
would be in effect two years.
The board decided Thursday night
that the schools of the district can be open
Wltil the close of classe• on Oct. 7 rather
than Oct. 6. The Oct. 7 date will mark the
close of the first six weeks .
The board approved Mrs. Ruth Sellers
as a substitute custodian and approved
••
passenger pickup and discbarges for the
sclrool buses as prepared by the drivers.
Named to the list of substituie tearheril
were Jeanie Slawter, health ~and physical
education ; Frances Foster, first through
PRoGRESSING RAPIDLY :_ The colonial style building being erected on
eighth grade; William Youog, seventh
Pomeroy's West Main Street will he the new home ol the Athens County Savings
through 12, English and biology, and Vinas
and Loan, Pomeroy branch . .Completion date is expected by the middle of
Lee, one through eight.
December. The building is being built by Karr Construction Co.
Thomas Hill was employed as a
Tegular bus driver ar\d the board gave
permission for use of the Syracuse
building by Qlb Scouts Pack 242 every
Monday and on the third Thursday of each
month and the Racine Elementary
bqilding to the school's PI'O on every third
Monday, except December. The
pennisslon is granted only for as long as
schools remain open for this year.
Board mem~ers attending were
1\obert Sayre, president; Dallas Hill, vice
president ; Jack Bostick, Greg Roush ar\d
David Nease . A special meeting has been
One of two county-wide levies wiU be a set for Sept. 29 at 7:30 p.m.
Numerous tax levies face Meigs
County voters and voters in th~ one mill tax which would proviile total
subdivisions of the county in the November emergency medical services in Meigs
election, the Meigs County Board of County. The tax is new and will be known
as "lsSue 27." It is ufiderstood that under
Electioos said Saturday.
the plan emergency squads of the "?un~
would be united but would still maintain
their community identities. No plan has
been reported on what the levy would
provide, how it would be used or even if it
GALLlPOUS - Seven juveniles were
would he distributed among the squads.
Several questions have heen directed to expected to be charged with deliilquency
involving three counts o! breaking and
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ohio's the county commissionets in regard to the entering, theft and vandalism as In·
operation
of the levy.
congressional delegation is seeking a
The second tax measure on a coWlty· vestigator George Plants of the GaWa
meeting soon with President Carter to wide basis is a one mill levy which County sheriff's department ended a long
discuss mounting unemployment in !Jle according to the ballot is for money to investigation here Friday afternoon.
state's steel industry.
Deputy Plants said the juveniles will
meet expenses of the Meigs County
And U. S. Sen•. Jolul Glenn and General Health District. Tbat levy if be charged with breaking and entering of.
Howard Metzenbaum, both D·Ohio, appro·.·ed, would be in effect for 10 years. an antique shop owned by Anita Ashcraft
Saturday aMounced plans to fonn a
Levies for the sub-divisions filed at at Eureka. The shop had been entered at
bipartisan senatorial caucus to review
least three time• during the past year.
this time include :
legislative proposals and other alter·
Rutland Village, two mills renewal,
lnve91igator Plants, Gary Bane of the
natives relating to foreign steel Imports five years, current expense.
Gallla County Juvenile Court and an In·
and environmental regulations.
Pomeroy Village, 1.9 mills renewal, vestigator from the Bureau of Criminal
They said In a statement, "We belleve five years; current expense. -.
Identification from London, 0 . bave been
the time has come lor us :.. to expend our
Racine Village, 1. 7 mills renewal, five working on the case.
discussion of the problems lacing the steel years, current expense.
It was reported that several valuable
.
industry to prevent any further
Letart Township, I mill, renewal, five antiques were destroyed.
deterioration of the .steei economy and to years, cemetery maintenance.
preserve the tllousands of steel industry
R\ltlaild Township, .3 of I mill, five
NEXT MEETING SET
jobs that are jeopardized.''
years, renewal, cemetery maintenance.
POMEROY- The next meeting of the
Glenn said the Ohio senators and
Sutton Township, .4 of I mill, five Meigs County Regional Planning Com·
representatives want to meet· with the years, reneWal, cemetery maintenance. mission will be held on the fourth Monday
President, Treasury Secretary W. Michael
In Pomeroy Village there is a in October. During the coming week the
Blwnental and Special Representative for referendwn to be voted upon ,to repeal a $5 indusirial site committee composed of
Trade Robert Strauss about the impact of pennissive auto license additional tax
Thereon Jqhnson, Orien Roush and C. E.
rising steel imports on domestic steel.
which was approved by council recently. Blakeslee is expected to .meet with the
Layoffs aMoWiced by Ohio steel !inns
In Salem and Columbia Townships there Athens County committee in conjunction
Ibis month have Included 600 jobs at the 'are wet an,d dry issues on the sale of beer.
with its work.
Annco Steel Corp. In Middletown, 200 at U.
S. Steel In YoWigstown and 5,0011 at
Youngstown Sheet and Tube. As the
nation's second largest steel producing
state, Ohio employs about 175,000 steel
workers.
Glenn said the delegation also decided
to find out from steel executives why the
COmPAniea have not taken stepa, such as
GALLlPOLIS - Gallia Academy High and Wings, "Silly Love Songs," then
making a plea t.o the International Trade
played a ballad titled, "Don't Give Up on
Commission, to bring relief from imports, School's marching band presented its Us," from the TV series, Starsky ani
halftime show of the season before
and to request !hat the. Department of second
a hume audience on Memorial Field Hutch .
Justice appeal a U. S. Court- &lt;f Appeals
Next game a majoriette feature to the
night.
decision reversing the F:r.vironmental Friday
tune
of the theme song from Swat. Prior to
The musicians of Director Rod
Protection :.gency's exemption of eight Tolliver,
in a coocert selection, beg ian their the GAHS performance the visiting Coal
Mahonlng River Valley steel mills from show with the 1976 hit by Paul McCartney Grove band presented Its show.
federal dean-water standards·.

..

Seven levies will

face Meigs voters
Meeting asked

Juveniles
in trouble

with Carter

Blue Devil band. m second show

'
f

I

�A· 2- The Sunday Tlmes..senunet. SWlday, Sept. 2$,1977

Old huddy

Ohillco Days festival
fo11r days this week
WELL'!TON - Now in its
fourth consecutive year, the
" Ohillco" Days Festival will
take place on the streets here

Wednesday. Sept. 28 through spoosored by The Wellston
Ohillco Society. th~ festival ,
Saturday, Oct. I.
An outgrowth of the 1973 stresses " old time.. acCentennial Celebration and tivities, dress and · family
participation .
There are games, country
music. rides, contests, gospel
singing,
midway . flea
markets, sales and good food
during the four days,
climaxed at 6 p.m . on
Saturday evening when the
spectacular parade steps off.
The public is invited to
Wellston, join the fun , dressup in old fashioned clothing,
enter the games and be in the
parade ; an entry form ap.
peats elsewhere in this
paper.
.
For festival information
fire fighting organizations.
contact
Billy Allen, chair·
Written
instruction
man,
336
Souith
OHio Avenue,
materials are made available
or
Mrs.
Shirley
Wellston
to the instructor and to each
Starkey,
secretary.
City
fire fighter by the Division of
Building
,
Broadway,
Vocational Education. The
Eastern Local School District Wellston, Ohio 45692. For
is cooperating in the program parade information write to
with Supt. John Riebel Herbert S. Taylor, Parade
currently supervising adult marshal, RJ) 3, Box 147·A,
Albany, Ohio 45710.
education.

gets help

from Carter

Firefighters to
begin training

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
15 members of the Orange
Twp. Fire Department are
beginning an organized
course of instruction to im·
prove local f1re protection.
Through the efforts of Chief
Bob Tripp, a fire service
training instructor has been
obtained to give 30 clock
hours of instruction to local
lire lighters. The instructor,
Joe Struble, of Pomeroy, will
conduct weekly sessions for
the department. Certificates
will be awarded to the men
who successfully complete
the course of instruction.
The services of the in·
structor are made available
by the Trade and Industrial
Vocational Education Service
of the State · Department of
By ROBERT PENICK
Education as a part of the
KENT, Ohio (UP!) public service training
Activist attorney William
throughout the state. The
value of the training is Kunsller told about 1,000
recognized and recom· demonstrators rallying at the
barren site of the 1970 Kent
mended by the Division of
State University . shootings
state Fire marshal, the I.S.O.
Saturday that attacks on
ant\ representatives .of state
students in the 1960's . were

"Sweetheart, where did you put the car? I can't find it!"

.F oundation draws high praise
ATHENS - Community
leaders from seven counties
of Southeast Ohio at the Ohio
Valley
Health
Service
Foundatin 's ninth annual
meeting in Athens Thursday

night heard two of Governor
Rhodes ' cabinet members
and the guest speaker, a
former Appalachian from
Scioto county, e~toll the
agency's accomplishments in
the health field and predict

for continued success due to
strong local leadership.
Dr. John H. Ackerman,
State Director of Health,
congratulated the Foundation
for "overcoming tremendous

Kent demo.nstrators told shootings were

deliberate and planned constituting murder

Kent victims' parents
hold to site as shrine
alternatives proposed by
By ROBERT PENICK
KENT, Ohio (UP!) -The school president Brage
parents of two the four Golding to moving the gym,
students killed in 1970 at Ke~t which is to be built near the
State University by National · site Qf ·the shootings.
"We want the area to be a
Guardsmen said Friday night
they do not want the school to national historical site so
name a proposed gymnasium people will remember ·what
happe..,. here," said Mrs.
after the slain students.
Scheuer.
Mr. and · Mrs. Arthur
Krause, of Pittsburgh, and · The May 4th·Coalition, the
Mr. and Mrs. Martin group leading the fight
Scheuer, of Youngstown, said against the gym, suffered a
at a campus press conference mild division over tactics
that "the school has not done Friday on the eve of its
anything during the past biggest rally effort against
seven years except add to our construction of the buil!\ing.
A dozen members of the
misery."
'
Coalition
formed a splinter
Mrs. Scheuer said the
group
dedicated
to passive
parents of the other two slain
students hold ·the same resistance, upset with talk
about taking over the
position.
site
on
The Scbeuers and Krauses construction
Saturday.
The
Coalition's
said they also do not accept

deliberate and constituted
murder.
The crowd gathered at the
muddy plot and !:Hoot gully
that used to be Blanket Hill
for a Stop-The-Gym Rally in
protest against KSU's
construction of a $6 million
gym complex on a spot gym
opponents say should be
strength remained in excess
of 200.
Both groups said they
expected " busloads of
supporters" for Saturday's
rally on· the Kent Commons
near the construction site.
Speakers for the rally will
include Chicago Seven
attorney William • Kunstler,
who represented the Coalition
in its legal battle to stop the
gymnasium, and anti-war
author Ron Kovic.
Site preparation for the $6
million gymnasium near
where four students were
killed and nine were wounde!\
by Ohio National Guard
gunfire on May 4, 1970, began
last weekend.
It was the first work since
July 29 when a federal judge
issued a restraining order
against consiruction, setting
off a series of court battles
. that ended in the Coalition's
•defeat in the U.S. Supreme
·Court.

Deregulation cost cited by senator
natural gas prices would hike monthly
heating bills for the average homeowner to
$70 by 19785.
He cited figures provided by the
congressional budget office showing that
winter heating bills for a typical
homeowner woul~be up to $61 monyhly by
1980 under deregulation and up to $70 by
1985.
Under the administration's proposal
which would keep controls on rates, the
average monthly biU would rise to $43 in
1980 and $47 by 1985. Met.lenbaum said he
would keep a campaign promise to fight
unjustified boosts in energy cost by
"leading this battle against any and all
proposals that would deregulate the price
of natural gas. "

WASHiNGTON (UP!) -Sen. Howard
M. Metzenbaum, D.Qhio, told his
colleagues Saturday that deregulating

$202,020 received

in school subsidy
POMEROY - The three local school
districts of Meigs County received a total
of $202,019.87 from the September . State
School Foundation Subsidy program,
4
according to State Auditor Thomas E.
Fergli!On.
Amounts received by each district, after
deductiOIIll for retirement of teachers and
non-teaching employes, are: Eastern
Local, $47,281.42; Meigs Local, $112,738.97,
and Southern Local, $51,999.48. In addition
the county board of education received a
direct allOtment of $14,478.86.

Help asked from

National Guard

Work Tll Age

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) - Help was
sought from the National Guard and the
Defiance County Common Pleas Court
Saturday, after about 300 striking Johns·
Mansville Corp. workers stormed one of
the firm's three Defiance plants.
Police said. the strikers broke down a
gate, ravaged a car and broke windows at
the plant. Three men were arrest~d and
charged with disorderly conduct and ,
criminal mischief. One was also charged
with public intoxication.

(Continued from Page A·l )
effect ori workers' eligibility for
Social Security retirement benefits,
but its spon!lOl's said it might result
in some reduction in the drain on the
Social Security Fund.
The Congressional Bu!\get Office
said in its report on the bill that
there was no way of determining
how many people might continue
working after the age of 65.
Most of them would have their
Social Security payments reduced
. until they reached 70. So long as they
work they would also continue
contributing to the Social Security
Fund.
"Some Social Security savings are
likely • a consequence of the
legll!latlon because some workers
wllllort~~o private pensions and part
or all ri. their Social Security
benellta In order to continue
.....~." the committee said.

.

'

(

'

MORE HOUSES NUMBERED
POMEROY - Jim Page, project
engineer for the county-wide house
numbering project said Sllturday houses
on 10 more roada have received new
numbers. They are Bar 30 Road (TR280),
Hickroy Hills Road (TR290), Partlow
Road (TR307), Betzing Road (TR299),
Cristy Road ( TR295), Myers Road
(TR300), Hickory Lake Road (TR289), Owl
HoUow Road (TR281), Old Seven Road
(TR294and TR22A) and Silver Ridge Road

•

I

preserved. They say it ought
to be a memorial to the four
students killed May 4, 1970, .
by National Guardsmen
intent on stopping an anti-war
demonstration.
Kunstler,
who
has
represented the May 4
Coalition in a long and so far
futile battle to stop the gym
construc;tion, said, 11 The
attack on students (at Kent
State and other U.S.
campuses ) was a deliberate
one ... these were murder by
those in highest places ,
including the governor of this

ment marked the return of
students as " an active
political force," in the United
States, and told them the
rally should be seen as a
victory party since "we held
off those ... bulldozers all

swnmer."
He drew heavy applause
when he. said university offi·
cials should "resod, rebuild
the hill and put it back the
way it was."

Police, meanwhile, were

keeping a low profile at the
campus.
Portage County Sheriff
Allen McKitrick instructed
state."
He said the anti-gym move- 300 deputies from five
counties earlier Saturday not
to arrest anyone who may try
to reoccupy the gym site. He
said police action would wait
until
Monday
when
construction workers are due
Sunday Tirues.Sentinel
back at work.
Publ is hed every Sund~:~y by The
McKitrick said protesters
Ohu Valley Publishln~ Cu.
wanted ·..a national incident
GALLIPOLIS
DAILY TRIBUNE
and they'll get the shock of
825 Third Ave., Ga llipol is, Ohio
their ' Jives when they go to
!156Jl.
Pubh.shed every weekday evening
that
ditch and see nobody
except Sa turd&lt;:~y . Second Chlss
there.
" He said " We're tired
Postage Pai d at Ga llipoHs, Ohio
4:i631.
of playing king of the
THE DAILY SENTINEL
mountain."
lll Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . 45769.
~bti s hed every week day evening
His ·plan instead was to
ex cept Sa turda y. Entert!d as :;a.'Ond
keep
his huge security force
class rnttiling matlcr at Prnneroy,
1
' Within
minutes" of the
Ohio Po!t1 Office.
By carri er daily lind Sunda y 7Sc
campus
and
to move in only if
per WL'Ck .. Motor route S:J.25 per mOO· '
the
opponents
try to leave
th
MAIL
campus
and
march
SUBSCRIP'I'ION RATES
downtown. He . told his
The G&lt;~llipul i.s Da ily Trlbune in
Ohio and West Vlr,.,:inill one year
deputies not to be caught in a
$12.00 : six months $1 i .5ll; thrte moncompromising situation.
ths $7.00. Elsewherll! S26.00 per
He ·added, however, that
year ; s'l.x month.s $13.50; thrt:!e months S7.a!l ; motor route $3.25 monany one still at the site
thly.
Monday would be "subject to
The Daily Sentinel, ooe year
$22.00; Six mo nths$11.Ml ; threemuntru; $7.00. Elsewhere $26.00 ; six
months $l3.50; thrt:!e months $7.50.
The United Press lnt.emtional is
exclusively entitled to the USe fur
publh:atw n of aU news dispatches
rrl!tlited to Lhe new.spaper and 11.bo
the local news published herein.

(·

wearing a mask while
committing a misdemeanor.
That charge is a felony
carrying a minimum twoyear jail sentence upon

conviction.
At a pre-rally new&amp;
conference, Kunstler said
opponents will bring a federal
court action, charging a
conspiracy among Portage
County judges, university
officials and others to violate
the rights of May 4 Coalition
members and supporters.
Another action, be said,
would be filed to resist ·a
Portage County grand jury
that is hearing teslimooy
about incidents arising from
the gym controversy.

Steel layoffs

Best camping days are
coming up in October
The height of the camping
season is past and the best
time to camp is just coming
up .
The days are cooler, but
warm enough· for comfort,
and the nights are perfect for
curling up in a warm sleeping
bag.
The elderberies are getting
ripe enough for a pie and nuts
of various kinds are almost
ready 11:&gt; be eaten.
Autumn campers are
· treated to the bright display
the trees as they prepare to
shed their leaves. Birds of all
descriptions, even species not
normally folUld in Ohio, can
be observed as they migrate
south for the winter . Animals
are getting their heavy
winter coats, and the fish are
beginning to bite again in the
etMl ler water.
Most of the state and
private campgrounds arolUld
Ohio remain open well into
the month of October, and
many campers find the time
betwe•u nnw and their .
closing an ideal time to .head
for the country. Most hi the
~•urists art' ~one and the
tamping areas are tightly ·
ll'ed. lf i1 is P"'"iblc for you

,r

..

obstacles in obtafuing quality
health programs" but observed there was much work
remaining for · its future at·
tention.
Administrator of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services Albert G. Giles, who
assisted in the establishment
of the Foundatin in 1966 when
he was in charge of Ohio's
Applachian Redevelopment
program, noted that the
commitment of the people of
seve)l counties to the
Foundation's goals and
programs was responsible for
its acclaim as one of the
"most successful rural health
systems in the nation."
Guest speaker Rev. Canon
Laurence Hall, who has been
deeply involved in com·
munity affairs in the Appalachian regions of New
York state and southern Ohio,
expressed "amazement at
the great strides in health
delivery" in Southeast Ohio.
Dr. William H. Allen, Jr.,
Athens, was re-elected
president of the 54-member
Board of Trustees of the
agency, and chaired the
meeting. In addition to Allen,
the following were elected as
vice presidents of the
executive committee of the
~member board of trustees:
Judge John L. Beckley.
Vinton County; Bernard
Fultz, Meigs County; Dr.
Thomas W. . Morgan, Gallia
County; Dr. A. Burton Payne,
Lawrence County; Dr.
Thomas Price, Hocking
County; Joseph B. Vanity,
Jr., Athens County; Dr. John
Zimmerly and Max W.
Morrow, Jackson Couniy.
PLummer,
Einon H.
Wellston,
was
elected
secretary and· executive
director and Hugh Kirkel,
Galliplis, hospital council
coordinator.
Elected· as mem liers of the
executive committee were
WiUiam Bourne, Lawrence .
County; Robert S. Mathews,
Athens County; and Dr.
Thomas Washam, as legal·
medical advisor of Pike
County.
Council Medical Societies
named the following as their
representatives to the Board
for the comin2 year:
Athens, Dr. L. I. Goldberg;
Gallia, Dr. Donald M.
Thaler; Jackson, Dr .. Carl J.
Greever; Hocking, Dr. L, W.
starr; Lawrence, Dr. Patrio
Tismo; and Meigs, Dr.
Raymond E. Boice.

(Continued · from Page A·l)
not just a trade problem ...
but indicates a basic trouble
in the economy - stagging in
the investment sector which
holds back the steel industry,
and labor and material costs
rising very, very rapidly."
Heimlich said immediate
solutions will not even be
discussed at the OECD talks.
"The focus of the meeting
is to reach an agreement on
what the problems are. Our
hope is that discussions on
solutions will come later in
the year but we have no firm
commitment they will," he
said.
"We're not going into the
meeting with a short-run ·
immediate arrest.11
solution in mind. We're trying
He said any person to develop a system where we
arrested wearing a mask, a can manage our crises
tactic by the gym opponents internationally in a better
to avoid police identification, way. But this is nothing that's
would be charged with goipg to be put Into effect this
year.'''
With the adminstration's
reluctance to change policies,
coalitions seeking changes
are increasing in numbers
a!)d strength.
The most recent coalition
announced was in the Senate.
Sens. H. John Heinz Ill, R·
Pa., and Jennings Randolph,
!).W.VA., plan to mail letters
chances are very good that
Monday to inv1te other
you'll have most of them to
senators to join the Senate
yourself .
·
steel coalition. The House
If ·there is a drawback to
formed · a steel coalition
camping this time of year, it
earlier this week. Local
is that you'll need to carry ·
government officials from
clothing to cover both warm steelmaking areas across the ·
and
cool
situations.
country formed another Sept.
Sometimes you can ease this
6.
requirement by combining
In announcing the Senate
articles of clothing.
steel coalition for Heinz, aide
For example, two shirts,
Larry McCarthy, sald, "The
one of wool and one of cotton admiriistration doesn't seem
can ·cover a wide range of
to have much sensitivity.
temperatures. The cotton one
"When Heinz met with
will be cool enough to wear
Carter last Wednesday, it
during the day when the sun
was indicated that the first
is warm. and the wool one time the president realized
will usually suffice for cool the serioll$ness of the steel
evenings. If the weater gets industry's problem was with
too chilly, you can pull the the Youngstown Sheet and
wool shirt over the cotton Tube
closing."
Co.
shirt for added warmth.
Youngstown Sheet and Tube
Rain gear should always be
Monday said it was shutting
carried on trips in the fall. its Campbell facilities near ,
The weather can change in a Youngstown, Ohio, affecting

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
ROANOKE, Va. (UP!) President
Carter
campaigned acrosS Virgirui
Saturday for Democratic
gubernatorial
candidate
Henry Howell, an old friend
and political ally engaged in a
bitter, personal war of words
his
Republican
with
opponent .
Criss-crossing the state
from the Appalachians to the
coast in a small presidential
jet, the president stopped
first in this Blue Ridge
foothill city, then moved on to
Norfolk and a $l,IJOO.;i-couple
fund-raiser in colonial
Williamsburg.
He plunged right into fray,
drawing roars of approval
from ·an estimated 10,000
persons in the Roanoke Civic
Center by picking up the
"populist" themes Howell
has been stressing in his
contest with Republican John
Dalton, including an attack
on rising utility rates .
"I know there is an
important place for telephone
and power companies in our
lives," Carter said. 11 BUt
most other states have tight .
control over the stepby..tep
increases in the charges that
are levied against conswners
and over the waste that
sometimes exists when there
is not tight control.
" In Virginia, everytime
energy costs go up the utility
companies automatically
raise your rates. That ought
to be changed!"
Howell, a jaunty and
ebullient campaigner with
rural roots, said "God bless
you" to the president as be
arrived in Roanoke and
pinned on a campaign button ·
reading "l believe in Henry
Howell."
"Our president is a man of
God, and when he speaks, the
people listen and he listens,"
Howell told the cheering
Roaooke audience. "There's
communication between .the
people and .our president."
In a preview to the heavy
campaign conunitments that
await him next year, Carter
was honoring his promise to
put the drawing power of the
White House to work for
Democrats everywhere. In
his first such outing, he
stumped New Jersey for
incumbent Gov . Brendan
· Byrne two weeks ago.
In Howellrs case, Carter
was repaying a classic
political debt to an old friend
who was also an early
supporter of his own
presidential candidacy.
He plainly likes Howell's
"populist" style and had
boned up carefully on the ·
local issues,
LAWYERS NAMED
ALEXANDRIA, Ky. (UPI)
- A committee of eight
lawyers have been appointed
to coordinate the activities of
those bringing suits in
Campbell Circuit Court
related to the Beverly Hilla
Supper Qub fire . A similar
panel 0! " lead counsel" was
appointed by U. S. District
Ju!\ge Carl B. Rubin for
federal
damage
suits
stemming from the May 28
blaze. As of Friday, there
were 28 state and 33 federal
suits filed by relatives of
victims of the Beverly Hilla
disaster.

By LEE LEONARD
. UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - .The
Ohio General Assembly
reconvenes Tuesday for the
final week of Its two-week
September session and the
spotlight once again will be
on collective bargain ing
legislation
for
public
employees.
A six-member conference
committee is to meet
Tuesday morning and again
Tuesday afternoon on that
bill, which has divided

(

.T\)hus lown,

P&amp;.,

were

announced In August) hadn't
affected Carter," McCarthy
said.

majority Democrats in the
Senate and House.
Sen. Harry Meshel , D·
Youngsiown, chairman of the
conference committee and
sponsor of the bill, said
limited testimony may be
offered on the measure.
But then be said the panel
would immediately begin
dealing with six major points
or difference between the two
chambers.
Senate
and
House
conferees seemed unwilling
to bend following testimony
last Thursday from Dayton
officials
and
city
firefighters• representative .
Meshel believes binding
arbitration for public safety
employes would head off
strikes, such as the one by
Dayton firefighters. But
House members bave shown
more sympathy toward local
government officials who
complain arbitration would
be impossible to live with and
stilt meet their bu!\gets.
If a coni erence. committee
settlement can't be reached
this week, it will have ((}wait
until October.

a

Land given
county for
•
recreation
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. ~ An
111-acre tract of land located
in this area donated by the
Appalachian Power Co. for
recreational purposes wiH
benefit the entire Bend Area,
county commissioner
WiHiam H. Rardin · said
Friday.
In a telephone conversation
with Fred Heim, division
manager of Appalachian
Power in Himtington, Rardin
was informed that in addition
to the real estate gift, a
substantial financial gift will
be forthcoming for develop.
ment. A meeting of the
Commission and represen·
tatives of Appalachian Power
will be scheduled soon to
discuss details and plan
development.
Rardin and commission
president Bob Powers have
visited the property along
with Homer Bunn, real estate
consultant to Appalachian
Power, to discuss what
possible specific aid the
power , compaqy
could
provide for development,
according to Lawrence
Butcher,
administrative
assistant to the Mason County
Commission.
The donation of this par·
ticular piece of real estate is
the result of a request made
by Rardin in 1974, when
APCO approached
the
Conunission to approve an
industrial revenue bond issue
to provide funds for in·
stallation of precipitators at
the Philip SP!Jrn Plant near
New Haven.
There are some restrictions
to the use of the land, according to Butcher. He said it
must be
utilized for
recreational purposes or
other county services and
cannot be conveyed by the
county to groups or in·
dividuals for any reasons .

The Senate wm be trying to
finish work on two major
House-passed bills , giving
utility rate discounts to the
poor and elderly and
appropriating $517 million in
capital construction funds.
Senate
Finance
The
Committee has s cheduled
bearings for Monday night
and Wednesday afternoon oo
both, but this is the first week
of Senate consideration and it
is unlikely they will be ready
for floor action .
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, !).Akron,
already has said he wants to
trim the capital construction
appropriation.
The Senate is to vote
Tuesday on legislation
introduced just last week
allowing school districts
which pass operating levies
to immediately issue short·
term notes borrowing from
next year's anticipated
revenues to stay open.
The bill, sponsored by Sen .
Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr., !).
Cleveland, would allow the
districts to bypass three
weeks of advertisements of

the notes. It would affect
about 14 districts in the state
this year.
Mea nwhile, the House has
scheduled a vote for Tuesday
on le gislation c reating
divisions of consumer finance
and credit unions in the state
Department of Commerce.
The Se nate Ways and
Means Committee will hold a
hearing Tuesday morn~ oo
House-passed legislation
providing tax exemptions for
industries converting boilers
away from natural gas.
And a House-approved bill
cr~ating a cabinet-level
Department of Energy comes
before the Senate Energy and
Public Utilities Conunittee
Thursday morning.
Opponents of legalizing the
substance Laetrile for cancer
treatment will be heard Tues·
day night in the Senate
Education
and
Health
Committee.
Both the Senate and House
reconvene at 1:30 p.m. Tues·
day .

MEIGS COUNTY
BOOKMOBILE SCHEDULE
Sepl.
26
Mid·
dleport
Elementary ,
S-11:38 a .m.; Jz.tl :31 p.m.;
Satilbury Elementary, 1·3;
Burliagbom ,
4·4 : 15 ;
County Road 10, Snowville,
4:45-5 :15; Pagevllle, 5:31).
6; H.lrrlsoavllle, 1:30-7:15;
Woll Pen, 7:4s-3; JllDCtiODt
143·7,
8 : 15·8 : 30.
Sept. Z1
Racine
Elementary, 9: 30-noon ;
Portland Elementary, 1·3
p.m. ; Portland Com·
munity, 3:15-3:45 ; Sttvero·
vute, 4-4 :38; Great Bend, 5·
5:30; Racine Bank, 6-7:30:
Mlnersvllle • Brown' s
TraDer Ct., 7:4H.

Driver of pickup truck
•
IS wanted by Sheriff

PO MEROY
Meigs
County Sheriff J a m es J .
Proffitt said Saturday his
de pariment is looking for a
pickup truck, dark colored,
with racks , believed in vol ved
in a n accident on SR 338 at
Antiquity around 12:51 a.m .
Saturday.
According 11:&gt; the report
re ceive d .
Hoba rt
R.
Ch ildress. 18, Rt. 2, Racine,
was traveling souUJ oo SR 336
when a pickup,truck suddenly
stopped in front of him a nd he
hit it in the rear .
OFFICIAL NAMED
The driver of the pickup,
GREENVILLE, Pa. (UPI )
according
to Childress and
James McCullough ,
director of athletics at Thiel
College, has been named ·
commissioner
of
the
Presidents' Athletic Con·
DO One
GALLIPOLIS - No one
terence by his fellow athletic
directors.
was injured or · cited in a
minor traffic accident in·
vestigated
Friday
in
OFFICE ACCEPTED
Gallipolis.
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - The
City police said the mishap
Fraternal Order of Police, occurred at 2:04 p.m. Friday
which threatened "police on Second Ave. where an auto
actions" unless the city came operated by Calvin E. Geiger.
to contract terms, has ac· 19, Rt. 1, Bidwell, struck the
cepted a city offer of an 8 rear end of a car driven by
percent p~y raise this year Dorothy Morgan, 53, Rio
and 7 percent next year.
Grande.

Mm·or crash
hurtS

another witness whO was
that sometime Tnursday
riding in the Childress
night or early Friday
vehicle, asked if he had
someone attempted to enter
insurance. The driver of the
her store at Hacine by cuttine
pickup said he didn't either
screen on a door but a slide
and he didn't want the law
chain prevented ent ry.
ca lled. Childress said he
Thursday morning Sheriff
pushed his car off the
Proffitt and a deputy picked
roadway and the driver of the
up four Racine juveniles and
pickup truck left the area : charged
them
with
The acciden t is under
delinquency . They allegedly
investigation. No injuries · were smoking marijuana in a
were reported.
vehicle in the parking lot at
In other department the Dorcas Church Thursday
activities :
arolUld 8 a .m. TI1ey were
Edna Deem to t~ deputies released to their parents
pending hearings in Meigs
County Juvenile Court.
By r o n
W e dd ing,
supcrinteodent for Hoosier
Engineering doing work in
PRICE GOES UP
Meigs County, reported his
SAN J)IEGO (UP!)
ve hJcles had been e ntered
J ohnny Rodgers is driving his during the night at Chester .
fultls Royce again , but the He said some gas primer cord
t him an extra was stol.e n. He warned lhat
privilege co&amp;
$5,000. The U. S. Customs mishandling of this pr imer
Service said Friday it levied co rd co uld cause ser i~;~us
the penalty, in addition to a injury .
$600 import duty, after the
Otis McClintock, Racine,
wide receiver with the San said sometime Tuesday night
Diego Changers brought the his la rge roll bale ol hay was
car south from Canada.
burned in a field on Snowball
" What can I do? " Rodgers Hill. That ac'Cident also is
said. 11 lt's a $40,000 car."
under investigation.

Arts and craft ·classes
will begin in October
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Museum Arts and
Crafts Classes are going to
begin for the fall session this
October. Adult classes of
Drawing and painting and
Macrame will be offered on
Monday evenings for six
weeks.
Drawing and Painting
mainly includes watercolor
painting, and pencil, char·
coal, and ink drawing. This
class will be taught by Tricia
Adleta ·on Monday evenings,
7-9:30. The fee for this class is
$26, ·all materials included.
The Macrame class offers a
variety . of . knots and
techniques taught by Sandy
Henderson and Lois Snyder.

9:30.

An introduction to the
classes will be provided at the
Meigs County Museum,
Monday, 7 p.m. Registration
and payment of fees will take
place at this meeting. Any
further
questions . and
payment of fees sh.ould be
directed to Mrs. Adleta, 145
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Phone 992-0040 or 992-66:il.

Diets to be explained
JACKSON - Diet is closely
related to chronic diseases.
Man·y people have problems
understanding these diets,
according to Sue Cable
Klingelhafer, nutritionist
with the S. E. District Office,
Ohio Department of Health,
who will speak on this subject
at the Jackson District
Health Conference on Oc·
Iober 13.
Mrs. Ktingelhafer will also
be available to answer in·
dividuat questions following

TRY OUR NEW SUPER BURGER
OR BIG FISH AND SAVE
WITH THE COUPONS BELOW

Sandy and Lois have both
been students in the Meigs
Arts and Crafts classes under
Tricia Adleta for one year.
This class covers four
projects to be completed in
six weeks with a fee of $26, all
materials included. It also
takes place on MOndays, 7·

her presentation.
The district health meeting
in the Jackson Extension
Area will be held at the
Jackson Area Extension
Center near Jackson from 10
a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Thursday,
Oct. 13.
Details on the entire
program and information on
making reservations are
available from Bettie Clark,
County Extension Agent,
Home Economics, telephone
446-4612, ext. 32.

The

Berry's World

"Apparently
the
Bethlehem Steel Corp.
furloughs ( 7,300 layoffs at
Bethlehem Steel facilities in
Lackawanna, N.Y., and

:::::::::::·:~:::·:·:·:::::·::: ::::~:::::::::~::: :: ::·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;~

Assembly ·to try again
on new bargaining law

SAVE

24~

ONE SUPER. BURGER

75¢

pound pure ground
beef with all the fix ins on
a sesame seed bun.

114

SAVEJ2• 2 · ·

·

-

With Coupon
Expires : 10· 1-7-7

.DOUBLE

HAMBURGERS

Two-· L- ~·• ._,, PGtti..
with our filrinudtfed

w,th

$
... · .....

1'J0

Expires: 'to. l-iT .

SAVE

24~

ONE BIG FISH
''4 pound F.ish Fillet with
tangy tartar sauce on
a sesame seed bun.

With Coupon
Expires : 10-1.-77

-ENJOY YOUR FOOD
IN OUR DINING ROOM

best reason
we know for stepping up to
separates.

OR USE THE DRIVE THRU WINDOW

Today's rece;vers have more power and more ieatures than
ever before But they're also b1gger. heav1er and more
expensive than ever before So 1f you want mo re performance
than your present receiver can deliver. you may be ready for
separat es A separate tuner and integ rated amplifier. Or a
separat e prea mpl ifier and power amplifier.
1ndependent test la bs have reported that LUX separates
sound better than anyt hmg else th ey have ever heard We agree.
And we think you will too. We'll always be pleased to have you
visit us for a demonstra!Jon

BIG
BEEF
PLATTE.
R
A one-third Jb: loo
pure chopped beef steak with

SAVE 35•

Pet~

fries nr baked potato, hot bread and all you can eat
salad bar.
40
With
Expires: 10·1·17 t

*1

Coupon

SAVE 35'

ONE EXAMPLE OF A LUX "RECEIVER "
T·88V AM /Stereo FM Tuner

LUXs least cxpens1ve tuner.
vet 1r'lcludes FET fron t-end and
lint!ar-phaseceramic fllters 1n
IF sOCtiOr'l And suPerb
specHicat\ons

2

FISH
FILLET
PlATTER
deep fried fish fillets with fries or baked potato, hot

.· bread and cole slaw or all you can eat salad bar .
Expires 10·1·77

$

40 With

Coupon

L·SOV lnt"')roted Stereo
Amplilier 50 waas per channel

min1mum continuous power

1nto 8 ohms 20·20 000 Hz.

total harr'non1c d1stortaon no
more than 0 08% Features
tnclude two turnover
frequenctes each lor bass and

treble controls two cutoH
lrequ/3nctes each for high· and
1ow ftlters. two dec1c. dubbing

moment's notice and ruin an 5,000.

outing if you aren't prepared
for it.
One experience with an
autumu camping trip will
teach you what you can do
withmtt, and what y~u must
have alonM. But it's sur• t•J
teaeh you tllat this is onf' .,f
the best wa.~ s t~t camp.

to gl'l away during U1e week .

(TR293).

•

A-3-ThtSundayTimes-8entinet. Sunday, Sept.~. lll77

......

.

."" 8 lilt~•
.

L·80Y

'

•

• •

•

•

«)

1917byN~A . Inc

,;The next time Mr. Mondale drops by to tall!
aboutedministration proposals, tell him I 'm out."

r-:
~-

....,.243 THIRD AVENUE '"GALL!PO!.IS, OHIO 4563 1

l
.

I

Phone: (614) 4,!6·7886

·

·

POMEROY
NEAR THE
POMEROY-MASON
BRIDGE
OPEN 'Til 9:1 5 P.M.
SUN. thru THURS.
and 'tilll:IS P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sat.

.·
·,
.•

..

.

�A-t - TheSilnday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 25, urn

allia, Lawrence County Bureaus combined ·
any representatives , as the
board will be expanded to 11
members; the original nine
still from Galli&amp; County and
an extra two from Lawrence.
"This will mean that now
every county in Ohio will
have official representation
in the Fann Bureau," said
retiring president Frank
Mills 111.
Merle Howard read the
minutes of the last year's
annual
meeting .
The
financial
report
was
presented by Bruce Benedict,
cou nty organizational
director, and accepted.
Present lor a report on the
youth conference held in July
were Teresa Stowers and
Jennifer Scarberry. Together
they gave an enthusiastic
report of their activities at
the conference at Otterbein
College.
Glenn Gralun presented the
slate of members nominated
for the election of trustees.

t; ALL.rPOLIS - Farm
Bureau members of GaUia
•n•l Lawrence counties have
adopted a r~lution which
officially changed the GaUia
or1:anitation to the ··Gallia·
Lawrence Farm Bureau
Corporation."
Approva I of the r~lution
wa&gt; the highlight of the an·
nualmeetlng September 20 at
the Rio Grande College
Cnfcteria . A long time
m••mber of the GaUia County
Bo'.r~ of Trustees, Maurice
n .omas, read the ofricial
w.rding of the changes to the
con :Ututition which covered
th e
incorpo ration
of
Lawrence
into
the
oq~unization. The resolution
passed unanimously.
This reo rganization
provides those members
re'!ding in Lawrence County
an official voice in the Farm
Bureu u through represen·
tat,.,u on a Board of Trustees.
Gallia County will not lose

•

Ire season
tarts Oct. 1
and make the fire bum more
fiercely and spread more
rapidly. He asks residents to
burn waste paper and
household debris in safe
containers and to watch fires
until they are out.
Following are the local
wardens from whom a
burning permit may be ol&gt;tained.
GALLIA COUNTY
Cheshire and Morgan
Townships - Kenneth Ward.
RFD. Bidwell.
MEIGS COUNTY
Bedford Township - Fred
Burson, John Meeks, Ernest
Wood.
Chester Township - John
Ridenour.
Columbia Township
Reed J elfers.
Lebimon Township
CLinton Johnson.
Letart Township - Theron
Johnson, Eulll Wolle.
Olive Township - Donald
R. Baun, Skip Smales.
Orange Township - Larry
Division of Forestry rangers.
Milhone,
Dorothy Robinson.
Ba un . said during last
Rutland Township - l\ose
spring's fire season , 80
Carson,
Leodell Davidson,
pe1cent of aU fires were
James
Nicholson.
caused by careless debris
Salem Township - John
burning. Baun recommends
Col-well,
Eugene Holliday.
!hoi residents bum after 4
Scipio
Township
- Nathan
p.m. because evening
Biggs,
Howard
Daily.
gene rally brings reduced
winds, are. less subject to • Scipio Township - Wayne
sudden changes, the air cools, Chase, Raymond Cotterhill,
relative humidity rises and . Edwin Oberholzer, Myrtle
U1e forest fuels begin to al&gt;- Stanley, Mrs. Gath Town·
sorb moistu re from the send, Kenneth Welsh.
Sutton
Township
dampened air. He urges that
Lawrence
Beegle,
Vernon
residents burn on calm days
Nease,
Edson
Roush.
Marion
since wind does drr out fuels
Sloter, Woodrow Zwilling.
ltE€DSVILLE - The Obio
Divi&lt;ion of Forestry is an·
nomoringthe start of the 1977
fall lire season, Donald R.
Baun, Shade River District
Ranger, anno unced Satur;
dR y.
11,e season starts Oct. I and
will rtm through Nov. 30. The
di vision is also initiating a
cb auge in the "permit to
ki ndle fire" system, which is
rrquired by law. A permit to
open burn is required through
Uoc designated dates.
Tioe new permit will in·
corporate several changes
the most important of which
are that each permit to open
bum will be valid for the
entire fire season and that
open burning will be allowed
only Hftcr 4 p.m. and must be
cumvleted before 6 a.m. the
nt'"x-l mor.ning. There will be a
spc&gt;&lt;:oul permit available to
allow burning at other times.
However, the special permit
will be available only from

' .

Meigs Transfers
Milo B. Hutchison, Betty
Ann Hutchison to Roger
A&lt;.la u1s, R. W., Meigs.
'·
C'ia rence Wolf, dec., to
George A. Wolf, Ruth Karr,
Ciurence C. Wolf Jr ., Aff.
• 1'• ons. , Chester.
.
Ma rjorie Ball to Jeanne
P hipi:!I'S1 Pa rcel, Chester .

Wilma McDa niel, Robert
McDa niel to Wilma Me·
ll::moi, Larry R. Hoschar,
r ·acel.

William H. Wyatt, Freda
IV yaft to Betty Vale, Lot,
Mid ctleport.
Howard P. Logan, Eleanor
J Logan, Carl F. Logan,
l!?l&lt;•n W. Logan to Ronald P.
l.AJgan, Barbara E. Logan,
11c·record.
Carter French, Carolyn
~'re nch to Michael V. Gard·
m·r, Alice Faye Gardner; 1.04
A.. Chester.
"
.J:m1es H. Hanson, Dorothy
J'.l. Jlanson to Aland Lopez,
l,1;t. Pomeroy.
Juhn T. Stalarski, Dolores
E. Stalarski, Edward H.
So nlw·ski, Anne M. Amodio to
Carl L. Amodio, Parcels,
llrdfortl.
Hichard J. Shultz to An·
drew L. Sylvia, Parcel,
Scipio.
Hudolph M. Jovan, Ruth
J uvun to William Owen
Wh itlock, f'reda Whitlock,
Lot.~. Syracuse.
.J. F. Whitt[e, Sha.rlee
Newman Whittle to Ronald E.
Reynolds, Mary R. Reynolds,
Parcel, Sutton.
DideE. Hart, Laura Hart to
F.di&gt;Jvn C. Brace, .36 acre,
Sutton.
Alice J. Arnold, dec. to
Flsie Mae Martin, Cert. of
trans. , SaliSbury.
Grace Swartz to William
Richards Swartz, Gerald
Vernon Swartz, Parcels,
Orange.
Phil ~attery, J udith E.

Slattery to Mary Jane
Ebenhach , 24.~89 acres,
Bedford.
George A. Wolf, Cora Helen
Wolf, Ruth Karr, Paul R.
Karr, Clarence E. Wolf, Jr.,
Wanda Lou Wolf to otis K.
Casto, Telitha Casto, Parcels,
Chester.

Lloyd 0 . Harris to Janice
E. Gibbs, Lot 443, Pt. Lot 434 ,
Middleport.
Glenn I. Cundiff, Rachel E.
Cundiff to Sherman A.
Cundiff, Loraine M. Cundiff,
·Parcels, Sutton-syracuse.
Corbett E. Ratliff to James
Cox, Margaret Cox, 100 acre
lot, .55 acre, Salisbury.
Elsie M. Martin, Albert L.
Martin, Jr. to Albert L.
Martin , Jr. , Elsie Mae
Martin, Parcel, Salisbury.
Paul Buckley, Virgil
Buckley to Robert D. Barber,
Tammi Barber, 2 acres,
Orange .
James B. Thomas, Comm.,
George Floyd Thomas, dec.
to James B. Thomas, Kermit
F. Thomas, Parcels, Rutland.
James B'. Thomas, Eleanor
T. Thomas to Kermit F.
Thomas, Bonnie Jean
Thomas, Int. in Parcels,
Rutland.
Melvin C. Reed, Jo Ann
Reed to Monongahela Power
Co., Right Qf way, Olive.
Francis Russell Well ,
Linda Lee Well to Edgar F.
Randolph, Iris L. Randolph,
6.12 acres, Bedford.
Albert Tromm, Marjorie
E. Tromm to Stephen M.
Wood, Parkanna Wood, 1.000
acre, Rutland.
Mary E. Showalter to Earl
Showalter,
Ellen
E.
Showalter, Parcels, Chester.
Paul E. Vol! to Mahlon G.
Eblen, Mary E. Eblen, Lot
502, Pomeroy.
Roger Carpenter, Laura L.
Carpenter to Pat E. Mitchell,
Marcella S. Mitchell, Ease.,
Rutland . (

The membershop elected

incumbent Evelyn Elhott and
new member~ Merrill Rose
and Herman Wood from
GaUia County and Robert
Rutt and Linda Fuller from
Lawrence County.
Golden Canaday, Ohio
State Farm Bureau Trustee,
brought greetings from the
state board. He explained the

present

POWELL'S

Ohio's

COUKTRY
STOBES- //' h'
r1
~,,,,. . ..
/J

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU
OCTOBER 1, 1977

controversy on

southeast

-~
2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS:

Store Ho~rs
8 A. M.-10 P. M.
Mon. -Sat.
10 A.M. -10 P.M.
Sunday

burley tobacco marketing,
and said his greatest concern
is that the family farm
operation will disappear if
the pro)losed cha·nges in
marketing and price support
are put into effect.
Martha
Gearhart,

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY. OHIO

I

NEW TRUSTEES -Elected to tbe board of trustees of the newly combined Gallia·
Lawrence County Farm Bureau Corp. were Robert Rutt, left, for Lawrence County, and '
Evelyn Elliott, right, for Gallia County (reelected). Center is Frank Mills HI, retiring
president of the Gallia County Federation.

For a beautiful home-

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'

KOTALIC
LANDSCAPING
....6 -3 100

137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
700 W. MAIN ST.,. POMEROY, OHIO
STORE HOURS:
9 A.M. to 9 P.M. DAILY
NOON to 8 P.M. SUNDAY

..

....

...

•"
•
•

..

•

•

•

"
••
••
:•
"••

WILSONS

•••

GRAPE~.

AU PURPOSE
ENRICHED R.OUR

•

.••
••

••
••
•
•

..•

BOO.KS ETC. NEEDED
POMEROY - Paperback
books · and · magazines are
needed by the language arts
students of Miss Jean Shaver
at the Meigs High School. The
books and magazines can he
on any grade level. Persons
having contributions may
leave them at the school
office.or if unable tQ do so can
leave a message for Miss
Shaver at the office. ·
SUIT DISMISSED
POMEROY - A suit filed
by Beasley and Matthews,
Inc., Athens, in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
aga inst Bernard Gilkey,
Middleport , has
been
dismissed in the ccurt due to
an out of court settlement.

§:§...:"

the mood
offall ...

STOP IN AND
LOOK,
YOU 'LL LIKE
WHAT YOU SEE,
AT THE NEW
STORE IN
MIDDLEPORT,
ON THE T.

GILLIAN'S
FASHION CENTER
On the Ti n
Middleport
Co r.oe On In !

~

2-LBS.

ROYAL SCOT

YELLOW 3 LB.
ONIONS ..~.

~

JERZEE EVAPORATED .

MARGARINE
3 LBS.

MILK
13

~
·SUNSHINE

oz.

KRISPY
CRACKERS

CANS

.00

1-LB.

PILLSBURY FLOUR

5 B~G 49~
Li mit 1 Per Custom er
Good On ly At Powell's
Offer Expires0ct. 1, 1977

'"

~~~M,I,/rftMM~

W/C

~

"""'

10% oz.

6/$1

2

W/C

24 OZ. CAN
...

HYDROX
COOKIES

----

19 OZ. PKG.

•••

TOILET TISSUE

$109

SUNSHINE

29 oz. cans
"

89~

•"• .
•••
••

ELF

PKG.

~

SLICES &amp; HALVES

Li mit 1 Per Custome r
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 1, 1977

8 ROU

SCOT LAD . ·

PEACHES

CAMP BELLS

TOMATO SOUP

DRESSES

--s-

•
••

ON FARM BUREAU PROGRAM -Golden Canaday, right, warned pending legislation
in Congress can destroy the family !ann, Eva Brown, left, received a certificate in
recognition lor h~r service w the Farm Bureau, and souitbeast Ohio woman's trustee
Martha Gearhart discussed issues before the state legislature of concern to women.
the bills, · speculating ihat
some of the miners violated
the law by crossing state lines
w incite a riot. He also
suggested tbe use of strike
breaker&amp; violates federal
labor law.
· Miller, in a statment issued
in Washingron, described Pa·
trick's charges of legal violations as "pure nonsense. "
uThese men went to West
Virginia as peacemakers,"
he said. "The men, aU of
them
good UMW union
WASHiNGTON (UP! )' went wWest Virginia
miners,
United · Mine Workers
w
encourage
the wildcatters
President Arnold Miller
w
return
w
work.
Friday denied a charge that
"Like the overwhelming
be illegally used union funds
majority
of our me!llbership,
to reimburse Pennsylvania
these
Pennsylvania
miners
miners who went to West
want
to
work
and
they
were
Virginia to quell a lil'week
tired
of
being
picketed
out
by
wildcat st~ike .
·
UMW Secretary·Treasurer a few hotheads and
Harr y Patri ck told the outsiders.''
Charleston (W.Va .) Gazette
Friday that 53 miners have .
submitted bills of $300 w$400.
each fQr expenses and lost
wages, saying they were
asked by Miller to go to West
Virginia to help end the
strike.
The men were involved in a
Cabin Creek, W. Va. ,
confrontation where gunfire
was exchanged.
Patrick has refused to pay

::; ...

JELLY

I \\\

"•

beautiful arrangements of
fresh flowers donated by
Ambleside Gardens and
given aiso as door prizes. Emelyn Scarberry.

/"~

WELCH'S

••
'
•••
•

SAVORY
BACON ••• !~.

Miller denies
R Ns invited
illegal use of
to meet ·at
union's money
Hocking Tech
Registered nurses in
Athens, Hocking , Vinton,
Gallia and Meigs Counties
are urged to attend a special
forum at 7:30p.m. Sept. 29 at
Hocking Technical College.
It will provide ,area nurses
with an opportunity to discuss
the current Nurse Practice
Act and proposed changes in
the Ia w which are being
dev eloped by the Ohio
Nurses Association.
"The law regulating the
practice of nursing affects
every nurse in the state as
well as their patients and
clients," according to
Suzanne Croci, nursing in·
structor at Hocking -Tech.
"The need for an updated
Nurse Practice Act has been
expressed for years,'' she
said.
ONA, the professional
organization for Ohio's
registered nurses, has
outlined several legislative
goals for changing the law.
These include definitions of
nursing , composition of the
State
Board,
and
requirements lor nursing
education in the future.
Some of the concepts have
become controversial, and
the forum is planned so that
mll-ses can discuss them,
identifying areas of support
and conflict.
Open to all registered
nurse.s, the forum is spon·
sor.ed by the Southern Hills
District Nurses Association .
There is no registration fee
for attending.

ALL PURPOSE

,••

·caused by wild animals.

Members and guests were
delightfully entertained by
Merlin Ross and students
from Rio Grande College
music department. Mrs. Ross
accompanied the soloists.
This event-filled evening
was concluded by awarding
door prizes by Don Thomas.
Prizes were donated by
Jackson Production Credit
Association, Swisher Im·
plement, GaUia RoUer Mills,
Pomeroy Landmark and
Ambleside Gardens . The
table centerpieces were

I

'

women

trustee, gave a brief look at
the issues in the state
legislature of special concern
to women of the Farm
Bureau. High on her list were
unemployment insurance for
farm workers, the "Bottle
Bill," and bargaining rights
lor farm produce grower
association.
Mrs. Waldo (Eva ) Brown
was presented a certificate
commending her lor many
years of servioe to the Gallia
Co unt y Farm Bureau by
Martha Gerhart and Golden
GanadRy.
Resolutions prepared lor
consideration of the members
were presented by Vice
President Roy Sprague.
Kenneth Thomlinson, game
protector of Gallia County,
discussed State Issue II
which would do away with
leghold traps, presenting
reasons for the Fann Bureau
opposing the bill.
Thomlinson said Issue 2 is
especially important to farm
owners when considering the
damage to ponds and crops

.POMEROY STORE
NOW .OPEN

••

c

W/C

Limit 1 Per Customer
At Powell's
Expires Oct. 1, 1977

ALL STAR

12 oz.

CULTURED

PKG.

LOOK FOK OUR

MYSTERY
SPECIAL
SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

1h GAL

BUTTERMILK

SALE fOR: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26th .THRU SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2nd

ONL
l

•

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\

l

1

�15,lrn

Concert season opens in
Parkersburg Monday

SEE-N-TAKE
COVERED

CAKE PAN

- -

.,59

MULTI.QJLOR PRINT
FANCY GLASS

200 CT. PKG.
5 HOLE· NOTEBOOK

KITCHEN SLICES

GIFTWARE
ASSORTMENT

S111

18"x32"

'

FILLER PAPER

CHECK PRESENTED - Barbara Sims, Most
Excellent Chief; Lena Pleasants, president, Gallia County
Heart Chapter; Cliff Dixoo, Chancellor Commander, and
l.Alcy Earwood, Chairman Gallia County Heart Chapter, 1r, were the principal figures when Pythian Sisters Temple

'144

Iron furnaces helped.in war

TAMP AX
TAMPONS

•

· By James Sands
GALUPOUS - Civil War
historians mostly agree that
the North won the War Between the States because of
her advanced technology .
Northern factories turned out
more and better weaponry.
Southern Ohioans are
justly proud of the con·
tribution to the war effort
made by her nwnerous iron
furnaces and foundries.
Gallia County had one furnace and two foundries
during the Civil War ·period
(Gallia Furnace, Callahan,
Castle, and Co Foundry, and
Hill's Foundry).
It must also he noted that
Gallians held stock in a
number of Jackson and
Lawrence CoWlty furnaces.
In addition, many Gallians
were employed in · similar
furnaces _kp~.!!!. MadiSQn.

••
•

WE'VE LOWERED
THE COST OF
CARPET CLEANING

SERVUS"
TOP LACE
11

:
•

PAC BOOT

40 CT.
REGULAR OR SUPER

•

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WITH STEEL ·TOE

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'149BOX

'16

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY, OHIO

•

PAIR ·

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NOW RENT
CARPET CLEANING
SYSTEMATUW

LOWER
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RATES
l .

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12,09 pkg.

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:. ~~1~w•••••••••••••••••••••••••
·:
. REG. 4f WHITMAN
REG. $1.49 MEN;S
REG. 2.29 1 LB.
:

MICKEY MOUSE

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NG

BOOKS

TUBE .
SOCKS

HAM
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BOX

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LADIES, GIRLS, INFANTS

SOLID COLOR

CRAYOLA
CRAYONS

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REVLON
16 oz. .
FLEX

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24 CT.

KNEE
SOCKS

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MIX

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FAMILY SIZE

POLY BLANKET

DOUCHE
TWIN
PACK

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TAPE :

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DISPOSABI.£

LIGHTERS
REG. 2.98 WAL
1

U~RS

$1

THURS

~~

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
·Vine St.

Ga IIi polis '

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DUCT

PKG.Of

1:u•3ae

COLUMBUS - Don't ever
tell an animal it doesn 't feel
pain when caught the steel
jaws of a leg-hold trap. It
won't believe you .
Neither will Dr. Robert E.
Cape, a Worthington, . Ohio
veterinarian.
Dr. Cape, a fierce opponent
of the leg-hold trap, has seen
too many animals caught in
these devices to let anyone
convince him otherwise.
The Ohio Committee for
Humane Trapping is seeking
to ban the leg-hold trap
through Issue 2 on the
November ballot. "There is
no way an animal can't be in
pain.'' Dr. Cape told the
committee. "Granted, there
probably is no pain in the part
. of the extremity that has had
circulation and nerves cut off
by the trap. But that's only a
very small part of the body.
The rest is stili functional and
quite capable of feeling
pain," he said.
Being captured in the leg..

00

Career Cluti
seasonal
stripes
you 're fashion right in Career
Club's new seasonal stnpes on
tinted grounds. a must for every
man 's shirt wardrobe. permanent
press of polyester and

$13

admitted on presenting his
TCCCA receipt at the door, if
he has not received his
permanent meml&gt;ership card

by Monday. If the receipt has
heen lost, the member may
obtain one from Mrs. James
Beverly, 519 Oak Dr. ,
Gallipolis (te lephone 4461906).
Concerts scheduled to
Ocrober iuclude Jorge Morel,
KROGER ELECTS
cla$slcal guitarist, ou Oct. 6
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The in Marietta; "Toccatas and
Kroger Co. has announced Flourishes" (trumpet and
the election of Lyle organ) on Oct. 25 In Lao·
Everingham, 51, as president caster, and the Slovenlao
of
the
supermarket , Philharmoni c Orchestra
drugstore
and
food from Yugoslavia on Oct. 29 In
manufacturing firm .
Parkersburg (at the Parkers·
Everingham, a 31-year burg South High School on
veteran of the supermarket Bll~zard Dr.)
The first concert on the Tri·
sawmills, mining tools, business, previously was
elevatoro and pumps. They senior vice president with County Community Concert
responsibility
for schedule will be the Orpheus
were a}go one of •he first
merchandising, operations Trio on Nov. 3. Other at·
firms in the United States to and distribution for the
build a pOe driver.
c 0 m p a n y •s
1 , 1 7 o tractions coming to Gallla
In 1876the Marme Dock Co. ' supermarkets in 21 states. He Academy High School will be
was fo~ed for the purpose of has heen a member of the Paul Lavalle and the
repa~rmg steamboats. This company's board of directors
company employed car- since 1970.
Kroger is the third largest
penters, Iron workers, and
supermarket chain in the
machine Wheelwrights.
In 1883 the Treasur~ Sto~e United States. The company
Works began operatiOns '" also operates 553 SupeRx
G~lhpohs. The firm was drug stores, as well as Top
prmcipally owned by F. W. Value Enterprises.
Dages. The brand names of
the Dages stoves were: My
Treasure, My Choice, and
Crocodile. Stove-making
continued to be important in
A thought for the day:
Gallipolis's economy well American author William
into the 20th century.
Faulkner said, "I decline to
The
last . industry accept the end of man."
prominent in 19th century
iron work was the Thompson,
Francis Co begun in 1693 in
the Waddell Woolen Mill
buildings.

Veterinarian says animals
can feel pain like humans

~

BIC

RUG RUNNER

Do·it-yourself
· snd get professiont~l
results

The furnace employed 50 T!iird and Grape. In the early
men just to cut wood. Another 1850s this firm ahd also
30 were employed to make operated a paper 'mill. Apcharcoal. Then there were parently paper was a good
furnace workers. miners, business in the early 1850s,
teamsters, blacksmiths, for Gallipolis had three paper
shoemakers, cabinetmakers, mills.
carpenters, coopers, teachers
In 1867 the Callahan, Castle
and bookkeepers just to name and Co. foundry became
a few. The amount of wood known as the firm of B. T.
land required to operate a Enos and C. A. Hill or Enos,
furnace was astounding . The Hill and Co., for short. It was
furnace needed 400 to 600 this finn that brought much
acres of timberland each distinction to Gallipolis in the
year.
field of ironwork.
In 1853 Gallipolis had a
The firm manufactured a
foundry near the old number of
steamboat
cemetery. McLaughlin and engines. The Ohio River
Brown operated it just a few Museum In Marietta bas one
years.
of these engines on display.
In 1859 CaUahan, Castle The firm also manufactured
and Co. opened .a foundry on works lor nour mUis and

'.

••

24"x60"

I

Keystone, Cambria and
Buckeye.
Iron-making
probably
began in Gallia County in the
1820s when Franklin Garel
built a primitive foundry on
Second Avenue. Carel was
able to make plows and plow
points.
Thomas HUJ took over tbe
foundry prior to the ClvU War
aad operated It untO 1869
when the firm came Into the
bands of Kling and Dages. In
later years the linn was
kaown as Kling. &amp; Co., Kling
and Bovie, Kling and Sboher,
and Kling Stove Works.
Under !be latter title the firm
became known for its stoves
and beaten.
Some of the stove brands
were Super.ior, Sentinal,
Standard, National, and Olive
Branch. Brand names of the
heaters were Burnside, Etna
and Scout.
The firm continued the
manufacture of plows
throughout its history in the
19th century.
· In 1830 near present-day
Bladensburg on Swan Creek,
a steam forge known as
Sample
Forge
began
operation. The forge operated
with a tilt hammer operated
by Steam. The company's
primary buyer for its product
was McNichols Rolling Mill
in Covington, Ky. During the
12 years of the forge·' s
operation this part of Gallla
was a busy place. Several
buildings were erected.
In 1850 Hartman and
O'Leary bought much of the
old forge to erect an iron
furnace. The giant stone
stacks associated with other
furnaces were never erected.
In the late 1850s, the forge
was known as McNickel
Forge. The forge ceased
operations about 1856.
In 1847 John Campbell, and
associates built the Gallla
furnace at Gallia. In its prinie
Gallia employed 800 men and
made 14 tons of pig iron a
day.

•
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••

••
87° TIJBE .
'333ROU. ••
•
···~·······················

EVE

DISPOSABLE

_.1

~

~~~~--~~~-:
REG. 14.41
•
2''x60 YD.
e

TOOTHPASTE

•
•

_..

•

.•,.4.

COLGATE

:

•

-

SUMMER'S
72"x90"
PRINT

''

76 and Naomi 55, Knights of Pythias, Gallipolis, presented
checks to the Gallia County Heart Fund . The money was
earned frpm a garage sale and sale at the nea market at
the Gallia County Fairgrounds. Money and items donated
by merchants made tlie sale the most successful lodge
sale in the state.

GALUPOUS - The 1977·
78 area Community Concert
season will open in Parkersburg Monday at 8 p.m. when
the Young Americans will
present ' 1West Side Story" on
the stage , of Parkersburg
High School on Dudley Ave.
Membership cards were to
he rna Ued out this weekend to
members of the Tri-County
Community Concert
Association. Any member
wishing to attend the
Parkersburg concert will he

MACHINE
SHOP
SERVICES

Chamber Music Society of
Lower Basin Street on Jan.
31, Hal Shane, one-man en·
tertainer, on Feb. 19, and
Virginia Eskin, pianist, on
April 17.
A complete calendar of the
23 concerta to he presented in
the area this season is being
mailed with the membership
cards. Admission to all
Community Comcerts is by
subscription only. No tickets
will be sold at the door for any
individual concert. Any
member who has not
received his membership
card by Oct. 1 should contact
Mrs. Beverly at 446-1906.
The current seasonJs
membership of over 930 is
again one of the highest in the
311-year existence of the Tri·
County Community Concert
Association.

No-Service
Charge
Checking.

PORTABLE
WELDING
SERVICE

hold trap isn't a pretty pic· alternatives.
"The trap and trapping do
ture, according to Dr. Cape.
Public walk in business.
And the longer the animal not have to be banned - and
industrial
or Construction
in
the
trap,
the
that
is
not
the
intent
of
the
remains
business welcomed .
OCHT. The intent is simply to
worse it gets.
large lathes and boring
Dr. Cape said an animal's eliminate the leg-hold trap
mills ..
first reaction · is to escape. and other traps which cause
Metalizing, welding and
Quite ofteh the animal will · an animal to.suffer prolonged
babbiting .
run. If the trap isn't properly agony.
Steel fabrication, complete
stock of steel: rounds ,
anchoCed, the animal· will run
"Right now, there is the
plates and structua ls.
with the trap for long quick-kill trap which kills the
distances. And in some cases · animal immediately, much in
Free Estimates
the traps will get caught oD a the same manner as a
No Job Too large
tree limb, rock or fence which mousetrap. This is the type
or. Too Small
trap we are recommending
can result in hanging.
"The other problem this he used. A special snare trap
poses is that when the trapper has been used successfully irt
returns, he'll probably never the Scandanavian countries. '
be able to find the animal or And it's not to say that
trap again. Or at least not another humane trap couldn't
Upper Route 7
soon enough to release the he developed. It's just that
Kana uga. Ohio
61!1 .,
animal from the suffering· before, it's never been
that ensues," Cape added. necessary to develop one."
" This will happen with
inexperienced trappers who
do not know the proper
techniques of trapping."
Ohio law permits anyone 10
years o"f age and over to trap.
by
"If the trap is properly
anchored, the captured
LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY
animal will struggle to get
loose, mutilating the foot' and
causing
deep, . painful
lacerations. Or the animal
will attempt escape by
chewing off or twisting off the
trapped extremity. There's
no way anyone could con·
vince me that isn't painful.
Ten to 12 hours after being
captured, the animal is still in
pain."
Ohio law states that traps
must he checked every 24

.M&amp;G MACHINE
SHOP
~

-~~.,#,

Senior Portraits

hours.

"After a prolonged time,
the animals will suffer from
exhaustion, since they expend such a great amount of
energy in attempting to
escape. With exhaustion, the ·
animal will eventually suffer
from exposure, frostbite
shock and eventually death .
"But.the inhumanity of the
leg-hold trap doesn't end
there. If the animal is still
alive - even to the point of
being fully aware of what is
happening - it still must he
killed before the trapper
releases it."
11
Here he has several
alternatives. He can shoot it,
club it to death or push in its
chest. Most often, trappers
don't carry weapons, leaving
only the last two alternatives.
An experienced trapper
can kill an animal with one
blow, but even an experienced trapper will miss,
forcing him to literally beat
the animal to death. Or, the
trapper will smash in the
animal's chest with his foot,
putting a strong blow to the
heart and rupturing the
lungs. And again, in many
cases, the animal may still be
fully aware of this needless
torture."
Dr . Cape considers it
needlfSS because there !1re

the Savings
Add Up!
•

You're in the money when you have
a checking account with us. We have
nO-service charge checking! We
don't charge for the checks you
write or for the monthly statement
that you receive.
We have a wide variety of checks
from which to choose, and they all
can be personalized to suit you.
So come in and open your no-service
charge checking account today. Just
think of the money you'll save.

•More than just a S~nior picture but a portrait to be

•

enioyed forever!

• Special rates to Seniors from any high school.
• Traditional and enviroJ;~mental settings available.

3 Locations To Serve You!

• Free Parking

Main Bank - Second Avenue

• Free Yearbook Glossy with every order.

SPECIAL: Call lor Appointment within

Third Avenue Branch ·
Third Avenue

the next week, and get deluxe sihing at

'12 PRICEI

Vinton Branch - Vinton

Call today for your appointment and let us
give your senior portrait the attention It
deserves.

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

"Your Full Service People

446-7494

To People Bank"

Spring Vi lit)' Plan

t:'alltpolis

.

o.jen Tues. thru Sat to S, till An"

MEMBER FDIC

T"l" r,'

•

�•

A-11-Tbe Sundav Times-Sentinel, Swulay, Sept. 25,! '¥17

M

A·10-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday,Sepl. 25,1977

•

Judge rules m
42 court cases

ROSEANNE WOOD

Instructor added
·i n med course
RlO GRANDE- Roseanne
Wood has joined the staff of
Rio Grande College and
C()mmunity College this fall
as instructor. in Medical
Laboratory Technology
(MLT).
Sam S. Smith, director of
academic affairs, said the
new faculty member, who
once served as a medical
technologist with the Peace
C()rps, will work with Rio
Grande 's two year career
program which prepares
students
to
become
technicians · in clinic and
hospital laboratories. The
program is operated in
cooperaton with Holzer
¥edical Center.
Wood spent two years with
the Peace Corps on the Ivory
C()ast of West Africa where
she taught and wrote. Her
volunteer efforts included the
development of a technical

Some don't like
Carter prQposal
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
President Carter's
reorganization plan calls for
elimination of the Office of
Drug Abuse Policy and some
congressmen doll 't like it.
Members ·o f the House
Select Committee on Nar·
cotics Abuse said they
worked hard for eight years
to create the office with its
seven-man professional staff
and budget of about $1
million. Drug abuse office
functions Will go to the White
House Domestic Council
under the first phase of
Carter's reorganization pian.

R&amp;M selling

library lor students and
collaboration in writing, and
translating into French, a
manual for phases of
laboratory technology.
She received her Bachelor
of Science degree in biology
from the University of
Oregon and completed a
medical technology internship at the University of
Oregon Medical School.
Currently she is completing a

master's

degree

in

in*

ternational
and
ad·
ministrative studies at Ohio
University.
Her experience includes a
variety of laboratory and
teaching positions in Ohio,
Oregon,
Montana
and
Washington. The
MLT
program enrolled 12 new
students this fail, while nine
are in the second year of the
program.

PARTY PLANNED
PORT CLINTON, Ohio
(Sept. 23) - The Ohio
National Guard's Second
Annual Officers' Rellhion will
be held on Oct. I and 2 at
Camp Perry , near Port
Clinton. Over 300 retired
Guard officers, and their
wives, are expected to attend
the affair. Among the
honored guests invited are
Major General (Ret.) Robert
S. Beightler, former World
War II commander of the
famed 37th
(Buckeye) ·
Division. Major General
James C. Clem, the Adjutant
General for the Ohio National
Guard, is expected to kick off
the reunion with opening
ceremonies at the Camp
Perry theatre at 2 p.m.
Retired officers desiring
more information on the
conference should contact
C()l. John Siemer at (614) 4665453.

Ontario plant
to executives
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc.,
Friday announced it plans to
- sell the assets of its Canadian
electric motor operations in
Brantford , Ontario, to a
group of executives currently
operating the plant. Fred G.
COLUMBUS - An average
Wall , president, said a letter
of
3,077 persons in Gallia
of intent has been signed
C()unty
participated in the
pending a definitive purchase
Federal
Food
Stamp
agreement. The transaction
.is for an undisclosed amount Program each ·month during
the first half of 1977
of cash.
The business, established (January-June), •~cording to
by Robbins &amp; Myers in 1919, the Food Stamp Bureau in the
makes fractional and integral Ohio Department of Public
horsepower motors for Welfare.
Gallia County food stamp
Canadian markets and ex·
participants
were issued
pori . For the fiscal year
ended August 31, its sales bonus stamps worth $440,621
were less than six percent of during this six-month petiod.
corporate fiscal year sales; The bonus value is the difand it contributed about two ference between what par·
percent of corporate ear- ticipants pay for the stamps
nings. The company has said and the amount of stamps
previously it expects total they receive. The value of the
earnings per share for the bonus stamps is reflected in
incre~sed food purchases
year to exceed $4.
which
low-income households
Wall said the completed
could not have made without
sale would result in a charge
.
in the fourth quarter of fiscal food stamp assistance.
Persons whO want to know
1977 of approximately
more about the Food Stamp
$190,000 or 17 cents a share,
Program, can call the Food
"This charge will not affect
Stamp Hotline, 1-800-282-1190.
our
earlier
earnings
The toll-free Hotline provides
estimate," he said.
individualized eligibility
The sale was consistent
infonnation to help persons
with the company's program
detennine if they are eligible
to chaMel its monetary and
before they make an actual
other resources Into areas of
application ·at their county
the business having the
welfare department. This
largest potentillil for earnings
allows the · county welfare
growth and return on in· departments to devote more
vestment, Wall added. R &amp; M time to eligible applicants
Inc. ope~!'tes • plant in and Jlrovide better service.
G.n,Jpolla.
'

3,077 ·Gallians
on average .got
food stamp aid

POMEROY - Twenty one
defendants were fined and 21
othe rs forfeited bonds in
Meigs C()unty Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Robert E.
Buck were Wheeler J .
Thomas, Rt . 1, Middleport,
$12 and costs, speeding;
David M. Kestner, Rt. 1,
Minersville and William J .
Smith, Rutland, $14 and costs
each, speeding; Ruth Spaun,
Pomeroy, and Harris Davis,
Mineral Walls, W . Va., SIO
and costs each, speeding;
Richard Fridley, Middleport,
$10 and costs, left of center ;
Foster Rood, Reedsville, ·70
days confinement and costs,
illegal use of firearms, $150
and costs, three days con·
linemen!, driving while in·
toxicated; Ray Buchanan,
Reedsville
and
Jerry
Buskirk, Uttle Hocking, $1l
and costs each, speeding ;
Theodore V. C()pprick, Rt. 1,
Portland, $25 and costs,
disorderly conduct; Howard
L. Fields, Silver City; N. C.,
$9 and costs, speeding;
James G . . E. Butcher,
Friendship, Ohio, $430 and
costs, $170 suspended, .
overload; Karl F. Culp, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, $1QO and costs, ·
failure to yield; Rodney R.
Butcher, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $100
and c0sts, $65 suspended, .30
days probation, · no cycle
endorsement;
Roger
Reynolds, Middleport, $35
and costs, stop signi Tracy
Lee Edwards, Athens, $15
and costs, stop sign; Carolyn
Ford, Hocking Port, $15 and
costs, speeding; David L.
Carnahan, $20 and costs,
contributing; Gerald Arnold,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, $~
suspended, no operator's
license; · Willard Durst ,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs ,
failure to yield; Wilbur Lee
Waddell, Lunberton, N.C., $8
and costs, speeding.
·
Forfeiting bonds were
Dennjs Boothe, Racine,
$30.55, speeding; John R.
Albright, West C()Jumbia, and
Homer Salyers, Hamden,
$360.50 each, driving while
intoxicated; Michael A.
Altice, Pomeroy, Ronald C.
Pempsey, Syracuse, Gale E.
Henry, Waterford, Leonard
F. Renfro, Ft. Mitchell, Ky.,
Jack Dawson, Little Hocking,
$30.55 .each, speeding;. Allen
Runyon, Athens , $33,50 ,

RIO GRANDE - Twenty- helping others," Drew said.
six studenta at Rio Grande "Not only that, but we think

speeding;
Howard
T.
Runyon , Athens, $59 .50,
overload; Charles E. San·
ders , Gallipolis, $34.50,
speeding;
Jackie
R.
Robinson, Marietta, $3().50,
illegal passing; Bessie L.
Pullins, Middleport, $3().50,
failure to yield; Nelda G.
Yockey , Rt. I. Racine, $3.50,
failure to yield; Nelda G.
Yockey. Rt. I , Racine, $3().50,
left of center; Lawrence L.
Coats, Pomeroy, $30.55,
speeding; Danny D. Brown,
Minersville, $28, speeding;
Max Knopp, Rt. 2, Racine,
and Timothy D. Michael, Rt.
2, Pomeroy, $53, disorderly
conduct i Bruce Cottrill,
Syracuse, . Charles Canter,
Syracuse and Terry E.
Moore, Syracuse, $103 each, .
illegal use of firearms, $53
each, disorderly conduct.

•
•

,.

••

•••

'

SENIOR CITIZENS' SCENES
program is a nostalgic trip seU-defense for women,
through the history of sound showing simple but ·effective
- with a few surprises techniques both for avoiding
thrown in. Hear Will Rogers, and coping with danger.
Two buses have bene
radio shows like " The
chartered
for the Lancaster
Shadow," hear F.D.R. and
Frank Sinatra, listen to Fair. Money must be paid by
October 7 and the first 8()
computers talk and sing.
On Thursday at 10:30 a.m. ·paying the fare will be going.
a movie entitled "Nobody Depature time from the
Victim" will be shown. This Center is 8:30 a.m. on Oc·

Senior
POMEROY
Citizens have shown again
what can be accomplished by
working together. Yesteryear

11 was a success with a

capitalS! What a pleasure it
was to see folks - young and
old, enjoying the memories
and crafts 6f the past.
The Meigs County Council
on Aging and the staff of the
Center extend their thanks movie is a practical rourse on
and appreciation to all of you
in the community and aU the
Senior Citizens who helped
About People
make "~Yesteryea r" a
U
nlled
Press International
memorable day. Volunteers
DEAL HIM IN
who helped ranged in age
LAS VEGAS, Nev:(UPI)from eight to eighty and their
duties consisted of everything Frank Sinatra, kicked out of
from bakiilg pies to carrying the Nevada gambling in·
chairs and tables to splitting dustry several years ago for
fire-wood for the apple butter entertain.ing the late underworld figure Sam Gian·
kettle.
cana
at his Lake Tahoe
The many donations from .
the merchants and banks of resort, has won another
the community and the round in his fight to get back
comm unity organizations. in. The state Geming Com·
who took part added much to mission said Friday Sinatra
Yesteryear's activities. The does not need a state gamentertainment provided was bling ·license to be a major
enjoyed by ail. Again our stockholder in the Dal E.
Webb C()rp., which owns the
thanks to aU of you!
·Sahara
and Mint hotels in Las
This week's special activities includes "Adventures Vegas, the Primadonna
in Sounds" presented by Bill casino in Reno, the Sahara·
Bauer of the Genera.! Tahoe hotel, and· now is ·
Telephone Company on building the Sahara-Reno
Tuesday at 10:30 a.m . This hotel.

IN SERVICE
SYRACUSE - Altman
David A. Hubbard, son of
Clyde W. Hubbard of
Syracuse has graduated at
Keesler AFB, Miss., from the
U.S. Air Force technical
training course for com·
munications equipment
repainnen. Ainnan Hubbard,
now trained to install and
maintain high-powered
ground
communications
equipment, is being assigned
to Hickam AFB, Hawaii, for
duty with a unit of the Pacific
Air Forces. The ainnan Is a
1976 graduate of Southern
Hi~ School, Rljclne, Ohio.

Iober 13 and the fee is $9 per
person. The day's activities
at the Iair includes harness
racin~ in the afternoon. This
trip is the last one planned for
this
year.

WANTS PRIVACY
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
( UPI) - Alabama Gov.
George Wallace wants
evidence in his divorce case
kept private, his lawy~r said
Friday. " These parties'
rights to privacy in divorce
proceedings !lhould be no less
than any other citizens' in
divorce litigation," Smith
said.

.'

New craft classes are in the
planning stages for this fall.
These classes are offered to
persons of all ages. Watch the
paper and your newsletter for
the dates.

"•

---.•.
....
-.
...
-

CORRECTION
Fruth's Pharmacy Ad
in Thursday's Tribune

LEWIS INDICTED
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP() Entertainer Jerry Lee Lewis
was indicted on drug charges
by a coWlty grand jury
Friday. The two-count in·
dictment, stemming from an
arrest .three months ago,
charges the 41-year,old
singer with driving while .
under the inOuence of drugs
and possession of controlled
substances.

Should Have Read

-3

OXY

5
oz.

dPl'P shags shon ~hag.,
of

Fae Reibel, a 4-H member from Pomeroy _sets off on the Bob Evans 4-H Trail Ride
Saturday with a little assist from farmer and sausagem~ker Bob Evans . .

• Green , full grain cowhide

lealher
• Comlon padded cullar and
•
•
•
•

insole

.

Leather lined and insulated
We II construclion
Sleet shank arch support
Cushion crepe sole and heel

Legionnaires cases increase
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) With state officials now
thinking that Legionnaires
disease is a new name for an
old Illness, two new cases of
the pneumonia-like malady
have been confirmed' in
Central Ohio, bringing to nine
the total detected this
summer.
Both the new vjctims are
male kidney transplant

-...

VlSA'

Reg. 12.49

patients at Ohio State
University Hospital. The
other victims were five
women
at
Riverside
Methodist Hospital in·
eluding one who died, and a
woman at OSU Hospital.
The disease was discovered
through blood tests done at
the Center for Disease
Control in Atlanta.

she plans to caU 11 0toe's Go ."

.kelli will name her roan stud
"Bailey's Rio Grande," but
over time.
call him 11 Handy'' for short.
" The O)lio 4·H has wanted
They are among seven Ohio
to add the competitive trail 4-H members who have
ride as a project at~ for received quarter horses from
approximately two Y'iars," Bob Evans Fanns tis year.
Kline said. "Many people
have complained that they
get tired of showing horses,
and would just like to cover
TAKENTOVMH
some ground. The com·
POMEROY
The
petitive trail ride is the
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
perfect solution."
Several participants and was called Saturday at 12:26
their parents matched to Crow's Steak House for
Kline's enthusiasm for the Milo Emerson Guthrie, a
project. AI Hirzel, a parent medical patient, who was
and advisor from Summit taken to Veterans Memorial
C()unty said he felt the event Hospital.

MODULAR HOMES
ARE

TODA Y'S BEST
BUYS IN HOMES

&amp;'~~~ .
MOBILE HOMES INC.
See Jim Staats or Joe Giles
Phone 446-9340
Ga IIi polis, Ohio

•
·•"

.•

&amp;

Gallipolis,.Ohio ':

....•
•••

•
••
•

w

100% NYLON ON SALE
-~

••

INSTALLATION
TOO!

Son shades
bngh ltones
beau!lfvl mt} lure~
PIU! dartng new adventurecolo•s

•

•

Dur tng th1s e'iem we ean oiler vou a
rock-0011om pac~a!)e prtce on

tr.r the vo1..ng and bold

~==~~~~ ~

.·-.. ,.-------I -

of floor space . Has 4 full -width shelves. 4 deep inner
door shelves, convenient

995

CO·OP LAUNDRY
DETERGENT

CO-OP WATER
SOFTENER

A IOW ·SUdS delergenllhal
gels lhe dirl wilhoul an

Has fully automatic controls that let you program
regeneration to ma1ch
rate. of water use. Has
guest C.YCie for additional
1
soft water when needed.
Built-in bypass lor non-

excesS of suds. It's biodegradable , won 't harm
septic tank systems. AecC' mmended lor automatic
wasllm. 40 lb. box (22-

30 cu. ft. Uprlghl, our largesllreezer, priced al less
lhan $16 per cubic fool ol slor.age space' Huge 311
cu. ft. slorage capacily. yel takes less lhan 9 sq. ft .

$46,

4394) Regularly $15.99

roll-oul baskel. delrosl
drain. door lock and key,

houseMI~

,

uses. Model

UC-XXX, removes up lo

210.000 grains ol hardness per week. (21-2224)
Regularly $359.95 ·

light and. magnetic door

gasket (21-0163)
Regularly $499.95

caroet cushtonanctanstallatton

~~

lood slorage yel lakes less lloor space-lengl h is
only 69Yz in. loaded with convenience features: two
lift·olJt sliding baskets. bulk storage dividers / automatic interior light. mag-·

nelic door gaskel.lid lock$
and key , ~elrosl ~rain.
(2 1·0575)
Regularly $425.95

Com. type foam rubbe r back, 10 colors.
Fashioned for publ ic places ... l"landsome
for homes. Bright clear tweed colorations

Jute black, foam back. cut loop &amp; saxony &amp;
plushes.

36

Tight weaves, saxony, splushes &amp; plushes.

in

Per Sq. Yard

Per Sq. Yard

Chain saw for homeowners. Weighs less than
8'12 lbs .• complete with JO.
inch bar and chain.
Automatic chain oiling . .
Sottone muffler. Regularly
$114.95:

•

'5''

'4''

_LIGHTWEIGHT

LAUNDRY PAIR
SAVE •60.00
ON THE PAIR
. 2-speed washer

Porcelain enamel · top, lid and

..

9 !er Sq. Yard

$}Q99

25 cu. ft. Chest holds 886 1bs .. has elliclenllhin-wall
polyurethane insulation which gives you additional

. •'

wash basket

Lid switch
Washer model WLW2100T

95

2 heat timed drying selection
Porcelain enamel drum
4 Venting options

Dryer Model DL8125QT
Special price. Washer regularly
$264.95 and Dryer regularly
$194 .95. -You save 560.00 on the
pair.

BUY OUR FOAM-BACK CARPET AND·SAVE 3 WAYS
3. SALE AT '3" &amp; '4"

1.

represented the epltomy of
good horsemanship. " If a
horse can master the trail,
when it goes on to shows it
can master any obstacle
placed before it," Hirzel said.
Also a part of the day's
activities was the pr_esen·
tation of two quarter horse
weanllngs by Bob Evans
Fanns to two deserving Ohio
4-H'ers. Selected to win a colt
on the basis of need and
performance in 4-H and
school were Kelli Lynn
Goodyear,
14,
from
Hilliard,and Kenda Poland,
15, of Milford Center.
Kenda won a sorrel stud

•

)

3

horse is ridden. Judges look
for new blemishes on the
horse incurred during the
ride, bad cinch sores or
irritation around the saddle,
plus signs of fatigue,
dehydration, lameness or
swelling.
Twelve awards were
presented Saturday,~ places
in horsemanship, 5 places for
best horse condition, plus the
overall and reserve grand
champion.
Kline said a good con·
ditioning program for a trail
horse should last a p·
proximately 12 weeks and
include a system of regular
workourts where horse and
rider start out gradually and
Increase speed or distance

-..

$149

here 1o chuo~e
from And a1 roll 5aJE Or oces 1

S

PARKMAYTALK
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
Tongsun Park, the central
figure iii a Capitol Hill in·
fluence buying scandal,
apparently is willing to answer questions from federal
prosecutors In a neutral third
country, his attorney says.
Attorney William H~ndley,
back from Seoul, said Friday
he advised park to meet
Justice Department in·
vestigators in a country
which has no extradition
treaty with the United States.

RIO GKANDE - Twentyfive young people selected
from county 4-H clubs across
Ohio, including Fae Reibel of
Pomeroy, were introduced
Saturday, Sept. 17, to a
rapidly growing contest
among horse lovers - the
competitive trail ride.
Fauna Donahue, 16, of
Vinton and Rita Raimer, 16,
from Northfield were judged
overall grand champion and
reserve champion respectively in a contest judged not
only on speed but also on the
physical endurance and
condition of a rider's horse.
Held on the 1,100 acre Bob
Evans Fann, the trail for the
ride covered 20 miles on hiUy
southeastern OHio terrain.
Approximately 100 spectators
including parents and 4-H
advisors awaited the con·
testants tour of the trail while
participating in a workshop
on the event ..Judges were Dr.
Robert Kline, Ohio 4-H horse
specialist; Dr. Ross Young,
DVM; and four veterinary
students from Ohio State
University.
The competitive trail ride,
according to Kline, is a ride
over predetermined, well
marked trails with a con·
trolled time and pace factor.
The temperature, heart rate
and respiration (TYP) of
each horse is taken before the
ride, at check points along the
trail, and at several Intervals
upon completion of the ride.
Points are awarded for
speed. however, they are
deducted for arriving early.
strong emphasis is placed on
the condition of the horse, for
example, how well its TPR
values return to normal after
the workout on the trail. Kline
said a good trail horse's TPR
should drop 30 percent by ten
minutes after the completion
of the ride.
Other measures of )ier·
foni:lance are horsemanship,
grooming and cleanliness of
the horse, manners; physical
signs of condition and
SOWldness, and how well the

-..
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vuu 'e lhmkmy

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WOLVERINE ' 9"
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ONE WEEK ONLY Monday, Sepl 26 thru ·Saturday, Oct 1

~\c~~~~,~~~&lt;:~~~~;

from New Madison (Ohio) .
The teeter-totter will be
constructed ori campus near
lhe student center. A special
ceremony at noon Tuesday
will kick off the event.
Fraternity members will seesaw in two hour shifts hoping
to earn the donations pledged
by other students.
"We're doing thls because
one of the things our
froternitv stands for is

we'll have a good time, too."
There is some debate about
how much of a world's record
might be established. So far,
the Gulness Book of Recorda
only recognizes a teetertotter record for two people,
not a group.
"We don't know whether
our effort will be accepted or
not," Drew said. "But. if
there is no group record so
far, then our 100 hours should
certainly be something
unique done by !lilY single
group of people."
Jeff Detty, a senior from
Jeffersonville (Ohio), Is
chainnan of the event. He
and his fraternity brothers
have been busy gathering
pledges for charity from as
many students as possible.
" We're asking people to
pledge· a nickel, a dime, even
a quarter per hour of teeter·
tottering," Detty said.
Anyone wishing to join in
the fun is invited to campus to
watch at any time of the day
or night. Pledges can be
made by calling Drew at 245-

!)

'4''((It's CARPET
SALE
Our Anniversary Special"
43 ROLLS

.

College and Community
College may aet a new
world'• record. On a teetertotter.
The men, aU members of
Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity,
say they'll be see-sawing for
charity beginning noon,
Tuesday, Sept. 27 . They
promise to keep moving,
twenty.fourhours a day, untll
at least 4 p.m., Saturday,
Sept. 30 •
" Sixty percent of the
money raised will be given to
the March of Dimes," Alpha
Sig president Kyle Drew said.
"The rest will be donated to
aeveral
other
local

charities. •' Drew is a senior

Vanlnwagen, sixth from the left in the second row, worked
together in the under ..ea coal mines of Japan as Japanese
prisoners of war and were headed by Col. Mamrow,
second from the left on the first row. Vaninwagen was a
prisoner of the Japanese 31'.. years.

MARCH SURVIVORS - Edgar Vanlnwagen,
Pomeroy, accompanied by Mrs. Vanlnwagen, was at
Fontana Village, Fontana Dam, N.C., Aug . 27-Sept. 3, to
attend a reunion of survivors of the Bataan Death March
in 1945 ~I World War II. The group pictured with

Studen~ · plan
APPAL Corps
in health area
.A committee of students
who , participated iQ the
Corporation for · llealtb
Education in Appalachia
Ohio (CHEAO) health team
project last summer meeting
in Athens.recently joined with.
CHEAO staff to plan and
develop an Appalachian Ohio
Student Health Association
IAPPAL CORt;'S).
Attending were Suzanne
Irwin, Ohio State University;
Jan Campbell, Barre, Mass.;
· Paul Haupt, Ohio University
College of Medicine; Bryan
Thatcher, University of
Cincinnati
College
of
Medicine; Vic Cocowitch,
University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hili , and Dr .
Thomas
Robertson
of
CHEAO.
The members of th-e
health team proJect were in
the communities of Portsmouth, Woodsfield , New
Philadelphia, Pomeroy and
Vinton County for an eight·
week period during the
summer.
The committee discussed
goals and objectives for the
new organization and the
possibilities of developing the
APPAL CORPS into a health
infonnalion clearinghouse,
providing manpower for
CHEAO student health team
projects, promoting development of local scholarships for
health professional students,
and assisting Appalachian
Ohio
communities
in
recruiting health manpower.

Horse-loving 4-H youths
compete on trail rides

Teetering record
eyed by students

NO PADDING TO BUY.

Each carpet comes cOmplete with its own
dense, .high-quality foam back. El1m1nates
the cost of ·
separate pad-

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2.

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·

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.

tape at fhe .edges, at · ·

POMEROY LANDMARK

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You can do it .or we'll
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I

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

HAFFELT BROS. CUSTOM
. CARPET
.

.

Rt 35 - Atrcr;s From the Galla County Fair Grounds -Ph. 446-:2107

WEEKDAYS &amp; SATURDAY 9·5

.

FRIDAY 9 TIL 8 P.M.

PHONE 992-2181

DRIVE A LlnLE AND SAVE A LOT-FREE DELIVERY WITHIN 75 MILES-YESI WE SERVICE AT YOUR
LOCAL HOTPOINT DEALER

STORE HOURS: 8:30 TO 5:30-MIU CLOSES AT 5:00 P.M.-SERVING MEIGS, GALLIA &amp; MASON COUNTIES.

�A·U-The Sunday nn-sentine!, Swlday, Sept. 25,1977

QUEEN CROWNED- Diana Abel, second from left,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Abel, New Haven, and a
senior at Wahama High Sc~ool was crowned Homecoming
Queen Friday evening during halftime activities. Shown,

left to right, Jill Ohlinger, last year's queen who crowned
Diana; Miss Abel; Bret Holbrook, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Holbrook, New Haven, who escorted Miss Abel;
and John Kaznoski, principal.

wJNmNG FLOAT- The Freshman class of Wahama
High School built the first place winning float for
homecoming this year. The floats were judged during the
homecoming parade held Friday afternoon through the

towns of New Haven, Mason, and.Hartlord. Each class, as
weU as the FF A, presented a float in the parade for
judging.

Ij

Homecoming Queen
Diana Abel Crowned
Diana
Abel,
senior
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jesse M. Abel of New Haven,
was crowned the · 1977
Wahama Homecoming Queen
during halftime activities at
the Wahama·Duval football
games Friday evening.
Diana was crowned by last
year's queen, Jill Ohlinger,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Woolcock, New Haven.
The new queen was escorted
by Brei Holbrook, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Holbrook,
New Haven.
Other candidates included
Connie Burton, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Phil. Burton of

Mason, who was escorted by
Kevin Knight, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Knight, New
Haven, and Darla Fowler,
daughter of Jack Fowler,
Mason, escorted by Tim
Halstead, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Halstead, New Haven.
Attendants were Jackie
Greene, escorted by David
Knight, junior class; Terri
Johnson, escorted by Terry
Angel, sophomore class;
freshmen , Kelly Roach,
escorted by Scot! Barnitz;
Lora McCauley and Kendall
Weaver, eighth grade; and
Mlsti Gandee and Darin
Gilland, seventh grade. .

fan

Serving as crown bearer
and flower girl were Mason
County's Little Miss and
Mister, Ryan Wood son of Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Wood, New
Haven, and Lisa Hayes,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Butch Hayes of Mason.
The Wahama White Falcon
Band performed an 1mpressive halftime show during
the game featuring a special
homecoming song, "I Write
The Songs", a popular tune by
Barry Manilow. The band will
be traveling to Ashland, Ky.,
WHS HOMECOMING ROYALTY AND COURT - Diana Abel was Roach, freshman; Darla Fowler, senior; Miss Abel; Connie Burton, senior;
today to compete in the
crowned during activitiesatthe 1977Wahama Homecoming Friday evening. Jill Ohlinger, last year's queen ; Jackie Greene, junior; and Lora McCauley,
Ashland Band Festival.
The Homecoming Court is pictured here. Shown, frolit row, left to right, eighth grade. Back row, left to right, .Darin Gilland, Terry Angel, Scott
EarUer in the afternoon, a
parade was held through the
tittle Miss Mason County Lisa Hayes, who served as ·nower girl, and Ryan Barnitz, Tim Halstead, Brei Holbrook, Kevin Knight, Principal John Kaztowns of New Haven, Hart- · Wood, Utile Mister Mason County, who served as crown bearer. Second row,. noski, David Knight, and Kendall Weaver.
ford, and Mason.
left to right, Mist! Gandee, seventh grade ; Terri Johnson, sophomore ; Kelly
The parade featured-floats
from each class, includeing
the traditional senior noat
which carries the queen
candidates and attendants.
'
.
.
Other units makln~ up the
parade included a car carrying school administratio~. an
Lawrence E. Lamb, MJl .
FF A float, the White Fa!CQn
Band, ponies. and many cars
arid trucks carryil)g football
AMPHETA.MINES
already made deep inroads problem parents face today .is ·
players, cheerleaders. and
Probably the greatest into our society and, until 5-6 not that children and teens
coaches.
original contributing factor, years ago, were still have not been ex)iosed to
The freshman elass won the to the misuse of . am- relatively' euy to get by proper drug abuse education
top noat in the -parade. The. phetamines among youth, refilling
an
existing . .. millions have been spent By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. needn'i e:opect to go to the
float featured a large replica was the fact that in the 1960s · prescription
without on a variety of such programs
DEAR DR. LAMB - I drug store ilnd buy it for
of a falcon and smaller ver- these drugs became popular another visit to the doctor in the schools and elsewhere. would be thankful if you could home use. It Is · a powerful
sion of a yellow jacket for in what was considered at the or by simply going to a doctor Rather, the point is that the write something about the salve and one must be inDuval.
time to be iegitmate use, on a and requesting a prescrip- average youngster is not salve, ~Fluorourscil. I was structed in its use. It is impor·
Henry o. Flipper was the prescription basis, obtainable lion, tailoring the right emotionally capable of told by ~ dennatologist that I tant to not get it in the eyes.
first black to graduate from from almost any physician. symptoms to fit the desire. complete avoidance of drug have actinic keratosis and
It will cause areas of the
the u.s. Military Academy at
usewhen
it
is
available
and
skin
that have already
They were prescribed for (Today,
PhYSician
she prescribed this salve to
West Point. in 1877.
weight control, because they prescribing of amphetamines in use all aroimd him - due to heal it. I beard that this is a undergone changes that you
curtailed the appetite, as a is down an estimated 99 pressures put on him, real or very powerful drug and am can 'I see with the naked eye
general stimulant, and for percent since 1970, and imagined, by present-day uneasy and worried about us- to turn red, and even1ually
'
Parkinsonism, depression, refilling a prescription for youth's social va lues.
ing it. I would have to put it scale off, Completely normal
behavior problems, etc. This them without seeing the
Since children begin their all over my face, Could you skin tissue will not be affected by the salve. In this
placed these drugs in millions doctor again is impossible. va lues - programming just give me your opinion?
of home medicine chests, and Many physicians refuse to beyond the toddler stage, it
DEAR READER - It is a way it literally identifies
ultimately made them prescribe them under any should be obvious that drug weU recognized and effective areas that have been damagreadily available to the circumstances.)
abuse prevention starts at treatment for actinic ed or undergone changes
children of the adults for
That was the beginning of this point in their lives, most keratosis, those little gray ·or compared to healthy skin.
Because the face is exposed
whom
they
had
originally
things
getting out-of-hand. heavily inOuenced by the brownish scaly spots that
AKRON, Ohio (UP!)- The
so
much more to the sun than
been
prescribed.
The
demand
was
already
·
e
xamples
set
for
them
by
the
develop on the skin. These
Fraternal Order of Police,
the
body it is frequently the
adults
around
Since
oral
amphetamines
established
and
illicit
drug
them
.
Thus,
if
changes in the skin are the
which had threatened "police
main
location for solar
qui c k 1y the value-building process in result of damage from solar
actions" unless the city came stimulate the user - these tr a !fie ker s
keratosis.
The backs of the
the
profit the family is ignored or onlr, radiation. Some people are
to contract terms, has ac- were the ones we all came to recog nized
bands
are
also
often involved.
Some hall-hearted, when the young more susceptible to the sun's
cepted a city offer of an 8 know as "pep pills" -too 'possibilities .
You
can
help
prevent theSe
percent pay raise this year many people who had ob- . established rou ndabout person · reaches the age of damaging rays than others.
tained them from their methods for obtaining am- coping with misguided values
It is important to treat changes in the skin by protecand 7 percent next year.
physicians
got
into
the
habit
ph~es
from
legitimate
that
always
seem
to
exist
in
these spots as some of them ting the skin properly from
,The offer, also including
of
using
them
as
pepper-·
U.
S.
pharmaceutical
every
teen
generation,
he
can become skin cancer and the sun. I am sending you ihe
improved fringe benefits,
Health Letter nwnher 7-10,
was accepted Friday by a 219- uppers, when dally routine manufacturers, by having Jacks the foundation to require more drastic treat- Your Skin: Sun, Aging, Spots
began to lose its luster. (It theirordersshippedoutofthe recognize intrinsic realities, ment. I inight add that skin
183 vote.
was
common to take an country to phony drug stores, and can be easily over- cancer, other tban malignant and Cancer, to give you InThe police had threatened
formation on taking care of
to take action, including amphetamine at 10 a.m. and doctors' offices and other whelmed by the live-for - melanoma, can usually be your skin and how to prevent
issuing parking tickets under still be flying high at 2 a.m. fronts . This worked ex- today - and - to - hell - with - completely cured. U you solar damage of the type you
ceptionally well with close tomorrow concept that the don't treat it early though the
state statutes instead of city the next morning.)
Too
many
people
w§re
countries,
like Mexico, as it young so often adopt.
treatment may increase any now have. Others who want
ordinances, if the city failed
For parents then, the disfigurement that might be this information can send 50
to come up with an ac- delighted with the effect the made .it possible to have the
drug had on them. Children of drugs back across U. S. freedom of doing -your - own caused by removing the cents with a long, stamPed.
ceptable contract.
self-addressed envelope for it
adult users soon came to borders, for sale . on the -thing is a luxury they cannot malignant area.
know what was making their street, within hours. Other afford, at least not until their
The salve you mention is a to P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
parents so full of energy, street suppliers sought-out or children are grown. They are prescription iteR\ so readers Station, New York; N'Y.,
100!9. People who do not care
ambition, so it was not sur- estab li s hed illegal constantly "on-stage" and
for tbeir skin properly 8F"
prising that they visited the laboratories, frequently nin their young audience is
more apt to have an "old
medicine chest to "try just. by experimenting amateurs watching and mentally
skin" earlier in life. The sunone."
using imbaJanced chemicals recording every word in their
tan ritual is a frequent factor
They, too, were delighted in unsterile surroundings.
lines.
as
is cigarette smoking.
and recommended the new
In spite of all-out efforts by
Effective Jaw enforcement,
The
effects of skin damage
several elderly persons find to their own age groups. U.S. drug control authorities, and certain punishment for
may
not
show up for years
lived.
In the process, users young amphetamines became part street sale, is without doubt
afterWard. Young people
"We ' ve barricaded the and old soon found that the ofthesoclaisceneinAmerica the greatest deterrent to
want a nice tan but When age
whole area.'' a
fire glow burned out and left them ... the "in" thing ... in use halting massive distribution
40 rolls around they want to
department spokesman said, with terrible feelings of recreationaUy and for fun of illegal drugs. But, in the ·
WASIDNGTON (UP! ) - look 25. The two are not com"and now we're waiting for it depression, but the logical and profit. Advocate-users final analysis, the most ef·
to cool off so we can check for answer to that was ... take and illicit dealers - and a Jot fect ive tools for preventing Penalties would be increased patible.
It ls important to realize
bodies.''
another one!
of kids sharing them with drug abuse will be found in for doctors and other
that
the sun affects the skin
Two children reportedly
Almost · unk110wn at the · friends - have spread them the home, in the quality of the providers of health care ·.who
all
year
round. People with
cheat Medicare and Medicaid
leaped or were tossed from tirile were some very im· even to remote rural areas. family environment.
the second floor of one of tbe portant
NEXT:
Met ham· programs ·under legislation ezceptlonally fair skin should
facts :
A And, as though ambuildings and both were psychological dependence phetamlnes were themseJ;ves phetamine
and
other approved by the House and use protection all year, in
winter as well as summer.
sent to the Senate.
saved.
developed in the misuse of not dangerous enough, new stimulants.
The House Friday ap- You can use one of the
The Rev. Forest Drake, these drugs, and in continued applications have developed
Sponsored by Royal Crown
owner of the local radio use and abuse, hyperactivity, along the way; combining Bottling Co., Middleport; proved, 362-6, new felony chemical " screening agents ·
station, said, "The truck hallucinations and great them with other drugs and provided by Chief of Police J. penalties for providers who mentioned in The Haith Letdefraud the government ter as a simple lotion each
overturned on one car, and 12 excitability often resulted alcoholic beverages, to add J . Cremeans, Middleport.
or 13 other parked cars were leading to, in many cases, greater "higba" and taking
programs subsidizing health morning before being . . , .
care for the poor and elderly. ed to the sun.
burned out . One of the psychosis similar to paranoid them in injections, which
(Because of the volume rl
The measure retained
buildings that burned was a schizophrenia, delusions, adds an addictive and relapse
mail
Dr .Lamb cannot lllll1ftl'
misdemeanor penalties for
restaurant and w~'re trying high blood pressure and pulse potential comparable to
your
letten peraonally, but
recipients convicted of
10 detef"1Tline whether anyone rate, and abnonnal heart hefllln. The illegality of street Gibsonburg 42 Lakota 6
te
will
answer repre&amp;e~~tative
defrauding the progr8llll, but
was trapped inside.
rhythm.
purchase seems to add to the Gl-., ·Ook 0 Mentor 0 (tie)
&lt;&gt;randvlew
20
North
Union
0
letters
of general interest In
rtates would be allowed to
An
unofficial
early
But, by the time these mystique, especially f~r Greenfield Mclain
JJ
silapend the eligibility of his column.)
estimate set damage at at adversities became widely young users.
Madison Plains 7
convicted Medicaid patients.
least tGOO,OOO.
known, amphetamines harl
Perhaps the biggest Greenhills Jl ·Harrlson 0

about the.abuse of drugs

Care of the skin

DAN EDWARDS

DAVID KEARNS

Sporn Promotes Two
Two employees at the Philip Sporn Plant in New Haven,
were promoted recently.
Dan G. Edwards, II,
Engineer Technologist, was
promoted to Performance
Enginer, and David L.
Keams, Equipment Opi!ratOr,
was elevated to Unit Super·
visor.
Edwards was born in
Huntington and graduated
from Marshall University in
1974 with· a BES degree. He
was employed at Sporn Plant
in 1974 as an Engineer Technologist and served in that
capacity until his recent
promotion to Performance
Engineer.
The Edwards' hav e a
daughter and a son and reside

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Don
McKinney and son, Bidwell;
Clarence King, Red House;
Lonnie Toney, A~htoit; Mrs.
Danny Roush, Letart; Mrs.
William Holcomb, Gallipolis
Ferry; Shirley Harmon,
Henderson; Zachary Taylor,
Gallipolis; Katherine Rice,
Vinton; Donald Miller,
Hometown; Mrs. Dale Herdman, Leon ; . Frank Bowers,
Grimms Landing; Shannon
Coz, Gallipolis; James Wise,
New Haven; George Knapp,
Letart; Chauncey Meadows,
Glenwood; Billy Weiss,
Mason ;
Mrs. Robert
NewllerrY. Mrs. P. E.
McDermitt, Golda Piatt,
Clarence Hesson, Mrs.
Wallace Smilfl, Jr. , John
Howard, Rev.Roy Ellis, and
Effie Sapp, all of Point
Pleasant. BIRTH - A
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Timothy Bissell, Point
Pleasant.

in New Haven.
Keams is a native of Mason
and graduated from Wahama
High School. He served in the
U.S. Air Force until1969. His
employment at Sporn Plant
began in 1969 a when he was
hired as a Utility Man·B. !n
1970, he entered the
Opi!rations Department as a
Utility Operator an""d later that
year was promoted to
Auxiliary
Equipment
Operator. Kearns
was
promoted to Equipment
Opi!rator in 1973 and served
there until his recent
promotion to Unit Supervisor.
Kearns and his wife, one
daughter, and one son, live in
Clifton. •

Police accept

8% increase

Blast kills five
BEATTYVILLE,
Ky.
(UP! )- At least five persons
were killed when a loaded
gasoline transport' truck
overturned and exploded in
Beatty ville Saturday,
destroying eight downtown
buildings and da11111ging six
others.
''They're picking up tbe
bodies now and taking them
to a garage to try to identify
theril," a funeral home
spokesman in BeattyviUe, a
southeast Kentucky mining
town Said. "We still don't
know how many were killed."
State police at Richmond
said they had reports as
as six bodies had been
recovered.
The unidentified ·driver of
the truck escaped the blaze,
according to pollee.
One of the destroyed buildings was an apartment where

many

"

More penalties

face cheaters

!&gt;

..,

•

MINERSVILLE- A dona.Uon was made to the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
during a meeting of the
United Methodist Women of
the Minersville Church
recently.
Mrs. Kar!Grueser presided
at the meeting during which
time tne women also voted to ·
donate to the toy project of
the Women's Awtlliary of ,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Plans were discussed for the
homecoming being held tcr
day and the meeting of the
UMW at the Gilman Church
in Marietta on Oct. 9 was
noted. Theme will be

.

Catherine Benet

Plans
for the observance of National Business and Professional Women's Week were
made at a recent meeting of
lhe Middleport Club.
National BPW week is Oct.
16-23 and members were Invited by Janet Korn,
Catherine Welsh, Mary
Kunzelman, Loretta Saelens,
Juanita Conde, and Mary
Bacon to attend the 10 a.m.
Mass on Sunday, Oct. 16, at
the Sacred Heart Cathoic
Churcti.
The Oct. 17 meeting wlll
have the program presented
by the legislation committee
with Mrs. Edith Forrest in
eharge. Other members of
the committee are Terrie
Walker; Linda Stobart, Eva
Robson, Catherine Welsh,
lWse Reyno)ds and Lucille
Swackhammer.
Mrs. Kom reported on attending the court of Judge
Robert Buck and suggested
that other members attend
and view the legislative process. The Shawnee family fun
weekend was announced for
Oct. 8 and 9th. Each club is to
furnish a prize. ·
Mrs. Dollie Hayes thanked
the club members lor the
planter and book sent to her
during her recent illness. A
membership application was
presented from Mrs. Dorothy
Jenkins who was voted into
club membership. Mrs.

Charlene Hoeflich

446-2342

992-2156

Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Pomeroy-Middleport

"Reaching Out for Tomorrow."
It was noted that flowers
had been sent to Mrs.
Margaretla Wise at the death
ofherhusband.
·
The Lord's Prayer in
unison opened the meeting,
WAS ACCEPTED
with Mrs. Betty Koch giving
POMEROY-Mrs. Michaei
the scripture. Readings in- · (Sharon) Wright has been aceluded "September" and cepted at the Buckeye Career
." Make Ufe An Adventure" Center for Nursing at Rio
by Mrs. Grueser; "To My Grande. She will begin her
Family and Friends" by Mrs. schooling on Oct. 3. Daughter
June Sayre; "Let's Suppose" of Mr. and Mrs. James
by Mrs. Stella Grueser; " The Whitlatch, Bradbury, Mrs.
W"mds of Ufe" by Mrs. Wright has two children,
Mildred Phillips; and "The Tanuny, a second grader at
Pranks We Used to Play" by Pomeroy Elementary School
Mrs. Helen Maag.
and Jason, five.

······················~····························

National BPW week slated
MIDDLEPORT~

PLANS TO WED - Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. James of
Lower River Road, Gallipolis, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their daughter, Lesa Dawn,
to Ralph Af&lt;!erson Thomt&gt;Siln III, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Lowe of Pt. Pleasant and the Ia te Ralph Thompson
Jr. The wedding will take place Sept. 30 at 7:30 in the
Chr~st United Methodist Church in Gallipolis with the Rev.
Kenneth R. S,.nders officiating. The bride to be is a 1975
graduate of Gallia Academy and her fiance is a 1975
graduate of Pt. Pleasant High School. Miss James is
employed at Bernadine 's and Mr. Thompson is sellemployed as a musician.

Woman 's World

Minersville UMW
make donations
.

Connie Putman

ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ruthrauff of
Salem, Ohio announce the engagement of their daughter
Sheryl to Jeffrey Hoopes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Oesch of Gallipolis. The open church wedding will take
place Oct. 8 at the First Friends Church of Salem at 1:30
p.m. The Revs. Die~ Sartwell and · Ben Staley will
officiate. The bride-elect is a 1.974 graduate of West
Branch High School. The groom-elect is a 1975 graduate of
Gallia Academy High . School and is employed as
mechanic at Salona Supply.

TO WED - Mr. and ·Mrs. E. M. Wiseman of 2
Glendale Dr., Gallipolis, announce the engagement of
their daughter, Jail Alice, to John Franklin Doolittle, son
of Mr. and Mrs. William Reid Doolittle of 3203 Jackson
Ave., Pt. Pleasant, W. Va. Jan is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and Ohio State University where
she received her B.S. in nursing. She is a member of
Sigma Theta Tau, horsing honorary fraternity. She is
presently employed at Holzer Medical Center. Frank is a
graduate of Pt. Pleasant High School and presently
attends West Virginia University, Morgantown, W. Va.,
where he is a junior in Phannacy . The wedding will take
place Saturday, November 26, 6:30 p.m. at the First
Presbyterian Church of Gallipolis,.Pastor James Frazier
of Grace United Methodist Church officiating. The
gracious custom of open church will be observed.

Facts parents should know

HEALTH

Sheryl Ruthrau.ff

Eloise Wilson, vice president,
conducted the meeting and
read a letter from Mrs.
Alwtlda Werner expressing
her regrets for her inactivity
due to illness.
It was noted that Mrs. Rose
Reynolds is improving. The
illness of Mrs. Lucille
Swackhammer's husband
was also reported.

jean Clark teaches
importance ·of nursing
GALUPOLIS - Mrs. Jean
Clark,

at

During the visit, Mrs. Clark
discussed the many ways she
might help students who
became ill or had an accident
while at school. Mrs. Clark
explained the use of several
of the items found in her
office such as bandages,
cleansing soap, alcohol
gauge, longue blade, throat
spray and splinter remover.

Mrs. Hayes presented the
program on the national and
state themes, "Change,
Challenge, and Respond" and
"Stand Tall, Walk Proudly, to
Meet Today's Challenges."
Following the meeting
members went to the Walker
Funeral Home to pay their
last respects to Mrs. Nellie.
Vale, a long-time · active
member of the club.

Mrs. Clark impressed upon
the students the importance
of clearillness in preventing
the spread of disease genns.
She stressed that only ' food
and tooth brushes should be
put into their mouths, not
pencils, lingers, etc.

Church picnic enjoyed

TUPPERS PLAINs-Tbe
Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ held its annual Sunday
school picnic on Sept.l8 at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Newland.
.
A potluck dinner was served, games were_played and a
devotional serviCe w~s condueled by ' the mmlster,
Eugene Underwood. The song
service was led by Duane
Wolfe.
. Attending were Creston
and Phyllis Newland, Allee
Osborne, Eugene, Ruth and
Virginia Underwood, Gale,
Zetah, and Dale Lee McCain,
Dennis, Helen, Mike and Pat
Newland, Bob, Helen and
Tim Dorst, Deryl, Doris Ann
and Amy Well, Duane,
Margie, Bruce and Lori
Wolle, Roger, Shirley, Usa
and Julie Hawk, Clyde,
Marlene Tim and Joe Kuhn,
Tim, Cheryl and David
~·::::s::::::::::::::::::::*:.;;::::*:::::::::::::::::::::!::-:~:~: Gwnpf, Annie and Brenda
SUNDAY DEADLINE
Tbe deadline lor wedding
aad eagagemeat notices
and society news items for
tbe Suaday Ttme&amp;-Seatlnel
ls 1% aooa on tbe Tb•rsday
CHOLERA FIGHT
preceding publlcatloD.
CAIRO, Egypt (VJ'l) lnformatlen may be turned Arab health minllters opened
.. or mailed to tbe office of a conference in Cairo today to
tile
Gallipolis Dally · ezamine ways of combating a
'l'rlbllue or Pomeroy Dally cholera epidemic which has
SeDtoDef. EIIPiemeat ud 1111led about 70 person~ . and
•eddiDC
for••
are , Infected more than 3,000 in
several Middle Eastern
:.vaOallle qpoa request.

school nurse

Washington · Elementary,
visited the morning and af·
ternoon Kindergarten classes
on Th.ursday, Sept . 22.
· Teachers are Mrs .. B. Canterbury and Mrs. B.
Hamilton.

Caloway, Larry Edward
Millhone, and Howard,
Marvene and Rubal Caldwell.

(Left to right), Mrs. Jean Clark, Jeremy Humphreys,
Frankie Hensen, Gloria Legarreta and Rachel Lund with
some of the items found in a nurse's office.

·

. CHESHIRE
A
homecoming was held on
Sept. 11 at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Freddie Moore of
Cheshire. Attending from out
of town were Robert Craigo,
· Moundsv!Ue, W.Va.; Edward
Craigo, Bancroft, W. Va.;
Pauline Miller, Louawana
Mlller, Melody Neimeyer,
Denise Russell of Poca, ·w.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
McCartney, Marty and
Tinnmy of Waverly; Jeff of
Marietta;
Mrs. · Della
DeVaule, M"r. and Mrs:
Wllllam· DeVault, Mrs.
Woodrow DeVault and
grandchildren, Janet
DeVauh, Mrs. Carolyn Rose
and daughter, Mrs. Anita
Merry and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Kerwood, Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy Kerwood,
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Hager and
dauglter, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Hager and daqhter, Mr. and
Mrs. John Hager, Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne Wolfe and
children of Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. Freddy Moore, David,
Jeff ..nd Scott of Oleshire;
Mr. and Mrs. Keith DeVault.
I

Local students inducted
into honor society
GALLIPOLIS
The
Reverend Mr. Frank D.
. Hayes, Pastor of the Firsi
United Presbyterian Church,
announced today that several
of their young members have
been inducted in The Society
of Distinguished American
High SLhool Students.
Students from this area
who were inducted are as
follows : Lewis Schmidt, Kent
Epling, Patty Newshutz,
Barbara Fish.• Catherine Schmidt, Linda Lowery and Lori
Withee.
Th'e SocietY, .which is one of

the nation's foremost high
school honoraries, inducted
the students because of their
excellence and leadership in
church
· and
civic
achievements according to
Rev. Hayes.
Pastor Hayes received a
National Appreciation Award
for his efforts on behall of the
students and stated that "!
am extremely proud of these
exceptional students and the
honor that they have
received. It's surely one that
they will cherish the rest of
their lives."

Ohio University Artist Series to ·open
ATHENS - The Ohio
University Artist Series will
present nine International
programs of theater, dance
and music for the 1977-78
season. Opening the season
will be the 'colorful Soviet
Georgian Dancers with the
Tblisi Polyphonic Choir on
October 3, followed by the
Broadway hit musical; on
Oct. 25 "Bubbling Brown
Sugar."
On
Novemfamed
ber
7
the
Canadian Quartet, the
Orford
String
Quar·
tet will appear and on
November 9 the Pittsburgh
Symphony Orchestra
followed by the Nikolais
Dance Theater on November
16. February 15, 1978 will see
the Organic Theater of
Chicago in the wonderful Ray
Bradbury comedy "The
Wonderful Ice Cream Suit."
Sounds in Motion Dance

Company w!U be presented
on April 7 and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra on April 14. The
season will end with the
young, brilliant viollnist,
Eugene Fodor on May 5.
Season subscrjptions are
available now at Memorial
Auditorium, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio. Write lor a
brochure, drop in and see us,
or call (614) 59H807, or 5!145341 for further information.

CALL ANSWERED
POMEROY
The
Pouieroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Meigs
High School Friday morning
for Jean Roush, a student,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Southwestern boosters make plans

U
' ·
nomecomtng
en101Jed
:1 J
,

WILL WED - Mrs. Mary Putman of Route 2,
CoolviUe, is announcing the approaching marriage of her
daughter, Connie Carlene Putman, to Jerry Lee Sayor,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Saylor, Guysville. The couple
will be married at 2 p.m. on Oct. I at the Tuppers Plains
Methodist Church by the Rev. Richard Thomas. The
custom of open church wiU be observed.

A final item of discussion
was the importance of good
New officers were elected:
The meetings are the first
nutrition, plenty of fresh air, · PATRIOT - The Southsunshine, exercise and ttestern Athletic Boosters Oscar Oavies, president; Don Thursday of each month at
proper rest to the ovcraU Club held ·their monthly E~ans, vice president ; Zenia 7:30 at the school. Everyone
health of the students.
meeting Tuesday, Sept. !3 at Evans," secretary; Gomer welcome. Be a booster
· member, help support our sh7:30 in the hlgh school Jenkins, treasurer.
The
membership
drive
was
cool.
·
library.
Mrs. Clark's visit enabled
the ·students to understand
the importance of the nurse's
NOW YOU KNOW
contributions to the total
The silver-mounted skull of
welfare of a school or com- the murdered hall brother of
.munity. She also assured the Mary Queen of Scots has
students "aU nurses do not served for centuries as a bowl
always give shots" but have for Brazil nuts on a sideboard
many ways to help the in the Scottish castle of the
students.
Earls of Moray.

discussed and the Athletic
Booster cards are to be
printed up with football and
basketball schedules on them
at the usual price of $! -per
membership.

Wedding plans completed
POMEROY··Plans have
been completed for the open
Church wedding of Janet
Holsinger, daughter of Mrs.
Win Holsinger, Route I
Reedsville and the late Mr.
Holsinger, and Richard
Koblentz, son of David
Koblentz, &amp;ute 3, Pomeroy,
and the late Mrs. Marie
Koblentz.
The wedding will he an
event of Oct. l at 7:30p.m. at
the Clester United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Robert
Hayden liflciating.

Serving as matron of honor
for the bride will be Ms. Janie
Jackson, with Mrs. Pat Mays
of LitUe Hocking as her
bridesmaid. Flower girls will
be Angela Chapman,
ReedsviUe, and Susan Wolle,
· Route 3, Pomeroy. John
Ridenour, Chester, wlll be
best man for the groom-elect.
The wedding celebration
will take place at Royal Oak
Park recreation room 1mmediately following th ~
cerem~y.

•

_The following in the above al'e officers li the 1177-78 Kyger Creek NatiOllll Hclnor
Soc1cty: (1-r), Marcus C-eiger, vie\' pretldent· Cindy ~eston treaiW"er· Robin )'ra!ey
secretary; ,l':lm Reynolds, president, and Todd lhom118, ~ter.
'l
i• 1

�8-3--Tbe Sunday TiJnea.Sentinel, SWiday, Sept.25,1977
B-2-Tile Sunday Times-Sentinel, SUnday, Sept. 25, 197'1

GALLIPOLIS
The
G•lllpolls Uoness Club held
ltl lint meeting of the new
yeer In tho Community Room
ol the Oblo Valley Bank,
Jac:klon Pike Branch on
September 19. There were
fourteen members and one
pest present. The new
pnsldent, Mrs. Ruth Snyder
called tho meeting to order
and welcomed everyone back
alter the summer recess. One
new member was introduced,
Mri. Rita Breckenridge,
along with our guest, Miss
Catherine Benet. Program
booka for the 197'1·78 year
were distributed as ·well as
the most recent Lioness
International Newsletter.
Mrs. Snyder then presented
a beautiful plaque to Mrs.
Becky Skinner, inunediate
pallt president, for her ser·
vices and untiring efforts on
bella!( of the Uoness Club.
Mrs. Skinner is to be
especially commended since
she was also the first
pnsldent of the club.
It was announced the
Halloween candy had arrived
and would be distributed. It
will again sell for $1.50 per 18
ounce bag and will go on sale
approximately October I.
Proceeds will again be used
for tho visually handicapped
of Ga111a County. Again,
numerous downtown mer·
chants have agreed to help
aell the candy in their stores.
These stores will be made
public In the near future.
Mrs. Dawn Clark will be in
cha111e of publicity for the

Uoness Club president Ruth Snyder presents a plaque
to Becky Skinner for her service to the club as president
for the 1976-77 year.

candy sale. Each member
was given a case of candy to
sell and more may be obtained by contacting Mrs.
Bernice McMahon.
After further business was
discussed, our guest speaker
was presented. She was Miss
Catherine Benet, Society
Editor for the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune,
Miss
Benet
described her job, what it
entails and some of her hopes
and plans for the future
Society page. She spoke about
some of her experiences since
becoming associated with the

Tribune. A question and
answer period followed her
infonnative talk. Refresh·
ments were served at the
close of the meeting by Mrs.
Snyder and Mrs. Shirley
Bane.
It is to be noted according
to Mrs. Snyder, October has
been designated as " New
Members Month" and each
active member should bring
a prospective member to the
October meeting. That
meeting will be October 18 at
6:30 p.m . . at the OVB,
Jackson Pike Branch.

Couple ·weds in· Florida

Candkli6--ht ceremony unites couple

Miss Welsh is married

Lioness Club begins new year

Rev. and Mrs. Richard Thomas

Manis to speak to FGBMFI
RIO GRANDE - The
October dinner meeting of
The Full Vospel Bus!·
ness ·Men's Fellowship
International will toke
place at Rio Grande College
Cafeteria at 7 p.m. on Oct. 1.
For reservations, call 4462431 or 446-3073 by noon
Wedne¥iay, Sept. 28. Cost is
$5 per i&gt;erson.
The speaker, William C.
Morris, an Assembly of God
minister from Marietta,
began his ministry at the age
of 17. He has been serving the
Lord as an evangelist,
Minister of Music, Pen·
tecostal
Director
of
Fellowship for the U. S. Air
WILLIAM MORRIS
Force. He witnessed recenUy
at the Meigs Aglow Chapter
and also led the singing at Bill Morris Singers consisting
of Bill, Debbie, Andrea, Leah
Jesu,..in-77.
·, ..
He is bringing with him The Roo and Faye.
· There will he a meeting at
Harold Lee Clark's house at
LAFF. A- DAY
7:30 p.m. October 3 for· aU
FGBMFI members.

LONG BOITOM - The
United Methodist Church at
Long Bottom was the setting
for tho 2:30 p.m. wedding
ceremony on July 16 of Bonnie
Lou Welsh, Tuppers Plains,
and Richard Thomas, also o(
Tuppers Plains.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Welsh,
Tuppers Plains, and the
bridegroom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Zed Thomas,
Zaleski. The Rev. Robert
BWill!arner officiated at the
double ring ceremony.
Maryln Robinson presented
miL'lic for the ceremony and
her selections included
"Evergreen", "A Song for
Bobby", "Annie's Song", and
"A Perfect Day".
For the ceremony the altar
was decorated with a
candelabra consisting of l5
·globed candles and baskets of
white gladioli and blue bow
accent The family pews were
marked with single blue
bows.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
ri white silk organza. The
bodice of re-embroidered
alencon lace, featured a high
neck and bishop sleeves. The
full skirt was adorned with a
flounce at the bottom and
flowed into a chapel train.
Appliques decorated the
skirt. Her headpiece was
covered with re-embroidered
lace and held a veil of illusioil
trimmed with lace to compliment the gown. She carried a
bride's Bible covered with
blue daisies and baby's
breath from which fell blue
streamers tied in lover's

blue gown ol polyester and a
corsage of blue dairies. The
bridegroom's mather was in
a blue and white dress and
bad a eorsage ol white
daisies.
Following the ceremony a
reception was held at the
church basement. The bride's
table featured a five tiered
wedding cake. A fountain ol
blue water separated the bot·
tom tier from the other tiers
ol tho cake. It was topped
with the traditional miniature
bride and groom.
• Mrs. Mary Frecker, Mrs.
Janet Connolly, Mrs. Nancy
Roush served at the table.
Guests were registered by
Mrs. Dorothy Pence.
For a trip to the Ozarks in
Missouri, the bride changed
into a mint green pantsuit
and worf! a necklace which
had been a gift of the groom.
They now reside at Tuppers
Plains.
The bride is employed at
the Pomeroy National Bank.
Her husband is pastor of tho

...•

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W. Va.; Miss Laura'·
Hathaway, Smithville, WV•
Va.; the Rev. and Mrs. Jel~· '
frey Gerber, Colnmbals; thi
Rev. Jay Montgomery;·
Louisville, Ky.; Dr. and Mn!'"'
Wesley Clarke, Athens; II»•"
Rev. Robert Randall1•·
Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas, 7.e' I; Mr. and"''
Mrs. Woodrow Thlmu and~
Mr. and Mrs. David Tbcmu ...
and family, Athens; Mrs. ••
Hugh Egleberry, Zaleski;'
Mrs. Pauline Friend ; ...
Zaleski,; Mr. and Mrs•· •
Richard O'Leary, Zaleski I".
Mr. and Mrs. George BIBsell :::
and sons, Norwalk, and Mrs~· ·
Dorothy Pence, Bentonvllie. " ·

w ··

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tllissumiMr,
tft

...
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knots.

...

The bride's attendants
were Brenda Frecker,
Reedsville, and Jan Koehler,
Coolville. They were in light
blue gowns of A·line Single
blue and white carnations
trimmed with ribbons to
'"
match their jackets were carried by the attendants. They
wore necklaces which were
gifts of the bride.
Randy Koehler was best
man, and the ushers were
"'
Dale Welsh, ' Jr., Tuppers
855 Second Avenue
Plains, and George Pickens,
Gallipolis,446-79DO
LongBottom.
You area little laie in 1toe seuon now but got. your pool
For her daughter's wed·
in. Enjoy II some this year, ond !wove It reody for use
ding, Mrs. Welsh wore a pale '--ne_•_,_•p;.r_in.;g;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _':-_ _ _ _ _ _J

___

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...

United Methodist Church on
Sept. 2.
The 7:30 p.m. ceremony
wa.s solemnized by the Rev.
J&amp;mel Corbitt. The bride is
the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Ohlinger, Rose Hill,
Pqmeroy,
and
the
brjj!egroom is the son of Mrs.
Edith Sisson, 120 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, and Ralph M.
Slaaan, Route3, Pomeroy.
Hurricane candle ar1'81111en&gt;ents decorated the
windows of the church and a
hunicane candle floral ar·
rangement of painted daisies
11111 baby's breath was used
on• the choir loft railing.
Seven branch candelabra
flanked the communion table
at the altar.
Organist and pianist for the
ceremony was Mrs. Rebecca
Cottrill whose selections included "Some Enchanted
Eiening", "Matchmaker",
"Today", "Come to Me", and
"If Ever I Would Leave
You." Guitarist Phil Obi·
Jnier, brother of the bride
pllyed "If I Fell'' and "Are
Y~ Happy for You.", and
d~ the ceremony, the
bride's aunt, Mrs. Frances
Hml sang "The Lord's
l'tayer."
f:scorted to the altar by her
faS!Jer, the bride wore a gown
of• ivory silk orga!WI with
peau d'ange lace. It was
falhioned with a lace empire
lxl!ice, a portrait neckline
qed in lace, and sleeves
~lace ruffled accent. Lace
aocented the chapel length
trAin. The bride's veil was of
siQt illusion edged in lace and
WfS wom MadOMB style. She
carried a bouquet of lemon
cainations, yellow rosebuds,
add baby's breath. with
yt4Jow satin ribbons.
for "aornelhi!lg · borrowed
tho bride wore and aunt's
si:Jigle strand of pearls, for
"sbmething blue she wore a
lace and ribbon garter made

and Mark, Colnmb.Jii Rev;~
David Seabaugh, Richwood,- •

GAWPOLIS - The First
Chrtlltian Church of Titus·
· vJlle, Florida was the settlrig
for tho marriage of Lila Lynn
England, daughter of Mrs.
Barnle
Ragsdale,
of
Titu.IVille, Fla. and the late
Nathan H. England, to
Palmer R. Barcus, son of
Mts. Freda Barcus of
Gallipolis, and' the late H.
Homer Barcus. The Rev.
Clark Scott perfonned the
double ring ceremony on.
Saturday, Sept. 3 at 2:30
o'clock In the afternoon,
•
before an altar decorated ith
•
~--------------------------~----------------~~
·
'
two lilrge baakets of yellow
and white chrysanthemums
centered by a large fanllhaJ)ed candelabra.
The bride, given In
.
marriage by her brother, W.
Howard England, wore a
formal wedding gown of ·
a
organza with appliques of
··-·---....
Veniae lace, the fitted bodice
"And you'll save a wad on
featured a high-banded collar
insurance . Nobody will sell you
that accented a sheer
any .'
organza yoke with insets of
the lace appliques, the long
fltt8d sleeves ended in full
flares over the hands. Her
Cathedral length veil of
' '
Jllllli1111 was caught with a
Tonight
Juliet cap and she carried a
cascade of yellow sweetheart
thru Friday
roaes, white and yellow shag
Mr. and Mrs. Palmer R. Barcus 1
Oct. 7
mums, ~by's breath and ivy.
The maid of honor, Miss light blue chiffon gown and munit)' College. The groom is
Lynn Melton of Orlando, Mrs. Barcus wore a turquoise . a graduate of Gallla
,
Fla.; the bridesmaids, her gown with matching Jacket. Academy High Scbool.
sister, Patricia and her Both mothers wore orchid
Others attending the
sister-in-law, Mrs. Kathy corsages.
wedding with Mrs. Freda
•
England, both of Titusville
Following the ceremony, Barcus and Mr. and Mrs.
were Identically gowned in the newlyweds received their Lucian Barcus with Matt and
yellow empire-wa~ed, V'd , famJlles and friends at a Sara Jo :were Mrs. Rohdonda
neck polyester gowns with reception held in the K of C Hardin of Gallipolis; Mr. and
ooft cape sleeves. They Club. The groom's niece, Mrs. Jack Brewer and
"' '
carried nosegays of yellow Miss Cynthia Brewer of Cynthia of Orlando (Mrs.
and white mums. The bride's Orlando, Fla. kept the bride's Brewer ls the groom's sister,
nephew, Jeff England, served
Guest Book and Matt Barcus and Mr. and Mrs. James
A UNIVERSAL PiCture ·
as ringbearer and Sara Jo of Gallipolis distributed rice. Boggs of Hawthorne, Fla., ·
CARTOON
Barci!S of Gallipolis, the After a wedding trip to fonner residents of GaiDa
groom's niece, was flower Gatlinburg, Tenn., the new County.
girl. Serving the groom as Mr. and Mrs. Barcus will
"
best man was Robert return to Andros Island in the
Severson of Andros, Bahama Bahamas, where they are
lllands a~ as groomsmen, both employed by the R.C.A.
the grooms brother, Luclan _service Co ., A.U.T.E.C. ·
Barcus of Gallipolis and Project. The bride Is a
SYRACUSE - Mr. and
Charles Wood of Orlando, graduate of Titusville, Mrs. Marvin McKelvey,
Fla.
,
Florida High School and Syracuse, are announcing the
Friday, Saturday
For her daughters wed· attended Brevard Com- birth of an eight pound, 15
and Sunday
dlug Mrs. Ragsdale cbose a
ounce son, Jay Patrick, at
7:71 #l.m. on Sept. 15 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. George H.
Schneider, Syracuse, and
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. William
McKelvey, PortWid. Mrs.
Anna HJlldore, Syracuae, Ia
the
maternal
great·
grandmother. Mr. and Mrs.
. NEw FASHION
McKelvey alao have a son,
•'
UPDATE! .
Michael Todd, 17 months old.

~

POMEROY- Miaa Ann
Marie Ohlinger and Dale E~
ward Slaaan ext.nanged wedding vows in a candlelight
ceremony at the Enterprise

Northeast Clllller ol United"'"
Methodilt Churches.
·~ ·
Out ollown £11111111 included&gt; ' •
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hcif- ....
man and 1100, Nathan, Ketter-:'
lng, the Rev. JamM ltetzel, -·Gra)'liOII, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs:••
Roy Scott, New Albany,lnd.; '"
Mrs. Jean Fuller, Kim, O!ril ;~

••

~~o~e~'s o~~r, ~~~
mllther's wedding garter pin.nellto her underskirt, and for
"$mething new", her gown.
Miss Laura Ohlinger serv·
ed: as maid of honor for her
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son born

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MASON DRIVE IN
Frida, • Saturday •
Sunday

: CHESTER-Techniques for
drying flowers were
demonstrated by Mrs.
lforace Karr at a recent
meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held at lhe borne
d' Mrs. Dale Kautz.
; Using "Keeping Your
ljeauties" as her theme, Mrs.
Karr displayed a variety of
dried flowers from her
liarden and then showed how
· tlley were dried and told of
&lt;\i{ferent techniques which
· can be used.
:Mrs. Buel Ridenour gave a
demonstration
on
·~r Splendor" using
roadside materials in an arnmgement. Devotions were
!liven by Mrs. Pllrley Karr
l(nd for roll call, members
named things in their
~ns not to be planted
again ne:rt year.
; Fall bulbs and spring
flowers were discussed by
Mrs. Oris Ginther. Gifts will
.be taken to two honorary
rilembers, Mrs. Ada Neutzl·
itlg and Mrs. Max Harrah.
: Arrangements
and
~lmts were judged with
Mrs. PatHoltertaking a blue
oo her roses, Mrs. Ada
iJolter, a red and a blue for
&lt;lab1la specimens, and Mrs.
~inther, a blue on a gladioiiL'l

MINERSVILLE··Thirtysi:t shutin visits were
reported at the Tuesday night
meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the
Forest Run United Methodist
Church held at the home of
Mrs. Fred Nease.
Mrs. Russ .Watson conducted the meeting during
which time the current of·
ficers were re-elected for
another year. The missionary
pledge was increased and the
annual fall district meeting.
was announced for Oct. 9 at·
Marietta at the Gilman
Church. A love offering was
taken.
Psalm 23, a meditation,
"Ught and Darkness", and
prayer by Mrs. Edison Hollon
opened the meeting.
Members sang "Saviour Uke
a Shepherd Lead Us" and the
program on the theme "Shining Windows" was given by
Mrs. Hollon. She compared
the Christian's light from
within to clean shining windows of a home. Readings

Why are so many drivers switching
their insurance to Allstate?
We'll give you lots of reasons.
Allstate offers lots of special
rates and discounts. Good Driver.
Compact Car. Two Car. Low
Mileage. Young Married. And more.
And Allstate offers today's most
advanced claim handling. Coast
to coast. Fast. Convenient .
We think you'll .find a
difference with Allstate.
So compare companies. Find out
why the owner,s of over nine
'million cars are now in ugood
hands." Call or come in.

_,

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Navy , Grey, Burgundy. Style 212
S20.00

"'
•

.NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
THE

",' .

' MCGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY:IN

IN,·11JE SILVER BRIDGE PUlA
••

NICK JOHNSON

•"
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Phone ·446-1761
.

.•

4522ndAvr

Sr. Citizens
CAlendar

Gallipolis

GALUPOUS - The ac- •
tivities for this week at the
Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Pike are as follows :
I Monday, Sept. 26, Quilting
Calendar
and vtBiting, 9 a.m.-3 p.m.
f:xhiblt for the month o{ September: Multi-media
Tuesday, Sept. 27 Quilting and visiting, 9 a.m.-3
presentation by the Tri.State Artists Association.
Gallery hours : Saturdays and Sundays, 1p.m. until5 p.m.; p.m.
Wednesday, Sept. 28 Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. until 3 p.m.
September 1-'i, 2 p.m.-4 p.m.- Parent.Qiild Workshop on Diabetes Education Class, 1·3
Print-making, Corrine Lund, Instructor, Penny Moore, p.m.; Card Games, 1·3 p.m.
Chairman, Riverby.
Thursday, Sept. 29 - BirthSeptember27 , ~p . m .- F .A .C. TrusteesMeeting,Riverby . day Party, 1:30 p.m.
October 14·15, 9 a.m.-3:30p.m. Friday and Saturdsy Friday , Sept. 30 - Art
Seventh Annual Antique Seminar, Conducted by Mrs. Orva Class, 1-3 p.m.; Nutrition
Walker Heissenbuttel of Washington, D. C. Reservations to be . Games, 1·3 p.m.; Blood
made with Mrs. Sue Beverly, phooe 44&amp;-1906 or 44&amp;-1819. $7.50 Pressure Check, 1: 15·1 :45
registration each day includes lunch at Rlverby. Special p.m.; Social Hour, 7 p.m.
e:thibits to include Antique Kitcben and antique pottery, pre·
The Senior Nutrition '
1900, from Southern Ohio. Contact Peggy Evans, Chairman, Program will serve the
for October's exhibit with items to loan for display; pbone 4-16- menus on the following days:
'!819.
Monday - Baked ham
slice,
buttered
sweet
potatoes , buttered peas,
bread, butter, apricot upside
down cake, milk.
Tuesday - Braised beef
MIDDLEPORT-The an- Flo Grueser, program; Mrs. cubes in mushroom sauce on
nual Homebuilders Class Clarice Erwin and Mrs. Nora noodles, jellied vegetable
banquet was planned for Oct. Rice, decorations; Mrs. Van salad, buttered lima beans,
18 at the Middleport Church of Meter and Mrs. Raymond cornbread, butter, canned
Christ when class members Baker, hostesses. Former peaches, milk.
Wednesday - Meatloaf,
met Tuesday at the church,
members of the class are inmashed
potatoes, 3-bean
Corrunittees named were vited to attend and are to con·
salad
,
buttered
spinach,
Mrs. Dorothy Roach, Mrs. · tact either Mrs. Margaret
bread,.
butter,
butterscotch
Colleen Van Meter' and Mrs, Kincaid or Mrs. Shirley
pudding, milk.
Baumgardner.
Thursday - Chicken,
Mrs. Farie Cole opened the
canned mixed vegetables,
meeting
with
Raymond
Cole
J
giving the prayer. Devotions jellied cranberry salad,
were by Mrs. Van Meter and bread, butter, oatmeal raisin
Max Stewart gave the qless- cookies, milk.
. Friday - Cabbage .rolls,
ing.
.
buttered
potatoes, celery
Attending were Mr. and
stick
with
peanut butter,
Mrs. Raymond Cole, Mr. and
buttered
green
beans, bread,
Mrs. Bud Wilson, Mrs. Nora
Rice, Mrs. Flo Grueser, Mrs. butter, bread pudding ·with
A picnic was held recently Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Van nutmeg sauce, milk.
Choice of beverage served
for Mrs. Ruth Larkins on her Meter, Max Stewart, Mrs.
81st birthday at Ash Cave.
Dorothy Baker and daughter, with each nieal.
"Services rendered on a
The birthday cake was bak- Angela, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
non-discriminatory basis.''
ed and decorated by Kila ward Evans.
Young. In the afternoon pictures were taken and the
family toured Old Man's
Cave and Rock House.
Attending were Mrs.
Larkins and her husband
Fred, Mr. and Mrs. Howard .
Larkins and Brent, Mr. and
Mrs. Virgil Bogard and John,
Scott Hauber, Vera Weber
and Vida, Mr. and Mrs. David
Daily and Rae Lynn, Mr. and
Mrs. Lawrence Johnston, Mr.
and Mrs.' Douglas Hauber,
Tim and Kim, Mr. and Mrs.
· Charles Weber and Jim, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Weber and
Mike, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel
Larkins and Kenneth, Mrs.
Ethel Larkins. Cards and
gifts were presented to Mrs.
Larkins.

1

Class .banquet enjoyed
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sisson
.

seau eu .•:::s&amp;:;;;:

:~!~~ · · , , , -:::;;; e

::::::::::::::;::::::::::::~:·:::~:·:•:-m.»».::::::::::::::: ••

i

Sr. Citizens ..
%~ Calendar

I Social '

I

B.
h
· zrt uay
observed

Calendar , ,

SUNDAy
HOMECOMING AT Eagle
Ridge Community Church,
Sunday. Sunday school • .10
k
a.m . followe d by bas et
dinner at noon. Dan
Hayman's
Hymntimers
featured singers for the af·
ternoon.
POMEROY SEVENTHDay Adventist Church will
host
songfest
Sunday
beginning at 2 p.m.; All
gospel singers and musicians
invited io participate and '
public invited to attend.
Social hour in ch urch
basement will follow.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
picnic at the club Sunday,
serving at 4 p.m. ; refreshments free. Members and
families invited.
THERE WILL be a
songfest Sunday afternoon,
Sept. 25 at the Pomeroy
Seventh·d~y
Advenl!st
Churc,_begmnlng at 2 p.m.
The smg IS open to all
gospel
smgers
and
musicians, and the public
is invited to ,attend;
UMWA SUPPORTERS
picnic for coal miners and
families of Locals 1886, 1890
and 1957 beginning at 12 noon
Sunday at Forest Acres Park,
Take covered dish and table
service.
SPECIAL MEETING,
Racine Emergency Squad, 2
p.m. Sunday at station. All
EMT's asked to attend.
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, 2
p.m. Sunday at the temple for
a practice for inspection. Lori
Wood, honored queen,

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center ac·
tivities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
isopen9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, Sept. 26 _ Cards
and Games, Square Dance,
12 =30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 27 - Bake
sale, 10 a.m., Bill Bauer,
General Telephone Co. Movie, "Adventure in
Soun~,"l0:30 ~.m.; Knitting,
10:11.30 a.m.; ~orus and
K1tchen Band, 12.15-2 p.m.
Wednesday •. Sept 28 Soc1al Secunty Represen·
tallve 9:30 a.m.·12:30 p.m.;
Games, 12 :30-2 p.m.
,
, Thursd~y •Sept 29 -;;- Mo:1e
Nobod~ s VIctim, 10.30
a.m.; S!ng·a·Long, 12 :15
p.m.; Horseshoes, 12:30 p.m.
Fr1day, Sept. 30 - Art
Class,
10-11:30
a.m.;
Crocheting, 10·11 :30 a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Citizens ,Nutrition·
Program, ll:30 a.m.-12!30
p.m. Monday through Fridlly.
·

were by Mrs. Edith Sisson,
Mrs. Mary K. RoiL'lh, Mrs.
Vernal Blackwood, Mrs:
Henry Salser, and Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger.
Singing of "Sunshine in My
Soul" and "This is My
Father's World" concluded
the program. For the special
of the meeting, Mrs. Kathleen
Scott read "Face · to Face
with Heaven or Hell."
MJ,'S. Fred Nease and Mrs.
U. S. Nease, cC&gt;-hostess, serv· pre~iding.
MONDAY
ed homemade ice cream and
BEND 0' The River
cake to those named and Mrs.
Mae Holter and Mrs. Harvey Garden Club, 7:30 Monday
night at the home oi 1\l:rs.
Koch.
Esther West. Mrs. Andrew
Cross, president. Program on
getting ready for fall. Ar·
rangement topic, "Where Did
theSununerGo."
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters7:30
p.m. Mondayat the Temple
with Lori Wood, honored
queen presiding.
TUESDAY
CLEVELAND (UPI) MIDDLEPORT • POM·
People attending masses this
weekend at the 240 churches EROY Area Branch of the
of the Cleveland Catholic American Association of
University Women, tea, 7:30
Diocese were asked by Tuesday
at the social room of
Bishop James A. Hickey to the Middleport
First United
say special prayers for Pope Presbyterian Church honor·
AUXILIARY OF Racine
Paul VI, who Monday ing fonner and prospective American Legion Post 602,
celebrates hia 80th birthdsy. members. Any woman who is 7:30Tuesday at the halL Dues
Hickey, who worked in a graduate of accredited col· are now payable.
Rome for five years before lege or university is invited to
WEDNESDAY
being named bishop of
WILDWOOD GARDEN
Cleveland in 1974, has visited attend. Entertainment and
r
e
I
r
e
s
h
m
e
n
t
s
.
CLUB,
8 p.tn Wednesday at
Pope Pa11l twice during the
SALISBURY PTO, 7: 30· the home of Mrs. Ada Holter,
past three years.
·
p.m.
Tuesday at theschool
Each member to lake picture
"From my own years in
PAST
MATRONS
CLUB,
frame
with glass and cloth for
Rome I can testify to the
Pomeroy
Chapter,
O.E.S.,
a
background
along · with
Pope's deep love for the
home
of
Mrs.
Dorothy
dried
flowers
for
a plaque
church and to his tender
human compassion for men Woodard, 7:30p.m. Tuesday. workshop.
and women everywhere,"
Hickey said Saturday. "His is
Second Alll!llue
a · · heavy resonslbillty,
successor of St. Peter, center
of unity for tho church.
"He
deserves
our
has a
understanding,
our
· cohaboratlon and our
prayers," said Hickey, wbo ,
also bas requested that all
Catholic schools in the local
diocese schedule masses
Mmday in honor of tile Pope,
reportedly in failing health.
The Pope's birthday,
Hickey says, "is an occasion
for all Roman Catholics· to
remember his dedicated
service and to aak for him,
God's special blessing."

Asks
prayers
fe&gt;r Pope

a gem of an iJea

MORE PENSION PAY
WASHINGTON (UPI) The House has approved a ' encourage the departure of
plan to boust the retirement some oider members.
pay of congressmen for one Members retiring with the
year in an apparent effort to maximwn allowable service
of 32 years would get $3,425 a
year more in their pension
under the new proposal which
SUNDAY
still must win Seriate apSPECIAL M~ETING 6 proval, or approximately
p.m. this evening for all $56,500 ~ year.
trustees, executive com·
mittee
members · and
members of the new home
committee at brew Webster
Post 39, American Legion
Home, W. Main St., Pomeroy.
State approval for new post
home in Rock Springs area
have been received and
Spring Valley Plaza
decisions must he made. All
interested post members also
Monday- Friday
invited.
9 a .m.-5 p.m.
TUESDAY
By Appointment Only
MEIGS LOCAL OAPSE 17
446-2206
meeting, Tuesady, 7:30p.m.
Doctor's Referral
at Meigs Junior High School
in Middleport.
P AS T
M AT R 0 N S ,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
. 7:30p.m. Tuesay at home of
Dorothy Woodard, Langsville:
AMERICAN Legion Aux·
iliary, Racine Post 602, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, Dues are
payable.

Fall Sportswear Sale!

Jackets, Pants, Tops, Skirts
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ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

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ther, assistant hostess, serv·
ed a salad course.

Mrs. Nease hosts group

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Mrs. Kautz and Mrs. Gin-

•

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THE HILLS
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TERRORFRQM
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and Mrs. Hennan Ohlinger In
a light blue street len'""
dress, wore orchid corsages.
1be groom's grandmother,
Mrs. Hanson Holter, was
unable to attend the
ceremony due to Illness.
Following the reception tho
bride and groom took her an
orchid corsage.
A recepUon buffet was held
Immediately following the
ceremony at the borne of the
bride's parents on Rose Hill.
1be bride's table was covered
in white with an overlay of
peach netting and featured a
three tiered cake decorated
with peach and yellow roses.
It was flanked by mllkglass
candle~ticks with peach
lapers.
Guests were registered by
Sharon Owens, Marshall,
Mich. Bird seed bags were
distributed by Cindy Evans.
Serving buffet table were
Alicia Evans, the punch; Kim
Ohlinger, the coffee, and Oelr
bie Ohlinger, the cake. Allare
cousins of the bride.
The couple now resides at
4589 Morunouth Ct., Colwn·
bus. The new Mrs. Sisson is a
Meigs High School graduate
and received her BA degree
from Otterbein College where
she was a member of Sigma
Zeta, science honorary. She is
employed at the Central Ohio
Dialysis Center.
The bridegroom, also a
graduate of Meigs, is a ~tu·
dent at the Ohio Institute of
Technolody and will graduate
in March, 1978. He is
employed at Caito Produce
Co.
Out-of-town guests at the
wedding were Andrea and
Sharon Owens, and Paula
Steiner, Marshall, Mich.; Mr.
and Mrs. Pete Houdashelt,
Kevin Reardon, Mrs.
Beatrice Stelzer and Joe,
Mrs. Robin Nye, Mrs. Hazel
Wynkoop, Mrs. Valerie
Curry, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Proudley, Susan Mora, and
Jim Moroney, all of Colwn·
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Terry Ohlinger, sons, Jay, Jon and
Joshua, Duncan Falls; Mrs.
Jeannine Cunningham, Mark
Cunningham, Jim Cunningham, and John S. Cunn·
Ingham, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. James Clark, Nancy J.
Clark of Cleves.

•

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Tastefully tailored
pants with
classic quarter-top pockets, in all your favorite solid colors . .

sister. She was in a floor
length sleeveless princess
gown of light green polyester
crepe topped with a cape of
sheer flocked pastel flowers.
She carried a nosegay bou·
quet of yeUow, peach and
green painted daiaies, yellow
carnations, baby's breath,
tied with yellow, pesch and
green ribbons.
The bridesmaids were Miss
Sheila McKnight, Colwnbus,
in a gown identical to the
maid of honor but in peach,
and Miss Jane Sisson,
Pomeroy, sister of the groom,
in an identical gown in
yellow. Their bouquets were
the same as the one carried
by tho maid of honor.
Randy
Arnold
of
Minersville was best man for
the groom and the ushers
were Jeff Reuter, Pomeroy,
and Harold Sisson, Pomeroy,
brother of tho groom.
Acolytes were David Warth
and Artie Hwtnel, both of
Pomeroy. The ringbearers
were Jay and Jon Ohlinger,
Duncan Falls, and they car·
ried heart·shaped ring
cushions made by their
mother, Mrs. Terry Ohlinger.
Darrin Warth and Ryan
Evans were the trainbearers.
All of the male attendants
were in brown tuxedos and
had white carnation boutonnieres. The groom wore a
brown· tuxedo with a yellow
shirt, and had a yellow ·
rosebud boutonniere.
Amy Warth of Pomeroy
was the flower girl and she
was in a green gown of identical style to the mald of
honor. She carried a basket of
flower pet;lis. The acolytes,
ringbearers, trainhearers,
and flower girl are aU cousins
of the bride.
For her daughter's wed·
ding, Mrs. Ohlinger wore a
floor length gown of pale
green polyester pring
fashiol)ed with a cape collar.
Her corsage was of yellow
rosebuds. Mrs. Sisson was in
· a floor length gown with cap
sleeves in a gold and green
print on a light blue
background. Both mothers
wore ·yellow rosebud cor·
sages.
The bride's grandmothers,
Mrs. Arthur Evans, in a
lavender street length dress,

Chester Garden Club meets

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• •

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i

�B+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SW!day, Sept. 25, 1977

Miss Rebecca Wilson mames

®

1928

Wekome Wagon
club activities
. Sept. 26 -Card Group at 1 p.m. at Fran Shaw's. Call Susie
Bailey, 446-n65.
Sept. 29- Evening Bridge at Pam Terrizzi's. Call 446-4485.
. Oct. 3 - Beginning Macrame at 7:30 p .m . Call Debbie
Tipple, '146-1851.
Oct. 6 - Crafts at Pam Terrizzi 's. Call Debbie Tipple 4461851.
'
Oct. 10- Macrame 7:30p.m.
Oct. 13 -Get Acquainted Coffee 10 a.m. Call Cindy Potter
~~ '
Oct. 17 - General meeting.
Membership chainnan : Joy Atwood, 446-8599.

FltEE CLINIC SET
POMEROY - The final
free cervical cancer clinic for
Meigs area women this
month will be held from 12:30
p.m. to 3:30p.m. Wednesday
at Trinity Church in

Pomeroy. There are still
some appointment openings
for the clinic. Appointments
may be secured by calling
992-5368 daily or 992-5832 on
the weekend or evenings.

JW-Tile Sunday 'l;...,e..Sentioel, Sunday, Sept. 25, 1977

or

SUNDAY
YOUTH program : " RAP"
5:30 p.m . in the Fellowship
HaU of Gallipolis Christian
Church; all youth , seventh
grade through college age are
Invited.
GALLIA County Historical
Society 2 p.m., St. Peter's
Episcopal Church.
ALL DAY homecoming
meeting at Harris Baptist
Church, Webb Swain, Bob
Colvert speaking. Kessel Joy
Finders Singers. Prospect
Youth and Ca ldwell Family.
THERE WILL be a songfest
Sunday Afternoon, Sept. 25,
at the Pomeroy Seventh-&lt;lay
Adventist Church, beginning
at 2 p.m . The sing is open to
all gospel singers and
musicians, and the public is
invited to attend.
SPECIAL services at Light
House Tabernacle Assembly
of God Church . "Aga pe
Sounds" providing music.
Rev. Sam Calhoun invites the
public.
SPECIAL singing True Tones
at Vinton Baptist Church at
7:30 p.m .
REV . LISTON Falloway will

the brldl!, and MJaa blue. The &lt;Jther IMie all.tilPOMEROY- Rebecca Jan sister
laW11
Eichinger,
sister ol the ctanta and the ringbearer
Wilson, daughter of Mr. and
wore white cam11Uons edged
grocm.
Mrs. Robert K. W!13on,
The attendants' Door length In blue.
Pomeroy, became the bride
For her daughter's w-.
ci Donald Ray Eichinger, son gOWIIII were ci identical style.
ci Mrs. Opal Eichinger and The maid ol honor wu at- ding, Mrs. Wilson cllole I
the late Henry Eichinger, In a tired in a golm ol pale blue floor length peach polyester
candlelight ceremony per- Docked cotton polyester. The knit gown with sheer long
formed oo AI!&amp; . 'r1 at 7 p.m. at bridesmaids dresses were ci sleeves and pleated skirt. 1116
the Trinity Church, Pomeroy. polyester knit with each girl groom's mother was in aflooc
The Rev . W. H. Perrin of. in matching sba.des of blue. length gown In blue polyester
ficiated at the double ring The dresses were fashioned with a malchlnlllong aleeved
ceremony. Given In marria~e with with lace, and bell lace jacket Both mothers
by her parents and escorted sleeves. They were accented wore corsages of white
''
to the altar by her father, the with bacll: sashes la'ce over rosebuds.
blue
and
a
wide
ruffle
triJnm.
A
reception
was
held
at
the
bride wore a white gown of
chantilly lace with a double lng the bottom ol the dress. church lmrnedlately follo.ruffled scoop neckline and Each also wore a sliver and ing the ceremony, The bride's
the table was covered with a fCJr'o
long fitted sleeves' accented pearl necklace, gift
with a lace ruffle at the bride. They cArried white mal white tablecloth and !Ill
wrists . The bouffant skirt hurricane candleholders with overlay gathered at the front
with tiers of gathered rufDes lighted candles. Blue and with colonial nosegays. ,.
edged In chantilly lace Dowed white flowers, similiar to the tllreHiered cake decorated
into a chapel train. The bride's bouquet, encircled the with white roses and blue
forget-me-nota topped with
bride 's chapel length three globes.
Suzannah
Eichinger,
Colthe traditional bride and
tiered mantilla was trimmed
wnbwi,
niece
ol
the
groom,
groom encloaed In a white
with matching lace and was
as
Dower
girL
She
served
!ace
heart design, centered
held with a bandeau headwore
a
floor
length
dress
the table. The wedding cake
piece.
The bride carried a colonial fashioned in the same was flanked on one side by a
bouquet of white rooebuds, material as that of the maid flower . entwined silver
honor. Her jewelry was a candelabra and on the other
snowflake mwns and carnagold
locket, a gift of the bride. by a sUver punch bowl.
tions edged in pale blue. It
She
carried
a white wicker
HOI!essell were Mrs. Mlndl
was accented with baby's
basket
with
blue
and
white
Kearns
· and Miss Robin
breath and ribbon entwined
streamers
and
baby's
breath.
Stewart of Mason,
through the Dowers. The
Jimmy Wilson, brother of Miss Debbie Windon,
·streamers of blue and white
satin ribbon were tied in the bride, served as ring Pomeroy, assisted by Mra.
lover's knots. The bride's on- bearer. He wore a white tux- Pearl Mora, Miss Mary
ly jewelry was a silver heart edo with a blue and white ruf- Virginia Reibel, and the
fled shirt. Taper lighters women ol the Friendly Circle
history and government or necklace centered with a diaTrinity Church. Mrs. Tammond pendant, gift of the. were Charles Eichinger of
Colwnbus, and Dennis my Spangler, Ripley, W.Va.
comparable social studies groom.
.
are eligible to take the
registered the wedd!lfg
As the bride approached Eichinger, Chester.
preliminary multiple choice
Jim
Landon,
Tuppers
guests.
the altar, she presented close
e1amination to be given · at of the ceremony, she gave a Plains, served as best Jll811,
The bride and groom, both
local schools these two days.
Ushers
were
Charles
and
graduates
of Eastern High
white rose to the groom's
, Winners will be those who mother.
Dennis Eichinger, brothers of School, are students at Rio
receive the highest score in
A half hOur of music the groom, Brian Conde, Grande College. They now
each county, the second preceding tbe ceremony was Reedsville, Mark Mora, reside at Rio Grande.
highest score in each county presented by organist Kyle Pomeroy, · and Tom Reed,
Out of town guests at the
if it is in the 95th percentile of Allen. His selections Included Reedsville. The groom was wedding and reception were
scores for all entrants, and
attired in white tails and an !root Groveport, Ironton, Rio
the top 20 scores in the state. "Because", "Cherish", "A all white t:uffled shirt. The
Grande, Marietta, Girard,
Time for Us", "0 Perfect
Top scorers will be angroomsmen
were
in
.
white
Colwnbus,
Youngstown,
Wve", and "Feelir)gs." Miss
nounced at the end of Octails
with
blue
and
white
rufWesterville,
and
Norton,
Janice. Mcflwain of Ironton
Iober .
fled
shirts,
and
the
father
of
Ohio;
and
Valparaiso,
Ind.;
was soloist and her selections
These winners will be
the
bride
wore
a
white
tuxedo
Point Pleasant, Vienna,
were urr·, "We've Only Just
guests at Ohio University on
Begun " and " The Twelfth of with a pale blue pleated skirt. Henderson, and Morgantown,
Friday and Saturday, Nov. 11
The groom's boutonniere was W.Va.; Atlanta, Ga., and
Never."
and 12 to compete In the final
a
while rosebUd edged with Baroda, Mich.
The · ceremony was
round. The final two-hour highlighted with the soloist
essay will be given on singing " The Wedding
campus at 2 p.m. on Nov. 11. Prayer" while the couple
ell: AND NG
The top 25 winners will knelt in reverence before bereceive prizes ranging from a ing served conununion. The
. first prize of $100 and a $900 lighting of the symbolic wedfull-tuition scholarship to one ding candle concluded the
of six $450 partial-tuition ceremony.
scholarships to honorable
The altar of the church,
mention certificates. Second
with a 15 branch arched
through 2oth place winners candelabra
in
the
will also receive cash prizes background, was centered
ranging from $75 to $S.
with a blue and white arPresentation of these awards
rangement of gladioli,
. will be made on Saturday
··· l
daisies,
carnations, baby's
morning, Nov. 12.
breath and snow Oake mwns.
Anyone wishing more in- Flanking the altar were two
formation about the contest nine-branch
chandelier
can contact Dr. Marvin E. candelabra. The famlly pews
Fletcher at Bentley Hall, were marked with candles In
hardspun High Quality Steel. Crepe, omelet
Ohio University, Athens, 0. hurricane globes and white
and frying pans with a handsome hangable
45701 or by calling 614-594- satin bows with cascading
wooden handle.
·
6101 or 614-594-5116.
greenery and baby's breath.
.Miss Debbie Wilson, sister
Priced From "9.00
the bride, served as maid
honor. The bridesmaids
Where Else
were Miss Denise Dean and
Miss Pam Kautz of Pomeroy ;
Mrs. Sherry Ridgway, Rio
Grande, Miss Beth Wilson,
Gallipolis, 0.
State &amp; Third

or

or

History contest slated

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SALE

Peddler's Pantry

Hayride
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Court Street

WE WILL
BE CLOSED

or

The following are new
books released .by the Gallia
· Cowity District Ubrary on
September 23:
Fiction
Nightwing, by Martin
Smith; Laidlaw, by William
McOvaMey;
Luxembourg
Run, by Stanley Ellin ;
Players, by Don DeLillo;
Lament for a Lost Lover, by
POMEROY - A hayride
Philippa
Carr;
The was plaMed when the Young
Silrnarillion, by J · R. R. Adult Class of the Laurel Cliff
Tolklen, Morgana, by Marie Free Methodist' Church met .
Buchanan.
recently at the Meigs County
Noo·Flctloo
Infirmary.
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs had
The Alias Program, by
Fred Graham; Myself When scripture and prayer and the
Young, by Daphne du Bible study on prophecy was
Maurier;
Appalachian given by Franklin Martin.
Odyssey; by Steve Sherman; Mrs. Doris Shook had charge
Please Rememl&gt;er Me, by of the business meeting. Mrs.
Marl Brady; Field guide to Ernest Haggy and Mrs.
Edible Wild Plants, · by Randy Hawley served
Bradford Angier; Don't Call refreshments. Others atMe Ma, by Sam Churchill; tending were the Rev. Floyd
Paul Harvey's The Rest of Shook, Ernest Haggy, Kathy
the Story, by Paul Aurandt; Scarberry, Mike Wright, Mr.
The Art of Knots, by Marc and Mrs. Bobby Fox, Mr. and
Berthier; A Begil)ner's Book .Mrs. Richard Folmer, Randy
of Vegetable Gardening, by Hawley, Mrs. Franklin
Sigmund Lavine, The Magic . Martin, Rachel Craig, Leona
Garden, by Anthony S . Martin, Diana Lewis and
Mercatante.
Rick Ash.

Silver Bridge Plaza

LOW PRICESI

w. v"'

for

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS
BANK

IT'S BIGGER AND BETTER • • • • •
·IT'S A NEW STIFFLER DEPARTMENT STORE IN THE
OLD TRADITION OF EVERYDAY

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Eichinger

.Were Headquarters

..

-----

or

speak at the Guyan Gospel
Tabernacle at 7:30 p.m.
ATHENS - High school
Special singing will follow . seniors in Ohio will have the
MONDAY
opportwtity to participate In
. u ·
·1
th
GALLI A Chapter, OCSEA,
e 31 s t Oh 10
01 vers1 y
·
Hi
t
c
t
. will hold its regular monthly Amer~can
s ory on es t
business meeting at 7:30 p· .m. · Oct . 1112
- and compete for a
. 1 t 't '
f
II
at teh Grande Squares Club u
or
pa rt 1a • Ul 1on
Room on Eastern Ave. A staff scholarship
from
the
·
·1
representative will
be uruversl y.
All 12th Ye. r stud. nIs who
present to answer any
·
or have tak en
q uestions from members . are I a kmg
We have a superb
Plan to attend.
selection of all kinds o f
TUESDAY
Bulova digital, electronic
OPEN GATE Garden Club at
and conventional
Mrs, Virginia Covert's at
THURSDAY
watches ... In every
7:30. Installation of officers.
PHILOMATHEAN
Dinner
price range . In every
LAFAYETTE
Unit
27 meeting 6t30 p.m. at Ocar's.
style . We have them all.
American Legion Auxiliary 'If necessary to cancel by
And we service them
wii! meet at the new legion Wednesday , call Virgi'nia
well. With watch rep'air
Davis.
home on Bob McCormick
experts who iake pr ide
Road a 7:30. Buckeye Girls
in their work.
State report to be given.
TUESDAy
When you want a watch ,
RIO GRANDE C~llege
choose a name you can
HUBBARD TO HAWAII
Woman's Club meet at 8 p.m.
trust .. . Bulova. And a
in
the
coilege
dining
hall.
$1
SYRACUSE
- Airman
jeweler who ca res ...
dues payable.
David A. Hub!&gt;ard, son of
Clyde W. Hubbard of
Use Your Visa or Master Charge
RIVERSIDE Study Club at Syracuse, has graduated at
(;';;;~ :!.the home of Dr. Edna · Keesler AFB, Miss., from the
U. S. Air Force technical
training co urse for coinWEDNESDAY
PYTHIAN Sisters will hold ' munications equipment
their regular meeting at 7: 30 repairman. ·Hubhard is now
P:m, at the KP Hall.' Ail trained to install and
s1sters and brothers are maintain high-powered
welcome.
ground
communications
~--••••••••••~~!'•••••••••••••
equipment and is being
assigned to Hickam AFB ,
Hawaii. The airman is a 1976
graduate of Southern High
School.

She has a savings account· at

WE HAVE RETURNEDII

--- etc. •)

DAILY SENTINEL!

DOORS OPEN
9 A.M. SHARP!

�Two baby showers given

Katie's Korner
By Katie Crow
. POMEROY - How great are the odds of wiMing in the
Oh1? Lottery, especially the instant touchdown game oow
available?
~~me quote what appeared in the Belpre Observer in an
ad pa1d for by the Ohio Lobbery:
. "Prize structure lor Touchdown, average number ol
wmners per million tickets: $2 - 100,000; $5 - 10,000; $10 _
3,000; $200 -50; S!,000-10; $10,000 ~ 10."
Need 1 say more.
TilE SAND~LASTING being done to portions of the courtho~,

the sold1ers monument and tbe Meigs County jail is
qutte an unprovemenl. Now when the courthouse gets a new
coat of paint it will really stand out.
. The Meigs County Commissioners contrac~d the work
bemg. done. More and more people are painting up and
cleanrng up. That's good.

EUREKA ,- Two showers
were given in honor os
Brenda Stegall, one at
tjle home ol James
Porter ol Eureka. The
table setting was decorated in
green, yellow and white with
a sheet cake that said
"Baby" that was baked by
Patty Porter.
The shower was given by
Jenny Jo and Mary Beth
Porter. Those attending were
Mrs . Paul Porter, Mrs .
Gerald Truesdall, Mrs.
Alice Clary, Betty Sheets,
Joy Waugh, Cathy Pickett,
Sheila Slone, Jennifer Ours,
Vickie Waugh, Beverly
Jeffers, Nancy Caldwell,
James Porter, Bill Porter
and Charles Berry and Jack
Stegall.
Games were played. Prizes
were awarded to Mary Porter
and Libby Truesdall, the door
prize went to Joy Waugh.
Gifts were opened and
refreshments were served ol

MR. AND MRS. ROBERT HARDEN, Syracuse recently
re~ed from a three week visit in Ansbach, Ger~ny with
their daughter and son-in-law, SP 5 and Mrs . Paul Sechrest
formerly Debbie Harden.
'
Last Sunday following church and Sunday School Mrs. · cake, ice cream, mints and
Hard~n gave each person there a souvenir, a coin valued in
punch.
Amencan money at about .one-half cent and resembling our
Those sending gilts were
penny in that it is much smaller .
·
·
Lenora Green, Delores
The coin is considered a good luck piece and is called Fisher, Mrs. Ben Chaney,
uPf'ennig," pronOlmced, fennig.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ours,
11 was a nice gesture on lhepartol Bob and Esther.
Jr. and family, Mr. and Mrs.
'
Freman Locke, Maxine Betz,
· IT WAS A PLEASURE Friday to see Dayton Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Roger Henry,
' Mrs. John Porter, Shirley
Jr. and old c~te. ~nd his wife ol Portland, Oregon .
They are VISiting h1s mother, Flo Strickland and his sister Furst, Sherri Neal, Mr. and
and husband, Pandora and Don Collins.
Mrs. Glenn Kingery, Janice
. Dayton was an outstanding basketball player lor Pomeroy Fisher and Jason, Cindy
High School many moons ago. It was nice seeing you.
Maynard and Shawn, Mr. and
Mrs. Dowie Williams, Mr.
SJ;;NDING ' 'HAPPY BlRTiiDAY " wishes to Dave and Mrs. Roger Brumfield
Buskitk, of out advertising staff, who is celebrating his ·25th and girls, Cindy Wills,
birthday today.
Virginia Hemphill and Mr.
Many happy returns .' Dave is young enough to tell his age and
Mrs. Harry Wray.
but ·not old enough to hide it.
·

The second shower was

given at the home ol Fran
Bloomer. The table .oetting
was in blue, pink and white
with a sheet cake baked· by
the hostess that said "Baby."
Those attending were Mrs.
June Porter, Mrs. Cheryl
Kingery, Mrs. Patty Bosler
Mrs. Wilma Montgomery and
Sherr!, Mrs. Dell Caldwell
and Mrs. Brenda Keeler.
Gilts were opened; games
were played and prizes went
to Brenda Keefer who also
won the door prize and Patty
Boster won another game.
Refreshments ol cake, ice
cream, mints, coffee and pop
were served.
Those sending gilts were
Mrs. Bonnie A1111tln. Linda

RIO GRANDE - The Easton, all ol Tampa,
&amp;Mual Easton · reunion was Florida.
,
held Sunday, Sept. 4 at Bob
Fred and Rae Faircbilds of
Evans Shelter Ho~. Rio Baltimore, Md. Margaret and
Grande.
Myron Hayth of Jackson :
. Those present were . To.in, Truman Wells, Corky Wells,
Gayle, Rich, Sharon, Deloris, Anna Wells, Thehna Wells,
Matthew Garvey, aU of New Aloma Wilburn, Pamela
Jersey ; Jack, Kay, David Wilburn, Michael Wilburn,
and_ Shawn Easton, Bowling Shannon Wells, aU ol Rush,
Green, Ky. Kathleen Easton, Kentucky.
Ashland, Ky.; Rhonda Kiser,
Billy Hall, Florence Hall,
Pam Adams, Patricia Kiser, Linda Hall, Dale Cline, Malva
Bonnie and Lee Gayhart, Cline, Belleville-;- Micb.
Tommy
and
Margie
Clarence, Bonnie, Renee,
Stephens, Margaret Calhoun,
all of Ashland, Ky.
Ronald and Emmalou
Easton, Gregg Easton and
Roni Robertson, Rhonda
Easton, Ballard an\! Erma

.1

.d

ADVANCED a.EANING SERVICE

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Call 675-5572 After 4 P.N\.

. ~·
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Several things were voted

. :O.;in:~~~r ~e ~~:

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

I meet'mg each member is to

.

: r---------------------------------------------------~

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NOW SAVE $100 ON HEW
~

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u•erstateft\ti11'M

Roberts, Leslie Roberts and
Chad Roberts.
Mrs. Roush received a
telephone cakes from Mrs.
Walter McDade of Troy, Ohio
and · Mrs. Don Riffle
Lucasville, Ohio.
'

,.

......
-

GALLIPOLIS - Navy
Personnelman First Class
Garry J. Ferguson, son ol
William J. Ferguson of 56
. !'fill Creek Drive, Gallipolis,
IS participating in the major
NATO exercise "Display
Detennination."
He Is serving as a
crewmember aboard the tank
landing ship USS Saginaw,
homeported in Norfolk, Va.
The Saginaw 1.!1 deployed as a
unit of the U. S. Sixth Fleet in
the Mediterranean Sea.
"Slsplay Determination" is
one of a series of &amp;Mual
operations, conducted each
falllrom Norway to Turkey,
designed to provide unified
and coordinated training of
national and NATO forces
within the Allied European
Command.
·
A 1972 graduate of the
University of Colorado,
Greeley, with a bachelor or
science degree, he joined the
Navy in January 1967.

-...--

.--.
A"

.' ..

""-•
...

- ~

VISA'

«'pen

Monday
&amp;
Friday
til 8. p.m.

••

.'
•

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••
~

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-...-....-•
...
~

•

~

'"'
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The right look for today·s clingy fa shions IS Understatement.
And now-:- between September 23 and October 1-1s the right
•-::::.-4 time to buy tnem at the low pnce of$ 2.50.
Understatement's sheer, shaped Ultra Sheer less give your
legs a look of smooth, silky e"'gance. And the panties combine a
subtle diamond pattern with the comfort of a cotton crotch .
Take advantage of this 1&gt;m1ted offer. Indulge yourself with
the pantyhose that show off your legs, knit 1nto pant1es that
• don't show at all: new Hanes Understatement .

•

Make ABig
Hit With
Flowers

••••

nannd '

28 Cedar St.

.
j ~~ ().. \\\S\"e ...

HIO GRANDE - The She wore a yellow ~own and
Calvary Baptist Church was carried mixed pastel daL•ies
the setting for the July 16 and asters with matching
wedding of Linda Jo Winkle streamers.
to Fred Vollbom. The bride is
Ed Vollborn of Thurman
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. served as best man.
Mrs. Winkle wore a navy
Gerald Winkle of Sardinia
Ohio and the bridegroom ~ blue dress trimmed in white.
the son ol Mrs. Esta Vollbom Her corsage was mixed
and the late Harland Voll- flowers in pastel colors. Mrs.
born, ol Bidwell.
Vollbom wore a cream dress
The Rev. Charles Lusher trinuned in blue. Her corsage
performed the double ring was of pink carnations. A
ceremony in the church reception was held in the
decorated with asters, fellowship hall of the church
daisies, gladiolas and with Mrs. Kay Ervin, sister of
greenery.
the groom, and Mrs. Sue VallSarah Winters provided born, slster·ln·law o! the
music before the ceremony. groom, presiding at the table.
The bride's father escorted Atwo layer cake, with the top
her to the altar. She wore a in a heart shape, was served.
gown of ·white chiffon over · The bride changed into a
white satin with long run lace two piece outfit of light blue
sleeves gathered at the accented with while ac·
wrists. The gown was cessories, lor a wedding trip
fashioned with a high lace south. They are now residing
neckline and a chapel length in Bidwell.
train. The veil was floor
The new Mrs. Vollborn is a
length trinuned in lace. She graduate from Ohio State and
carried a bouquet of white is a teacher at Rio Grande
and yellow roses with baby's Elementary. Her husband is
breath and while streamers. manager at Hidden Valley
She wore a pea(! necklace Ranch. Out ol town guests
that had beeri worn by her Included J elf Winkle ol
mother when she was Sardinia, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
married·.
Winkle of Fayetteville, Ohio
Miss ·Kay Ward of and Mr. and Mrs. Greg Ervin
Gallipolis was maid of honor. of Columbus.

~~aW\:

Phone 446-9721
Gallipolis

DAVIS AJ.l.W,Ood 7 Pc. Dlntng Set w /42" -tO-eli• Round
Extension Table, 8 Sturdy Chainl.
·
MATCHING BUFF~T ·Io HUTCH TO'P,

Debonair detectives, happy hookers and total women
have all appeared on the
pages of recent bestsellers
by female authors . According to the soon to be
published Good HousekeeiJing Woman's Almanac, these
are some of the top selling
books of the last 15 years
Dome Agsths: bestseller
written by women:
Captalna and the Klnge, Up the Down SlalrcaH
Taylor Caldwell (1972)
Bel Kaufman (1965)
'
.Curtain . Agatha Christie Chrlaly , Catherine
(1975)
.
Marshall (1967)
The Crazy Ladt.a, Joyce The . Group , Mary
,
McCarthy (1963)
Elbert (1970)
Benll. Leonore Fleischer The Total Woman, Mara:
(1974)
·
bel Morgan 11973 )
The Feminine MJIIIIque, The Weight Walcher•
Betty Friedan (1 963) .
.Program Cookbook, Jean
I Never ~omlaact You a Nidetch (1972)
Roae Garden, Joanne Ship ot Foolo, Katherine
Greenberg (1964) .
·Anne Porter (1962)
The H•PPJ Hooker , Dark Flrea. Rosemary
Xaviera Hollander (1972)
Rogers (1975)
Fear o1 Flying, Erica Jong V1lley ot the Dallo, Jac(1973)
queline Susann (1966)

... at the end ol a simply rushed week. With the start of the
social season many organizations are beginning meetings and
dinners. After this week I fell partied out but a much better
person than before. Monday was the AAUW potluck dinner
where !learned about PEP- People with Education Produce .
I for one would be happy to be a semi-professional student.
Uke most people being cha_llenged brings out the best effort&amp;, work, productivity in me. On Tuesday l spoke to the
U011ess Club. The ladies were more than gra.cious as l tried to
relate some of my experiences. Each was patient, laughed In
all the t ight places and showed a lot ol interest in the fourth
estate. Thursday night The Welcome Wagon Newcomers' Club
and The Cancer Society hosted a look into Fall with a fashion
show. The people involved in this project were always
cbeerlul, perhaps with the !mowledge that they were working
lor a. good cause.
Book-of-the-week: From Desire Ill Desire by Yevgeny
Yevtusllenko. One or the greatest experiences I've ever had
came when in high school, I viewed a video-type ol
Yevtushenko reading his worlis in both Russian and English.
He writes with such style, simplistic at times, yet always filled
with emotion. Of the new Russia! school Yevtushenk.o stands
. alone as brllllanl and truly the spokesman for the group.
Although somewhat of a cbarming bad boy, he writes ol
IJBsslon so well I can almost say he is a younger Pasternak.
Russian poetry is somewhat compact yet what artists they all
are in painting word portraits.

Early American

Spanish

MSSm MAPLE

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Table, Hutch, 1 arm chair 5
side chairs. Reg. $799.97 ' .

Early American

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LaflyeHe MaD

Galipolis, OH.

•

WANT AD

they even now suspend some
HOLLYWOOD - (NEA)- badly b11r0ed patients.
Last year it was uJaws . "
Anyhow, this scene is one
This year it's "Star Wars." they hope the public will talk
Next year, the people at about and thereby hype 1M
MGM believe, it will be "Coma'' box office. They
"Coma."
have a fine cast for ''Coma,"
Tbe flhn Michael Crichton too -Genevieve Bujold is the
wrote (from Robin Cook's star (the doctor who suspects
novel) and is directing is cur- the crime and investigates
rently being shot at the MGM it ), Michael Douglas ,
studio. And il has one sensa- Elizabeth Ashley and .
tional scene which, alone, Richard Widmark.
should be enough to drag
And Michael Crichton. He's
thousands into the box office. the 6' 10" author ("The AnNo one was aJlowed on the dromeda Strain' • and "The
set when they shot this scene, Terminal Man," among
but I saw some stills of it. And others) who has become a
it is a heart-stopper. It's a director. uwestworld" was
scene of perhaps 20 or 25 peo- his first and this is his second.
ple, hospitalized and in
Crichton is also an M.D.,
comas, who are just suspend- although he never practiced
ed from wires. •
medicine . Still , that
The picture concerns a background helps on this pichospital crime - somebody ture with lis hospital selling.
has a black market in vital I watched a scerie in which
organs going, and puis pa- Genevieve Bujold, at the bed·
tients into comas and takes side of patient Tom Selleck
those organa. The critical (he was the Salem cigarette
sce!'e has those victims in man on · billboards and was
one huge ward, simply dang!· spotted there), has to take his
ing from wires.
pulse.
·
They look to be floating in
"No, this way," Crichton
mid-air. They are nude (It said, and showed Miss Bujold
was shot again with drapes exactly how to hold Selleck's
for TV) • They are connected hand so as to obtaii. the pro.to a device which feeds and per pulse reading.
monitors them automatical"I quit medicine," Crichton
ly.
says, "because I found out I
The claim is that this is, in didn't like it. And, after the
reality; the treatment of the last few days on this set,
Mure for people in comas. shooting in an operating room
Being suspended like that set, it's all come back to me
eliminates the danger ol bed why I didn't like it."
sores. II is considerably Crichton thinks that
cbeaper than individualized "Coma" Will. be successful
treatment. One doctor says because it is a "scary"
that, in certain bum clinics,

'------:------------------....,..._J

ceJe {/'{'O,tes btrt. hcJa.
L.~

r11
'J

GALUPOUS - Jodi Lynn
Unroe celebrated her second
birthday on Saturday, Sept.
10 at home with her parents,
Charles and Kathy Unroe.
Refreshments of a doll cake
(made by Unck Gerald
F 11
e ure), ice. cream, coffee,
and Kool-Aid were served as :

~!~penedandenjoyedmany
•u~

Those attending were Mr.
.and Mrs. Doug Meadows,
Ellen and Tim, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Fellure, Milinda and
Angie, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Mullins,
Mrs.
Na~cy
McGuire, Jud Harrison and
Mrs. Lynn Chapman and

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OONTEMPORARY.UBERTY

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More vets may
get benefits

.

With a wave of books on the market teacbing us to stand up
for ourrighisand the lates theme being,staleyour feelings, I'd
like to share an experience with you. Friday, while opening the
mall, I came across an adv~mentfor porno films. Trash is
often called art, but a sick mind starxls lor what it is. After
calling the post office, I was shocked to learn mailing this !rash
is legal. The only recourse was to fill out a form at the post
!'~flee which would remove our name from the New York based
mailing list. I am currently in the process of writing letters to
state representatives abuut action against such laws. Why not
write a letter for something you believe in?

From the
dependable name
in time

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COMPLETES
TRAINING James
Weslfall, son or Mr. and·
Mrs. Frank Westfall,
Cheshire, bas recently
eompleted his basic
training and Is · currenily
nndergoiDg his advanced
Individual TraiDIDg at Fort
lknnlDg, Georgia. WhUe 1D
basic tralnlag James
received two medall, for
bls espertlae wltb tbe M-11
rifte and band grenades.
James will receive a $2,500
calli bonua and assignment
to Hawal4 he eall1ted for.
He II a 1971 graduate of
Kyger Creek Hlgb School.

HOURS:
Mon.- Friday
1:00-1:00
T-.-Wid. &amp; Thurs.
1:01-5:00

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E-RCALLED
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
wu called Saturday at 11:43
a.m. to Spring Ave. for Judy
Spencer, II, a medical
· patient who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

WASffiNGTON (UPI )
Legislation approved by
Congress and sent to
President Carter would open
the door to veterlllis' health
and ho~pllal benefits for
veterans who received less
than honorable discharges.
The measure, given final
congressional approval by
the House Friday, repeals a
Ia w barring anyone who ever
got less than an honorable
disc harge from receiving
veterans' health benefits.
Automatic G.I. benefits to
Vietnam era veterans taking
advantage ol Carter's .
discharge upgrade program
would be prohibited under the
legislation .
The manager of the
legislation,
Rep. · Ray
Roberts, 0-Texas, said White
House assistants told him
President Carter would sign
the bill.

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•

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24.3 Thtrd Ave ., Gallipolis

lafayette
Mall
Downtown
Gallipolis
']

.,
A

'

.,
'

.t.
" In some ways," he says,
movie. And yet it has no
scenes in which it sets out "I like directing better tban
deliberately to shock and acting. Writing is harder. I'm
frighten you, unless you count the kind of person wbo never
that scene or the suspended stops when I'm doing what
coma . victims. For one I'm doing. When I'm writing,
thing, Crichton has studiously I just keep on writing for
avoided any close-ups of hours, for days.
"But, with directing, you
surgical procedures. You'll
see no scalpels slicing skin, have to stop at the end of
every day. So it's easier on
oo vital organs spilling out.
"I don't agree with those me."
He says that he once toyed
who show expllcit scenes," he
says. " And I don't think the with the idea of becoming a
psychiatrist - "and here I
public likes them, either.
"When I go to a movie and am." He laughs, because be
there comes a spot when I say says that being a director and
to myself, 'Oh, God, they're having to deal with actors rereally not going to show me quires the skill and tact of a
that, are they?' and then they trained psychiatrist.
"In many ways,' ~ he says,
go ahead and show it to me,
well, those films I don't like. " ! am now closer to having a
And, from what l can see, private practice than I have
tbal type of film turns out to ever been."
He says he is the kind of
be only marginally sucperson who delights in laking
cessful, at best."
But Crichton thinks unnecessary chances. Profesucorna' ' can and will be sionally, he does !bat by
scary, without anything ex- writing books tba't are off the
plicit up there on the screen. beaten track.
And, In his private life, he
He believes, for one ·thing,
lakes
chances, too.
thai the theme of the film 1.!1
"I
have
my ways of exscary to begin with. He thinks
everybody is automatically pressing macho," he says.
frightened of hospitais. And "Mostly, it's scuba diving. I
he believes there is justifica- go down too far and take
ridiculous chances, stupid
tion in their fright.
"Hospitals are scary," he chances. I've gotten Into
says, "and with very good serious trouble doing that,
reason. "The idea has been too.
"But, fortunately, I'm dopopularized on TV and in
ing
less of that as I grow
slick magazines that you go
Into a hospital for a surgical older."
procedure - the removal of a
gall bladder, say - and they
fix you up and you walk out
and that's that.
"Well, sometimes it hal&gt;'
pens like that and sometimes
it doesn't. Even the best
surgeons admit thai surgey is
risky, at best. So I'd be very
frightened if I had to go into
the hospital." ·
Crichton says that when he
went to medical school -he is
a graduate of Harvard "medicine was at. lis most
scientific and inhuman.' He
. thinks now thai it has become
a little less scientific and a litANY
tie more human, with more
attention paid to the patient LIYINGROOM &amp; HALL *
and less to the noadings on the 'Oifor ............. ....
meters.
• • ...., .... 300 ~ft.
Curiously, he started out as
· a youngster, wanting to
write. But as a Harvard
Wldergraduate, his English
FURMITUit STllllEl STUMED
professors were always saying his writing was poor, so
S'cot~g~m·
he thought he might not be
able to make a living as a
PROTECTION
writer. Since pre-med was
popQlar at.Havard, he switch'
ed to pre-med.
hut, after he had gotten his
M.D., he began writing again.
And he has been very suc~1~208
cessful. Now, he has added
directing to his talents.

2995 .

;.." ';

"CLEAN HORNS PLAY BETTER" -One of the phUoaophies of the Wahama White
Falcon Band members Is that clean horns play and sound better than dirty ones. SO each
band member Is responsible for tbe cleaning of his instrument after each practice. Shown,
left to right, are Rhonda Kay, April Parsons and Usa Gllland.
·

INSTANT C"'WT

with a

By Dldr. KleiBer

Quote-of-the-week: In my life, 1 had the capacity ol either
being a mass murdered or an artist. !think it's that way with
any intense petson. Daryl Hall of rock duo Hall and Oates.

1 7!10

You' II
tract it down
much raster

''Coma ' ' is latest boxoffice chiller

What's up In
books by women

tcM\e. ''" e~;

-IJii.IIIC•.U.,.r

. Table, Hutch, 4 side chairs, 2
arm chairs. Reg . $9 99.95

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Vollbom

Flowers by GEORGE

•IIW.Ciw,..
• J
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aDd K111~.,.. O'NI' ..... m

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• Ltalllltd ll•klll Top

"881'1111' I PC. IIIIIDI'I'BJU\.UQAN DINmiJIIOOII
117 8 " " to ~~ !looipod wtlllou- mol!ltll

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or any special occasion .. . or
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for someone special, one of our
floral gifts are a joy to receive!

ALL8PJBCEB

DELIVERED

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You A.11y

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bring everything needed to
make a complete dress. One
member will be drawn and
their dress wUI be made by
everyone. A bake sale will be
held between members.at the
November meeting. New
officers will be elected during
November meeting. Also
names will be drawn for the
ladies' Christmas gilt. An·
nual Christmas dinner wiU be
held at the Holiday Inn. New
officers elected in November
will be Installed during
Christmas dinner.
The majority ol the evening
was spent having a "white
elephant sale."
The hostess served refreshments and meeting adjourned.
The next meeting will be
held at the home ol Dorothy
Beaver Oct. 'll at 7 p.m.
Those attending were Becky
Unroe, Juanita Ostergren,
Dana Caldwell, Daryle
Sheets, Janet
Hively,
Dorothy Beaver, Pam Clary
and daughter Nicki, Nelda
Caldwell, Alta Dailey, and
Geraldine Sheets .

Linda Winkle marries

RefrMIImtatl

oerved and prrw nre
played.
Those present were Cindy
Sl.uoo, John S!risher, Cindy
Roberta, Bill Lookado, Kathy
Roberts, Nikki Thaxton,
Cherie Roberts, Josle
Camden, Mike Wills, Ray
Roberta and advisor, Joanne
Roberts.

Area man in
NATO exercise

i:

.-...
...."
-•-·

Candy, C. H., and Tina
Easton, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Swisher, Ed Swisher, Tami
Easton, Ronnie and Micbelle
Eas.ton, Celcus Reynolds,
Ley1e
Easton, Bill, Donna •
'
K 1m,
Karen and Buck
Reynolds, Scott VanSickle,
Mac, Roma, Jeff, Carl Ward
Jaunita Damron, all of
Bidwell; lllr. and Mrs.
Vaughn Roush, Vinton; Joyce
Swisher, Englewood, Ohio.
The oldest member present
was Ballard Easton, age 73,
of Tampa, Fla.

Table, .Hutch, 2 arm chairs, 4
side chairs. Reg. $1399.95

- ~

""...
•

cbiklren by Jaw, they aNI:
support, physical care, moral
cano, and education. ln addillon to legal respon·
sibilltles, Christian paretts
have God·given respon·
sibilltles.
After the program the
youth dismissed with all
M.Y.F.
repeating tbe

blmeflc:tllln.
Wl!l't!

• 401:80:1:71" ......

Ultra Sheer pantyhose &amp; panties in one.

· ,.;

benefits paretts owe tMlr

GREAT·-------VALUES

Sew &amp; So Club meets :

CARPETS STEAM CLEANED

BiDWELL - The meetlnc
or the Bidwell youth was
called to order by president
Cindy Sisson.· Opening song
was "Sing A Brand New
Song. "
Pledges to 1M Arilerican
and Christian Flags were led
by Mike Wills along with the
pledge to the Bible.
Secrt!tary's report was given
by
Nikki
Thuton.
Treasurer's report was by
Kathy Roberts. New business
was plans for the annual
Halloween party.
The program was brought
by Josie Camden. This
week's program entitled "If I
Were A Parent" helped us to
look at a parent's vlewpoiht.
It also showed the lour

Easton reunion held

Mrs. Roush honored with party
LETART FALLS - A were served to Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hill
surprise party was held at the Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Hill and son Robbi'
Letart Community . Hall Howard Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Roush, Todd Robert~
Monday evening in honor of Lester Roush, Mr. and Mrs. and Mike ]U&gt;ush.
· Others attending were
Mrs. Edna Roush who was Russell Roush, ott Boston
celebrating her 91st birthday. Mrs. Jim Connolly, Brian and Davuj Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Roush was presented Shelly, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Randall Roberts, Todd
. many lovely gifts and money. Russell, Mandy and Micbael
She was also presented a Mr. and Mrs. Roger Manuet'
cake baked by her grand- Angie and Aimee, Vicki
daughter, Mrs. Roger Roush Roush, Greg Cundiff, Mr. and
decorated in white icing with Mrs. Dick Smith, John
yellow roses and blue icing Roush, Cindy Roush, Mrs.
around the outside ol the cake Melanie Barnett, Mrs. . GAUlPOUS - The Sew
and "Happy Birthday, Sharon Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. and So Club met at the home
Mother and Grandmother." Roger Roush, Mr. and Mrs. of Alta Dailey with 10
Refreshments of ice cream Patrick Hill and son Jered, members present.
The evenin~ was started
cake, coffee and Kool-Aid Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis.
with devotional readings ol
"The Children Sleep," "At
Even Tide" and 18th chapter
of Luke also a prayer was
read.
Secretary
and
DIRT EXTRACTION METHOD
treasurer's reports were read
I and approved.
I
RESIDENTIAL- COMMERCIAL
.
I
Streakless Machine Wall Washing
I Games were conducted by
I
Upholstery - Windows- Floors
I Dana Caldwell with the prize
1 going to Pam Clary Juanita
I
Complete Line of , ; .
Cleaniri'g Equipment &amp; Supplies
Ostergren and Lillie Fulks

Austin, Bambi Dains and
Bessie Clark, aU of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Hazlett of Lancaster; Mr.
and Mrs. Waldo Porter and
boys of Sandusky ; Mrs.
JeaMie Lantz of Virginia ·
Bennie George, Debbi;
Tipple, Marie Moore, Gerry
Tale, Margorle McWllllama,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kingery,
Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbard (Jake)
Snodgrass and girls, Linda
Spires, Richard Ferguson
Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Angeli
and girls, Richard Henry
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Klsne;
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ross and daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. George
Clark, all ol Gallipolis.

Bidwell youth have fellowship meeting

1

�(}!-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,Sept. 25, 1m

-~·-·~-

Fall arrives ·with joint fashion show-1

" Come on Jim, Margaux Hemingway did not get
started this way ." Even if Margaux didn't, Jan Thaler
and Jim Morrison seem to be having little trouble proving
their talents for the modeling business.

GALLIPOLIS - Leaves
adorned the pathway; a chill
of autumn mist was in the air.
Fall had arrived and with the
changing of the seasons what
better time to change your
outlook, your !lyle and most
of all your fashion scene.
Fall atTived in Gallipolis
with a fashion show spon·
sored by the Welcome Wagon
Newcomers' Club and the
Cancer Society, Thursday
night at the Elks' Hall in
town . The new look in fashion
was modeled with clothes
from PJ's, Bastille, Jack &amp;
Jill's and Carl's Shoe Store.
The latest for fall fashion was
back to the classics with
more softness a~d more
femininity. The layered look,
so popular last winter,
returned with more in·
teresting lines and colors.
Marianne Campbell
provided commentary as
models strolled down the
runway to music by Ann
Thompson on a Gulbransen
Pacemaker from Ward 's
Keyboard.
The evening began with
sleepware modeled by, Carol
Cremeans, tanz nightshirt :
Vicki Baxter, quilted robe,
johns;
Brooke
long
Warehime, hooded jumpsuit
and Beverly Splete, peignoir

and gown.
Denim by John Thaler,
split cowhide jacket and
denim jean; Bess Grace,
suede jacket and jeans ; Amy
Neal, denim gaucho suit;
Bridget Cloalc, denim bib
overalls.
Outdoors by Bill Gene
Johnson, leather coat, slacks,

shirt; Wilma Brown, hang ten
gaucho
suit ;
Carol
Cremeans, russet suede suit.
Western by Bill Campbell,
Lee's rust denim leisure suit :
Ularla Evans, lanz quilted
wrap jumper.
Sportswear by . Beverly
Splete, port wine John Meyer
corduroy suit: Gordon Splete,

I
~

•

•

•

"'
\ .

~

1!,

-

(

A model must be pretty, smile, be poised and
maintain her balance at all times. Jan Thaler seems to be
managing all four at one time.

woo_l plaid coat and green
den1ms.
Sporty OUtdoors by Peggy
Evans , suede ion~ coat, John
Meyer pants ; Br1dget Cloak,
sweater coat, gray pants;
Wilma Brown, poplin jacket.
The Committee by Joy
Atwood, Plaza South dress ;
Sue Bailey, black dress.
Green group by John
Thaler, green corduroy
slacks, shirt; Vicki Baxter,
JH CoUectibles knicker suit;
Amy Neal , Joseph Love
jacket dress.
Dress up by Bess Grace,
fur coat, red Caron dress;
Matt Evans, Suit, vest, shirt
and tie ; Holly Davis,
adorable pinaford dress.
Gauchos by Jan Thaler,
Caron suedette gauchos; Jim
Morrison, Fioavanti suit.
Evening - After Five by
Marieanna Campbell, Miss
Shaheen royal PUrPle.
Afternoon Events by Bill
Gene Johnson, top coat ,
blazer, turtle neck; Beverly
Spleet, James Kenrob knit
dress; Wilma BroWil, Plaza
South peasant dress and
shaw; Annessa Warehime,
blue layer sweater and
slacks.
Miss Hope by Bridget
Cloak, Gunne six black
challis .d ress.
Evenmg on the Town by
Bill Campbell, Tobias black
corduroy
suit;
Carol
Cremeans, Mr. Jay formal ;
Vicki Baxter·, Mr. Jay for·
mal ; Bess Grace , Miss
Shaheen formal.
' After the fashion show
refreshments,
provided
Marchi
Distrlbut·
by

...

SPORTS

.Kentucky stops
West Virginia

Joy Atwood and Susie Bailey, committee
chairpersons share a quiet moment at the close of the
show.
:

By HERB SPARROW
LEXINGTON. Ky. (UP!)
- Kentucky quarterback
Derrick Ramsey scored on a
one-yard touchdown plunge
and then later added a 5().
yard 5coring pass to end
Felix Wilson to lead the
Wildcats to a 28-13 victory
ove r 20th ranked West
Virginia Saturday.
West Virginia had taken an
early 7~ lead when quarterback Dan Kendra hit Dave
Riley on an 11-yard scoring
pass, capping a 75-yard
touchdown march on the
Mountaineers' second
possession of the game in the
first quarter.
Kentucky came ba~k when
cornerbac k Dallas Owen

ing Company and the
PHOTOS BY
Last Chance Carry Out
CATHERINE
BENET
were enjoyed by the
audience.
Prizes were
awarded to several lucky Newcomers' Club and the
people through the generosity Cancer Society had pulled
of Ambleslde Gardens, Carl's their resources for a worthy·
Family Shoe Store, Central cause and fall bad officially
Supply, Clark's Jewelry arrived in Gallipolis.
Store, F IowerIa nd , F un -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Fashions, Gillingham Drug, ,
Larry's Wayside Furniture,
O'Dell Lumber Company,
CAROU K. SNOWDEN
Sarah Coventry Jewel,ry,
24 State Street
Thaler Ford Sales, Toney
l'tl&lt;&gt;M444..290
Realty, The Vernon Com·
pany, Warehime Funeral
Home, White's Dean and
Barry paint Town, Willis Tire
company.
Supplying their latest
fashions : Jan Thaler and
Peggy Evans from PJ's, Jim
MorriSQn and Mike Allen of
the Bastille, Donna Allen
from Jack and Jill's, Jack
Hudson and Jan Brown from
Carl's Shoe Store. Assisting
in the dressing room were
Brenda Board and Ida
Thaler.
The committee for the
fashion show was Joy At·
wood, Chairing; Susie Bailey,
Co-Chairing; Pam Terrizi,
Mary Anne Jamison , Lois
Pbleger, Teresa Bib!, Kathy
Bostic, Judy Warehime and
Charla Evans.
As the evening lingered on
many stayed behind to get a
closer look at the daring new
liktagood aeigbbor,
heel size or the new heather
State Farm is there.
color. The evening ended with
a successful note · as the
audience remarked on the
p 7601
work done by many con·
cerned
people.
The

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(UPI) - Marshall's running
back duo of Claude Geiger
and Mike Bailey gained more
than 100 yards apiece for the
~nd straight week ro lead
Marshall to a 24-&lt;1 rout of
winless Toledo Saturday .
Bailey, who gained 101
yards on only 12 carries,
· se wed up the game for
Marshall, 2-1, by sprinting 60
yards for a touchdown to
boost the margin to 21~ in the
middle of til&lt;&gt; third quarter .

I

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Mose Rison rushed · for a
career high 179 yards and
scored three touchd ow ns
Saturday to lead Central
Michigan · University to a
come-from-behind 31·14
vicrory over Ohio University
in MidAmerican Conference
play.
The victory kept the Chippewas atop the MAC will) a 20 record and pushed their

l(enmore Appliances
50th Anniversary

SALE!

...

.
The look (or fall - sleek, no frills, no fuss . Carol Cremeans, Wilma Brown and Bill Gene
· · J ohnson model three classic examples of what's in for autumn .
'

IN

Elec. Dryer
Was $209.95

Colors

10.00 extra

(Langford 8'18 and Coleman
3-4), 2, 3:30p.m.
Chicago (Stone 15-11) at
Seattle (Medicb 11~ ). 4:35
p.m.
National League
St. Louis (Falcone 4-7) at
New York (Espinosa 8ol3 ),
2:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Kaat 6-10) at
Montreal (Dues 1-l), 2:15
p.m.
Cincinnati (Seaver 19~) at
Atlanta (Niekro (16-18), 2:15
p.m .
Pittsburgh (Candelaria 18'
5) at Chicago (R. Reuschel
m), 2:15p.m.
Los Angeles (John l!Hi) at
Houston (Niekro 13·7 ), 2:15
p.m.
San Francisco (Knepper l&lt;l8) at San Diego (Owchinko 8'
11), 4:00 p.m.

Kent State

Gas dryer

$209.95

: The AlmaJLac
Uoiled Press International
· Today is Sunday, Sept. 25,
the 268th day of 1977 with 97 to
follow.
The moon is approaching
its full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Saturn, Jupiter ,
Mars and Venus.
There are no evening stars.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Libra.
American author William
Faulkner was born on Sept.
25, 1897.
On this day in history:
In 1513, gpaolsh explorer
Balboa became the first
known European to see the
Pacific Ocean when he
crossed the Isthmus of
Panama.
In 1789, the first Congress
adopted 12 amendments to
the original Constitution, 10 of
which were ratified and
• became knorn as "The Bill of
Righ~."

on this laundry pair

THE LATEST FALL FASHIONS

.

Sunday's
. Probable Pitchers
United Press International
(All Times EDT)
American League
New York (Figueroa 15-lO)
at Rotonto (Clancy 4-7 ), I :30
p.m.
Boston (Tiant 11-8 ) at
Detroit (Crawford 7-7), 1:30
p.m.
Baltimore (Grimlsey 14-9)
at Cleveland (Bibby 12·12),
2:00p.m.
MUwaukee (Sorenson 6-9
and Travers 4-10 ) at Min·
nesota (Zahn 12·13 and
Thonnodsgard ll·l3), 2, 2:15
p.m.
.
Kansas City (Pattin 8-3 and
Splittorff J:Hi ) at California
(Brett 13-12 and Nolan o-3), 2,
4:00p.m.
Texas (Ellis 10·12 and
Umbarger 2~) . at Oakland

====~~~~::::~~==:;.27~84;:1/~6;7:84:1:-~
Washer
Was $309.95

season record tD 4-&lt;1. ·
Ohio University led 14-lO in
the second quarter an.d was
driving for an insurance
touchdown when Vondell
Robertson intercepted an
Andy Vetter pass . Eight
plays later, Rison scored his
first touchdown to put the
Chippewas ahead to stay.
Rison scored twice more in
the final quarter to lock up
the victory.

Today's hurlers

SAVE 880

Holly Davis, Matt Evans and bess Grace, all dressed up with some
go perhaps to a matinee, churcli or an autumn party. Marianne Campbell, background, beams
her approval .

Ue1ger, the 192-pound
transfer from Michigan
State, carried 34 times for 110
yards and ran three yards for
Marshall's first toucl1down
with 6:25 left in the first .
quarter .
Felton
score d
J .C.
Marshall's second touchdown
by blasting 10 yards through
the m iddle to shove the
Thundering Herd ahead 14~
early in the second quarter .
Ed Hamrick kicked a 48o yard field goal, the longest in
Marshall history , to conclude

•

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EQUIPM~NT

RENTAL &amp; SALES
• Home Olftln
• Haispital Beds
• Wheel ChMs

• CalMs
• Walrels
• Crutches

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• HumidifieiS
• Respira1oly Support

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100% Acrylic-Wool Look Jumper
with Woven Multicolor
Indian Stripe Pattern.
Long Sleeve Cowl Neck

Large-capacity Kenmore" washer
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MEDICAL SUPPLY
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ronald L. S.unaers
Manager &amp; S.IH Retlnllllln1'atl'~•

•

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6 cycles inclndP J•erruanimt press
4. watei· lf'vel s includin~ extra high
5 wash/ rinse tempf'ratm·" cmnhinations

KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Kent

Large-capacity Kenmore dryer
• Faht'ic master dryer shuts off at
pre-selected level of dt·yness
• Wrillklf' Guard® tumhl .. s clothcs after
dt·ying- ends to help pt·event wrinkl..s

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Kenmore dryera require eilher Ji:;aS or
t:lectric conneclors not indudcd in prjces i!hown
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rf'adilr uniluhlc for 11alt'

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Sear~

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~rVK•

a~:;
Plaza

boot set a school record .
TaUback George Jenkins
plowed in on a three-yard run
in the third period, but the
Flashes held as the Cardinals
tried for a two-point

State'sdonnantoffense came
Ill life in the fourth period for
two field goals by Paul
Marchese and a lour-yard
iDuchdown by Tom Roper ro
nip defending Mid-American conversion.
Kent kept Ball State deep in
Conference Champion Ball
its own terrilllry much of the
State 13-12 Saturday.
With the wind to his back, . game, thanks to the punting
Marchese booted field goals of Jim Posipanka who was
of 36 and 38 yarda to cut Ball caUed on seven times. One of
State's lead to 13-6. With I :36 his kicks was a 77-yard punt,
left, Roper crashed over for second longest in the school's
the score which boosted history.
· Kent's winning touchdown
Kent's overall record to 1·2
and Ita first MAC win of the drive was sparked by a 14yard pass !rom Mike Whalen
&amp;ellllllll.
Tblrd string kicker Mark to Kim Featsent, making him
O'ConneU had ·gotten Ball Kent's all-time leading
State rolling with field goals receiver. Featsent's fourth
of 51 8111 44 yarda in the and four reception for seven
llllCOnd period. His 51-yard yards set up Roper's score.
I

periods and led 28-20 when
substitute quarterback Greg
Castignola 's fumble was
recovered by Reggie Kinlaw
on the OSU 43.
That pumped new life into
the sagging Sooners who
promptly marched 57 yards
for a touchdown with Elvis
Peacock going the final yard
to make it 28-26. Peacock,
however, was stopped short
011 a twO-pQintconversion try.
Oklahoma got the ball
back, however, when OSU
was unable to field its on-side
kick at the S().yard line.
Quarterback Dean Blevins
then . ' hit split end Steve
Rhodes for

17-yarrt~

t(l

thot&gt;

The Sooners then moved in
three plays to the Buckeye 24
setting up von Schamann's
game-winning kick .
The Sooners, with quarter~
back Thomas Loti and
halfback Billy Simms doing
most of 'the damage, ripped
the Ohio State defense for two
touchdowns and a field goal
in the opening period.
Peacock got the first Ok·
lahoma touchdown when he
picked up a fumble by Loll
and raced 3J yards for the
score. Then only 54 seconds
later, Simms raced 15 yards
for another TD set up by a
fumble
by
Rurkeye

By POHLA SMITH
UPI Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Freshman quarterback Rick
Trocano ran lor three touch·
downs and passed for one
while senior running back
Elliot Walker ran for two TDs
and threw for one ~turday to
lead
the
17th-ranked
Panthers to a .76-0 shellacking
the scoring early in the fourth
of Temple.
quarter.
It was Pitt 's biggest
The shurout before a school
margin of victory since it
record crowd of 16,724 at
defeated Westminster' 118-D in
Homecoming came on the
1926 and Temple's worst loss
heels of Marshall's yielding
since it fell to Franklin ami
49 points in losing to ·Ohio
Marshall !J6.0 in 1899.
University and giving up 26 in
Trocano, playing only his
beating Morehead.
second college game as
Toledo, 1)..3, committed six
backup for injured starter
turnovers and advanced no
Matt Cavanaugh, did all of
farther than 1\larshail's 32his
scoring on runs of five,
yard line. The Rockets were
five and two yards in only two
led in rushing by Skip
quarters of play as Pitt coach
McCulley, with 82 yards oo 18
Jackie Sherrill cleared his
carries.
bench in the second half.
But Sherrill ·left Walker in
for three plays of the third
quarter - long enough for
him to push his total yards
rushing for the day to 102 and
Central Michigan allowed his career rushing yardage
total to 1,960, moving him in
OU, now J-2'this year, only 42
front
of Marshall Goldberg as
yards iDtal offense in the ·
Pitt's
second all..f.inne leading
·
· second half.
rusher.
·.,. Ohio University's scores
Walker scored his Tbs .on
came on a 14-yard John
runs of 4 and 20 yards and
Sommers run in the first
used a halfback option play ro
quarter and Vetter 's fourhit Willie Taylor with ·a 14yard run capping a 67-yard
yard scoring strike.
drive which was highlighted
·
Gordon' Jones also scored
by a 63-yard Vetter to Nigel
Turpin pass.

quarterback Rod Gerald.
Van Schamann kicked a 2J.
yard field goal late in the first
period and made it ~ with
another 23-yarder early in the
second period.
Ohio State marched 81
yards to get on the
scoreboard with the last 31
yards coming on a run by Ron
Springs . A fumble by
Peacock on the Oklahoma 19
set up a second quick OSU
to uchdown with Gerald
racing 19 yards for the score
to cut the margin to ~14.
OSU failed to take
advantage of two other
fumbles by the Sooners who

two touchdowns for Pitt, one
on an 84-yard punt return and
another on a l&lt;l-yard pass
from Trocano.
Another freshman quarterback, Lindsay Delaney, hit
Randy Reutershan with a 31·
yard touchdown pass. on the
first pass he ever threw on a
college field . JoJo Heath
scored on a 12-yard run and
Larry Sims scored on a threeyard spurt.
Six of the Pitt rouchdowns
followed rec ove ries of
Temple fumbles by Pitt's
quick
and
sharp-eyed
defense. Another touchdown
fo)lowed an interception of a
Temple pass.
.
Pitt's 76 points were the
most ever by a visiting team,
its 11 touchdowns ·the most by
a visiting team, its 10 extra
points the most by a visiting
team ; its '1:1 points in the
second quarter the most
points in one period by a
visiting team and its 48 points
in the first half the most in a
half by a visiting team.

Michigan slips
by Midshipmen
By RICHARD L· SHOOK
UPI Sports Writer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Junior tailback Harlan
Huckleby scored on second
quarter runs of IJ and 22
yards Saturda y, but topranked Michigan bogged
down in the second half in
struggling to a 14-7 victory
over Navy.
The Midshipmen, ending
their five-game winning
streak that included their
first two games lh,is season,
scored with 2:18 to play in the
third period im a 34-yard pass
from junior quarterback Bob
Leszczynski to junior split
end Sandy Jones.
But
Michigan 's
traditionally stout defense
stiffened and never let Navy

their initial first dollm of the
second half until 211:10 lw"
expired. Their only four :.r~
downs of the half c.o;.tt on a
driv~ that ~-"' with a
rnilled Gr~~ Nlllner 29-yard
field (1081.
Ml"!,.gan took the opening
kickoff and methodically
moved down the rain-eoaked
artificial turf only to have
Huckleby fumble on the one.
yard line for his third straight
crucial miscue in as many
games.
But he atoned for that the
next time the Wolverines hap
the ball by capping an l!().yard
drive with his 13-ya~d rnn
l : 10 into the second period.
Michigan stalled in its third
possession but took a short
Navy punt and drove 54.
across midfield again in yards,
with
Huckleby
winning its third straight scooting 22 yards to give his
team a 14-&lt;1 lead just 1 :42
game.
The Wolverines didn't get before halftime.
A Navy drive tenninated

Crenshaw, Hill
share KIO.lead

By RICK VANSANT
MASON, Ohio (UP!)
. Defending champion Ben
Crenshaw and veteran Mike
Hill battled against wind
gusting to 35 miles an hour
Saturday to share the lead
leading into Sunday's final
round of the $150,000 Ohio
Kings Island Open.
DETROIT (UP!) - Two- · when Lynn belted his 18th
Crenshaw took a 67~7·71run
homers by Carl homer off the right•field foul 205 into the last day of play,
Yastrzemski and Fred Lynn pole .
while Hill was 61Hi5-72-205 in
in the sixth inning powered
the chase for the $30,000 first
Rookie designated hitter prize.
Boston to a 6-2 victory over
the Detroit Tigers 6·2 Ted Cox hit his firE! Major
Three strokes bac&lt; at 208
Saturday and moved the Red League homer in the third to were Tony Cerda and Tom .
Sox ro within 21&gt; games of tie the game J.l af~r the Kite·, while Miller Barber,
first-place New York in the Tigers had taken a I~ lead in Jim Dent and Gary Grob
American League Easi.
~econd
on
Phil were four strokes behind at
the
The Yankees were rained Mankowski's RBI dno.1ble. AU . 209.
out in Toronto and Boston the Boston homers came off
Those were the only seven
trails second place Baltimore Tigers' starter Milt Wilcox. golfers managing to hold onto
Mike Paxton, J().O, worked sub-par scores after three
by a half-game.
Yastrzemski's horner, his 7 2-3 innings before yielding days of play at the par-70
·26th of the season, came after to ace reliever Bill Campbell, Jack Nicklaus Golf ·eenter.
Jim Rice's leadoff single and who picked up his 29th save.
Strong winds which caved
broke a 1-1 tie. Carlton Fisk Detroit starter Milt Wilcox, 6- in tents alongside the course
pushed all of Saturday's
singled
and
scored 2, took the loss.

Boston tops Detroit, 6-2

scores several strokes hjgher
than usual. ·
·
"My 71 isn't all that bad
today," figured Crenshaw.
"The wind gusted quite a bit
out there and it was tough to
.
shoot any kind of score ."
However, Crenshaw
blamed himself for not
carrying a two or three shot
lead into the final round.
"!.made a stupid mistake
011 No. 16, took a chance and
didn't play it safe," he
recalled. "I wound up with a
double bogey. If I'd played it
decently, maybe I'm going to
have a two or three shot
lead."
Hills not only benefitted
from Crenshaw's mistake at
No. 16, but also from a
brilliant putt of his own at No .
18.
'
"I got about a 25 or 31J.foot
birdie putt at No. 18 and i!
really saved the day, " said
Hill .

Deer hunting permits available
COLUMBUS - The Ohio checking station or offices of
Department ·of natural the Agricultural Stabilization
Resources' Division of and Conservation Service.
Wildlife, reminds sportsmen
Those disabled v~tcrans
that deer hunting pennlts are exempt from purchasing ·a
now available at most hun· hunting license or deer
ling license agencies.
permit may request an an·
Deer pennits are $10 plus a tlerless deer permit ap·
50-cent writing fee . Deer plication from the Division of
hunters must have a 1977 Wildlife, Fountain Square,
hunting license in addition to Columbus 43224.
the deer penni!.
Antlerless deer permits
This year the application will be available in two deer
blank for free antlerless deer Z()nes. In deer zone one,
hunting permits Is attached antlerless pennits will he
to the bottom of the deer issued in Defiance, Fulton,
penni!. Hunters wanting to Henry, Lucas, Paulding and
. apply for ani!erless deer Williams counties. In ·deer
hunting permits have until zone four, antle!less pennits
October 21 to mail their will be issued in Athens,
application to the address Belmont, Coshocton, Fair·
indicated on the application field, Gallla , Guernsey,
blank. Successful applicants Harrison, Jackson, Ucking,
will be determined by ran· Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
domized computer selection Muskingum, Noble, Perry,
and will be hotified by mail. Tuscarawas, Vinton and
Landowner antlerleas deer Washington counties.
pennits will be issued in
The deer longbow season
selected counties upon the will open statewide, except
request of landowners or Kelleys Island, for deer of
their children. Only one either sex on October 7 and
permit per landowner family continue through January 21,
will be issued. Applications · 1978. llunlin~ ho11rs nru •,
for these permits may b&lt;· hnur before SU1ulodu 1. hour
obtained at any local deer

had six for the day and the
score remained 211-14 at the
half.
~' reshman fullback Joel
Payton put OSU in the lead
for the first time midway in
the third quarter when he
capped a 48-yard drive with a
one-yard
plunge.
The
Buckeyes' final touchdown
came on a !~yard pass from
Cas.tignola to tight end
Jimmy Moore.
Oklahoma held the edge in
statistics picking up 250 yards
oo the ground to 173 for the
Buckeyes and Blevins
connect"~! on three of five
passes for 44 yards.

1:\.

Pitt humbles
Temple, .76-0

OU drops .loop opener

1..--S~ea_r_,s

"Who says a man can't make three dates for an evening ?" Not Bill Campbell and his
three lovelies, Bess Grace, Carol Cremeans and Vicki Baxter don't seem to mind either.

quarter on a 37-yard pass
from Kendra to Rick Duggan.
A twopoint conversion failed ,
leaving the Mountaineers
trailing 28-13.
The Mountaineers twice
drove into Kentucky territory
in the closing minutes of the
fourth quarter , but the Kentucky, also 2-1, stopped West
Virginia threats.
Ramsey ended the day as
UK's leading rusher with 86
yards in 17 carries while
connecting on only four of 11
passes for 71 yards.
Brooks added 79 ya rds
rushing for the ground·
or iented UK attack while
Dipre gain!'&lt;~ 65 yards as the
Wildcats rolled out Z/8 yards
rushing .

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS ( UP! ) - Uwe
von Schamann kicked a H·
yard field goal with three
seconds left to give fourth·
ranked Oklahoma a come·
from-behind 29-28 victory
Saturday over third-ranked
Ohio State in a regionally
.teleVised game.
The undefeated Sooners,
who led ~ early in the
second quarter, saw their
margin vanish in the second
and third period during a
rash of turnovers.
The Buckeyes, now 2-1, put
14 points on the board in each
of the second and th ird

.
Marshall blanks T 0 I·ed 0

"See me for car
home, life, health
and business
insurance!'

" Modeling is hard work" or so it 'looks. Bill Campbell, John Thaler and Bill Gene·
Johnson take a break to reenergize before going back to work.

intercepted a Kendra pass on
the West Virginia 311 yard line
at the end of the first quarter.
Kentucky scored 10 playe,rs
later on Ramsey's plunge,
and then took a 14-7 lead they
never relinquished when
Ramsey found Wilson on the
long scoring pass.
The Wildcats, hobbled by
injuries, added single touch·
downs In the third and fourth
quarter on a two-yard run by
Joe Dipre, a little used senior
who was repl acing the
injured Rod Stewart, and a
five-yard run by sophomore
Randy Brooks.
West Virginia , which had
upset Maryland last week
and is now 2-1. scored its final
touchdown early in the fourth

Buckeyes drop 29-28
tilt in last seconds

after sunset.
The primitive weapons
deer hunting season will be
Oct. 31 through Nov. 5 on
three specially designated
areas. Bucks only may be
taken during this season on
the Shawnee Forest in Scioto
and Adams counties, Wildcat
Hollow in Athe.Qs, Morgan
and Perry counties and at
Salt Fork Wildlife Area in
Guernsey counties.
·
The deer crossbow season
is open statewide except
Kelleys Island for deer of
either sex Dec. 31 through
Jan, 21, 1978. Hunting period
is I&gt; hour before sunrise to I&gt;
bour after sunset. CfOiisbows·
must have a working safety
and a one-piece stock more
than 25 inches long.
Th~ daylight huJlting of all
wild animals except deer and
waterfowl is prohibited in
each deer zone during the gun
season in that zone and on the
three primitive weapons
areas during the primitive

weapons season.
· hunng the regular deer

gun season hunters may u~t:'
only a shotg,·n using a :-.inglE.'

ball or riOed slug, or a single
shot muzzle loading rifle of
.38 caliber or larger. Hunting
hours will be 7 a .m . until 5
p.m. daily except Sunday.
The seasons for the deer
gun zones are as follows :
.Zone One - Nov . 28
through Dec. 2 for buck only
with a five·inch antler

minimwn. No open season on
Kelleys Island.
Zone Two - No deer. gun

season.
Zone Three - Nov . 28 for
buck or doe. Nov. 29 through
Dec. 2 for buck only with a
five-inch· antler minimum.
Zone Four - Nov. 28
thruugh Dec. 3 for buck only
with a flve·inch antler
minimum.
The four Ohio deer zones
are outlined in the 1977 Ohio
Tr_..,g
Hunting and
Regulations availa_..-with
each hunting and trapping
license . Ti •.: hunting and
trapping digest, Publication
85, may be obtained by
contacting the Publications
1~ 'r.iter, Ohio' Department of
Natural Resources, Fountain
Square, Columbus, 43224.

r:. the Wolverines one-yard
line early in the third quarter.

A penalty and a sack on
Leszczynski put the ball 011
the Michigan 23, and the
quarterback's desperation
pass from the nine two plays
later on fourth down was
caught senior wingback Joe
Curowski, wbo was tackled
just short of the goal line.
Sophomore defensive back
Mike Jolly offset his
responsibility for the lone
Navy score by tipping a pass

away from a wide-open
receiver on the Midshipmen's
next to last possession of the
game.
Leszczynski completed
eight of 11 passes for 110
yards in the third quarter,
winding
up
with
16
completions in 28 attempts
for 193 yards. Huckleby
gained 107 yards in the first
half and ended with 147 yards
on 24 carries.

Penn State. in·
27-9 triumph ·
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UP!) - Junior quarterback
Chuck Fusina woke up a
sluggish Penn State offense
with a 58oyard touchdown
bomb to .flanker Jimmy
Cefalo in the third quarter
Saturday and the fifth-ranked .
Nittany Lions went on to a 27·
9 victory over Maryland.
Fusina, who hit 19 of 29
passes for 286 yards, also hit
Mike Guman with a 20-yard

TD pass and Matt Bahr

kicked two field goals as the
Nittany Lions registered
their third victory of the
season and their 22n.d in 23
meetings with ihl' terps.
The game was tied at 3-3 in
. the third quarter when, from
his own 42-yard line, Fusina
found Cefalo five yards
behind Maryland safety
Jonathan Claiborne and hit
him with a perfect pass from
the Terps; 25. Cefalo eluded a
desperation
tackle
by
Claiborne and scored.
Passes of 12 yards to Steve
Geise aod Cefalo later in the
quarter set up a field goal of
37 yards by Bahr, his sixth
straight of the season which
broke the Penn State record
of five in one year set by his
brother, Chris, in 1973.
An 18·yard pass from
ATLANTA
(UP!)
Quarterback Steve Fuller ran Fusina to Guman on Penn
for two ·touchdowns and State's next drive put the
passed 66 yards ro · record· Lions on the Maryland 33 to
setting Jerry Butler for set up their final touchdown .
another Saturday ro lead Six plays later, Fusina hit
Clemson ro a 31-14 victory Guman coming out of the
over Georgia Tech, the backfield and the sophomore
largest margin the Tigers tailback scored.
Cefalo scored his second
have run up over the Yellow
touchdown of the . game with
Jackets in 74 years.
Butler, who set · a school 40 seconds remaining on a
record by catching five seven-yard pass from reserve
passes for 163 yards, caught quarterback Tony Capozzoli.
Ed Loncar kicked an IiiFuller's bomb at the Tech 20
yard
field goal ·as time ran
without a defender within 10
yards of him and waltzed out . in the first half and
across with Clemson's first reserve quarterback Larry
touchdown in the first period. Dick fired a 47-yard touch·
Fuller added his two scores down pass to Dean Richards
on runs of seven and one yard in the fourth quarter for
Maryland's only points.
in the second period.
The Tigers gqt another Loncar had a 34-yard field
touchdown early in the final ,goal attempt in the final
period when Leli!er Brown, a period blocked by middle
sophomore running back who guard Randy Sidler .
The Nittany Uons scored
gained 124 yards on 28
on
their first possession of the
carries, burst up the middle
for 20 yards with [4:23 left. game, aided by Scott Sit·
Clemson, · a two-point zkee's excellent diving catch
underdog, opened the scoring of a Fuaina pass that gained
midway through the first 48 yards and put Penn State
period o~ a 37-yard field goal on the Maryland 6. B«br
kicked a 21-yard field goal
by .linuny RusseU.
Georgia Tech cut the gap to four plays later.
The Terps held Penn
J&lt;l-7 late in the first period
State's
offense, which had
when Pat Moriarty lunged
gained
1,025
yards in the flnt
over from a yard out to cap a
66-yard drive and added its two games, without a flnt
other touchdown in the third do~~m in the second quarter
period when Rodney Lee but Lorlcar's field goal waa
broke up the middle for 17 the only points they were able
yards.
to wt on the board.

Clemson
wallops

foe 31-14

,,

•

�C.2-The SundaJI TIJnes..Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. ~.um

CJ-The&amp;mday 'filnes.Sentinel, SW&gt;day,Sept. ~. 1977

Southern cops third straight win
By G""l BaUey

RACINE Using a
bruising and balanced ground
attack, the Southern Tornadoes of Coach John Dud-

'!"in

quarter enroute to the easy

against no losses at Racine
Friday night by dwnping the
Waterford Wildcats 24-'.
Southern scored in every

Led by the running of junior
Billy Harrta, the Tornado
ground lll1l6 c:ballted up an

ding rolled to their third

SOUTHERN'S Kelly Winebrenner (18, on far right)
gets good blocking as he picks up a gain for the Tornadoes

win.

amazing 261 yards on the
ground. Harris had Ill yards
in 13 attempts and had two of
the touchdowns. With 4::10 left

· against Waterford Friday night. Southern won the game
to remain unbeaten in three starts.

Wahama rips Duval

in tbe first period, Harris hit
paydirt on a one-yard plunge
after Southern had marched
61 yards in 12 plays. The
Kelly Winebrenner kick for
the e:&lt;tras was blocked.
With I :33 left in the first
half, Harris again found what
he was looking for and went
in for a ten-yard score.
Winebrenner again missed
the extras and the hall-time
score stood 12-j).
Danny Dudding got the
Tornadoes on the board again
in the third period after his
team went 50 yards in 9 plays
by plunging over from the
three. The run for the extras
was no good. Steve Hill got
the last Southern score by
. going two yqrds up the
middle with eight minutes to
go in the game.
Waterford scored their only
touchdown of the night when
Benny King went five yards
up the middle with 2:02left in
the game. 'The Tornadoes had
two touchdowns called back
by penalties. With 10 seconds
showing or the clock, fresh·
man Danny Talbott hit the
line and found dsytight to
race 58 yards to paydirt, but

it turned out to be only a lot of
excitement for the fans as a
Tornado was caught holding
to nullify the run.
Mike Warner also ran well
with 5li yards while Martin
Bush had five tackles to lead
the defense . King led
Waterford with 47 yards
while Doug Carter had 34.
King also led the defense with
nine solo tackles.
Waterford had just 102
yards on the ground while
Southern had its 261. The
Wildcats led · in one depart·
ment, passing, by connecting
for 56 yards to Southern's 46.
Southern
has
their
homecoming Friday when
they host the Wahama White
Falcons.

Ironton whips
Broncos, 33-0

LINE PLAY was fierce during Fridsy's SouthernWaterford contest at Racine. Southern won, 24-', to
remain unbeaten this fall .

Deparlmeut
So. Wa.
95 40
Penalties
14
9
First downs
261 102
Yards rushing
Yards passing
46 58
307 158
Total yards
Fumbles
I
I
Passes completed
8-310-3
2
Interceptions thrown 2
Score by quarters:
Southern
6 12 18 24
Waterford
6 0 0 6

Wellston posts
COAL GROVE'S Jack Webb ( 43 ),lone senior in the Hornets young backfield, is brought
down on this play by Galtia's Mark Sheets. In background is Gallia's Mike Staggs (80) . The
Hornets won, 4~26 .

Blue Devils m
40-26 grid loss

Big Blacks
win fourth

yards on 24 carries and three
touchdowns. 'The 5'10" junior
also does the punting for the
.White Falcons and had one
hoot good for 39 yards. The
junior fullback has now scored
5 touchdowns in his last two
outings to give him a total of 30
points on the season.
Ken Hankinson also looked
sharp from his quarterback
post. Although the junior
s_ignal caller only had two
completions in seven attempts
he could have easily con·
ilected on at least three more
aerials had the receivers held
on to the ball.
Defensively you could pick
almost · any one of the 11
players as the stars of the
game. David Elias carne away
with individual tackle honors
with 10 solo shots. He was

aided i!l_l!ls defensive heroics
by Kurt Sayre a nd Rick
Buzzard with six each
followed by Ted Swartz with
five , while Blessing, Tim
Rawlings and Brei Holbrook
chipped in with four each.
Wahama will now take to
the road in search of victory
and number four when .they
travel to Racine, Ohio where
they will meet the unbeaten
Southern Tornadoes next
Friday night in a 7:~0 .p.m.
contest.
SCORING :
Duval
Wahama

7 oo o 7
7 o 6 21 34

WAHAMA- Smith, 17 .yard
run (Elias kick )
DUVAL - McConnick 4
yard run (Pyles kick)
WAHAMA - Smith 13 yard
run (.kick wide)
·
WAHAMA - Blessing 77
yard pass interception (Eli~s

k:lck

'

BOWLING
Sunda·y Miners League

Week of?-11 ·77
· Standings

w.

Team

Hot Shots

L.

2J 1

Team No.1
Sunday Duds
Cou nt r y Bumpkins
Team No. 3

16 8
15 9
12 12
A 20

TeamS

2 22

Team high game - Team S

373 ; Team 5 305 ; Team 5 295 .
Team high ser ies- TeamS
973; Team 2 BOB ; Country
Bumpki ns 738.

Men 's high game -

Bob

Will iams 194 ; Bob Williams

160 ; Roland Morris 154.
Men's high series - Bob
Williams 483; Roland Morris

411; Ralph Gibbs 378.

Women's high game ~
Will iams 179; Patti
William s 166; Sheryl Gibbs
P~tti

149.
Women 's high

series

-

Patti Williams 490; Sheryl
Gibbs 402; Ann Morris 397.
Sunday Miners League
Week of 9-18-77
Standings

Team
Hot Shot

W. L.
29 3

Country Bumpkins

20 12

Team 2
Sunday Duds

18 14
15 11

Teams

8 24

TeamJ
Team

6 26 .

high

game

PT. P:..EASANT - Coach
Steve Safford's Pt. Pleasant
Big Blacks remained tinbeaten and unscored upon in
four starts here Friday night
with a 21-j) victory over
visiting Hurricane.
Nearest the Hurricanes got
to the PPHS goal line was the
20 late in the third period. Bitt
they coughed up the hall on the
25 when Nibert nailed Andy
Holliday trying to pass.
Those proud local defenders, in the trenches and in the
SO!'ondary, were having a field
day again. Statistician Don
DeCoy showed Timbo Roberts
with6 hits and 10 assists; Paul
Krimm 9 tackles and 7 assists ;
Mike Marlin 8 and 3; Brerry
Hudson 4 and 4; Alan Whitman 3 and 6; Chris Mahan 3
and 4; Ron Newell 3 and 5;
John Withers 4 and 2. And
.other lads got in their licks

WAHAMA -Smith 9 yard
run (Elias ·kick)
WAHAMA - Blessing 52
yard· pass from Hankinson too.
(Elias kick )
INDIVIDUAL
STATIST!CS:
WAHAMA
STATISTICS
RUSHING - Smith, 24-126; Dept.
Hurr. PPHS
1st Downs
10
11
Roush, 8-12 ; Hankinson, 7-8; Net Yds Rush
59 136
Weaver, 5-2 ; Bamitz, 1-5 ; Passes
6-17 2·7
Buzzard, 2-3.
IntC. By
1
3
.
Yds Passing
42
15
PASSING - Hankin~on, 2-7- Scrimmage Yds
101 151
50 yds; Mitchell, 2-8-8 yds.
Return Ydge
56 · 118
RECEIVING- Blessing, 1- Fumbles
2
4
52 yds; Smith, 1·2 yds; Cooper, Fumbles Lost
o 2
1-3 yds; Weaver, l-5 yds:
Punts, YdsAve. 7-31.4 &gt;-42
5li
45
PUNTING - Smith, 1-39 yd. Penalts y ds
avg. ; Mitche, 7-26, yd. avg. Of!ensi~e Plays
71
52
DUVAL
---------RUSHING - McCormick,
14-58;_Cooper 12-9; ~iner, 9- Scott Howard was busy in
29; Mitchell, f&gt;-18; Vickers 3-9. the safety spot, fielding punts,
STATISTICS
caught a 7-yard pass, and
Wahama Duval turned in si&gt;me more pro
FirstDowns
10
6 pWlting with an average of 45Ydsrushing
48-156 43-.'17 yds on 5 kicks. He had one for
Yds. passing
50
8 54 and another 47-yarder that
Toialyards
206
95 was downed on the Hurricane
Passing
2-7 2-8 one-yard stripe.
Interceptions
1
I ~n Newell, Cook, and Ted
Fwnbles-Lost
4-3 2-2 Ohlinger each picked off an
Penalties
f&gt;-72 f&gt;-55 Andy •Holiday pass, and
Punts-Avg.
1-39 7-26 Hurricane's Tim Drake inOff. plays
5li
59 tercepted one of Holland's

tosses.
'The locals fumbled four
times and AI Perrine
recovered two of them for the
Redskins.
Hurricane's top rus.her was
Bill Allison with 31-yds in 14
attempts. Danny 'Woods
notched 28 in 8 tries.
The locals scored first with
24 seconds left in the opening
period. Ron Newell set it up
with an Interception and
batted out 42-yds to the
Hurricane
four
where
Holliday finally rolled him.
'Then Sommer cracked the
distance .
There was only 0:14 left in
the hall when PPHS drove 33yds i!J fiv!' plays, with Holland
plougl)ing over'from the one.
The big gainers were 14 by
Sornmer,ll by HoUand, a 7-yd
aerial to Howard.
Ted Ohlinger set up the
final Big Blacks TD. He
returned an interception 33yds to the Hurricane 10. That's
when Holland found Cook in a
comer of the end zone for an
8-yd touchdown.
Football is a funny game. In
the third quarter Hurricane
ran21 plays to 9 for PPHS but
still wound up with minus 39
rushiing . The locals had only
14.
Besides Sommer's hard
runnjpg, soph Jay Minton
picked up 16 in 4 carries;
Holland netted 7 in 5 (two
losses cost him yardage) ;
Bubba Jones had 4 in 3 tries;
Brian Stepp 3 in one shot; and
Ron Newell 2 1n one.
For Hurricane, Holliday and
Bob Gibson and Allison and
Barrett and Bert Jones got in
some good defensive ticks. But
they were not near enough to
stem the Llde.
Next Saturday night, at
Charleston's Laidley Field,
the Big Blacks knock heads
with the highly-touted Geoue
Washington Patriots.
sCOre by quarters:
Hurricane
0 It 0 110- 0
Pt. Pl"'l•·
7 7 0 7- 21

-

Rick

Women's high game- Ann
Women's high series- Ann

Tuesday Triplicate
League

Sept. 13, 1977
Standings

.Pis.
16
14
12
12

10
8

High indiv idual game -

.

~

(

Ironton

2 1 0 67

lo 1 0 49
'! 1 0 34

Beverly

·Hensley 447 ; Helen Phelps
440.
Team high gam'e - No. 6
.
.
a:--;
Scott Howard, fleet-footed senior quarterback for the Big
g or real estate on an end sweep.

RUNNIN .
Bla ·ks is sho G
. '
wn sc

•

.z:

• Hamilton

!l! Hartley 6

injured in last week's J:Hlloss
to Nelsonville York , came off
the bench to engineer two
fourth period touchdowns.
Wellston struck in the first
period on a nine yard pass
from Lowell Settles to J erry
Patton with Montgomery
adding the placement.
In the second period the
Rockets lugged the ball 98
yards in 18 ground plays with
fullback Don Osborne going
the final two yards and a 13-1l
halftime lead.
The Vikings narrowed the
count to 13-9 in the third
period ion a four yard run by
Bruce Bailey.
In the final period Don
Osborne raced 60 yards for a
_TD AND Montgomery hjt
Brent Osborne with a 37 yard
strike and repeated this for
the two point conversion .
Wellston , now 2·1, netted
245 yards rushing with
Osborne getting 121 in ,16
ca rries, and two of five pass
attempts netted a pair of
touchdowns and 37 yards.
Vinton County had a total of
171 yards, au on the ground.
· Score by quarters :
Vinton Co.
0 o 6 0- 6
Wellston
7 6 0 15-28

PASSING
(Gallipolis)
Player
C-A I YG TO
Harr ington
1-7 0 7 0
WIII&gt;S
0-1 0 0 0
Totals
1-8070
!Coa l Grovel
Player
C-A I YG TO
Brammer
1-2 0 34 1
Kegley
0-1 0 0 0
Sexton
0-1 0 0 0
Totals
1-4 0 34 1
Team Statistics

Department

G

First downs

7

CG
13

Yards rushing
Lost rushi ng

218
65

255

Net rushing
Pass attempts

153
8
1

247
4
1

0
7
160

0
34
281
58
50
1
0
7-45
5-178

Completions

Intercepted by
Yards pa ssing
Tqtal yards
Plays
Return yards
Fumbles
Lost fumbles
Penalties
Punts

36

238
6
s
2-10
4-101

e

RecOvered enemy fumbles : .

Coal Grove - Randy Hardy ,
Rex Heyman, Tex Sexton,
12); Doug Will is.
Scoring: GAHS - Gary
Dabney, 77-yard run , 3:55
third, (run fa ll) ; Nick
Robinson,

97 -yard

punt

return , 10: 56 fourth (Greg
Harrington to Mike Staggs) ;

TIIISTLEDOWN
NORTH
. RANDALL, Ohio
Scott Morrison, 23-yard run ,
5: 17, fourth I pass fall): Gary (UP!) - B.B. Baker won the
Dabney, SO-yard run, 2:12 . featured eighth race at
fourth (run fall) .
'Thistledown Friday with a
Randy
Coal Grove Hardy, 2-yard run , 6:47 first clocking of I : 13 2-5 for ·the six
(pass fall) ; Randy Hardy , 3- furlongs .
yard run. 2:01 first [Doug
. The three-year-old filly,
W illis, run) ; Doug Willis. 31· nddeo by Bennie Feticiano,
yard run , 11 : 03 second
(Willis, run) ; Jack Webb, 1- paid $13.60, $5.80 and $4.60.
yard run. 7:08 second (kick Miss A.D. was second and
fa iI) ; Scott Vanderhoof, 34- Rooty Toot Toot was third.
yard pass from
Keith
The 4-3-3 ninth race trifecta
Brammer, 4:46 second (run
of
Busy Brick, Go Dancer Go
fall) ; Brammer, 3-yard run,
and
Lad)' Fingal WRS worth
7:56 third (run fall ).
Score by quarters:
$2,280.30. The 2-4 daily double
Coal Grove
14 20 6 0-40 of Four Way Street and A
Gallipolis
o o 6 20-26
Spinning Spray, which paid
NEXT GAHS GAME
$100.20, returned $381.80.
Sept. 30, at Waverly.

MASON, Ohio (UPI ) Every once in a while Jack
Nicklaus has to do something
to show he's human .
Like miss a cut.
And so it was that Nicklaus
wasn 't around for today's
third round of the $150,000
Ohio Kings Island Open.
For the first time in seven
months~ and only the third
time in the last 125
tournaments, the Golden
Bear missed a cut Friday.
Nicklaus' 73-72-145 was
five over par and two strokes
off the cutoff mark reached
by 75 of the original156 man·
field.
The leader at the halfway
point was Mike Hill with a ~
65 - 133, followed by Ben
Crenshaw with 67-97-134.
Sharing third place were
Tom Kite and Bill CaUee, the
first round co-leaders who
slipped a bit Friday ·with 69s
after firing 66s Thursday.
They were five under par,
two strokes back of Hill.
For Nicklaus it was the
first cut he bad missed since
the Hawaiian Open in

February ,

but

Asked about Nicklaus'
showing, Crenshaw said,.
''Maybe he wa s netvous'
about tbat game."
Others missing the cut
included Bobby Cole, Charles
Coody, Curtis Sifford, Frank
Beard, Don Iverson, Jerry
McGee , David Graham, Ed
Sneed, Dale Douglass and
Bruce Lietzke.
Staying in contention just
three off the pace were Craig
Stadler, Gary Groh and Tony
Cerda. Four strokes back

THE COAL MINE'AS

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Cols

were Jerry Pate, Fred Marti,
Bill Pelham aud Sam Adams.
Hill, who was also the
second round leader last year
but faded, said he may quit
the tour if be doesn 't come up
with more goud rounds.
" I promised my wife and
family that if I don't make
$25,000 this year and next,
then 1'1 quit," said the
Jackson, Mich ., native.
"I'm 33-yearHld aod I
fig ure I don't need the
aggravation of traveling
40,000 miles a year and
spending $30,000 just trying to
make $10,000." .

Two ·stee l hc lts and
'1wo pol p·s ler cord
plies work I Oj!etht'r
for ~;o(ul ·lra c lio.u

1 2 0 48

13

was

TV.

2 1 0 50
1 2 o 38

Twp.

it

particularly embarassing
because it came at the Jack
Nicklaus Golf Center , a
course designed and partlyowned by Nicklaus.
,
Nicklaus, who might have
made the cut had he not taken
a double bogey seven on the
18th · hole
Friday,
immediately flew to Florida
to celebrate his son's
birthday Saturday, and
watch his alma mater, Ohio
Sl!tte, batUe Oklahoma on

1
LORETTA &amp;. CONWAY
lYNN
TWITTY

vsitors to only 52 net yards in
the last half while the Eagle
offense got rolling . Kuhn led
the .Eagle rushers with 63
yards in 17 attemots while
Dan .S pencer and Brian
Matthews each had 18 yards.
Eastern quarterbacks Brian
MaLLhews and Rusty Wigal
connected on five aerials for
47 yards while the Spartans
didn't connect once. Eastern
had 14 first downs compared
to 17 for the visitors .
Eastern is now 2-1 on the
year, and Friday will play
host to Federal Houcking.
Score by quarters:
Eastern
o 0 6 6-12
Alexander
0 8 0 0- 8
East. Ale.x.
Rushing
87 178
Passing
47
0
14 17
FD
Pen.
90 60
Pass, comp., int. · 5-14-1) ~3-1
Total yards
134 178

raced 18 yards to paydirt to
give the Eagles the margin of
victory. Kuhn also scored the
Eagles only other touchdown,
a three-yard caper in the
third period.
Alexander seemed to have
the game under control in the
first half as they moved the
ball at will, but just couldn't
push any more than one
touchdown across. That score
was by Bob Wessels in the
second periodt and Wessels
also ran the extras. Wessels
gave the Eagles fits all night
as he chalked up most of the
Spartans' 178 yards on the
ground.
But the Eagles came out
fired up in the second half,
and the defense held the

EAST MEIGS - For the
first time since 1969, the host
Eastern Eagles of Coach Joe
Mitchum downed the visiting
Ale&lt;ander Spartans in a mild
upset Friday evening 12-3.
The fired-up Eagle squad had
determined before the contest to dedicate the game to
teammate Lawrence Pooler,
a starter who is out for the
season with a head injury,
and the momentum of that
dedication helped the hosts
overcome an 8·6 fourth
quarter deficit.
With just :25 showing left
in the game, an important
fourth and one situation could
have spelled out defeat for
the Eagles. But senior Joe
Kuhn found an opening and

Grain Prices= ·
Profitable
Hog

. Grid

:' Rock Hill
Athens
r. Wellston
iO Waverly

·4

54 247 4.5

~

=

Doi'othy Karr 167; Charlotte

1236.

Totals

1 -4

••
"'..

=.

Morris 406 ; Sheryl Gibbs 363 ;
~~e Searls 323.

428 .
Team high series -- No. 6

"'

Team

":'j

Jackson
1 2 o 22
MeiQS
0 3 0 6
~ Gallipolis
0 3 0 32 105
;::1 Sept. 23 ros.ults :
"' Coal Grove 40 Gallipolis
I" Belpre 11 Meigs 6
Ceedo-Kenova 21 Rock Hill
!'.! Pl. Pleasant 21 Hurricane
k Athens 15 Circleville 0
Ironton 33 Jefferson 0
Q Miami- Trace 62 Jackson 0
.:1 Logan 54 Nelsonville· York 0
,., Waverly 30 Unloto 3
"' Wellston 28 VInton County 6
:; Sept. 30 games;
t« Gallipolis at Waverly
Ironton at Meigs
Jackson at Athens
oo Wellston at Logan
::0 Coal Grove at South Point
~ Pl . Pleasant at George
Washington
"' Oct. 1 game:
;:\ Rock Hill at Ironton St.

Morr is 165 ; Sheryl Gibbs 134;
Sue Searls 126.

touchdown to Gret BleSBing which ended Ute' evening's
scoring for the Falcons.

..
..

LOOKING FOR BAIL CARRIER...:. GAHS defenders
Nick Robinson (24) and Danny Sickles (31) look for Coal
Grove ball carrier during Friday's non-eonference clash
on Memorial Field. Robinson set a school record with the
return of a punt 97 yards and a touchdown in the final
period.

!! Coal Grove

Martin 4A2 ; Les Gibbs 433 ;
Jeff Marl in 423.

Hantlnaon threw this 52' yard pa111 for a fourth period

.......:.:

.-1

2 735; Hot Shots 721.
Men's high game ·- Rick
Martin 165 ; Les Gibbs 162 ;
Rick Martin 155,

TOUCHDOWN PASS- Falcon Quarterback Ken

-...,....

5 . 19 ·3.8

M. Wil lis
3 -29 -9.6
Totals
28 153 5.4
(Coa I Grove)
TCB YG Avg
Player
3 31 10.3
K. Brammer
4 40 10.0
D. Willis
1 9 9.0
J . Kegley
14 79 5.6
R. Hardy
7 30 4.2
J . Webb
1 ~ 4.0
B. Stewart
13 37 2.8
T. Hall
9 21 2.3
Kev Markins
1 0 0.0
R. Barrett

=

Teem high series
Country Bumpk ins 796 ; Team

Hanning 164.
High series -

G. Harrington

l::
ALL GAMES ·
,. TEAM
W LT P
Pl. Pleas.
4 o o 89
- Logan
3 0 0 105

2 283 : Country Bumpkins 260.

Team
Royal Crown Bottling
No. 5
No. 1
No. 6
Shamrock Motel
No. 2

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Tbe EDT. 'The change was made
Cincinnati Stingers have an- because of a previously
nounced. their World Hockey scheduled ev ent at the
Association season opener Coliseum.
The Stingers have been
has been moved up a day .
'
training
in Europe during
The regular season opener,
against the Indianapolis ·much of September. They'
Racers, was scheduled at will play a Finnish club at
Riverfront Coliseum for '1\trlru, Finland, this Sunday
Thursday, Oct. 13. It will be and the following Tuesday. A
played Wednesday, Oct. 12, game against the Finnish
with faceoff at 7:35 p.m. National Team is slated for
Sept. 29.

14 trips. He scored twice on
periOd, and after his lads
runs of two and three
were ahead by forty, cleared
yards.
the bench.
other Hornet scores were
During that first half
Gallipolis nightmare, the by Doug Willis, 160-pound
Hornets ran 33 plays from junior haUback on a 31-yard
scrimmage for 231 total yards run (he also ran two conversions in); Jack Webb, one·
and II first downs.
The GaUians had a minus yard plunge; Scott Van34 yard total in 16 plays from dertlOof, on a 34-yard pass
scrimmage the fi rst half and from QB Keith Brammer and
no first downs. .
· Brammer, a· 155.-pound
After the final gun sounded, junior, on a three yard run.
Gallia 's scores came on a
total yards favored the
Hornets, 281-180. Coal Grove 77-yard scamper by Gary
ran 58 plays from scrimmage Dabney, a 97-yard punt
to Gallia's 36, and led in first return by Nick Robinson, 143downs,
13-7 . . pound sophomore wingback
Randy Hardy , 184).pouud
(new school record, breaking
sophomore fullback, paced
Bill Conley's 65-yard return
the visitors with 79 yards in
set against Jackson in 1960);
Scott Morrison's 23-yard
blast and a 50-yard dash by
Pabney. Greg Harrington,
who played most ot the game
at quarterback, passed to
Mike Staggs for a two-point
· conversion after the second ·
GAHS
score .
Dabney led the Blue
DevOs with 170 yards In 14
trips.
FriW.y, the Blue Devils
travel to Waverly for their
1977 Southeastern Ohio
League opener. The Hornets
take on defending Ohio Valley
Conference champion South
Point at South Point.
INDIVIDUAL NET
YAROS RUSHING
!Gallipolis) Player
TCB YG Avg
S. Morrison
1 23 23.0
G. Dabney
1~ 170 12.1
J . Yeagley
2 . 4 2.0
M. Sheets
2 3 1.5
N. Robinson
1 1 1.0

~: standings

Country Bumpk ins 284; Team

Men's high series -

SJDEUNED BY INJURY - JWJior Ted Mahan (80 )
suffered an ankle injury in the fourth quarter of Friday
night's PPHS game ·and ended up viewing the action from
the sidelines.
·

GALLIPOLIS - Taking
advantage of five Gallipolis
fumbles and a blocked punt
during the first two and onehalf quarters of play, visiting
Coal Grove built up a 40-j)
advantage over Gallipolis,
then held on for a 40:.26 victory over the Blue Devils here
Friday
night .
It was the Hornets' first
victory in_three starts lhls
fall. Gallla Academ y
dropped to 0-3 on tbe year.
Each time the Blue Devils
made a mistake Friday, the
Hornets capitlized and
scored.
Coach Dave Lucas began
substituting freely with 4: 45
remaining in the second

Eastern stuns
Spartans, 12-8

Nicklaus misses cut

second grid win
WELlSTON - Sparked by
Jeff
inj ured quarterback
Montgomery the Wellston
Golden Rockets registered a
28-6 victory over Vinton
County Friday night.
Montgomery, who was

•

'

BY GARY CLARX
both
teams which killed
MASON A 27-point numerous drives for both the
second half enabled the home team and the visitors.
Wahama White Falcons to Intermission came with the
emerge
with
a
34-7 score \ied at 7-7.
homecoming victory over the
The · third quarter wa&gt;
visiting
Duval
Yellow played between the 30 yard
Jack·e ts before a large tur- lines until late in the period
nout here Friday night.
when a had snap from center
Halftime ceremonies saw on an attempted punt gave
pretty Diana Able crowned Wahama a first doW)I on the
homecoming queen to make Duval 13 yard line.
the evening a complete sueJack Smith hit paydirt on
cess for Wahama followers. the first play from scrimmage
The win was the third with 1:591eft in the quarter to
straight for Coach Marcus put the bend area 11 out in
Rice's crew and gave them a front to stay. Elias' con3-1 season slate, while Duval version attempt was wide so
sUpped to 1-3 on th! year.
as the third stanza came to a
DesJ?ile the lop~ided score,_ close Wahama held a one
the two teams battled to a 7-7 touchdown lead at 13-7.
deadlock through three
Early in the final12 minutes
quarters of play before the of action, Duval made an
Wldte Falcons took advantage attempt to take the lead by
of a fumble recovery on the marching from their own 38
Duval 13 yru:d line which set yard line to . the WhiteFalc.on
up the go ahead touchdown. · 31 but Gregg Blessing took
. Wahama _lo!&gt;k the opening care of the visitors hopes of a
kickoff and marched 66 yards victory when he picked off a
in 12 plays to get thln~s tm- Mark Mitchell pass and raced
derway wllli Jack smith 71 yards for the third Falcon
covering, the final17 yards to touchdown of the night. Elias
paydirt for the games first hoot was true to make it '»-7.
score. David Elias' extra
Fiveminuteslaterthelocals
point kick made it 7..() with 6:24 struck again when Jack Smith
left in the initial period.
scored for the third time in the
Duval took the ensuing game on a nine yard burst up
kickoff and promptly fumbled the middle. Elias once again
the bl!il back to the localll on made good on 'the conversion
their second
play from attempt and Sllddenly the 7-7
scrimmage to give Wahama ball game became a 27'7
another excellent scoring Wahama lead but the White
opportunity on their second Falcons still weren't flnisbed .
On their next possession,
series of plays, but the Yellow
Jacket defense stiffened to kill Ken lianklrulon uncorked a 52
the scoring chance.
yard bomb to Greg Blessing
The Lincoln County 11 then for his first touchdown pass of
proceeded to cover 11 yards in the year. David Elias capped
nine plays to knot the sco..., off the night with his fourth
after the point after touch- extra point kick to make the
down conver.tlon was declared final score stand at 34-7.
good. Mark McCormick went
Wahama
completely
in from four yards out with dominated the final statistics
p .J·. Pyles splitting the by roling up 206 total yards
uprights to tie It at 7-7 with :26 (156) rushing) as compa...,d to
remaining In the first quarter. 95 total yards for Duval (87
Neither team could muster rushing).
a score in the second period
Jack Smith came away as
due to a rash of fumbles by the top offensive star with 126

around end to make it 33-j)
following Fletcher's kick.
Fullback Rod Boykin
picked up 79 yards in 22
carries as the Tigers
recorded 244 yards on the
ground and hit three of eight
passes for 53 more.
The tough Tiger defense
held the Broncos in check and
forced a passing game that
showed them completing just
three of 25 attempts, and
getting just three first downs.
lrontoo will travel to Meigs
Friday night to open defense
of the 1976 crown which they
shared with Logan .
Score by quarters :
Dayton Jefferson
000 0-0
Ironton
7 0 7 19-33

IRONTON - Defending
SEOAL co-ehamplon Ironton
easily disposed of visiting
Dayton Jefferson Friday
night by a 33-0 score as Coach
Bob Lotz's Tigers upped their
non-league record to 2-1.
Speedy halfback Juan
Thomas scored in the first
quarter on a nine yard run
and again in the third period
on a four yard scamper with
Joe Fletcher 's kicks putting
Ironton up 1~ heading Into
the final period.
In the final five minutes of
play Bodle Deeds returned an
interception 91 yards for a
TD, Wes Bowling raced
another pass theft back 41
yards for another, and Jerry
Taylor zoomed 34 yards

•

•

•·-~~·. ,_

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GALLIA ROLLER MILLS, INC.

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• Prln•s includt• in !:- t;•lhition ·

IUQSI

Satisfaction Guuronteed or Yuur Money Back

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' 4 46-2710

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it:A HS. ltot;UUC'K ANO CO.

...

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA

v

�C6--Tbe Sunday Times-SenUnel, Sunday, ~t. ~. 1917

C-4 1lle Sunday TiJlles.Sentinel, SWlday, Sept. ZS, 1917

Belpre edges Meigs, 11-6
By Greg Bailey
BELPRE ~ The Meigs
Marauders finall y got their
offense moving, but the host
Belpre Golden Eagles came
up with the big plays when
needed to down the . Meigs
crew 11-6 here Friday night.
Meigs wound up on top in
nearly ever y department
except the scoring . Meigs had
a total of 270 yards on the
night, led by running back
Greg Becker's superb 192
yards on the ground, and the
Marauder defense held the
hosts to just 31 yards rushing.
But 110 yards in penalties
against the Marauders and
50me big plays sent the boys
of Coach Charlie Chancey
down to their third loss of the
season.
It started out to be a real
thriller from the very first
kick-off when Belpre's
speedy Doug Ingold took the
kick on his own fifteen yard
line and found a hole and
raced to the Meigs five before
being stopped. But the Meigs
defense dug in to throw
quarterback Dana Gates for

a one and nine yard loss and · mage , Becker found a hole
fo rced him to cough up the and slanted off-tackle lor a 71
ball. Kevin McLaughlin yard gallop to paydirt. Dave
po unced on it and th e Blake's kick for the extras
Marauders had the ball on was wide.
their own fifteen.
Meigs controlled lhe baU
The offense was on the fo r most of the rest of the
move and in eleven plays had quarter, but the opening of
moved the ball to the Belpre the last stanza saw some fast
nine, but was stopped short turnarounds. With nine
onf a fourth down pass. minutes to go and Belpre at
Belpre had four tries to move the Meigs 46, Kenny YoWJg
th e ball but was stymied by intercepted another Gates'
the Marauder defense and aerial and returned it 24 ··
had to punt.
yards to give the Marauders
Meigs controlled the baU the ball at their own 48. But
nearly the whole game, but on the very first play,
near the end of the second quarterback George Gum
period, Belpre started on the fumbled the pigskin and a
Meigs 46 and moved to the 13 Belpre player picked it up to
with :OJ seconds left, Clark give his team the baU at the
MacGregor booted a 23 yard Meigs 38, On Belpre's first
field goal with no time left to play from there, Gates foWJd
give the hosts a 3~ lead to Rick Campbell In the end
zone for a 38 yard touchdown
take into the locker room.
To open the third period, pass to make it 9-6 Belpre.
the two teams exchanged a The Eagles then lined up in
series of downs, and on a the quail formation and
third down pass from Gates, pretended they were going to ·
Meigs's Joe Garnes picked kick the extras, but reserve
the aerial oflto give Meigs a quarterback Holder got the
chance on their own 29. On ball and found Gates in the
the first play from scrim·

MEIGS' Mike Wayland (25) caught a pass on this play (the only Marauder completion

~;~nght) before fumbling seconds later. Belpre defender is Mike Marks (17 ). Belpre won,

end zone for the two-point
conversion .
Meigs took the kick at their
own 15 and began a drive that
covered 80 yards in 18 plays
to put the baU on Belpre's 8yard line with a fourth and
four situation. Becker was
thrown for an eight yard Ia..
and the Eagles took over with
just 45 seconds remaining
and killed the clock for the
victory .
Before that eight-yard loss,
Becker was over the 200 yard
marker for the evening in 29
carries. MikeWaylandhad39
yards in eight carries for
Meigs, but the Eagles' big
plays made the difference in
yardage insignificant. Ingold
was the leading rusher for the
hosts as he tallied 26 yards In
eight attempts, although he
had some big gainers that
were negated by rushing
losses.
Belpre did have one
significant statistic, the
passing department . Gates
and Holder connected on six
of fourteen aerials for 147
yards and that one touch·
down. Both teams fumbled
three times, but the winners'
fumble loss didn't burt. Meigs
had two of their fumbles go
into the hands of Belpre, and
one resulted In a touchdown
and the other •topped a Meigs
, drive on the Belpre thirteen.
Meigs will open its 1977
SEOAL campaign Friday
when they play host to the
powerful Ironton Tigers.

M

Rush ing

8

263

Passing

Jl

Total Yards

7

116

270 ,

147

Passes-comp .

6-1

lo4-6

110

60

14

7

Penott tes
FD

Bobcats hand Wildcats
48-12 conference loss

Fumbtes-tost
3·2
3·1
Punts-yds.·•• · 3-87· 29 3-1J0.43
lndividuolo
Meig• Ru•hif19
All . Yd•.
29 192

Becker
worland
Wl l ford

8
J

5

G1 1m

Elk tns
3
SouIs by
1
Belpre Ru•hing
8
tngold

39

12

11
8•
1

26

4 13

Baker

J
1

Dev ore

Marks

1

Griffin
Gates

2

6
1

5(· 117

Combine
Fun
,and
Economy in an enjoyable,

practical hobby! Make att
those lovely dishes, lamps
and knick-knacks you'y~
only dreamed of owning.

Make lovely gill• for
your relatives and friends.
Phone now and join our
daily or weekly workshop.

Stop in and see what other
hobbyists have done .

The Town Kiln
1'20lf2 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Linda Mayer

Owner, Instructor

INTERCEPTS PASS - Hannan Trace's David
campbell (39) intercepts Kyger Creek pass on this play
during Friday's SV AC tilt at Cheshire. However, KC won
the
game, 48-12. - Tom Beaver . Peggy
Thomas photos.
'
.
.
.

Friday's linescores
By United Press International
·
FridiV
.
Pro B11sketbJII
' Buffalo - Waivec free agents
K;en Kee, Curvan Lewi s, Bnld
Werbte, Ti m Bryend and Ricky
Love .
M ilwaukee :-- Placed veteran
forward Rowland Garrett and
roo.kie guard Gary Yoder on

watvers .

utdoors display will he

ChicllgD

Soccer

(NASL)

-

Signed

goalkeeper Oave Ftescheri to ill
one.year contract.
Seattle (NASLl Signed
Tommy Ofd to a 1978 contracl .
Baseball

c h i c a g o White

Sox ·-

Cla imed m inor league outf ielder Bob Molinaro when Oetrolt
put him on irrevocable wa ivers.

THIS WEEK'S
Race rained out Saturday

at Evans Farm Festival
ATHENS~ The Division of
Wildlife will have hunting,
fistnng, and trapping displays
In
various
locations
U~rougho ut District 4. Per·
1!01Hrel from the Division of
Wildlife will be present to
answer any questions on fish
and wildlife.

sPECIAL

DEER PERMITS
Sep t. 2. Wilson ' s sn.ipe
Anllerless deer permit opens. thru Dec. 17.
.Sept . 9, Squirrel opens , thru
~pplication forms are now Nov . 12 (pr ivate) ; thru Dec .
available for the following 24 (public) .
counties in Deer Zone ·4:
Sept. 30, Woodco.ck opens,
Athens, Belmont, Coshocton, thru Dec . 3.
Oct . 1, Landowner an .
Fairfield, Gallia Guernsey, tlerless
perm i t requests
Harrison, Hocking, Jackson, accepted, thru Oct . 31.
Licking, Meigs, Monroe,
Oct . 1. Ravenna (deer gun)
Morgan, Muskingum, Noble,

co unties. Applications must

It' s. not just great style.
It 's hO\V gre:i!' style is ~
achieved. In soft , no~
phony Nature HideTM in
n ~.nure's

colors. In genuine

PI H111ation Crepe soles. In

rugged details and bold
slitching. In Dexter Shoes.

WI""' people suddenl y
lt1u k up to your feet,

)t•u·,e got DEXTERiTY .

For Him
SJJ

For Her
27
N ~

_

Mwidths

__::_Silver Bridge

be submitted before the
October 31 deadline.
The application for the free
public antlerless deer permit
is attached to the $10.50 deer
permit. Only one antlerless
deer county may be applied
for and the application
deadline for public anllerless
deer permit applications Is
October 21, 1977.
Qualified disabled veterans
may obtain an application for
an antlerless· deer permit by
writing: Division of Wildlife,
Permit Section, Fountain
Square,

Columbu s,

SEPT. 25 ,
thru OCT .. 1

•

I'

appli cations accepted , thr u

FOORONG &amp;
FRENCH FRIES

"

'

31.
Perry, Tuscarawas, Vinton, Oct.
Oct. 1, Free publ ic anand Washington.
t lerless appli cations accepted
Persons desiring a lan- (incl uding qualified disabled
downer antlerless permit vets), thr u Oct. :2, 1.
7. Grouse opens , thr u
may pick up application Oct.
Feb . 25.
forms at official checkirig
Oct. 7, Deer (l ongbow)
stations and county Soil and opens , thn..i Jan . 21 . .
Oct. B. Ravenna (l ongbow)
Water Conservation District
of 6 Saturdays .
offices in the' antlerless f irst
Oct . 15, (Ravena (longbow)

TRENTON, N.J. (UP!) all..:lay drizzle forced the
postponement of Saturday's
· $81,000 Machinst Union l5ll
USAC Cliarilpionship Auto
Race at Trenton In·
t~rnational Speedway.
The 28-ear field, including a
last minute entry by four·
time Indianapolis 500 winner
A. J. Foyt, will qualify for the
~

BECKER HAS GOOD NIGHT - Meigs' Greg Becker (13, with Qall ) raced for more than
200 yards in 29 carries against Belpre Friday night.

89~

'

Trouble still'persistent on

antler l ess
perm it
ap plications).
Oct . 21, Fox. oposossum,
skunk, weasel hunting opens,
thru Feb. 15.

Oct . 21.

scheduled -title match
Shavers, and the Garden sued
each other in two different
courts before making a
settlement last month . Now
they're all in business
together.
1\li. always the child of

Fox trapping

opens, thru Jan. 1.
Oct . 21 , Opossum , .s kunk ,
weasel trapping opens , thru

Feb. 18.
Oct . 22, Ravenna (longbow.)

third of 6 Saturdays.

Oct . 29, Ravenna (longbow I

are:
-Print legibly or type
application forms. Permits
that cannot be read will not
be fiUed.
-Make sure your address
is complete and correct.
- Apply well in advance of
deadline dates. Allow suf·
ficient time for the rna il.
Applications received after
the deadline cannot be filled.
(Note: Public drawing applicants should be sure to buy
their $10.50 deer permit
early, "" they will have time
to submit the antlerless deer
permit application.)
Sept. 1, Dog traini ng now
permitted on wildlife lands,
thru Apri I JO.
Sept. 2, Rail, gallinule
opens, thru Nov . 10.

of His OHice

no

senseless twice .in one roWJd
in sparring last Wednesday
against 37-year-{)ld Jimmy
Ellis and most people,
including Shavers, refuse to
bE:lieve it wasn't a hoax.

RT. 2 NORTH

1-L.

...

...

A wider side·lap &gt;design has made the world 's largest .
sell ing aluminum farm stieet even better by providing
greater rigidity and.leak resistance.
If you wa nt an economical me.tlll building panel
that's 66 percent lighter than galvanized, easier to handle,
can't rust, keeps in teriors more com fortable, never needs
paini and costs less to maintain, then you want Kaiser
Aluminum Twin· Rib Plus.
We've got it in 4-foot
1'1
wide sheets and long lengths.
Check Our Prices
And it's competitive in price
with galvanized.

Servi ng Meig s, Gallia &amp;

Mason Counties
Jack W. Carsey. Mgr.

PH. ~92 - 2181

FARMER

PHONE (304) 428-0000

..

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~J
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POMEROY, OHIO

I

Trinitron Plus. Trlnitron has a lway s been known· foro
great picture but Trinitron Plus introd uces you to o n
even greater picture. Sony engi nee rs fou nd a way to
intensify the electron beams which 11 painr' the picture .

Also, the surface of the tube is dorker to heighten
contrast . Whiter whi tes . Darker darks. More subtle
in· betweens.
Come see .the biggest, brighte st, sh a rpest Trinitron
ever. You'll believe it . Trinitron Plus. '' It's a $any ."

KV-2101
21" screen measured di'agonolly

TRINITRON

243 Third Ave.

I

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FARMER/ FARMER
OWNEO

CONTROllED

----------~------ -~·----~·-~----------

D.............
·-

Gallipoiis, Ohio 45631

'

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.

What is adult education?·
Adult education is a program of courses for individuals to
upgrade themselves, prepare for new jobs, or just fun .
When are clas'ses held?
Courses in adult education may be offered .anytime sufficient
community interest is · eVident. Standard courses will be offe red
periodically throughout the year as per class schedules. Class will be
cancelled and rescheduled during inclement weather .

J_ocosi Street

,I
Ji

KITCHIN

. ;;'•
. ,~ 0

{'&gt;"~

0

I

ADULT EDUCATION
BUtKEYE HILLS CAREER. CENTER

•
8

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D...

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'I

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0
--.....

~

Q !
II I1- ...... ••

D
CJJ
.-. ..
.,.,

u ·~

lMNO . . . .
W-4"

II

A(QUIRE NEW FRIENDS!

REGISTRATION
SEPTEMBER 26 &amp; 27
6:30 TO 8:30 P.M.

u·..,-

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OBTAIN SELF-SATISFACTION!

GALLIA·JACKSON-VINTON JVSD

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HOURS BY APPOINTMENT

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POMEROY 'LANDMARK

PARKERSBURG, WEST VIRGINIA

~1(. ..

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TWJN·RIB"+ DWS

TO 4542 EMERSON AVENUE

.

LEARN VOCATIONAL SKILLS!

Build
improved TWIN·RIB.+PWS
!!Jhe easy handler!'

Wishes to Announce the Relocotlon

.

Fees?
Fees are based on instructional, consumable, and facility costs.

i ... • ..

DR. DONALD S. PRITT
PODIATRIST

Here's the biggest Trinitron color TV yet- 21 11
(measured diagonally). And i1 has a big plu.-

Where?
·
Courses may be . held wherever adequate facilities exist.
Generally courses will be held at Buckeye Hills Career Center.

MINNESOTA 21 UCLA 13
MINNEAPOUS (UPI ) Sophomore Jeff Thompson
ranuned for two touchdowns
and tackle Steve Midboe
recovered a fumble in the end
zone for another .to lead ·
Minnesota to a 27 ·13 upset
victory over UCLA Saturday
in Memorial Stadium. ·

I

LEARNING IS LIFELONG

controversy, was knocked

fourth of 6 Saturdays.
Oct . 31, Dead li ne {lan downer antler l ess perm it
requests).
Oct. 31, Primit ive weapons
opens tor deer , thru Nov . 5.

SONY'S
BIG

BUCKEYE HILLS CA·REER CENTER

second of 6 Saturdays.

Oct . 21 , Deadline (pub.lic

CHESHIRE - Mike casey,
senior runntn&amp; back was the
offensive star while Claude
Cornelius, a 180 poWtd senior
tackle, blocked two punts to
lead an aggressive defense as
the Kyget Creek Bobcats
rolled to a 4&amp;-12 victory over
Hannan Trace here Friday
night.
Casey, for the second
straight week, had an out·
standing night getting five
touchdowns and 167 yards
rushing in 29 attempts.
Cornelius blocked two
punts, one leading to a score
and dropped Wildcat punter
Ron McCoy in the end zone
for a safety. He was also the
victim of a blocked punt by
Hannan Trace, which led to
one of their two scores for the
night.
Coach Larry Cremeens'
underdog Wildcats reached
paydirt first with 8:21 left In
the opening Stanza as David
Campbell, senior linebacker,
WILDCAT STOPPED - An unidentified Hannan Trace ball carrier is pulled to the
picked off an errant Greg
ground (on left) in this action shot of Friday's Hannan Trace. Kyger Creek footbaU game at
MuUord pass and returned it
Cheshire. Bobcat defender closing·in on right is Tim Nibert (82) - Peggy Thomas-Tom
57 yard! for the first six
Beaver photos.
·
points of the game. A run for
the two-point conversion was
seven plays as Casey went
Sprague's Bobcats used some fourth down play.
stopped.
Kyger Creek marched right razzle-dazzle handoffs which · Hannan Trace, behind the over the left side on a 17 yard
back going 74 yards in 15 placed the baU at the 34 yard pin·point passing of senior run. Lucas' kick pushed the
Steve Beaver began its best score to 36-12.
plays. Casey tied the score on line.
Scott Richards, senior
a two-yard plunge. Randy . Nine plays late~, Casey drive of the night.
cornerback,
picked off a
Beaver
hit
senior
David
Lucas' kick put the Bobcats . lOOmed ov~r.from fiVe yards
Beaver
pass
to
set·Up the next
Swain
for
16
yards;
Swain
for
In front for good at 7-li.
out. Lucas ktck was no good.
Bobcat
score.
Randy
Taylor,
Casey, Mulford and On the next series, Hannan 13 yards, Frank Mooney for
a
small,
but
quick
tailback,
1!0phomore fullback Victor Trace was _again _forced to 17 yards and Loren Cox for 14
VanSickle picked up large punt. Cornelrus agam blocked yards. Mooney then got a 16 . outran the Wildcat secondary
hunks of real estate during the punt. Casey scooped it up yard run and a five-yard on a 32 yard scoring play with
the march.
then outraced the Wildcats on jaunt before the drive was 4:54 left to push the count to
A pa.. Interception by Von a 29 yard jaunt for the TD. stopped at the Bobcat 17 yard 42-12.
The final Kyger Creek TD
Taylor started a second Lucas' kick pushed the score stripe.
came
in the final minutes on a
.
·
Rick
Clary's
block
punt
set
Bobcat march however the to 22-6 at the half.
seven-yard
pass from ·
up
the
final
Wildcat
TO
in
the
series ended 'on a . f~ble · In the third period, the
quarterback
Steve
Russell to
recovery by Hannan Trace. defendin~ SV AC champs, opening minutes of the fourth
junior
receiver
Gary
Nibert.
Four plays later, the scored wtth 6:45 left on the period. Two plays later,
It
was
set
up
on
a
fourth
down
Wildcats were forced to punt clock as Casey went over Beaver·connected with Swain
28-ya.rd
pa'"
completion
from
from the end . zone. Ron from 11 yards out capping a for a seven-yard touchdown.
Russell
to
sophomore
end
McCoy, senior punter, was 54 yard drive ~ 11 plays. A The kick was not good. That
dropped by Cornelius lor a btg mistake dunng the drive cut the Bobcat lead to 29-12. Tom Reese.
The Kyger Creek defense
Following the Wildcat
t wo·poinl safety, On the was an encroachment caU
·
held
Hannan Trace to just 26
kickoff,
Kyger
Creek's
of·
ensuing free kick Coach Jlm against WUdcats which gave
· '
the Bobcats new life on a tense marched 48 yards in yards on the ground. HT

71 .7
Yarda Puain&amp;
lOS MO
Total Yorda&amp;e
II
I
PuaesAttempt.
•
3
PaueaCompt.
I
4
Interceptions
2
3
Fumbles
0 2
Fumbles Lost
&amp;-45 wo
Penalized
By Quarters:
I 0 0 6-12
HT
7 15 7 lt--41
KC

NIGH-T LIFE AT

~

Ohio

43224.
Three steps to follow to help
assure yourself of a permit

20 starting spots at 9 a.m.
Sunday. The championship
car race will begin at I p.m.
Sunday.
The
Minl·lndy · 100·
Kilometer Super V will be
held at noon before the 15ll
mile championship race. ,
Because of the post·
ponement the race will not be
televised nationally as
originally scheduled.

collected 71 via the air.
Tho lou !ell HT with a J.2
reeord while ,Kyger Creek's
mark went to 2-1. Friday
night, Kyger Creek visits
Southwestern wblle Hannan
Trace hosts Green.
STATISTICS
DEPARTM.ENT
liT KC
First Downs
&amp; 15
Yards Rushing
26 293

--

!/;;f

or::J
o:

Registration may also be made at the Adult
Education Office during the week of
September 26, 1977 from 8:00a.m . to 4:00p.m .
TYPING

Course

Total
Hours

Adult Basio Education
Air Conditioning · Heating II
Auto Body Repair
Basic Clothing Construction
Basic Electricity
Dog Obedience
Drafting I
First Aid
Income Tax Preparation
Karate
Macrame
Medical Secretary
Preparation for Parenthood
Shorthand I
Slimnastics
Typing
Welding
Welding

40
60
20
48
18
60
20
30
20
16
60
14
48
14
30
60
60 ·

E

.
venmgs
Mon .. Wed.,
&amp; Thurs .
Tues. &amp; Wed.
Tues. &amp; Thur'.
Tues.
Tues. &amp; Thurs.
Mon.
Mol\· &amp; Wed.
Monday
Thurs.
Mon.
Thurs.
Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Wed.
Mon. &amp; Wed.
Mon.
Tues.
Mon. &amp; Wed.
Tues. &amp; Thurs.

-1978 Ending

6:00-10:00
6:00-10:00
6:30· 9:00
6:00-10: 00
7: oo. 8:30
6:00-10:0Q .
7: 00· 9: 00
6: 30- 9:30
6:00· 8:00
7: 00· 9: 00
6: 00· 10: 00
7:00· 9: 00
6:30- 9:30
7: 00 -9:00
6: 30· 9: 30
6:00-10:00
6:00-10: 00

Education

FIRST NATIONAL BA~K
3 Locations To Serve You
Main Bank -..,. Second Avenue
~rd Avenue Branch
Vinton .Branch - Vinton

Staffing
.Date
10-3-77

Time-P.M.
6:00· 9:00

10-4-77
10·4·77
10·4·77
10-4-77
10·3-77
10-3-77
10·3·77
10·6-77
10-3-77
10·6·77
10-5-77
10·5·77
10-10-77
10-3-77
10-4-77
10-3-77
10·4·77

Farm Business Planning &amp; Analysis
( Ca 11245;5336 ext. 252 for information l
fractical Nurse Program
( Call245-5336 ext. 2041or information)

Downtown Gallipcilis
Spring Valley Plaza

11·2·77
11 -22-77
11 -22-77
11 -10·77
12-19-77
11·21·77
12·5·77
12-8.77
12·5·77
12-1-77
11·23·77
11·16·77 (
11·30·77 J;
11·14·77
12·6·77
11 -21 -17
11-22·77

Instructor ·
Delong
Stewart
Garnes
Bradbury
Wilson II
· Abrams
Harper
Nibert
Brown
Massie
Steele
Wisniski
Brown
Lusk
Musser
Brown
Heath
Call

Fee
Fre.e

'

$65.00
$60.00
$17.00
$45.00
$25.00
$50.00
Free
$20.00
$20.00
$15.00
$50.00
Free
$45.00
$15.00
$30.00
$74.00
$74.00

Room
227
303
343
KK 18
323
304
232
224
280
Cafe
224
208
224
263
213
263
312
.312

245-S336 Ext. 252 lor inlormation.

ns

Is Space Pa
COMMERCIAL
&amp; SAVINGS BANK
Silver Bridge Pla1e

Date

)

.

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'

500 Third Avenue

OHIO VAllEY BANK 00.
Great Locations To Silrve You lliottior.
370 Jackson Pike
420 Third Avenue
419 Fourth Avenue "Mini a.nk'!
Rio Grande Branch

�c.-TheSimdayTimes.Sentlnel, Sunday, Sept. 1!i,l977

Vikings fall Bengals
to Panthers IIY
ATit

face Seahawks today

Seattle Seahawks.
Ctncmnati came off 11
powerful pre&gt;eason effort,
ooly to put m a dismal
offensive show and fall flat m
their faces last Sunday before
a sellout hometown crowd at
Riverfront Stadium.
Against Seattle, nearly aU
of Cincinnati's improvement
must come in their offensive

ROBERT SANGEORGE
CJNCINN
UP() - For
tht Cincinnati Bengals, it's
time to start the regular

WILLOW
WOOD
Ctesapeake recorded its first season over again .
COOling off a ll-3 upset loss
victory of the season here
Friday night rolling to a ~ at the hands of the Cleveland
victory over the host VIkings. Browns. the Bengals are
The SVAC Vikes have not · hoping to get their highly
touted offense back in gear
taated victory this season.
Mike Lake opened the this Sunday against the
acorir!g for the Panthera with
a 15 yard run with 8:28 to go
In the first quarter. The extra
poillt attempt was made by
Randy Fulton for a 7-4 lead.
With 10:59 to go in the
aecond quarter, Woody O.kin
ICOI'ed on a 12 yard run. The
Panthera failed on the ems
point attempt.
After leading 13·0 at
balftlme, Lake started the
aecond half scoring with a
four-yard touchdown run.
Lake seored again In the
• third quarter with 1:18 to go
and Fulton was successful
with his ema point.
The panthers are now 1-1·1
on the. year, wblle Sfmmes
Valley's record dropped to lf.

game. "The biggest !lung
('«ltributing lo our loss was
U1e inability of our offense to
movt• the ball," Bengals
coach
Bill
Johnson
concluded.
The Bengals may find
Seattle's defense to their
liking. Two starting defensive
linemen will be out with
serious injuries. Right tackle

Bill Sandifer suffered a
broken fibula booe in his right
leg during the Seahawks' 2914 loss lD the Baltimore Coli!;
Sunday . He will be replaced
by Bob Lurtsema.
Left tackle Steve Niehaus,
who was to be a mainstay in

the

Score by quarters :

C!es.

7 6 13 7-33

ooo

~v

0-

o

Bulldogs
slip past
CHS, 15-0

than we did," Johnson said of
the opening day upsel " ll's
very difficult to pinpoint
anytlungl was pleased with."
Indeed, the man who
makes the Cincinnati offense
go,
quarterback
Ken
Anderson, connected m less
than ha If or his passes against
the Browns, lor a paltry 157
yards, no touchdowns and one
interception.
The Seahawks, on the other
hand, moved lor a touchdown
through a tough Colt defense,
keeping themselves in the

quietly.

C.7-1'be Sunday Tlme&amp;Senlinel,Swlday, Sepl z;, 1977

Barons president says team financially stable
By PETER P. S!"UDicH JR.
KENT,Ohio(UPI)- Peter
Larsen, president of the
Cleveland Barons, says the
National Hockey League
team, with a year of
adversity and turmoil behind
it, is financially stable, but
management still faces the
task of marketing a winning

product.

"They've been through
adversity together," Larsen
said Friday at the team's
Kent
State
University
training facility. "A whole
period of 'bull' is beyond
them.
"They know there's a
stable situatioo here oow.
They know lhe cootracts will
be hooored. That's corning a

long way." Last season the
franchise nearly folded and
players had lllreatened to
strike.
Already thinking that the
club will make the playoffs

upcoming campa1gn . The

task,

however, has

not

produced significant results
nor the sought-alter season
ticket holders - currently
only aboul 3,000.
" We've got a hot-bed of
hockey in Cleveland," Larsen
happily admits. "It's been
here 48 years."
But must of Ule support

Ulis time around. larsen and
his maoagement team bave
been scouring northern Ghio
in an attempt to draw interest
and sell season tickets for the

from hockey comes from
Cleveland's far west side,
where hockey programs have
become mstitutions in the
schools, unlike most of the
most of educational outlets oo

the city's far east side and
inner city.
Larsen plans to combat this
by making his players more
visible in the community;

movmg the Barons' practices
around northern Ohio;
holding clinics; dropping in
oo active hockey programs in
the schools; "and working
with people who don't know
ooe end of a hockey stick
from the other and interest
them in hockey."
"We can do .it with this
product
because
it's

el.ciling ... he says. usut
we've gQt to get them to lhe
games. We've got to create a
reason for them to go to the
games and that takes topflight, professional sports

enlertainmenl. ,.
While Larsen worries about
attendance
and
the
marketability
of
the
franchise, he plans to leave
the on-ict operation to
General Manager Harry
Howell and Coach Jack
Evans, saying both have his
support. But LarseJ'! Is quick

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- 'l!l

LOINS

N College Hill 33 Mason 6
Napoleor 22 Montpelier 20
New Albany 21 Marysville 0
New lexington 24 Riverview

0

New. Richmon,:t JO Batavia 30
Newark 14 Cols Watterson 10

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Portsmouth N D J.4 Luc-

svllle Val 0
~eadlng

116&lt;53 152 .336

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Sm llll LA

U2 473 W .311
U5 514 15' .309

- ~~

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&gt; R... Cln
155 1&gt;3(1 192 ·.305
Amerlcln League

Toka'

TAMBELLINI FROZEN

•

!

Carew Min

Bottock Min
Singleton 81

U7 551177 .318

U2 528 162 .307

G. AB . H', Pet.
l&lt;U 584 225 .385

LeFlore Oet

Rivers NY
~Ice

Bos

Grap

U6 564 181 .333
145 SOli 161 .331
U7 622 202 ,325

131 539 174 .323
153 614 195 .318

Brett KC
•

Bumbry Bal
126 A92 153 .311
Bailor ior
H4 .460 1.43 .311
Home Runs
National League: Foster. Cin

SO; Burtougns, All 40; Schmidt,
Phil 37 i Lutlnski ,
Garvev, LA 31 .

Phil

l-Ib.

• • •••

lee
Cream
Vz-9J.

Pkg.

. $1 • 49
MEAT RAVIOLI. • • • • • • • • • • • 1-Ib.. 1-ol. Pkt. $139
CHEESE RAVIOLI. • • • • • • • • •
• 1-lb. l·o•. Pkg.

0

{!!..

•

tl48"

131 531169 .314
144 502 156 .311

Flak 8os

7~

SWANSON FROZEN

US 590 190 .322

Hendrick SO
Luzinskl Ph\

36;

American Llltue: Rice, BOS

38 ; Bonds, Cal and .N ettles, NY

36 ; scott, sos 33; Gamble. Chi

31 .

Ruft, 8attld In

' 'N1tlona.t ·t..•ague: Foster, Cin
l.U; Luzlnskl. PHil 125; Bur-

roUghs, Atl 113; Garvey, LA
H2 ; Cey, LA 110.

Amtrlcln LtiiUt:
Hisle,
Mlnn lll; ~nds, Cal 111;
COwens, KC 106; Rice, Bos 105 ;
HobSOn. Bos 104. ·
Stolen ••.,.•
National LtiiUt: . Taveras,
PJH 66: Cedeno, Hou 57;

Rlchlrds, SO 49 ; Morgan. Cin
- Morono, Pitt 48 .
Amerlun Le11Ue: Patek, KC
!111 Bonds, Cal 39; R:emy , Cal
31; LIFiort, Det and Pege, Oak

' 31.

Pitching

Most Victories.

llat'-1' Leetue : . Cerlton,
"'II 22·f; R:Reuschel , Chi 20·8;

-~.

Cln, John. LA and
' ·
St.L
' A•ertcatl 19-6.
LtiiUI : Leonard,
I(C 1~ Ryan. Cal 19-15;
(Jfltz,
11-10: Palmer; Bait
11-11;'~• KC 18-13.
• aU •un Avtrltt

n··-.. '" .......

pitched)
NatteMI Leellfe : Candelaria,
Pitt 2.AI; Jetm; LA and Carlton,

-IRJ R.. _MI . Chi 2.61;
-.LA2.,.,.

..,..,. ... L..... : . Tanana.
~Ien,U4J
- - ·Guidry,
Tex 2.72;
cat-f.73;
NY
; ,...,...., Batt end Rozema,

U1.

ltrlkiHfl .

,...._, LH. . . : Nlekro, Atl
• ; Rogers, Mtl 195 ; Richard,

Mtu 1..1. K_m... NY 192;
terlton, l'lllt Ito.
A..-leall LHfVI : Ryan , Cel
KC )25 ; Tanana,
Cllol , . I • , ..mt* kit 115;

....-d.

llylevtn, TIX ·112.

..,

t.
.
_
..

Tll)pltn St.L

~

,

1

Oak Glenn 0
Parma Padua 8 Normandy 8
(tie)
·~
Patrick Henry 7 Evergreen 0 "t
Perry 13 North Canton
Hoover 7
~­
~errysburg 5 BowlinQ Green ~

National League
CO. AB . H- Pet.

Griffey Cln

view o

&gt;

Pa inesville Harvey 21 Bruns wick 7
Parkersburg (W. Va .) S 44

•

(besed on .425 It bats)

7

~. 1

~

North Royalton 6 Rocky
River 0
Northwesl 24 Claymont 0
Oak Harbor 14 Genoa 6
01 msted Fails 22 Brooklyn 6
Orange 0 Solon 0 (tie)
Oregor Cloy 13 Port
_ Clinton 6'
Otsego 20 Elmwood 14

4~89'

PAMPERS DISPOSABLE

Newcomerstown

\ l

• .

Ridgewood 0 · .·
North Qlmsl'ed 23 Cle West
Tech 12
North RidgeVIlle ·21 Clear-

Molor League Leaders

•

•

Mt. Healthy 32 Cln Anderson

By Uni tel Preu1ntern1tlon11

151 590 192 .325
U3 At5 160 .323

Lebanon 30 Talawanda 0
Llepslc 25 Liberty Benton 0
Lima Rath 15 Defiance 7
Lockland 18 Morrow Little
Miami Q
Maple Heights 32 Cle Lincoln ,

6

Baeon

lb.

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Foster Cin
Slmmns Sf .L

Lancaster 26 Cols Desales 20

Reserve 12
Minerva 34 Tuslaw 14

Slleell

Sealtest

0 0 0 0- 0

Stoonett Pit

Hubbard 19 Austintown Fitch

17
Huron 7 Fremont St . Joseph 0
Indian Hills 7 Deer Park 7
Kirtland 15 Berkshire 13
La Brae 22 liberty 11
Lake 27 Lucas Springfield 12

Newark Coth 42 Licking ·
Valley o ·

Score by quarters:
Athens
6 0 0 9-15

15' 617 211 .3.42

Hicksville 32 Holgate 0
Highland 23 Woodridge 12
Hilliard 12 Westland 0
Hilltop 22 .Edon 6

Martins Ferry 10 Brldgeporl
0
Mossllloo 31 Cle Glenville 6
Meadowbrook 22 Caldwell 6
Mechanicsburg 27 Triad 0
Medina 15 Cle John Hay 14
Mentor 0 Glen Oaks o (tte)
Miaml!burg 40 Fairborn
Baker 7
Middletown Fenwick 28
Eator 0
Middletown
Monroe 43
Madison 12
Milford 7 Cln Sycamore 6
Mineral Ridge 14 Western

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Mariemont 26 Glen Este 13
MorlonCalh20
Fredericktown 0
Morlor Harding 19 Lima '
Shawnee 6

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have to make some trades
before the regular season
begins, Larsen says.
"Harry will have to trade to
strengthen the club," Larsen
readily admits. "It'll have to
happen, but it has to fit into
the Howell-Evans plan of
running the team."

Marion Local 25 Minster 6

NEWI SOIIEIIER'S INDIYIDUALLYWRAPPED

~*~

with."
'ro do that, the Barorlli will

w7

lb.

•••

"~

to tell Ulem what is needed.
uwe need more goals." he
says. "Defensively, we've got
to tighten up.
"But we need more goals.
They(HowellandEvans)say'
we're 60 goals away from the
playoffs. (That's 60 more
than the 80-85 goals Ule club
scored last year), That's two
or three players, perhaps.
Jack says he thinks he's three
players away from the
situation he'd like to be faced

High school ··1:

10-6

NEEDS
AT

defensive struggle at
Circleville Friday night the
Athens Bulldogs posted a 15-0
triumph over the bost Roundtowners.
In the first quarter AI
Walton found Kurt Halter
with 'a ,13 yard touchdown
!trike and this 8-4 lead stood
untU the final 48 _seconds in
the CQntest.
The lluUdogs recovered a
fumble at Circleville's 23 and
scored In four plays with
Walton going the final four
yarda.
John _Schanzenbach kicked
the mrs point and then
kicked off deep with. Cir·
clevllle taking over at the
~even yard line.
On the Hrst play Mlke Born
blasted Into the Circleville
' backfield and
dumped
quarterbaCk Richard Elsea
In the end zone for a 'safety
with jllllt 19 seconds left.
Defenae was the name of
the game as Athens led In
firlt doWIII7-4, in 1'IIBhlng 112114, and In paaaing 7!;-12.
Jack Smathers led Athens
with '¥/ yards rushing while
Dave Marshall netted 57 for

Circleville

game against Baltimore until
the fourth quarter.
Johnson ackoowledged that
lor a club in its second year 0(
league play, Seattle "can
score points. They have a
good quarterback in Jim Zorn
and move the ball well."
Oddsmakers
favor
Cincinnati by 20 points, the
widest margin of all NFL
games this Sunday:
"We'll have to get things
together again this week and
get at it," Johnson declared

" ' ,...,...... ,.... hi liMH ~ Ill •

In a

CIRCLEVILlE -

nerce

underwent

shoulder surgery in July and
has not reswned practice

BAKING

3-0.

middle ,

with the team . Veteran Roo
P.a.t has hUed hili spot.
Challenjling Seattle's
patchedup defense may be
some wounded
Bengal
linemen and running backs,
inc! udinl( fullbacks Boobie
Clark and Pete Johnson and
guards Glenn Bujnock, Greg
Fairchild and John Shinners.
But beyond the injury
reports
and
oflensive
strategies, the Bengals hope
for a change in attitude this
Sunday. "There's oo questioo
Cleveland wanted It more

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Richmond Heights 7 Cardinal
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Ridgedale
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Pleasant 20 (tie)
' River Valley 26 Wynford 0
Riverdale 13 Carey 6
Sandusky 28 Toledo Woodward 13
Shadyside 24 Mingo 8
Shaker Height. 7 Fairview 6
Shelby 20 Bucyrus 6
Sherwood
Fairv iew
13
Edgerton 7
Sidney 33 Tecumseh 13
South Range 13 McDonald o
Southeastern 21 Springboro 0 ,
Spring Cath 48 St. Paris ;
Graham 14
~ .
Spring Shawnee 47 Spring ~
Ridge 12
St. Clairsville 46 Toronto 8
St. Henry 4J Ansonia 8
St. Mary 37 Kenton 15
St . Marys (W. Va . ) 27
Frontier 6
Steubenville 28 Cols East 6
Struthers 13 Youngs Ursuline
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.
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Swa ntoo 27 Delton 6
Tiffin Calvert 3'1 Fostoria 16
Tol Whitmer 10 Findlay 8
Tri -Valley 8 Morgan 7
Trimble 13 Cols Wehrle 12
Upper Sandusky 7 Tiffin
Columbian 0
Urbana 26 Bellefontal ne 0
Volley Froge 35 Bay 18
Van Buren 22 Pandora Gilboa
7

Van Lue 18 McComb 6
Walsh Jesuit 14 Cuyahoga
Falls 0
·
Wapakoneta 20 Ellda 14
Warren Harding 6 Youngs
Chaney 6 (tie)
,
Washington C H 16 Lexington
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West Uberty Solem 21
Waynesfield 6
West Musklngum 19 New
Concord 7
WestervllleS 14 Mt. Vernon 7
Westerville M Chillicothe 20
Wheelersburg 3'1 J&lt;lorthwest 6
Willard 3 Norwalk 0
Willoughby S 1' Wickliffe 1•
Woodsfield 11 Shenandoah 0
Wooster 0 New Philadelphia 0
(tit)
.
'
Worthington 62 Delaware 0
Wyoming J.4 TaylorO
Young• Moonty 7 Howland 0

Youngs .N 15 YO\Higs, .S I

ZanesvHTe 38 K~tterlllg 12

�'

C8-The Sunday TIJnes..Sentinel, SWlday, Sept. 25, 191'1

-steelers, Raiders renew NFL riviilry today

Panthers shock
Ironrnen, 62-0
'·

JACKSON
All
American quarterback Art
Schlichter, who Is being
eought by over 100 colleges,
ran alid passed the Miami
Trace Panthers to a 62-G rout
of the Jackson lronmen
Frldlly night.
Schlichter engineered the
PantherS to 22 first downs
aJid 478 net yards while the
defense limited Jackson to
just four first downs and 31
total yards.
Trace scored twice In the
first quarter on a pair of 20
yard runs by Dennis Combs
with conversions by Shane
Riley on a pass from
'Schlichter and a run by David
Creamer.
The Panthers put 20 points
the board in the second
:tanza with Schlichter run·

on

By GREG AIELLO
UP! Sparto Wrller
The Pittsburgh Steelers
and Oaklalid Raiders are
trying to dismiss their
meeting Sunday as just
BI&gt;Cther game. And in a way
they're right. It's just the
next game in the NFL's
hottest rivalry.
These are the teams that
have woo the last three Super
Bowls between them. They
have faced each other In the
last three AFC Championship
games. For added drama, the
series has produced the "Immaculate Reception "
(Franco Harris' riNl&lt;'heted

nlng 28 yards for one rn;
passing seven yards to Bill
Hanner for another, and then
another 53 yard toss to
HaMer. .. The Machine" ran
for a two point conversion as
the halftime score zoomed to
36-0.

In the third quarter Combs
scored on a 20 yard run,
Shane Riley scooted 15 yards
with a recovered fumble,
Creamer ran 20 for a third
TD, and Mike Eddleman
added the crusher on a 61
yard pass from Scott
Grooms.
The Panthers hit on 10 of 17
PBSSI!S fot 201 yards and
rushed for another 'l/7.
Score by quarters: ·
Jackson
0 0 0 0- 0
MT
18 20 28 0-62

ID catch In the 1972 Playoffs )
aJid the "Six-Million Dollar

significant than any other In
Madden is e:rpected to open triumph last Moodily night.
the Raiders' Super Bowl with the same 22 players who "We're the world champions
Slander Suit " (George 5e88011 .
started the Super Bowl. Pitts- .and we're the team they have
Atkinson 's
unsuccessful
"That 's true," he said . burgh will be missing ooly to beat. And we have to heat
claim against Pittsburgh " Because we had so me linebacker and top draft them."
Coach Chuck Noll, who called doubts about how strong our choice Robin Cole, out four
In other games Sunday, It's
the Raiders' defensive back team was until we came back weeks wjth a fractured arm, the New York Giants at
part of a criminal element in and won that one."
with defensive end L.C. Dallas, Chicago at St. Louis,
the NFL. )
The Raiders have a 14- Greenwood (charley horse ) Atlanta at Washington,
Even in the regular season, game regular and j)()Siseason and cornerback Jimmy Allen Philadelphia at Los Angeles,
this game has taken on added winning streak while the (toe ) probable. Guard Jim Baltimore at the New York
meaning. In last year 's · Steelers, whose last defeat Clack again fills in f&lt;r Sam Jets, Buffalo at Denver,
season opener, Oakland was 24-7 to Oakland in last Davis, out with a pulled Houston at Green Bay, Miami
hosted the defending Super year's AFC Championship, hamstring.
at San Francisco, New
Bowl champion Steelers and own a !().game regular
"I'm not sure if tbe Steelers Orleans at Detroit, San Diego
scored 17 points In the fmal season winning streak. Both are that good o~ San at Kansas City and Seattle at
three minutes to win 31-28. teams recocded shutouts in Francisco that bad," said Cincinnati.
Coach John Madden admits their seas on-o penin g Oakland quarterback Ken
New England visits
that game was more victories.
Stabler of Pittsburgh's 'l/-G Cleveland Monday night.

North ·Gallia drops
Southwestern,-24-6

National League

East

W. L

Phil a

Plttsbgh
Ch i cago
St . lours
Montreat
New York

95
89
80
80
71
60

West

58
65
74
74
82
94

W. L

X·LOSAng
Cinci
Houston

GB
6'h
15'12
15 112
24

3S'h

Pet. GB

92 61 .601
83 72 .535 10
17 76 .503 IS
71 BJ .461 21 111

San Fran
San

Pet.
.621
.578
. 519
.519
.464
.39()

Oi~o

66 89 .A26 27
59 95 .383 331f'l

Atlanta

VINTON - Senior runing
backs Rex Justit:e and Bill
Lookadoo combined fo• 320
yards here Friday night in
leading the North Gallia
Pirates to a 2H conference
win over Southwestern.
Coach John Blake's Pirates
reached the scoreboard
following a scoreless first
quarter on a 71 yard run by
Lookadoo midway through
the second st8112a.
·
Justice scored on runs .of
one and 41 yards to pllllh the
Pirates into an 18-G lead going
Into the final quarter.
Southwestern, coached by
the veteran mentor Bob
Ashley, got on the scoreboard
in the fourth period as Larry
Carter grabbed a 17 yard
paSf! from Barry Jenkins. A
run for the extras was

Seattle
60 95 ,387 38
x -clinched division title
Fridllly's Results
Mllw ,eat Minn. ri!l ln .
New York S. Toronto 3
Cleveland 3, Balt imore 2
Boston 5, Detroit 1
Kansas City 7, Calif 3
Texas 6, Oakland s
Seattle 3, Ch lcaqo 2
SundiY'I GAmes
New York at Toronto
Boston at Detroit
Baltimore at Cleveland
Milwaukee at Minnesota, 2
Kansas City at Californ ia, 2
Texas at Oakland, 2
Chicago at Seattle

•·cliched dfvlson title
Frldll'f's Results

P i ttsburgh 2, Chicago 0
Cincinnati s, Atlanta 1.
Philadelphia 61 Montreal 1
St. Louis 10, New York 61
Houston .. , L.A . 3, 12 inns
San Fran ~. San Diego -4

SundaY's ·Gam·es ·

Philadelphia at Montrea l
St. Louis ·at New York
Pittsburgh i!ll Chi cago
Cincl.nnati at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Houston
San Francisco at San Diego

Americln Le1gue
EAst
W L
New York
B81timre
Boston
Detroit
Ctevelnd
Milw
Toronto
x.Knss Cfy
, Texas
Chicago •
Mlnnesot
Callfornl
Oakland

"

92
91
12

68

64

52

West

.w

96
87
86
80
72
59

Pet. GB

59 .614
62 .597
62 .595
82 .468
8S ....
90 .416
101 .340
L

55
61
69
73

21/ l
3
22 1h

26

JQlf.,

42

Pet . GB

.636

.565 10 1f~
.555 12
.. 523 17
81 .471 25

92 .391 37

STUTTGART,
West
Germany (UP!) - Soviet
Russia's highly regarded
Sergei Polloratski Friday
won two of three gold medals
in the middle heavyweight
division of the 31st world
weight lifting championships.
In Stuttgan's Killesberg
Sports Hall, the Russian woo
the final event, the snatch,
with a lift of 369 pounds.
He had to settle f&lt;r secood
place in the jerk at 457 pounds
but had enough weight on his
record to also grab the gold
medal in the all-around
classification - snatch and
jerk combined - with a
combined 8'll pounds.

M•lor Le.gue Resutts
By United Pr1ss International
Na11onal l..eague
Pitsbgh
POO 000 02i)-.- 2 7 0
.C hlcgo
000 000
062
Rooker. TekuJve (8 ). JackSon
(8 I. Gossoge (8 ) and Ott :
Krukow, Hernandez (7) and
Swisher. W-Rooker, 13-9. LHernandez. 8·7. HR - Pittsburgh , Ott (7 ).

ooo-

Ph ill
Mntral

002 010 102- 6 10 0
000 001 ooo- 1 10 3
Christenson , Garber (7) and

BOQne; RoQers, Kern~an CBl
and Carter. W-christenson , 17.
6. L-Rogers, 16-l5.
t-tRPhlladelphla, Schmidt (37).

St.L
N.Y .

Gallipolis
~t:':rt:t:~::::?ttt:r:=sPECIAV fir::=t:::~:~r:r~::::=~n
446-1611

Hill ;

1-345-6-7
&amp;8TH

20%

3
Passes Com pt.
0
Interceptions
1
5
Fwnbles
0 2
Fumbles Lost
7~ 7-75
Penalized
By Quarters:
0 6 12 6--24
NG
00
06--6
sw

36-;1 .

In notching their first
victory of the season the
Tigers scored quickly In the
first period when Leffler
raced 29 yards to paydirt and

OFF

Chuck Thompson ran the period on a two yard run and
grabbing a« yard pass from
conversion.
Unioto's Mark David Weeter with Leffler adding a
drilled a 24 yard field goal in conversion run.
Leffler carried 11 times lor
the second period but
Waverly struck back on a 58 99 yards and Weeter com·
yard pass from Weeter to pleted five of 12 passes for 1115
Leffler with Thompson yards as his throws covered
running the conversion for a . 50, 58, 24, 19, and « yards.
Score by quarters :
16-3 halftime lead.
0 3 0 0- 3
Thompson, a fine senior Unloto
Waverly
8
8 14 0-30
fullback, scored both Tiger
touchdowns in the third

•3••

SHEET

Give any room in y:our
home a facelift . . . with
richly grained wall paneling. Marked below our
regular low price during
this big sale mnl.

e

4'x8' DESCRIPTION
1/8

5/32
-

5/32

D'AcquiSTo,

Collins 151, Stanton 1261.
203 200

HR-Cinclnnatl .

020 105 020-10 13 3
020 003 IDO- 6 71

oOo- 1 9 0

Sutton,_ R aut z h 1!1 n
(8 ).
Garman (8) , Hough (9) and
Grote, Yeager {10) ; Lemonge! -

64°

lo, McLaughlin (V), Pentz (101,

Forsch 021 and Hermann,
Pulots {10} . W-Forsch, 5-8 . L Hough, 5-12. HR-Los Angeles,

Open Daily 10 a .m . to 10 p .m.

Lacy (61 .
San Frn
Sen Ogo

010 300 002-611 0
000 001 3oo- • 8 0

MOSS GREEN

'6.99
1

5/32

WESTERN CEDAR

1

5/32

COCOA PINE

1

CYPRESS

FOOTLON.G HO

W. L.

12 12

Cline's Construction
10 14
Gibbs' Groc..-y
2 22
High Individual game -

Men ,

larry

Dugan

197;

women, Phyll is Cline 205;
Ed Voss 190, Betty Smith
187;
~arry
Dugan 182,
Marlene Wilson 181.
High Series- Larry Dugan
558, Belly Smith 515 : Ed Voss
499, Phylll• Cline 484; Bill
Willford
485,
Charlotte
Willford 471.
&lt; Team high game - Jack's
Dairy Bar 704.
.
Team high series- Jack's
Dairy Bar 1974.

"Fixed The Way
You Like 'Em,.

Morning Glories
Sept. 13, 1977
Standings

....
........
2nd &amp; OM

Team
Gibbs Grocery

PfPfLU
IUIIJ

Pis.
14
No. 6
10
No.4
10
No.2
8
No.5
6
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
0
High ind. game Lena
Howard 173 ; C. Hysell and M .
Follrod 162.
High ind. 3-games - Vicky
Gillilan 443; Phyllis Cline 442.
High team . game - Gibbs
Grocery 803.
High team 3-games Gibbs Grocery 2308 .

tour Convenient Locatl01111 To Better Sene You

$646

5 GAL JOINT

WOOD
SPINDELS

COMPOUND

20%

BUCKET

ss~

Regular 17.25 Bucket

SALE

$646
BU

PAN AND

SAVEl

3/16

ETOILE &amp; VILLAGE green brown

11.69

sn

VANITIES

1

10.69

. 1

I

15.95

STONE

RED BRICK &amp;
AUTUMN

$9.95

1

'9.95

Colonial
Aluminum Combinetion Door
&amp;rly American beautY
rugged aluminum

'8.95

construt~ion.

20% OFF

•nd

/

/

'

~a~h

Screen

i,.,.rft in·

eluded. SJ:•Mj•rd iizn.

ssgaa

SPECIAL

DISSTON.L_

-

\..n

----·------------~Q~~
Regular
18.05

Regular
115.99
23 PC.
SOCKET SET SALE $1188

$599

ALL

Regular

'9.95

HAND
TOOLS
20% OFF

'STORE; HOURS

II

- , or Wood . Masonry Metal
• Ava.tabla ,tn.Wh ite
• Soap'and Wttar Clefin-ltP

I
I
I
I
I
I

SALE

30%-0FF
Good Selection
In Stack

I
I

-------------------1,
ALL•AME ROCK 1

" ~ ~.'\~

••

you come and see us pel'IQllally
or have your dealer give us a
call, you can be sure your loan
will be pr~ quickly and
efficiently. The Willing Bank is
the key-to your ·new ~!

G•ll1pohs O!'uo

SALE

BATHROOM

SALE

~ OhiOValley Bank

--------·

Regular 17.25

ROLLER

'.ALE_•6.29

There's nothing quite like th~
feeling you get when sitting
behind the wheel of.a new car.
And, there's nothing quite likt
The Willing Bank to help yo•
experience thatfeeling. We hav,
minimized all the fuss and
confusion of financing and have
geared our service to help you
answer the questions. Whether

TOPPING

'9.99

STANLEY

Team

CAULK

lA" STAPLES
69' box

BLUE LACE

-

Jack's Da iry Bar
20 14
Tom's carry .OVt
14 10
Town Kiln
14 10
Royal Crown Bottling Co.

43~

·------------·

5GAL.

DAP
BATH TUB

$1144

118

Regular '8.99

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday
Mixed League

TUBE

FOOT

I

-BOWLING

$1999

SALE

39~

/

121 .

J7~

WHITE
ALUMINUM
GUMR

8.99

.WOOD PRE ANISHED MOULDING

113 000 ooo- 5 10 0
000 000 OlD- 1 4 1

Standings

ADHESIVE

'9.99

5/32

R.
May, Oraoo (8), T.
Martinez
(8)
and
Skeggs,
Dem pdey (8) ; Wafts, Bibby (9)
and Kendell. W- Walts. 9-7. LMay, 17-U.

$269

GOLD LACE

4.

ooo ooo 002- 2 6 2
000 200 01x- 3 8 0

INSULATED
SHEAlHING

7.99

MADERIA WALNUT

L-Jefferson, 9-17. HRsToronto, Velez (16). McKay
(Jl ; New York, Nettles (361.

$319

118

M i I w 1 u k e e It MinnesOta
(rAined aut)

Lee and FISk i Sykes , Ruhle
(ll and Parrish . W- Lee, 9--4 . L
- Sykes, 5·7. HRs - Boston, .
Hobson (29) : Detroit, Parrfsh

SEPT. 24 THRU OCT. 1

SALE

BRISTOL BIRCH

TeKas
, 031 000 02o- 6 7 J
Oaklnd
0.00 010 0110- 53 1
Perry and Sundberg ; Keough,
Bair
{7),
Lacey
(9)
and
Sanguillen, Newman (9) . WPerry, 1-4·12. L-Bair, 4·5. HRs
-Texas. Hargrove (18 }; Oak land , Armas p3l .

Boston
Del

7.49

.._...

:~::.:·:::

CEILING BOXES

NUTMEG

ry ·(23) ; Californ ia, Baylor {23 ).

Ball

l6.29

""'

.'-

SHEET

PANELING

REC. BOXES
SALE

'9.75

EASTlAND PECAN

· 000 000 201- 3 s 3

Cleve

SALE

'6.39

....
·----·-

lhx4x8

ELECTRIC WIRE

'3.99
'5.49

BRANDY BIRCH
WHITE OAK

REGULAR
$5.60
SALE

DURING SALE

4.49

5/32
5/32

N.Y .
201000002- 590
( 121nnlngsl
Tronto
010 000 11()-- 3 5o
~.A .
100 110 000 1)00--- 3 15 0
Gullett and Munson ; Jeffer.
Hst
100 000 110 001- 4 12 1 son and Cerone. W-Gulleft , 13-

Fixed The

SALE $}99

SALE

'6.39

llnderp Inning

12"116 FT.

20% OFF

Regular 127.95

MEDIUM TONE

AL. . . . .M.OOP
I(Oft

ALL PAINT
AND BRUSHES

REG;
1

...........

PRIME
SIDING

$488

7lf4" SAW
BLADE
B&amp;O
COMBINATION

250 Foot Roll

American Le1gue
Chicgo
000 020 ooo-- 2 8 1
Seattle
003 000 OOx- J 7 0
Barrios, Hamilton (7) and
Essian ; House. Montague {6 )
anc;t Fosse , W-House , 5·5. L Barrlo.s , 14-6.
HRs- Seatlle,

Calif

SAVE
NOW

12-2 With Ground

Griffio (-4) , Tomlin (71 , Splllner
(8) . Sawyer (9) and Tenace. W
- Heaverlo, 5· 1. L - Spll lner , 1·6.

Kan City

5 WARM
MORNING
WOOD BURNERS
IN STOCK

STARTS

Leonard anef Porter ; Simp·.

Forsch, Schultz (6) , Eastwick
(7) and Simmons; Jackson,
Myrick
(6),
Bl!lldwin
{7) ,
Siebert (8), Pacella (9) and
Stearns. W-Forsch. 19-6. LJackson, 0-1. HR-St. Louis,
· Ouncan (1) .

FOOTLONG HOTDOGS
Way You
Uke 'em.

and

&amp; 30TH
OCTOBER

010 120 001- 5 10 0 'SOn, ·BarlOw (A) and Etcheb9r .
Atlanta
000 001 ooo- 1 11 I reo , Humphrey, Hampton. WMoskau. Murray (6) , Borbon Leonard, 19-11 . L-Stmpson, . 6{8) ·and Werner; Mahler, Hann~ 11 . HRs-Kansas City , Mayber.

Mahler, 0-1.
Foster (50) .

Rt. 35 West

(8)

26-27-28-29

The Giants, upset winners
over W81hington last week,
are disturbed about a note
posted outside the Cowboys'
ticket office. It read :
,
"Some clowns from New
York are coming to town,
To add a star to our
ultimate crown."
The mystery in St. Louis,
considered playoff contender
again Is what happened to
the Cardinals' · e:rplosive
offense~ After a miserable,
low-scoring preseason,
Denver shut out the Cards 7-G
last Sunday. Their next test
comes against the Bears'
tough defense.

Barr , Lavelle t7 ), Heaverlo

Clncl

{5), Davey (6"), Capra (8) anct

~qnppr

WAVERLY - Quarterback
Lor~n Weeter passed for 1115
yards and Robbie Leffler ran
for 99 more Friday night as
0 the Waverly Tigers rolled
1 over the Unionoto Shennans

FridJJy's linescores

Murphy. W-Moskau , 5-6. L-

&amp;qaltt

stopped.
North Gallla's final TD
came on a f1 yard run by,
Justice. Justice had 214 yards
In 'll carries to pace the
winners. Lookado finished
with 106 yards in 11 tries.
Defensively, Justice and
Curt Nolan, a former
Highlander, were the big
stars with 12 tackles each.
North Gallia, 1·1·1 goes to
Symmes Valley Friday in
another SV AC contest. South·
western, 0·3 hosts Kyger
Creek.
STATISTICS
DEPARTMENT
SW NG
First Downs
9 8
Yards Rushing
61 383
Yards Passing
27
0
Total Yardage
88 383
Passes Attpt.
7 2

SEPTEMBER

Waverly routes Unioto

'

,,

Mal or League Standings
By United Pr•u International

.

HARDWARE
.
.
20% OFF

II

4"'x10 FT. PlASTIC
DRAIN PIPE

I

1
'-----------------~

4" BRUSH
REG. '5.99

1

WHITE CEIUNG
TilE
12"Xl2"

14$
SQ. FT.

FURRING
56' EACH

87 OLIVE ST.
GN IIPOLIS, OHIO
PtllNE 446 4464

�()-11-The SWlday Times-Sentmel, Sunday, Sept. ~. 1977
C-ll)-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday,Sept. 25,Im

Foster· belts
50th home run
·ATLANTA
(UPI I
George Foster, the first
player in a dozen seasons to
hit SO homeruns, is reeling no
pressure and figures he has a
shot at reaching the National
League record of 56 in the
seven games left on the
Cincinnati schedule.
"It's not really out of the
question ,' ' Foster sajd

of

Hack Wilson 's NL record. ·•Jt
depends on how I'll be
swinging the rest of the way
and what I will be getting ta
hit the rest of tbe way . The
main thing is just relax and

to third on an error by Mahler
and scored on Driessen's
sacrifiee fly tD right.
Joe Morgan walked in the
fifth. stole second and went tD
third on Mahler's wild pitch.
Foster then drove his triple In
the centerfield fence; scoring
Morgan .
Reliever Preston Hanna
walked Johnny Bench and
Dan Driessen to load the
bases before Werner's
forceout scored Foster.
Paul Moskau, :H;, hurled
the first 5 1-3 innings to pick
up the victory . He allowed
just a runscoring single by
Gary Matthews in the sixth .

Cl n Lovel a nd 14 Madiera 1.4

(tie)

Cin McNicholas ..s·1 Ham ilton
Garfield 6
Cin Moel ler 42 Middletown 0
Cin Qak Hi l ls 28 Norwood 0
Cin Princeton 10 Upper
Arli ngton 0
Cin· Withrow 8 Cin Taft 6
Cin Woodward 26 Cin Western .
Hllls 7
Cin Xa vier 28 Grove City 9
Cle East Tech 18 Elyria 15
Cle Holy Na me 6 Warren .
sville 6 (tie)

Cle John Marshall 27 Cle Cin
Cath 6
·

Clermont Northeastern
Western 0
·

)A

Clyde 34 Marga relta 0

Coldw ater 31 Par kway 13

Colerain 17 Cin Northwest II
(tiel

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.
S!all! faun l~~ lnwr ilfl(;e Cor!-Da"l

'

Ofl..:e Eltoom•ngiO&lt;' i&lt;I•"O'S

YORK ! UP! ) Connors was the
"loser" in men's
19n. so big that he

won $288,800 in orricial prize

money. over $500,000 In·
eluding challenge matches
and exhibitions and is still
ranked number one in the
world by a large margin. _
Connors, 25, lost in the

finals at both Wimbledon and
the U. S. Open this year, the
world's two most prestigious
championships and some

people have already begun
talking or his decline.
But consider this : Connors
won the WCT Championships
in Dallas, dropped a tough
five-set fin~! :Hi, 6-2, 6-1, 6-7,
6-4 to Bjorn Bore at Wem·
bledon and thoug~ he lost 26, 6-3, 7~. 6-0 to Argentine
Guillermo Vilas in the U. S.
Ohio High School
Open, Connors was the first
Football Results
man since the great Bill
Unih!d Press I nternational
Tilden in the 1920's to go to
Amelia 2B Willi amsburg 0
four
straight finals at Forest
Arl ington 12 Cory Rawson 7
Ashland 23 Coshocton 6
Hills.
Ashtabula St . John 32
The Association of TourAshtabula 14
nament Professionals, which
Athens 15 Circleville 0
uses a computer to establish
Avon 17 Buckeye 7
Avon Lake 28 South o
its rankings and the seeds for
Ba rberton
14
Warren
the U. S. Open, currently
Western Rese rve 0
ranks Connors No. 1 with a
Beallsv ille 26 Fort Frye 25
61.06
rating and he will likely
Bel laire St. Johns 12 Buckeye
finish
the year in that spot.
SI
Bellvue 20 Ga·iion 19
Borg is far behind in second
Beri Logan 38 "Riverside 0
at 51.67, Brian Gottfried is
Berea 54 Cle Rhodes 0
third at 51.43 and Vilas is
Bexley 8 West Jefferson 8
fourth at 51.22. Borg had been
Big Walnut 6 Cols Academy 0
Bl uffton I Al len East 0
ranked first going into the
Boyd County (Ky.) 15 Ports. open but his shoulder iniurv
mouth 12
fo rced him to drop out in the
Brookf ield 42 Girard 0
Brooks ide 16 Vermil ion 0
quarter-finals.
Brookville 30 Carl isle 8
Connors is annoyed that he
Bryan 12 Archbol d 8
lost
the big ones this year. He
Cadiz 27 McMechen (W. Va .)
has so mu·ch pride in himself
0
Canton McK inley 54 Cle E 8 and his game that just
Carollton 9 Sandy Va lley 6
making the finals is never
Carroll 3-4 Li berty Union 6
good
enough. He has said his
Celin a J Ottawa Glandorf 0

hit the ball hard and let the
rest take care of itself."
Foster slammed his 50th
home run and a triple to lead
the Reds to a 5-1 victary over
the Atlanta Braves Friday
night. With just seven games
left. topping the 52 homers
Willie Mays hit in 1960 may be
a more plausible goal than
the league record, but Foster
said the home runs may be
coming a little easier in the
waning days , with the
western division title already
won by Los Angeles.
" In between 50 and, say, 60,
it 's not going to be as tough,"
he said. " I don 't feel there's
any pressure. When you know
you can do a job, there's no
pressure."
In addition to being the first
player since Mays to hit 50,
Foster is also the first Red
ever to make that mark.
Cincinnati got to sta rter
Mickey Mahler, 1).1, lor one
run in the second when Dave
Concepcion singled, stole
second, went to third on an
error by catcher Dale
Murphy aod scored on a
sacrifice fly to left by Don Chagrin Falls 19 Tw insburg 6
Ch ardon 16 Aurora 14
Werner.
·
Cin Aiken 6 Walnut Hills 0
The Reds made it 2.0 in the Cin Hughes 7 Frankl in 0
fourth when Concepcion led Cin LaSalle 14 Fremont Ros.s
. off with a single tv right, went 7

"I can help you
get the most
from your life
insurance dollar."

NEW
Jimmy
b1ggest
tennis in

goaJ is "to rewrite thf record

books," and he knows he still
has several years to ac·
complish that.
·
When the last U. S. Open at
Forest Hills ended at 7:20
p.m. Sunday, Sept. 11, it was
amid confusion and a touch of
madness. Fans rushed the
court as if it were a soccer
ga me , surrounding and
jostling Connors and lifting
Vilas into the air. Connors,
disgusted with the outcome
and fearful of a possible
attack, fled the scene quickly
with his mother, Gloria, and

coach, Pancho Segura.
Co nnors
has
been
vacation~ng

ever since but in

his one public comment said
he felt he had nothing t.o be
ashamed of and was looking
forward to comi ng back

stronger next yea r.
And there is no reason to
e1pect that Connors can't
come back to win his second
Wimbledon Title and third U.
S. Open. Borg, 22, remains his
chief rival and the dlllerence
between them on Wimbledon's grass this yea r was
extremely thin. Next year
the courts at the U. S. Open
will change from the slow
clay-like har-tru that favor~
players like Vilas and
Orantes to a faster Asphalt·
based cushioned surface that
will be more to Connors'
liking.
llike Muhammad Ali, the
controversial heavyweight
champion, Connors seems to
strike a chord of annoyance
with fans. Many come just to
cheer for his opponents.
With all, however, it is all
an act. In person, he is one of
the most courteous athletes in
the world and perhaps the

WASIUNGTON (UPI ) w~llld rille and
f!IWtclal ruin would hit the
cattle in&lt;ilstry if antibiotics
.,.e taken out ol the diets of
bofiiY"rd animala, a congressional committee has been

Meat prices

most accommodating to the
press. Connors is often
pleasant and happy-go-lucky,
but too often he lets his
temllframent get the better
of him. He made obscene
remarks to Vilas during the
finals at Forest Hills and
when the fans rushed the
cou rt he nearly swung at one,
yelling " Wl10 18 nen. II
Connors, who bristled the
British when he avoided the
nostalgic Parade of Cham·
pions at Wimbledon's opening
ce remonies, left without
attending
the
closing
ceremonies at Forest Hills,
picking up his runner-up
check or speaking with the
press. In short, he left a sore
loser.
Perhaps another year will
bring a little maturity to
Connors. Perhaps not . Either
way, he'll be back next year
and the tennis world will have
to take him oo his own terms.

Namath, Rams
eye first win

However, there are those

CARRYING FOR BIG YARDAGE - Hannan High's
JW!ior Fullback Reese Dalton (30) is shown sweeping the
left slde on a carry that netted the Wildcats big yardage in
the first quarter of their Friday night clash against
rugged Fort Gay. A few plays later Hannan scored its only
TO of the evening.

Hannan drops .40-7 tilt

FRAZIERS BOTTOM
made good on the extra point Hannan, whose record has
The Fort Gay Pioneers to hold a commanding 23-7 now dipped to 1·2 travels to
Walton, for a rare Saturday ·
invaped Hannan High School lead.
and before It was over they One JM:riod later with 9:22 evening contest.
were able to skin the Wildcats, remaining in the game, Waller HANNAN : 7 0 0 0-7.
FORT GAY: 615 7 l:!M.
40-7.
carri.ed the ball 41 yards for
Three and two touchdowns another six points.
respectively by senior running Six minutes later teammate
backs Tronnie Boone and Rick Boone took the ball in from
Waller proved to be too much seven yards out lor the final
for rookie Coach Randy score of the evening. This
Clark's Hannan team whose score was set up by a Hannan
backfield has been decimated fumble.
by injuries.
Hannan had two excellent
While the score does not scoring opportunities, with the
indicate it, Hannan did play a first coming late in the second .
good offensive game.
period.
'
''They wore us down but we
In 11 plays, the Wildcats
played a heck of a game, took the ball to the Pioneer 16
stated Clark."
yard line before the drive
The statistics indicate this fizzled out. The drive ended on
too as Wildcat runners ·alone a fourth and five situation as
amassed 160 yards on the the Wildcats went for it and
ground.
came up two yards short.
But it is in the scoring
The other opportunity came
cohimn that tells the final in the third period when Keith
outcome of the game.
Dye ran a kick off return back
It was Reece Dalton , for 73 yards to the Pioneer
The Rams' lone preseason .Wildcat junior back, who on a eight yard line. Hannan was
win
was
20·3
over 35 yard rllfl went into the unable to move it from that
Philadelphia Aug. 13.
books with Hannan's lone point.
In the. Tampa Bay game, . seore ~sides an extra point . On offense Hannan amassed
quarterback Ron Jaworski, kicked by Darren Lewis.
208 yards ·with 160 on the
All types of. aids, including
formerly of the Rams, threw
The score came with .9:56 ground and 48 through the air. custom -made ali -in -thetwo touchdown passes and hit left in the fir~t period~ -~~ was
Reece Dalton led the ground ear .
Medical
and
14 of 24 for 147 yards. He was the first time Hannan had the attack with 170 yards on · 24 audiological referral.
intercepted twice and sacked ball and it took them only five . canjes. However, Villars had
cost ,
openly
three times.
plays and 74 yards total to a minus 10 yards on 12 carries. Modest
discussed, over 28 years
reach the end zone.
Villars completed five experience - the only
The score was set up first on passes on 17 attempts and hearing aid service you' ll
ever need!
a 15 yard pas's play from threw two interceptions.
Quarterback Dennis Villars to
On defense, Villars led his
steve Roclevitch. Then came team with eight solo tackles
for 234 and completed nine of1 a five yard penalty, followed and four assists. Clifford
by three short runs .bY Dalton Akers had four solo tackles
15 aerials for 200 more.
Brad Tucker · led the of two, seven and 15 yards and seven assists : Reece
44 West Union Street
Athens, Ohio 45701
Chieftains with 58 yards in 12 respectively before breaking Dalton had three si&gt;lo tackles
carries and Dave Emerson loose on the 35 yard run.
and six assists; and Jim Dye
Tel. 592-623a
After seeing Hannan put had four solo tackles and five .__ _.:..;,;:.:.,;.:.;::;;_ _ _.,•
added 50 on 11 tries.
The Buckeyes were limited together the succeS$!ul drive, assists._ _ _ _ _ _ _. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
to just five first downs and 86 Fort Gay apparently decided
total yards .
to go to work after falling in
Score by quarters:
their initial drive.
Logan
13 14 21 6-54
In the next series of plays,
Nels.-York . 0 0 0 0- 0 1!15-pound senior Qu&amp;rterback
Kim Fraley plowed his way
•
•
into the end zone for the
•
Pioneers' first score. The
extra point attempt failed,
cinnati last week, 13-3.
"I hope our guys don't thus leaving Hannan with a
become too preoccupied with slim 7-9 first period lead.
However thls ended with the
the Monday night at·
rnosphere,'' Slpe said Friday. beginning of the second period
" The fact we're playing a as Boone, a 180-pound senior
quality team like New back danced his way into the
England should help our end zone from 35 yards out
concentration. It's important with 10:15 remaining in that
we remember we set the first period. Boone ran the confour games as our immediate version attempt in for two
goal and this one is critical." points..
Kicker Don Cockroft, who
Moments later it was Boone
booted three field goals in the again as he ran the ball in
game against Miami . four from 19 yards outs.The
years ago, says it's good for Pioneers kick was good and
the Browns to get national they went into the locker room
recognition, 1'but it's also at halftime with a 21-7 lead.
easy for a team to get too
The Pion~ers began the
uptight.''
third period like they ended
It'll be the Browns first
time on national TV in four the second period as Rick
years, having met Miami in Waller, a 190-senior back ran
1973- losiQg to the Dolphins, 26 yards for the six points and
with 9:55 remaining in the
17-9.
third period the Pioneers
YOU'RE IN CONTROL

WHEN
AMPLIFICATION
LS NECESSARY

Bucks no match for Chieftains
NELSONVILLE
Quarte1back Scott Gasser
ran fo r a pair of touchdowns
and passed for two others
Friday night as the un·
defeated Logan Chieftains
crushed Nelsonville York by
a 5~ score.
John Kemper opened the
scoring in the first period
with a one yard blast and four
minutes later Ga.Ser rolled in

from the nine with Jeff Lee
Smith ~ddin g the conversion
on a kick.
In the second quarter Dave
Emerson scored from the five
and Gasser ran over from the
seven with Smith kicking
both extra points and a 27.()
halliime lead.
Kemper returned the kick
olr or the second half 85 yards
for a TO, and then Gasser

DILES HEARING
AID CENTER

teamed up with end Marty
Hallett on touchdown passes
of . 10 and 48 yards with
Smith's kicks uppmg the
score to 48-ll after three
quarters.
Charlie Brodbeck tallied
the final Chieftain touchdown
on a 20 yard run.
Logan's vaunted- offense
rolled up 434 total yards and
23 first downs as they rushed

Browns keyed up for tilt

GIVE ABEAUTIFUL "NEW''
LOOK AND PROTECTION
TO YOUR OLD ROOF

CLEVELAND (UP! ) Defensive back Thorn Darden
of the Cleveland Browns says
most of the players "are
pretty keyed up already" for
Monday night's nationallytelevised encounter against
the New England Patriots:
~~ It's a chance to show fans
around the country we're
good," he says. "The atmosphere and attitude of the
fans is more exciting for
these Monday night games."
More than 60,000 tickets
have been sold for the
showdown. But since it's not a
sell-out, the game will not be
televised locally.
Browns quarterback Brian
Sipe says he's wary of his
teammates '
feelings
regarding the season home
opener,
even
though
Cleveland pummled Cin·

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We will send copies of this paper to anyone Interested. Just call
the Extension Office at 992-3895.
Corn- Corn is maturing much more rapidly this year and
meat.
also is going down sooner. Check your fields and start
But Rep. Virginia Smith,
harvesting as soon as it will store. We may be three to four
Items timely in the season:
R-Neb ., told a House
weeks ahead of schedule this year. Planting dates, rates of
I
mk
Out
For
Fall
Armyworms
Fall
armyworms
are
on
commerce commi ttee
warned·
the move. They can almost destroy a forage field over night. nitr!ljjen application, and plant populations significa ntly
Antibiotlca have been l18ed Kennedy should back off
Be on the lookout . There is danger for the next two to three influence corn yields, says Lawrence N. Shepherd, Extension
for over two decades to keep from his stand because be
cattlt!, swine and poultry free lacks "sufficient scientific
weeks. lf you decide to treat, use Sevin at the rate or ! lit pounds agrooomiat at The Ohio State University . His statement is
per ace of 8() Wor 2pounds per acre of 50 W.
backed up by research results from plantings at the Fann
r1 diseaoe and make them evidence.''
Woodburning for Fuel - Are you going to be considering ScienCe Review site in Columbus,
grow fatter, which in tum
She said also that
Since 1969 records of various dates of planting- from late
on burmng some wood for fuel this year? Vinton County just
Jreeps feed costs down for the restrictions on barnyard
March to mid-June - have been used to check yield
antibiotics would result in the
Jl'octucer.
differences. Over that period, the planting dates aod average
rood
and
Drug use of more '' precious
yields have been as follows : March 21).30, 179 bushels; April 8,
commissioner Donald grain."
185 bushels ; April 9-15, 178 bushels; April 1&amp;-22, 177 bushels;
Kennedy wants to restrict
Rep. James Santini, )).
April23-29,
175 bushels ; April3o-May 7, 176 bushels; May 11-14,
their use, saying there 's Nev.,
cited
industry
165
bushels;
May 15-21, 154 bushels; May 22-27, 153 bushels;
evidence cattle, swine and estimates that the cost of
•
May
28-June
4,
138 bushels; and June 5-23, 93 bushels.
poultry are becoming taking the antibiotics out of
Shepherd
says
the data Indicate that corn can be planted
resistant to the drugs. The feed would be 112.1 billion a
earlier
than
normal
and still obtain adequate stands and yield.
year in higher meat and
The
corn
yields
held
.at 171).180 bushels per acre levels with
poultry prices.
ENERGY Olm..OOK
By
Bryson
R.
I
Bud)
Carter
planting
dates
from
late
March to the May 10 period .
Santini add.ed the cattle
OOLUMBUS (UPI )- Sen.
Gallia
County
Extension
Agent
Also , yields declined rapidly when planting was done after
has
been
Neal F. ZimiJlers, )).Dayton, industry
May
10. The moisture content of grain increased, and the test
"staggering
upon
its
knees
said Thursday the Ohio House
weight
of corn dropped with the later dates of planting.
and
Senate
energy Oat on its face - for the past
GALLIPOLIS High acre of 54.6 followed closely
Another
demonstration has evaluated the effect of
committees will hold joint two or three years and this
quality feeder calves are by Logan with 53.1.
nitrogen
rates
on the moisture content and yield of corn grain.
Arthur 71 has the lowest
hearings to get winter energy (ban ) would be another
being sought f9r the Ohio
Nitrogen
was
applied
in the grain from no-nitrogen plots. And,
supply predictions from aggravating possibility lor
Feeder Calf Roundup. average · yield of the as the nitrogen rate was increased, grain yield increased while
natural
gas
utility the deterioration Of that
Entries must
be in recommended varieties (47.5 moisture in the grain decreased. Nitrogen applications and
industry.
"
executives.
by September 20 for bushels per acre ). Yields for average yield per acre were as follows: none, 67 bushels per
the Roundup Show and the other recommended acre; 60 pounds, 100 bushels; 120 pounds, 135 bushels ; 100
Sale, which takes place varieties are : Abe 49 .0, Ar· pounds, 158 bushels: 240 pounds 169 bushels ; and 300 pounds,
HORSEMEN: A New Horse Wormer
September J().()ct. I at the thur 48.3, Beau 49.0, and
Continued on page c.12
Ohio State Fairgrounds. It's Oasis 48.9.
the best place lor 4-H and
Silos recently filled with
FFA youths to show and
corn
silage produce gases
market high quality calves.
OONTESTANTS, ABOVE, and one of the judges,
following
ensiling. This
High quality steer calves
Meigs County District Conservationist Boyd Ruth.
usually
takes
place the first
se.ll really well at the
Roundup. Junior exhibitors 24-48 hours. So, at this time of
also get the experience of year be alert lor the apNo~ you,c8.n ·wotm even the ~ost
showing their animals and pearance of brown, yellow or
fln1eky horse In 30 seconds wllh
seeing how they place among orange gases for several
new Equlvet-TZ, or your money
days.
the other entries.
back ! ... Famam guarantees It!
The most common of these
Each exhibitor may enter
Come In ond see lhls reV&lt;&gt;lutllooa;~
gases
is nitrogen dioxide. The
new way to worm your hor.n
up to six calves. All must be
faster , .. easier .. . elfectl¥ely!
gases
are heavier than air
sired ·by beef )lulls and calves
Buy new Equ lvet-Tz for your horse
I
and
are
usually seen falling
with visible dairy breeding
today.
versary
is
an
appro·
down
the
silo
chute.
They
can
will not be accepted.
priate time to salute the
Now available .. .
Calves must have been accumulate at the top of
greatest
producer of food
Soil and Water Conservation born after January 1, 1977, silage or in unventilated
By Steve Hlblnger
J. D. NORTH PRODUCE CO.
and
fiber
in the world District sponsored tnis an- and must weigh 350 to 650 buildings at the bottom of
District Conservationist
American
farmers .
VINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS,O.
GALLIPOUS - The North nual event. Federal Land pounds at the weigh-in. They silos .
Sixty years ago, the land Bank,.,.;.___
These gases are extremely
Gallia Vocational Agriculture Bank Association and must be castrated, dehorned,
established to help the farmer by
dangerous
to humans and
Credit and completely healed by
providing dependable , tong-term
soil judging team walked Production
financing .
away from the county contest Association will present team show and sale date. The livestock. They destroy · the
We've changed a tot over those
with all the top honors this and individual awards later calves must be weaned, lung tissue and can cause
Jlayanyae•
but our purpose has rematned
years,
this fall.
started on feed , and broke to serious Illness and death. The
past Thursday.
.
the
same
., .to provide farmers with
Emerson Evans permitted lead at least two weeks prior safest practice is to stay out
A score of 655 points of a
ID'AaferJIOif with
THE BANK OF
the
··redit
to produce that lood
of the silo for 2 to 3 weeks
possible 900 secured first us to dig test pits on his land to the Roundup.
GENERATIONS
and
fiber
.Clyde B. Walker Mgr.
place for the North Gallia for the contest, and Carter &amp;
To compete in the show, 4-H after filling. Even after that
period,
treat
a
silo
as
though
Gallipolis Ph . 446-0203
221 Upper River Road
·
team. Team members were Evans, Inc . provided a and FFA members must be
it
still
had
gas.
Mike Sheehim, Jim Cains, backhoe to dig the sample enrolled in a beef project and
If brown, yellow or orange
have the calves in their
Oscar Griffith and Roger pits.
gases
are seen or if burning
This contest is designed to possession by June 1. Four·H
Cremeens.
nndlllay
The Hannan Trace team teach students to recognize members must be age 9 as of and choking are felt in the
suitability
and January I, or ·be in the third nose and throat, leave the
placed second wltp 635 points. land
lot 1
limitations
.
Slope,
topsoil,
grade, and they must not area immediately. Run the
David Swain, David CampBull
bell, Loren Cox and Steve profile depth .and the natural have passed their 19th birth· blower for 10 to 15 minutes
before
entering
a
silo
during
Beaver represented this drainage are all considered in day as of January I, 1977.
team. Southwestern was deciding the optimum land FFA members . must be the danger pel'iod (if you
represented by Shawn Trout, us.e for the area. Practical enrolled in Vocational mu!ll enter it) and continue to
Darrell Baker, MerriU Baker land use is always considered Agriculture and must not operate the blower as long as ·
under conservation treat- have passed thelr 19th birth· someone is inside. Never
and Tom Stephens.
enter a silo when you are
ment
that will protect and day as of January I.
Gallia Academy was
For other details and entry alone.
represented by Brent James, conserve the soil and water
Universal gas masks are
LOW DOAii NINCWI'I, LOIIG 'I'QM
blanks, contact our office.
Randy Caldwell, Tandy resources.
not
recommenqed. They are
The Roundup is sponsored
I'DIIIItiiiG,. AJID lMNCJ!Iml 'I'ID.D Woodward and Usa Fellure.
LAFF- A- DAY
of
no
value where there is a
by the Ohio Rural Electric
The top individual score in
'1'0 101'1' 'fOUB.CASII FLOW"
lack
of exygen, due to
Cooperatives, Inc., and the
the county was made by Jim
1ah more ol 1b.e work oulgl h oy in ~J . W11h
If• !be pedKI 1im• to move up to
by gases. The
displacement
Ohio Cooperative Extension
Cains; Mike Sheehan was in
no linon("e t"hargu to Mar I. 19711 Ofle1
lield prov tn.Mau.ey F"e •'luaon ba ler
ends CKrobe r 31. l977 ,
perlo nno~ . Thefre 111gqed . ots1m ple
Service with assistance from only ~ffective device Is a self·
second place. Both were on
d•11gn lo1 Ml.iobi.li1y and ellic1ency. lc
Producers
Livestock contained unit with an exygen
the winning team.
tank. as part of the gear.
3 Bulls -15 cows with 8 calves by side .
Association.
This contest requires much
The silage in a silo. that has
: cqoperation from outside
J;:':J .
- •c:: Based on five-year trials produced gas is expected to
11 Bred Heifers -13 open Heifers
individual's and agency
·
be
safe
feed
after
the
gases
Q
(197:1-77)
at
eight
locations
representatives. The Gallia
disappeared.
throughout
the
state have
30 Plus Angus Club Calves
Production
of these gases in
currently
recommended
1b:: wheat varieties are Abe, the silo indicates that .the
Steers and Heifers Suitable for
Arthur, Arthur 71, Beau, nitrate content of the green
chop material ensiled has
" But ~~~~;n~ i b~ ·th-;;-~me lady Logan, Oasis, and Ruler . .or
been reduced.
4-H and FFA Projects.
1 placed an order with last these, Ruler leads the pick
week .. you must be her daugh: with an average yield per
ter, ··
AUCTIONEER-MERLIN WOODRUFF

The American

I

farmer deserves...---..
lot ofcredit.

North Gallians
•
WID soil judging

NO
ftNANCE CII.UGIS

.....

SOUtHEASTERN OHIO ANGUS
ASSOCIATION'S
FIRST PRODUCTION SALE
Monday, Oct. 10, 1977 5:30 P.M.
At Gallia County Fairgrounds

't';\J'""·

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THROUGH I.H.C.C.

UNTIL MARCH 1, 1978 ON ALL
36 HORSEPOWER AND UP TRACTORS AND ALL HAY
AND FORAGE EQUIPMENT, NEW OR USED.

- .....
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For information or Catalog contact Charles
E. Withee, Box 39, Rio Grande, Ohio 45674,
Tel. 614.245-5477.
·

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.221

recently completed a field day on WOOd lor Fuel and published

a short paper regarding prices and woods for wood burning.

Homelite XI!
Automatic during
Saw Buck Days.

HOW DO YOU STAND?

593 3071

I'OMt,;ROV - n .. lie«! OUtiO&lt;Jk Meeting is scheduled
Wednesday ,Sept. 28. AIJ&gt;ur uf the Research Station at Jackson
starts at 4:31l, followed by a beef barbecue at 6:30p.m. The
Outl01•k Meeting starts at 7:45p.m. You may attend one or all
three events. Make sure you ca ll in your reservations for the
barbecue if attendin~.

result , he said is that
diseaoe-resiatant genns are
tu~ning up in humans
particularly those handling

Agriculture and
our commwuty

LOS ANGELES (UPIJ - kept his composure. He has
Joe Namath, the ex-New refused to criticize Knox's
York Jet who has been decision to go with Namath.
somewhat the center of Haden was the No. I quar·
controversy since his arrival terback when the 1976 season
in Los Angeles in June, will ended for the Rams at
try to get.the Rams' impotent Minnesota in the MFC title
offense going Sunday when game .
they meet the Philadelhpia· And looking for their first
Eagles in their home opener. regular season win after 1-5
Acrowd of 55,000 is forecast exhibition season , the Rams
for the 4 p.m. EDT game at had a good practice week,
the Coliseum and the Rams, according to Knox .
NFC West Champions the
"1 think the players know
past four seasons, are the l(). we are embarrassed and the
point favorites .
Eagles are a better football
· A week ago at Atlanta, the team than Atlanta," said the
Rams were shocked 17~ in Coach. "We have to prove to
the majo'r upset of the NFL's our fans , our friendS and our
first week of action . families that we're a better
However, head coach Chuck team than we have looked so·
Knox refused to blame we can show our faces
Namath, who went all the again.''
way at quarterback hitting 15 · The Eagles are coming off
of 30 passes for 141 yards, for their first opening season
the defeat.
· victory since 1967, a 13·3 win
"He stayed in the pocket," over Tampa Bay, but they've
Knox said. "We didn't do a · lost five straight to the Rams
good job on pass protection. and eight out of nine since
He handled the rush well. " 1950.
who feel the insertion of the
irnrho bile Namath into the
starting lineup in place of
scrambling Pat Haden ,
former University of Soutlr
ern California Rose Bowl
here, is the main cause of the
Rams' lack of scoring punch.
Through it all, Haden has

County ·agent's corner

Cattlemen claim medicine needed

Conners still number one
despite major '77 losses

By John C. Rice
Ext . A&amp;tnt, Agrlculturt

SAME PRICE AS
LAST YEAR

.

CENTRAL SOYA
Gf Ohio, Inc.,
Gal'ptls, Ohio
0

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DEUT.

Tractors
r

FULTON·THOMPSON
TRAClUK SALES ·
Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio

�~12-:n-snnday 1'\me$&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Sepl2!i, 1977

Bob Evans puts home eye test
.into Bolivia, South America ·

•

"(d·

7

MAX CHAMBERLI'N

LA PI\Z;BOUVIA
SOOTH N'1ERICA
_WHERE'S BOUVIA?. -

COLUMBUS - The Home
Eye Test of the Society for the
Prevention of Blindness has
crosoed our national boundary.
Bob Evans, Rio Grande
farmer · businessman, and
the chainnan for the current
Sight Saving Campaign of the
Ohio Society for tlie
Prevention of Blindness, JiiOO
· W. Third Ave ., saw to that
this week.
Evans is an enthusiastic
supporter of the Society'•
programs, especially the free
Home Eye Test
for
preschoolers, which alerts
parents to vision problems ·
their children mi~ht have.

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!)
- Starting poaitiona ror the
Los Altgeles Kings' first presea90n hockey game will be
determined at an intra-&lt;IQlLid
match Saturday at CUlver
City lee Rink .
The Kings will meet the
Minnesota North Stars
Sunday then host the
Colorado
Rockies
Wednesday . Both games will
be at the Inglewood F&lt;r11111.
"Because the competition
is 90 keen this year, our
practices have been spirited

Since it.s introduction in
bundled the tests.
1972
by the National Society
The Ohio Society for the
for
the
Prevention of BlindPrevention of Blindnness
reports that one in 20 neso of which the Ohio Society
children, ages three through is an affiliate, more than
five, have eye problems, 5,000,000 copies of the Home
many of them serious. For Eye Test have been
ex.ample, 11 la.zy eye," (am- distributed; 250,000 of them and intense:' new Kings'
blyopia), if not treated by the by OSPB.
Coach .Ron Stewart said
Friday. "Most of the
time the child reaches age
positions are open and h811e
seven often causes blindness.
Half of all blindness can be
to be earned and c!IJlpetition
In 1926, the Ford Motor Co. wUI get us the best players.
prevented.
put
its workers on an eight- With only one week to
Bolivia!' Evans says. " A
The Society ' s current
hour
day, five-day-week prepare for the first game,
future of sight is important to campaign seeks $195,000 to
f&lt;r the first time. we've added scrimmages to
schedule
us all, wherever we are!" support the Home Eye Tests,
In 1973, the American the morning sesions to help u.s
With the help of Aaron preschool vision and adult
Lawson, HU!iard, Ohio, a glaucoma screenings, and Sky lab 2 crew ended a record . evaluate the 41 players under
" lazy eye" victim, and Little education on eye care and 5lklay stay in space and simulated game conditions."
returned salely to earth.
Mister POB, 19n, Evans safety throughout Ohio.

When his grandchildren
who live in Bolivia visited Rio
Grande last summer, Evans
gave the Home Eye Test to
his three-year-&lt;&gt;ld grandson,
Max Chamberlin . Max
passed, but he wondered
about his friends in Bolivia.
Evans decided they should
have a chance to take the
Home Eye Test too.
."The simplest thing was to
ship some Home Eye Tests to

Bob Evans, Rio Grande, 1977 Sight Saving Campaign

ChB;trm~n for the Ohto Soctety for the Prevention of Blindness, Columbus, explains where

BoliVIa, ts and stresses unportance of the free Horne Eye Test for Preschoolers, to the
Soctety s Little_Mtster POB, Aaron Lawson, Hilliard ''lazy eye " patient. The campaign
personalt\tes this week packed copies of the test for shipment to Evans' grandson .

Federal funds to

advise senior citizens on
matters of concern.
Transportation - Funds
will not supply means of
transportation but will
provide for hiring drivers to.
transport senior citizens.
Winterization and home
'maintenance - Work will be
done in conjunction w.ith
Community Action Program
agencies.
Homemaker-health aide Persons hired will be placed
in a variety of local agencies.

assist elderly

COLuMBUS- Ohio's older hospitals and mental health
resident.s
will be direct institutions to assist them in
beneficiaries of federal funds returping to the community.
granted recently to the Ohio It's a supportive proCommission on Aging.
gram.
Under Title IX of the Older
Paralegal
Persons
Americans Act, a total of $1.5 will work with attormlflion has been approved for neys and law grcups to
the Commission to provide ,
jobs in local communities for
persons 55 years of age or
older, based on individual
·and community needs.
Under Title VI of the
Continued from page C-11
Comprehensive Employment
and Training Act, Depart- 171 bushels .
Since 1~72, ssed drop variation of from 13,Soo to 35,000 have
ment of Labor, funda totaling
been
used to check resulting yields. These varied from 118 to
$5.6 million. have been
164
bushels
per acre. In-between results were as follows: 18,000
granted to fill approximately
seed drop, 129 ooshels; 20,700, 141; 24,500, loS; 27,300,163.
537 job slots in rural areas of
. This is the time to evaluate your weed control program.
Ohio in six service programs :
Find out what weeds were not controlled al)d start planning
senior
awareness,
your 1978 weed control program now .
homemaker-health aide,
. Shepherd points out that farmers should be evaluating
senior friends, paralegal
thetr corn crops thts fall and making plans for improving
services, winterization and }'lelds m 1978.

County agent ·c orner

.JiJi·; \
,~)

The lowest prices ever!
Come in and see our
great selection today.

~ETZ HONOA SALlES
Itt: 7

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

&amp;

Employmeat, hours aad
earaln&amp;• In the major
meiropohtan areas during
August :
A k .r o a :
Nonfarm
employmenl' was down .6
percent from July at 254,300.
Factory employment was
down 1,100 to 82,900 largely
because of a dispute in
nonelectrical machinery.
Nonmanufacturing was off
due to seasonal declines in
state government education.
Manufacturing
production
workers earned $6.80 art hour
for an average 42.6 hour
workweek, little changed
from July.
Ce"ton: Down by .5 percent
to 150,700 for August ,
nonfarm wage and salazy
employment
reflected
declines in primary metals
and
local . government
education. Manufacturing
employment slipped :100 from
July to 56,200. Continuing
disputes in conununication,
electriC, and gas services
kept emp loyment levels
below those of last year.
Factory production workers
averaged 40.3 hours a week,
down half an hour, at $7.03 an
bour.
Cincinnati:
Nonagricultural employment
declined 4,:100 from July to
550,200. Model changeover in
transportation equipment
was mostly responsible for a
fall of 2,800 in the area's
manufacturing employment.

ADAMANT OPPONENT
of the newly signed
Panama Canal treaties,
Ronald Reagan sees in
them a " fatal flaw ." The
former Ca!Hornla governor
and presidential cotilender
challenges tbe assumption
of reliable, trouble-free
operation of tbe canal in
the lulure onder lnot03slag
Panamanian control.

marginal
gains
for
pro duct'ton wor kers a t 43 .3
and $7,03.
Youngstown-Warren : Nonfarm employment declined
by 1 percent to 205,000, a drop
of
2,100
fr om
July.
Manufacturing at 79,100 for
the month accounted for the
entire change in the area.
Durable goods were bard hit,
as model changeover in
transportation equipment
contributed to a decline of
2,300.
Average
hour ly
earnings and weekly hours
relliained fairly constant for
.production workers at $7.n
arid 40.1 hours.

ientintl

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1977

THE NEW STYLE RUSTIC LOOK FOR THE FAMILY ROOM
Reversible cushions , solid rein forced vinyl on one side,
vinyl and Herculon Combo ·on other side.

SALE PRICED

SOFA, CHAIR, ROCKER, FOOT STOOL

AND 3 TABLES

REG. 1699.95

$54995

Big Way Style $200 more

By LEE LEONARD
VPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Last
week 's announcement of
layoffs in the steel industry
reverberated through the
statehouse like a bowling ball
rolling through the rotunda,
and it is likely to be awhile
before the shock waves
subside.
Word of the 600 layoffs at
Armco Steel and the
impending 5,000 la'yoffs by

Ohio politics

HE CAPTAIN'S
Colonial maple finish
color with heavy post ·

WITH BEDDING"

large

storage

~::::·~:~~"' $19

9

Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube
came as the General
Assembly was beginning i!s
autumn session, and it
appeared to knock legislative
leaders off their pins.
·
All they needed was
another problem to add to the
growing list pf headaches
facing Ohio, such as school
fmancing and fuel supplies
for the coming winter.
llut it was right up Gov.
James A. Rhodes' alley.
In typical fashion, Rhodes
wasted no time in exerting his
Influence. He had sensed the
Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube
move and summoned major
steel company executives,
union representatives and
legislative leaders to his
office for a meeting.
This allowed the steel finns
to air their gripes, and most
of the attack centered on the
federal goverrtment for lack
of action to limit steel
imports and for unnecessary

air
pollution
control
regulations.
Then Rhodes took off for
more
meetings
in
Youngstown and Middletown .
Again, not much of a
departure from the norm .
The governor has been
co nferring regularly with
officials in many cities as an
apparent prelude to a
campaign for re-election.
But this latest development
gives Rhodes some real
ammunition in his continuing
battle with the Democraticcontrolled legislature.
The governor has been
warning of an industrial
exodus for months, and he
bas been trying for three
years to get the legislature to
approve tax incentives for
industries
to
remodel
factories and replace old
equipment.
Nothing has been done, and
now it's no longer a matter of
attracting new industry. It's
a matter or keeping what's in
Obio now.
Democratic leaders
continued to cling to the
opinion that there is little the
state can do to solve the
problem.
Sen. Harry Meshel, DYoungstown, criticized Sheet
&amp; Tube for failing to put back
in what it has gotten out of the
YoWJgstown area, cradle of
the steel industry.
He said the legislature
could try to encourage the
Environmental
Protection

Agency to delay its timetable
for forcing industries to
phase in clean air equipment
on factories.
But for the first time,
Meshel showed a softening on
Rhodes' tax incentives .for
replacing old equipment and ·
·relocating and remodeling
factories.
"We ought to take a look at
them," said Meshel, who
previously has shown little
enthusiasm
for · the
legislation.
.
Meshel still was reluctant
to favor tax incentives across
the board, but he said there
might be "a more receptive
attitude" in the legislature
for specialized incentives for
the steel, glass and rubber
industries.
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, said
the main problems - limiling
steel imports and glilning a
grace period on air pollution
control equipment - can only
be solved at the federal level.
"Even if we passed the tax
incentives now it wouldn't do
any good if the import
problem isn't resolved," said
Riffe.
The layoffs put the Democrats on the spot. Rhodes has
the capacity, and now the
reason, for pointing the finger
at them for delaying the taX
incentives.
And they can no longer
blame
a
Republican
administration in Washington
for failing to come to Ohio's

rescue.

Blue &amp; White - Maise &amp; Blue
White &amp; Green.

Reg. sl6.99

SHOES
Silver Bridge Plaza

Open Sunday
1 ttl 5

Sl?cial drinking out on the
booze beat across the
country, chatting with
bartenders and customers
and dutifully reporting what
makes men and women
imbibe - and why some
become inebriated.
"more organized studies"
Financial vouchers show were carried out in 1958-59.
expenditures for travel , The project moved along
· ~entertainment , ' '
pocket smartly with the object of:
tape reco~ders, two-way
" Developing
a
mirrors, Polaroid cameras classification of natural
plus one fully-equipped bar drinking situations (bars and
with roulette, pinball and cafes ) in (censored) and
"fun" machines. The bugged vicinity .. .
" Continuation
of
bistro apparently was set up
at a research institute with a bartender interviews.
- "Developing methods for
large staff and used for
supposedly informal cocktail study of bar and tavern
parties that were actually clients ;.. "
taped and photographed
A June 26, 1956, memo from
the CIA's Technical Services
down to the last drop.
It was all part of a Division
called
for
multimillion dollar, 25-year- ·•participation in
and
long research project which direction of agencysponsored
or external)
included experiments on (internal
sometim.e s willing, but often 'traini ng exercises ' and
unwitting, Americans and courses in the general area of
foreigners.
alcohol and social drinking."
The CIA's Subproject 63 of
The bugged bar - or
MKULTRA, as the overall "ecology lab" as it was
operation was codenamed for sometimes
called
a time, was purely alcoholic. apparently sprung from a

Two faiths seen
near agreement
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UPI Religion Writer
WASIDNGTON . (UP! ) Lutheran
and
Roman
Catholic ·-theologians ha ve
neared
agreement
on
formulation of a common
statement
on
papal
infallibility, one or the
thorniest issues separating
the two churches.
But it is unlikely that the
common statement will
represent a consensus on the
subject or resolve all of the
. differences between the two
Papal infallibility ; the
belief the Pope is divinely
· protected from error when he
speaks "ex cathedra 1' on
. matters of faith and morals,
is a relatively recent doctrine
of the Roman Catholic
church.
It was first promulgated in
1870 by the first ·· Vatican
Council and invoked only
once, in 1950 when Pope Pius
peclared
· the
XII
"assumption" of the Virgin
Mary, mother of Jesus, into
heaven.
Lutherans generally reject
such a view.
In Roman Catholic circles,
however, there is a growing
consensus that before any use
of infallibility , the Pope
would invoke the principle of

ByCHARLESTAVLOR
ATLANTA
(.UP!)
Federal health officials bave
reported 48 cases of
1..eglonnaires' disease in 19
·states since the original
outbreak last year in Philadelphia ~ch claimed 29
lives.
1be Center for Diseue
Control Friday reported two
new Cllllell of Legionnaires'
dlaease In Philadelphia and
said oth.. CMeB were Wider
il!9elt!PUon In Vermml and
New Meslco.
1be Philadelphia caaes, the
ftnl In lllal city lllnc:e the
~Wfak\tl

outbrelk lltrllek 110

~·
auendinll
au
A rrtaan lAIIon coowntlon,

occured in · a 70-year-old
woman and a 50-year-&lt;&gt;ld man
in July . Both recovei-ed after
prolonged hospital
treatment.
The CDC said in Its weekly
rt!port that clinical response
in the treatment of the two
Philadelphia patients
"provides additional
anecdotal experience that
erylbrunycln (an antibiotic)
may be an effective drug in
the treatment of ·Legion-

naira' &lt;~~•a•. "
It was the CDC's strongest
endorsement
yet
of
erythromycin as a treatment
for the dlaease, although t1)e
center aald tests have net
been C!IJlpleted.

A COC spokesman said the
recent flurry of reports of the
disease can be attributed at
least In part to development
of a diagnostic test f&lt;r the
ailment and Increased
awareness by physicians.
In addition to the New
Mexico and Vermont reports,
another cue was 1l8ted in
Moline, Ill., earlier this week
and two weeks ago Ohio
health officials reported a
cluster of seven casea in
r..,lumbu.s.
Health officials have
emphasized that all medical
evidence so far strongly
indlcatea thit Legionllalres'
dilleue Is not transnilsible.
HO'jl' the illness Is spread and

collegiality - consultation
with the bishops of the church
- over whatever was at

lssue.
While the final decision
would rest with the Pope, the
use or co llegiality would
represent
what
some
the ologians have called
''moderate infallibism.''
The theologians, officially
appointed representatives of

the two confessions, are
expected to reach their
consensus by stressing the
"indefectibility " of the
church, the notion that "the
· church is so protected and
guided by the Holy Spirit that
its faith in christ remains
authentic
through
the
ag~.~~

SUch a view would mean
that individuals within the
church could make errors in
their teaching but that the
church
itself
remains
protected.
In addition, the interfaith
group has stressed its "clear
affirmation of the supreme
authority ·of God ' s word
through 'the gospel which
protects the church from
irremediable error.''
The issue of papal
infallibility has been under
consideration
by
the
theological dialogue group
since 1974.

.

Monaco's
Princess
CaroiiDe is marrying a
commoner but the couple
has something more Important to them than raak.
In common - aa ardent
lnlereot In sports. The ZOyear-old prtacess and Paris
businessman
Philippe
Junot, 37, are tennis
players, swimmers and
skiers. She also is a horsewoman and he plays

soccer.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio State Bar AssoCiation
has issued emergency
guidelines
for
lawyer
advertising that list 20 items
that may be included in a
printed ad.
The association 's
recommendations bave been
turned over to the Ohio
Supreme Court and are a
response to a rerent U.S.
Supreme Court decision ·that
prohibiting attorneys from
publicizing their services was
a restraint on trade.
Valid for publication, the
lawyers' group decided are:
-whether credit cards or

causative
where
the
bacterium lives are still
medical mysteries.
The disease is marked by
an extremely high fever,
chest pain, cough and other
symptoms normally
associated with pneumonia or
nu.
States reporting caSes of
Legionnaires' disease since
the PbUadelphia epidemic
were Ohio seven and one
death; · California
and
Massachusetts five eacll and
one death; Michigan four and
one·
death;
Missouri,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey
and Wisconsin three cases
each with one ~ath _in
Wisconsin; Indiana, IUUIOtS,

Vermont and Washington
D.C., two cases each with one
death in Wisconsin; and
single cases in Florida, North
Carolina, New Mel&lt;ico,
Oregon, Tennessee, Texas,
and Washington with single
deaths In New Mexico ,
Tennessee and Washington.

Weather ·
Cloudy, warm and hwnid,
chance of showers today.
Highs close to 80. Clearing
tonight and Monday. Lows
tonight in the 50s, highs
the
60s.
Monday
in
Probabllity of precipitation
50 pet. today and tlus
evening, and 20 pet. Monday.

1958 memo calllng for

a

comparison of

" alcohol
effects on a small sample of
subjects on whom repeated
observations can be made
during periods of naturally
induced stress, mood depression and fatigue ."
This homegrown pub left
nothing to the imagination . It
included a stationary bar and
4 stools ; chairs without
arms ; chairs witil anns;
Polaroid camera; "one-way
screen; " four microphones ;

ice crackers; can openers;
stirrers ;
ice
bucket ;
" roulette , darts, jigsaw
puzzle, tambourine, pinball
machine,
fun
ball
machine .''
An Aug. 27, 1908, CIA memo
called for " a series of
cocktail parties in our
specially designed barroom"
with
" staff
members
avaUable for · spur of the
moment sessions." .

Other investigato rs
throughout the COW! try, it
said, should "frequent a bar
often enough to be able to
describe the general attitude
of the . place, its cultural
status and the reactions ... of
regular habitues wbo regard
the bar as a kiod of club."
The
memo
urged
approaches to a subject after
he began to mellow, "gain
rapport and enlist his
cooperation in controlled
drinking" - presumably by
keeping him at it.
"Alcohol," another report
says, is "a social institution
and should be studied in the
same manner as the
sociologist studies religion,
for example .. . For some
groups of people, one could
conceive of alcohol as a
religion, another as a drug,
another as a lubricant or
adjustant to sociabUity."

•

Governor says
Ohio in trouble
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)"Our state is in trouble,"
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes
said Saturday. " If this trend
is not reversed, the quality of
life in Ohio will decline
rapidly."
In a statement, the
governor counted the loss of
6,450 steel and rubber
industry job losses in the past
10 days, noting they come "at
a time when general
unemployment in Ohio is
about twice what it should be,
when 40 percent of inner city
youths are unemployed, and
when the cost of welfare is
doUbling every four years in
Ohio."
·
He asked " all Ohioans to
pause on Sunday to reflect on
the future of our state."
He said, "It is certain that
all compassionate Ohioans
are sympathizing with and
praying for the 6,450 Ohio
family heads wbo have
learned in the past 10 days
they will. lose their jobs,
probably pennanently."
But in addition, he added,
" thoughtful Ohioans must be
alarmed and fearful at the

Plant
stormed
by 200

nature of these job iosses."
Hurting , Rhodes said, are
the steel and rubber firms,
"both keystones of our Ohio
and national economies."
The governor said Ohio
needs two things : a natlonal
policy on basic industry that
recognizes the importance of
steel and rubber to the
nation's defense and survival
and the malntainance of the
state's industrial base.
He said that would require
tax incentives so that
industries can modernize and
keep jobs.
In the past 10 days; 5,000
, workers were laid off by the
Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube
Co.; 600 by Armco Steel in
Middletown;
651l
by
Goodyear's passenger tire
division in Akron; and 200 by
U.S. Steel in Youngstown.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

NOBODY TO CONTEST
LOS ANGELES (UPI) ~
Groucbo Marx' wW apparently wm not he contested by any ·of hls
relatives and frlei:tds who
were ,given a part of his
multimWlon estate.' The .
document, admitted to
probate Friday without
opposition, specified that
tbe inheritance of any who
disputed lis lerms would be
reduced to $1.

DEFIANCE, Ohio (UP!) Mayor Kenneth Amsbaugh
asked the National Guard for
help and the Johns Mansville
Corp. went to court seeking a
MIDDLEPORT _:_ Issue 2,
temporary restraining order
Saturday just hours after the question of whether or not
strikers stormed one of the to ban the leg-hold trap, will
firm's
three
Defiance · have to go down by a nine to
one margin in the rural areas
plants.
About 200 strikers left the of Ohio .to overcome expected
main plant about 4 a.m., after majorities for it in the
knocking down a gate and Cleveland area according. to
Andy Lyles; speaker Friday
breaking windows.
.
In a drizzling rain Saturday · evening to the Middleport Rotary
club
morning, riot-helmeted Pomeroy
at
Heath
following
dinner
police threw up .barricades
other credit arrangements
around the three plants and United Methodist Church.
Lyles, game protector of
are accepted
city police and sheriff's
Meigs
County, was assisted in
-fee for initial consultatior deputies patrolled
the
showing
slides, and with
- availability of a written
factories.
But Amsbaugh said he remarks by Ray Karr. Both
fee schedule
-fee estimates for specific
feared more trouble and were introduced by Rotarian
wanted guard help "because Gene Riggs who got his own
services
-contingent fee rates
of a lack of manpower and the plug in against Issue 2 by
responsibility bf providing pointing out how rabbits,
-hourly rate
s]mnks and fox present
- fixed fees for specific
protection."
It was not immediately hazards to farmers and
services
-{)ne or more fields of law
know how many arrests trapping is the only feasible
police made in connection · ·way to control Such
in which the lawyer or firm
populations.
practices
·
with the disturbance.
other points emphasi~ed by
-date and place of birth
JM attorney Karl Weaner
the
speakers were :
~ schools attended and
said he has asked Defiance
A Lawrence County
other scholastic distinctions
County Common Pleas Court
turkey
producer lost 179 birds
- public or quasi..public
Judge Dan Batt to hold an
recently
to mink, an example
immediate hearing on the
offices
firm's request for a of wildlife management being
- military service
foreign
language restraining order against the needed.
Researchers have
strikers and a limit on the
ability
snggested
a link between
The bar association recom• number of pickets at the
and
rabid
wildlife
mended that lawyers now be
plants.
'
multisclerosis.
A
woman
in
allowed to advertise that they
Trouble began late Friday
Reedsville
was
bitten
by
a
are specialists or concentrate when the strikers' cheers of
.
in one or more fields of law. approval. about the 3-1 rabig fox recently.
Trapping
has
great
·
The
recommendations margin defeat 'Ill the latest
value,
particularly
economic
stipulated that law lawyer JM contract offer turned into
to teenagers who trap for
advertisements must be free
shouts of anger.
Frank Howell, president of income while going to school.
. of
" false,
fraudulent , ·
Slate
of
The
misleading, deceptive, self- Local 51 of the Glass Bottle
!Xlt
a
similar
Massachusetts
laudatory
or
unfair" Blowers Association, said the
lack of an open-ended cost of trap banning law on its books
statements or claims.
The
emergency living clause and a contract in 1934 and took it off in 1938.
- Ohio is one of 15 states
recommendations do not expiration date of Aug. 15
currenUy
preparing to vote
cover radio and television in•t•a~ July I bad led to
on
banning
the leg-hold trap,
ads. A bar association Friday's 904-266 vote against
.
proof
enough
of an organized
spokesman said, "We hope the company's offer. The
drive to do away with all
that meetings we are strike is now 86 days old.
planning with radio and
Howell criticized the trapping of wildlife in any ·
oponents of
television
representatives, mayor, as well, saying way by
:&lt;ue&gt;. as· the Ohio Association Ambaugh had come to visit established wildlife
of Broadcasters, will mea11 and console the strikers at the manasement practices.
Presldenl Carl I?eflilon ·
that many 0\lhese problelllS same time po~e were
can be resolved ."
getting their riot gear ready. pre&amp;lded at !he meeting.

Attorney ads O.K.

Legionnaires disease hits 48 persons in states

VINYL &amp; LEATHER

JOGGING SHOES

PAGE 1·0

through statehouse ·r otunda

· "COMPLETE

NYLON &amp; LEATHER

hours.

Production workers early J3
cents less, $6.19 an hour, for
an
average
41 .5-hour
workweek.
Cleveland: Wage and
salary employment added iiOO
to 887,300. Manufacturing
was
down
slig htly ;
nonmanufacturing benefited
from temporary summer
help in local government
education . Factory production employees earned
$11.85 an hour for an average
workweek of 42.5 hours, little
changed from July.
Columbus: About 800
nonfarm employees were lost
for a monthly total of 469,600.
Manufacturing accoWJted for
the entire loss while net total
nonrnanulacturing remained
unchanged . Factory workers
grossed $244 .82 for an
average 40.2 hour week , the
same as in July.
Dayton: Slipping .3 percent
to 336,000, total nonfarm
employement was 1,100 under
the July level. A dispute in
nonelectrica
. I machinery was
partuflally responsible for
lll8Jl acturing's drop of 1,600
to 106,800 for the month .
Average weekly hours and
earnings for production
workers were 43.7 hours and
$6.86, up fractionally from a
month ago.
Toledo:
Nonfarm
employment gained 200,
raising the level to 293,200.
Manufacturing employment
at 88,100 was up 400 with food
and
similar
products
benefiting from seasonal in·creases. Average weekly
hours a11d earnings showed ·

'researchers' ' schooled in

It becan1e so big it spawned
subprojects and ran from
1956 well into the 1960's .
Some
derails
were
contained among 2,532 pages
of hitherto " Top Secret" CIA
documents made available
Friday.
A Feb. 17, 1960, memo ,
apparently
from
a
psychiatrist or psychologist
working
"with
covert
clearance" for the CIA,
disclosed that "pilot studies"
on the effects of alcohol on
humans started in 1956, and

corrununions.

Two

MEN'S

earnings
of
ractory
production worltera gained
$28 over the year, as the
workweek was utended by .6

Steel layoffs make waves

News Notes

SUNDAY SPECIAL

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Total
employment slipped .3
percent in Obio from July to
August, the state Bureau of
Employment Services
reported Saturday.
'nle ooreau found that the
number of workers on
nonfarm payrolls fell by .3
percent
and
factory
employment declined .5
percent. That decline was
moderated, however, the
bureau said, by seasonal
hlrlngs in canneries.
The net loss was due to
temporary
layoffs
of
production workers during
model changeover operations
in the car industry. Layoffs
were also reported among
plants producing stampedmetal parts.
Nonmanufacturing
employment was fractionally
below July, with summer
layoffs of nonteaching
personnel in public schools
accounting for the decline.
Average weekly earnings
of Ohio factory production
workers slipped more than $2
frqm July to $281.57 and the
average workweek shrank
slig htl y to 41.9 hours.
Substantial overtime cuts by
carmakers and lowered
average hours in iron
foundries were responsible.
Between Aug. 1976 and
1977, the overall state
unemployement
rate
decreased from 6.9 to 6
percent of the civilian labor
force. Greatest growth
occured in services, trade
and government.
Gross average weekly

VOL 12 NO. 34

.

Mr . and Mrs . Howard
Thoma, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
E. Johnson , Tammy, Cheryl
and Terry, Mrs. J . R. Murphy, Peggy. Carmel, Mr. and
Mrs. John E. Murphy, Chris
Racine , Mrs . Robert A:
Murphy, Veronica, Syracuse,
Debbie Murphy, Racine, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Barr, David
and Michell or Rutland and
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr and
son enjoyed a cake and ice
cream at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Harley T. Johnson ,
celebrating Mrs. Johnson's
birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Boyce of Columbus were
recent visitors or Mrs. Bertha
Russell and Earl Russell.
Mr. · and Mrs.
Guy
Tuckerman of Springfield
were weekend visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman
and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning , Rhonda and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood
Howard Jr. and family of
Harrisonville were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Johnson and family.
~r. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Kat!, Charles and Kevin
were Sunday dinner ·guests of'
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.

By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGTON ( UP!) - If
you boozed and bar ;hopped in
the 195C)s and 1960s - even at
elegant c'OCktaU lounges Big Brother may have been
there watching you ..
The CIA had a t:orps of
1

~

Wolfpen

BY BERTHA PARKER
Attendance at Sunday
morning service at the Free
Methodist Church was 90.
Choir members present was
10.
Mr. Ea rl Radcliff, 'Gideon
representative , was guest
speaker Sept. 18 at the iQcal
church.
.
Mr. and Mrs . Henry West, ·
CaUforilia , visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Pat Tracy.
I;;ighty persons attended
the local church picnic which .
was held at Fort Meigs.
·The Laurel Cliff Hea lth
Club met recently with Mrs.
Tracy.
Eleven
Nellie
members and two guests,
Mrs. Katy Parker and Mary
Braley attended. It was a
surprise party for Mrs.
Tracy's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Allen
and Mr. Carlos, Bunker Hill,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Wells,
Middleport, Mr. Mark Stahl,
Stockport, recently called on
·Mr . and Mrs . Norman
Schaefer .
Mr.
Bill
Hysell,
Mississippi, called on friends
here recently .
Mr. Roy Howell has been a
heart patient at U11iversitv
Hospital. He spent the
weekend at his home but will
enter the hospital this· week
for heart surge ry .

Big Brother watched boozers

Total work force
Hown .3% in Ohio

~unbatt ~imts -

home maintenance trans·

portation.
Jame ·s
Alexander,
assistant director, special
event.s, said the Title IX lunds
would provide employment
for older persons throughout
the state for up to 20 hours a
week.
~'Our imrltediate goal,"
Alexander said·, "is to hire 20
persons to help Mahan meet
his goals under Title VI. Then
we'll complete the liaison
network of about 117 people
so wh,en legislature comes
back on a permanent basis,
they will be available."
Other persons can be hired,
for example, in city or county
' agencies: a police department might want a person for
~ hours a week to answer
phones. " We would give
priority to programs that
would most benefit older
persons," Alexander said.
Mahan explained the
programs being developed
under Title VI CETA funds:
Senior friends - Those
hired will meet with elderly
persons in nursing homes,

D-1- TheSunday'l'lmes-&amp;nunet, :Sunday,~pt. :!:&gt;,I'll'/

opposed

�'

•

'

•

D-3--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWiday, Sept. 2$, 19'17

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

P-a-'the Swlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Sept. 2$, 19'17

For Best Results Use Sunday Times Sentinel Clas~ifieds

--..

•

...
•
~

~

1977

3

•="
"'

SELL-DOWN
GET READY FOR

76 Cadilac Cpe.

DeVille .................. .

FALL WITH ONE OF THESE
USED (ARS THAT HAS .BEEN

'7900

CHECKED AND READY TO GO.

Rea With while·,lnyl roof, white leather interior 1 full
power and fac1ory air, full stereo, crul~ control , T&amp; T
wheel.

76 Cadilac Sed.

1976 G.M.C.
lh ton · pickup air, auto.•

7900

DeVille Was S8'100 NOW 1

p.s.• p.b. , nice truc:l&lt; .

Light blue, blue vinyl roof, de-elegance Interior full
power ~d air. AM-FM stereo w ith tape, T&amp;T sl~ring
wheel .

75

Cad~lac

Coupe

DeVillewas

uaoo

NOW

'5900

Full power, factory a ir, leather seats, T&amp;T wheel,

·74 Sedan

DeVille

moo

Was

NOW

Cadillat

Cpe.

;~~~~E

DeVilles

1975.BUICK

1975 PONTIAC

Extra clean car . Onl y

4900

DeVille was

moo

1974 PONTIAC

1974 BUICK

sold and service this one.

Elc. 225 4 dr. HT. This car

thing , one owner.

•4395

1974 FORD

1974 M.G.

Pinto Runabout, auto .. ps,

NOW IN STOCK
1-DEMO SEDAN DEVILLE

a gas saver.

'2295

•2895

1973 MAZDA

1973 BUICK

8.000 miles.

1-1977 SEDAN DEVILLE$
1-1977 COUPE DEVILLES

RX2, auto. This is really a
gas saver.

ALL FULLY EQUIPPED

Midge Conv ., 4 speed, low
mileage.

Elec. 225. 4 dr

Karr &amp; v ·a n Zan.d t

Catalina 4 dr ., local , one
owner , Runs good .

~esabre Cust ., 2 dr. ht.- .We
sold and serviced this one .

'2395
Imp. Cust . 2 dr . ht, autO.,
air body, little rough.

V-8, 4 sp. trans., P.S.

ZABLE
1

AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apls . 1
bedroom , $105 per montn . $150
security deposi t. 992-6098.

r)

0~

FOUR ROOM.S and bolh. Adults
·
only. No pets. 992-5908.

Wt-IAI THE MAN

) I I

I· LANNID
I K)
,... A

[j

WHO :OLEPT iHR'OU!&amp;H

A POL.IIICAL

v.s,

'2695

SAVE ON THESE
USED CAR
SPECIALS NOW.

1975 Ford F-100 Pickup ........... 53095

DAN THOMPSON FORD
See Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp or Dorrel Dodrill
Fora Good Deal ono New or Used Vehicle
Open Evenings till7 :00 ucept
Thursday and Saturdty. Closed Sunday
Middleport, 0.
H2-2196

tJ

Now arrange t11e circled letters lo
lorrn the SUfP'ise answer, as suggested by t11e abo\18 canoon.

"t xxxr r r r xxJ

I

Jumbles: FLUTE WEARY GRATIS NOGGIN
Answer: NeckiiiMr for a •• &lt; fuf author-

"ROYAI.·TIES"

FIVE ROOMS and o bath. Upstairs
apt. in Pomeroy , OH . 992-562.1
or 992 -2205.

Available Oct. 1

LIGHT houseke·e plng room , Park

Ph. 446·1599

Central Hotel .
SlEEPING rooms for rent, Gallio

Hotel
OVER .4 ,000 lb. Tobacco base for
lease , or rent , Ph. -4.46-0166.

SLEEPING Rooms , wHkly· roles.
Pork Central Hotel.

7L:;;O;:W::-wee:..::::k:::ly,::o::nd~m~o::nc_r,-hl:-y-ro_r_•~•-.1

RIGHT PRICE
RIGHT DEAL

BED . FARM
HOUSE
first
Od. Thr"
m•les from hosp1tal. Adults on-

Ssturdsy. September 24

~f

ly. Neal's rental. Call ~6-0157

Personal property of Sam &amp; Mabel
Pickens Saturday, Oct. 1, 1:00 P. M. on
College Road off 124 in Syracuse. Have sold
house, moving into mobile home. Offering
following items:

lot field tile, large garden spray, one
cabinet, metal shelf, box head . sewing
machine cabinet, G. E. record player,
Christmas decorations, living room suite,
couch, arm chair, table, 2 chairs. roll -away
bed. recliner chair, platform rocker, iron
bed, vanity, misc . dishes ..
1

NORTH
"' 8 6
• 7 s3

~A::K:::C~OO.:.:.:.BcERMA
_-,-N,.,--P::cUc:P:-.-r-ed
-:-o-n-,d

WEST
&lt;~&gt;J1095 3

·-

• Q 10 6 4
• A6 S3

EAST
.74 2
• J 982

:Lunch
Jim Carnahan
949-2708
Terms: Cash
Laurtf~Ce Donohue
742-3048

faster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .

+ K7

ace right away and plays a se- 4 FAMILY YARD SALE . 25 Henkle
cond spade. Now South won't
Avo., 10 to 5, good school

SOUTH tDl

be able to run clubs

•AKQ
.AK
• QJ 10 9 8
• Q32 .
North East

Pass

~

N.T. Pass

and

won't

Soutb
2 N.T.
Pass

By 01wald &amp; James Jacoby
Here is a hand to try out on
your friends, but if you do try
it out, don' t laugh at those who
miss the correct line of play.
It is the sort of hand that looks
so automatic that almost
anyone from the best player in
the world to the worst player
in the world will land in !lie
soup.
.
South wins the spade lead
and will atta.ck clubs right
away . If he goes after
diamonds be will wind up with
just three dlaqiOIIds, three
spades and two 'harts.

Tberefore. he bu to lead a

Chev•. 1f2 T. ••••• ••••• ••·•

ee ••
V -8 engine, std. 1rans., step bumper. real nlc:e

'995
tor·

model.

other clothing . Rain or shine .

clothes, woman clothes , some
furn . mise items
'

1971 Ford Crew Cab ............. 51349
Big' '6", 4 speed, 3/.&amp; ton, H. duty wheels &amp; tires.

19It
Chevy Van G20 ·····•••e••·'5495
1 owner, 350 .. v.e, automatic power steering and
brakes, rally wheels, c:hrome equipment, Interior
paneled and insulated, carpeted, ready to add your
own camping equipment.

Chevy G20 Van ConveiSion ·e • • '7995
Fl bergiass raiHd roof, bunks,·screen, 12 V, electric
refrlg ., furnace: Porta Pottl, stove, dinette, 350 v.a
eng .• automatic, P.S._
, P.B., air cond., AM-FM stereo
radio and tape, W· W tires, red and white. Only 10,000
miles: and clean as new.

1974 Scout u.•.••.•.••.•.••••• '2895 .
Trave.l lop, 258 cu. In 6 cyi. engine, a-uto. trans.. like
new fires, radio, 2 wheel drive.

········•e·· '1595

lndoor-Ou1door runs. grooming
olt breeds. clean sanitary
facilities oe 367-7112. Cheshire.

1972 Maverick 2 Dr.

Phone(61•1 367-02'12.

Small V·B, automatic, P.S., radio, good !Ires, .clean.

AKC

SHETLAND

sheep dogs .
{Min .) Collies ,• 2 females , 7
week' old . Shots and wormed.

saddles. Hone Shoeing. Ruth

Reeve• . Albany.(614)698·3290.
AKC POODLE puppies .
apricot majes. 9•9-257 1.

STOP IN. NEW '78 CHEVmE
NOW ON DISPLAY

It'll Drive You Happy.

Two

Hurry In For A Good DEAL
POMEROY MOTOR CO.

AKC REGISTERED ·Doberman
have time to establish
dia11101)ds.
YARD SALE ALL WEEK. Sopr . 26
pinschar puppies , 3 mo . old .
$125. Pilono 1·304·882·2740,
If
leads the queen of
thru Oct. 1 Price• reduced .
after Spm.
club!l·, ~d East takes his a~e, -,.:T~•:::•o~·~R~do.. .::1 0o~mccll~11:.5f'pm~-~
South wins the return, ducks a YARD SALE. ru... ond s.r. ~&gt;es;~ MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society.
Corellne cmd adoption Servke.
club next and scores four
the Food MW •• a;dwell. 19
doors and storm doors ,
992-7680, 742·3162, 992·5427.
clu bs, th ree spades and two
balhroom our!il formic sink top
hearts. If East ducks, South
ond •Ink. rv. 1toroo. lumbor . AKC REVISTEREO Boxer pups. 3
molet. 949-26-CA.
goes right after diamonds.
clorhot mloc.
TWO FAMILY PORCH SALE . Sepl. TWO MO. old port·collio malo
puppy to give away. 992·3113.
29 and 30 Irom 9am to Spm .
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Clothing, furniture·, stereo, 9 x FOUR holt Border collie, half col992·2126
'
Pomeroy
12 rug. On• fourth mile up
lie pups. Hove bMn around
A West Virsinia reader
Unnllp.m.
Open
Evenings
stingy Creek rood of 55-4. Last
wants to know what we lead
and cows. Will mak•
trailer on rood.
·
• ~~l1tock
dogs. Coli 992·5106.
with :
GARAGESALE
at
or
BK!woll
on
..S 3 2.J 74 •K H . . 76.
Fourth AVo. Sept. 26 thru 30.
~. - -~ --- - - ·
The
biddins
by
our
. -·- ~~ -·--·
;.--=~ - - - - opponents bas been one
notrump - three notrump.
STARCRAFT 10th onn;v.mry oole
1'171 ~ \T.I, P.S., A.C..
We lead the four of hearts! .
on mlnl-moro,.. trollers, ond
STAIICRI\FT
AM-FM ....... 992-23311.
'
We aren't sure thai thls Is the
folddowns. Trovofstor 25 fl. All 1977 mocloiJ roduced. Save
..
~. • ~·sLOTS
S4«10.00: 20 fl. mini-motor
right Iead, bu t just that we ~ ~
$10.850.00. we •ofiMNico and
S1700. on 25 Ft. 1971 unit• In l'lflf IMPALA I'OUII-00011; F1M
candHion. point loll. 350
think it is the one moslllltely GIIHN TEnACE MOBILE COM·
quollty. Camp Conley Storcrolt
1fock. Now and UHd. W. Mil
. ..,lne: 7ol2·23!9.
to cause trouble for declarer.
Soloo, Rr. 62 north of Pt. Ploto·
(For 1 copy ol JACOBY ochoolo, 5 min. from Golllpolis
OQnt. - ~------of Pt. P'-ont.
·
MODERN,
$1 to: "Win 11 ondHolrer-p!lol.
1971 STARCRAFT .20 fl ..trovol ~;.__.:.:..:.==.:.:.....----Brld~." clo Ill/a
TWO ~~~ mobile homo In
trollor, Mil·conloinod, o;r 17f Travel Trollor. ooN-c:cinloinod.

"!i9!tlh

East-West vulnerable
West

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,

·11 clubs are going to break 2- ::c-"'C:=al::_l992=:.:
·2.:.:156::::.,
. ---~~
2 or', 3-1 it doesn't matter THREE FAMILY PORCH SALE. Skin·
Phane (614 ) 367·0292 or
which club South leads. If
ner's Lane, Pomeroy' near·
367-7112.
West has all, it doesn't make Minersville city limits. wed ..
any difference, but there is Thurs . Fireplace set, household HOOF HOLLOW Horses. 8uy. sell
East with all four. [£ South Items . toys, maternity ond
trode or train . New and used

• A 10 9 8

Opening lead - J•

COLLECTOR'S ITEMS
Smoki'ng stand , 2 cow bells, milk can,
pole bell, 2 apple peelers, 2 good school
desks, collection bottles some Avon,
collection salt, pepper shakers, stone jars
and iugs, yarn counter, wicker hamper, old
high chair, 7 small oil lamps, old wooden
bucket.

~lub at trick two and here is IF YOU kove a 1ervice to offer,
Nhere· the right club must be wont to buy or sell somathirg,
oe looking for work .. , or
led. South must lead the queen
whatever ... you 'll get results

leads a low club East takes his

Pass

.-

rust . Mala . Coll446-n95

of c lubs.

• 42
&lt;I&gt;K J7654

DobermonPinscher. Priced on ,
inspection only . Call388-8811

BRADBURY RENTALS
GREAT DANE PUPS. AKC horlo·
First floor efliciency apartments. quin and blocks . $100. Call
No.3 and 4, Coll446·0957
1·448·A922

Only one play lor 3 NT
24

446·0231

TTE~N~M~O~N~TffHlOOOLOD-;,;;pg;;;y;;;eddf;;;;;~:-

Oswald and Jim Jacoby

PUBLIC SALE

B' Fleetslde, 6 Cyi. , std. trans., good tires, step bulper,
mirrors, radio .

Sanitary facilities , Cheshire, Ph

or-s gleaming, use Blue lustre DRAGONWYND CATIERY· KEN NEL , AKC Chow Chow dogs,
carpet cleaner. Rent" electric
shompooer $1 . Central Supply .
CFA Siamese and Himalayan
APARTMENTS FOR RENT. Jackson
(Persians). Pl_c ce Christmas ki t·
ten and sprmg puppy orders
Estate&amp; . Rt . lS, 1 and 2
now . sian). Ph . .CA6-38A4 .
bedrooms, no pats. Rent according to your income. Coli AKC REG . COCKER SPANIEL PUP ·
446-27.45 ·
PIES. C&amp;ntenary Woods Kennel.

A~olloble

BRIDGE

Positive 1. 0.
Din Smith,
f4f-20ll

Week End Special

e.

TWO

Libby Hotel , .446-17.43.

-------

••nd

u!,~fT.!Rr.l 41 , cltywolor, clty .

n•-PI'·

P.O.·Box418.-oCityStol/orl,
NIW YarN, N.Y. 10011}
oNE_AI'IIII_...,..1

c.........,2~

'Ia

Coli f46

•

to

,. .

o.p

. roq. .

-

•
•
•
•

•

•
•

--•
-••
--

-•

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

- '·

. . 8RIARPATCH Kennels . Boarding ,
FOR RENT OR LEASE , Over 4.000 Grooming, AKC Gordon setlbt . tobacCo, bose, Robert
tars , English Cocker Spaniels ,
OuMn. Ph. 4-46.0168.
Ph . ._6.A191
3 BEOR MOBILE HOME. 1A • 70. :R::
IS:'IN":G::-.':'
ST:-A:.:R:':K::EcNc-N-Ecl ---$175 mo, plus deposit, At 1, Boarding , Indoor-Outdoor Runs .
Bidwell, ovoilobla lost of
Groomin\J. All Breeds. Clean

~

:~s':rc":::tt~·~~

concl., -nlng, ontenna olec·
trlc oncl II"' heat. oi..Po Jlx.

Phonoll2-3152or742·2906.

Ga IIi polis, 0 .

Court &amp; Third

P.S.. std. trans. , sharp .

V-8, std . trans .• P .S.

ONE BEDROOM HOUSE located -:;736
:::7
:-·0'029:.:.:_2=---c----on Neighborhood Rood ond CENTENARY
WOODS PET
Sandera Dr. 1 or 2 adults only .
GROOMING FACILITIES. ProCall .....6-0254 evenings .
·feuionol Services offered, all
.FOR better cleaning to keep col breeds , all styles~ Ph . .CA6-0231.

Aparbnents

992·332A.

5-PEECH WA5-.

I""-'" Monday)

Vesterday'l

TWO BEDROOM trailer. lt901 nice.

CARROLL NORRIS
DODGE

1973 Ford F-100 Pickup ....,...... '2295

Elec. 225 4 dr. hi, loaded,
has some m lies on it.

August, 01,.·772 -2566

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom

•

•

1975 Chevrolet 1fz r.. ......••• '2995
SPRING VALLEY
GREEN APARTMENTS

--

IN·STOCK
READY TO GO

NEWGMC

1975 Ford F-250 Pickup .......... 53295

· POMEROY, OHIO

3 AND • RM. furnished and un furnished opts . Phone 9925434 .

•

• AM radio
• Reclining bucket seats• •
• White stripe ! ires
• 1.6 Litre engine
• Console
• Sport steering wheel
• Body side moldings
• Bumper rub strips
• Swing-out rear windows

• Wheel trim rings
• Deluxe grille
• Color-keyed instrument
panel
• Glove compa rtment lock
• Cigarette lighter ,

==-.,..-

• Chrome headlight trim
• Bright hood edge
molding
• Bright instrument panel
molding
• Automati c dome light
swi tch (both doors)

1973 Olds Cutlas Supreme ........52695

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
lri

-

~

trans ., P .S.

V-8, auto. trans .• air, P.S.

Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check with us before you buy any car new or ·
used . We can save you money. We are The Friendly Dealer. Call or come in and ·
see one of these Friendly Salesmen, Ceward Calvert, J. D. Story or Bill Nelson .

500 E. MAIN ST.

•

18 New Standard Features for '78

Beat the 6% Increase
Save Up To '1,000
on '77. Dodges In Stock•

1976 Ford Maverick 4 Dr.......... 3395

1973 BUICK

•2495

•2295

•.

PONTIAC$

5

'1295

caprice 2 dr. ht, auto., air ,
extra clean for '73.

-..

AND

L1ean car. Air, P.S., P.B.

Newport Custom , A dr .•
real nice, luxury car.

1973 BUICK

'1895

"Yo.u'll Like Our Quality Way
Of Doing Business"
992· 5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open EvePings Tii6:0o- Til5 p.m .. Sat.

Applo, 2 dr .,' s mall VB,
auto., ps, pb.

'2695
1973 atEV.

••
•
•
••
•
••
••
••
•••

..

1974 Ford Maverick 4 Dr.......... '1995
v.s, auto.

1973 CHEV.

'3295

1973 PONTIAC

1974 BUICK

vfnyl top.

•
•
•

ONLY A fEW '77
MODELS IN STOCK!

1975 Ford Granada 4 Dr......... · '3195

'3695
1975 atRYSLER

~ir

-...t

----

77 BUICKS

6 Cyl., std . trans.

•3395

Century 'lux 2 dr . ht, auto.,

""

--••

.,....•

A Cyl., std . trans . Sharp

2 dr. hi, air, blue
with while top . Sharp.

1973 BUICK

loaded .

•

••
•
••

1974 Ford Pinto 2 Dr. Sed........ $1795 ..
•

~esabre

4 dr. std .. has every·

1974 Ford Pinto 3 Dr............... s1995
Runabout, 4 cyl .. auto. trans., one owner·

1974 BUICK

•3295

My brother's car, only

'1495
See one of. these courteous salesmen: Pete ·
Burris~. Marvin l!:eebaugh ~r George Harris:

'
ht,

p 5

'4295

'3195
1974 OI.DS
~U K

Like new 6 cyl .• auto . trans., AM-FM stereo.

P . B .. ta pe, o nly .,29, S2·;
miles.

laguna, a ir, auto., p.s.,
p.b., tape, nice car.

extra clean. Only

•4395

Full power, air, stereo..

has

98

extra clean. Only

2900

NOW 1

black.

'4495

Elec. 275 4 dr. hi. This car

73 Cadillac Coupe

PriK,

'3995
Grand Prix, local owner

'5500

Grand

Camara alr, auto

Lesabre CusL 4 dr. hi,
extra clean. Car only

'5295
1974 atEV.

everything, local car.

1

Vinyl roof, leather seats, full power, factory air, cruise
control, T&amp; T wheel , full stereo, 1 owner .

2-74

· '4995

~esabre Cust., 4 dr . HT.

stereb, 32.000 miles.

1 ton pi ckup 4 speed , dual
wheels, p.s.. p.b.

'3995

1975 CHEV.

1976 BUICK

1976 CHEV.

1976 Ford Granada 4 Dr, ......... '3895

-........

HURRY!

.-•

-•

NOW'S YOUR TIME TO BUY

DISCOUNT PRICES

•••
•
•
••

Sleeps ti•. Furnace and
relrlearotol. Stowe. 992~7644.

~

~

~

-·-·
...-·
-·..
-·
--......-.
...-·-.
-.-.-..
..... .
••• •••
-.••...
...
~

----·- ..''
·'
Ull' t

Truck Headquarters
197-t 'h T. GMCPickup
197_. 'h T. GMC Pickup
1973 1h Chev. Pickvp

1974 CHEVY IMPALA CUSTOM .

19].4 •;, T. GMC PU
197:2 Y, T Chev., pickup
1--1973 v~ T. Chev. PU
1974 •;~ T. Chev . PU
1973 EIComino with top
1970 Olds Delio sa
1974 •t, T. Ford PU
1973 three-fourth T. Ford PU
197A three-fourth Chev . PU
197-4 three-fourth T. GMC PU
1975 •t, T. GMCPU

PINTO RUNABOUT , auto ., AM·
FM , tope . Call 446-.4457 offer
5pm

1971 GMC 9500 Trottor

1976 '/4 T. Ford 4 W.O.
SOMMERSGMC
TRUCKS. INC.

air, PS , PB, cruise control. vi nyl
top, low milege . exc. cond ,

$3 100. Call446-4189

MUST SELL
1977 DODGE DUDE PICKUP .
16,000 actual miles , 318 auto.
loaded with extras . Exce llent
shape . Coli 388-8120 !)~ :ween
Bom ond IOpm .

Chevy Chevette,
priced to drive you happy.

1970 CHEVELL.E SS . 396 4 spd . ud.
trans . $1150. Call ~56-6205
1975 DODGE DART CUSTOM .
small V ·8 auto .. PS. foe. air ,

446·2532

vinyl top, low mileage , extro
nice. $2800. Call 388-996q ,

77 MAVERICK 6 cyl, 12,000 miles ,
S.T. would consider older cor
On trade , Ph 446·2995

1975 DODGE DART , sla nt 6 cyl. ,
PS , PB, std. shift. 29 ,COO miles ..
good condition. S20CO. C.a ll
256-6457

133 Pine St.

All these fea tures are standard for the first time on the '7B Chevette Coupe. ·
And yet the "78 .Chevette is priced' lower than last year's ca r with the same
eqUipment So come on 1n soon to see and lest drive this very imp ressive
small car w1th thEI a1tract1ve pnce t~g. And while you're alit. be sure to ask to
see Chevette "s new 4-doo r Hatchba ck. It 's room ier than the Coupe and sti ll
pri ced to drive you happy.

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER.

'Comp_a r.ison of manufacturer 's suggested retai i price for a 1977 Chevette Coupe with features
now sta ndard on a 1978 Chevette CouPe.
·
'· some early production Chevettes in ou r inventor-; will not be equipped with these recl ining
bucke t sea ls.

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1977
ACROSS

1

Atmo~plterlc

dlaturbonce
6 Wire nella
11 Beaged
18 Hauled
19 Forelve
20 ~et go
21 Declared
23W~IP

· 24 Female aheep
26 Flower
27 Spanish for

"yea"

29 Trensgressed
30 Old nama for
Thailand
31 Flesh
32 Goal
33 Man 's nickname
34 Sow
·
35 Pitching lnfractlan
36 Girl"s name
38 Downy ducks
40 Mournful
. 41 Warning device
42 Buss
43 Recent
45 Styleol painting
46 Cyprlnoi!l r;sh
4 7 Protective ditch
48 Ceremony
49 ~et in ·
51 Auditory
52 Suffix : denoting
all
.
53 Shadelree
54 Wagers

55 Poison
57 Deposit
58 Country of Ash!
60 Seed conta lners
61 Urge on
62 Alcoholic drink .
64 SymbQIIor
dysprosium

65Near
86 Surfe ll
67 Ancient Greek
theater

69 Charge I he account of
71 Swiss river
73 National hymns
7-4 Leak through
76 Privileges
79 Waslond of ·
8 t Dress barder
82 Guido's high
note

84 Coastline
85 Inclinations
87 Remainder

90 Intervening
period
92 lnlel
93 Food programs
95Domain

97 Character in
"'Othello'"

98 Printer's
measure ·
99 Notary publ ic
(abbr.!
101 Evaporates
103 Indonesian tribesman
· 104 PrePOsition
105 Adhesive subs ~

tance
108 Sic~
110Areas
1 12 Canines
1 13 Small bird
1 14 Span ish arlicle
115 Caudal appen dage
117 Walks
1 1 8 Makes lace
1 19 Grain (pl.l
120 Note of scale

1 21 Competitor
123 Bi~hopric

124 Cold Adriatic
wind
,
t 25 Chlel god ol
Memphis_
126 Limb
127 Boast
129 Clergyman
131 Orun kards
132Winga
133 Man's nick"na'me
t 34 Golf mound
136 Sums up
137 In addillan
138 Morning pra-;er
139 Teutonic deity
1 40 Fruit
1 41 Peda I digit
t 42 Dillseed
1 43 Falher or mother
1 44 Letter
146 Trapped
t 48 Engine
149 Sofas
'1 50 Is aware of
1St Unlocks
DOWN
1 ~ooked fi•edly
2 Carried
3 Was in debt
4 Crimson
5 Physician
(abbr.!
6 Smash
7 Paper measure
8 Danish land division

9 Roman gods
1 0 Spirited horses
' 1 1 Shams
12 French article
13 ~amb" s pen
name

14 Eagle's nest
1 5 Old Japanese

noble
16Worm
17 P.refix : down
· 21 Meeling

22 Foot lever
23 Man's nickname
25 Armed conflict
27 Compacl
28 Despicable pef$Ons
30 Seasoning
31 Ponder
. 33 Nalives oi Lalvia
35Ray
36 River islands
37 Division or

63 Jason's ship
86 Pig liens
88 Scorches

89 Ma~es lace

GALLIPOLIS MOTOR CO.

90 Negative praflx
91 Maiden loved by

Zeus
94 Clans
96 Note ol seale
98 Dines
·
99 Salt of nitric
acid
t 00 Simpler
102 Precipitio.us
104 Greek feller
I 05 Substance
Arabia
106 Piece of ground
39 Pair
1071ngredlent .
4 1 Pod of a pla n I
109 Black and blue
42 Outfits
111 Manages
44 Furnished with
112 Arrow
drink
113 Chinese
47Fiesh
pagodas ·
48 Savior
1 16 Ara bit: letter
49 Debate
11 8 Hurl
50 Striped animal
119 Man 's name
· 54 Fuss
122 Newest
55 Matures
124 Adorn
56 School of paint125 Station
ing
126 Changes
59 Deposited lem·
128 Fewest
porarily lcolloqJ 130 Artificial
60 ~ane
language
61 Man ' s nickname 131 Winter vehicles
63 Grieve for
· 132 Home·run king
66 Symbolfor lin
135 Greal ~ake
67 Bone
137 Again
68 Sessions
138 Partner
70 So'-'rces of an1 40 Baker's product
npyance
142 Time gone by
71 In music . high
143.Parent. (colloq.)
72 Ventilate
144 Manu script
· 73 Snakes
labbr I
75 Folds
145 Borther of Odin
77 Prefix : three
147 Arlicle
78 Ocean
148 A slate labbr.l
80 Wile ol Gera inl

. • ·236 Second Ave.

Phone ·446·3672

1973

DODGE CHARGER , ou1.
trans ., PS , PB , foe. olr, 45,000
miles, good Cond ., one owner

Ph 24~ - 5182 after 5 PM
1966 FORO MUSTANG.
675·5022

Coil

1973 Olds Cutlass; 1972 Olds Sfa·
tion Wagon 1973 Storcroh
Camper. Ph . 446-1395

1975 TOYOTA CELICA GT . 'good .
con di tion, 5 speed trons., 28
MPG. $3500. Coll256-6022
1968 CAMARO , 396, A spd. ,
crogers . Also 1974.SUZUKI 185 ,
good condition . (oll.t4b·7069
1975 VEGA. 20,000 miles. Coli
after Spm , 446-7-420

1977 MONTE CARLO , 8.000 ocluol
miles , exc . cond. Call4 46-1595

1972 ~ONTIAC LEMANS, $q50.
1976 Ford Pickup, $4100. Call
-367-7187

1970 CHEVELLE SS . 396. 4 spd.
eng.. 42,000 miles . Call
245·5064
1969 DODGE DART . 340 , 4 spd .
Sell or trade lor pickup. Call
367·0256
1972 OLDS DELTA 88 with full
power stee ring, brakes and
seats. Very good ·condition .
Asking $1 ,275 or best offer.

949·2031.

ANTIQUE AUCTION
SATURDAY OCTOBER 1

10:00 AM
Located 13 miles abOve Henderson, West Virginia on U.

s. 35

The following is a partial listing that will be ollered to
the highest bidder :
Empire chest, wicker doll carriage, 2 ox yokes. dinner
bell, one large lot of stone jar s, milkcan, iron pots. doll
bed, Stnlard scales, 2 spinning wheels, 2 fnonks (1
wood. 1 leatherL Heartback ice cream stool. child's
bathtub, rocking cradle, Seth· Thomas clock with lion
head, mantle clock, 4 rocking chair's,
insu lators.
walnut metal chest , fireplace front and cover. Duncan·
Fife type buffet, musiC stand 118981 , matching dresser
and wardrobe, several picture frames . cvt and etched
French light, copper chaffin dish, 2 pedestal table.
hanging light, East Lake walnut table, oak dressing
table, Mother of Pearl inlay chair with needle point
seat, McDougal chair, ice cream chair and table •
coffee grinder, fire dogs, dough box, wooden coal hod.
Duncan· Fife magnoany drop leaf table, Gone With the
Wind lamp. Germany berry set, depression glass,
child's tea set, maple desk, 3 pc . pewter tea set, butter
mold. New Haven 30 hour walnut cradle. side saddle,
display cabinet, cut glass cream and sugar set, 2
Bristol vases, Navarre cut and etched piece, grape and
cable Marigold ruffle bowl, milk glass, chocolate pot,
Silesta cream &amp; sugar set, Bavaria cream &amp; sugar set,
6 bone dishes, spoutless pitcher, old doll, school desk ,
walnut drop leaf table, wa5h stand with towel rack ,
library table, dresser, large country kitchen cabinet,
Jenny Lynd double bed. vil:trola, walnut shaker table, .
brass kettle w;th stand, hanging pie safe, Queen and
.walnut round table. old kilchen cabinets, cast iron ham
broiler, 6 wooden porth posts, plano rolls, ole records,
Avon bottles, 4 Dutch ovens, slaw cuHer, mahogany
dining room suite with buffet and 6 chairs (1920) In
good condition, 1 oak curved glass secretary, and
many other interesting Terms: Cash Lunch Available
Mrs. W. J. Artrip, Owner
Auctioneer:
~ee Johnson
Crown City, Ohio
2S6-6740

Gallipolis

PARTS FOR 197 1 Galaxie Ford for
sale. Phone 992 -5858 .

1972 DODGE CHARGER. A.C. on~
many more options . $1495. Call
992·5169.
1971 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON . Best ofler. P.S., P:B. ,
A.C. Gene Mitch . 992-3.478.
1976 CATALINA . $4AOO or best of ·
lor. 985-3981.
1•55

,INTERNATIONAl

PICKUP

Truck. R-100. \.11 ton . 992-7492
or 992-3716 .

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN
We se ll anything lor
anybody at our Auction
Barn oi' in yuor. hom e. For
information and pickup
service ca ll 256-1 96 7.
Sale EverY Saturday
Nigttt at 1 p.m .

SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth swain, Auct .
Corner Third &amp; Olive

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, ..1977
Starting at 10:30 A.M.
Directions from Oak Hill, Ohio, take State Route 233
East or County Road No. 2 off 279 to 233 East. Turn
right on County Road No. 48 . Watch for Public ·Auction
Signs that will be posted .
Consisting in part of : Walnut Lumber, Massie Harris
Model 30 Tractor with Plows &amp; Cultivators, New
Hollarid Hay Baler with Wisconsin Engine, New
Holland Pull Type Mowing Machine, 1972 Dodge 300
Maxie Van with slant 6 engine and 3 speed transmission , l lf2 ton Chevy cut down Truck, Allis Chalmers
WO Tractor (needS repair). International 3 pt. Hitch
Cultivators, Woods Brothers 1 row Corner Plc:ker. one
man Saw Mill (needs wood) , Platform Scales, Outdoor
Light (new). Hog Feeder, Wheel Horse ~awn Tractor
with att•chments, Rototi ller lnew l , ~arge Pipe Vise,
Hous~ Jacks.
Fodder Chopper 1869, Dehorner,
Acetylene Outfit complete with 50 f.oot of Hose Gauges
&amp; Tips, 24·26 foot Wooden Trusses, Piston Pump and
Tank , 23 gal. Side Mount Truck Gas Tank, A ir
Compressor with S H. P . Briggs and S'traton Engine,
Baler Twine, Particle Board. Locust Posts, Electric
~otors, Iron Kettles, Stone Churn - Jars . Jugs, Old
L1cense Plates, Doors; Barrels, Hand &amp; Carpenter and
Garden Tools of all kinds. Bolts, Car Seats, Wheels &amp;
Tires, Wooden Bloc:k Planes, Corker Type Bottles, 2-7
quatt Pressure Canners, Commercial Type Meat
Cuber with Stainless Steel Blades, Kool Aire Air
Conditioner, Wooden Calmps, Paint (new &amp; opened),
Chains, Nails.
Household Furniture: Brass Bed tsheill. T .S. W. Coai
Cook Stove, Wood Burning Stove, Estate Apartment
Gas Range, Refrigerators, Deep Freezers (upright &amp;
chest type), Speed Queen Round Tub Washer. Moovcr
Spin Dry Washer, Spring Out leaf Table made in
England, Mefal Knee Hole Desk. Old Trunk, School
Desks . Record Play~ 1. Royal Typewriter. Phi leo Floor
Model R~d io, Old Radios, Cast Iron Sink with unusual
leg,., l&lt;itchen Sink, Old Medicine Cabinet. Chairs of all
kmds. 2 piece Sectional Couch, Old Spindle Back
Rocker , Dresser, Chest of Drawers, Metal Clothes
Cabinet (nice). Iron Outch Oven. Brass ~amps , Movie
Camera Equipment. Lots of small miscellaneous
items. Antiques and Collector's Items. Biggle.
TERMS : CASH
Lunth WJII Be Served
RAY CONLEY, OWNER
Daryl Alban
-AUCTIONE"ER5Kenneth Swain
Oak Hill, Ohio
Gallipolis, OhiO
Not Ruponsiblt lor Accidents

•

�••

--

t&gt;-4--Tile Sunday 'l'ime5&amp;ntulel. Suodon Sept. :!:&gt; 19'n

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

~TheSUndliy'l'lnle&amp;$entinel,Sunday Sept 25 l9TI

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

REOUESTS FOR

c.. * 47
.. LOVING .....,..,..,.

ol ""'
Ro•• E t.1 S&lt;01
b&lt;ough "wfto pctued owoy 10
'feot'"l ogo She heM gone lo nt
b4.1t ..... U l"teYe( be foreot .,.. 1
h.,&lt; ot two ., -h doy 9"'"'
by Sadly m •Hd by dol.vfo .,,
Phyil• McM ion ond 'ij&lt;OnO
ch Jd en Oouglat Ocr.-.d ond
mother

t

NT$H

1

fO •• ~ my

lJnc.e..-•

""'I many f -ends who NEED A WATER
~be-ced me ""hiie t wot: o
po·he"lt
n
o
ho!.p o
o
SOFTENER?

r

• o

Park...-sbu ·9 , Jho.n.k1 fm the
~ coeds
Hcwen. g fhi

Ler

s and pf'oyen They Wfi•
gr.a .,. oppc.-c~ted GQ.d ar.t.~
i80d't ~ J..o"* e Lawr.nc•
5

who

s.p 25Th 1973

ploc:• S OCQII.I m OU ~:!o
Thot ,...,., c.on be- f I tod Sod 'f

A

muadbyOod Mom Ss•J
and Br-othen and Fe, I es

tN MEMa.Y of Jul e Ann F" sh.
who poued owo.,. h H .,.eo :!t
ago s.p 2• 197S
Our! tegrf
Ttl H yea 1 gone by
14. I t Ia -g l c.ome ro ~h s t.o d of

""

.

Her ho

os golden 01 he sum me

flowers
Suddenl)l OMI cwtumn doy
Cod eoched down for 1"' s C'h d
Our lo tie g I wos tokel'\ owoy
To sleep and sJumbe m ld
Mttm:Q e1a e fel to keep
s\.ffe-rt noJ and f -ves n peot:a
Boby Jesus watch o e he- 1leep
Moy he p &amp;e ou.t: memoc e1 ne e
c.ase
M ommr,
ond
G ondmo he
8eeg.

sn.

IN

MEMORY ot Ceorg a

E ro

Olo

Seplembe

come~

sod

w h

Co-oD

MDdel

UC

xv r

Let us test your Wilfer
ARTLEY FLUTE e11c cond
Co 1145 9369

Free

Sl?5

FOR SALE

.c:_~~-

SAXOfHON£ V o ex
cellen~ cond Ot't Coli af ec Spm
UO-IS.OO
A,LTO

New Ca Op w.ater •nd
model VC SVI
Only S27t tS
Save S50 00 on • new
softeners

--'-~~----

Hotpo nt Rotngeralor
1 New 10 cubtc tt Chest
freerer
ns 00 DIScount

AUCTION EVE RY F
7 p tr'l lof5
of new ond used merchond se
a Oh a Jl ver A uc on Ma gs
P a to M ddlepo Oh o Home
Phon• (:lQ.o /
5&lt;17 1.~-~

(I) Good

n3

~~~~~

~;.

SPR NC GARDEN Supples

Cab
bo9e
cou t ower
D occo
and heed le tuoe pion s
yellow wi-1 e and ed on on
se s on on plan ts Kennebec
cobble Ko ohd n Red Po11 o
and Red Lolodo seed po o oeos
Bulk go den seeds po t ng SQ I
pect mou f u I ees ond OSfi!
bushu
M dwoy Mo k~
Pome O't
Oh o
992 2582
Sob s Mo kef Mo.son W Vo
(Jo.&lt; 1773 5721

COAL I rneslone and ca c urn
chlor de ond co c um br ne fo
dus con ol and t:pe&lt;: a m x ng
sol fo fa me f Exce so So 1
Works Mo n St ee Pome oy
Oh o or phone 992 389
CAMPER:
$600
Also
ho se
ole $.4 50 Pkone (6 1A) b98
3190

fo get
Fo n ouc hearts you w II olwoys

CASE LOT
CAN GOODS

•toy

Loved on.d cemembe ed elfery

day

ECONOMY TRACTOR w th o at
tech men 1 l ke new niik ng
52150 Phone (b 4) 698 3290_

FOR THE I nesi n wood heo ng
stoves cooks eves ond c::oa
sto'IS,. Coli Z on Heo Co 8
Putnam 0 ve A.ti"lenS- (614)

Slru:l&lt;ly wholesale to all .
Nol less than 2 case

w•

A:efngerator S200

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack w ear .. y Mg r
Phone 992 2181

he mon h we w II neve

Ou heo h we e sod o ose you
Bu~ you a e not o one
lnlheque~of hengh s
Ovr eo 1 w I often f o w
To th nk of how suddenly you
e oken f om ul
On 1-1 s dey one y@O og o
Scd ly m ned by
Husbo,d
George dough er and son n
ow Mono lee.ond ll..e son and
Gene ond
dougt-!te n law
Pot g ondch ld en Ja nel l ee
lilG ondE c

ilnd

your
water

•279.95

eg • •

1M day

watl!f'

Landm•rk

cond1fMJn

Now Only

paned' owo'f

~ prec ou• one t om u1 ho10 gon•
A vo.c • we lo'¥.d • 5 led

&amp;

softener

a-v•.-::----:-::-c--:
IN LOVING ,."""'Y ol C yO. ~oy
John~on

Pomeroy

soften

Miller Produce
&amp;
Garden Center

696 I 67 o (6"] 592 IIJI9

ALADD N KEROS NE klmp end
heale s
eploc::emen
porh
Ch mney mantels w cks e c
Sop n fo demonst ot on ond
I ee co a ogue
Moun a n
leo l-Ie and G•ne ol S o e
0.&amp; 106 W Un on S A hens
on o 591 5478

1210 Wa shmgton B lvd

Belpre, Oh io

~ b-.. ld ng mo1euo ls
block bed \4'\N., p pes ""' n
dows.
t n ets
ere Ooode

AlL TYPES

...-s.

Wn
Rte Gf'ond• 0
245 5111 afte 5

APPlES FIJZPAIR!CK O.&lt;hank
S at• l ov • 689
Willo.Hv I e 669 3785

Phone

Adamsville Outfitters
STUDENTS

Phonec

NEW

lhJ:.======I225

20X40

1 F eet• 1 woshe 1 S bed oom
lu es 5 desk• used f eeze
wh e Up gh f M:ze gold
sew ng moch nes
d nette
Pedes o table &amp; 4 cho n ound
lob e 4 cho s. gun cab ne
f eeze 2 maple posle beds
pot: e be-d TV 1 ef ge oton.
d ye s
anges
bed com
su es beds chestt: d esse s
lob e1 lomps cho s othe
terns. book cose co 4"6-0322
9 l 8 p m 3 m out Bulov e

Rd

REFRIGERATO~

RANGES

Wos:he 1 ond drye l
GENE
SKAGGS
918 Eos en Ave
Ph 446 7398

FOR THE BEST N &lt;URN TURE
UPHOLSTERING Free Est mo es
PK:k up and de very se " ce
co Mow ey f Upho lste y P
Plea san W Vo 675 4 154
LIGHT WE GHT CHIMNEY BLOCK
8KI3 BxB Gol po s Block
446 2783

1972
ARI STOC RA T TRA VEL
T ole
18 ft Se f con a ned
hcellen
Cond on
Col
m 2427 day me 0 m 3580
of e Apm

U'J'S

HARRISON'S
SERVICE
CENTER
447 Srcond An
Bud H•rnson

Ennl ngs f,U 3150
John Fullrr
DIY 446 3fl4
ngs 446 .U27

FIVI 16 Gene ol Mo o Truck
Wheels w h 6 py t es and
ube!t
5 hoi•
ms
Co
2427 a 992 3580 of e 4

5950 Un co

2doo loge ef geoo

Boby be&lt;l

SIS

1965

$85
Fo d

Custom fo
9926124

po

$75

Cal

t:!o

COAl HE,..TER $50 2•7 216&lt;
COMPlETE beds Sw ve
ocke n ew eel ne two slo m
w ndows Ke nmo e drye Me
Cu ough cho nsow I JJ Bu e
nut Pome oy

JWO

YAMAHA HARLEY DAII DSON

I
Can AMMo o o:;yd•• Comp e e
sa es and fo11 os K serv ce
HounMT T96 WF 97 S.0
9 S TI-le Moo eye e PeQp e of
Sou heoste n 01-1 o
A hens
Spo Cydes nc 20 W S mson
Athens OI-l o Phone
A'Ye

(61&lt;) 592 1692

Jomes

1968 G M C PICKUP T uck ston
dord
n good cond f on
50c. a

SPECIAL TH.IS week on y

11 ro dlnemlnlt•
lnformtt on
on
Youth
commun i ty Con&amp;erv•IICJn
mproW~em~rnt Prol•cts
~VCCIP) IJndtr Tlflt 111 Of

and

the Comprehensive Em
p aymenr and TralnJng Act of
1973 iCETAl Emplovmtnl
and training opportunlt iH
would be offered. under then
projects to youth age-a l6 to
\9
nctualve
who 1r1t

econom lcallv disadvantaged

and
out ot tchool
Ap
p opr ate etrorts Shelf be

FREEZER BEEF

HORSES FOR SALE Rid ng ho

Ph

snacks S2'195 RC 8 pock 16
Ol
99c Gem flavors 6 pock

79c p. Ul ax ond depos t FRYE S
Pennzo I
Rv lend
011 o
742 9575 o 742 2081 W ecker
Serv ce ond T e Aepo r Open
10 unl lO Do ly Closed Mon
doys

FARM FENCE POSTS All SIZES
over 6 ()(X) to choose fcom
S1 99 ond up sh1ngles $1-4 95
pe sq
Ande •on w ndows
s uds othe bu d ng mote ol
Open do v 9 7 Franks Sorgo n
Cente R'
60 Po e Oh o

se~o

work horses pon es and tack
of oil k nd1 Co I 367 7533 o
388 9303

nel CBs $79 95 40 channel CB
ece 'I'&amp; only S 2 30 Oelc:o o r

RAYHAWKINS AGENCY
f you are a non smokttr co I ut:
for 1pec al otes on p operly
IN S 446 2300
FIREWOOD fot sole Buy now ond
sove Col 367 7672

USED FURNITU RE
.00 TAPPAN GAS RAf'jGE

two
ra&lt;:l ne s ol away bed coH ee
ob e AT Corb n and Snyde
furn tu 11
955 Second Ave

Gall pols 0
COALAND liMESTONE delve

ed

Co Oov d Voughon at 245 5309

100 OC() BTU gos fur nace good
cond coll4.46 .4347 ol e S P M

r-------------------"--------,

Jt Dateline
G ll.
I

a za

I

By Hobart Wrlson Jr
ELMER E Caldwell retired Gallipolis postmaster
subJrutted this art1cle recently following the v1s1t of Paul
Sagen who grew up m the Old Frency City It reads
There s been some changes made whtle I ve been away
Thus spoke Paul Sagen upon hlS return to the scene of hiS
childhood after spending 36 years away from the Old FrenC}
City
The f1rst change noted by Paul was the rubble where a
hotel once s!Dod at the corner of Second and Olive That s
wheretheSagensstayed With the Amsbarys upon their am val
here from aucago
Paul but a lad carne here Mth his parents Dr George
and Mrs Sagen upon the acceptance of h1s father as the
Pas!Dr of The F1rst Baptist Church m 192B Every day while m
his hometown recently Paul traveled around the area m
search of some sequestered spot or some •emernbered scene
Gomg down Second Ave hiS f1rst reactiOn was noticeable
when be came to where the Grace Umted MethodiSt Church
once stood now only an apparition w1th ghost like rafters
pomtmg toWard the sky and wood over the place where lovely
sta med glass wmdows used to be
Across the corner the dernoht10n of the building where
Holzer Hosp1tal once stood brought back thoughts of
yesterday The Journey toward the business section was about
the same bu t the Ohw Valley Bank on the corner of Second
and State was gone and on the corner of Second and Court the
Commerctal and Savmgs Bank had moved The Lafayette
Hotel where he had enjoyed many swnptuous meals was no
more Traversmg two and one half alley where houses and
bustness buildings once stood was a gapmg area w1th 1ron
sentineLs and meters on the1r heads beggmg for mckeLs dimes
or quarters
The parsonage where he spent 14 years of hiS life was
gone And the athlehc f1eld hes1de the h1gb School where he as
a member of the Blue Devil Band pataded on Fnday mght
before and a t the half of every football game was occup1ed by
a large bnck building The pasture f1eld across Chicka mauga
Creek where he and his paLs used to go for squ~rrels had
homes over the whole area Dr Ke th Brandeberry s home
OCCupied the place where Paul used to play m the Old
Riverv1ew Hotel basement But the park was m its place So
was the post office
Not all was negative The Ohio Valley and the Cornrnercwl
&amp; Savmgs Banks bad new buildings The First Church of the
Nazarene had replaced many old houses on First Ave Bob
Evans Steak House and the other addttions to East Galltpohs
was all new to him Bemg the son of a Jruru.ster he noted the
many new churches Across from the COWlty home at the
triangle of the bypass one on the south and one on the north
Side of Route 35 four mileo beyond Holzer Hosp1tal and
another church on Route 588 commg back toward town fr om
R1o Grande
Paul stood in woodennent as he gazed at the place where
once stood the Silver Bndge He asked why the Silver
Memonal Bndge was closed He VISited Pomt Pleasant and
noted the rebuilding of the Mason CoWlty Jatl On h1s VISlt at Tu
Endie We• Park he mqwred of the curator of the many
llappenlngs and wa s told of the long forgotten Curse of Corn
stalk Yes there have been some changes made m the Old
French City m the past 36 years
Since leaving Galltpolis Paul spent some time m the U S
Navy He restgned his cornrn•ss•oo as a heutenant commander
when he left Texas He Is a graduate of Texas A &amp; M and IS now
located in Milwaukee W1s as a fabnc dealer On lea vlng
Gallipolis he stated that he would not tarry so long before hiB
~nvwt
•

+++

TWENTY YEARS AGO from the fl ies of the Daily Tribune
and weekly Galha Times
Emmett Church to head Swan
Creek Grange Joe Ross named asststant prmctpal at Gallia
Academy Hlgh School Hank Forgey mstalled president of
FF A Chapter at R1o Grande Htgh School
Dan and Don
Notter return to studies at Ohio State Umvers1ty Mrs Hugo
Pierotti to head auxiliary of GallipoliS Boat Club
Logan
upsets GAHS 25-14 m SEOAL opener
C~UPPED

COLUMBUS (UPl) - The
Pltbllc Utilities Coi11IIII8Swn
rl Ohio Friday qrdered an in

crease m the directory ass1st
an ce
allowan ce
for
restdenllal customers of
Cincmnafj Bell Inc

I
J
I
I

230 SER ES MASSEY FERGUSON

FARM TRACTOR go t 70

~-~2!S ...an~=~~!'~.

Me1gs CoUD ty Humane Society
POMEROY - You know JUSt when r start thinkmg that
30Tiletimes life ll1 Meigs County IS dull something comes up to
bnghten It up
For mstance the events that took place at Yesteryear on
Saturday Sept 17 at the Semor Citizens If you missed Jt you
llliSSed a greattune and some very good chow as we used to
say m the Army I sure shot my dJet all to heck that day
Holding down the Humane Society booth was fWl too and I met
a lot of wooderful people some of you readers of thiS column
We collected QUlte a tidy sum for our shelter fund sold about
half of our Jewelry (the rest well sell at our bazaar between
now and Chnstmas) and some bum(s) had Ma Jor Miller and
me thrown m the Jail that the CB people had set up on the
groWlds to collect money for chanties ll was a real mce day I
hope our Semor Cittzen people do il a gam next year
Today I d ltke to tell you a little story about a toy poodle
that was rather special to me and tn a lot of other people But to
get to him I have to go back JUS! a while before he was born
In 1968 while a Middleport woman commanded the Fifth
Army WAC Department at Fort Shendan Illinols who of
course was MaJor E Joyce Miller she llad a little poodle
named Raggit He was a cute but a rather yappy httle ball of
fur tllat she loved very much - but who loved her even more
Well while home on pass one weekend and while on Beech
Street near the MaJor s horne Ragg1t saw a cat on the other
Side of the street and ran out to reach 1t JUSt as a car came
down the street too rast Ragglt never knew what htt hun
The Ma}oc buned her pet before returnrng to duty at Fort
Sheridan Now then Maj Miller had a company of over 500
women and when they saw the ir conunander return to the
company on Monday all upset and WJthout her poodle they
dec1ded to do somethmg about it
They had a meeting that mghl aod chipped m over $600
and then sent a representative up to WISConsuJ next day to thiS

COMEDIAN BOB HOPE master showman of our
times will be the featured entertainment at Ohio
Uruversity s Homecornrng Saturday Oct 29 Tickets for
the 8 p rn performance m the Convocation Center
sponsored by the Alumru Association wtll go on sale Oct
17 m the Mernonal Aud1tortum box offtce from 1 to 4 p m
Monday through Fnday for $4 $5 and $7 for the 8 p rn
performance Mall orders receiVed at the Memonal
Audttonum box QfflCe w11l be processed begirunng Oct 10
Persons sendmg m mall orders who would like to nave
tickets returned to them should mclude a self-addressed
stamped envelope Otherwtse the1r tickets may be p1cked
up at the box office begmnmg Ol lober 17 or at the
Cm vocation £ enter oo the r.l~; ht of the performance

SCHOOLS SHORTS
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - State
Audilor Thomas Ferguson
srud Friday a cash analysts of
three school distncts shows
they may have to close before
the end of tbe year
Ferguson sa1d an analySIS
of the James A Garfield
Local School Distrtct 1n
Portage CoWlty revealed a
potential year-end cash
defictt of $114 831 and could
result m the clo111ng of schools
for 21 days
Ferguson sa1d two school
distrtcts In Allen COWlty Allen East and Perry Local could end 1977 With cash
deficits that could fll'ce closrngs for several days prtot to
the Christmas recess
The financial analysls
showe&lt;l that Perry Local
School DistriCt would end the
year wtth an $11971 cash
defidt and the Allen East
D1str1ct would end the
calendar ye"r with 'ii u~ 571
cash ~ef1c1t

MAIER SPEAXS
OXFORD Ohio (UPI)
The preSident of the Kaiser
Aluminum and Chermcal
Corp Cornell C Maler will
be the featured speaker Oct 6
at a MiaiiU University School
of Busmess conference
The one-day confennce
titled Prtvate Enterprile
and thl\, Profit Mottw Endangered Species' will
he held at the Onctnnatl
Convention
Exposition
Center
The cooference IS part of
the
year long
commemoration of the
busmess school s 50th
anmversary

HOMESITES for sale

I ocre and

IJl&gt; M ddleporl noor Rullond

Call '192 7•B1

nrs

PS flu d n eo t res bumper
on f ont Ph 256 6228 o col
446-3575 ask t or M Sheets

She selected a htUe black. ball of fur who was presented to
the Major that afternoon Needless to say the MaJor loved that
little fella and With the gJrls they named hun tha t day Mr
Thomson from Wisconstn a rather long name for such a little
guy
Well to make a long stor) short Mr Thomson turned out
to be a chubb) btue cutest faced poodle we had ever seen and
most who saw him sa1d the same thing He only had one fault
and tllat was that he didn t particularly like other dogs He
should have been an only dog So through the years as he
was mtroduced to other anunal members of the major s
household he had a dog fight or two (or three or four or fi ve)
One time while Jreakmg up a f1ght between my dog Ke&gt;-Ko
and Thomson ole Tom rrussed Ko Ko and got me I won t tell
you where he bit me but! didn t s1t down for'about a week
The MaJor la ughed so hard she about had a stroke
doctor mg me
Another thmg I remember about our sweet Thomson was
all the tunes we d Jose hun and hWlt all over the house pamc
striCken that he may have gotten outside We d end up finding
him hiding somewhere under sornethmg JUSt watchrng us
hunting One time after looking for about an bour we foWld
him s1tting JUS! lllSide the hall closet doorlooking at us as much
as to say Well dumnues why d you shut the door on me'
All of our military fn ends loved Tom and after VIStlmg us
always llad to be searched because mvanably there would be
Jumps under coats as they tr1ed to smuggle Tom out of the
house
Just a few mon ths ago we were afra1d our Bos!Dn Temers
were gomg to do poor Thomso n ll1 smce he was getting too old
and Sick to defend hun.self So at the Major s sister 8
suggestwn we Jet her take him for his own good that IS Mrs
Raymood Stewart of Middleport (Donna) We had VISitabon
nghts naturally
Well he got even more spoiled by Donna and her family
but h1s health con tinued to deteriOrate ThiS past week I
accornparued the MaJor when Thomson was taken to the
hospital We hoped fll' a mtracle but Torn didn t1ast the night
We hadn t gotten over losmg Ke&gt;-Ko when here we had lost our
other poodle
We IniSS her ver} much and want to thank Donna for
making hiS last months such happy ones
Anunals available for adophon this week are as follows
Irish Setter 742-3162
Pekingese male 18 rnos old 742-3162
White Poodle found on Mulberry 992-3214
Collie female yoWlg 992-3113
Boxer female 2 yrs old 742-3014
Bassett type male young ruce 742-2767
Cocker Beagle housebroken male 3 yrs old 99Ul356
White short hatred dog With black spot over eye will be
latge 992-2548
PerSian kitten yellow 8 weeks old 992-3162
Siamese cat female also 2 kittens one yellow wh1te and
black 4 mos old ooe gray str1ped 5 rnos old 742-3162

97-t 360 'l"ohomo End uro 3600
m l~ s perfect cond 1 on WI
t ode on lorget stree b k e

•46-()5.18
•
RAYS USED FURN ITURE
ADDISON OHIO coll 367-0637

Couch $.t5 8reoklost set $35
l b cry table $20 CoHee able
and 2 end fob leJ $ 12 0 eu ar
$22 50 E ec r c ronga $-45
Ch no cob net $95
COAL FURNACE conv•rted o luel
o I lf'!dudes 5 r eg stars 2 co ld
o
e u ns and o duct work

Coli 245 5023
8 FT SliDE IN CAMPER un t un
tu nished

Ca

yout~s

made to Insure that

dot

~0 chon

Con
htla In

terence

m ss1o

EGGS FOR Sole
985 • ().&lt;

8 ldder s

bt
Columbut on Octobtf' 4 "1l
Ttlt purpon of thiS con

On Rout e JS R1o Grande Oh•o

m

0 FT TRUCK c.ompe

ror 1
rer•ncl' to

AO can outfit day h1kes or group
expe&lt;llt ons lnqutre about package tnps
and our 16 miles of htk&gt;ng and bndal trails
Canoe along Raccoon Creek - 5 tr1ps
Reservat1ons
Raccoon Creek Canoe
l1very
Call (61 4) 245-5304

PhOne- 4-46 t23l

Ev~tn

p en1

Padls
Terns
Sleeping Sap
Boots

nso

1hl6

0 "-«• S5.S 00 Bunk beds com
pee St50 mo I fl1o oM box
sp ngs S60 eo f m chell ot
d ower $..10 Queen f ze mo
l en &amp; bmc sp ngs set S 30

GOOOUSED

Ot""' opment Is announcing

1M DISCOUNT with ID

lAYNE S NfW &amp; USED FURNITURE
New oft up top dtik Ill cho r
S ISO Mode n b.d oom 1ou te
$ t 50 P ot~ bed oonuv • 5300
K ng s r:e ••
$100 Mop••
bed oom su. •• S300 Wolnu
Sed oom s.u 'le S7SO Mad •
ranean U&gt;fo and love HO $325
Eo Am s.ofo I cho 1300 love
•.a $ 150 modem rofa c;ho
lov...-o 5275 t:Ofa l&gt;ecf w th
match 1\Q cho r $ 50 Reel ne ,.
$ 100 ond up Tob es Coffee
oak Hexagon maple or p ne
$60 each Rod;e S5S maple
~able
~ cho s 5115
Hutch
S2'7S 7 pc 0 ne te $ 109 5 pc

PROPOSALS
YOUTH COMMUNITY
CONSERVATI O N AND
IMP ROVE M ENT
P R OJE CTS
OHIO OIIPARTMINT
OF ADMINIST R ATIVE
SERVICIS
Tl'lt Off ct of Manpa,.er

part clp,at lnQ
n
these
p ojects Shl I be those wl'lo
1 e u .per encino ditf lculf t1
In obtain ng empla"ment
those who rec:~u re substantial
bas c and remedlel s,k fl
ctrve opmt'nt thou who are
womtn m nor t es veteran1
offenders nandlcii p p• d
or
those with dependents A 1
opportun ties will be made
ava table w th out r~ a r d to
race creed color na t onal
origin se~~: 1ge hand cap
po It ca aff 1 at on or beli efs
The vee P will p r o v ldt
community
se r vice
op
portunltles through la bo r
ntens ve community con
servat on and m provem ent
prolects
w hlcl't
w o ul d
o t he r w se ttlrOu o t'l l abo r
lnh n slv e community con
servat l0f1 a nd Improvement
projecTS
w hich
would
otherw ise not be car r ied oul
This progra m w II su p
p e m enl but n ot r ep l ac e
p r ograms and ec Ji v Hl n
ava il ab le under T tie I of
CETA The geograph i c area
ser ved Is th e Bidanc e of State
(80S) Pr oject d uration may
range from 7 t o 12 m onths
Total
progr a m
funds
avala b le In the Ba lanc e of
State Is $888 090 Project sin
w 1 be im ted to between
UO 000 an d $200 0 00 The
B dder s Con fer e-n ce w ll
provide nterested app li ca nts
w th pre app l ca t on
n
form at on and form s Then
proposals an t o be su b m ltted
to t he Off ce of Manpower
De v elop m ent on or befor e
Oc tober 17 1977 Add ti ona !
v e e p Infor m at on m a y be
obta ned from Chester Wh te
Planni ng Su perv SGr 30 East
Broad Street
27th
F loor
Co u mbu s Oh l o A321 S a t ( 6U )
&lt;66 1 297 or 1 t 800l 21 2 1050
(ton f re e )
Re se rv a t ons
must be made In a dvan ce by
Sep t ember 30 1977 and m av
be m ad e t h o ugh Pr sc II a
Be-l
Tn nina Coo r d ina tor
A v n W hyT e or o ane
Kowalesk at tne sa me ad
dress and phone numbers
( 9 ) 2.5

Eo

hpt 25 1877

LIBRA (Sepl 23 Oct 23) Am
be b 1ons a e apt to be untulllled

Con
seen at Spould ng s Grocery
554 Kyger Call367 0511
THREE WEANING COLTS two Ap
polooso one quocter horse
Can be
eg lfered
Ca ll

to d ay not be cau se th ey are
beyo nd yo ur reach bu t you w
re t onallze r&amp;asons for de ay
F nd out more about you self by
send ng fo your cop y o f Ast o

:::2:':56"-::19:'5:'1::::-

07==--:-:-,---~ , G aph Lelter Ma l 50 cents tor
GEHL FORAGE BOXES 3 beaters each and a lon g se r addressed
covered

Coli 675 3963 stamped en velo pe t o Astro
G aph Rad o C 1y Stal on NY
10019 Be sure 10 sp ecify your
1974 PROWLER 18 fl self can b rth 8 gn
o ned Coll367 7524

ohe 6pm

COMPlETE

used

BEA UTY

SALON SCORPIO (Ocl 24 NoY 22) As

EQUIP
4 comb out stotlont
w th-hyd ol c cho r s -4 match ng
m ors 2 shompoo stations
w1t tl chon ond cab nets 6
drye cho rs un1 penn system
All 'Y nyl s ~old brocade
00

~~!o~~~'nd :oW: ;;~ry ~ ~ ! ~1~"

a ba gain hu nter you leave a lot
t o be des red today Take care OJ:o
someo ne may un oad the ir wh
e ephanr on you
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 D-=•
21) You m ay be un s ure o

yo urse f today because you
Se lng fo r health reasons Coli goals aren t c ear Y defined Huy.
targ ets blur you ma rksmanshl £
992 7608

7 PC DRUM SET c mbal• ond •tol CAPRICORN (Ooc :r2-Jan 1f)"
ncluded Exc cond $100 Coli Today when d scuss ng 8
388 8545
O)utua fr end who le n t preseDJ,;.,
say no thing about th•s persOI'I"
that sn t fa ctual
:

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Fab

11) Be
sure an yone do ng wo ric: for X2£
FOR SALE Wholesale women s
toda y estimates a I the costs....,
wear bus neu Requires -4 SIO
for
nvenrory
thot
s cura ely then double check 1Q1f
guoron't&amp;ed to sell Port t me (8 to be sate
o 10 OOun per week) For tn I!ISCES (Fab 20 March
formal on coli TOLL FREE 20)There s opportunity about
I 800 528 6050 axt 3041 o you t oda y but you must be
write Fosh ons P 0 Box 128 keen y percept ve to d scern It
Polktown N C 28135
Don t el the c han c e fo
JOHN DEERE DOZE)l mod &lt;0 something good go by

$17SO Call 245 5535
ARIES jMarcl121 Apr1111) Your
FORK LIFE small whoelo sohd w lingness to do thrngs tor
good •hope Call2•5 S535
oth e s today could posa bly be
ro
the wrong easons To e~~:pect
HARlEY 0"VIDSON l 972 olock
tpo tster Ike new custom something n retu n sn t t!'le
po nt 1ab low m leoge $1150 noblest m ot vat on
S.. ol R-ncy Apt 17 Sond TAURUS fAprll 20 Moy 20) A
H II Rd Pt Ploa•ont WVa
fr end who ta ks much but In es
sence says I ttle could gel you
a enthused today regard ng a
venture of small prorn ses

IUILDING LOT 210 x
plel• w th septic tank water
top electricity tel up p vote
phon• on mo I and "hool bus
routes I m from Rt 33 2 :It
m
fram Me•511 HS 1974
Skyline trotlec 12 x 60 W II sell
with Jot Will not Mil 1eporote

ly lol only oold separalely 8y
owner

Ms

5

Carmon

992 7060 Rack Sprmgo oroq

IY OWNER
IR HOUSI! Kitchen
ltving reum and batlt Will
tn
wall
carpelinl
hrougheut
Almost '
acrts The lots are leveled
off tor building 11t11 or
housetrallers Ofte very
llcluded building site 11
the top of tttt hill 2 acr11 of
woodt with sever4111 11r11
bled; walnut and White

I

Oik trots In Galltpbtls
School District Only 2'12

,...,

mites

from

Gelllpolis

Price rNucecl to 12J 111

(:104) 882 2«l7

~o&lt;hordt

A•k for

ANNOUNCING

JUNK ovto ond scrap metal Ph

NEW store hou 1 for Rod a
Shock Ace Hordware and
Meigs Plaza now op.n Monday
through Saturday '9 00 o 9 00

J8B8n6
GOOD USED FU~NITURE Ph
•• 6 0022
GOOD USED REGRIGERATOR
AND FREEZE~ UPRIGHT OR
CHEST Ph ••6-0322
TIMBER

Sundoy 12 00 to6 00

SHOOTING MATC .. at lhe Sporl
sman Club storl ng of t pm
Sunday Foclory choked guns
only Shot a nd 1lug motci-1

ANTIQUE OAK FURNITURE Ioney
ron be-ds stone 10 s e c Call

BEGIN your 1prlng cleaning by
hovl ng your carpets cleaned by
best method known Remove
all t he d rt Moke you c.o pet
f ee
look new ago n Fo
est mote t o ll 379 2682

2•5 5050

WANTED
cho '

pm
1963 OlDS CUTLASS p efe ably

DEAD Stock c.moved No cha ge

o convect ble Col 61-4 256 1598

55t ~

TH URMAN HOUSE ant ques Fur
nilure sir pp ng
epolc end
refinished Coun ty Rd .e off 35
Cent• rv li e V I og•
Closed
Monday &amp; Tuesdoy Even ngs
by oppo nlment 2-4 5 9-479

CASH po d lo o I makes and
mode s of mob le homes
Phone o ao code 61-4 423 9531

GET YOUR EARS P erced free wlti-1
the purchase of S10 po of

T MBER

Poma oy FOres Pro
ducts Top p ce fo stand ng
•owt mbe
Col 9fi2 5965 o
Ken Hanby 1 .446 8570

.arnlngs Towney1 Jewe ers
TRAOE~S

DAY

Every Sundoy In Porter
Br ng or buy
onyth ng o
e'fleryth ng
At l or ry l vely
residence n Porter Fo llow
s gns

COINS CU RREN CY tokens

od
pocket watches and ch o ns
sl ver and go d WfJ need 19~
o nd o lde s lve co ns Buy se
or t ode Coli Roger Wamsley

7•2 2331

TREE HAVEN CERAMICS g ttn
custom I ng f !'1 shed
product ord e s Co 1388 881 1

wore

OLD FURNITU RE ce bolCes brass
bed1
elc
complete
househo ds W te M D M I e
Rt -4 Pame oy Oh o o col
992 77fiJ

R&amp; J COINS of Mddleport w U be
ot the French 500 Flea Mark et
to buy se ll trade U S cons
and cu rrency also we nove
stomp suppl es and me o
detectors

CASH
Junk co s Fry s T uck &amp;
A uto Rutland Phone 7-4 2 2081
a 742 9 575 Closed Mondays

HIGLEY S BARBER SHOP OPEN 8
lo 5 CLOSED SUNDAY &amp; MON
DAY GIFTS BOOKS &amp; POTTERY
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Fo m•rs Home A.dm n stro
1 on has fo r sole from I me t o
1 me
es dental pro~rt es
located In Gall o Jackson and
Low ence count es Any I cans
ed r.a l estate b oker n
terestedtn I st ng hese prope
1 es should contact th e For me s
Home Adm n strot on. A.t 529
Jackson p ke Gol pol 5 o n 0

Te lephone

two or lou wooden
Col 2-45 5611 ofte 4 30

(61&lt; /

NO ITEM TOO Lo rge or too small
W I buy
p ece o r complete
household Ne w used or an t
ques Mo t n s Furn lu e 20 N
2nd St
M dd e_po
Phone

992 6370

THE

GALLIA METRO POUT AN

Hous n9 Autho ty s seek ng a
qual fi•d penon to bll the Ex
ecut ve D ector
espons ble
for mplement ng lhe Deport
ment of Hous ng ond U bon
deve apmen l prog oms
n
Gall a County OUt es consist of
odm n ster ng the Author t y s
act vlt es oco t ng prospect ve
e gbe ondlords and e gbe
tenan ts to en e n o o subs d 1
ed eose agreement fo lawn
come fomil es
mo nta n ng
I ason w th the Deportment of
Hous ng ond Urban Deve op
ment and monag ng ony t utu e
hous ng o be owned by l-Ie
Go I a M&amp;t opo ton Hous ng
Au hor ty Solo y s n t he
$8 000 o $ 0 000 tone o com
mensu ol e w th qual f cot ons
and s open o nego ot o.n w th
pofol'1f a for advancement We
a e on Eqvo Oppo tul'l y
Emplore and w I n eN ew all
quo fed oppl cants lnte es ted
po t at should subm a esume
l-Ie Gol lo Met opo ton
to
Hous ng Au tho ty Mun cpa
8u d ngGo po s Oh o 45631

LOCAL DISTRIBUTORSHIP cove
lng Go II a Me gs and Mason
count es E~~:cellent pari me n
come and can be operated by
one pe son No se ng re
qu ed
App ox rna ely 25
l-lours monthly
to se " ce
es ob shed oute Owne
1
elocot ng Coii2S6 1353

Vmyl &amp; Alummum S1 d1ng.
Storm Wmdows &amp; Insula-

GEMINI (Ma)' 21-Juna 20) In
matters where you hope to gain
ma,er al y IQday don t use
methods or tact ta that aren t up
to you usually high standarda

CANC!R (June 21 July tal

Unless your pens are well
cooce ved today your energ:ea
w I be m isdirected Rea.on
th ngs out then act - not v ce

ve sa
L!O (July D A.. 22) Bua neaa
or commec al dealingS' in

general could be exceptlo11011ty
lr cky for yoij today Be wory
where money s invotved

YIIIQO (Aut H hpl. 22)&gt; A
rorcelul 8810C ate could coerce

vou 10 make comm tmdn

~today

lhal opPOse your belter 'lilg
ment Be strong enough to,....y
No

N~ ~I M .. H Jo NTY.fH RIKfo: l~

:i; ""

GUTTER
SERVICE
pile•
W• hlnJ
11, or do ~ ,...,.u Spe&lt;ol "'"" .,
lou idOlS

tion

Call Professionals

Contit~YOitl OM

B1ssell S1dmg Co.
loul contractor
Phone 949 2801
or949 2860
frn Estim1tes

CARTERS PLUMBING
AND HEATING

For 17 to 31 y e
olds
Tratnmg wtth full pa y a nd

benetots PLUS travel &amp;
adventu re 1n t he U S
Navy Cafl 01' see 221
Columbus Rd
Athens
Oh1o Phone (coflectl 593
3566

Plumb ng Heal ng
215 Th dAve 446 3762

GENEPlANTS &amp; SONS
PlUMB NG
Heat ng - A Con
d t on ng 300 Four h Ave Ph
446 637

DEWITT S PlUMBING
ANDHEATING
Route 60 ot Everg een
Phone 4-46 2735

A CAREE R w th o lu u e Ia o men
o woman who won s the best
n I fe A poy check &amp;'Yery
week fon ast c fr nge benef s 1973 All El ECTR IC Mob le Home 2
bedroom
bo th Linde p nn
ol lace wo k G ve us o col ot
ed
w 1-1 0 )( io u l ty bu d ng
992 2480 or w te Wes te ,
992 3702 ofte 5 pm
Soul he n l fe lnsu once 21a
E Ma n Pomeroy Oh o to n
2 JC: 70 2 bed oom totol elec:: c
format on
mob le nome Pho,e(i92 7442

ADDRESSE RS

WAITRESS
R

WANTED

lm

med otely Work at home no
expe ence necesso y
e~~:
ce len pay W te Arne con
Serv ce 8350 Po k l one Su te
269 Dol as TX 75231

975 12 x 60 SHULTZ mQb e
home Phone 742 2965

AULT MOBILE HOMES SERVCE
Sk t ng onchor ng and pat os
ca ll 446 3608 afte 4

MATURE MIDDlE AGED boby • I
FOR SALE or T ode House ond lot
n Mason W Vo 3 bed corns
bo h I v ng oom k tchen uti
ty ex t a a ge oom to ec eo
t on o TV oom (304) 773 5227
of e 5 pm
FOR SALE or en N ce 2 bed com
unf u n shed
Mob le Home
en depas eq u ed Pass ble
fa buye to eave mob e home
on lo t n o bea u fu country set
FOR SALE o
ode or land con
2 bed oom l-Ieu se n
trod
Rutland 992 5856

PA R MEN S eye g tosses dork
plos t c r ms
los
outs de
Formers Bank
Pome oy

te
n my home
Ave
M dd epo
of e Spm

South 2nd
)-"92 2222

FEMALE COM PANIO N o
n w 1-1 M dd e aged ody
housekeep ng on -4 oc e
nea P
P eoson
W
Rete ences
equ ed

ve

I ght
fo m
Vo
(304)

675 69'19 or (304/675 32SI

BAND S MOB LE HOMES
PT Pl EA SANT W VA
1973 A llen 12x40 2 8
1973 V ctor o 1 4 ~~:67 3 8 2 both
ffl2 Mon o ch 12x50 2 B cen t

....

61~1

'p

9912174

109 Hicll SL

0

Wedd1ngs
Portraits
Passports
Anmversanes

Special Occ,asio1ns

R es td e n t ta l

Ca ll

6-22 rno

Pool Sales

Ru stoleum Pa nl Products
can sh ip parts clirectly
to your door by way of

Rll

Chester Oh1o
8 2'1 pd

ups

Mitld~port, 0

.

Comp~ta
~

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT
COMPANY

•we

filob I S11mmit R01d

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

!1&gt;1 mo.

I

D. Bumgardner

a nd
fo r

esttmate 24 hour serviCe
Any day anyftme
Phone 985 3806

Box34

'fhe GripNot TlllelmitJioB

992 Sl9Z

Bob Hoefl ch

Ph l7Ul50
5171fC

commerci a l

2 x 68 Holly Pork T o e

w h
expando w oshe and dryer
d shwosher underplnn ng 2 )(
12 ou b dg Ph 606 638 • 060

992 5724
Sates and Stnico ond

Su~

J.l4-1 mo

DAVID BRICKLES

CARTER

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING INC

R.. ~2

J00 llaoo Sl

446 4235

Pomeooy

Oh~

45769

•Custom Hydraul c Hose
Mak ng
Phone 992 2116
Pomeroy 0
a 7 1 mo

FUllY FURN SHEO 2 bdr Mob e
Home n n ce ad u t pork, at Key
Largo
For do
$5500 Cal

245 5115

PENNZO L RUTLAND o pen do y
I I 0 C ose d Mondays
w ecker se v ce 1 e epa r
Pho ne 742 957Sor 742 200 1
PIANO TUN NG and Repa r lone
Don es 992 2082 12 yea sse
v ce to Tr County Rel e ence

Ebede ds

KmgsbuiJ Home Saln
s JOII .Juthonzed

de~ler

for Urban

awn np 1nd uroorts. f JOU wint a
•"' ~ fooclucl which wll "'".,. the
.-laue 0 rou home Of mob ~ 1\ome
one that wtR enbance its beauty for
rears to come th11 will su t rou .._
The U ban ne tS all alum num ltm'Y
pua:e aftOdlltd ra.tinp and posts.
piatn or decorJitwe We hllfl an u

that hne cruted many
o1 lflese ltne q~~~ahty awntnp and ar
ports n lh11 area. Most of th111 products qual h tor low nterest home m

peuenc:ed crew

POIIItiOJOh~

Pomeooy !19Z-i21Z
0199H263

Remode ng
Ph. m 7119 .. &amp;96-1005
Est matn IJIIII"d to ~b

1 oo--Gong Show 3 All My Children 6 13 News 8
Young &amp; the Restless 1D Not for Women Only 15
1 3o--Days of Our Lives 3 4 15 As The Wor d Turns
8 10
2 oo-s20 000 Pyram d 613 2 Jo--Doctors 3 4 15 One
L fe to L ve 6 13 Guiding L ght 8 10
3 oo--Another World 3 4 15 All n the Family B10
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20
3 15-General Hospital 6 13 3 3o--Match Game B10
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
4 oo--Mister Cartoon 3 Little Rascals Our Gang 4
Gong Show 15 Merv Griffin 6 Gilligan s Is 8
Sesame Sl 20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 10 Dinah 13
4 3()---My Three Sons 3 Partridge Family 4 Braoy
Bunch B 10 Little Rascals 15
5 OG--Bonanza 3 My Three Sons 4 Gunsmoke a Mister
Rogers Nleghborbood 20 33 Hogan s Heroes 1D
Emergency One 13 My Three Sons 15
s JG-Odd Couple 4 News 6 Elec Co 20 33 Mary
Tyler Moore 10 Hogan s Heroes 15
6 oo--News 3 4 B10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
6 »-NBC News3 4 15 ABC News 13 Andy Griffith 6
CBS News 8 10 Pests Pesticides &amp; Safety 20
7 oo--Truth or Cons 3 Cross Wits 4 LIars Club 6
Marty Robbins Spotllght 8 News 1D To Tell the
Truth 13 Gilligan sIs 15 Ohio Writers 2D Know
Your Schools 33
7 3o--That Nashvllle Music 3 New Truth or Cons 4
Muppet Show 6 Match Game PM 8 MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20 33 Candid Camera 13 Nashville
on the Roaa 15
8 oo-LIItle House on the Prairie 3 4 15 San Pedro
Beach Bums 13 You~g Dan I Boone 8 10 Upstairs
Downstairs 20 33
9 OQ--Movle In the Matter of Karen Ann Quinlan
3 4 15 NFL Football 6 13 Betty W~lle 8 10 Age of
Uncertainty 20 33
9 Jo--Maude 8 10
10 oo--Rafferty B1D News 20 Austin Clty Limits 33
11 OQ--News 3 4 a 10 15 Art In Public Places 33
11 3o--Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Movie McCabe &amp; Mrs
Mlller 8 ABC News 33
12 oo--Jonokl 33
12 3o--lronstde 13
1 oo--Tomorrow 34 1 3o--Mary Hortman 10 News
13
Channel Movie 4 5&amp;9PM - Gator
7 &amp; 11 P M - Jock &amp; the Beanstalk
Cable Channel 5 7 pM
P•u&gt; Gaud no Famlly F tness
7 30- PPHSHurrlcane Football
1u 110 - 700 Club
4 P M - Pf Pleasant Bond A Rama

R"'le l P.....,,o

Ca1pet &amp;UpiHllsleiJ
Phone M1ke Y011ng
AI
992 2206 or99Z 7630

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

675 6999 or 675 325
BABYS ITT ER

MONDAY SEPTEMBER 26 1977
5 4s-- Farm Report 13 5 so--PTL Club 13 5 ss-Sunr tse Semester 10 "I&gt; 2s--Medlx 10
6 3D-Columbus Today 4 News 6 Sunr se Semester 8
6 4s--Mornlng Report 3 6 So--Good Morning
West V rgln la 13 6 ss--Chuck White Reports 10
Good Morning Trl Sate 13
7 oo--Today 3 4 15 Good Morn ing Am erica 6 13 CBS
News 8 Bullw nkle 1D
7 3o--School es 0 7 4s--Sesame St 33
8 oo--Capt Kangaroo 8 10
9 OQ--Me rv Gr iffin 3 P.hll Donahue 4 13 15 Famil y
Affair 8
9 3o--Edge ot N ght 6 Andy Grill th 8 Here s Lucy 10
10 oo-Santord &amp; Son 3 4 15 Heres Lucy B Joker s
Wild ID M ke Douglas 13
10 3()---Hoflywood Squares 3 4 5 Price Is Right 8 10
11 oo--Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Haoov Davs 6 13
Marcus Welby M D 4 E lee Co 20
11 Jo--11 s Anybody s Guess 3 15 f aml y Feud 6 13
Love of L fe 8 10 Sesame St 20
11 55-C BS News B Lov ng Free 10
12 oo--News 3 4 6 1D Shoot for the Stars 15 Divorce
Court 8 Midday 13
12 3o--Chlco&amp; the Man 315 Ryans Hope 6 13 Search

Young's
Carpetmg

'""'""

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED
REASONABLE
RATES
lleedsl'il e

Supenor
Slum Eltrat110n

l972 Come on 12x602 B
956 Marlett l Ox -47 2 8

FEMALE COMPANION to l ve n
w h m ddle aged lo dy I ght
housekeep ng
Sa ary open
Call
ef e ences
equ ed

TV Log for easy viewing

10 Jo--B&gt;g Blue Marble 3 Yours tor the Ask ing 4 Rex
Humbard 8 Hot FUdge 6 Garner Ted Armstrong
13 Zoom 20
11 oo--TV Chapel 3 Doctors on Call 4 Notre Dame
Highlights 6 Rex Humbard 15 Rev Henry Mahan
13 Elec Co 20
11 »-At Issue 3 Focus on Columbus 4 W V U
Highlights 8 Medlx 13 Once Upon a Classic 20
12 oo-Meef the Press 3 4 15 Issues &amp; Answers 6
Evangelistic Outreach 13
12 »-NFL 773 News Conference 4 College Football
77 6 The Issue 10 Willard Wilcox 13 A Few Good
Boys 20
12 ss--NFL Follies 10 1 OQ--NFL Football 3 4 15
Directions 6 NFL Football 8 NFL Football 10
Issues &amp; Answers13 Novo 20 Even1ng at Pops 33
1 »-Americas Black Forum 6 Town Topics 13
2 oo--Aware 6 Neighborhood Forum 13 Great Per
formances 20 33 2 »-Animals Animals Animas
6 Tony the Pony 13
3 oo--Mod Squad 6 Cliffwood Avenue K ds 13
3 »-Movie The King and I 13 College F&lt;&gt;olball 20
Performance Jazz 33
4 oo--NFL Football 3 4 15 Movie The Caper of the
Golden Bulls 6 Movie 8 Movie The Princess &amp;
the Pirate 10 Documentary Showcase 33
5 OQ--In Pursu1t of Liberty 33
6 oo--Let l Deal With It 6 Face the Nation a Lions
Are Free 10 Fran Curet Football 13 Sesame St
20 Amer leona 33
6 JG-News 6 30 Minutes B Newsmaker 77 13 Wall
Street Week 33
7 oo--World of Disney 3 4 15 Hardy Boys 6 13 6l!
Minutes 8 10 OhiO Writers 20 Onedln Line 33
7 JG-Antlques 20
a OQ--SIK Million Dollar Man 6 13 Movie That s
Entertainment Part 2 a 10
9 OQ--Movle Kill Ma If You Can 3 4 15 Movie The
Longest Yard 6 13 Dickens of London 20 33
10 ~hlldhood 20 Tom Wolfe s Los Angeles 33
11 oo--News 34 810 15 Monty Python s Flying Circus
33
,11:.J' ~-e.~. Nm.~,o f~~~~·~l~t People' 4
News613 7()0.Ciub 1 Foce1he Notton 10 Janakl
33
11 45--ABC News 6 12 oo--SEcond City TV 6 Movie
L.ovln!l 10 PTL Club 13
l2 »-FBI 6 Notre Dame Highlights I 1 OG--ABC
News 13 1 »-Peyton Place 4
Movie CIY11nel 4 s&amp;t p M -ManA"ackstheWorld
7 a, 11 p M -All The Prn1dent I Men
CM1Je CIY-1 S 11 A M - PPHS Hurrlc- Football
M - Point ~ Band-a-Rama

r~

~utomam

TJansmtssJon Semce

K!chen Cab nets Roof ng Cone ete
Pat os Sdewa ks New Const uct on

for Tomorrow 8 10

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

mo

THE PHOTO PLACE

8 kll to4JO P II
SALES ANO SERVICE
718-1 mo

6271mopd

a OQ--Day of Discovery 4 Mormon Choir 3 Grace
Cathedral 6 Church Service 1D Dr E J Daniels
Presents Happiness Is 13 Sesame St 20
B JG-()rol Roberts 3 J mmy Swaggort 4 Day of
Discovery 8 James Robison Presents 10 Rex
Humt&gt;ard 13 Open Bible 15
9 Oil-Gospel Slngln Jubilee 3 Robert Schuler 4 Oral
Robert 10 Rex Humbard 6 Rev Leonard Repass
8 Errest Angley 15 Mister Rogers 20
9 »-What Does the Bible Plainly Say 8 It Is Wr tten
10 Jim Franklin 13 Sesame St 20
10 ()0--(hrlst Is the Answer 3 Church Service 4
Communique 6 Christian Center 8 Movie The
King and ) 10 Jimmy Swaggarl 13 Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15

Service
• - the le,....-

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

SWAIN

a

m2368

4

Radiator

STANDARD

ng 7•2 3122

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 26 1977
6 oo--This Is The Life 10 6 Jo--Jer ry Falwell 4
Talking Hands 8 Amer ican P robler!JS &amp;
Challenges 10
7 oo--&lt;:hrlsfopher Closeup 3 Eddie Saunders 6
Thinking m Black 8 Treehouse Club 10
Newsmaker 77 13
7 Jo--This Is The Life 3 Your Health 4 Show My
People 6 Jerry Falwell 8 Urban League 10
Amazing Grace Bible Class 13 7 ss--Biack Cameo

EX

Phone 949 2814

Ko Su'diJ Calls Pie.,.

Co Fou h &amp; P ne
Phone 446 3888 a -446 -4-4777

avtt•r~.

9a m lo 5 p m

~

A FUTURE
TO COUNT ON

Top pr ces lor

MEIGS COUNTY Sen ort Make Top Quo) ly
appo ntment1 for your portro ts POMEROY FORREST PRODUCTS
Calm 5965
at lhe Photo Place 992 5292
Bob Hoell ch

Call 2&lt;5

Scotten Dillon Toba cco Co ha s occas1onal
need lo r tabor o rs t o unload t oba cco truc ks
Th1 s mvolves hflmg Forty Pound Bales of
Toba cco and the hour s would extend f rom 4
to 8 hours da1ly a s needed
If mle r ested call 446 9575 to reg1 sl er
Th1 s IS NOT steady e mploym ent
SCOTT E N DILLON TOBACCO CO
700 F1rst Ave
Galhpo h~ Oh1o

Dovo

Business Services

OWN YOUR OWN beaut ful Jeon
Shop no fronchit:e S I 4 500
opens you door lo succeu n
the Fash on F eld lnclvdel
complete nventory t a n ng
and f xtures
Ask lor M
W kenon(501 ) 80 -4050

PART TIME • WORK

Crook Rd Ph ... 02'14
PASQUALE Et.cl ocal
446 2716doyor mght

..t.nENTtON lOW Hunters! For o
complete line of Bow Hunt ng
supplies The low Hunter Shop
New Hovt&gt;n W Va Phone

Berntce Bede Osol

Don t be nt m dated by enter
ELECTRIC HOTPOINT drye ond P 585 th 5 co m ng year that 8 e a.
c der m If both good cond t on
Coll 379 2-455 aft•r 6pm
b t arge r than you re used to
hand ng You have whal it tak es
NEW CORN $160 bushel W II to measu e up
load on t uck Call 245 5007

WOOD BURNER HEATERS

SWEEPER and sew ng mach ne
repa r ports and suppf as Pk:k
up and delivery Dov s Voc_uum
CleoMt VY m I• up Geo get:

ASTRO•GRAPH

$1 60 a

buohel Coll675 40.5

Chad..
.,..,.

446 8686

«6 2967 after

com

Roclno Gun Club

afternoon Foetor
gunt only Assorted

every Sun

FCK Sundar Stpt 25 1111

•pm
ONE BLACK "NGUS BUll 3 Vo
years o ld

GUN SHOOT

&lt;5631

li e

~

BRADFORD
Auct onee
Com
plete Se v ce Phon e 949 2487
o 949 2fXK) Roc ne Oh o Cr tt

8 odto d
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

pr_O'Iemtftl

mans at roar loul blrtk or

Slol C.ll992 7034 tor • hot ostima~
or

0

'"'P br 1100 E lla n St , PMMOOJ
120-lmo

FREE ESTIMATES
BloWft
lnsullhon Sert1t1s

Fn1nc nt A'flilll*:
Bklwn Into Wllhi &amp; Attics

SIORII

Sweepe s laos e s rons ol
sma I oppl onces low n mowe
nex t to State H ghway Garoge
o n Route 7 Phone {614) 985

3825
Wfl l 00 bobys t ng n my home

742 2833
w ll CARE to

o

do

gh

housework fo he elde ly by
the day o week n he M d
dleport o
Pomeroy a eo
Phone 992 52.5-4
PASQUALE nsulot ng 103 Cedar
S Gall pol s Ph 446 2716 or

446 092
DACK TERMITING SPEC(Al ST
PEST CONTROL l tensed IN
sured
Free
nspe ct on
Membe NPCA ond OPCA C
M Hoi W lkesv lie Oh o Ph
669 .9 ..
V

E F LUNGER Wa e De IVery
PI-I
379 2124 o r
Se v ce

379 21 72
ROOFING
HOME
IM
PROVEMENT S PAINTING
Co pen er work
ge neral
epar
PH
446-43 16 o

446 SS6B
CHAIN LINK AND WOOD FENCE
Roy Houck Fence Center F ee
esl ma es Ph 1 776 2237

SEWING MACHINE REPAIR oil
makes 4-46 4235

ECONOMIZE WITH A FIREPLACE
fcee as mates LOGUE CON

TRACTING 388 '1939
ALLEN S GENERAl CONTRAC
TORS emodel ng hou se w r
house plumb ng
f ee
ng
est motes 4A6 29 0

PA TTRY S

CARPENTRY

remodehng

Point ng

367 7672
REESE TRENCHING

ond
Coli

Will 00 housec eon ng o olf ce
d eon ng W I g ve eferences
Phone 992 6208

PENDlETONS REBUilT BATTERY
SERVICE CALL3B6 8596
CUSTOM REMODELING 20 yeo s
exper ence 388 8308 New dry
wall ce I ng w th sw o tex
tu e des gns: Othe d y wol
epo r v nyl wo lpoper ng new
boths new k chens Anyth ng
n remodel ng o epa

SANDY AND BEAVER INSURANCE
CO l-los offered seN,ces for
I re nsurance: cove age n
Goll o County for almost o cen
tury Farm home ond personal
coverages
ore
p ope ty
avo IQble to mee
nd v duo
needt Contoc Ha y P tchfo d
your ne ghbor ond agent

lillmR~WNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
S,rac1111, Ohio
Ph. 992 3993

MAC ~!NE Repo r s se
vice oil makes 992 2284 The
Fob c
Shop
Pomer oy
Au l-lor zed S nge Soles and
Se v ce We sharpen Sc sso s

SEW NG

TV SERVICE Elect on c 'TV Clinic
756 2nd Ave
Go I pol s
446 3980 Servtee co I $5 95 plus
ports and labor Serv ce co s
wltl-l n24H s
Tr State Uphols ery Shop
163Seco ndAvenue Gall pol s
4-46 7833 Even ngs 446 1833
HARRISON S T V Repot.r Serv ce
Col s 276 Sycomo e St Mid
dleport Phone 992 2522

EXCAVATING dozer loader ond
backhoe wo k dump t ucks
and lo boys for h re w II haul
f I d t to so I I mestone end
grave Coli Bob or Rage Jef
7089 n ght
f e s doy phone
phone 992 3525 o 992 5232

m

EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
ond d tcher Cl-la es R Ho
f ed
Bock Moe Serv ce
Rul ond Oh o Phone 742 2008

WILl do roof ng, construct on
plumbing and heat ng No 1ob
BATHROOMS
AND
K
tchen
s
too lo ge or oo small Phone
eve yth ng n Two Way Rod o
emodeled ce am c t Ia plum
7•2 2348
Antennas and acces Geo ges
b ng co pent v ond genera
Creek Rd Gall po s 446 4517
ma nt enonce 13 veo s ex
SMITH EXCAVAT NG dozer
per ence 992 3685
bock hoe I encher dump truck
MOBILE Home Repcnr
E ec
wo k done at reasonable rates EXCAVATING BACKHOE dozer
plumb ng and heot ng Phone
encher
ow
boy
dump
Ph 446 39B1 John Sm th J
992 5858
ucks
sept c systems 8111
BORDERS GARAGE DOOR SER
Pu I ns phone 992 2476 day or HOWERY
AND MARTIN EK
V CE Commer col ond res den
n ght
caval ng
sap c systems
ol spec ol z ng n opera o rs
doze backhoe dump t uck
BLOWN
INSULATION
Gel
lhree
locol256 6472
I mestone
grovel
blacktop
e:st moles Coil 667 6479 fa
pov ng Rt 143 Phone 1 {614 )
DOZER WORK excovo ng lond
f ee es t mae
698 7331
cl eo ng Ph -446 0051

BOBS

CB

STANlEY

Rodlo

STEEMER

Equ p

CARPET

ClEANER Any I v ng oom ond

hoi $29 95 up lo 300 Sq Fl

Sou heaste n Oh o No
Co pe t
Clean e s
Ph
614 446 4208

CHAIN l NK FENCING WOODEN
FENCING AWNINGS Palo
SERVICE

water sewer electr c gos I ne
or d lches 12 ncl-les w de to 5
ft deep Wote I ne t\ook ups
Call after 4pm 367 7560

REMODELING Plumb ng heat ng
and oil types of general epa
Work gua onteed 20 yeo s ex
pe ence Phone 992 2409

cove s
Au I s Home lm
provements Ph 4.46 3608 offer

•

BACKHOE DOZER DITCHER and
dump tru ck Concrete wo k
H.otf eld Backhoe Ser Rut ond

Oh Ph H2 2008 o .. 6 2786
STUCCO PLASTERING ond Plaste

epo
Textu ed ce ling sw r
tlool on brush destgn 32 y s
exp Work by the hou or by the
lob 256 1182 T Co Plaste
lng and Stucc::o

BORDERS GARAGE DOORS
BeautifY your home wtlb beauhful Wayne
doors
Sales serv1ce and mstallatton
guaranteed EnJOY the conventence and
protect1on w1th an automatic door opener
Free estimates Let an expenenced door
man do the 10b for you

COMMERCIAL AND RBIDENTIAL
CALL WALT BORDERS DOOR SERVICE
2S6-6472 DAY OR NIGHT

PUBLIC SALE
Sal, Oct. 1, 1977
9:30A.M.
The personal properly of the late Ella M
Reuter of 686 Brownell Ave Middleport 0
HOUSEHOLD'
Ph1ico refngerator gas stove table &amp; 4
cha1rs metal cabmets stands clocks
telephone stand m1sc chatrs 21 1n TV
rocktng chatr electnc roaster cha1r w
etectnc lift d1shes
Antrque or Collector s Items
5 pc oak love seat set 125 yr old marble top
dresser library table Jenny Ltnd bed old
radiO coo coo clock W dancers made In
Germany stone 1ars corn shelter sau~age
grinder tron beds m1lk. bottles gram
cradle kraut cutter and mtsc Items
'MISC
Cham btnders car carnage grass seeder
mtsc hand toots
Admmrstrator- Rtchard Reuter
Terms Cash
Pos1t1ve I D
Dan Sm1th
Lawrence Donohue
J1m
Carnahan
742 3048
949 2708
949 2033
Not respons1ble lor acc1dents or loss of
property

�'

.

~The Sund4y Times-Sentinel. Sun&lt;Wy, Sept.

25,lm

}~or Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

,.,_,...F;;;}J'";~~·Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
L:J &amp;tate Iors.ale

TEAFORD(B
Q[A

CANADAY REALn

TOR

VIRGIL B TEAFORD, SR
REALTOR
216 E. 5econcl Stroet
Phonem 332S
MIDDLEPOR T - 5 years
~d 4 bedroom home with
natural
gas
central
heatong Nice kitchen and
level lot $24.000.
APARTMENT HOUSE Has 3 apartments and 1
effiCiency In good brick
bu ild ing $240 per month
full occupancy 1 block
from heart of town Just
$23,000
SYRACUSE - Bulldmg lot
wrth no close neighbors
150' x 200', electrrc and
water ava1 lable S2,800
NEW TRI-L.EVEL 3
bedrooms l'h baths, and
family room Has a lad1es
k1tchen and 1 car garage 1
acre
1n
family
ne1ghborhood
t7S ACRES Count ry
fresh atr w1th ntce ranch
style 4 bedroom Central
heating wtth free gas lots
of frutt trees and dose to
town
B IG - 4 bedroom home
w1th famdy room, hot a tr
fu rnace1 2 baths. and 1s on
large lot w1th garage Near

woods
APARTMENT HOUSE- 2
apartments m Pomeroy
C1ty water, Oh10 Power,
and natural gas Only
$9.600

MUST
SELL
IM ·
MEDIATELY, modern 4

BR bnck ranch, 31 l baths,
family rm

formal

w ith fireplace

entrance,

forma l

dmlng Iaroe LR, eQuipped
kitchen , dOuble garage

screened 10 pat•o, heat
pump 2 barns., 10 acres
$80,.000 located on the Kerr
Harr1sburg Road about 7
m• from HMC •n the cltv
school d1st

HARDWARE

STO RE

-

Here's you.r chance to get
started
•n
your
own

property Is
located m VInton Oh JO &amp;
can be bought for S12 'i!OO
plus stock &amp; eQutpm~nt
bUSineSS

ThiS

NEAR LECTA - 101 a cr e
farm w1th AS A tillable, 5
rm house. 3 barns several•
other outbulldmgs, cellar
hoUse spnng water &amp; a
3500 lb tob base S50 000
NEAR
RODNEY ~ Approx 55
acres of level &amp; roll ing
farm land w1th pond , tob
base barn &amp; co water
Th tS property rronts on 2
rds tn a very des1rab le
loca t ion Lots of porent1a1
for sss ooo
VACANT

LAND

PRICED REDUCED TG
$l 3,ooo _ owner says sell
th is 6 room and bath home
with new alum mum sidmg,
lar9e L.R ~kitchen , 3 BR ' s,
dtnmg room, oil furnace
and flat lot 1n Thurman

LOTS OF LOT$ - Loc•!td
on Graham School Rd •
Lincoln Ptkt&gt; &amp; Georges
Creek Rd Mobtle homes
welcome
NEAll TYCOON LAKE 38 5 acre farm 1S level &amp;
rolling land w tfh aboul 15
acres ttllabtt &amp; the balance
m woods 11'2 story home
has. been n1cely remodeled
&amp; offers 4 BR's , ntce ktt
chen w1th stove &amp; refr1g
oil turn ace &amp; w w ca rpet
LOCATION
VALUE •
APPEAL - 2A acre farm 1S
mostly ttlleble &amp; features a
"ery n1ce 2 story home with.

s rms

&amp;
balh
The
downsta1rs tS brand new
Also mcluded are a 50x60
barn, silo &amp; 3 small
bu ll d !ngs Th ts property Is
located 3~ m 1 north of
HMC on Route 1~0

BEAUTY IN THE WOODS

- Quality bu1lf ranch style
home 1s s.tuated on 17
acres of pines overlooking
u s 35 approx -&lt;4 m1 west
of R 10 Grande Th 1S low
matntenance home 1S
cov ered wtth brtck &amp;
alum1num &amp; features 3
BR's, la rge LR w llh stone
f•replace. ntce k ttchen &amp;
dmmg area 2 g arage s &amp; a
cell ar ho use First lime on
1he market SSO' s
BE YOUR OWN BOSS with
th ts
w ell
establiShed
grocery bus iness Perfect
for a family operaf ton
L1vmg quarters are at
tached Call fof details

-

New
offers
lots ot good IJ\Itng
some
lucky lam•ly Bnck and
frame beauty features 3
SR 's 2 baths complete
kttchen w1th . d1shwasher,
range &amp; refr1g , 20X241
fam1ly rm . 2 car garage
and la rCie lo1 near town
INEXPENSIVE HOUSING
NEAR ADDISON -

tSn'l much for thfs good,
solid 2 &amp;R home with large
bt!llth, butane furnace,
unflnlshed att ic, cella r
house. fruu trees &amp; a large
lot Immedi ate possessiOn
Th1s would make a nice
rental
_ _
NEW LISTING - 2 yr old
ranctt has lots to offer for
only $32 900 Features are 3
BR's , large LR &amp; famil y
rm , kitchen with stove,
refrtg , Cl ts hweshe r &amp;
breakfast bar laundry
rrn
cent atr &amp; SWIM
MtNG POOL This beauty
is located In Bidwell &amp;
would probably go FHA or
VA
MORGAN TOWNSHIP 103 acres vacant land Lots
of bottom land and lots of
wontis for $32,000
NEW LISTING - 3 mileS
out Modern 3 BR ranch 1S
pnced to sell at S29 ,500
Spec1al features are 11'2
baths cent air , kltetl en
w1th stove &amp; re t r~g n tce.
carpet throughout,
&amp;
family rm Located on a
large lot m the Green
SChool D1st Shown by
appo tntment
NEEDED ADVERTISE

LISTINGS

WE
NATIONALLY - WE BUY
- SELL - TRADE

THREE BEDROOM HOUSE all
rebutlt hke new Near ctty
l•m1ts Approx 2 acre$ of land
$22 , 500
Call
446 1984
446 161 5or-440- 1243

FARM LIVIN ! ThiS one' s lUSt r.ghl tor you and your
fam•IY 53 acres enough t1llble to nuse your own hay,
corn etc Pasture, pond GOOd large barn. Tab. Nse,
farm home as 3 BRs, hreplace in uv.ng room . Eat-tn
k1tchen w1th range and relr1gerator. Fneter. New
s1d1ng. Hannan Trace Schools S35,000.
.,
FIRST AD! 2 story 38R alder home 1n good cond Eat·
hils nearly new Cilbtnets, new hot water
tank. Storm doors and windows . New roof. Garage. On
1 acre level lot $11,000

m k1tchen

FIRST AD! Neor Govon and Kyger Creek Plants .
Roomy 3 BR , IS'x17' L.R . Lg Ia moiy rm . l 'h baths Well
plitnned k1tchen witH Tappin range. Ntce- level lot
Garage $29,500 .

FOUR BEDROOM . Situated on 40'x150' lot within city
of Gallipolis 2 baths , lg ltvmg room , 12' x22' , centra l
A
14'x24' garage. nat gas. $39 00 monthly budget
Pn ce 530,000 00
NEAR TYCOON LAKE 3 acres. plus , new fireplace
£1trewood already c ut), 16'x17' Irving room, 3
bedrooms, carpeted , 700 feet of road frontage
Gal li polis City School DISincl Pnce $35,000 00

c,

FIRST ADt Look1ng for a place 1n the country? 5.3
acres. barn, Ch1cken hOuse and granary. Good fence. 4
BR home, family rm , garage. Fuel 011 furnace Lots of
space for a tg . fam1ly. S:Jl,SOO
.. :Y.'C

"r

NEW 3 BEDROOM BRICK , 11;, baths, I ~replace with
bu1lt ln fans, heat pump, 24'x24' garage w1th electric
door opener You must see this home to appreciate/
rrltmy butlf 1ns Prtce $55,000 00

.oo

-;.' :;&lt;--·~
- -~
-:-r---1
.......
i:';
.. ..

1[1~

1

No :Z 16 Here's your
chan ce to l1ve 1n the
country wtth conven1ences
3 Bedrooms large kitchen ,
c arpeted throughout
attached garage, 100x400
lot
Prtce reduced to
$26.500 FHA approved

r::::::::= --

..

If ~

NEW LISTING Located on Lower River Rd . a
beautiful v1ew w1th nver frontage ; 3 bedroom , newly
renovated, carpeted
you must see to apprec1ate
Wood burning fireplace, new hot water tank , F A fuel
atl furnace 84 acre lol , all for $30,00 00

...

NEW LISTING 3 bedroom bnck home. centrally
located between Gallipolis and Rto Grande, less than
one year old Gallipolis City School DIStrict , rural
water, 1•r2 t;Jaths, n1ce 50 acre lot Buy thts brick for
only $29 ,900 00

WARM AND FRIENDLY Gather around the
ltrelace in the famtly rm and en1ov thne w1nter even
1ngs. Th1s 3 BR brtck, all electnc ranch has a Warm
Mornmg wood burner for added comfort and economy
Work saver kitchen wtth lots of cabmets, range,
dlshwa$her, and dlsp. ~. acre lot . S37,500.

No 212 43 acres of
vacant land close to mmes
Price S6 700
CAL.L.USANDCHECKlO
SEE
IF
WE
HAVE
SOMETHING
YOU
MIGHT NEED
804 w MalA
Pomeroy
992 2298
After Hours Ca II
992-7133
CONTACT ·
LOIS Pauley
Branch Manager

BUD McGHEE

NEAT CLEAN 3 bedroom home located on Bidwell,
near s~hool , fu{l basement. large lot. 150'x140' Rural
water Prt ce reduced, S28,SOO
COMFORTABLE 2 bedroom home In Kanauga,
sttuated on ~ acre lot, nat gas F A. furna'* Kitchen,
~ bedroom and living room furniture goes wtth home,
1ncl udes refrigerator stove washer and dryer Also lg
2 car gage Could be used as a shop Price $24,000.

SUPER YARD! Nearly an acre surrounded by trees.
Well cared for 2 BR frame home, eat1n kttchen, fuel 011
furnace Storage bldg . Rural water, c1ty schools Ex·
cetent buy at $22,500

Manager
EXCELLENT LOCATION, near Holzer All brick
ranch w 1th natural gas heat, central a1r. Call today,
owner •s anx1ous to sell. Under $40.000.

ONLy TWO m11es from downtown. th1s lovely home
has nearly 1900 sq. ft. of liv.ng space and 1t sets on 1 84
acres of land . If you are a qua lifted buyer g1ve us a call
loday Tho$ one IS priced r.ght. $63,000.
LOOKING FOR an all briCk home Wllh two fireplaCO$,
flntshed basement (5 rooms), formal entrance on the
ma.n floor, formal DR There' s much more to be said
about thiS fine home situated on a 1!2: acre lot G1ve us a
call today and we will make you an apointment to see 1t
soon

LOOK - COMPARE and you'll agree thos home has a
lotto offer lor $20,000 lower Rt. 7 and Ohto Rwer fron
tage 2 story frame wath nearly new s1d1ng 4 BR . Lg
spac1ous hv1ng rm. w1th ftreplace. D1ning rm Will seat
the largest family in comfort Rural water, c1ty
schools

NEW LISTING . 40 acres, with three bedroom house,
garage &amp; two outbuildings, rural water &amp; well Located
near Cora oo Tom Wood Rd Prtce $28,000 00
NEW LISTING : Three bedroom carpeted home In
Plantz Subd1v • lwo extra lots , lola I d i mensions
180'x140' FA nat gas furnace, $23.00 monthly budget

BUY OF THE WEEK! Noce 3 BR ranch only l 'l2 miles
from city Hardwood floors, lg. carport wtth storage
area, l V2 acres all fenced Sever.al excellent bu1ldmg
s1tes $28,500

1975 Vondate mobtle home, 14' xt'l', all electnc The
average electric bill for last year was $69 00 a month
Th1s mobtle home 1s on a large corner lot in the village
of Vtnton and 1n excellent condition throughout It has a
covered patio 30'x8' and air condit1onmg Includes new
house furn1ture, color T V and all the goodtes . Has
large garage and work area You need to see this to
apprec1ate it Pn ced at less than replacement cost

44 OLIVE STREET W1th1n walk1ng diStance
downtown. 3 BR frame N1ce eat 10 kstchen Garage
Natural gas furnace Good cond S30,000.

RENT BEATER! 1\12 story, 3 Br. frame in c1ty, 26'x32'
concrete block garage with cement floor. Ctty water
and sewage. Gas heat Clean, well ma1ntatned , 518,900.

LOT on Debby Or. 140XISO
LOT 1n Charotaos Hilts 2.98 acres.
LOT on Rl. 141, 120x260 ( 71 acres)
OWNER ANXIOUS to sell• One and half story home
wtth 12 75 acres 6 miles from Galhpohs
OWNER WI L.L. help financelhe home at 3S4 3rd Ave It
you are lookmg for a convenient lacatton and a very
clean home, give usa call now. $32, 500

us

GIVE
A call and we w11i show you the house located
on Rt. 588. Th1s one Is only one m1le from town 3 BR's,
llh baths, full basement and much more $26,500.
FOUR MILES from Gattipohs, coly schools, all br~ck
ranch. fireplace. full basement~ lots of excellent
features. You wtll be proud to own thts beauty Call
now. $S7,900
IT LOOKS SMALL, but, 1! has 3 BR's, LR , bath, eat m
kitchen and utility area 1t1sa solid house and the pnce
Is roght Located at 71 Moll Creek $16,000

LOOK 1NG FOR an acre bu1ld1ng lot, onlv 6 m•les out ot
town. w1th city schools? Call now , tomorrow could be
too tate

NEW LISTING· Small cottage , localed on Rt 160, just
outside ci ty limits. nice garden area, fenced In yard.
garage Priced to sell 523,500 00

190 ACRES. 60 tillable, 100 acres pasture fenced ,
ponds, tobacco base, some ttmber, 3 barns, other
outbtdg 4 BR bnck home, nearly completed F.replace
on LR , FULL. BASEMENT, GARAGE Perfect tor best
cattle Call for appointment

FIVE BEDROOMS: Centrally located along 400 block
of Second Ave Home Is div ided to make rental
apartment if des1red 2 kitchens, 2 baithrooms , carport,
full basement, steam heat W1 t h1n easy walking
dtstance of downtown Prtce $35,000 00

VINTON- Remodeled one story, 3 BR home has
alum1num stdtng, blown msutat1on N1ce one acre lot
w1th good garden spot FrUit trees $24.500
KYGER CREE!Ci SCHOOLS, 3 BR ranch on lSO' XIO'
tree shaded lot. F1n1shecl 1 car garage. All electr1c,
well 1nsutated f Last Winter's heat b1ll was low&gt;. Well
ma1nta1ned $25, 000.

LOOKING FOR 2 bedroom home. with furniture . In
Centenary area, Gallipolis City School DIS!. 1 acre of
land w1thin s1ght of Green School Also, 30' xJO' 2 car
garage, could be used for shop or sforage Pn ce
mcludlng turn 1ture $27.500 00 ,

ORCHARD HILL.- One ot !he nocest neoghborhoods on
the city Within walktng d1stance of schools and
downtown Approx ¥• acre wOOded lol offers excellent
Y1ew, pnvacy 3 8 R redwOOd home, eat 1n kitchen
features dtn1ng area with p1cture Window, hardwood
floors , carport. Gas furnace heat. $35,000

FOLLOW RT 218 and L1ttle Bull Skin Rd to
Macedonia Rd and see this 3 bedroom home situated
on 3/"' acre lot Call for an appomtrnent to see P rice
only $17, 500 00

DRIVE BUY! Located In coly at 11 Locus! St. Newly
pcunted 2 story, 3 BR, full basement Fully carpeted.
ma1nta1ned 1ns1de. Gas furnace heat. Kitchen has
and refrtg. Washer and dryer.

TWO-STORY· 3 bearoom home mctudmg 3 SO'xlSO'
lots overlook1ng Ohio Rtver Pnce $16,000
,(:OMMERCIAL BUILDING. Located 1222 Second
Ave, Gallipolis Price $17 500.00

THINKING about buy.ng a double w1de? We have one
in near m1nt condtt1an sett1ng on 1.61 acres of land In
eludes central arr and two car garage

IN TOWN - Excellent 1ocat1on 1n town, ntce large
house w1th 5 bedrooms, 21/:a baths, fam1ly room, fully
c•rpeted, beautiful 1n ground sw1mm1ng pool. Pnce
reduced, owner wants to sell now, 1f you need a large
house 1n town, be sure to see this one.
COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST - Th!S beautotul
r•nch overfookmg Tycoon Lake has 3 bedrooms, 2
t..ths,. large hv1ng room w1th a stone fireplace, very
nice kitchen· d1n.ng, loVely Lee carpet throughout
You'll be happy you looked at thos .
BASEMENT WITH FIREPLACE - Lovely broCk
home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2 fireplaces, formal dimng,
full divtded tNsement, large 2 car garage Located an 1
acre on St. Rl. 160, took allhls home before you buy .
NEW RANCH- Just comleled, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths,
carpeted, lovely kttchen. beaut1ful brick fJreplace, car
port, loc.ted on l lf:i acres on Kerr Bethel Rd ., Kygtr
Creek Sch. Dis!., very good buy, call today
PLEASANT IN TOWN LIVING - N1ce frame home
w1th 3 bedrooms. fully carpeted downsla.rs, open sta.r
way, large bath, lots of storage and ts close to
everything . Cllllor appoontmenrtoday.

WE HAVE OTHER LISTINGS &amp; PICTliR ES OF ALL
OUR LISTINGS IN THE OFFICE . COME IN &amp; LET
US HELP WITH YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS
WE BUY, SELL OR TRADE
EYENIN~ CALL

""'"' FuiNr

LM J"'-

Osaor lltrd
ttl 44132
Earl Wlnltr'$-S--&lt;tl4tlt-J121
.,..., Wetlllrlloft
••, 42t4
ttl t327
25U7&lt;10

HUNTING-FISHING or tust watkong 1n the Woods It
the above sounds good to you. I am sure our new l1st1ng
tn eureka wtll have that certam appeal There are
nearly 30 acres of woodland offereng a panoramiC v1ew
of the Ohto Rtver, locks and dam. You Will also en1~Y
~n older home that has been updated w1th a new ~11
chen and bath plus new walls and ceihngs There 1s
new carpet throughout most of the house. I know you
will want more tnformation on th1s property. Call
44'1552 anyt1me and 1 Will be happy to g1ve you com ·
ptele delalts.

4 BR's, full basement, -.ew pa1nt and shuHers
Evans He1ghts. 525,900.

31

NEW LISTING at 39$ LeGrande (Green Acres). Thos
welll&lt;ept home has 3 BR's, bath, hv1ng room, large kol·
chen and utihty room, end 1 one car anached garage
w1th automatic door opener. You will also en1or year
'round comfort w1th a he1t pump for heattng and coolIng Th!S home IS situated on JT;, tots (10Sx141) Call
now for an appomtment $34,900
NEW LISTING al328 L.e Grande CGrHn Acres). In this
home you witt like the t~rge living room and eat-on kol
chen which fntures tots of very nice cobinels. Both of
these rooms hove C1thtdrat ceilings with exposed
beams. This home also has three BR's ond a bath w1th
shower, and utility area. If you are economy minded
you will 1pprociate the narur•t gas forced "" heat,
$28.00 budget. Call for 1n appo1ntment soon 534,900.

WE NEED USTINGS
WE THANK YOU FOR LISTING WITH US

PHONE 446-0552
ANYTIME

NEW LISTINGS : Three bedrQOm, carll' ted homes , all
eJectr lc. situated on 7S'x120' lots Availab le for one
ye~r lease, or buy for $25.000 00 with conventiona l loan,
or land contract Call for more in format ion

FOR SALE OR LEASE Modern one story br ick'
build1ng, over 14,000 sq ft , part basement , nat gas.
cent ral air con d ltlontng Large reception room , over 60
rooms, vanous sizes Ideal location. park ing area
accommodates excess of .40 autos Located ad(acent to
Gallipolis Golf Cour'se Ca ll or stop In for more
information

NEW HOMES UNDER CONSTRUCTION All have
spac1ous quahty bu1tt plans s1mlfar to one illustrated.
Wood·burn1ng fireplace, 2 car garage, 2 FULL BAHTS,
central 11r cond , range, diShwasher V2 d1sp 1n 1&lt;1t Apprax 1 acre lot $45,900 and under

Branch

Willis T.
Leadingham

HERE 'S THE ONE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING
FOR Nice 2. or 3 bedroom home, with 3 acres of land
situated on Rt 160, just 7 miles north ot Holzer Hosp
Has barn Vfith 2 car garage and storage, 2 other
outbuildings Concrete dnve and pat io Owner bemg
transferred so th is one won't last too tong for $35,000 00
Call us and we'll go take a look!'

L

HELEN L TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES

B•dwell Ptl J88 874.6

l

I

10 ACRES . Fronts on Neighborhood Rd Buoldlngs lots
no mobile homes Price $15,000 00
APPROX
3 ACRES.
On corner lot along
Neoghborhood Rd No mobile homes Price S I 8,000 00
MOBILE HOME: Clean 2 bedroom Fleelwood, located
along Kemper Hollow Rd., I acre lot Rural water. 2
outbu1id1ngs , A C , some turn1lure. all for only
$12 ,000 00

Audrey Canaday
Realtor Associate
446-3636

4nv Hour

!51 ACRE FARM: Near Vinton , Includes tillable and
hmber l~nd Also, 4 bedroom home, equipment shed
Bottom land borders Raccoon Creek Call lor more
Information

Lookiitg tor B acres on Shoestring Ridge, Wit have H;
lncludong rural water. electric hllok up, fonoe and gate
Pr iced now for $10,000 00
FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 bdr
home hvtng room. k1tchen
bath, full basement w1th fomily
room two cor garage opprox
lmately one ocre Coli _.46·3613
or4A6 4957

ACRES c1ty water. hordtop
rood beautiful home slte R1o
Grond1 Centerpo•nl Rd Coli
6U 262 5916 Columbut
or
614t 354 5036Porhmouth

NEW lHREE bedroom 1-iou•• fully EIGHT

carpeted
l1replace d1nmg
room carport
1 ocre lot
61&gt;7 33A9

ROOM hous• 2 cor
garoqe Reduced to $16 000
Good locahon 232 South 4th
M iddle':.po
:cr.:.l:__ _ _ __ _

THE WISEMAN AGENCY

Evenings
446 0971

446-1066

U

dose lo Rutland Phone 992
748t

KenMorg~n

E11~1ngs

RUSSELL WOOD REALTOR..

...

OLD RT. 33 - 4 65 acres
fairly level Electnc and
water available

GRADE A DAIRY One of Gall1o
County s best 140 A fert tle
lond! mostly ttllable , 8 cow
parlor 18 K 50 stiCI wtlh
unloader and feeder 60 free
ttolls other barns cnbs ond
remodeled home $100 000
Strout R9CIIty 446-0008
_. BR HOUSE on one acre lot m

Russell D Wood
466-4618

lf i&gt; O..

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
home wtth low upkeep on
quiet
street
Central
heating and garage

IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO
Spec1ol1zmg In FHA ond VA
Home loon s Also Relt nonc1ng
-&lt;463 2nd Ave located 2nd floor
Galhpohs Ph .446 7172

446-3636

SU,OOO

Ranny Blackburn, Branch Manager

70 ACRES On Rt 33
North tor less than $150 an
acre

Gallipolis, Ohio

REALTOR"

3 r02 or (30A} 77'1 3227

Nt:W 3 bedroom Muse 2 ba1ns
all ele&lt; r ocre Middleport

suoo.oo.
can ._...,2ft

2;5'1:1 Loc;ust St.

[H

Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

SMAll lorm for sole JO•. down
owner linonced Monro. Coun
ty , W Vo Phone {304) 77'1

FOR SALE
Nice, clean level lot In
Cheshlro . Sultobte lor
building or mobile home

10

WE NEED "'~III•GS· IF YOU ARE THINKING OF
SELLING GIVE US A CALL. .... LET US HELP YOU I
IF

'rOU ' IIE

PLANN!N?.

IF YOU DON'T SEE THI!
HAVE
A
LIST
OF PROPERTY YOU WANT
PROSPECTIVE BUYERS., tN THIS AD , CALL WE
8E ABLE TO ~' I NO
AND W£'R E ANX IOU~ MAY
IT FOR YOU ,
TO SERVE YOU
TO SELL, CALL US , WE"

'

ANY PERSON who has onythmg to
C.OII Wood lnsuronce a
91W away and does not offer or
R••t Estl!&lt;t~-1066
ottemr,rro offar ony other thtng
for ta e moy place em od In this
column Thera will be no
charge
to the odvertl1er
SEWING AND AlTERATIONS also ,
doll clothes '" my !'tome Call BOTILE GAS f!oor furnace, com
-446 311S
plote Colt 440849
=--~.-Will BABYSIT 1n my horne oges 2 THREE PUPPIES par! Huoklo Colt
,;_ -=-·
·= .:. Yl and up Call .4~ 7921
367711S
0 REE PUP::P::IE:;:S~C;:-o-;:11-;-446::-:4::460:;;;--Will BABYSIT on Infant tn my
ot
THREE SlATKiN IEA'UiYWON~ 1W0 III!DIIOOM HOU$£
home Colt 446-9767
THREE MONTH OlD PUP, half
.........
0&lt;
.....
l
r
toll
good loco!lan, """''"' ou! of COUIW on los!iotil Or. Call
lobrodOf' holt doberman Colt
!own. Muol Nil Colt 446-3613
446-2157
-446 ms
or~ 41957
GENERAL Contractors Do all
masonory carpenter &amp; plumbmg lnttoll ond repair aU
drr"awoys Ph 4&lt;16 9587

,.;+

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST
LISTED
2
busi ness buildings w1th 2
apartments over. each
apartment has 2 bedrooms
and own bath This 1S a
very good Investment at
just $38,888 oo
JUST LISTED - BuSiness
room In good location . w1th
2 apartments over, 2 car
garage , alley In rear, 40 ft
frontage $6,900 00
JUST LISTED - 2 f loor
plan home with new F 0
forced
air
furnace.
Insulated, storm door s. 3
bedrooms bath dm1ng
room
Go ing at rust
$6,900 00
JUST LISTED - Close In
Just added to and
remodeled, 1 floor plan . 2
or 3 bedrooms, bath. F 0
forced air heat. very larg e
2 car garage and workshop ,
many ofher features
Pr iced tor quick sale
S16, 000 00 Over 112 acre
NEEDS SOME WORK - 2
bedrooms. bath kTtchen
and hv1ng. Bedrooms have
been renovated
Front
porch and 2 lois A lot for a
little $4,800 00
CLOSE TO MEIGS HI - 50
acres, buy all or halt Lots
ol frontage. good for
building sol es
LOOt&lt; , 3.0S ACRES Lovely 3 bedroom home
with equipped k1tchen
dining room , uttllty, all
carll'led except kotchen
and ut11ity F 0 forced a 1r
heat,
entlre
home
Insu lated. large detached
garage and workshop, pole
barn, chicken house, Cold
room. lots of fruit and
berries THIS IS TRULY A
BABY FARM $35 000 00
TO
SELL
YOUR
PROPERTY QUICK , LIST
WITH US.
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY LEONA CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 -2259,992-6191
9n2568
HEDGE
AGAINST
INFLATION $19S per
acre.
180
acres
of
wilderness approx
:zo
motes west of Gai11pohs
STROUT REALTY, 446

0008

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
15S SECOND AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS , OHIO

Office

446-7900

WE NI;EDYOUR
PROPERTY TO
SELL NOW!
COUNTRY RETREAT
Like new 3 bedroom • t •h.
bath,
24'x72'
Vmdale
Modular home with B acres
of land In Kyger Creek
Sc hool Olstr lct Kitchen
appliances go w1th sale
This 1s a large comfortable
home offenng central a tr
and the best of co n
struction Prtced at on ly
$29.000 00
GOING BUSINESS
AND GOOO RENTAL
INVESTMENT

At an Ideal locat.on In the
city of Gall ipo lis Th is
business
/las
been
established for 35 years '"
the area and has a very
good followtng We have
the real estate only ,
Pnced If you des1re to
continue the same bus mess
at this location , you can
deal directly wlth the
owner on Inventory and
supplies
If
you are
thinkmg about your own
business , you should check
Into this I
CQMMERCIAL SITE
1o1 on Second
whe re the Old
Bee was located
I
buildmg on rear 01
to!. Priced 11 $50,000 00
LANO CONTRACT WITH
A GOOD DOWN PA'ri\IIENT
fn th 1s 2 bedroom hideaway
setting on Blue Lake near
Raccoon Creek t!llnd Route
7 Call us today for more
cleta Us
NEW LISTING
home In Jfleed of
remodeling
on
F lr sf
Avenue Jn Gatupolls Th is
home sets on a beautiful
river tot that Is 65' wtde a nd
390 , deep If you are tn
terested In boating and
outdoor recreation lh•s
could be whet you are
looklnc;J tor
Older

CALL AT HOME'
BOB LANE tU 10"
WALT LANE 446·0451
Wllh

Realtor

Phone

Gallia County's Fastest Growing Real Estate Agency

REA LTOR

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
CALL 446-3643

We Need Your Home or Farm To Sell

NEW - ON THE MARKET
Westbrook SubdiVISion locate d on
Bulavllle Porter Rd , approx l lf2 miles
trom GallipOliS Beaut1tul 3 BR modern
ranch style home with large fam1 ly room &amp;
a fireplace Th1s home looks like new Ntce
landscaped yard w1th shrubery 7 rooms
plus bath &amp; shower N1ce carpeftng, nat
gas forced a1r furn.ace w1 th central air
c1 fy water &amp; sewage Thermopane
wtndows Th1s 1s a n1ce home close to
Gallipolis &amp; pnced at a low, low pn ce

RIVERFRONT HOME
)BEDROOMS
Beaultfu l view on the Oh10
R1ver r!Qhf from your

llvtnQ room l tke to boat
f1sh &amp; relax each evenmg
on your own R1verfront? 6
rooms remodeled home,
ntce modern k tcheri F &amp;
e porches na t gas forced
atr fu rnace all rooms are
ntcely carpeted Yo1.1r own
water system Wh1le alum
ou ts1de cove r lnQ, 2 large
n•cely shaded Jots w1th 3
cherry trees &amp; one peach A
very economical place to
live
12 acres and home

near no grande

Be the first to see th1s well
kept home features 3 B R ,

2 baths la r Qe 11vtng room.
mod~rn k.•tchen w1th bu1 lf
1n cabtnets. stove &amp; refr lg
&amp; ta m!ly room
Total
electrtc Stngle car garage ,
work shop storage room &amp;
other budd1ngs - toot shed,
celliH house &amp; chicken
house 12 A of cle ared
roll1ng land with stocked
farm pond , frutt t ree s,
grape vines &amp;. large ptne
tr ees Some far m equ1p
ment &amp; a trailer space also
go with the real estate
FOR
A
GOOD
I&gt;&lt;
VESTMENT PROPERTY
CALL US NOW 1
OW NEll SAYS SELL NOW
PRICE II EDUCED
Be the f trsf to see this
OLDIE
but a GOODIE
Th1s home was bu1 1t m the
late 1800 s but ~ s 1n t1p top
sl'lape 11 features a formal
dm1ng room w1fh a wood
burr1 1ng fireplace very
modern ktlchen W1th buill
In cabs and eat a rea, n1ce
large ltv1nQ room 2 baths
formal en t ry from a large
front po r ch A bedrooms 2
bed rooms have built •n
de sks Th 1s home has new
wtrrng and nat gas forced
atr furnace and hUmldl f te r
2 1a rge pat 1os and a buil t tn
stde po r ch and su rround ed
by se ve ra l large shade
tree s also has a garage
1mmed1ate possess ton C,a ll
Now for Appt
40 ACRE FARM

$14,&lt;100 00
IS land
has a good
tld tng s 1te 12 acres or
more . t tllable n 1ce farm
pond The rest ls pasture &amp;
some t 1mber land Most of
the lme fences are a lmost
new woven w1re Good buv
CALL NOW
NICE COLONIAL HOME
IN GALLIPOLIS
One of the attract iv e older
two s tory
homes
1n
Gall ipo li s 7 room s, 4 B R ,
2'12 ba th, bu 11t tn kt t , F A
nat gas furna ce, ntce large
fron t porch , screened 1n
back porch, n ice lot Wtth 4
car garage'" back , close to
churel'l and business sect
downtown Th1 S property is
In good cond 1tlon &amp; pn ced
to sell

HERE IS A GOOD BUY
6 Rooms . 3 B R approx l iJ2 m1 from
GalltpOits Electnc FA furna ce wtth
central a tr modern kitchen, Gallipolis
C1ty School Dost Fully carpeted Galllpolos
C1ty Water. sewage system M etal outside
do o~ s &amp; thermopane wtndowS'
Small
children goes to Green School N1 ce level
landscaped lot ALL OF TH IS FOR ONL. Y
$30 000

1 ROOM HOME
AND MINIFARM
Over 3 Acres of good fa•rly
level lan d Good fencmg on
three Stdes
226 2 ft
frontage of blacktop road
w•th a two story red barn
approx srze JO'XJJ' wtth a
metal roo f All m1nera 1
nghts goes N 1ce 7 room
frame home W1th bath
Some carpeting Ctty water
sys tem PRI CE D TO SELL
NOW - ONLY 517 ,90000

BRICK HOME
Th1s 1S a nrce home on ~nd
Ave
10
Ga1!1p0 I1 S
4
be drooms basement , 2
ftreplaces
wood burning
nat gas F 4. furnace ThiS
home could be used as a
two apt ren ta l bU! Id 1ng
Close to busmess sect1on
LOOk thtS OWr
12 ACRES- BARN MOBILE HOME
19'87
lbs
tobacco base
approx 1 ac;res ftl labte 5
acres ltmber Cla y Twp
GallipO liS C1 ty School 01 s t
Kir kwood 2 bedroom home
has 1ts own water system
1,000 gal septiC tan k All
mmeral r~ghts goes l 1!2
mtles off State Highway 7
Call for mote dela 1fs
4 ACRES MORE
011 LESS
Wooded Lot Some p me
trees Approx 1 m tie from
Cente11ary on Herman
N-Orthup Rd PICK YOUR
OWN BLDG SITE
30ACIIES
WOODED AREA

Vacan t land - all mtneral
r•g hts goes A good place to
retreat Hunt or 1ust be by
you rse lf ONLY SlA 900 00
WOOD BURNING
FIREPLACE
Beaut 1ful 7 room home
located In a muc h des ired
locat 1on 1n Middleport All
ci ty co nven tences The best
grade alum S1d1ng , nice
!j. haded
front
por c h ,
moder n k•tchen , nat gas
forced a 1r. furna ce w•lh
central a1r garage , lots of
shrubbe ry , leve l g re en
grassy lot Also a rental 3
room house on teh re"Br of
this beautiful lot bnngmg
In a n1ce monthly lncomff.
Th ts property is prlced
r 1a ht r:-' 11 nO!J
6 ROOM
IIEMDOELEO HOME
2 or more bedrooms , alum
sl dmg , lots of bu ilt Jn
cabin ets, cit y water , one
ca r garage , nlce shady
front porch Bath w1th
shower Partial basement
with cellar Sh ingle roof
Large lot A REAL BUY
FO R THE MONEY
LAND CONTRACT
6 rooms , 2 story, wooc:S
burning fireplace, city
water on a large Jol Jn
Vmton
52,000
down
payment iU1d S133 3.4 per
month Just hke rent Call
for more Information

NEW LISTING - Do you want to live in a wooded are a
where your netghbors aren' t nght on your doorstop,
yet are close by 7 Thts aHract1ve 3 bedroom home on
Rl 588 Includes an eat m
Clots of cabanets
full basement w1th rec

NEW LISTING

I ROOM HOUSE
IN CITY

This Is a very modern
attractive brtck home
loca ted only a short
(i1stance from city schoc's
J B R ba tr.. shower very
niCe kilchen
lots ol
cab1nets &amp; almost all ap
pliances posstble mcl uded
Basement , nat gas F A
tu rn , cen tra I ~ 1r. very ntce
carpel Many more tOVIf tnQ
fea tu res lnclud tng new
ca r port &amp; cham ltnk renee
Th1s home 1S in top con
dtfton
SELLI NG
REA SONABLE
SPRING VALLEY
SUBDIVISION
vacant lots - n 1ce
butld tng lots w tth
utdt l 1es. there
Lot
101 8' by 171 2 Better
'um now

PRICE REDUCED on thts recently remOdeled l 'h
story 4 bedroom frame EntOY a large hv1ng room, d1n1ng or familY room, large kttchen and garage. Located
1n Chesh.re on a n1ce stladed lot

SIZC

all
Stze
get

ROUTE 3S WEST
OF GALLIPOLIS
Real nice home w1th 5
rooms. bath basement.
very n1ce lot, 100 fron tage
on Rt 35 Also , a 1972 2
bedroom mob 1le home
Th•s propert y 1S all very
n tce, loc a te d west and
across street from the
Western Pancake House
Th 1s could also be a top
Jocatton lor most com
merclal bus inesses In th1s
area Call now for ap
pomtment
CITY PROPERTY
NICE COTTAGE
5 rooms 2 or 3 bedrooms

bath par t1al basement ,
nat gas F A furnace , one
floor plan Close to Su per
Market.
Drug
Store
Lundry walkmg d 1s ta nce
of Downtown Stores Good
backyard garden sp a ce
Call now 1f you want 10
GalliPOi tS P rtced ONLY
$23,900 00
NEW LISTING
A STEAL
s rooms , 3 B R home,
located In a qu iet &amp; nt ce
communtty w tth a fuel oil
F A
furnace
Part lal
basement large liv1ng
room 13'x24', large ea t 1n
kttchen Carpeting 1n all
rooms except k1tchen Ct ty
water , garden area Front
porch With back porch
built 1n A nice home at a
sleal ONLY $12 ,5 00 00
THAT S ALL

ONLY S22.000
N 1ce 3 bedrooms, bath ,
living room , modern eat in
kltcf'len
w 1th
built 1n
cab 1nets Full ba sement,
a 1most new gas forced a lr
furnace &amp; hoi water healer
Located w1th1n the city
t1m 1ts Looking for a ntce
cle an heme
close to
sf'lopp 1ng area A BUY •
CALL NOW

1N TOWN - A modern brick ranch that
end to your house hunting Located tn
neighborhoOd 1usf S blocks from the
features 3 or 4 bedrooms. farge eat-m kllchoen,
baths, l car carport on mce shaded lot
FRIENDLY FAMILY ROOM WELCOMES YOU . In
the famtty room alone there are 800 sq ft of rusttc livIng space Huge rough sawed beams support a balcony,
master bedroom, bath and most attrachve overs11ed
fireplace . There are 3 other bedrooms, n1ce kttchen, 34 '
11v1ng room, another bath Ius garage En1oy the m
ground sw1mmmg pool and a large flat acre lot on a
good h1ghway 1n c1ty school dtstrtct

CAll NOW. OHICf 11&lt;16 7699 HOME 41\6-9539

MUST SEll thls 3 bedroom 2 1/ J
both , spill foyer w1tn oil tne eJC

tros! Priced for below actual
real estate value for qUick
solei NICe dnve Ia power
plonh $44 000 992 2492
NEW HOME w1th 3 bedrooms
both full boteme nt Iorge
fl&lt;lroge fully carpeted Iorge
deck on bock L•odmg Creek
Rood Phone '192·7054
IN POMEROY large roomy four
bedroom 2 story hom. Fully
llqlllpped kitchen, I 'A boths
bosem.nt Call lor of'ti!Dint
mtnt between 10om ond 2 pm
m 3247 So~o.ooo

HOUSE IN CITY
Excellent condlhon, exctllenllocotlon. B&gt;Htntnl,
garage, alum1num
stding, storm wtndaws.
Pr.ced in S20's. 446-1643,
446-9S23

ECONOMY MINDED?
heating &amp; 10t
water ere an mcluded for
$26 per month In this
modern 3 BR Fanch Thts
home is tn excellent cond1
tlon 1f2 located on a large
flat lot in Country A1r
Estates. Prtced to 5ell at
$29,900. STROUT REAL
TY, 446·0001
Coolt~ng ,

THREE BEDROOM ranch m010nary
con$1rucllon 1500sq It Out of COUNTRY farmland wtlh sec.lud ·
ed wood5, woter and good oc ·
town 992 368.4 9 ttl S $l6,900
cess '" Monroe County W Vo
THE PROPERTY of !he lo!e John l
Sl 000 down coli (JQ&lt;) n2
ond Viola Jeffers located on US
3102ar(304)m·3227
·--RT. 7 B,poos 1&gt;1' US R! 143
House property , 29 acres VA FHA 30 yr financing Ireland
Mortgage 77 E State Athem
more or IIHI, m•n•rol rlgnt,
phono (614) 592 3051
some timber A real borgoin
Must sell $8500 Coli Joh" A
STORY 3 bedroom lrome
Jeffers Jr . olter 5 pm
hou1e F A furnoce storm wtn
dows firepJace tn Middleport
ONE ACRE lois IOOit Rl 7 Fron
Phono '192 3JI57
top Tuppers Plain$ Ohto
61&gt;7-3309
·- Si~ Ro0Mh~;M ~~~613 Mtll St
APr 200 ACRES ol ground no Mtddleport Good c:wnd1hon In
butldmga
Tuppen Plolns
qulr" 01 •39 loncaln 51 Mod
Oh•o 61&gt;7 3349
dlepo''

2-

SPETACULAR VIEW - ARCHITECT DESIGNED
RANCH - Absolutely one of the best vtews ot the Oh1o
valley and only 3 m1nutes from downtown. 22 acres of
woods and bea1tutuy des1nged 3 bedrooms of shaped
res1dence that w111 ptese the most d1scnm•nat1ng.
Usually n1ce kttchen (all appliances mcluded) 2112
baths and a famtiV room that 1s aut of th1s world Large
stone ftreplace. A peaceful sett1ng w1th a v1ew that
would be hard to match. Arrangements to see th•s can
be made at your conven1ence.

62 ACRt= FARM- Located on Fnendly R1dge off Rl.
218 18 acres t1llable balance fenced pasture and
woodland Recond1t1oned 2 story 4 bedroom home. At
tract1ve kttchen w1th range, oven, refrtgerator Cent.
gas heat, 2 car garage and large barn . 545,000
QUALITY HOME LESS THAN $30,000- FHA approv
ed Th 1s IS an extremely well bu1lt very clean 3
bedroom home Low tuel b1lh (nat gas forced atr furnace), large k1tchen, garage and large lot Carpet
throughout
ATTRACTIVE BRICK AND FRAME RANCH - (You
must see th1s colorful home) . Large k1tchen and fam1IV
room comb1nat1on 3 spac1ous bedrooms Beaut1ful
carpet throughout Located on L1nco1n P1ke at
Centenary 531 , 900
OLDER 2 STORY BRICK IN TOWN - A n1ce 4
bedroom home canven1ently localed downtown. At~
tractive fam•IY room w1th firelace, dm.ng roo~,d 2
baths eat 1n k1tchen, 2 car carport and an ou s1 e
stasr~ay to the second story Beaut1ful fenced •n
backy~rd . could be used as 2 apartments
MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES
IN MIDDLEPORT ON MILL. ST - Two story home on
large lot Formal dtmng, n1ce k1tchen, bath W1th
shower, basement, 1 car garage and central a1r
carpeted throughout 530,000
HOME AND 11 ACRES IN MET ~ $ CO. - 520:000 buys
th•s n 1ce 2 story frame fea1urtng 4 80s, dtnmg ed
room nice kttchen, cellar and basement Barn IS us
as garage. Also workshop and chicken house

8 ACRES . Large frontage on SR 124 w1th frame
butld1ng completely furn1shed. Could be apartment or
commerctal purpose Has 2 mobile home s1tes w1th
seploc lank, $20,000.

We're Out To Sell The Earth.

FOil SALE
P ick your own ca rpet .color
th is
comr.letely
1n
remode led 75 Pc
new
canst &lt;11 or s BR. family R.
1\h baths, lg l R , 1'1~ a cre
lot , nat gas plenty water,
2&lt;4x:32 block garage w 112
basement.~ ml from town,
J m 1 from HMC 446 3621

RT 160 NEAR VINTON - New Ltst1ng - Very mce 2
bedroom frame revealing fam•IY roam wtth w .b
fireplace, large hvtng room, eat·tn kitchen w1th range,
and refngerator. Includes a beautiful 6 acre wooded
tract of land For more tnfo. call Dan Evans at 38B B111 .

A CLASSIC COLONIAL (Best By on Today •s Markel)
- Thts immaculate 2 story Calon1a1 has to be one of the
ftnest constructed homes on the marke t. 4 large
bedrooms. famtly room With w.b fireplace, formal d1n1ng. perfect kitchen, 31J2 baths, rec room , sundeck and
covered patio. Must sell, owner has moved tow . va
$61,500.
COUNTRY SHOWPLACE WITH 4 ACRES
Beatuftful br1ck ranch with 2200 sq ft. of living space.
Three spac1ous bedrooms. formal entrnce and d1nlng, 2
baths n1ce k1tchen and breakfast area. Large fam11y
room' w 1th w b hrelace Thts ftne home includes a
small livestock barn and IS located In Gallla Co. Sch.
DIS! on stale highway. Proced to se ll at $69,900. Make
us an offer.
•
DUTCH STYLE - 4 bedroom trame ~onta.niAg 2300
sq ft of gracious llvtng Attractive overstzed fam11y
ro~m with w.b ftreplace, w1fe approved built~ 1n k1t·
chen, formal dmmg, 21/:a baths, :z sundecks, 2 pat1os,
large 2 car garage and central atr. Located 6 m1 . from
town oft Rl 3S.
ENJOY A PEACEFUL. SETTING from thiS very at·
tract1ve 4 bedroom ranch restmg on 6 acres W1th
woods Large llvmg and d1n1ng room, famtly room , 2
baths, eat m k1tchen , rec. room. 2 car garage and cen·
tral a1r Located on state highway In K C. Sch . D1st.
$49,SOO

WE NEED LISTINGS
SOLID QUALITY WITH RIVER FRONTAGE - ThiS
well bu 1tt 6 room bnck home comes w1th large hv1ng
room Wlfh :Z ftreplaces, dining room With a captivating
v1ew of the river, butlf tn k1tcherl, l 'h: bath~, overs1zet~ 1
car garage and room for workshop Picture
e
beaUtifUl settmg on thrs extra large lot gently sloping to
the rtver.
LOOKING FOR SOLITUDE AND COUNTRY ~Vu
lNG? And one of the Area's Best :arg=~~~;;, sp~it
must see thiS attractive Ph yr ol 3 ~ar e kttchen.

~:i~~-=~~~ ~ar~~r;~~i~~~hb:~~;~ ~:~daavaHable. s mt

out. $35,000 .

68 ACRE FARM- Located near Rutland In MeigS IS
acres tillable, remainder m pasture Good fence and
mce barn . Large 2 story home with 5 large bedrooms,
eat· IJ'I k 1tchen, d1ning, 1V:a baths, carpeted throughout
Excellent buy at $49.900
A GENTLEMAN ' S FARM - 117 ac. One of the tlnesl
beef larms 1n the valley . 90 acres of tughly tmpraved
ha and pasture, 30 acres of wooded pasture. New
ferice, 2 ponds, 6 automatic cattle fount11ns. 3 metal
barns wtth concrete loafing pads, butft· in feeders,
gram storage, loading shute w1th head gate. In addit1an
there 1S an attracttve 3 bedroom home revealing a
family room with w.b fireplace, modern bult.. tn kit
chen 1'h baths. 2 car carpOrt. Excelleftt locetron on a
stat~ highway . 9 ml from Holzer Med1cal Center

E. M. WISEMAN 446-3796
500 2ND AVE.

j

It•••••••••••·-~---

BUY YOUR BUILDING LOT NOW
BEFCIRE SPRING BRINGS INFLATION
LOTS LOTS LOTS - We have 3 acre wooded
(som~ With lake frontage} only 4 mi from town
3 or 4 acre s1tes 1n Rto Grande , 3/4 acre tn
Centenary
WANT ACREAGE CLOSET TO TOWN&gt; We
have 65 acres of beauttful h1lls and valleys EX·
cellent v1ew N1ce location.
toEAL WOODED SITES OVERLOOKING THE
RIVER . Have a mce v1ew of the nver from a
very pr1vate locatton 1n a wooded area 1ust I m1.
from town. Call Ike Wtsem an Most prest1g1ous
home stte I've see!!,-_
·

STRICTL. Y DESIGNED TO SUIT THE MOST
DISCRIMINATING Restong on a beaulotully elevated
tree shaded 11/:a lot that offers an 1mposmg v1ew from
every wtndow
Th1s spectacular home ohers
everything you' ve ever dreamed of from a TV mon1tor
at the front door to 6,000 sq ft of elegant liv.ng space.
A classic kitchen. breakfast room, formal dining, huge
tormal en~nce. l V2 baths, 2 w b hreplaces, 2
sundecks. rrantc buHon den, expansive and diSttncti-..e
enterta1nm.nt area w1th bar Immaculate taste
dt's.cnttes the professionals who d1d the dec:oratmg.
Plenty of storage Lighted c.rcle dnve and mature
1andscap1ng puts the flntshtng touches on thJS exctttng
home

E. N. WISEMAN, BROKER 446-4500
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�1).8-The Sunday·Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Sept

25, 1m

Car upsets, driver safe
GAWPOUS - Brian R.
Evans, 19, Gallipolis, escaped
injury in a single car·mishap

••

The Gallia -Meigs Post

••••••••••••••

~al ~
Cf;stat&amp;.

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•••

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0 0 sm•g
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,------------------· -------,
of opllllon are weh:ome.d. Tboy &amp;hould be 1

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f b ases
delayed :
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get one going. Your pound needs to be closed down too, and
replaced by a Human ~ Society Animal Shelter, where a much
larger percentage will find thelr way Ul homes and when each
has been given a chance at life, iB put to sleep huii'UUlely . Marion C. Crawford, Hoofs and Paws.

Letten

1... dl• 300 wordlloac (or be subject tG reduetl011 by
the edllor) ud muat be ol(ned with the slpee 'o ad·
dreu. Nam01 lllllf be withheld .._ publication.
However, oa requ..t, 11111101 wtU be dllelosed. Lelten
should be ID good lasle, addr ... lng IIIUeo, aot personallt101.

C

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Dear Sir :
Being an avid supporter of the local humane society, also
having once owned a farm , and to my dismay, after hours of
work in the hot sun, from sunrise to sunset, rising on many
occasions, to find my garden half destroyed, I didn't really
care at that point how the creatures were gotten rid of.
Including when the fox got into my chickens and several
times destroyed my baby ducks. I loved my dogs and cats,. But
I loved my chickens, ducks and peacocks too .
Not having lived on a farm for several years, I had
forgotten, because oo a farm, certain cruel actions (to city folk
would seem unusual) but they are necessary.
'
My question, and it to me is even more cruel than !be leghold is about the castration of pigs and and calves. Simply
bemi: held down, taking very sha rp knife or a special cutte.r ,
if you happen to own one . Most people I knew used no pam
killer. Just slit, slit, with a mixture of vaseline and pine tar
spread on to keep rues and insects away to hold down the
infection.
I gave many a shot later because they did get infection.
Didn't lose many. But my conscience does deserve an answer.
Ca n a leg-hold trap be more cruel than tha t?
And if the city folk wan t wkeep on eating prime choices of
veal, pork, and let's not forget, lamb, it's a necessary
procedure. Lei's face it: Afarmer cannot afford more. Is there
a vet available if he could ?
I'll continue in the efforts of the humane society. But
recalling, lost memories, if I were an animal, I'd much more
prefer my paw in a trap for say 30 hours in preference to taking
two weeks wstop aching, regardless of whether the farmer or
the vet was the rat . - Yvon ne M. Sellers.

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Today :

FUTUMt SHOCK! ! !

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HOSPITAL

NEWS

SAVE

20%

en tine

Preference for the trap

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By ROBERT KAYLOR
Appreciative note sounded
WASHINGTON (UPI )
Defense Secretary Harold Dea r Sir :
By
•
Brown wa!'ts the Carter
Willis T. Lead ing~m e
staff at the Senior Citizens Center would like to extend
admtmstration 's ftrst round the1rThe
Realtor
•
appreciati
on tuall who helped with "Yesteryear II !'
of military base closings to ~
Juidging
from
attendance the day was a big success,
on a bigger scale than those c1ver 1,000 persons the
e Who would have thoug ht must find a way to cr eate •
were
the grounds. People registered
implemented this year by the from all over the state, on
• that we'd look forward to an income in addition to •
42 towns and cities outside Meigs
Ford administration .
• an annual i ~f 1 ation rate ~f 6 your pay check .. Although •
County were r eprese nted . There were visitors from West
• percent With an em af ton there is no such thtn g as lhe •
Virginia, Kentucky, Nort h Carolina , Ari zona, Florida and
close to ecst asy? Yet, perfect investment, r eal
Assi
s
tant
Defense
California
. The ('OVerage whi ch your newspaper. ga ve
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
• today ttlat ' s what we ' re estate ma y be the nearest •
• d oing . The reason . of thing to II . It cli!n be an •
Admitted - Mildred Ar- Secretary John White, who "Yesteryear II" was greatly apprecia ted.
• course, ~s that aft er t~ree inc9me producer , a shelter • nold, Pomeroy; Je.an Roush, will oversee the program,
Our thanks to all the entertainers, the judges (from near
• success1ve yea rly htk es from high ta xes_, and an • Middleport ; Bertie Wyatt, said the Pentagon still hopes
and far), the craft denwnstrators, and the many volunteers
e averagi ng better than_ 9 ideal prot ection from the e
to announce a list of bases ran ging in age from 6 to 90.
• pe rcent, 1976' s b percent ravages of inflation . Rea l e Pomeroy; George Meinhart, being considered for closure ·
We would especially like to thank the four banks, the 75
e inc r ease looks pret ty good . estate vallJeS histor ica,lly • Middleprot ; Shirley Wolfe, or reducti'on by U)e time
businesses
and 10 individ uals . who donated cash, gift
e Don' t be fooled - 6 percent Increase
faster
than • Racine ; William Morris,
Co
ngress
adjour
ns
in
Pomeroy
.
·
certificates
and
prizes for Yesteryear II . Our thanks also to
• inf lation is hlg h. At. t ha t general inflation pr ices and •
October,
a
lt
ho
ugh
delays
• rate pr ices doub le 10 12 :~· ma i nta i n a - higher va lue •
evervone
who
donated
items for the Country Store and Country
Discharged
Gold ia
it
back
until
early
may
push
·
th an m os t assets. in
• years.
Kitchen
.
Hendren, Eleanor F'a ul k,
What woo ld happen to depre ssi on . The 1deal :
Organizations who had boo ths or displa ys helped make
Raymond Baker, Roger next year.
• housing prices wi t h a b hedge.
Yesteryear
II a "rnmmunity" event. There are too many who
Manley,
Mary
Roush,
Stanley
• pe r cent year ly cos t -o f If ther e i s anything we •
Officials
won
't
discuss
helped
to
name
each one individually as much as we 'd like to.
Shaver,
Geo
rge
Deem,
• living incr ease? A home can do to help you in the •
There were some though wh o one might say helped "above and
• t hat cost $45,000 now ~aul d fie ld of r eal estate please • Donald Eynon, George possible areas that may be
e increase to !.90,548 1n 12 phone or drop in at • Cond e, Virgil Markin, Roger affected but White indicated beyond the call of duty." Some of these were the emcees who
• years. In 20 year s it wou ld LEADINGHAM REAL • St earns, Ca th y Sigler, the department is taking a kept things moving all day , Big Bend C.B. Club, County
• cost $144,320. In 30 years it ESTATE. 512 Second Ave .. e
hard iook at the nwnber of Highway Department , may or of Pomer oy , Rutland
e would sel l tor $258, 456.
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699 . • Pamela Ogdin, Marie Custer, tra
in ing
bases,
now Emergency Squad , Rutland American Legion, Adult Minin g
•
What does all th is mean ? We' re here to help !
• Lula Westfall.
considered
too
large.
Class - and last , but not least, husbands of the staff (some of
• :!'~~~r- tO~ _a_ae;;_ J:O,!! e •••• e. e e e ••••
whom worked 12 to 16 hours at "Yesteryear.' ' )
Comments were overheard from o u t ~f..:ounty visitors
"The guideline from the
defense secretary iB that next such as :
year we will · try to ha ve a
" the friend liness of Meigs Counti ans "
larger base closing program
" how everyone participated - fr om .young to old"
SPECIAL
than thls year in tenns of
"a family affair' 1
THIS WEEK!
"fun reliving the old days"
estimated dollar savings,"
While said in an interview.
There has been a lot of hard work involved th e past lew
months preparing lor " Yesteryear II" - but we hope everyone
This year's base "realign~ fee ls as we do- that it wa s well worth it
ments," which included shutAgain, our thanks to each and everyone who he lped in any
ting down three air bases and way .- The Staff , Mei gs County Senior Citizens Center.
a major reduction at a fourth,
saved taxpayers $151. 4 Response to two letters
million. They were made on
ON EVERY PIECE
the basis of decisions made Dear Sir :
by the F'ord . administration
I Would like to reply to two letters that were in the paper on
and put into forc e over Sunday, Sept. 18. F'irst , the one from Kathryn Spona gel.
opposition from local leaders
I too hope tbat someone got Scotty out of the pound, but his
whose areas have lost jobs chances were slim. Not too many people acquire their pels
from the Meigs Coun ty or Ga llia pounds. Th is is a wonderful
and business as a result.
source, though and let's encourage people to do just th is. We
In one ·case involving an provide fr ee pets to anyone through the Huma ne Society
Army
arsenal
in Careline, but we doo 't always have the type dogs tha t are
Philadelphia , the closure requested so perhaps this could be the source to find those
order was approved by the types.
Carter
administration
Thanks for your comments on my column. By the way,
despite a campaign promise that isn 't an Animal Shelter you have in Gallia County, nor is
by Vice President Walter there one in Meigs County. They are the county pounds and
Mondale to keep the facility have no con nection whatsoever with the Hwnane Society or the
open.
type animal sheller that we hope to build ln Meigs Coun ty
within the year .
Opposition to furth er
Next, in answer to th e gentleman or lady who wrote in
reductions iB expected to regard to my comments on the pound in my column on Sunday ,
stiffen, with one example the the lith. I agree tha't there are times that there is no other
formation of a bipartisan choice; we too of the Huma ne Society have no choice but to tell
coalition of 204 governors and people to call the warden, i.e ., when there are wild dogs
congressmen from the harrassin~ cattle or other fann animals, when a dog is vicious
Northeast and Midwest who and can not be safely picked up by one of our own people. But
put President Carter on toO often nice dogs are thrown into the pound with no effort
notice last week they would made on the part of the "thrower" to find that animal a good
further loss of defense home.
;..;..nolina in their states .
Contrary to your comment concerning animals being
Pentagon sources said tbe treated well at the pounds though: most of the time th ey are in
by O..rborn, monufKturen of Arneriean Traditionol since 1914
administration wants to filth , without food and water, there is no heat in the winter and
Captains Toblo
make
· its announcement .both pounds were guilty this past winter of letting animals
You'll take s,.cla/ pride In
before
Congress adjourns for freeze to death. Dogs are not kept the required amount of time
IVIillblo With l,12" I..Yit
the INindsom• Provincetown furniture
the year to keep the issue as to give o.wners a chance to reclaim, they are all picked up and
Componlon choirs
selectftl to fit your life stylet
far ·away as possible from . pUt to death on a weekly basis with all animals included on the
with oxdusin Leg Lock
next year's congressional same day.
Ruggftl, beeutllully era lied by strllled
elections.
American
artluns
who
take
pride
in
The pound is a necessity for some, but a " way out of
Handlome half-china
A Defense · Department resp'onsibility" for most Gallia County needs a Shelter as
top ond buffet baM
review of candidates ! or much a• we do, but as far as I know all efforts to form a
closure
bas been delayed, Hwnane Society down there have come to screeching halls by
Sal id rnaplo hordwoodo
however , because ' the lack of leadership.
Fibtmin table top
services were unable to make
Please , someone, tell me I'm wrong, you are attempting to
a Sept . 1 deadline for
Choice of two finiohos:
submitting their lists of which
worm rrt~plo ond doep
installations they consider
ontiquo shadings
HOSTEL OPENS
least es.&lt;;ential.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
new youth hostel, ·the first
ever at an Ohio state park, is
opening at Malabar .Fann
State Park near Mansfield in
a cooperative effort by the
state Department of Natural
Resources and the Columbus
Council of American Youth
Hostels, Inc.
Under terms of an
agreement between the two,
the hostel is authorized
through Dec. 31, 1982. It will
be open year-round and is
primarily for travelers who
enjoy backpackirig, hiking,
bicycling, canoeing and rock
climbing.
Our New Hot Dog Menu Also Available!

•••

.

at 12:10 a.m. Saturday on US
33, south of Burlingham.

State Highway Patrol said
Evans lost control of his car
whlch ran orr the highway on
a sha rp curve. The vehicle
ran over an embankment,
rolled over two times before
&lt;'llming to a stop. No charges
were filed .
A deer was killed at 4:30
p.m. on SR 160, three tenths
of a mile south of milepost 17.
The animal ran into the path
of a car operated by Doriald
1.. Swisher, 40, Rt. 1, Vinton .

VOL. XXVIII NO .. 114

Hunting, Fishing Day
celebrated Saturday

a

ROOER BIRCH AND HIS well-tra ined bird dogs
made a big hit with the yo ungsters at National Hunting
and Fishing Day . (l.rr l Doc (a Brittany Spaniel ), Birch
and JilHEnglish Springer Spaniel ).

By Greg Bailey
More than 75 persons
celebrated National Hunting
and Fishing Day Saturday at
Royal Oak Park nea r F'ive
Points. Sponsored by the
Jzaak Wa lton League, Ken
Amsbary Chapter, the day
was enjoyed by young and old
of both sexes.
There were a variety of
t raditional outdoor events

and at the conclusion of the
activities, door prizes were
won by Renee Buckley, David
Hawthorne, Paul Holsinger,
Greg Nease, Bryce Buckley
and Donna Grueser. Each
youth was presented a fishing
reel, furnished by the BASS
Masters of Meigs County and
the lzaak Walton League.
Roger Birch and his bird
dogs , 11 Doc" and " Jill "

I

resident of lower Ri ver Rd.,

was pr onounced dead on
arri va l Friday morning at the

Holzer Med ical Cen ter. He

beccime ill while shopping in
downtown Ga ll ipolis.
Mr . Bar cus was born Jul y
3, 1903

in Clay Twp. son of the

lat e Thomas and Al vl ra
Wh i ttaker
Bartu s.
He
marri ed
Flor il la
Ma e

in

1924

and

she survives

Ply male

along

with

the .follow ing c hlldr~n :
Mrs . Freder ic k (Lola )
Rl.chards, Sprlngt ield, Va .;
Mrs . Edgar ( P&lt;athryn )
Green ,
Mrs.
Bruce
{ Rebecca ) Unroe·, M r s.
Cla re n ce (Erne s t i n e)
/!Aooney , Mrs. Char les W.

(Ina Belle) Sibley, all of
Ga llipol is; Mrs. Will iam C.
(Add ie Mae) Keesee of
Orlando, Fla. ; Mrs . Opel
Coulson , Columbus : two sons.
Clarence ~ Barcus. Rt. 2.
Gall ipolis and Ralph A.
Barcus.

G~lllpolis.

A brofhPr-.

He attended the Ba iley

Chapel Church and wa s a

charter member of the new ly
formed Canna n M issiona r y

Chur ch

and

a

member of Morning Dawn •

Lodge 7.

Funer al serv ices wil l be

he ld at 2 p.m. Monday from
the Will is Funeral Home on
Garfie ld Ave. with Rev .
Clifford Suiter etflc lallng .
Bur ial wilt be in Mlna Chapel
Cemetery . Visitation wHI be

WIL DUFE AGEN T Jim Spleet instructed.youngsters on gun safe ty·

he ld at the funeral home from
and 7, 9 p.m. today .

2· 4

AAasonic services are slated
for 7 : 30 p.m. tonight at the
f uneral home.

Pallbearers ·will be his

grandsons. In l ieu of flower s,
fhe f am il y requests tha t
donat ions be made to the
Canaan M iss ionary Baptist
Chur ch In care of Mrs . Ma ry

E. Cox, Box 233, Rt. 1, Crown
City .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

GLENN (pADDLE ) LAM BERT, (extreme left) , and Roscoe Wise explained the fine art of fly fishing and ~elped
.
· youngsters try their hands at it .

_______________,
REGULAR SIZE OR FOOT LONG

Iz

EXPIRES OCTOBER 7, 1977
n
,..
~FREE Soft Service Ice Cream Cone (JOe Size) ;;
g .vith Purchase of Any Mexican .Food or Hot Dog
vlfems.
o..

Vanilla
Chocolate Double Twist
CARRY-OuT or DRIVE· IN SERVICE ONLY
Offer Good Mondays tllru Fridays

HIGHER SCORES
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
high school students · are
scoring higher on national
liandardlzed tests than the
national average, the state
education
department
reported Friday. Results for
teb 1976-77 academic year.
released by the American
College Testing Program,
showed a composite score of
19.1 for ~ollege-bound Ohio
st~dents compared to a
natiooal average of 18.4 and
an avelllg• for 18.8 for
Ohioans lhe previoua year.

to Scout Roa·d
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the Scout
Road near Chester at 4:28
p.m. Saturday for Sue
Darling who was injured in
an auto accident. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 2:47 a.m. Sunday, the
squad went to the sheriff's
office for George Betzing
who, suffering a possible
attack, was taken to Veterahs
Memorial Hospital.
At 1:25 a.m. Monday (he
squad was called to the Ar·
mentrout residence in
Naylors Run for Monty Riffle
who had a laceration of a foot.
He received first aid.

METULLAH ISRAEL - SOVIET-MADE rockets
slanuned into the 'nearby rowns of Kiryat Simona and Safed
today in what Israeli military sources said was a~ attempt by
extremist Palestinians to subvert a new ceaseftre in south
Lebanon.
·
·
ullah 'd th
sai e
Wiinesses in the northernmost town of Met
122mm Katyusha rockets were fired after the U.S.-med1ated
cease.fire went into effect at 10 a.m. (4 a.m. EDT) and Israel
began withdrawing its troops from south Lebanon: The
miliiary command said eight persons were w~u.nded m the
salvo seven of them in Kiryat' Slunona. Autbonties re()9rted
considerable damage from the attack launched from across
the Israeli-Lebanonese frontier. ·

CHARLESTON , W. Va .
(UP! ) - Highwa y Com·
missioner
Joseph
(Speed ) Jones resigned
Sunday, just a week after
Gov.
Jay Rockefeller
expressed dissatisfaction
with the way the department
was bein~run .
-Jones
ame the second
high-level official in the
Rockefeller Administration
to leave office this month.
Earlier, Rockefeller's top
aide Donald Richardson,
anno~ced he was leaving to
fonn a consulting business.
Rockefeller
appointed
Charles L, Miller, 40, of South
Charleston, as the new highway commission,er. Miller is
a fonner distrtct h1ghway
engineer in Huntington.

• MeJgS
• Court
Ju dgrnent asked m

Thi,s year Elberfelds ar~ featuring boys' wear up to size a, Wrangler
Leggs , 'lnd campus brands, Blue Jeans. dress slacks, knit shirts
'
sport and dress shirts.
GARY SISK SHOWS that the ancient crossbow is still
a modern weapon.

"''

.

JOHNNIE REIBEL tries his hand shooting a
muzzleloading rifle after receiving instruction from Dave
Chadwell Duane LOngenette, and F'rank Casto .

'

An .action for a judgment
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Noeal A. and Ed(th
·Herrmann, Middleport,
against Thomas L. ~nd
Virginia King, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, for $5,137.32 due on

a land contract and $520.20
due on delinquent taxes.
Filing for divorce were
Grsce E. Castle, Pomeroy,
against Raymond L. Castle,
Galion ; · Lonnie Taylor,
Middleport against Louise
Taylor, P\meroy.

moment."
Jones
has
figured
prominently in recent
dispatches in connection with
repair of the Silver Memorial
Bridge at Point Pleasant. He
also has been asked to
respond to the question ol
responsibility for the six·
year.:Uld span showing such
serious defects lhat it has
been closed since July 6, and
not expected to reopen for
another three to live weeks.

car burned in mishaps

or were left over from last term.
.
In preparation for lbe 1977-78 tenn open~g next Monday •
' the nine justices met at 9:30a.m. ED'! for the first day of week·
long private conferences during which they will sort through
stacks of petitions for review.
·

You'll enjoy a trip to Elberfelds Children's Dept. You'll find
e~erything you need_ from infa.n ts' wear up to girls' size 16 and boys
stze 8. Just to menhon a few tfems - jackets, coats, tops, slacks,
jeans. sweaters, shirts. headwear, Buster Brown knit wear.

A spokesman for the
governor, Jack Canfield, said
Jones had resigned effective
today. Asked if any pressure
was brought to bear, he
replied : "We're not prepared
to elaborate beyond the official statement at the .

Cow hit, deer killed,

~ay on hundreds of appeals which piled up over the surruner

WELL KNOWN BRANDS

Some critics have claimed
the treaties do not contain a
right which is explicit enough
to
permi t
military
intervention.
-The treaties will not
require U.S. taxpayers to
shell out more money, since
increased payments to
Panama will be financed
from higher canal tolls. Some
critics
have
claimed
American taxpayers will
have to finance any deficit
which occurs.
- The
treaties
will
encourage Panama · to
re spect human rights by
providing a closer working
relationship between the
United States and Panama.
Critics have complained the
treaties lend new legitimacy
toward the Torrijos regime.
Vance
began
the
administration's drive for
ratification by asking the
committee to thoroughly
investigate every facet of the
treaties to avoiq a later. ''Who ·
lost Panama?" debate.
"it is quite proper that this
committee, the Senate and
the American people should
consider carefully the content
and implications of these
treaties," he testified, "for
they should not at some later
time be made the subject of
partisan
and
divisive
debate.''

·Jones ·resigns
Highway post

WASffiNGTON-THESUPREMEOOURTBEGANwork

BIG SELECTIONS .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

E·R unit called

. · WASHINGTON- THE NUMBER OF BACHELORS living
alone is growing faster than the number of women livin,g by
themselves, but there still are far more women mamtammg
llleir own households.
The Census Bureau reported Sunday that the nwnber of
men living alone has risen 60 per cent In the past seven years,
while the nurnber of women living alone iB up 35 .per cent.
Amohg persons under 25, the number of men hvmg alone
tripled since 1970 - from 274,000 to 752,000 - and the number
of wOOlen living alone doubled from 282,000 to 588,000. . . .
There were 15.5 million siligle persons mamtammg
household this year, .the bureau reported.

:1
NEW JOBS
COLUMBUS (UPI )
Russell J . Adams, assistant
~eputy director of the state
Department of Natural
Resources for rP.source
protection and legal affairs,
will become general counsel
for the state Energy and
Resource Developmeqt
Agency Nov. I.

·::::::::::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:

"Any Panamanian government wtU have an interest in
preserving the treaties
because the treaties are in
the intereSt of Panama as
well as ourselves. These
treaties reduce the chance of
such an
event
(nationalization).''
The pacts - already signed
by President Carter , and
Panamanian strongman
Omar Torrijos - still must be
approved by the Senate ,
which is not expected 1&lt;&gt; vote
on the issue until next year.
" II would be all too easy for
me to emphasize today that if
13 years of effort were lost and these treaties rejected ~
our relations with Panama
would be shattered , our
standing in Latin America
damaged inuneasurably and
the security of the canal itself
placed in jeopardy," Vance
said in his opening statement.
"Indeed, all of these could
and might happen if the
treaties were not ratified.''
Bitt, Vance said, the major
reason for supporting them ...
is because they are in our
interest as well as the interest
of Panama."
Vance ofiered these other
rebuttals to critics of the
treaty :
-The Joint Chiefs of Staff
"are satisfied that the
treaties enable us to keep the
canal open inde finitely."

By United Pressli:tternatlonal
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - ISRAEL'S ACCEP;T~CE of a
proposal by President Carter to allow Palestinians at the
Geneva peace talks was drawing increased oppoSition at hor~1e
today on the ground it will lead to direct talks w1th
Palestinians.
B · •
The decision Sunday by Prime Minister Menahem egl!' s
cabinet was a radical turnabout from previous Israeli. pollcy
and it eliminated one of the main impediments to reswrung the
Geneva talks stalled since December 1973. Carter's plan
called for a ~nJde Arab delegation - made up of Egypt ,
Syria, Jordan and the Palestinians - to take part in the
Geneva conference. No date has been setfor its start.
.
Former Prime Minister Yitzbak Rabin, defea~ed by Begm
in the May elections, said in a telephone mterv1,~:"' the I(). I
cabinet vote a "wrong decision" because tt tackles
. procedures rather than substance."

TACOS - BURRITOS - ENCHILIDAS
TASTAOOS - FRIJOLES

* Plain * Meat Sauce * American Dog
* German Dog * Cheese Dog * Mexican Dog

WASillNGTON (UP!) - Rebutting Ronald Reagan's
charge that there is a '1atal flaw" in the Panama Canal
treaties Secretary of State Cyrus Vance today warned the
Senate lt must not reject the. controversial agreements.
Vance testified such rejection would shatter relati?ns with
Panama, damage U. S, prestige in Latin Amertca and
endanser the canal itself.
.
.
Vance was the first witness as the Senate F'ore1gn
Relations Committee began four days of hearings on the two
treaties turning the canal over to Panama in the year 2000 and
guaranteeing U. S. protection rights over the waterway.
Obviously referring to Reagan's charge that. the. '1a_tal
flaw" in the treaties is that they cannot prevent nationalizallon
of the canal by Panama, Vance testified :

:::

VISIT OUR CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT
ON THE
2nd FLOOR

. EAT IN or CARRY-OUT

CLEVELAND (UPI) Members of Teamsters for
a Oemoeratlt Union ended
tbeir annual convention
Sunday by pledging to
unseat the top Teamsters
Un ion leaders hip, at.
leading workshops on
orKulzlng and electing 15
people to the dl,osidents'
national steering com·
mlttee.
.
More !ban 250 TD U
members, claiming to have
support In 24 states and
Canada, lashed out at union
corruption, sweetheart
contracts, high salaries of
their leaders and anion
restrictions on their voting
rights.
The TDU vowed to
"cballenge pres ident
Frank Fitzsimmons every
place we can" In an effort
to organize campaigns that
would substitute " rank and
file leadership" for F'ilz·
simmons-backed officers.
They promised help
from more than 75 lawyers
around lbe country and a
legal
defense
and
education fund of more
than $30,000.

~~

DAVI D HA WTIIORNE rece ives instruction on how to paddle a canoe from Art Skinner of Middleport

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MEXICAN FOOD IS HERE!

(Continued on Pll• I)

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) F'rank Dick announced today
he
is
r esigning
as
superintendent of
the
beleagured Toledo city school
system effective July 31, 1976.
Dick's announcement at a
news conference came in the
wake of reports that the
school district could become
the first in the state to go
bankrupt.
Dick said he made the
announcement so far in ad·
vance of. his resignation date
for several reasons , including
anotl)er school levy tbat is
expected to be put on ihe
ballot this fall in an attempt
to avert another school
closing.
"The passage of the school
levy is so vital that a
personality or personalities
should ever cloud an
important issue of such
magnitutde for our youth and
our city,'' said Dick.
Dick also said he wan~ tp
give the Toledo Board · of
Education tinle to screen and
select a successor and
provide a chance for he and
his wife to assess their future.
Board J'resident Richard
Daust
called
Dick 's
resignation "a courageous
decision."

by two brothers, two sister s,
a gr andson and son-in-law.

Bapt ist

opened the daY'S program
with an obedience and
retrieving exhibition. Then
wildlife agent Jim Spleet
demonstrated gun safet y,
followed by canoe paddling
by Art Skinner. While at the
water, the kids got to try their
hands at fly fishing aft er
Paddle Lambert and Roscoe
Wise gav e an expert's

Toledo
•
reSigllS

I
Wymond Barcus, Gal li pol is,
CLARENCE BARtUS
GALLI POLIS - Clarence 26 gra nd and 14 great .
C. ( Boots) Barcus, 74, a grandchildren survive.
retired city employee and
He was preceded In deat h

Vance tells
why treaty
necessary

Dissidents hope
to uns~t
teamster brass

Dick in

---------------------------1
! Area Deaths !

PRICE FlmEN CENTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fire of · undetermined
origin in the engine
demolished an auto driven by
Ronalda L. Voreh, 24, Kerr,
at 8:25 p.m. Saturday on US
35 at CR 57 in Springfield
Twp. The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the car's engine apparently
caught fire. No one was in·
jured.
A deer was killed in an
accident at 11 : 21 p.m.
Saturday on U.S. 35, two and
seven tent~ miles east of SR
160. The aruma! ran into the
polh ?f a car operated by

not injured in an accident at
3:30p.m. Saturday on SR 143,
two miles south of Carpenter.
The cow, owned by William
Kennedy, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
was struck by a vehicle
operated by Jacqueline
Fraley, «, Rt. 3, Albany.
There was moderate damage
to her car.
A Sunday accident occured
at 10 :05 a.m. on Third Ave. in
Kanauga at the ferry landing.
A car driven by Unda V.
Konkler, 27, Lancaster, was
leaving the ferry dock when it
struck the side of a vehicle
~Y~l'ru"r Bunc~h~~ Rt~;; operated by George H. Lee,
67, Gallipolis; There was
ad !pot lSd
mo era e amage.
a minor damage.
A cow was str.~ck but w s

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