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12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmi~eroy , 0 ., Friday, Aug. 25, 1978

··Nationwide mail ·strike possibility posed
GRro&lt;)RY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UP!} An unofficial vote count early
IOOay showed the nation's
largest postal union has
rejected a proposed threeyear contract, posing the
possibility of an illegal
nationwide mail strike, union

By

sources said.
'rhe unofficial tally showed
the vote by the American
Postal Wockers Union to be
94,000 to 78,1)00 against the
contract offer. About 175,000
of the 280,000 Wlion members
were believed to have
participated in the balloting.

An off icial count was
expected to be announced
later today.
- By rejecting the offer of a
19.5 percent wage and costof-living raise , the union
representing postal clerks
became the second postal
union to defy President

Carter's call for restraint in
the negotiatloos - restraint
that carter said would help
hold down inflation.
The vote by the APWU was
considered a determining
factor in chances f&lt;r .a strike.
Leaders of both th~ APWU
and the Natiooal AsSociation

hill top aides would say
Thuraday whether they will
yield to 1111im demands to
return to' the bargaining
table ;
Bolger has lnUied that in
the event any of the four
postal unions, repre.nting
600,000 union employees,

of Letter ' carriers, which
earlier rejected the ·~tract
by a 4-3 margin, ar now
under ·pressure fmm rankand-file members to ~eopen
negotiatioos or set ~S~rike
deadlines next week. •
Neither Postmaster
General William Bolger nor

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

Results of '78 ·fair
horseback games given
Results of the Meigs County
Junior Fair games on horseback held at the Fair on
Friday, Aug . 18. have been
announced.
High point trophy went to
Brett Jones.
Drunkard's Paradise, first
place, Tammy Ward and
Debbie Woodyard ; second
place, Kristin Anderson and
Brett Jones ; third, Penny
Dewhurst and Debbie Porter;
fourth, Fae Reibel and Julie
Elberfeld ; fifth, Judy
Sargent and Mae Nakamoto;
Flag Race, first, Brett Jones ;
second, Tony Kennedy ; third,
Mike Boyles ; fourth , Kristin
Anderson ; fifth , Tammy
Ward ; Pick Up Race, first ,
Tammy Ward; second ,
Charles Kn9pp; third, Darren
Hayes ; fourth, Tammy
Kennedy; Potato race, first,
Dan:en Hayes; second, Beth
Our Interest' is
eater For You

~ 5.75%
On 90-Day
'certificates
5.75 per cent paid on

90 day Certificates of
Deposit .
$500.00
Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quarterly .
A substantial penalty is

invohd on all certificate
accounts withdrawn prior

'to the dale of maturity.

The Athens.County
SavinG$ &amp; Loan Co.

w. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

FSIJC

-----

Gloeckner; third, Julie
Elberfeld ; fourth, Judy
Sargent; fifth, Debbie
Woodyard.
Apple Bob, first , Judy
Sargent ; second, Penny
Dewhurst ;
third, Tad
Darling ; fourth, Penny Miller
fifth, Kristin Anderson; Cob
race , first , Brett Jones ;
second, Mike Bowles; third,
Tad Darling ; fourth, Karl
Suchoza; fifth, Charles
Knopp ; barrel race, first,
Tony Kennedy ; second, Brett
Jones; third, Mike Boyles;
fourth , Tammy Kennedy ;
fifth , Cl)arles· Knopp; Cones,
first , Brett Jones; second,
Chery l Mowery ; thir.d,
Tammy Ward ; fourth ,
Tammy Kemiedy, filth ,
Penny Miller.
Egg and spoon, first , Judy
Sargent ; second, Julie
Elberfeld; third, Deborah
Woodyard ; fourth, Kristin
Anderson ; filth, Tammy
Ward ; In line barrels, first,
Cheryl Mowery; second,
Brett Jones; third , Mike
Bowles; fourth, Deborah
Woodyard; filth, Darren
Hayes.
Catalogue race, first, Brett
Jones ; second, Tad Darling ;
third , Mikki Conley ; fourth ,
Ma ~
Nakamoto ; fifth ,
Charles Knopp; Figure 8
barrels, first , Tony Kennedy ;
second, Brett Jones ; third,
Cheryl Mowery ; fourth,
Deborah Wo odxard; lj fth,
Mike Bowels.
Dash for cash, first, Tony
Kennedy ; second , Brett
J ones; third, Tammy Ward;
fourth , Mike Boyles ; fifth ,
Cheryl Mowery ; Ride and
run, first, Karl Suchoza ;
second, Darren Hayes; third,
Charles Knopp ; fourth, B. J .
Hunt; fifth. Cheryl Mower_y;
Four corner · stakes, first,
Mike Boyles ; second, Darren
Hayes; third, B. J . Hunt;
fourth , Elise Meier; fiftl!.
Brett Jones; Pole bending,
first , Brett Jones; second,
Mike Bowles; third, Tammy
Ward ; fourth , Cheryl Moery ;
fifth, Darren Hayes.

Carter gets good news, stiff
warning, another challenge
WASHINGTON (UPI)- President Carter has received
some good news, a stiff warning and another chaUenge
from the Senate.
.The good news came Thursday night when the Senate
approved maj&lt;r legislation sought by the administration
to streamline the federal Civil Service syatem and make it
easier l&lt;r the government to lire incoffipetent employees.
The bill, which Carter has called the "heart of our
governmental reorganiZation effort," was approved 87-1,
with Sen, Wi111am Scott, R-Va., casting the only no vote.
The warning came earlier Thursday. A group of
senat&lt;rs warned the administration a strategic arms
limitation agreement- no matter how good - might be
defeated if it reaches the Senate in any form other than as
a treaty.
The warning followed a statement by Paul Warnke,
director of the Arms Control and Disannament Agency,
that the administration was considering submitting an
anns limitation pact as an "executive agreement"
instead of as a treaty if agreement can be reached with
the Soviet Union.
At a joint news conference Thursday, nine senators,
running the gamut from conservative Republican to
liberal Democrat, offered alternative "bare bones"
natural gas legi~ation carrying presidential powers to
allocate gas supplies and curtail low-priority use during
emergencies.
The tar~et of dissent was compromise legislation

favored by the administration that would phase out
federal controls on the production price of natural gas by
1985, meanwhile putting gas sold in the stale of production
Wider leder.al controls.
The House-passed $16.3 billion in tax reductions came
under lire from both flanks Thursdqy - business!saying [t
doesn't cut deep enough, and a coll8umer !!roup
spokesman c&lt;BI!Plaining it cuts in the wrong places. ·
With the House not in session, the only other action in
Congress Thursday alSo was in the Senate;
~Pan American W&lt;rld Airways, seeking government
approval l&lt;r a tnerger with National Airlines, told the
Senate Aviation subc&lt;mmittee it will drOp some of its
!&lt;reign routes ne.:t month "in order to be businesslike and
profitable."
-Sen. John Stennis, 0-Miss., chairman of the Senate
Armed Services Coounittee, said he believes the Navy's
proposed settlement of shipbuilding .claims with General
Dynamics and Litton Industries will be approved by
Congress.
·
- An 'insurance adjuster who was part of a F1orida
"arson empire" told a Senate permanent investigations
subcorrunittee how ooe of his associates bought a house·
l&lt;r $50, got ~.000 in fire insurance and had the place
burned doWI! 45 days later.
-The Senate approved a fivl!year ~2.5 bi111on program
of federal aid to elementary and secondary schools after
refusing to kill experimental projects in teaching the
"three Rs" and several off-beat subjects.

Meigs County 4-H'er present at
'Acre-for Wildlife' dedication
Camp Ohio is one of live a deep interest in 4:-H and in
Ohio 4-H camps that will conservation," said Kottman.
incorporate the wildlife acre ·· Some of 'Evans' coninto its camping site. Other . tributions to Ohio 4-H ·include
camps that will set aside the sponsorship of conservation
acre are : Camp Palmer, reference materials, two $500
Fulton County;
Camp conservation scholarships to
Whitewood ,
Ashtabula 4:-H members, two quarter
County; Canter's ! Ca ve , horse foals to state 4-H horse
Jackson County ; and Camp winners, trophies for the Ohio
Graham, Clinton Corty.
State Fair 4-H Natural
While
Evans
was Resources Day and spon·
presenting the acre to Ohio 4- sorship of the annual 4·H
H, 4-H made a presentation to competitive trail ride. Mr.
him - The Buckeye Clover Evans is also a frl'(luent
Award. This is the highest purchaser of 4-H livestock at
honor given to supporters of the state fair and various
the Ohio 4-H program. The county fairs .
presentation was made by ·
Roy M. Kollman, dean of the
College of Agriculture, Home
Economics and Natural
Re.Ources , the Ohio State
University.
'
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
"Bob Evans has expressed
Highway Patrol, investigated
five accidents Thursday.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle crash
at II: 45 p.m. on CR 40, one(Continued from Poll• I )
It contained demands for the release of Sirhan, Hess, four tenth of a mile south of SR
Germans - some of whom were not even in jail - and the five 141.
According to the patrol, an
Croatians, Zvonko Buzic, his wife Julienne, Frane Pesut, Mark
auto
driven by Ronald Smith,
Vlasic and Petar Metavik.
23,
Gallipolis,
went left of
The Croatians are serving terms of up to life for air piracy in
center,
and
ran
oil the left
the Sept. 10,1976 hijack of a TWA plane from Chicago to Paris.
side
of
the
roadway,
striking
The policeman was killed when he tried to defuse a bomb they
a
paper
tube
and
a
culvert.
left in a locker at New York 'sGrand Central Station.
The
vehicle
was
demolished.
The hijackers demanded that Hess, sole remaining prisoner
Smith and a passenger,
in the fouri&gt;ower Spandau prison in West Germany, be floWI!
to Geneva and, reunited here with his wile Jlse. She, their son, Dean L. Reese, 22 , Rio
and one of Hess's lawyers were then to come to the airplane Grande, displayed visible
and swear on oath t:!iat they bad seen Hess. The demand even signs of injury, but were not
immediately treated.
gave the text, in German, of the oath they were to take.
No citation was issued.
The plane landed at 8:25 a .m. (3:25 EDT), almost exactly
The
patrol investigated a
nine hours before the hijacke~s· deadline.
two-auto
accident at 5:35
They offered to free "all children under 18 and their
p.m.
on
SR
218, at milepost 8.
mothers" along with female crew members at 5 p.m. (noon
Officers
report
that a north
EDT) provided "no one has attempted to break into the
bound
.
vehicle
operated
by
plane." They said two ~d Cross representatives must go
Sherman
McQuire,
32,
aboard.
Swiss officials said the 19-page document was muddied and Gallipolis, went left of center
coofused. It claimed "the United States is led by a bunch of in a curve, striking a south
bound auto driven by Everett
Zionists" and threatened :
McCloud,
42, Chesapeake.
" ln tbe fublre we will blow up American passenger planes by
The
McQuire
auto incurred
using our combination bombs without warning."
moderate damage. There
was slight damage to the
McCloud auto .
McQuire was cited on
charges of DWI .
At 4 p.m., officers were

Tammie Starcher ,
daughter of ' Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Starch~~~ Pine Grove,
was among 1~ Ohio 4-H' ers
present for Bob Evans' "Acre
- For - Wildlife" dedication
at Camp Ohio, Utica. The
ceremony took place during
State Conservation Camp.
In sponsoring the acre for
wild animals and birds,
Evans hopes to promot e
conservation ed uca tion
among Ohio 4-H'ers about the
habits of wildlife. The "Acre
- For - Wildlife" includes
wildlife attraction plantings,
consisting of types of shrubs
and plants that will provide
natural food for birds and
animals. A source of water is
located on the acre, along
with a bird blind that will
enable 4-H'ers to observe
birds without disturbing
them.

I

I

ATTENTION:

I

EASTERN EAGLES' AND MEIGS MARAUDERS'
FOOTBALL FANS - STO~. IN THE POMERdY
NATIONAL BANK AND PICK UP YOUR I1 .
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE AND BUMPER STIC ER.
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy
nationa
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

cup.

""

The

event Ia being
by the Pomeroy
• Middleport Uono Club.
Last day of the event Is
Saturday. II II belag held
dally from 1 p.m. until
dart.
spo~~~ored

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

FREE SKIN TESTS
There will be free TB skin
tests Tuesday, Aug. 29 at the
Racine Fire House from 6:30
to 7;30 p.m. which will be
given by Jane. Brown, R.N.

rejected the contract offer,
the dispute be submitted to
bindmg arbitration, the
mechanilm foc solwla a&amp;ch
stalerDates under t.w.
It was Wlclear whether the
unions would or could
consider that alternative ·
under their constltulloos.

Public
•
meetmg
slated
A public meeting to appraise problems, needs and
trends in the use of Meigs
County soil and water
resources will be Tueaday,
August 29, at 7;30 p.m. at the
Meiga Branch ol the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.
building at 216 W. Main. St.,
Pomeroy.
Individuals and groups
concerned about use and
conservation of Meigs
County's natural resources
are urged to attend.
Comments from the·
meeting will be used to direct
the conservation programs of
the United States Depart·
ment of Agriculture. The
Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servation District and the Soil
Conservation Service are
sponsoring the meeting.

REUNION SUNDAY
The annual McElroy
reunion will be held Sunday
MEETING SET
at the Portland Park. A
EAST
MEIGS - All
basket dinner will be served
Eastern
High
School girls
at 12:30 p.m.
going out for volleyball this
year are to meet at 12 noon
Monday at the high school.
I Those
who are interested but
cannot attend the Monda:,:
meeting are asked to call the
pusiness meeting will also be school during the day Mon·
day and leave their names.
held.
Anyone needing more InFILE FOR DISSOLUTION
formation may call Ubby
Filing for dissolution of
Fisher, 949·2378; Jan • Cor·
done, 949-2449; Ullian Weese, marriage in Meig. County
949-2034 or Sue Beegle, 247· Common Pleas Court were
Wi111aln David Baker, Rt. 1,
2724.
Long Bottom, and Joyce Ann
Baker, same address; Ernest
J. Deeter, Rt. I, Long Bot·
tom, and Audelle M. Deeter,
NAMES OMl'ITED
8ame address.
The names of Don Snyder
and Danny Hysell were
PARENTSTOMEET
omitted from the list of
There will be a meeting of
Explorers of Post 230 who parents of kindergarten
assisted
the
Sheriff's . students of Eastern District
department during the Meigs at Tuppers Plains School
County Fair.
Aug . 29, 30 and 31.
Parents wUI be informed of
the time when youngsters will
be..'attending classes.
Students from the Chester
area will attend classes in the
slight damage. No citation morning and students from
the Tuppers Plains and
was issued.
Riverview
area will attend in
At 9:55p.m. part of the load
the
afternoon
.
carried on a tractor trailer
HYMN SlNG
opera~ed by Keith Hollon, 32,
Gran ville, 0., struck the top
An old fashioned hymn sing
of a b idge on SR 7, just south will be held at 7:30 p.m. 1
of milepost 16. No citation Sunday at the Pomeroy 1
was issued.
United Methodist Church . .
Individual and group num- '
bers will be featured. The
Veterau Memorial Iioapital public is invited.
Admitted - Wesley Allen,
SQUAD CALLED
Portland ; Ralph Shalri,
The Pomeroy Emergency
Syracuse; Hannah Van
Squad
was called to state St.
Meter , Long Bottom; George
at
l:39
p. m. Thursday lor
Warner, Pomeroy; Albert
Lola
Zwilling
who was taken
Heilman, Pomeroy ; Alma
to
Veterans
Memorial
Carnahan, Long Bottom ;.
Hospital
where
she was
Kyle WoodJ, Pomeroy; Lola
admitted.
Zwi111ng, Pomeroy.
Discharged
Patty
GRID PRACI'ICE SET
Hornsby, Clyde Johnson,
Meigs Junior High seventll
Charles Chalson, Bernice · and eighth grade football
Molden, John Gl)ftt, Roberta practice will begin Monday ,
Marshall, Myrtle Hayes, Aug. 28, from 6:30 to 8:30
Virginia Wyatt, Albert p.m. at the stadium In
Heilman.
Middleport.

Picnic, sWim party set by
.
Racine Baseball Association
RACINE - The Racine
Baseball Association will
hold a picnic and swimming
party Monday. ·
The picnic will be held at
5;30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Park and the swimming
party from 7 to 9 at London
Pool. Tee-ball, pee-wee, little,
pony and girls team mem·
bers and their coaches and
the families of participants
are invited.
Those attending are to take
a meat dish and another
covered dish as-well a8 their
own table service. A
beverage will be provided.
Suits are to be turned in·
during the evening. A

OSP logs· five accidents

Hijacker

Rent our money
for your new car.
Low cost. Easy terms.
Today's way to go.
Let's talk about
a money-savmg
Auto Loan.
Todayf

Wedaeoday's whlllera In
_the Hole·ln·Oae coat01l
bela&amp; beld at !be Pomeroy
Golf Couroe were, flnt and
third place, Bill CblldJ,
who on his lint shot came
'!'ithln two feel seven and
ooe-ball IDeheo ·"' the cup
aad oa hia third ahot came
within tllree leet ud ab:
lnchea. Secoad place weal
to BUI Hackett who came
within three feet aDd one
and one-lialf laches ol the

School bus
(Continued from PIM•I)
pupil management, safety
and emergency procedures,
first aid, transporting the
exceptional child, laws
pertaining to school bus
driving and two-way radio.
Those taking the course wiU
also be given actual n ·
perience in operating the
school bus.
All residents interested in
the program should contact
their local school auperin·
tendent who will pau along
the names ol the applicants to
Riebel who will set up the
required course for first time
driven. The course wlll be
·aet up on the bull of need and
lntereat. Wallbington County
Ia the flrat to have such a
course set up In the ninecow•tY area oerved.by Riebel.

called to the scene of a twovehicle mishap on SR 7, one
and one-tenth of a mile north
of Pomeroy , in Meigs County.
The patrol reports an auto
driven by Lewis Williams, 47,
Pomeroy, going north went
left of center, striking the
rear of a south bound tractor
trailer operated by Paul
Smith, 39, Vinton. The Williams auto incurred
severe damage. The Smith
vehicle incurred slight
damage.
There was no report of
injury, or of citation.The patrol Investigated a
two-vehicle mishap at 3:45
p.m., on U.S. 35, at milepost
17.

OfficeiiS report, ihe spare
tire from a tractor trailer
operated by Bruce Runyon,
20, Bidwell, fell striking an
auto driven by William
Howley, 53, Roanoke, Va.
Both vehicles incurre&lt;l

Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport busy place

i

A $14,888 REPAIR project · has recently been
completed at the GaUia-Meigs Regional Airport. The
Gallia C&lt;&gt;unty Board of Commissioners granted the
supplemental fundll tn the Airport Authority in April of

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE
BRINGS YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
Many savings throughout the store end the Warehouse on Mechanic
Street.
.
Special August prices on women's Winter Coats. little boys' leans,
Junior Slacks, Women's scarves. Men's 14 oz. Wrangler lttns, boys'
letns, Henes Knit Underwear for men end boys, Men's Rolf blllfold.fold. . .
'
Get ready for school now-the time is almost here.

Elberfelds In

were needed for the fa cility to conform tn Ff A, and Ohio
Department of Transportation regulations .

.

•
)

•

-~--. OVER 600 PRIVATELY owned aircraft currently
land at the Gallla-Melgs ~glonal Airport each ;~ear.
Airport facilities also aecommodate hundreds·of take-offs
and landings bY student pilots, as ~U u being ll5ed by
local industry and emergency health service providers.

BY LARRY EWING
GALUPOlJS ~ The Gallia • Meigs Regional Airport
Authority was established in 1967 by a joint resolution o[ the
Commissioners of both counties .
The airport authority was enacted, according to the
resolution,·to fulfill "the need for reasonable and adequate
airport landing facilities in Gallia and Meigs Counties, which
has bec'OIIle a pressing problem requiring immediate action ."
Ten years later, in 1977, the airport had grown to the point
of handling over 600 landings by private aircraft, as well as
several hundred takMifs and landings by student pilots.
Airport facilities also acc,mmodated over 40 helicopter
iandings in 1977.
The Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport - now a busy location

- is Used by Holzer Medical Center, The Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Service, and the Gallia County Volunteer
Squad to transport patients during emergency situations.
Airport facilities are also used by numerous local
businesses and coal COIJlpanies. The 4,QOO.foot runway will
accommodate aircraft up to the twin jet-&lt;engine, business plane
(biz-jet) .
In April of this year, Airport Authority President Larry
Beebe requested a supplemental appropriation, in the amount
of 114,888, from the Galli• County Board of Commissioners.
The additional funds were needed tn implement repairs and
unprovemenls at the airport needed tn conform to FAA, and
Ohio Department of Transportation regulations . .
Continued on page A-3 .

+

tmes
VOL. 13

NO. 30

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY. AUGUST 27, 1978

Bike Rodeo
today at
fairgrounds

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday lhrough Wednesday , fa ir
Monday with ttcattcred thundershowers
Tuesday and Wednesday . Warm and.

humid Monday and Tuesday wilh blghs

•

In the 80s and a low between 65 and 70.

Cooler Wednt!sday with hi gh temperatures In the 70s and lows betw t&gt;en
60 and 6~ .

•

POMEROY - Boy Power, Inc., "!ill
sponsor a Bike tlodeo at I p.m. today at the
ROck Springs Fairgrounds for young
people between the aRes ol five and 18.
Numerous racea and evenu will be
1118tured with~ races w include jumpo
8fld hairpin tUni!L Prizel will be aWarded
winners and racu will be held ,in age ·
groupo. A trophy wW bt awarded the in·
divldual accumulating the most poinll .
. during the day's events.
Gate .fee will be $1 and the first event
will be free . .All others will have a 'I entry
lee. Participants can enter as many events
as they wish.
All release .forms and entry forms
must be signed by the .legal parent or
guardian. The forms will be available at
the gate. Contestants are r"'Julred to wear ·
a.helmet, long sleeve shirts, long trousers
and leather shoes are preferred. Proceeds
go to Boy Scout Troop 249.
EMERGENCY FUNDS OKAYED
SOUTH SHORE, Ky. tUPI ) - Rep.
Carl Perkins, D-Ky., announced Friday
that Federal ~ranaportation Secretary
Brock Adams ha s approved emergency
fuhdirig enabling the repair of U. S.
Grant Bridge between South Shore and
Portsmouth , Ohio.
Perkins said the federal government
will pay 100 percent of the cost of repair of
the Grant Bridge. He said this will allow
the state of Ohi o, which owns the span, to
proceed with aU possible speed to repair
and reopen the bridge.
Joining Perkins in making the an·
nouncement was Rep. William Harsha of
. '
Oh1o.
· I

Gallia School
Board to meet
GALLIPOIJS - there will be a
•special meeting of ·the GaU\a County Local
Board of Education Tuesday, Aug . 29, at
8:30p.m., in the Superintendent's Office,
'· 220 Jackson Pike. ·
Agenda items inciu~ employment of
certificated and classified personnel ;
acceptance of resignations of certificated
· and classified personnel; consideration of
architects for the building program;
consideration of pupil immunization ; and,
other pertinent matters that ma y come

before the board.
CAHOON BRIDGE is pictured as it was 38 years ago . The bridge was.one of 20
covered bridges still standing Aug . 1, 1940, in Gallia County. Cahoon Bridge
spanned Little Raccoon Creek in Huntington Twp. Sixtv.four feet lo112. it was on
(Alai Valley Rd. Tlmea-se•lael News Photographer Larry Ewing copied this
ptcture from the Gallia CoWlty Cornmi.!sioners' journal, and he copied seven other
covered-bridge photographs from the journal. These seven will be found oo Page
A-2 today.
·

GALLIPOLIS - Tuesday, Au&amp;. 2!1,

:~!~:~r~~~·y·:~:~::o:.~~~~·fo:b~~

cbarae• against Oaalel E. Clay, 19,
Lower River Road, aad Kwtla Douglas
· Lemley, 20, Kerr, by Judge James A.
Beanett In GallipoUo Mulllclpal Court,

Two Rutland youths

in cycle crash

•' GAUJPOlJS. - Two Rutland youths
were injured in a motorcycle accident
Friday, at 2;:10 p.m.,.on CR 16, in Rutland.
The Gallla-Meiga Post Highway Patrol
teporta a motoreycle operated by Dwaine
McDaniels, 18, Rutland, overtu111ed when
.~ front wheel lc¥:1tod.
McDaniels, and a pauenger, Michael
flannon •. 1~, Rutland, di*Played vlalble
aigns ol inJury and were taken by
SEOEMS to Veteran~ Memorial Hospital.
Hannon waa treated and admitted.
Hannoll Is lilted In -Y utlafactory

radio and antenna were installed to replace the 30 year old
unit which had been used. The new communication

equipment is designed to provide a safer and more
reliable relay of messages between pi,lots and the
terminaL Pic!ured above is airport manager Ed Atkins.

tntittt
MIDDLEPORT POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Controversy
to be aired
.

lh&lt;tt written st:aiements from the- publil·
will ·be re...:eivt!d by Huntington District
through Sept. !i.
·
II feature of a special mc'eting Aug. 14
was i:l. petition prutesiing the facility and

CROWN CITY- A public meeting will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Crown City
village hall to discuss the proposed
c-oalloading facility south of the village.
This announf...-etnent was the outgrowth
of a specia l meeting of Crown City Council
Friday night, when Cvuncil rescindc'li an

signed by 138 dtlzcns .

Crown Coal Company has filed an appli cation with the Corps of Engineers for
Village Solicitor Warren ~-- Shcels advised approval of the facility, mooring cells of
against zoning ; he pointed out that it was which will be located along 2,200 feet of
not feasible and extremely expensive, and riverfront.
Warren Sheels told Council Friday night
Council accepted hi&gt; advice. .

.Aug. 3 resolution to zon ~ the village.

U~t it COUld adopt &lt;:Hl ordinance governing.
traffic, such as speed and weight of .

Everybody in Crown City and environs is

invited to Monday ni ght'_s public meeting
to present both sides of a controversy vehicles, on the strec~ ~md alleys of Crown
precipitated by tbe project of Crown Coal City. He emphasized that a village or·
Co ..of Proctorville to develop the faci lity dinan..:e would have no effed on sU::t te
on the Ohio River bcmk just below Crown ltighways.
City on 34 acres in Lawrcnec County to

handle 18,(100 tons uf coal 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
daily except Sunday .
Attending Monday night, in addition to

Temporary

HEAVY FIGHTING
BEIRUT, Leban on (UPf )-Heavy residents , will be the two men from the U.
fighting erupted in the hills north of Beirut S. Anny Corps of Engineers, Huntington
again Saturday between Syrian peace· District, who attended Friday night's
keeping troops backed by tanks and heavy speciitl meeting of the Crown City CounciL
There were 35 or 40 peopl e at Friday
artillery and Christian militiamen who
night's
special meeting 111 village hall, who
ambushed the Syrians on friday . ·
learned from the Corps of Enginee'" men

• •
•
IDJUDCtiOn

is issued

!UM$:=~~":::'*"* Chessie

Friday.
CITY COMMlSSION MEETS
Clay aad Lemley are belq charged
GALLIPOLIS - There will be a •:·In co"''ecllon with the Thursday,
special meeting of thO Gallipolis City
midnight, armed robbery of the Bonded
Commission at8 p.m., Tuesday, Aug . :19, in Oil Stallon, Second Ave.
the Municipal Court Room.
.Bond was set at '10,000 each· by
' The agenda in cludes the second Judge Benoelt.
'l'l'ading of the Ohio Valley Bank ~zoning.

~urt

NEW RADIO, ANTENNA - As a part of the
improvement and repair program at Ute airport, a new

.;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

.:;:~:;:;~~=~=~:r~=~=~:~=~=~=~=~:~=~=~:;:;:~=~=~=tt~:~=~i~:;:;:~:;:;:;t:~:~:tt~=~:~:~:::·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

this year \o finance the repairs and improvements, which

Randy L. McGuire, 19, Crown City, just as
the McGuire vehicle starte~ to pass
another auto .
The McGuire auto puUed into the side
of the Woodyard vehicle.
Officers report severe damage to the
Woodyard auto, slight damage to the
McGuirt vehicle. McGuire was cited on
· Charges of changing lanes without caution.
The patrol was called to the scene ol a
two-auto mishap Friday, at 12:42 p.m., on ·
SR 7, jUII north of mUepoat 29. . •
· Officers uld a· vfblcle operated by
c!OndiUon.
·
Carol A. Serugg1, 22, Cheshire, was
" McO.nlell was treated and relelaed. · ~~topped in traffic on 7.
·
Mcll!lnlels lraa cited an charg'" ol
An auto driven by Charles Gerard, 30.
epentinl a motor vehicle without a Middleport, failed to stop and !llruck the
llc:enM.
.
Seruga vehicle In the rear.
Ollletn lnveotlpted a two-.~uto aeThe patrol reports moderate dama ge
ddelll at • p.m., Friday on SR 218, two- to the Scruggs auto slight damage to the
tllltha of a mile nortb af CR 31.
·Gerard vehicle.
'
·• Aecardlnl to tbi patrol, • vehicle
Gerard was cited on charges of
.dri* bJ Walter Wood)'lrd, 30, Columblia, asaured clear distinct .
attempted to paaa an auto operated by

System
postpon
' e's mack
a ban don ment

WASHINGTON (UPil - U. S. District
Court Judge John Pratt Saturday issued a
Sl.•x-day temporary . injunction against a
nationwide postal strike that was to have
begun as early as Monday .

"We just signed that order," Pratt told
UP! from his home, where lawyers for the
two biggest of the four postal unions and
the U. S. Postal Service gathered in
midafternoon . " It enjoins any strikes or
concerted work S\oppage or slowdown and
requires union officials to send out notices
telling members to comply 1 " he said.
The order expires next Friday, he

·

·

POMEROY - George Arnott, secretary
of the Meigs County Rail Service Conunittee, says that tho! Ches;;ie System will ron·
tinue operating about 75 miles of track between Logan and Pomeroy for another 12

for ~cnerators , the Huntington paper
quoted Russ - Baker, assistant plant
manager. The blades arc too bi g t.o be shipped by truck
The newspaper also said that Keener
months despite an abandon,ment urder
Sand
and Gravel at Kerr dubbed the abanfrom the lnterstaw Cvmmerce Commisdonment last year as fataL Russ aiso wrote
sion.
Reason assigned £or tht! contihuance o£ that Thelma Elliott, Gallipolis Chamber of
ooe year is that Gallia County's Gavin . Commerce, welcomed the postponement,
Power Plant depends upon the line for sup- but ""id "!think it's a hopeless case" after
the year's reprieve . Absence of the line
plies.
c'l!uld
deter irdustrial growth. she told
Amott is quoted by Jim' Ross in the Hun·
tington HeraldDispatch as saying that Ross.
·.Chessie hits entered into an agreement

with the American Electric Power Co. to
continue tho! line for a year.
AEP owns Ohio Power. which operates
the Gavin Plant.
Two week.• ago the ICC upheld a ruling
by the Atlmlnistrative Law Judge allowing
fur abandonment by the Chc,.,peuke and
Ohio Railway Co. of the Pomeroy Branch
18.14 miles between Old Town and Creola,
between Dundas and Gallipolis 36.04 miles,
between Gallipolill and Pomeroy 17.87
miles, and at Pomeroy 3.05 miles.
·
Gavin

Plant ret-eivc.s shipn~ent:; of

INJURED IN WRECK
POMEROY - Patricia McCuugle, no
address given, wa1 treated and rele~ at
Veterans Memorial Hospital following a
traffic accident on ltoute 7, two miles
north of the Bcacun Service Station, in
Meigs County. slit was ta~en to the
hospital uy Pomeroy Emergency Squad-

men .

said, and holds the unions and their
presidents legally responsible for ensuring
the mail will continue to be delivered.

dllorine, sulruric acid,· and turbine blades

Governors vow
to cut taxes
~

BOSTON I UPI) - The nation's
governors, gathering for their late
summer meeting, believe the nationwide
tax revolt is here to stay - so they're
taking steps to cut taxes and alate
..,ending.
Surveyed by UPJ on the eve of the
meeting, the governocs agreed there Is a
tax revolt sweeping the Illilion. All but ooe
nf the 50 governors responded to the
survey . ·
Goveni&lt;rs from smaller states, moot in
the south, said thetr flllrly low tax rates
have kept the revolt !rqm hitting them. But
even they uid they wt!re looking lor area•
to cut government COlla.
"The tax revolt has been with 111 f&lt;r :m
years and I doo ~ ellpeCI It to dllappear,"
said Gov. Michael Duluikil, 0-Maas.

There was no immediate response
from the unions .

A nationwide walkout would force the
Postal Service to use federal troops to keep
the mail moving .
The sudden labor strife in the postal
industry was triggered Friday when two
more unions - the 280,0QO.rnember American Postal Workers Union and the 40,()00.
member
National
Post
Office
Mailhandlers :_ announced their rank and
file had rejected a proposed three year
contract .
Earlier in the week, the IOO,OQO.rnember
National Association of Letter Carriers
announced it had rejected the pact.
But th e Postal Service showed no signs
of buckling to union demands that it
reopen con tract negotiations. Instead the
COLLECTOR- Nltk BUlb, ll, oon
service
sought a federal court order to
ol Mn. Celeste 111t1~, S. Third Ave.,
restrain
the unions from going on strike.
Middleport, Is piclured willo bls com·
With attorneys for the two largest unions
pleted colle&lt;lon series - 100 In all - of
present, U.S. District Judge John Pratt
Royal Crown Boltlln&amp; Co. c...
feaiurlag plclureo of profuslooal · tnld attorneys for the Postal Service and
the Justice Department: . "I am not going
baseball players. A S.nllnel carrier,
to grant a tempocary ·(IO day) restraining
Nick Ia a colleclor of all of the .coUector
eau llaued by the company and - order now . U there is l!le slightest
indication the talks are breaklnK down
rumma1e• about baD fields, billl!o
over the weekelld, 1 Will not delay granting
game locations alld otber places where
a temporary ·restraining order."
10ft drinks are eouumed In ordet to cet
Postmaster General William &amp;lger,
dlffere•t l11ueo. Frletlda aDd relallves
eonoumtng an R. C. product also save . who was vacationing in New England, has
shown no inclination to bend from hil
lhe tau lor Nitk. Nl&lt;k hu last year's
position that any union rejection of the
bueballaad football aeries- althouKh
proposed 19.5 percent wage and cost-&lt;&gt;f·
..t qulle complete - alld Ia also
Uving incr...., sp"""d ovm- three years
Cllrreatly werltlq on lhe "Happy
must be followed by binding arbitration.
Days" aeries.

.,
I

�-·--- ..... . . . . _

.-

-----

•

•

'

A·2- Tfl4, Sunday Times-&amp;ntirw:l, Sunday, Aug. ?:1, 1978

•

Covered bridges zn Gallia once numbered 100

:; Prison. guard
· face~ charges

-

HARRISBURG BRIDGE acrll!IS Raet:oon Creek on SR.
:;;.t ; this covered bridge was 120 feet long.

WOODRUFF BRIOOE on SR 325 (Rio Grande-Vinton
Rd.) in Huntington Twp.; 80 feet loog across Uttle Rae·
c'txm Creek.
•

J . L. W. EVANS' bridge over Symmes Creek in Greenfield Twp. ; 76 feet long.

ASHBY BRIDGE across S!rong's Run in HuntingtOn
Twp. ; 58 feellong.

• •

By J ; Sherman Porter

Once upon a time there were 100 cov.ered
bridges in Gallia County, bUt time and
weather and the invention of the automobile
eroded that number io 20 in 1940. Today, in
1978, there are no covered b~dges in Gallia

-446-3353
COVERED BRIDGE on Oliver White Rd. in Springfield
Twp. near the home of Brooksie Rife. The span was 64 feet
long.

PWA

Ynl We are most proud. to aMOunced thet :
Penny '-""Y Hynll II now IIIOCiitwd With OUr' Ulorl.
She invite• you hi ttDP In lncl 1M Mr only fOr rfttH.
utre tPtcltls whtn accomSNnled by 1 _copy of "''' 1d.

$5.50 Val~.

Prof...ionel. Creetive 1nd
SHAMPOO l SET

n;itin9

l ·"

US. Voluo. Hliono Curti1 BOdy lor Mon :_or_
U~IPERM

IS·"
Wo'•• Eiot Slylol
WALK

IN; WELCOME

'o1tatttW~
LIIIG SALOII

RIVER·

CRUISES

County, and few in Ohio.
The Commissioners' journal in the court
house has three "double-spread" sets. of
pages of photographs of the 20 covered
bridges still in use here as of Aug.1, 1940.
Typewritten, there's a warning in the
journal : "These photographs are the property of Gallia County and are never to be
removed from this journal."
The typewritten message goes on to say
that "they,are of all the covered bridges in
. Gallia County standing on Aug. 1, .1940. Most
of these bridges were built about the time of
the Civil War, and at one·time this county
had about 100 of these covered bridges."
Ti,w•·SPntim•l Reporter Larry Ewing,
news photographer, called prophetic the
next statement: "They served their purpose well for the horse and buggy days but
with modern transportation they began to
fail to carry the loads and are lleing rapidly
replaced with steel structures."
"These photographs were taken by Emmett D. Keeler, county auditor." And the
pictures in 1978-pictures of pictures - were
made by Larry Ewing. Signatures typed into the journal were George P. Ewing (no
kin ), Dan Jones' and Jerry Grover, county
commissioners, and E. N. Leonard, county
engineer.
Another picture is on the front page today.

ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY EIGiiT feet long was
this eovered bridge in Green Twp. at the home of Frank
Woods. It crossed Raccoon Creek on SR 775 (the MudsocLecta Rd.).

TOM .JENKINS' bridge at the forks of Vernon Woods
and Symmes Creek Rd. at the home oi Cl!arles Steger in
Perry Twp. Sixty-four feet long, it crosses Symines Creek.

•

END OF MONTH SALE

•
••

•
•
•

DOWNTOWN STORE
341 2nd A. VENUE
SUNDAY thru SAT.
AUG. 27 • SEPT. 2

•
•

1M% Polyester

DIUBLEINDS
VALUES
TO
'1.97
Choote ' - " our t.v.ly
al ..... anil
fanct•. w-1 lor oulta,

...

coll~ion

-.-~~­
wash.
All on full bolta.
60"wlde.

REG. -'10J8
!-bUt1on conrrol LEO wllh hourml nute-second-month-dot•
readput. Lightwe11Jhl super
COMI.

0

Juvenile charged
GATEWAY WPPER FLEET

Sunday Timcs~cntincl

Sailing from Gallipolis on
St!ptember 1' 2-3-4-S and 8
Boarding From the River Front Park

l 'llblis lwd t'\'l' l)

NOCTURN RIVER CRUISE

ONLY 1l.50 per person

·

CAPfS. DINNER DANCE CRUISE

.J5t0: 11 .
f';Hd at { ;&lt;i ll l!lohs, Oluu

&gt;tS!kll

THE UAIL.V s~:N:rtNEL
11 1 Cuurt Sl. , Pulllt'ruy, U. 4!J76~ .
,f'uhllslk•d '' \'cry lltll ' lc'k day t' \'t'll i ll ~

t:xn •pt Sat1rU-. y. F:nl(•rct.l

a~

sc_"':utJ(I

Jl'llllllh

Mit. II.

Board 7,30 p.m .- Soil a, oo p.m. to 12,00 Midnight
I · Cruise Includes Hour Cruise (apt . •s Buffet Dinner

pelSOR

SUNDAY, SEPT. 3

GALLIPOLIS TO CHARLESTON

SUB..~IUP'I'ION

IIATES
Cial hptJII!&gt; Dai l)' Trilmnt• H t
Ouu aru.l Wc!lt Virl(lzua utM' year
$tl .00: SiN 11\UIIl/ lS $11 .50 ; l hl't'l' I 110 11·
U1 ~ $7,00. E [...;t.~ W [H'I'f' $2ii.OO per;. t•&lt;t r :
j MX munlhs $! ;tOO : th l' l!l ~ l l!m ltl ~
fl.lill : llltllur· mule s:J.:!!I munlhl)'.
1'h~·

The ll!iLly &amp;nlmd. ullt' )'t:iU'

Board 7:30a.m . S1il8 :001.m . to 3:00p.m.
Cruise Includes : 7 Hour Cruise Lo(k &amp; Dam Hot
Buffet Lunch
.
.
Bus Return to G~tllipolls Limited No. of tickets

ONLY 114.95

et.:~

l'bllis mathn K ll !&lt;lUcr a\ Pumt• ru\ .
Ohiu Pulit Offtt't! ,
•
, By t•arrlt•r thti iY anU Suntla} i !X:
per· WCt~ k . Mutlll' mUh' S:U :i pt.'l' ,

SATURDAY, SEPT. 2

Available.

GAI .l.IPUI.IS
OAII.V TRIRUNt:
Th1r r.l 1\ Vt· , ( iallipulh. Oh1 u

PIJ~ IU I!t'

Board , ,30 p.m .- Soii7 ,00 p.m. Ia 10 ,00 p.m .
Cruise Features 3 Hour Ev•nina Cruise SNck Blr

ONLY ·111.95 per

Tht'

Cu .•

I'U bli .~ I K..J c \lt'l ] ' on·dnlay o:\l cl l lll ~
cxl'l'PI Satu nlay. Sc•·u•Kl .('la s:.

FRIDAY. SEPT. I

Dancing

S u ml&lt;~ )' b)

Puh ll ~ hlli ~

.\1ullunct1\u , lrll'.

---CRUISE SCHEDULE---

Available.

V&lt;~ ll c }'

Olw

per person '

f12.110: S•x rnulllh.., Sll .:.O: tltn•emun ·
ths $i .00. f: LM·wht·n~ $26.00; !&gt;LX rnun·
Ut.!i$11.50 : thn.~ 11Ll11 Lths f1 .50 .

The Umtal Prt&gt;mi lnlcrnlumal 1s
c:cc·lu!&gt;i\'cly l'l" ltled tu the ust• for
JMlbiii.' Hlll~l uf .11.U IICW:S dbp;~\ l't lC:-,
l'I'L'titletl to tht· tll'WIIJWJM:=f Hml ulsu

tht·luc»lnews published l ll'I'I' UL.

MONDAY, SEPT. 4

•

It's for sure : one thing
heMith food definitely has that
the run-of-the-grocery chow
doesn't is Jiigher price tags.

LABOR DAY DANCE CRUISE
' ·-~
Snack Bar Ava il•ble

• •..

ONlY 4.(10 per person

· Volume, lone , balance
contr ols . Oust cover .
Headphone jock . Full
size re cor d changer .

7 PC. SWIRL

....,....am
Rte.'iAr
10.18

1

.

BEVERAGE
SET

9

94
riAvi1

L2!J

PITCHER
6 GLASSES

•300

REG.

'2.99

TUESDAY, SEPT. S

GALLIPOLIS TO PARKERSBURG

COWOIIOUND

Boord 7,30 a .m. - Soi" ' oo o.m. ta , ,oo p.m.
Cruise Include" 10 Hour CruiH Hot hffol Lunch
Cipt.'s Buffet Dinner

Twa Locks,&amp; Oam Bus Return Ia Gallipolis

ONLY '26.50

per

DAVE &amp; SUG AR

person

111d the PRIOESMEN

FRIDAY, S'EPT. 8

GAU.IPOLIS TO MARIETTA
, ,oo

Boord 7,ioo .m .- Salla ,ooo .m: to
p.m.
Crul11 Include" 10 Hour Cruill Hot Bufftl Lunch
Co pl.'s Buffet Dinner ·
'
Twa Locks &amp; Doms Bus Return Ia Gallipolis

. ONLY '26.50 per person . .
Rts~rvations required on CruiHs 2, J, 5

&amp; 6.

M.u

Orders octopled . S.nd chock or monoy order IHYOblo
to Gateway CllpiHr Flttlllld endo11 1 Jlomped solfedclruMCI on•tlopt with your ordtr. PIHse spodly
Cruise ond Oale. Send To '
Galewlly Clipper Fleet-1 Wood St., PltllbvJb, I'll.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23 - 8:00 _
, .M.
HUNTINGTON. CIVIC C£NTER
S7 .so, $6 .50, $5.50 (lax Included)
Moil Orders Filled Promptl~ .,.. by .sondlne certified
chock or postal money order to Huntington Civic
Center, P. 0 . Box 2767, Hunllngltln; WV 25727. PIHII
trlclase self-oddr11MCI, stomped envelope with 2Sc for
hlndiing .
FOR MATEII CHARGE RESERVATIONS, CALL

11041 · - -

,

BEN ROUSH, JR.

Wahama grad
:wins
WVU
•
~ scholarship
•
: LETART - Benjamin F.
:Roush, Jr., son of Mr. and
• Mrs. Ben F.' Roush , Sr.,
• Letart, has been notified [hat
: he is the recipient of the West
: Virginia University _Alumni
· Loyalt -y Endowment
: Scholarship. The award is
~ given annually by fonner
: graduates or WVU to a
.. s l~dent of outstanding
• promise of achievement.
: Roush, a graduate of
: wahama HighSchool,has been
:active in ' the FFA Serving a
: president of the local chapter
: 1976·77. He was recently
: elected vice-president of the
: Southwestern District of the
• W.Va. State FFA at Jackaon's
: Mill. While at Jackson's Mill,
: Roush received a $100 award
~ along with a trip to the
; national convention next year
: In Kansas City for placing first
; in the stale In livestock
: judging.
• During high school Roush
: was a member of the debate
: team, wrestling team , Key
: Club and National Honor
: Society . He was also chosen as
: the Rotary Club's student of
: the month.
: Roush will be pursuing a
: major In political science
• while at WVU in anticipation
: of entering the Ia w field upon
: completion or his education.
•

SAVI NOW ON THIS
ROOMY POOT LOCKER
31"115lll"11214"
COVEI£D Ill SHEET
METAL WI1K IM£0
ENAMEl, FINISH

SAVE '2.00

A.,.,.,.,_
·1 2"

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

............ "·$.......
-

SAVE '16.00
UMl

~~~ _,..'9Y lhon htwq '&lt;60-

won . t..lbo. 70-paoiliOI\ "fqqal
f. oM" tuner. Aluminlaed pktvre

f\lbe for cleor. aharp picturtt.
loop and releteopic . ,......

'

•
•

Sy raeusc

l.ad1cs AuK!l!i tr y Will llc.Jtl :1
yil rd salt' Sa tunl&lt;• y . Sc•pl . '1. .

iJI 11 11' ~yr : w w. t · V1 n · S t;,I H•ll
1\ n y lol ll ' h : t ¥ 111~ rl ••l l&lt;llifo fl ,&lt;;

an·

\1 1

I

ii ll

~f(1 2- n rJI .

' '' l'l-2 4)!/

( !r

~ ~· 2 - 21i 11

I

.The World's Smallest Hi-Fi System.*

'

I

SIGNS ltjSTALLED - To'aid transient pilots in runway identification, a number of
signs were installed at th e Gallia-Me_igs Regional Airport. Pictured above are airport
manager Ed Atkins, and Regional Airport Authority President Larry Beebe.

Gallia-Meigs Airport
Continued from page .A-1

m tne orogmal agreement between Meigs and Gallia, state
monies granted to both counties were merged to construct the
airport facility. Gallia County owns, or leases, the land upon
which the airport is located, and is responsible for the
maintenance and operation of the facilily.
•
The s_uppl0111ental appropriation was approved in April,
and the unprovements to the airport have recently been
com,-~;Ieted .
·.
e runway_ was repainted to reflect a " non11recision"
\flSirumenl approach onto runway 23. ·The holding lines were
repainted and taxi-way markings were added. All paint used
on the runway contains reflective glass beads to aid pilots
durmg take-off and landing .at night.
A new radio transceiver and antenna 11ere purchased and
inStalled, at a cost of $975, to replace the 3().year old unit which
h;ld been used. The new radio equipment should result in safer
and more reliable communication between the airport
terminal and in-flight aircraft.
New bi-colored runway threshold lights were installed .
The lights, with bi-colored lenses, inform pilots of the runway
limits from either direction of approach.
.
. !To accommodste the growing number or those using the
atrport , a paved parking lot was installed. Larry Beebe reports
that over two dozen individuals CIUTenlly maintain private
airplanes in the Gallla-Meigs area. ·
. Further improvements included the installation or signs to
atd tra~stent pilots in runway identification, and the filling of
lTacks m the pavement of the runway.
. Improvements to the airport building included the
installatton of. a water softener and drinking fountain, as well
as, the rerouting of drainage downspouts, away !rom the
building.
The Gallia-Melgs Regional Airport ~uthority is comprised
of ~ven members - four from Gallia COunty, and three fr om
Metgs.
' GaUia cqunty members are Larry Beebe, Ernie
Thompson, Un Young, and· Eldon Wuerch: Representing
Metgs county are Franklin Rizer, Bill Childs and Ray Pickens.

If you wo ul d like to enjoy a roomful of mu sic
wilhoul a roomful of gadge try, l he Advent FM
R a d1o (t he Model 400 ) is th e thing to see and
hea!. Jt is a ~ imp le . iql_o h t nr ~ i v e monop honi c FM
ra cho tha t fill s a room wilh spaeious, detailed.
wid e-r a nge l:l ound . An am az in g a mo unt a nd
qualit y of so und .
The Ad v ~ n t F1\tl radio L' Ome s in t w~ pieces.
Yqu cnn put th e coni rol sect ion whe re i t' ~ easies t
to '!PCrnt e , a nd the :-; pcak er where it :-;ounds hest.

THE SUPPLEMENTAL

appropriation granted by
the Gallla County Board of
Comm,issioners allowed for

Rol h are so smnll t.ha t t hey fit a lmost· Hn vwhere .
I t :-~ F \tl rece J.lt- ion is a s good a s com-pon ent
receivers of far g-rcnter cos t . And in add it ion to
li stening to h ro a ch.'n ~ts. yo u ca n plu g in a cassett e or ot he r t apl! ref'n rdcr to make and pla v
record ings.
· It i ~ t h e s i mpl e~ t.l eil ti l expen :-; i,·c way we kno w
o f 10 fill a roo m wit h beau ti full y rr pro d ueed
music.
Come in and hea r it for yo ur ~ c lf .

the runway to be repainted
to reflect a " non-precision"

instrument approach. The
holding

lines·

were

repainted and taxi-way
markings were added. All
paint

used

co ntain s

renecllve ~lass beads to
old pilots dut log night takeoffs and landings.

243 T h ird Aven'ue .

~

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

"O ur th nn k;o t n _Te ch lh fL . o r i ilm ll t fl r o f (HLr h .. 1u.l l inc . An d t o Renia nu n a nd Thom a ~

•

•

0 A d~· cnl

Co q Jo r n t1 &lt;' n , \' •iii

t

'

.J
.,

.

MilliS'
SIDS.

·
For Your

'

'

A juvenile was arrested
and charged with grand
larceny Friday by the Gallia
County Sheriff's Department.
The youth was Incarcerated following the
breaking and enterin~ of the
Merrill Watkins home,
Bulaville Rd., Friday.
The incomplete report
states, jewelry, · valued at
approximately $3,000, was
taken during the breaking
and entering.
·
In further action, Steven
l!etz, Brick School Rd.,
reported to the department
Friday that the window of his
auto, which had been parked
on the south side of the f!onda
Shop, SR 7, had been broken
out.
Damage to the vehicle was
set at $200.

Board a,Jo p.m . Soil7 ,oo p.m. to 11 ,oo p.m.
Cruise Features : O.ndng Music by ttMry Lucas end
Friends
4 hour Cruise
Enjoyment

SUPIR
DISCOUNT
NOWI

.,

~

•

SYHA CUSE

into the · prison,

according to the Ohio
Qepartment of Rehabilitation
and Correclion .
.
The suspect, arrested as h'e
I . arrived !or work on the first
shirt, wa s identified as
Mondell Wadsworth, 25, of
Columbus.
,
George F. Denton, director
or the department. said
Wadsworth was sea rched on
a tip,_and was round to have
two rolls of marijuana in a
lunchbox and a joint and a
half in a .cigarette pa ckage.
Wadsworth was booked at
\A&gt;lumbus city jail under a
new law forbidding the
conveyance of drugs into a
stale institution.
Denton said drug traffic
control is improving at the
state institutions . " While
some drug abuse is a prob!eQl
in a ll penal in stitutions
around the country. we do not
feel drugs are running
rampant in Ohio's prisons as
suggested by some," he said.

Phone 'No.

. SILVER BRIDGE

\' AKil SALt: SET

· .

COLUMBUS iUPII - A
guard
at
Col umbu s
Correctional Facility wa s
arrested Friday lor allegedly
auempting lo smugg le
narcoti~s

None left.

.•·

. .·'"A.J- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sqnuar, Aug . 27, lil78

fr_

-.- ~

I

i .

..

GALLIA COUNTY
DISTRICT LIBRARY
• New books released August
: 24, 1978 : .
•
Fiction
: Flappers &amp; Philosophers.
: Francis Fitzgerald; Study
: War No More, Joe Halder•
• man, ed.; Cassandra Rising ,
: Alice Laurance; Trey of
: Swords , Andre Nortorl; •
: Sisters and Strangers, Helen
=VanSlyke; The Hunters, Burt
- Wetanson ; Dave Sulkin
: Cares !, Fletcher Knebel.
:
.
Non·FictlOD
• A Time lor Truth, WiUiam ·
• Simon ; Guilty Until Proven
: Innocent, Donald Connery;
: How to Do. Your Own Bank·
~ ruptcy, Aaron Milberg; Hear
: (he Children Crying, Dale
• Evans Roge.rs; Anjlao, an
: American Indian Odyssey,
: Jamake Hlghwater; , The
: Real Food Cookbook, Ethel
• Renwick ; Macrame, Ann ·
: Steam~; Puppet Theatre- in
: Performance, Nancy Cole;
; The flarvard LampOOn Big
: Book of Collese Ufe, Steven
• G. Crill; Innocent Erendtra
: and Other Stories, Gabriel
;' 'Miorq~~e~; Convenatlona with
:,_Willie, Robin MaughND.

7 PIECE
Werfem Style Gtoup...

' '

AN UN REATA lUJ~

'

,,

'

'

•

VALUE!
All 7 Pieces Only

SOijiD PINE SOFA tut!'lf M;\TeH.ING ROCI(-I~R,
ARM CHAIR and OTTOMAN ;~;~E~A:;:~E
•

Here's a. ruggedly handsome group lhal'a iult great lor everyday living. The unique wood tri~ a~d smart wraparound belted arm treatment will bring you compliments from lrlends and family for years to come. The "Western"
Influence In slyllng combined with the sturdy 1 'I&gt; Pine c 0 nstructlon and the durable vinyl and contrasting Herculon
cove~lng make this set an unbeatable value. Beeuty .. . Quality .. . Comlort ... Durability!

'4

95

LARRY'S
THIRD &amp; OLIVE

WAYSIDE FURNITURE
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO '

• I

�....... . . . . ........
~

78 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS

SQUAD ANSWERS CALL
The
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to New St.
Friday afternoon for James
Hughes who was taken to
.Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Patriot,

(3Sl'.

dt~CUVt'rt"d

au im·h and a hall bulllrog

last Sunday, with seven
legs. The son of Lewis and
Sue Case. Ronnie slates
lhal he Is ' explorhig the
~sslblllly of re~rllog the
find lo the McGinnis Book
of World Records, ao4
Ripley's Believe It Or Not.
Kermit prohably woul~n't
believe II.

Holzer Medical Cenh•r
OiS&lt;•harges, August14
Orey Argabright: Dor·is
Barnhill : Vidor· Burgess:
r. Ja!l ys Cas to : Wrlliarn

~~~'up to 14%

2

JnSlltaiK'e

-

.. ., oolloiiii.YJ'WIIeiS'
. .

Col'hran ; P t.• arl
btty ;
Katherine Doles Amy F.lkins

: F.!lith Fields: l'hornas
Harper : Ga ry Hunt : Jac-

If your home is less than

quell nt.•

money. Find out how
much. call:
.

.Jones;

and

Mrs .

, _..t:a rs old', you may save ·

Cllar lt.•s

J.al hcy: Thelma l.ellch:
Mt·Ginrrrs: John Moka s: Mrs.
Ronald Mull irr s arui
tlaughtCI' : Mrs. Tim Ncllerl
anti· daughter : Lillian Pl·offiU : Lela Robinson: April
Smith : Erin Troike: Alvi~
Walloli
Births, August 14
Mr.

f POMEROY

CLOSED LABOR DAY
COLUMBUS - Director
Clifford E, Reich of the Ohio ;
Department Alf Liquor .
Control today announced that
ail state liquor stores,
agencies and departmental '
offi ces will be closed Monday,
September 4, a legal holiday •
for state employees.

Sl'EAKING UF' t'RIXi
lt•gs. 16 yea r·ol~ Ronnit•

Eastern bus routes
to stay about same ·

James

Guc::;er. a su11, Mitldlepurt
Mr. and Mrs. I .c~wr~ncr
Wood, a son. Ga llipolis
Mr and MRs Stephen
Stout, a son, Bidwell
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Call ,
a .sun, KcrT

Mr. and Mr·s. Robert Harrison, a son. Crown City
Mr. arrd MRs. Anthony Car-

•

tlillo, a son, l.arrgsvillc
Mr. a)rd Mrs. Durraltl Funk,
a sun . Ewingtun

Mr. and Mrs. Br·yan l.itdrfield , a sun, Hender·sun
(\lr and Mrs. Charles
Spenser·' a sun, Poirrt Plea·
~ nt ·

Mr. arrd Mrs. Kenneth
Barnes, a sun, Gallipolis
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Carroll
Dodderer, Coolville: Michael
Harmon , Rutland; Donna
Rankin, Reedsville.
DISCHARGED - Gladys
Cuckler, Millia Hysell.

•

FINAL SUMMER
CLEARANCE!

I

I

••

Mike w1ger

50% -75%

9'12-7155
149 S. Third St.
Middleport, 0.
lr=~ Statt• Farm Fire

SUMMER MERCHANDI

---

•

and Cas ualty Com ·
Home Offire:

Bl&lt;xlmmgt.On, Illinois
p 788011

BIG

APPLIANCE

'

Ut

-...n

POMEROY LANDMARK

AT

WE'VE
DOUBLED
OUR APPLIANCE
STORE.

DISCOUNT PRICES

COME AND SEE•

GENERAL ELECTRIC

0

~SLOW

z

AS

n

'9995 .
•COLOR

"'"'...

•BLACK &amp;
WHITE

~

-.:z:..

·1N THE
perFormance
TELEVISION

...z

0 30" Self-c lean ing oven-range 0
Cloc k and automat ic oven fimer 0
Stay-up Calrod• surface units, 1·8"
size 0 Glass conlro l panel.

0 17 8 Cu . fl. re:rigerator-freezer 0
3 Adjustable cant rl eve r shelves 0
Energy Saver swin::h 0 2 Easy-Re lease'" 1ce trays 0 Twin vegetab le
crispers .
•

,

Ut

-,..."'.

n

Clarence E. ·Thompson, superintendent of the Gallia·
Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational District (Buckeye Hills
Career Center at RJo Grande), has a brother Homer, who built
the Ponderosa Steak House at Chlllit'Oihe and another at
Russell, Ky . The Homer Thompson family, quoth the Wellston
Sentry, has moved to Ironton, where he'll be running the
Bonanza, a competing steak house similar to the Ponderosa.
The Thompson ' son Steve lives in Ironton. Steve is a Miami U.
graduate in geology and petroleum.

'50 DISCOUNT

50 DISCOUNT

5

0 Delu xe 21.8 cu. II si de·by · side
ref rigeraiOr·freeze r 0 Conver lible
mea t cond itio ne r 0 4 Adju stab le
shelves 0 no -frosl 0 Rol l-out wheels.
Model CSF22EW

dish washe r, conve rts to a built -m when

ready S Power Sc rub• cycle D Normal
Energy Saver Dry cycle .

STYLE
NO. 375

WHOPPER DISCOUNTS

'

EXPANDED VINYL
RECLINERS
SAVE '34.88

HARI:MOOD· FRAME
WASHABU VINYL
UPHOLSTERY IN
.OR

$

·5

00

'50 DISCOUNT

...
1ft

:1111:

0 De luxe dryer wrth select io ns for
poly knr ts, delrcate . &amp; sturdy pe rma nenl -press 0 Sensr- Dry'" cycle C End ·
ol-cycl e s1 gna l Q Up -lron t l1n1 l11ter

n

"'
z

ALL SIZES

Model DLB21\54T

Ut

IN STOCK

s25 DISCOUNT
.

BEST BY
FAR ON
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
"

0 Deluxe 2 speed washer with Gentle
cycle for permanen t press and poly
· kn its 0 3 Water level selections 0 3
Wa sh -Rinse temoeralure selections.
Model WLW2330T

0 Large 1.3 cu . It caoacll't D Handsome
black glass front 0 Sol1d -state touch contro ls
0 4 Power level 's enmgs w 1 1 ~ ind icato r lights
0 Cooks la st by time or temperat ure .

.

525

DISCOUNT

'50 DISCOUNT

--·

----

COMPLETE LiNE IN STOCI&lt;

BIG DISCOUNTS

POMEROY LANDMARK

JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Servin&amp; Meip, Gala &amp; Mason Counties.
E. MAIN ,
'
POMEROY
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 - Mil Closes at 5 PM

181
•I

..

+hrl:p.oi.n±

g
f
...

,J

•

IQVAD CAu.ED
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Emersency
Squad wu caUed to Ill Front

St., at 10:117 a.m. Saturday for .
Mra. Dorothy Demolkey who
was taken to Vetera111
Memorial HOIPital.

SAVE
'39.81

Sony No
Layaway At
Sale Price

$

400
REG. '98.88

NTON' SWIVEL ROCKER
WITH DEEP CUSHIONS

, •HARDWOOD FRAME
•NO SAG SPRINGS
•HARDWOOD FRAME
•OYSTER COLOR FOR MOST DECORS
No. 346 HI BACK
SWIVEL ROCKER
•COLORS RUST

AND GREEN

00

$

REG.
'137

SAVE '59.88

. Panasonic "

".IUKIBOX"

$

94

!REGULAR 'M9.94l
• AMIFM stereo radio, S-trock tape
player and 3-speed record player
with Sound Response Psychedelic
lig&gt;ls •BSR changer with Cue/ Pause
control • Diamond sty! us • Stereo
" Duocone " audio system •, lucile

dust cover • 45 rpm adapter

MODEL
SE 3170

MODEL ·
TXL22205

PANASONIC

8 TRACK STEREO TAPE

QUALITY

94

•AM.fM RADIO
•AUTOMATIC RECORD CHANGER
•SIMULATED WOOD CABINET

REG.
1

SORRY NO LAYAWAYS AT SALE PRICE

The Gallipolis Area Chamber of Coounerce, "We do have

ooe you know."
,
Some people.l've talked with didn't even know Gallipolis
had a Chamber ol Commerce.
The staff Is com)lOIIed of Mrs. Thelma EWott,·Ezecutlve '
Secretary; Mrs. Jane Qualla, Alln. Secretary to Exec.
Secretary; Mr. John P. Rodel'llll, Executive Director of GMHA
the exira plus .~.
The Chamber of Commerce Is an IIIIOciation ol bualnesamen who promote the interests of its members and of buslnellll
In general. It works to Iring new lndunles in the area and our
cmununlly. AIIIO It's an information center for anyone in
search of a hoole, job, local points ol interest, recreation, etc .
The informatloo Is lree for the asking or a phone can away.
11 is there for the benefit of the people in our conununlty
and the surrounding areaa. I've heard . people lake the
Chamber oJ Commerce very lightly. Wen, you're wrong. Ilia
jll.lt Wte everyone elle. The Chamber's employees really w&lt;rk
hard It lakellime patience and devoted underaWldlng to do
aU the lhlnll• put ~ by the C of C and our RetaU Merchants.
And they are aU the time trying to "Improve" your city.
This Ia not Jllllllnl for any ooe penon but fer thc.e who
didn't know we had a Cll!lmber of Commerce, and )'011
know what It Ia for. .
.
Thank you l&lt;r llalenlnll. - Concerned Citizen. Ntme
Withheld.

HERCULON UPHOLSTERY .
NO SAG SPRING CONSTRUCTION
HARDWOOD TRIM

221NCH STIIIIO

0

'75 DISCOUNT

UNICO
FREEZERS

1ft

-.:z:..

Mod el HOB776

SUPER BUYS
ON I COMFORTABLE
SWIVEL ROCKERS
PATCHWORK ROCKER

.

z

1ft

Hememtier, that was 1911. An extremely neal and well·
wn tten pieee of family ltistory, 'it will certainly be a highlight
uf tuday's 1978 reunion in Chi llicothe.

STYLE
NO. 420

Ill

0 Deluxe 6 cycle po rtable polwasher

And indeed they have good memory ,
For they're the little tots,
Whu, as we toltl in our story,
Are the ball.s of Grandma Scott.

AT SALE PRICES

:lliJ

~

·.

·.

SORRY
NO lAYAWAYS

-

,...

••

SORRY NO lAYAWAYS
AT SALE PRICES
No. 356 Not Exact~ As P.i~ured

n
1ft

0

\

AUGUST 27th THRU
SEPTEMBER 2

,

n

•

SUN. thru. SAT•.

SORRY NO
lAYAWAY AT
SALE PRICE

z

&lt;..

7 DAYSI

Sony No Layaways
At Sale Price

M ode l RB 7.34T

•

0

..

END· OF·

Marjorie Gates' old clippings- An undated clipping in a
. scrapbook had this headline : "Community Plunged into Profound Grief by Sudden Demise." II was Judge R. J. Mauck.
The article read that the Judge was born May 17, 1870, and was
64 years old at death : therefore, we know that the year was
1934. He was adJTUtLed twthe bar in 1893, and was elected
mayor of Gallipolis in 1894, married Nelle Mulline.aux in 1895,
111111 their only child was a daughter, Helen; who married John
W. Galbreath. R&lt;&gt;~coe Jay Mauck was building and loan com·
missioner of Ohio, and the clipping ends there.
June 15, 1936, was the date ~fa clipping which read that John
Newton Kerr, 21, grocer on Lower Third Ave., drowned 100
yardoi below the head of Gallipolis Island. More than an hour
Drs. W. Lewis Brown and F. W. Shane directed resuscitation
efforts without success. John C. Steinbeck recovered the body
with the aid of a rowboat and fishline. ·

In between thost: verses, the story goes on. Miss Bryant tells
lithe ancestors in sUJUly North Carolina, where ~y were held
by "men as slaves in bondage- 0 , the horror and the shame!"
It was there that the three great families originated with
"three loving sisters ... Barbara, Caroline, and Luvinia, work-

n

I

•

Ill J, ·' ·1.111 f.'l . N .'f:iif.;

GALUPOLJS- Her.e 's a lip to pastors: to fill -your church
baptize a baby who has large families and multitudinous
friends . Last Sunday Jaye Timothy Epling, the son of Breland
Cindy Smith Epling, packed 'em in at the First United
Presbyterian Church.
Tbe Rev. Frank Hayes and the Rev. Tunt Hayes did the of·
. ficial honors, as they have done many times before, Frank tak·
· ing the infant down the aisle so that everybody could get a
close look, and vice versa. When he first took that walk with a
baby a couple of years ago, it was an innovation. This young
pastoral L'Duple has brought other innovationS to the
Presbyterian worship service.
LaslSunday there were a couple of items not seen before, at
least not in recent decades. One related to the ritual which
calls for a lay leader to ask the congregation if it will help lbe
parents In the Christian upbringing of the child, aqd the au·
dienL-e answers that it will. The novel aspect was the lay leader
who put the question; she was the grandmother, Barbara Epl·
ing,
Another item had no exclusive relation to the baptismal
c-eremony, but every Sunday there are greeters, usually two
people. This time there were six. The half-duzeri who shook
hands with the worshipers as they came into 'the sanctuary
were Lewis, Lisa, Laura, Catherine, Joan, and Dr. Lewis A.
Schmidt.

Then long live our own reunion,
And as long as time may last
May we ne'erforgel our loved ones
Though they've lived far in the past.
We will not forget the journey,
In the year of '44
When our Carolina fathers
Landed on Ohio's shore.
And whene'er the days of Autumn
Shall begin to hover near,
Let's remember our reunion
And meet in Chillicothe once a year

:1111:

Ut.

A Gallip&lt;)lis Diary

ing hanl .. .in the conr and in the cott11n." Jeff Stull " WOOl'ti Otarle:;Lon ar1U Puml Ptca!Utnt. They crossed the Uh.in HJVl'r
and won" Caroline. Will Mwnfor.l w&lt;·d Luvrma. and Rantl•ll into "their long souKhl for l~nd of Can" ""·" Mumford went on
Carter married Barbara.
to Oefi•ncc, but Stull anti Carter stayed.
It turned out that their master, oltl Jolur Hockiday, was
"generous good and kind, " and as he neared death he sent for
Of the twelve that look that journey
IW; labore.:S and told them to go and take their families to Ohio
All but two•relong, lung gone:
to "enjoy the life of the free." This epic poem traces therr
None are loft to tell the story
travels from North Carolina through the mountarns to
SutGr•ndma Long and Und~ John.

.And the last verse, 12lines long, reads this way :

0

,...

Peeps . .•

Once again through Heaven's kindness
We are spared to gather here,
At our family reunion
Held at Bidwell once a year.

AREA

TELEVISIONS

Ut

A~-The Sunday Timell-&amp;nlinel,Sunday, AuK. 27, 1978

Today (Sunday ) they 're having a family reunion · in .
Chillicothe. Likelihood is that there are several reunions in 1
Chillicothe, but there 's one in particular:
Nearly fiT years ago Edith Dove Bryant wrote a long rhymed
presentation to honor the &amp;'Ott, Carter, and Mumford families,
a novel manner of publicizing a famly reunion. It's neatly
printed under the Iitle, "A Memorial", and the cover r~ads
that the first edition was Sept. 2, 1911, With a second edition
June 10, 1969.
Miss Bryant was the aunt of Mrs. Beulah A. Johnson, 824
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.
·
Each verse is eight lines, with the rhymes coming .at the
ends of the' even-nwnbered lines. Here are the first four lmes:

LARGEST
STOCK OF
APPLIANCES

SERVICE AFTER THE SALE

:lliJ

,.

•

bound fm· Tuppers Plains om!
Eastern. This year she will
trave~to the Fire Tu11·er H11ad
where she will tum on to and
proceed to Success Road.
Mrs. Satterfield will continue
on Success Road until she
arrives at ·the old Catholic
EAST MEIGS - Eastern · Run Hoad, or the second. church. where she will exschool district officials today gravel road to the left. will be change students with Bill
advised parents ano students picked up by Dolly Reed. and Hannum. Those st udents
that all bus routes will be transported to Bridle Run going · to Tuppers Plains. or
essentiaUy the same this fall, Road where the high school Eastern will board Bill
with the exception of t' rank and Junior high students will Hannum's bus.
Upton's route, which has be transferred to M"rs. SatThe only other change in
terfield 's bus. From that the district is ·that Mrs.
been discontinued.
Those students on Frank . point on Mrs. Reed 's route Cowdrey will pick up those
Upton's old route will be will be the same as last year. st udents in Long Bottom.
After ·Mrs . Satterfield has previously picked up by Mrs.
picked up by different drivers
traveling the same roadoi . All obta ined the students from Satterfield.
students living on Rt. 681 Mrs. Reed she will continue
For further information
from Reedsville to Bridle on 681 picking up children call Eastern Hi gh and ask for
Mr. Lees or Mr. Rose.
The kinder~arten students
who live on or above State
Route 248, or Sumne[ or
Cherry Ridge Road, will go to
the aft ernoon classes at
· Tuppers Plains. Those people
living on the west side of
Route 7 will be picked up by
Mr. Frederick and those
living on the East side will
probably be transported by
Mrs. Helen Blake.
All those students living
below Route 248 and Sumner
will go to kindergarten in the
morning and ride the bus of
that regular route-.

,
,...-n"'.
,

..... " ......... .,.

I

A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, .\ul(. 27, 1918

IN STOCK
READY TO GO·

~

2~9.94

. . .lll••••laJ

••••

"liiWI&amp;ILIN • • Lz&amp;"

••••,••••••n•••••
rs:@\
\2!..1

PAI'IOCOV•
10.20POOT
• SCIOUID COLUMNS

'177

FEATURES 92 SQUARE FEET OF

STORAGE AREA WEATHER RESISTANT
STEEL FRAME, GREY WOOD GRAIN
PANELS 64" H. SLIDING DOORS,

I'UmW,-.U-

\SAVE •78.12 I

AI~~~;-sAT

SAL£ PRICES

lx16FOOT

SAVE

3 Scrolled Columns ... '47 .00 · • · •

$14788

92" H. ~ 118'4" W. x Ul ~" D. (Interior)

G. C. MURPHY CO. THE FRIENDLY STORE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE ONLY
·'

•

�A~- The

Sw1cta y Tilllcs,~cnt in ~ l , Suncta)', Au~ . 27, 1978

Miller wants coal jobs protected
WASHINGTON, D. C. - . Miller tuld ~ fede ral 1-: PA
Ohi o
Tenth
Dist rict hearing at St. Clairsv1He last
Co ngress ma n Cla re nce week ttiat sul fur di oxi de
sta ndards fu r Ohio mu st
allo.w \he co ntlnucd mining
and burin g of Ohiu coal
PLEASANT VALLEY
rather than force the state
DISCHARGES _ Te r- to rely un imported western
coa l.
anr e
Hopkins
and
In his testiniony before the
dauRhler , Patri ot ; Sv bel EP A panel. Mill er said
Hanes..
I.eo.n :
Cha rles Congress did not, intend air
Humphrey , New Haven : quality standards to cause
e co n o m,l c
Marvin Cottrill, Gallipolis; rna s s i v e
Hance! Ball, Letart; Glenn di slocati on a nd un emCWldifl, Syracuse; Alberta ploymenl. Unless Ohio is able
Davis, Gallipolis; Mrs. to full y use its abundant roa l
Timothy C&lt;lnne r and son, supplies. Miller Sa id , many of
Pomeroy ; Mrs. John Hill , the state's lfi,OOO miners will
New Haven ; Geraldine Hill, lose their jobs and the state 's
Letart ; Phyllis Carrier. Mt. economy will be seriously
Alto ; Kenneth Bowers, Leon ; harmed .
Mrs . Elmer Wood, Ne w " Environmental
regHaven ; Patty Ha rmon , ·ulations . ex pecially per·
Rutla nd ; Vir ginia Ell is, taining to the control of
Middleport : · Mrs. Ralph sulfur diolxide - threaten to
Brown and son, Crown City; slow coal production to a
Mrs. James Hurlow, Mason : walk , a nd the ultimate outDonald Garrison, Red House; come of EPA intervention
Charles Durfee Southside· into the mini"g industry
Mrs.. . J_a me;
Beaver: .
Galltpolts ,
Mrs.
Ra y
mond Moss, Apple Grove ;
Carl Orender, Jackson ;
Shirley
Bartles.
West
Colwnbia ; Lowell Cook, Mrs.
Joseph Paugh and daughter,
Uonald
Workman
and
Frances Greer, all ' of Point
Pleasant.

helps keep t.ota ou1 ... leu adulu 1n.

c 1976

FRUTH PHARMACIES
All LOCAUO'NS .

IC,I N DE~G AR O COR ~

' ~ ,t.

fi QN Dalla:. I X

7~~~~

uur

a rea ,

the

Jubs of
thuusa nds of miners, and the
fuel bills uf every consunaer,''
Miller sa id . Lot'al r itizens

should writ e to EPN belure
October 16 to urge that Ohio
be permiited to mine and
to send their lett ers to Rep.
Mill er at the Rayburn
Building , Washington, D. C. .
20515, they will be sent to the
voices on this important.ssue
will be heard .

vacation.

While we were gone several
conservatiOn projects were
completed. One of these ineludes a spring development
on the _Henry Hoschar farm
near Gallipolis Ferry. The
work on this development
was done by the work crew of
th e Western Soil Conse n~ ation Distriet. Since it
was completed, Roger Powell
checked the now of water and
found that the production to
be 250 gallons per day . Most
sprin gs produ ce greater
quantities ol water in winter
and in early spring than at
this time of year since
vegetation and .evaporation
tak e much ol the available
ground water in thf sununerlime.
.s
1-o the next few days work 1
expected to start on the Jake
Somerville pond on Owl
Hollow Road and on the Will
Edwards pond near Be&lt;fch ·
Hill. The Somerville pond will
be used for recreation,
esthetic~, and fire control
around his farmstead. Will
Edwards ' pond will be lor
recreation and water supply
also. Ever ell Wedge · will do
th~ eart hm oving -on the
Somerville pond and the bulldozer of the Western Soil
Conservation District is doing
the work on the Edwards
pond. Both were planned and
designed by technicians of
SCS.

FUNDS DISTRIBUTED .
GALLIPOLIS - State
Audit or
Th oma s
E.
Ferguson's office reported
Saturday the ljlth advance
distribution ol 1978 state
motor vehicle registration
fees
totaling $24,971,814:22 to
freewa y.
Ohio
counties, cities, townIncidentally, the purpose ol
ships
and
villages.
our trip was to attend the
Local
counties
retained lor
na tiona I_ meeting of Christtheir
own
.
purposes
the
mas Tree Growers and we
following
sums
:
were pleased that West
Gallia, $31,147.84 ; Jackson ,
Virginia 's entry in the Christ$30
, 21fl .83 ; Lawrence,
mas tree contest won the
$58,689.37;
Meigs, $23,1fl4.55;
grand prize . The award for
winning the grand prize is and Vinton, $15,929.24.
that the grower, Eric Sunback of Jefferson' County will
be furnishing the tree for the
CITATIONS ISSUED
yule celebration in the White
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis City Polke issued
three citations Friday.
Harold L. Smith, 37,
Gallipoli s, was cited on
charges ol DWI.
Cited on charges ol excessive speed were Bobby
Lee
Burnheimer ,
26,
Gallipolis, and Sandy D.
Francis, 26, Gallipolis.

SAVE 20%-50% ON:
WHEELCHAIRS AND WALKING AIDS
CONVALESCENT SUPPLIES
MEDICINE CHEST ITEMS
HOME SAFETY SUPPLIES
MATERNITY AND SUPPORT HOSE
DISPOSABLE UNDERPADS
WHIRLPOOLS

· SPECIAL OF THE YEARfllllfl
DELUXE HOSPITAL BED AND MAnRESS

$350.00

F ixed height ; walnut fin ish w-stainless steel trim . Hea vy duly
ins t itutional . mattress w -plast ic over.
Now
518.00
SUNLAMP, Reg . $44 .60Now 535.00
INFRA- RI:D
Now
MASSAGERS, Reg . $16 .96
$12.95

STOREWIDE ClEARANCE SALE

PORTABLE SAUNA, Reg .
S2S.OO
Now $18.95
. SAUNA SUITS, Reg. $7 .95
~ow
55.95
DELUXE CHILD'S
WHEEL CHAIR, Reg. S299 .70Now
NUMEROUS ITEMS ON SALE!!!!!!! 52 1S.oo

ill..
iaal llnlDIDIDB
Hours :
Nlon ., Fr i. 9.-5

5aturday9-t

.,

529 Jackson Pike
Phone 446-2206
Spring Valley Plaza
Master Charge, VISA, Golden Buckeye

35%

.

The Best
Cleaning Your
Carpet Ever Had

I' OMER OY Ele ven
defenda nt s were lined and
live others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
~'ined by Ju&lt;Jge Robert E .
Buck wer e John McBride,
Minersville, $50 a nd costs and
restitution , disorderly conduct, 30 days confinement, 29
days suspended, six months
probation ; contributing ; Roy
F. Boggs, Middleport , 60 days
confin e ment, DWI ; Da vid

25%

'

OFF·

OFF

COLEMAN
HEATERS

POOL

40% OFF

House.

FINAL WEEK AUGUST CLEARANCE

MICROSCOPE, Reg . 524 .50

-

F.PA Administrator so your

~

LAYOFTHELAND
BY JOHN COOPER
Soil Cons. Service
PT. PLEASANT _ It is
alway s nice to take a
va cation , but even good .
vacations make a pe rson
appreciate home and hom e
situations more than before. I
think that that is one ol th e
advantages to ta kin g a

11 fined by Judge Buck

1-

SAVE 20°Al TO 60%
QUAN TITIES LIMITED

burn our own l'oal.
If interested residents wish

BULLETin

'

Last Rose of..............
Summer Sale

Vacations ·are
goo(f, but it's -nice
to return home

Our r ecent vacation took us
to Massachusells and Connecti cut and travelled
l h r 0 ugh M a r y 1a n d ,
Del a ware, Penn sy lvania .
New Jersey and New York. In
travelling that distance one
sees some beautiful fam 1
land and woodla nd and also
we saw several things which
were displeasing. Some ·or
these displeasing thin gs were
'in northeastern Pennsylvania
in an area that had been ;1rip
minea some twenty or thirty
years ago a nd
land
devastation was paramount.
Nearly -all of Massachusett s
and Connecticut is beautiful
rolling land , however there
are some mountains even in
those ·states.
We al so learn ed th at
Connecticut which Is considered the bedroom ol New
· York City is about sixty
. percent woodland . This came
as a surprise to us because
. Mason CoWlty is about sixtyfi ve percent woodland also.
In t ravelling about 1,600
mil es we saw only one deer
alongside the road an(! that
was in Maryland between
Wilmington, Delaware and
Baltimore. The freewa y al
that point wa s six lane and a
huge buck deer wa s nonchalantly grazing in a
meadow beside the woods not
mnre than 100 yards from the
noise and confusion of the

If the minu te you turn your head your little
mess maker is in your je..yelry box or
cosmetics making a big mess . .. then you
need ldiiii"!Jfl"'/ , I he child protection latch
for cabinets and drawers . Jt keeps tots out
of the cabinets and drawers you want them
kept out of. Yet , adults can get in quickly.
And it locks automatically when you d ose
the cabinet or drawer. Put an end to the big
messes, install/tlmlnytmt

Available at:

bt.•en perfected . and alternati ves have been develope&lt;)
tu the point ol operational
rd ia bilit y a nd cust effediveness. ··
Miller r il ed Soutlleastern
Ohio " unemployment and the
su bstantial public investment
in area economic development as prime reasons for
flexibl e. less st r inge nt
po llut io n a b a i e m en t
requiremen.s. "
.
"What EPA does proposed
lu do in Ohio is very critica~m
that it affects the future of

~:ct h~~eth: e~~~~~~~·:~ .

both the Appalachian states
and the nation in general,"
Miller staled.
"The U.S. EPA must be
willin g to gr a nt Qh\o a
variance to dioxide emission
standards un til sulfur
reducing technologies have
'

Cla rence Conger, Po'1 land ,
$75 and costs, 30 days confin t! men t. co n{in e me nt
suspended, 30 days probation,

Fivt· furfeitt•d hund!S

REG.
SWIM FINS .......................... A.SSORTED
1
WATER TUBES
10.87
1
1
BASEBALL GLOVES........ : .... 11.99 · 17.47
SKATE BOARDS. ................ 112.57 • 125.99
TENNIS BAGS ..... :..................... 112.63
REG.
PICNIC PLATES..............11.13
PlASTIC SPOONS .......... ;............ ~3'
COLEMAN 7 GAL. ICE CHEST ............128.78
1 GAL COOLER JUG .............. 14.18 - 17.99
3 GAL COOLER .JUG ..................... 118.27
5 GAL COOLER JUG..................... 123.59

POMEROY -

VACUUM
HEADS
OHIO DIVISION of Forestry presents the Olive
Township Vohmteer Fire Department a check of $226, .
aw~rded under the RCFP program. Shown, from left,

20% OFF
REG .

TRASH CANS
(20 • 23 • 32 GAL) .............. ASSORTED
GARDEN SHOVELS ............. .'.. ASSORTED
ICE CREAM
1 EACH I
I
FREEZERS ..................... 31.47 • 21.64

'

FREEZER ICE PACKS ...... ,.......... 77' · 58'
BARBEQUE TOOLS (2 Only) ............... 13.88
HOTDOG FORK ............................. 11.13
BARBEQUE APRON (1 Only) ....... .' ...... 11.99
PICNIC BASKETS ............... 117.99 • 112.43

VOLLEY BALL SET (1 OnlyL ............ 17.99
REGULAR
1
2.33
1
12.89
1
1413
15.39 &amp; 14.59
1
10.34
1
5.99 &amp; 11.98

SALE

'1A9
'10.99
LOUNGE CHAIR (1 Only) ............... : ............. ......... :.... . ..
CORNING COOLER DISH (1 Only) ...........................:....... .
'9.99
WOOD BASEBAU BATS •••..•••••••..••••••...••••••..••...•.•.. •.•••.•
'1.69
&amp; '1.49
.
'
ALVMINUM BASEBALL BATS ........................... ............. ..
'5.99
TABLE TENNIS PADDLES................ : ........................... ..
'299 &amp; 99•
PRACTICE GOLF aALLS ............... .-................................ . 67'
47•
SOFTBALLS .•.••..• ••.•• •. •• •••••••..• •. ••••.• .••• ••••... ..••..•• •....•.• SJ.94
'1.97
1
BAT WEIGHTS (2 On~) ... .. .. .. .... . .. ... .. .... . .. ... .. . .. ...... ... .. • 4.58
'.1 .99
1
ROLLER SKATES (2 On~) ................ -............. -.............. 11.23
'5.62
1
VOLLEY BALL NET ........ .............................................. 4.37
'2.19
t:AWN SPRINKLER ..... ................................... .-............... '9.94
'5.99
1
STEEL LAWN EDGING ... .. ... •••.. .. .. •... .. .. ... .. . .. .. .. ... .. .. .•.. •.. 3.99
'2A9
CHARCOAL BROILER RACK (2 Only) .. .. .. .. .. ... . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. '6.18
'3.99
11.06 ·.
CHARCOAL BRIX •....•. •..•.••.• ••.•••.••••..•...••.••••.•••..•.•.•.••••
89•
CHARCOAL........... .... .................................................. 53.84 &amp; '1.99 •2.99 &amp; '1.59
CHARCOAL LIGHTER FLUID..................... ....................... 12.13 &amp; 11.07 •1.59 &amp; 89•
HICKORY CHIPS ............ ··· · · ·· •· ··· · •· · ····· ·· · ··· · ··. · · · ··........ 9~
69•
TWIST TIES ...•.............•... •• ·•·•· · · · · ·. ·................ •......•... s2.29
'1.39
1
ELECTRIC .CHARCOAl STARTER ................................... : .... 518
'3.99
1
5% CU. FT. LAWN CART (1 Only) .................................... 45.39
'29.99
1
lAWN BAG HOLDER (2 Only)......................................... 15.33
'11.99
1
CONTRACTOR WHEELBARROW (1 Only) .............................. 71.98
'59.99
1 3.99
PLASTIC TREUIS . .. .. ...• .. .•••••••... •••....... .• . •. .. .. . .•.. .. . . . . .. . SS.29
PLASTIC FE~CE •............ •· · •· · •··· · · · . •···· ·· ··...................... 5]t
39•
GRILL LINER .................. ....... ..•.•....•. ............. ........... 7'1'
29•
1
FOLDING CAMP CHAIR (1 On~)..................................... 3.43
'1.99
'1A9
FOLDING CAMP STCOL (2 Only)..................................... 12.39
'3.99
METAL FOLDING TABLE (1 On~) .................................... : 14.99
'10.59
TEN_
NIS RACQUET (1 Only) ................................._. .. ·........ 120.99
39•
. COllAPSIBLE CUP. ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• •••_..... 63'
1 1.69
SNAKE BITE KIT ...............••........................ ·. · ···· · ••••·•· '3.3 7
'
WINDPROOF MATCHES.:............................................... 11.43
99•
CAMP STOVE LIGHTER .......•.•...... .- .•....... ~...................... . '5.79
'3.99 .
1
1 2.20
TETHER BALL (1 Only) .. ... .. ••.. .. ... .. •.. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 4J9
lAWN DARTS SET (1 Only .....-........................... :............ 13.99
~2.99
BETSY ROSS FLAG (1 On~l ............................... ··········· '9.99
'5.99
WADING .POOL ..••.....•. .'...........•..•.............................• 12.53
'1.99 .
KIDDIE POOL SANITIZER.............................................. 12.D5
'1.03
POOL HOSE HANGER. .................·...........·••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••· .'2.23
'1.12
1
BADMINTON NET (1 Only)... ............................. .......: ..... 1.79
99•
......••·.·····.. .

BORDER FENCING .•. .••••.•••••••••.••••••.....• .••.....•...•...••••..

Forfeitin g bonds were
and costs, illegal parking.
Delbert Coo per, Park ersJeffrey J . Karr , Rt. 2, burg, Brya n T. Os wald ,
Pomeroy , $10 and costs, Athe ns, Don Umensette r,
failure to properly display Wa lk er, W. Va. , and
llte nse pl a tes ; David W. Lawrence Coats, Pomeroy,
Collins, Rt. 1, Racine, $25 and $30 .50 eac h, speeding;
costs, unable to stop within , Natha n Hysell, Rutland , $53,
assured clear distance; disorderly conduct .
~~~~?&lt;.~~~~~~~

Find out why people all
over are switching to Allstate
auto insurance.
·
·

Two vehicle wreck probed

STYROFOAM ICE CHEST.. .........11.58 • 11.39 HORSESHOE GAME (1 Only) ............ 115.83
1
. STYROFOAM 1 GAL JUG ....................
. 11~
_._ TENNIS BALLS ............................. 3.99
FREEZER PACK .... ~ ...............'. 11.46 - 11.06

Vance, Belpre, 110 a nd. costs,
speed ; Eli D. White. Minersville, $150 and costs, three
days confinement , DiYI.
J a mes
J.
Chi chka,
Columbus, · $17 and costs,
speeding; Kaaron K. Hatfi eld , Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $7fl and
costs, $5fl suspended, unsafe
vehicle: Robert M. Haley,
Middleport , $1 2 and costs,
s p ee din g; Kenneth
illcLaughhn, Pomeroy , $10

Charles Hall, Hugh Martin, chief ol Olive Township VFD ;
and Dmald R. Baun, forest manager of Ule Shade River
Fire Protection District.

Olive Township VFD receives $226 grant
•
REEDSVILLE - The Dlive
Township Volunteer Fire
Department was a warded
$226 from the Ohio Division ol
Forestry. The fund s awarded
Olive Township VFD was
allocated under the Rural
Community Fire Prot~tion

program (RCFP). The funds
were distributed on an approximate 50 percent cost
stiaring ba sis to provide
assistance to rural lire
departme nt s in upgrading
their lire equipment lor
better fire prot ect ion.

The Olive Township VFD
wal; awarded the fun_ds for
hose to us~ on their pumper
truck s
and protective
clothing .
Ernest GeQilart, chief of
the Ohio Division ol Forestry,

Financial aid give:f!
GAUJPDLIS - The 0 . D.
l\1clntyre Park District has·
worked cooperatively with
several groups this summer
to provide a variety ol
recreational program s
throughout the county. A total
ol $6,000 in financial
assistance will be granted 'to
lour groups in t~e Gallipolis
City Sehool District within
i the next week as partial
assistance
for
their
programs. Nine-hundred and
sixty·three people parlicipated mthe programs , 719
children and 244 adults.
The
Clay
Baseball
Association, under the
'direction ol Linda Stanley ,
served
38
president,
youngsters with a T-Ball and
Pee Wee Baseball program.
Rio Grande Baseball
Association , headed by Curtis
Ramey.
offered
three

C. II. $!lOWDEN

--....

417 Slcoftd Ave.
Gollipollo. 0 . .

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

"See • farce

..

qwaJ

~. aood noilllbitr.
lillie ..... ill there.

.•...... __ _............
. . fi!MI ' "

,_~

-

programs, pee wee, ponY
league , and lillie lea gue .
baseball to 65 children in the
Rio Grande area .
Ken Holley, presidenl ofthe
Green Baseball Association ,
guided 178 boys and girls in
the Green Area . The
programs offered were TBall, Pee Wee, Little League,
Pony Lea gue, and Girls
Softball.
The Gallipolis Recreation
Board, under Clill Wilson,
president, provided a · wide
program range with 438
children and 244 adult s
participating. Programs
offered were pee wee , little
lea gue . and pony league
baseball, softball junior
league, youth tennis, volleyball, basketball, trampoline
and tumbling for youths, and
adult tennis and softball. All
ol the programs were well
allended In all areas.
The Park District will also
be assisting the Gallia County
·Sehool District within the
next few weeks as soon as a
final audit of the sununer.
recreation programs is
completed.
:
A park spokesman reported
the- possibility ol offering a
lew adult recreationa·I
programs this fall lor bo t~
men and women . Among the
programs being considered is

,. 71140

to the Olive Township fire

department by a letter.
Donald R. · Baun of tire
Shade Hiver Fire Protection
District, presented the check
lor $226 to Hugh Martin the
Chief ol Olive Township VFD.
Oli ve Township VFD was
eligible lor the cost sharing
program since they protect a 1
community -und er 10 ,000 ·
popu lation.

rnd•v••l!i&lt;t ls

mu se um

( ;u llipoli s in I'Cl'C II l
t.lus summ er, fivt
rJe \'l'fallllt~ I'S

\\' CI" l'

;\v~.:n ut

· ·~ l . r t ol r~ llt"d

...:: ;.:::•.'. •....... ·::.-:,-.-;_.
~

••·:!::~·.'·"·.

.:fi.::::···
.:.~·.::.··
•:.•:··

Olfer inel . . s living room
and h•ll only up to JDO 1q.
fl. .

I IF•urnlturo Stanltl' SIHmod

• INVENTORY EXCHANGE

• NO SElliNG REQUIRED • REPURCHASE AGREEMENT
o~ vc~rl&lt;t l) l o • tn n t·

t2 .705 IH I, r i "'I No

N o t veudr!l(j Fo 1 rnore 11• ' ,, .,,, t i &lt;Uil

1111u r ~ P •'' .,.,., ., • .,

lr: u K il !SI:11~·r· IJ f roy,rll{
lrl't' D! •H..tlll 11' Lol lltlrrll

Fr &lt;&gt;et 1· 800 ·52 7·4206 ur M• t.· t"
.
C ROWN · REG~N C Y C ORPORATION
720 'ciTIZENS BANI&lt; C ENTER
RI C HARDSON (DALLAS). TEXAS 75080

NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH
. THE .

McGINNESS-STANLEY AGENCY:
INC .
NICK JOHNSON
ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE

Phone 446 -1761

·:-:.•..
··:f.{::.

·?;...

···1~...

PROTECTION

614-446-47·: 3

•,

PIKE
HOURS
MON·SAT. 9 am • I PM

./

.. .···

'4 ;:~,&lt;:~;:;·:·:;·:··.&lt;···:;/·~'((:,
SUNDAY 1-6 . () W ~ · 44&amp;,4554

Gallipolis

452 2nd Avr

bdll give you
0

t aight Tal
about

........,

.~

uta-Financing?

o n Wednesday.

On th eir lwncymuun. Mary
and 1\l iJcrl Bc/il, C:Ul uldcr coupl e . from Chelt e nham .
Enl-{ laml. tuuk tht• t ~J U I" wit h
Curator Mary 1\lli su n o11.J uly
~J .

The Bt:sts l "a lllc tu
,\m cril'&lt;:t t ll~l..· t ht.• r. wen.· 111CII'-

r;cd 11 1 Da ytun. and M&lt;:H")-

Ill')l wu s impressed with tile
bCl.: iJ USC ~ he /tad
:-tjA'll t 50 yea rs ii!'l a maid in W l
w'1l'icnt F:ng tish rcsiilem.'c .
Signing the rcgi.o;lcr £or tilt.·
H]d huUSl!

That' s right. The Ohio Valley Bank.
is known throughout Gallia County
as auto loan experts. Wh_y; not call
or stop in and learn all about our
attractive rates and terms. We
will process your application

promptly . . . usually within an hour.
So when you are considering a new
car, remember a vai!Jable accessory
JS Ohio Valley Bank financing . It's
what you would expect from
Willing Bankers.

cw~

five blimllulk fr·um ('I,•ve)and

Will!

s tilt• g randdcmglllt~r of one
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .wet
uf them; thi s ~ irl left the
tlcst.:ription to Milry Alt ~sun ,
YEAR END
however , 1:1 11!.l till' quintet
"SCJ W" the Vjjriuus items
t.Ju·1 'ugh t hl'ir fmgert ir&gt;s .

CLEARANCE

NOW N.PROGRESS AT • • •

•
BETZ HONDA SALES
Phone 446-2240
Rt.7

Take Us

-

STRIKE ENDS
HILADELPHIA (UPI) h lchard Phillips, attorney
representing the Major
League Umpires Association,
said the umpires strike ended
Saturday following a temporary restraining order filed
in
federa l court
in
Philadelphia.
The temporary order was
issued late Friday by U. S.
District Court Judge Joseph
McGlynn at the request ol
attorneys for the American
-and National Leagues.

·'·'

OhioValley Bank
Gallr po lrs . Oh io

We're Yours

Rio Grande College and
Community College, ••
HAS 2l9 COURSES AVAILABLE STARTING SEPTEMBER. 5TH.
TAKE ONE COURSE OR A COMPLETE SCHEDULE. BUT TAKE
ADVAJCTAGE OF THE TRAINING AND EDUCATION AVAILABlE TO YOU.

CALL THE OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS .&amp; RECORDS

245-5353

Rio Grande Collage and Community College
WE'RE YOU!f COLLEGE
Rio Grande Collet~• &amp; Community College doesn't · "'scrlminate
1111111t race. color, creed. HX or r•llglon, handlcappM, age.
Mttonal or ethnic group.

Mcmbe ' FDI C

I .

···:~•..

\.

mi ll ion cars a re now in t'good

ha nds-" Call or come in.

···.'·:;•.

Spri"ng r·vall·e. y

ScatJ;.,tJgttf
Gallia, Mein
&amp; Vinton Co-

~.~

why the owners of over ni ne

rr:: f,ul au.. ur JJII ';, 111

N O t; - pt_:rn•I1Lt ' ; eqwrf.'U M r1&lt;:.1 11,1\ •• !!IHII"""n S

week~

\'ISiturs.
·. Evi am.J .J uiJn Kanzur uf
F:stuni(j went l!l ruug ll the 1819
furnll' r tavcm un F trsl

tu s •·''v ' ' ,. ,.,.,,, p, ll rf

• IMMEDIATE INCOME

in ·

blind
•other

So compa re companies. Find out

.....

t hi S it! cr1

Cill .l.IPOI.I S- Tw&lt;&gt; lllurc
Huu ot·

HI-LOW TEMPS
NEW YORK I UP I I - The
highest temperature report ed
Fnda y t u th e Nationa l
Weather Service , excluding
Alaska and Hawaii , was 107
deg rees at Buckeye, Ariz.
Tuday 's low wa s 33 degrees at
Jackson, Wyo.

1\j ;II !U il,Ji o., (JO IIJ)o l! l ~ w r!l ,tp JJtnlll I IIT!! I o• t l tllJI!I(l l!l u l q , r,rl! l ot;d

couples from F.urupe visikd

Our

center. Ther e were nu in·
juries.

HIGH PROFIT
DISTRIBUTION BUS.INESS

extended his congratulation

a !lag football program for
adult men and a repeat of the
succe s sful volleyball
program for women. II you
would be interested in participating in these ·programs,
let us know by calling at 4464612, Extension 45.
..

Europeans
visit here

Twu l:a rs

received moder1:1 te damages
and one driver was cited in an
accident on Lincoln Hill Road
at 8:47 p.m. Friday.
Pomeroy Poli ce s&lt;Jid cars
driven by Teresa S. Gibbs,
Route I , Letart, W. Va .,
com ing down hill , and Parlin
E. Jew ell, West Columbia,
going up hill , collided. J ewell
is cha rged with going left of

Why are so many drivers switching
their insuran ce to Allstate?
We'll give you lots of reasons.
AJ istate offe rs lots of special
rates and discounts. Good Dri ver.
Compact Ca r. Two Car. Low
Mileage. You ng Married . And more.
And Allstate offers today 's most
'ad vanced cla im hand ling. Coast
to coast. Fast. Convenien t.
We think yo u'll find a
difference wit h All state.

.

ANY
UVING ROOM &amp;

no operator 's license.

Four 'Locations To Better Serve You

_,
'\

�A~- The Sunday

Times.S..'Illinel, Sunday.

Au~ . ~7.

I

The &amp;!nday Times-&amp;ntinel, Swuwy, Aug. 'l7, 1978

1!178

Miller seeks reelection

Industrialist buys rights

Sharon Elaine Hill
becomes bride of
fohn Mark Matson.

-~

ATHENS, Ohio tUPl J Seigfried Schafer, a West
German industrialist , has
purchased !'Qa.l rights in a
portion of the Hocking Valley
for S1 million.
The land is in Canaan
Township east of here an~
wa s purchased from Robert
• and Marjorie Mathews,
former Athens residents nuw
living in Tucson, Ariz.
The emil is that formerly
owned by the Canaan Coal
Co . whi ch went into
receivership About 50 years
ago. The coal is paM of the
same fnnnation which was
mined in the early part of the
century in nearby township of
Athens County.
Mining of the coal will
begin as early as next year
and is expected to be in full

fa&lt;Y . Estimates have plaeed By ANDREW GALLAGHER
the amount ,,f ,.,,.1 undcl' lht•
CHARLESTON , W.Va.
land at murc tlwu 40 nulliun 1UPI 1 _ United Mine
:ons.
Workers President Arnold
·:·:·:-:-:· ·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:·&gt;:·:-:·:·:·:::::::-:·:::::·:::::-:.::::::. Miller said Friday he will
.. . .. ........
seek a third five-year term as
,
WASHINGTON tUP1l - head of the stri fe -ridden
Tbe environment modem
America created lor ilself 'l:IO, OQO.rnem~ UMW ·
In addition, Miller said he
may now be a leading . will seek wide-ranging
cause of death In the United .
powers when the union meets
States, a new ·government within 18months at Miami, in
report said Saturday.
its third convention wider his
II sold thai even though direction, to distipline those
the nation spent $2D 7 who fail to follow the
million last year research- directives of the international
. lag the links between union .
pollution and cancer, heart
Miller was in Charleston .
disease and lun&amp; disease, for a tw&lt;&gt;&lt;lay conference of
not enough Is being done In
terms of preventive health
to brtag down the death toll
from those kUiers.
1
,:,:,:,:::,:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::,

r

T.he land contains-a vein of

coal a bout tour-a nd·•· hatf
feet thick lying bet ween 350
and 500 feet below the s.ur-

·

No arson
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,.

,

1/u·fllr.

Tonight thru
Thursday

Cartoon

eVI"den.ce

SALLY ANNA HUDSON
SYRACUSE ~ Sally Anna
Hudson , 104, of Syracuse,
died Saturday morning at
Veterans Memorial Jlospilal.
She was born Aug. 7, ,1874.
ENGLISHTOWN, N. J . Shewasprecededindeathby
(UPil - The Middlesex her husba nd, David Hudson,
County Prosecutor's office two sons, Alonzo and FrankAAvs investieators turned up
no evidence of arson in a fire lin and one daughter, Grace.
She was a member of the
that killed two people and 40 Glouster Church of Christ and
race h·orses in the stable of was baptized there in 1913.
harness racer Herve Filion .
She is survived by two
Prosecu.to( Richard S. ·daughters, Mrs. Freda
Rebeckcsatd Frtday the Aug .. Elkins, Lancaster. and Mrs.
5 f1re has been decla~ed Rosella Thomson, Syracuse ;
acctdental andd the In - four sons, Fred and Paul, of
vesllgatiOn close ·
. Pomeroy: Lewis and James.
The fire, which broke out~ several grandchildren, great th_e. e~rly m?rntng hours a grandchildren , great· great ·
Fthon s Capttal Htll Farms, grandchildren, and great·
caused an estimated $3 great- great- grandchildren.
mtlhon damage.
F
.1
·
'II •· ~
Rebeck said the fire
unera servtees wt ""
.
held Monday at 3 p.m. at
resulted etlher from lhe Ewing Chapel with, Clifford
spontane.ous combustton -- of Cass officiating. Bunal will
wet hay m the bam or from a be in Rock Springs. Friends
ctgarette dropped m the hay. may call at the funeral home
Although two ~ttnesses at any time.
suggested the ftre was
started by lightning, Rebeck
said a check with the national
weather service showed there
. was none at the time of the
RA YMUN() L. KNOX
blaze.
McARTHUR - Raymond
A blacksmith , Fred Dale, L. Knox, a resident of Rt. 3,
and a groom, Steve Martin, Albany , died Friday morning
died from asphyxiation and in the Holzer Medical Center.
' smoke inhalation while they He was born in Knox Twp.,
slept in a stable loft. ,
Vinton Co unty , June 16, 1905,
son of the late Clemant Knox
and Charity Gregory Knox.
He was a retired carpenter
and school te~cher .

Besides them and Mrs.
Pickering, he is survived by
three grandchildren: Edmond · L. and Thomas L.
Wright, Crown City, and
Virginia Dougherty , Prot··
!orville : nine
great ·grand t•hildren; and a
brother, Ora Rossiter, Crown
Qly .

•

"LINK UP"
WITH GOLD, OF COURSE
Fash io ned in chams that transcend gender,
that took super on their own, Increase in
impact with numbers .. .
the more the merrier .

NAMED PRESIDENT
WILLIAMSPORT,
Pa .
(UPil - Tony Franzi,
Duboistown, Pa., Saturday
was elected president of the
Little League .. Umpires
Alumni International. He
succeeds Jack Powell of
Maumee, Ohio.
Tom Pike, Viejo, Calif.,
was elected vice president
and Royal Clark, Gary, .Ind .,
was named to the board of
directors of the association.
Re-elected were U.onard
Hanline, lona ,
Mich.,
secretary and AI Patton.

Franklin Knox of Bridgeport,
Ohio. fonnerly of Gallipolis ;
Paul Knox of .'Rt . I,
·Gallipolis; two brothers .
George of McArthur and
Everett of WellSton ; five
sisters, Mrs. Pauline Chesser
and Opel West, ' both of
McArthur: ElSie Bratton , Rt.
3, Albany : Gladys Tuckerman, RFD Pomeroy, and
Eva Jones of Lancaster, &lt;!nd Pottstown, Pa ., treasurer.
three grandchildren .
His wife, Vernice, preceded
him in death as did two
·daughters
and
three
brothers.
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Monday from
the James Blower Funeral
Home in McArthur with
burial foll owing in Elk
Cemetery. Visitation will be
held at the funeral home after ·
2 p.m. today.

LONNIE ROSSITER
GALLIPOUS - Lunnie E.
Rossiter, 87, retired fanner,
died at 2:40 p.m. Friday at
· Holwr Medical Center.
He had l'esided w~th his
daughter , . Mrs . Philip
(Helen) Pickering, 50• Ray
Rd .. Northup, but had been·in
failing health for 2'~ years.
In his later years he reared
two children in his hu1ne:
U.ona and U.ruy, who sur-

It

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i
I
I

I
I
j

Fall Maternities
TOPS
SLACKS
SKIRTS
DRESSES
JUMPERS ·
BLUEJEANS

AND A
COMPLETE LINGERIE li~E OF SLIPS,
It BRAS, PANTIES,PANTIHOSE AND GIROLES

Tv~NIIlllln, GALLIPOUS, OHIO

PHONE U6 tst3

BOYER
RIVER

Asked specifically what
powers he sought, the former
Kanawha County miner said :
" If they don't want to be part
of tl)e union, I need the
authority ID throw them out."
Although limping slightly
as a result of a heart attack
and stroke suffered this year
ne·
lollowi.ng · lengthy
gotiations on a new coal
contract, Miller nevertheless
look&lt;:&lt;! hale as he addressed
the delegates and he appears
to have reduced his heavy
smoking .
He spoke with confidence
and said he planned to spend
much more time in the
coalfields now that he has a
competent
staff
in
Washington .
MiUer said he figures he'll ·
probably have to ask for a

BACON

12 OZ. PKG.

89~

89P~:

··•

TAVERN BONELESS HAMS
WHOLE.. ........... ~ .. lb. J 1.49 QUARTERED....... lb. '1.69
HALF................... lb. '1.59 SLICED QUARTERS.Ib. '1.79
CENTER SLICED HAM ....... lb. '1..89

Son born to Mooneys

Freshest Produce In Town
RIPE FIRM

BANANAS
JUICY SWEET

PLUMS

$
LB. .

5 1 LETTUCE 39~
49e MUSHROOMS age
SOLID HEAD

HD.

FOR

FRESH

'I

8 Ol PKG.

Miss .Thornton
weds june 24

Mon . and Fri. tiiB

SANDWICH
BAGS ··

or DIET

80 CT. PKG.

16 Ol BTLS.

·.

$109
42 oz.

Can

It

I

$139

.-----·COUPON-----..... ----~-cOUPON-----,

L366 ~d~~-~~~~~~~~... Oho.J ' - - - - - - ...

Carole

Miller-Grandal exchange vows

.

MIDDLEPORT--White
gladioli, pink ·and blue
chrysanthemums and fuji
mwns flanked by candelabra
'
decorated the altar of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church for the wedding of
RUTLAND-The Rutland Falls, Idaho, was best man
Mega n Jane Miller and
United Methodist Church was and the ushers were Mark
'
Daniel Patrick Grandal.
MRS. HOLLIS MOONEY
the setting for the June 24 Morris, Athens; Dave
The bride is the .Wughter of
wedding of Doima L. Thorn• Williamson, Rutlaad; Charlie
AND SON,
Mrs.
Brady M. Huffman,
ton and Robert L. William- Marshall, Hemlock Grove.
'
\
,
.
Middleport,
and George W.
son.
For her Wiughter's wed\
_Jo
Miller,
Lancaster.
The groom
The bri~ Is the daughter of ding, Mrs. Thornton wore a
.
111
1
,
UU
J
IS
the
son
of
the
Rev.
and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. William L. gown which was cream col~
Peter
M.
Granda!,
Thornton 14ylli8Yille, and the ored flor~ with • min"""··• · '
, ....,...,_
;.o t
'
Jacqueline Jill McCarty Charleston, W. Va.
groom is the 1011 of Mr. ahd green jackff Mrs. William- · ·
MR.
AND
MRS.
DENNIS
BENEDUM
was honored on her first
The doubl.,.ring t'eremony
Mrs. ·Fred L. Williamson,. son was in a cream t'Oiored
birthday, August 19, at her wa~ perfonned at 6: 3il p.m.
Rutwnd.
dress with a matching jacket.
mother's. home.
un Aug. 5 by the Rev. Kirby
The Rev . Eugene Brundige Both mothers wore peacfi
Helping
her
celebrate
were
Oiler
and the Rev. Mr. Gran·and the Rev. Wiltiur Hill per- carnation and yellow rosebud
her
mother
Brenda
Medal.
Organist was Mrs;
fonned •the double ring t'Orsages.
•
Carty,
and
h~r
grandparents,
Dorothy
Anthony and 'she
t'l!remony following a proA ret'eplion honoring lhe
,...,n~ U "
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J
.
Owen
(0ney)
played
''Yuu
Light Up My
gram ' of music by Darla t'Ouple.was held in the church
I {I . 6
Lloyd
and
Mrs.
Olga
Mae
Life",
"I
Love
You Truly"
Winiamson, . pianist. Her social room. The three tiered
McCarty, others attending an~ : · TheWedding Sung".
selections included "Time In cake decorated with bouquets
&lt;¥n
.
were Bobby and Vicki Grim,
(,tven In mamage by her
a Bottle","Sunrise,. Sunset",' of peach and yellow nowers
T c;t
Terry
McCarty,
Dale,
Mary,
father
the bt'ide was attired in
· "Evergreen", "Love Story", . featured wedding bells bel·
Bambi
and
Jimmy
McCarty,
a
guwn
and veil by Priscilla
and . " We've Only Just ween tile first ·and second
POMEROY-Miss Cindy in the candlelight ceremony.
of
Boston.
It was uf while stlk,
Donnie,
Barb
and
David
Sue
·
u
and
De
·
w
Featured
in
the
alwr
decoraDl
Begun . " Flower ar· tiers, a"d an arrangement of
nnts · ayne
rangements and candles flowers on the top.
Benedwn exchanged wed- lions was the unity center- McCarty, and Joe, Mary and chiffon trimmed . with
&lt;?wpure lace: Thebod1 ce was
were used on the piano and
Mrs. Duane McLaughlin ding vows in a ~ouble-ring piece with the lighting taking Keith McCa rty .
Jill also received gifts from fltted to empu-e wlth face and
organ.
registered the gueests. Diana ceremony on Saturday, July plat'll during the cer~mony.
Escorted to the altar by her CrU9by, sister of the bride, 15 at 7:30p.m. at the Eagle
Kathy Osborne served as Ronnie McCarty, Mr. and embrutdered organza
matron of honor lor her "'rs. Carl Simpkins and Tom, Oowe~s . and it had a V
lather and given in marriage Sue Blankenship, Janet Ridge Conununity Church.
by her parents, the bride was Watkins, and Mary Krall,
The bride is the daughter of sister. Lorre Osborne, niece Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stewart, neckline- and short capped
attired in- a polye~ter knit aunts of the bride, presided at Gary Dlll, Long Bottom, and of ~ bride, was the flower Jimmy and Randy , Mr. and sleeves. The skirt was A-line
gown fashioned with an em- the bride's table.
Mrs. Millie Stone, Mason. Mr. girl.
· Mrs. Scott Stewart , Mr. and the tram was chapel
MR.ANDMRS.DANIELGRANDAL
·
i t1
1
d
Both Mr. and Mrs. Wt'llt'am- Benedwn is ~ son of Mr.
Best man was Bill Osborne Marvin Stewart and Cheryl length. The bride wore an emptrewas' ongseeves,an a
and Mrs ~r . B d
with Tim Dill, brother -of the Kingery.
broidered
Juliet
cap
headfitted bodice covered witli son are 1976 graduat,es of
• r anc1s ene wn,
Petersburg, Fla., and Dave by fern and baby's breath .
Refreshments of cake
piece from which fell a chapel Robinson , Virginia.
chantilly. Her train was of Meigs High School. They Reedsville.
bride, as the usher. Guests
Completing the table apwee ,.nd her flltl!ertip veil of reside at Beech Grove Road, · The ceremony was per- were registered by Teresa coffee tea and Kool-Aid wer~ length mantilla of silk illusion
For her daughter's wed- pointments were a silver cofillusion edged with lat'e fell Rutland. Mr. Williamson ·is formed ~y the Rev. Freewnd· Whitlock, sister of the groom. served to those who attended. edged in lat'e and pearls. She ding , Mrs. HUffman was in a fee servil'e and punch bowl.
carried ·a colonial bouquet of peach floor length gown and
NOITis, Racine. Music was
A reception honoring the
.from a cap covered with seed employed at Krogers.
pink rosebuds, baby 's breath wore a corsc~gt! uf carnations Napkins and matches in the
For the wedding; the Jlf!lvided by pianist, Bonnie · t'Ouple was held in the
pearls. There was lace accent
and white, pink and blue tipped in blue. Mrs. Granda! colors of the wedding. were
trim on the sleeves and at the bridegroom wore a white tux- Wood, with two songs being Chester Commw1ity hall. The
mu•ns with white streamers. wore a pink floor length gown gtven to the guests. Mints and
neckline.
edo with peach carnation presented by Kim .Batey, bride's table featured a threeShe wore a single strand of and her corS(:Ige was carna- nut.s were served.
The bride carried a basket boutoniliere, and the best guitarist.
tiered wedding cake witli blue ,
For a wedding trip to
pearls, a gift from the tions tipped in pink.
li yellow rosebuds, daisies,. inan and ushers were in luxGiven in marriage by her carnations and the traditional
Petaluma, Calif. where 'they
bridegroom's
mother.
peach carnations and baby's edU9 in colors to match the father, the bride wore a for- miniature bride and groom
A reception honoring the
Miss Tracy Burdette was t'Ouple was held inunediately will reside while the groom
breath in a basket. The peach gowns of the bride's allen- mal gown and carried a bou- on lap ..
Ute bride's maid of honor, and following the wedding in l~e c'Ompletes his training with
streamers from the basket dants. They wore peach car- quet of miniature blue aitd
The couple honeymooned at
her brideSITlllids were Miss church social room . Miss the U. S. Coos! Guard, the
were tied in lover's knots.'
nation boutonnieres. .
white carnations. A pa!e blue Daytmw Beach, Fla . They
Margery Miller, Middleport, Vickie Epple of Pomeroy bride changed into an aqua
Matron of honor for the
Out4·town guests at the t'Oior scheme was earned uut now reside at Coolville.
a sister, Miss Pat Vaughan, registered the guests. flowered dress with·white acbride was Mrs. Usa Morris, · wedding and re&lt;.'eptlon were
1J
Pomeroy, Miss Jane Miller, Presiding at the reception t'essories and a pink rosebud
All)ens, who wore a mint Mr. and Mrs. Charles KenHarrisonville, and Miss table were Miss Kim Taylor, corsage. Both Mr. and Mrs.
green sundress with a white nedy, Canal Wmchester;
. 'J
Shiela Harmon, Rutland . Racine, Miss Pam Vaughan, Granda! are graduates of
•
eyelet
jacket.
The Floyd Kennedy, Canal Win,J
They wore gowns of polyester Pomeroy! Miss Marcia Meigs High Sc hoot.
birdesmaids were Kathy chester; Mr ..a~ Mrs. Wayne
Out-of-town guests at the
fitted to empire waistlines, Dillard, Pomeroy, and Miss
Price, Pomeroy in peach; Russell, LoUISVIlle, Ky.; Mr.
·
wedding
included Mrs.
sleeveless with V necklines Nancy Stanley, Darwin.
a.\di Garnes, Dexter, in mint and Mrs. Tom Wllliarnson
Walter
B.
Harri s, Inedged with ruffles. Miss
The bride's table . was dianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and
green; and Darlene Thorn- and family, Kettering; Mrs.
Burdette was in pink and the l'Overed with embroidered
ton, Langsville, in peach, all Harry Blankenship, Mrs.
bridesmatds
in blue. All of the eyelet with white satin bows MJ's, Peter Granda!, Sr.,
d. identical style. They car· Mary Kraft and ramity, Mrs.
attendants carried single and pink rosebuds .at each Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and
Ohio's innovative Golden outside the state, now take
ried baskets of peach carna- Janet Walkins and family,
pink roses and baby's breath corner. The four-lie•ed cake Mrs. William Kelley and
tlons and white ·daisies with· Colwnbus; Mrs. Betty White, Buckeye Card Program part in the Golden Buckhe
JAcQUEIJNE McCARTY
with Streamers uf pink and featured pink rosebuds , Kari, Mr . and Mrs . William
peach streamers.
Jackson; Virgil Smith and continues to gain acceptance Card Program offering
•
blue.
They wore sprigs of cupids between the tiers, and Kelly II, Charleston, W. Va.;
among merchants in the tlllcoun18 from two to 50
Duane McLaughlin, Idaho family of SwrunerviUe.
Mrs . Charles Searles ,
baby's
breath in their hair.
state. Five new busineues percent on a wide range of
a miniature ·replica of the Cheshire; Mr, and Mrs.
Jim
Bunn,
Maryland,
was
ba ve joined the fight apinst products and services. In the
bride and groom on lop. The
best man, and the ushers entire cake was surrounded George Freeland, Syracuse;
D.,
the effects of inflation on Gallla County area, 117
and Mrs. · Jeff Zerkle,
were Bruce Nettleton, St.
their older cllllomers, in the merchants are now honoring
Cheshire .
•
GaUla County area.
.
. '/'
the Golden Buckeye Card.
'
V
J,
The Outpost, 62 State St., is Any Ohioan age 65 and over is
for a free Golden
=~r. a 10 ~ercent eligible
Lisa Bunch Mitchell,
Buckeye Card.
granddaughter of Mr. and
POMEROY-Plana have Regina
Kimes, Jan
Lori U.e LTD., 417 Second
If you have not yet apjllied
Mrs. John Mergan of Kerr
been completed for the operi Eichinger, Denlae Payne, Ave., la offering a 10 percent for yout' free card, you may
and the dauRblu of Mr.
church wedding· of Pamela •nd Sherry Ridgeway as the diacount.
do so at .any of the following
aad Mrs. Bntamln F.
Kautz, Route . 3, Pomeroy,1 bridesmaids. Rob Massie will
Derifleld Jewelry, Second llications:
Bunch, Urhllaa, II a June
and Timothy Massie
be belt man, and the UlbenJ Ave., la giving a 10 percent
All Ohio Valley Bank
graduate of Heber Medical
Mrs. Orpha Wooten was and Heidi.
congratulating her. She also.
GaJJJpolla.
' will be John Payne, Bill diacount.
locatlona, Senior Citizens Ceater School of Nursilllin . recently honored on her 88th
Everyone
sang
"Happy
received a !Qvely jade
The •lddlna will be an Burleson, David Graham;
VInton Home Fumlllhlngs, Center, Red Crou Office,
Gallipolis. Mrs. Mitebeil II
birthday with a party given Birthday" to Mrs. Wooten necklace from her pastor, the
,vent af Sept. 3112:30 p.m. at and o.ve Thomu.
VInton, Ia offering a 10 per- Vinton Home Fumllhlngs in
a 1973 Kraduate of Urblloa
for her )ly her relHtives and and then enjoyed a piet'e of REv. Alfred Holley, and a
the Mltltlltpott Church of
Iva BaUreU will be the . cent dllcount on furniture Vinton, Gallia • Meigs
friends.
Hl•h Scbool. Slle paned
delicious cake baked by Nora card from her nephew, Mr.
Oll'llt IHtb tile Rev. WlDard Bower girl, and Cluld Pope, lnd 5 percent discount on Community Action
in
her Stale Board Eom Ia
Those attending the party Wooten.
Hudson, in Charleston, Wst
Love performing the the rlnjJbearer.
appliances.
Cheshire; Chaney's Market
July rtcelvlnR an R.N.
included: Mr. and Mrs. Gor·
Later
in
the
day,
Mrs.
Virginia, which was signed
, IAWDGD) . "-linl the
A rempUon hanori!ltl tile
Bolter's TV lnd Radlo ' at Eureka.
' ·
De&amp;""'· Mn. Mlkllell Ia
don Wooten Joan Kaminsky, Wooten was taken out for din· by his t'Ongregation.
. !lillie will be' Dw otby Karr 'caup~e. will be lleld lJn. Se"lce, Third Avenue, Proof of age, such u a employed by Holaer MHrlbeth and David; Darleen ner by Goldie Hasz and her
Mrs. Wooten would like to
IIIII Jeltalllln blllnnlnllat 2 mediately following the Galllpblla, II lllvlnc I 10 valld driver's license, birth Medltal Ceater, GaUJpolla.
Parete, Gina, Usa,' Mike and friend of Dayton.
sincerely
thank all her
~ P.lll.
OO'emony In the chun:h percent discount.
certificate or other legal
'Michelle; one great - great
She waa married to James
For
her
birthday,
Mrs.
relatives
for makfriends
and
1farJ Ab i.UreU will be IIOCialroom. ·
About 22,717 merchant• document, Is required at the
Mlkht!ll of Galllpolll, Sept.
•grandchild, Tiffany; Norena Wooten received .a card frmn Ing ~Mlr 88th birthday such a
~ lhtt m.ld ul honor with
,lhroueho"' Ohio, and 1 few time of application.
4. 1t7C.
Muntgomery, J•tme, Jason President and Mrs. Carter bappytime.

Has, bt',.,.th

I
I

II
I

I I

DAWN UQUID
DETERGENT .

32 oz. Btl.

. , ,.
I

II
II
II

CHEER DETERGENT
84 oz. Box

'2 ,.

I I

~~~-----E!P.:..!'!!.'.ll~.!~----!!:..'~:.7!.
~·

•

')

" '·

1

Lisa ·Mitchell
june graduate

M ,
-'
r 1.\.autz- asste weuutng

SCOT lAD CATSUP. •.•:•••.••••••••••••.•••••••••••••.•••.•• 26 oz. BtL 59'
SMUCKERS GRAPE JAM or JEl1Y.................. :.......... .32 oz. 89•

/e&amp;e•-== . . .

and

Brewer, Colwnbus. Guests
were registered by Kristy
Dailey.
The new Mrs. Matson is a
senior at Southern High
School and is employed at the
Pomeroy Pastry Shop. Mr.
M&gt;ttson works at Powells
Super Valu, P01neroy .
Out-uf-town guests at t~e
wedding were Mr. and Mrs. ·
Marion Eddy, Columbus ; Mr.
and Mrs. Stuart Brewer, Amy
ana Ted, Colwnbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Dam1y Howa rd, Minford: Ms. Deb Matson and
M.s . Debbie Christian, Columbus : Carson Hunt, Thunnan ;
and Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Hill, Tobey and Eric ,
Parkersburg, W.Va .

•

rtnaJp'/a ns comh /e ted

VALLEY BELL BUMRMILK ......................._........... J2 Gil 79•
MARDI GRAS PAPER TOWElS......................... :·~,Jumbo Roll 59•

MIMC:Ofite . . . . .

..

GOtuen BUCk e11e D tJCOUnt
,
caru honored at ft.Ve
!G l bu '
.
new oca Jtnesses

PEPSI

Tues .. Wed., Sat.to s
· Thursday to 12

I

Syrac use,

M tSS
• .D't!tt
•71 .weds
tn d0 U b.le •
J
l
ce monry, U ry 15

btJi h IL'd .

I

" ( -.

. ..

I

·1

James Dailey, Middleport,
was best man and Thomas . .
McGraU1, Lung Bottom was a
groomsman. Usht:!r wa s
Ronald Hill, Parkersburg, W.
Va .
For her daughter 's wedding, Mrs. Hill chose a.gown
pf pale yellow polyester with
matching jacket and a corsage uf yellow carnations.
MJ·s. Matson .wore a peach
gown with matching cape and
had a Corsage of carnettiuns.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the park
shelter house, The bride's
table featured' a three-tiered
cake decorated in blue and
yellow with blue tinted wine
goblets supporting the tup
tier . Hostesses fur the reception were Thelma Cundiff,

"

MR. AND MIIS;-ROBERT-WILUAMSON

LB.

""Y WJ Y yo u

1

'·

RUTLAND-fn an outdoor
double ring ceremony at
Forest Acres Park, Rutland,
Sharon Elaine Hill, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. U,o C. Hill,
Racine, and Jol\n Mar~ Matsun, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kj!nneth Matson, Rutland, excha nged wedding vows.
The marriage was performed beneath an archway
decoratid with blue and
white daisies flanked by
palms The wedding was an
event of June 24 at I :30 p.m.
with the Rev. James Cundiff,
Sr., officiating, . Pre-nuptial
music was presented 'by Cline
Dailey .
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
uf peau de soie which
featured a high neckline, empire wai•t. full bishop .sl•eves
and a gored skirt which flowed into a chapel length tra in.
TI1e bride's matching lace
cap held a fingertip veil of illusion. Sfie carried a bouquet
of blue and yellow daisies surrounded with baby's breath .
Kathy McDaniel, Bashan ,
sister of the bride, served as
matron uf honor. She wore a
blue chiffon gown with matching cape and a picture hat
with matching blue ribbun .
Valerie Matson, Rutland, was

POMEROY--Plans have Syracuse, N.Y., sister of the
been. completed 'for the open bri!le, will serv'e as matron of
church wedding of Miss Mary honor. Mrs. Jane Morris,
Louise Mills, daughter of Mr. Mason, and Mis.s'Vicki Gaul,
and Mrs. Robert Mills, Salem, W. Va. , will be the
Pomeroy, and Jeffrey Bruce bridesmaids. Wayne Deaver,
Riley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Coolville, will be the ring ·
Marshall Riley; Mason, W. bearer.
AND MRS. JOHN MATSON
Va.
David ley, GU,nville, W.
The candlelight t'i!rernony Va. will serve as best man for
will be an event of Saturday, his brother, and the ushers
Sept. .2 at 6:30 p.m. at the will be Bruce Alexander,
Mason United Methodist Cambridge, and Don Machir,
Church. Pre-nuptial music Cleveland . . Gues'ls will be
will begin at 6 p.m. with Mrs, registered by Miss Cheryl
Mr . and Mrs . Hollis
He was born niday ,
Evelyn Proffit as organist. Nichols, Jackson.
Mooney of Mercerville, are August 11, at Holzer Medical
The Rev. John Wildman will
An open reception will be proud to announce the birth of Center .. He weighed 9 lbs. , 9
perfonn the double ring held in the church social their son, James Travis.
ozs., and was 22 inches long.
t"eremony. .
· room Immediately following
Travis is the grandson of
Mrs. Robyn ' Boring, the&lt;'eremony:
paternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley E. Mooney a bridesmaid and wore a
of Gallipplis, and grandson of green polyester gown with
maternal grandparent, Mrs. matching pleated cape and
•
Lyla B. Waugh of Crown City. alsu had a picture hat with
Travis was welcomed at ribbon to match her gown.
home by two sisters and one Each carried a tinted carnabrother .
tion in the color of her attire.·

'\f

tmmt-he i n ~ rdl'
w1lh nr h le.1IIwr.
kir k t&gt;ul of wt'&lt;lt"ll&gt;~

l

Pomeroy-Miildkport

BOLOGNA

l,i,,k .11 &gt;I Llc·&lt; lt- r m.1kt•&gt; llw

II

992-2156
Mills-Riley plan
.Sept. 2-ceremony ·

... 1 .1 r t ~

r1 g ht .., ,H il' IL)f

446-2342

GERMAN

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy National Bank filed
suit in the amounts of $719.28
· and $103.23 in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
Davt'd M. "'c
•• Ewen, Rt . · 2,
Pomeroy .
,
· Filing · for divorce were
Dixie Rose Knol1s. Middleport, against Daniel Earl
Knotts, same address; Mary
Jane Scaggs , Mi~dleport,
against Marvin R. Scaggs,
same address: Patricia S.
Eynon, Pomeroy, against
Robert J . Eynon, Syracuse.

Il l· ~ ··&lt;' h t'&lt; Jlbt'

Charlene Hoeflich

BRAND

Suits fUed

Yo u.II ~t'l"

Sallyanne Holtz .
Gallipolis-Point-.Pkasant

G1vt· your,c ll
,, h lltli ~ tyli n~ ihJI

I

,.

•

PRICES
. EFFECTIVE SUNDAY; AUG.
. 27 THitU SATURDAY, SEPT: 2
'
''We reserve the
right to limit
quantities"

·· Lonnie E. Rossiter was
burn Jan. 12. 1891, in. Guyan
Twp " Gallia County-; to t\lon- dues increase at the Miami
zo and Rachel Chapman
convention, but he said he'll
Rossiter. He married Ruth simply explain to the
Etizabeth Wat.son in 1917, and membership the programs
she j&gt;receded him in death un the union needs and he'll let
Feb. 22. 1939.
decide whether they
In his earlier years, he was them
want them or' not. If they do,
~ member of Good Hope
then they'll have to pay for
Church and Pilgrim Holiness them.
Church. Services will be conHe said the union needs a
duett'&lt;l at 3 p.m. Monday at ''massive
organizing drive''
the. Waugh-Hall ey-Wuod
.and an educational program.
Funeral Home, the Rev. He specifically told the
Alfred Holley officiating, and delegates that there's
burial will!;), in the cemetery thousands of tons of lignite
at Miller. Pallbearers will be !'Oal being moved from west
great -grandsons. Friends Texas and he's preparing a
may call 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. to- report on the situation there.
day (Sunday ) at the funeral None of it is UMW. He wants
home.
to send an organizing team
Also preceding him in into
that lignite area to try ID
de ~ th
were a great- organize it .
granddaughter, three
brothers, and two sisters. Additional survivor.; ~ire several
nieces and nephews.

r--------··-·- ·- ·- -·- ·- ·- ---------i

!

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

any."

1

I

vive.

Survivors include two sons,

I
I

He defeated W.A. "Tony"
Boyle overwhelmi"ngly in
1972: but won a minority
victory in a three-way split in
1977, defeating his nearest

Area Deaths

lOCated

COI.O"\' ·

work) ."

-------------.-------------I

production in abo ut five

years

·woman's World

rival, l.ee Hoy Patter!lm, by
a vnte of ~.236 to 49,035.
In H&lt;klition, he's recently
b,en troubled and involved in
a legal hassle about an
attempted recall drive
against him, which started in
his oome region of District 17,
in the Charleston area .
Miller said he will also ask
t~ e Miami convention to
btrengthen the powers of the
president's offtce. " I need
more authority to run the
union. Right now, I ain't got

the state 's Coal Minrrs
Political Action Committee
and made his !'&lt;&gt;mments in a
brief Interview during a
break in the :.discussions
Friday afternooo'l.
"I'm going. to run for
another term," Miller said.
"Damn right. I've got a lot of
work to do . And," he said,
pointing out unnamed
enemies, "bec.ause of their
devisive action, I haven't
been able to (complete the

'

•

Orpha Wooten honored by President
and Mrs. Carter on 88th birthday

"

�•

I

B-2- The Sunday Time~.Sentine l , Sunday. Aug. ?:/, 1978

BRENDA JOHNSON

Engagement
announced
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs.
DouglasJohnson, Jr .. Raeine,
are announcing the engagement and forthcoming wedding of their da ughter, Brenda M. Johnson , to Randy E.
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Smith, Hartford, W.
Va . The bride-dec! wiil be a
senior ll!is fall at Southern
High Sch&lt;10l. Her fiance
works at a dairy !ann in
Hartford, W. Va. Tile wedding will be on Sept. 2.

Lear Photography is now accepting
~

appointments tor Senior PortraiJs.
Call early tor most convenient
appointment time. If you didn 't

The 48th aMual reunion or'
the descendants of Abraham and Elizabeth Jones
Thomas was he ld at
Tyn Rhos on Aug. 20
with 35 family members
attending. A bBsket dinner
was enjoyed in the Sheller
House at the side of the
ch urch .:. Marshall F.
Canaday offering gra ce
before the meal.
Later, the group assembled
in the church for the business
meeting conducted by the
president , Helen Jones
Canaday. Several hymns
were sung accompanied by
Drug treatment sPecialilt Rick Barnes, of the Plcbway County Mentll Health Center,
Harriet Thomas. Minutes of
and.
the Great American 'rraveliflll Shdw employed music io empl!aslze the mis-use of drugs
the 1977 reunion were read
durmg
a peychodtama demoostraUon eonducted at tile Galllil -Jackson ·Meigs Community
and
approved.
The
Mental
Health Center, Friday.
·
·
treasurer ,s report was given
and accepted. Edwin Thomas
gave a brief account of the
Thomas history:
Officers for 1978 were reelected to serve for 1979 Helen Canaday, president;
Harri et Thomas. vice
president ; Aldeth Robinson,
secretary-treasurer.
One birth reported was
Bradley Thomas Pqole on
Oct. 19, 1977 to Robert ~· and
Annette Thomas Pqole. One
marriage was thai of Susan
Cochrane and Erwin L.
Nickels July 12, 1978 at
SuMydale, Calif.
One death reported was
J . Maurice Jones on May 22,
1978. Atribute was read in his
memory .
The group miss~d the
presen ce of Mrs . Bertha
Thomas who was unable to
attend because of illness. she
is the oldest merpber and this
was the first rednion she has
not been present.
As an educationai technique, psychodramll utilizes role play to illustrate declsiooSlides of past reunions were
making
about the use of drugs. Rick Barnes is pictured above being tom between those
shown by Tom Phillips while
forces
which
would have him follow the path of drug use, a!!d the straighter segments of
old movies of reunions were
society
who
lind
pleasure In life without the use of artificial stimulants.
shoWn by William B. Thoma.s.
Both were thoroughly enjoyed. ·
The meeting closed with ·
singing "Abide With Me."
The 1979 reunion will be held
· the third Sunday in August at
Tyn Rhos .

Music, poetry, skits used
in psychodrama presentation

REUNION SET
Annual Harrison reunion of
the descendant s of the late
Fred and Mary Lewis
Harrison will be held at the
GaUia County Fairgrounds,
·Sept. 3. Everyone is urged to
attend ..

Lear

Photography

In 1845 Southern Baptists
withdrew from the 'General
Missionary Convention over
the question of sl&gt;overy and
other matters and funned till!
Southern Baptist Convention, _
the largest of Baptist bodies.

SPRI,NG VALLEY PLAZA, GALLIPOLIS
446-7494

AUGUST COAT SALE
Fmd everyt hing
from cuddly
fun and furr1u

to slee k
reefer loo ks and
lots more m

between. Come 1n

.,

~

..

..

,.

10.00 wru

HOLD YOUR
COAT UNTIL
OCTOBER 15th

and ge t a
of OIJr

GALLIPOLIS
A
psychodrama demonstration
was presented by the Great
Americ a n Travel i n g
Medicine Show, Friday, ·at.
the GaUia - Jackson - Meigs
Community Health Center in
G.aUipolis.
Psychodrama
is
an
educational te ~hnique , involving role play, which
addresses specific content

Southern Ohio Regional
Council on Alcoholism; ·Rick
Barnes, of the Pickaway
County . Mental . Health
Center; Sber Angel, of the
Southern Ohio Regional
Council on 'Aicoholism; Terry
Thompson , of the Ross
County Alcoholism Program;
and Eric Jenkins, of the
Fayette County Mental

-~

·~

Health Center'.
The dramatic demon stration was vledo taped, and
Is, according _to Program
Coordinator Nancy
. Kohlrleser , of the GaUia. Jackson - Meigs Community
Health Center, available for
use u an educational tool lor
parents , teachers, clergy and
other community groups.

abuse, values clarification
and communication.
Anon-traditional approach,
the dramatic technique is
used, according to program
emcee. Mike Bethel, of the
Scioto-Paint Valley Mental
Health Center , because,
"people need to be touched in
their hearts, as well as their

r.e
I;

SAVE

$10

To

$40

ON EVERY COAT
IN OUR STORE .
IF&lt;-WE DON'T HAVE YOUI' SIZE WE CAN ORDER IT
AND HAVE IT Rill 1011 BY FAll.

p.m. at their home.
The couple were.united iQ
marriage on Sept. 5, 1953 at
the Epworth Methodist
Church in Parkersburg, W.
Va. by the Rev . Clifford
Phillips.
Mr. Buckley is a son of the
late E .. Wesley ~~;nd Florence
Lucas Buckley and for most
of his life has been a farmer
in the Reedsville community.
Mrs. Buckley is the wly
daughter of the late E. L. and
l..ena ChaMel Westfall and
prior to her marriage was
employed by the J. C. PeMey
Co. in Parkersburg.
Assisting at the reception
will be Mrs. Ralph Wigal,
Mrs. · Randle Coulsln, Mrs..
Carl Cochran, and Mrs. Gail
McCain.
Frienda and relative!) of the
l'Ouple are invited to attend.
Mr . and Mrs. Buckley request the omission of j!ifts.
One man 's crunchy cereal
is another poor fellow's
f•llillK-out fillings. "

~

.•

-&lt;"

dleport ; and Sherry Sue
Johnson, 19, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

Soft Spoken Kiltie

~

Hazel Hlne Is shown disfllaying her beautiful china.

....

The British
came
- .
to tea in Gallipolis

.....

-

By SA:li. VANNE HOLTZ
Anyone woo was driving
down ~ackson Pike past the
Senior Citizens' Center on
Thursday, •August 24, ~
bably ran to Bob Evans',
jumped on a Mustang, and
rode through the streets of
Gallipolis shouting, "The
.British are coming; the
British are corning," but he
would have been mistaken. It
was merely the senior
citizens having iheir English
Tea, a part of the Hwrumities
Program headed by Mrs.

--

Vilma Pikkoja ~

.Pictured are, right to left, Elizabeth Simms, Dreama
Rutt , and Lynn Lewis, hostesses for the Tea; Mrs.
Beatrice Clark, chairperson of the Tea ; Mrs. YUma

Ben Duncan of Eleanor,
W.Va., spent Thursday here
visiting his sister, Gamet
Betz; he was accompanied by
their niece, Alice Mae
(Duncan) DeUlle of Cocoa,
Fla . She came to West
Virginia especially to attend
the · family rellnion of her ·
mother which will be held at
St. Albans, Sunday : Her
family are former residents
of Gallipolis who moved to
Florida 25 years ago.

The Orkney and Shetland
Islanda, now part of Britain,
once belonged to Norway.

'

'

.

BRIGHTEN UP THE DAY
WITH

'

'

What doea. the Bible
Teach On:
"Exorclun"
"End of The World"
"Faith"
"God'a Dlridl111 U~~t"
"!!peaidnc ID TOIII!Iett"

Make a dull day a little brighter

Mil WILDON WARNOCK
wiD dltcUII thelt and otlltr aublecll

someone you love . Flowers turn

Aug."28 - Sept. 1

by giving a bo'uqu et of flowers to

a du ll day into someth ing special.
"When words are not enough send .. . "

: ~LOWERS by GEORGE
28 Cedar St.

Ph. 446-9721

Gallipolis

7:30 EACH EVENING
(!lunda,_ 10 111111 I P.M.)
\' ou .,., lnritfd to

BRINC YOUR BIBLE
and atudy with ua.

Westside Church of Christ
Corner of Butternut and w..t Main ~t•.

POMEROY OHIO

MR. AND MRS. CAIILBUCJtLEY

.
us1
~uG . AT

Plkkoja, chairperson of the Hwnanlties Prosram; and
Mrs. Mary Allen, whose collection of dollJ can be seen in
th~ foreground.

Summer Summaries
BVOPALG!tUESER
Pressure Cllilic was held at
Meigs Heall)l Department
each of the three Meigs Coal ·
POMEROY - The· Meigs Mines (S.O.C. Co.) and apCounty Health Department proximately 600 miners were
Nursing Division has had a screened lor Hypertension
busy summer. Since June the (high blood pressure) . A
nurses have been very busy. number of miners were reWe have live Well Child checked in August.
Clinics with 68 children atAlso during the Meigs
tending. One hundred and two County Fair, County Public
children were scheduled for Health Nurse, Opal M.
the Pediatric Clinic but quite · Grues~r . H.N., performed 30
a lew did not show up or fqod service inspections at
cancelled. An orthopedic the fair. Each food service
clinic in June had 41 children operation at the lair was
scheduled with 35 deeping inspected at least two times.
their appoinlments. D.O.P. The food stands were found to
Cllilic (eye) had 14 children be very clean and all
scheduled' to attend with 10 recommendations ·were
coming to the cllilic. Cardiac followe&lt;L We wish to thank
Clinic had 9 out' of 12 children everyone at the fair lor their
attending. We also had IS cooperation and for making
Satellite Clinics In July and the job enjoyable. Wally
August. The response to the Bradford· of the Fair &amp;ani
July cllilics was very gqod was very help(ul and this was
hut August was poor. Overall appreciated. The overall
we did 318 blood press~res inspection of the fair grounds
and administered 149 vac- found them to be . in good
cines. From June I to August condition.
23, 406 vaccines have been , The 4-H groups should be .
administered at the H~ahh · commended for their efforts
Department.
. in keeping everything clean
Ourtng July a Blood and odor free. We would like

The Tea was held on the
lawn under a canopy of trees.
The menu consis~d of tea,
Welsh lfied cakes, sugared
grapes, cucumber sandwic hes , am(mg other
delicacies. The baked goods
and Uie sugared grapes were
prepared by Mrs.. Beatrice
Clark and the three 4-H
hostesses, Lynn . Lewis,
Dreama Rutt and Elizabeth

to thank everycme who helped
us this summer in planning
and carrying out aU of the
clinics
and
va rious
programs.

"flexsteel" - "Prowincetown. Maple Dinin&amp; Rooms" - '\ilne" -

'

BAKER FU·RNITURE
MIDDUPOII, 0.

'

WOil OF ART
•'

'

NICA.RDI M·USIC ·COMPANY

Ml IICOMO

.wDM.II / ............

•

dial

c

I

for
=--"'-~. Connie~

GALLIPOLIS
'BUSINESS COLLEGE
Choose an exciting Career in one of these
success proven fields :

•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
I
•SECRETARIAL
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRAnON
• JR. ACCOUNTING
•GENERAL OFFICE

Fleece of Foot

a.ASS~
Bqin Seplember 18, 1978

DAY or EVENING

Finucial Assistance Available
Approved for Veterans
New Alternative
Roller Bottom

Accroclltod by lho Accrodlllng Commlulon of tllo
Association of lndopondont Collo.. l •nd Schools.

'28.99

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
St. Na.

This is and. remains the·mOtto of the flouse of lowriJ.

Speed Queen

28.99

5

AT

When Quality Is Upper Most In Your Mind
The Lowrey ~iano Is Deserving Of Your
Consideration.

THIS TRULY BEAUTIFUL

Sturdy Suede

·FALL TERM

7!-02-11472 B

FOR INFORMATION

CALL 446 436,

"Sprinl Air Beddinl'' • "Howell Dinettes" Admial - Hoover - Ffilldaire -

Simms. The tea was made by
Winifred Knight.
Mter eating, the guests
were treated to a demonstralion of how to make open faced sandwiches, given by
Elizabeth Simms, and a hearty rendition of "Kumbayah",
sung by Mrs. Ethel Robinson,
wholedthe groupinhandmolions to accompany the song.
Later, Mrs. John (!\la'ry)
Allen displayed her fabulous
collec ti on of English
cha racter dolls, hand-made
by Peggy Nesbitt of England.
The collection included a purtrait doll of Henry VIII and
five of his six wives:
·
As an "ice breaker", the
group selected the prettiest
china pattern· at each t.oble
and the owner gave a short
speech on the history of the
piece. Some of the china patterns selected belange;d to
- Jim Porter, wbo had a
demitasse t.'Up, .and Irene
King, with a ~p from the
Orient.
The Tea was a great suct'eSS, with over · 40 senior
l'itizens and friends allending. Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja and
· Mrs. Beatrice Clark, who
organized the tea , did a fine
job.

FOR

LOWREY

'

•

EN.ROLL· NOW

'1o ·&amp;M the 'lltilll 1nd ntllllc lotlll of the Woltd 111
instni11111 that fulfills ~r hlal*t Elp1~lo11 "

THE HOME OF QUALITY

Almstnln&amp; - Ca-ic -

UNDERGOES SURG~RY
CHESTER - Mrs. ;,;arlene
Thompson, former Marlene
Wolle. Columbus, underwent
ourgery Thursday at Mercy
Hospital, Columbus. Her
room nUmber Is 325. She Is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Wolfe, Chester.

-·.

Mr, and Mrs. Carl Buckley

• ..,::~e

.. ......., •

'

areas such as subStance

of Reedsville will observe
Sunday,.Sept. 3, fr~m 2 to 4

WI ACCII'T

··,· ~..c.~

.

Anniversary
celebrated

tod~y '

SUIIDAYS
llGO til 6:00
' WEEKDAYS
10:110 II !:GO

••

MARRIAGE LICENSE
POMEROY - A marriage
license was issued to James
Edward Kennedy, 21, Mid-

1 did something recently _three degrees in the shade! I
lhst I haven 't done in quite tqok lor granted that the atr·
some time - I went to the CQnditioning would be turned
store and did my grocery· on - what I didn't count on
shopping. The experience left was that It had been turned on
me feeling even more rotten since early . 1157 and the
than some of those can- temperature was a pleaaanl
taloupes I almost bought.
forty-four degrees.
EVI!rything was so lll¥h It was so ,cold that there
including the placement of were stgns placed here and
mimy of the items ·on the there which read, "Watch for,
shelves . ( Superq~arket Ice in Aisles." The real'
..'
shelves are deflilitely not · problem came when I had to
•
stocked with the abort person go past the freezers (I think
,.•
in mind· I'm eonvlnced the lor the first time I truly un'
,
Green Giant moonlights by derstood the meaing of the
•
corning Into the stores and word! ). The manager had
putting up his own stock).
forgotten to put any anti1 nearly threw my whole freeze into the carts and ll!lne
body .out by trying to reach a froze up before I even got ·
•
box of "Special bin-din" for half-way past the first leg of __ _.,
""
, my cats which was placed frozen chicken.
.
'somewhere between the top
The final blow came when I
~·
shelf and God's basement was finally ready to. check out
steps.
with my week's worth of
Since there ·was no way I groceries (at least, I'd hoped
could reach the top box I it was a week's worth;
pulled out one from the usually when I' think I've got
bottom of the stack. I still enough for a whole week, I
haven't decided exacUy bow get home and fine I've only
to .explain why I . bought got enough lor one dinner,
twenty-four boxes instead of three midnight snacks, and .a
my usualtwo - but I was just half-a-piece of cold pizza).
IQO embarrassed to let them
After I made itto the check·
all lay there! ·
out counter and had brUBhed
Another mistake I made the 'onion tops Impatiently
was dressing for the weather away from around nlY
•
outside the store instead of ankles , I got out the money
'••
the weather .lllllde the store. I'd' been saving since last
•
Since It was a balmy ninety- Christmas and paid the bill.
"At least," I thought to
myself as I wheeled my cart
across the parking lot, "I'll
SEEN AND HEARD
Ross Harding of Cheshire is nave something to eat
tonight."
not so well at this time.
Upon arriving home , I
began
to unpack the grocery
Mrs. Ross (Hazel) Harding
bags.
Is a patient at Uruverslty
Hospital in Columbus. Her Good Grief!!
It was aU cat fqod !
address is Hazel Harding,
Room W543 Means Hall,
University
Hospital,
Columbus, Ohio.

Friday 's demonstration
included a presentation
related to decisions about
drugs, followed by a question
and answer session. Music,
poetry , and skits were used
by the dramatic troupe &lt;tO.
illustrate the problems encountered in contemporary
society rela.ting to the use and
mis-use of alcohol and drugs.
Members of the Great
Ameri can Traveling
Medicine Show include Mike
Bethel ; Rebecca Hill, of the

1

AND
MISSES
SIZES

,

..

Something
from .
· · Sally

heads."

USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN!

JUNIOR

... ~.

VACATION
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Fulks
and children, Candy and
Cathy, of Huntington, W. Va.,
and Ruth Belville of Green
Acres, spent the past seven
· days. on vacation at Myrtle
Beach, South Carolina .

great buy on one

gn!at co ~u

'

·----·--- --

r•---------

Thomas
•
reunton

discount coupons.

sele ction of coats!

.. .

B-3- The Sunday Times.SCntinel, Sunday, Aug. ?:/, 197S

rece1ve our mailer be sure to ask
'
about our special limited time

Styles abound m
this superb

·--

'•

OR WRITE:

IG"iui;oLisiuiiN'iiscoiL"ioE-1
I
I

I

P.O..... 749
Golllpolls, ON. 456ll

•

'

·

1( ) Plolso provlclo .... wllh m.,.. lnlormallonl

INI:::
- ~:::::::o~::::::St;.
.Wdrns
Cily

I
1

1

AII_,.,.-State_ z;,
I

~"··==~~------------~------~
-------~;·

Old Faithful•

25.99

1

�........

B-4- The Sunday Tim.,&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Aug. 27. 1978
I

r-~-----l

Bartky-Hays united
•
•
tn e.ventng ceremony

'

MIDDLEPORT--Jo Ann
Bartley and Randall C. Hays,
Middleport, were married on
June 24 at the Vinton Baptist
Church, 7:30 p.m. with the
Rev. Jerry L. Neal perfonning the double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughl.er of
Mrs Mora Vallaru:e, Vinton,
and the lal.e Lewis F , Bartley.
The bridegorom is the son of
Jan Hays, Marietta-, and
Clem Hays, Mt . Vernon.
Music was presented by
Mrs. Jean Moore and Mrs.
Laura Brown who sahg "The
Wedding Prayer " and "One
Hand, One Heart." Featured
in the altar decorations! ar·
ranged by Mrs. Thelma
Barnes, was the unity centerpiece surrounded by ~win
seven tier candela!lra.
The bride was given .in
. marriage by her stepfather,
James"C. Vallance. She wore
a white full length gown of
satin trimmed with lace and
pearls. ·11 was designed with
an empire waist and fitted
bodke. The neddine was high
edged with laee and sheer inserts. Her veil was chapel
length edged in lace and she
Cllrried a bride's Bible, gift of
the groom with lilies of the
valley.
Mrs . Linda Rutan , sister of
the bride, was matron of
honor, M.iss Alma . Bartley,
alSo a sister, and Mrs. Kathy
· Pinson were bridesmaids.
They wore peac h satin
polyester gowns with V
necklines and cape sleeves
and a' sheer overlay in peach.
Their bouquets were white
and peach ti pped white carnations with baby's breath
tied with peach and white ribbons.
·
Andrea Rutan, Bidwell,
and K i m Brackman ,
Ashland, Ky . were the. train
attendants for the bride.
Flower girls •were Christi
Vallance, Flatwoods, ~ ;
Lucinda Brackman, Ashland,
Ky. ; Dottie and Cathy Nolte,
South Shore, J&lt;y .; Gina
Rutan , Bidwell. They

.

.

Physit:al i'' itncss. 11 : l:J tun.;
Bilthday l'"ltY, 1::10 p.m.
Wl'llnosday, Au~ust :11 •

!:Jr. Citizens 1
.
I Bluud Pressure Check
: Calendar · 1 Vinton.
Friday, September . l
,
'

t'OOnlinating dresses of white
and green eyelet Suuth Shore, ·
Ky .; Gina Rutan, and earried
' small fireside baskets with
artifidal ean~~~tions .
Steve Hays, Mt. Vernon,
was best man fill" his brother
.
' were An-'
and the groomsmen
dy Young , Marietta, and Neil
Ubroek, Rochester, N. Y.
Ushers were Mike Hays, a
brother, Marietta, and Troy
Bartley, Vinton, brotber of
the bride. The groom wore
white tuxedo, and the
groomsmen and ushers were
in beige and tan tuxedoes.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Vallance -w9re a
gown of blue laee polyester
with a white and blue silk
flower corsage. · Mrs. Hays
was in a pink gown and she
wore a corsage of white and .
bright pink silk carnations .
The groom's grandmother,
Mrs . Marie Burdette of
·Marietta, wore an aqua gown
IR polyester with A-line stylMR. AND MRS. RANDALL HAYS
ing, a beige laee shawl and a
white silk earnatioo.corsage.
The bride's table was
t'&lt;lvered in green with a white graduate of Rio Grande Col- Point Pleasant, W. Va .; Mr.
lace overclolh made by the lege and is a teacher in the and Mrs. C. R. Williams,
groom's grandmother, Mrs. Meigs Local Sehoul District. Marietta ; Donna Betcher,
Burdette. The cake was three Mr. Hays, a graduate of the MI. Vernon ; Mr. and Mrs.
tiered
with
column University of Cincinnati. 1s James Holly, and Mlehelle,
separalers and a small employed with Capital Gallipolis ; Dorothy a nd
basket of lilies of the valleys. Finance in Pomeroy. ·
· Tony . Kim
Brockman,
On lop of the cake were kissOut-of-town guests ineluded Ashland, Ky. ; Shirley S.
ing · angels in gazebo with the Rev ; and Mrs . Kirby Williams, Ashland; Nant'Y
doves. Green and peach rib- Oiler, Wellston; Colleen Oiler Edwards, Marietta ; Mark
buns t'OIIlpleted the deeor of Vicars, Wellston: Adrienne Klaiber, Fayetteville, N. C.;
the cake baked by Mrs . Phillips, Wellston ; Mrs . Carolyn and Lori Klaiber
Esther Metcalf, Troy ; Mr. Marietta; Gary Landsettle,
DenverWalkerofBidwell.
Hostesses were Mrs. Mary and Mrs . Charles Vallance, Sistersville, W. Va. ; Mrs.
Lanier, Mrs. Vennie Casto, Fiatwoods, Ky .; Mr. and Betty Brockman, Steve and
Mrs. Fannie, Mrs. Judy Hoi- Mrs . Harold Vallance , Cindy , Ashland. Ky .; Mrs.
ly, Mrs. Christine Hawks. Christi. James, Tedd and Judy Nol te, Dottie a nd Cathy,
Mrs. Elizabeth Cloud and Ma ry , Flat woods , Ky.; Mrs . Suuth Shore. Ky . and Debra
Miss Gail Belville registered l)teve Hays, Mt. Vernon ; Mr. Wallace , Middleport.
the guests.
and Mrs. Donald Bell and
The gift hostesses were Mary, Parkersburg, W. Va .;
Mrs. Kathy · Rice, Rulland, Mr . and Mrs. Keith Ashley ,
and Mrs. Emma Ashley, Chester;. Mr . and Mrs. Paul
•
Chester.
Rice, Rutland ; Mrs . Marjorie
F·ollowing a tour of Goett and Robin Campbell,
southern Ohio and Kentueky, Pomeroy ; Cheryl D. BarPeople who substitute a cup
the couple now reside at 271 nharl, Bradbury; Robyn of Orange Pekue fur U1al '
North Front St. Middlepqrt . . · Davis, Flatwoods, Ky .; Mrs. other beverage are obviously
The ~'! Mrs. Havs is a Marilyn
l.eed-off at coffee pri ces.

GALLIPOLIS - Activities
for this week at the Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, are as follows :
Monday, August 28
Chorus, I : 15-3 p.Rl.
Tuesday , August 29
S.T.f'.P .
10 :30
" .m .;

IHit.lJI.ht' S ,

1' rl"1l ll1( '1 1

'lltunviJ• .Y

p• •;JS,

IJn•atl, hultt•r, tn : . •· n ·mu,
mHk .
TucSdiiy
T un u,
111 ushruu111, e:t nll
OIJ,,d Jc
l'asscrolc, 'tMisccJ sa la d,

at

JAM order to be delivered ;
Advisory Council, I p.m.; Alt
Class, I .:I p.m.;_ Soci"l Hour, 7
p.m.
The Senior. Nutrition
Program will serve the
following menus: ..
Monday - Baked ham
buttered
sweet
sli ce.

buttered lima beans, c.,rn·
bread, butter, yellow cake
with . cherry sauce, milk.
Wednesday - Meatloaf,
tomato gravy, mashed
potatoes, brussel sprouts,
bread, butter, butterscotch
pudding, milk,

Frl~&gt;~l r·hi,·krn.;

v.r;• vy, w;•st••·rt IH•f.Ht, ,,,.~:
r·:w nNI uux• ~'J v•~ ~f\ l. ltble i'C'
hrc(j ~J, IJULI._': r , t; h,,t:t~ late thl~f.
f'fi4",kws , rrulk .
•
~· r~da y
S•uerkraut and
wicncr:s, rnasht:d pntatAJC~~
t1&gt;1cry sticks with peanut
butter. buttered Hreen beans,
bread , butter , tapioc• pudding, milk.
.
Ch.oice of beverage served
with each meal.
·
"Services rmdered on i
non-discriminatory besis."

•

•

SUPER MARKETS

EFFEaiVE
THRU SATURDAY~ SEPT. 2, 1978
.
'

.

We're· trying ·
to keep the cost of
a good education down.
F

&amp;WAGNALLS
ENCYCWPEDIA

1.

.

Last
To Save
·Sale Ends August 29

.
.
,
.I Sr. Ctttzens II.

M -The Sun_day Times-&amp;ntmel, Sunday, Aug. 'J:T , 1976,

rv~-

.

1

JJ

-f~-?n{lf.JI- '
·

.. _

"'::2:!~~~· ·~

;::;

·
9 :30 a .m.-12 : 30 p.m. ;
lallve,
~---- -· -·-:-~-··-··Picnic at 12 noon, Forked Run
Pa rk.
A
111 ur ay, ugust 31 :.....
a~d Games, 10 a.m . .
1··
1 Cards.
Fruhiy, September I POMEROY · - · Me igs Art Class, 10 a.m.-12 noon;
Se~1or C1t1zens Center ac-· Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
llv1t1es located at the
Senior Nutrition Program
Pomeroy Junior High School 12 noon to 12:45 p.m., Monday
1sopen 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
Monday _ ·T urkey, roll,
through Friday .
• Monday , August 28 buttered sweet poli.toes ,
Square Dance, 12:30-3 p.m. creamed· peas, yellow ca e •
Tuesday, August 29- Hook · cherry. sauce, .milk, bread,
Rug Makmg, 10 a .m.-12 noon . butter,.
Wednesday,. August 30 Tuesday _ Beef cubes 1
Soc1al Secunty Represen-

.

?:]

Vols. 2-27
$2.6.9 each.

with $5 foml1mrdw ..·.

•

. If you've been wanting a good
encyclopedia. but fig..ured you'd
have to lay out hundreds of dollars
for it, we've got a surprise for you.
The Funk &amp; Wagnalls New
Encyclopedia.
This week, we're offering·
Volume l for the incredibly low
price of 9&lt;r:. Which is our way of
· introducing you to an encyclopedia
that covers 193,000 suqjects (more
than some encyclopedias costing
hundreds of dollars). And features over 10,000 maps, photos
and illustrations, many of them in
full color:
·•

. When you and your family
have examined Volume I at your
leisure (without some high-pressure
salesman trying to sell you the
whole set), we think you'll want
Volumes 2 through 27.
You can complete your set as
you shop each week for $2.69 a
volume.
"&gt;
In no time at all, you'll have
what you've always wanted: a
home reference library that
contains a wealth of information.
But hasn't cost a fortune.

sct
.

Calendar

1

SUNDAY
PAINT
Creek
Baptist
homecoming. Bring covered
dbh.
.
VINTON Baptist Church wiU
have the Sunday · Schoo l
plcnlc at the Bob Evans
Shelter House at 5 p.m., Aug.
27. Will be potluck . Bring
games, musical talent and
instruments . Everyone
welcome:
POPLAR Ridge Free · Will
Baptist Church Homecoming, '
Sunday School at 10 a.m. and
basket dinner 12 noon .
KEMPER reunion Sunday,
Aug. 27, Galli a .Co unty
Fairgrounds.
MR. AND MRS. Ivan Fife
will host sixth annual Fife
reunion Aug. 27 at their home .
(Eureka). Famjly members
are urged to come. Friends
are invited. Basket lunth will
be served at noon.
GAL!JA Assoc. will · meet
Sandfork Baptist Church ,
Saturday, Aug. 26 and Sun·
day, Aug. 27. The public is
invited to attend the two-day
service.
STANLEY aqd Laura Barcus
reunion will be held Sunday
at .Addison Roadside Park .
HOMECOMING, Kings
Chapel, all day services
·starting at 10 a.m. this
Sunday. Earl Whitmor e,
Lesage,
Va., Raymond
· Bragg, Proctorville. Singers
will be Charlie Adams and
the Helping Haruls, Flat wood,
Ky. ; Shafer Family, Crown
City. Pastor Earnest Baker
invites public to attend.
POPLAR RIDGE Free Will
Baptist h o m eco ming.
beginning at 10 a.m. with
Sunday Sehoul. Basket dinner
at noon . Spec ial si ngi ng.
Gospel Me s sengers . Rev .
LUsher speaker .

·

-

·

M·

~

·

- - . . . .. .

·

AIIRICA'I filii! IIAITIIUIIS.

COKE
&amp;

The Bemco Posture•SeriH
o..::::~h•turin~' " I'll' He-•lth ·O· M•I•c'

:\i.~i'...;;

:;,~~·~~~
~

·

Construction with Htmco · ~
t'll l'lus.ivt' Pcasture· r:r.lm6~
for fi nn nns And suppor1
whtrt you
most.

The World 's Greo11c,t Sl~"p ing Pill'

FREE DICTIONARY
Get Funk &amp; Wagnalls 2-volume Standard Desk
Dictionary free when you purchase Vols. 2 and 3
oft he LP "vclopedia.
I

SEMI-BONELESS

I,,, ,, l• •l ...

'I"' , H
11 , I .. ,,; ,, II ·~"· d· \. •.
I IlL 1 • 1"1' ol
IJ.1 ·•· I. , ,, ·ll· , .
\ ..... ," I .... "" I ' ol~··

Whole
14tol7
lb . Avg.

i""'

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111 "- • in·,, :

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VOLUME 1
NOW! ON SALE

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J tf .... fMydol'tdil.

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Introducing
Funk &amp; Wagnalls

H""'"·

GROUND CHUCK •••••••••••••• ,....
'1.29
S
.oyND IIONE SHOULDER STEAK ••••••• '' 1.71
!i'.s"Ji•. CHOlQiiiO
.
,
Rlf STEAI(S...,"' .. • • .. • .. • .. • • .. • • .. • •· 2·79
i.!.':J .A. CHOICI 1110 .
'1 19
t:.UII STEAKS • ·, •••••••••••••• • • • • • • • •· ·
'ltll15uNb
THICK CUT ••••••••••• • '2.29
. A.
liP
·
.
s
pR
I!; STEAK-........ .. ....... •· 2.39
.D.&amp;. CMOtCI allf
'2 "
EYE OF ROUND STEAK ............. • • • • ·

m

U.I.D.&amp;. CltOICIIIIP

CHUCK ROAST..,. c.e

Fabrle
Softener
15' Oil
label

64-o•·
Jug

~ •••••••• , • • ••••••

SUPER MARKETS
OPEN DAILY._..__ _ _ __.._,

s1 35

•

1111.

•

U.~,!&gt;~ · CNC!!&lt;!IIIO

SHOULDER ROAST...., ........ • • ••••••• • • -'1 .73
lconomi,cal

SJ.49
Twen!y Four 2-oz. Pops

ARMOUR

VIRI-B£ST ..ORK

Beef

Pork Chops

l -Ib•.
orMort

sse

8AMltl9PM

Alternative
To Ground Beel

'"·

Chielle1a
Parts

Padcage Includes: 2 atade Otopt,
2 Sl,-loln Chops, 6 Rib &amp; Loin Chops

79A.
•

FAMILYPAK

VARIETT

Patt~Mi~

Chill, Pops

~"~;:~~;~~.:...
, ...... Wet.

..,

1 .. dl.

.~\

CUDAIIY IAI S

9

A

.....

lb.

lesser Quan!ities • · IS'

COUNTRY SPARlRIBS •••.•.•• • . "· 5 1.49

USDA CHOICE BEEF BONELESS
ARMOUR STAR HOT DOGS •• •• • '" "• 5 1.19
. ·
lb
89
·
5
$1 28
CHUCK ROAST... ....... .................. :.!l.
ARMOUR STAR BEEF HOT DOG . '"·"• •
~ ,.•.,4 t9 ARMOUR STAR LUNCH MEATS.~ • •';;;~ 51.19
HAMS
CANNED
AR
AG
\~ "" •
'I S9
""""''' sr••
ARMOUR STAR SLIClD BACON •• , •·"•·· •
BONELESS HALF HAM ~. ~- 52.29 · SUPERIOR FRANIUES ••• ••••••• .,., ,.,. 99•

htn&amp;...W... . .ffenMrly

•

GROUND ROUND'....... ...... . • ' 1.35

'""'

FRESH GROUND BEEF •••.••• ""'" •·
FAMILY PAII:CHICIIEN BREASTS •. ••• •

.

•I 09
•

5

1.18
79'

HOLIDAY CANNED HAm{:;;-&lt;t~; 5 6.19 SUPERIOR BUFFRANKlES •.••.• .':.~· 51.09 ROASTINGCHICIIlNS ••••.•••..• · ·"
•

DINNER IIELL

Chielce11
Thllhs

Boneless

Hams
n':.~·lb. $f79
•••

FIIOZI"-

Freneh Fries
•

'

'

Whole

s~98"

17 oz.
•

c.ans

MORRELl

SUGARDALE
CHUCK WAGON

Wieners ,.,.
l-Ib.

.

.

79'

FROZEN FOODS
Perch Fillets .............. 5 1.69
St.IGAIOAU•IIDSIMII 89910£)
69$ Cod Fillets .............. 5 1.75
BOLOGNA •., ... ""' • • • ••••• •
SliCED •••••••••••••••• ••• •••• •.l9c Jeno's O!eese Pizza .... ,., 5 1..09 ·
IUOAHAU
""'Sbe
59'. Jeno's Hamburg Pizza"~~· $).09
BRAUNSCHWEIGER - •••• •·
Jeno's Pepperoni
USDA CHOIC~ BEEF . BONE IN
CHUCK STEAK •••••• • • •
Pizza . . . . • • • • ,.. ~ ..... 5 1.09

........
$) 29
POLISH SAUSAGE ••••••• • •

89t

SMITHFIILD

.

sz99

...

SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••.•••t-lb. Pkl·

BONUS BUY

~~::: .. ~:: SJH

'P'

.,...,.,. ... ,... ............ .,_ ..... _........... til.._,.... ,,;

Retails eftectlve thrv

II fwttFi9 el '

·~ .

;qe
6qe
Green Onions •••••••••
;qe
Romain• Lettuce ••••••• ~·
qe
Llm.a•••••••.•••••• • • • • • • • ...
u.s."""·
qqe
Bussa Potatoes •••••••.
fRIIHCIISP

C•ler31 HfUirts ..............
FftSH TI"-D£R

GOLDENRlPE

Bananas

31nr;hL

fftSHC.ISP

79e
'"·
....

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AU PLAYOU kz.lox

~sqe

STEAK SAUCE , ~ , ', • , • • • • • • • • ........99c
MACARONI and CHEESE ..............4 ... 89c
HefTY

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oletl

s

$)

u'

TRASH BAG ••••••••• • • • , ""·"'· . •
~

DONALD MIC&amp; ,,.....

,

LEMONADE •••••••••• ·••• • • ..... tiM

VlNCAMP

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TANGY ••F.ISHINO

IIDIAL FOB IAIIINo

1.....

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oa•T'S IIO.UTID .. SALTID In the "'"'II
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2... •- "'•·

.

PORK N BEANS •••••••••

I • .......

6 $1

3

...

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PoTATO CHIPS ................... 59c

apec:lall!llllic eadl tvenllll.
'ftll Ret. Jim Carbltt, putor,
atlndl ID ltlvllltidD to die"
'

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U.I.D.A. CHOICIIIIP

WEDNESDAY
M,l D G E T
LEAGUE
cheerleader tryouts 6:30p.m.
W a,.s h in g t o n School
auditorium.
TliURSDAY
THURSDAY, August 31, is
the lui day to submit your
500 word essay for the Expo
1978 contest for Senior
Citizens. Bring or mail to the
Senior Citizens Center, 200
Jackaon Pille.

j

First, the good news : you
bought the mower on a pay
later plan. The bad news :
now is t..ter.

New ENCYCLOPEDIA

GSI Volunteer Service
Association will meet at ~:30
p.m . Monday in the dining
pavilion of GSI . Any and all
volunteers welcome.
nJESDAY
MEET THE SQUAD and band
night at Hannan Trace High
School, · Aug . 29, 6 p.m .
Refreshments will be served
at 6:30. Admission is free.

·.

Technological CeniLry
The predominanee of
technological power in the
Unil.ed States is little r,,ore
than 100 years old, The Conferenee Board notes. It was
nut until 1870 that the
h orse p ower from all
mechanical sources exceeded
the horsepower .produced by
work animals.

l"'UNK &amp; WAGNALLS
Nl.W ~NCYCWP~DIA

LIAN OIIOUND IUP POI!Md\ T

EMANCIPATION bu.·iness
meeting at Mt. Carmel
Baptist Church Aug . 28 at 7
p.m. Public is invite&lt;!.

public. The rtvlVII -will
a.ntlnue throll(lh Sept. 3.

TbeMapRoom
The Map Room, on the
growld floor of the White
House, . was a secret wur
room during World War 11 . It
was redeeocated in 1970 at the
request of.('resident and-Mrs.
Nixon . Furnished in
American Chippendale style,
it eontains four American
t.ndscape , paintings and a
portrait of Benjamin
Franklin whieh · was taken
from Franklin 's I'hiladelphia
home by a ~ritish officer
quar1.ered there during . the
American Revolution.

il l•· ···· · [ , , ,,\\,lll lfll ~ ,,~: • •• l
, 111 1 , t,•t • ·olo 1 l.oii i •&lt;'L '' ol 1, ·I· ol

TAB
.08

ADDISON
United
Methodist Church picnic at
., Addison Townhouse Sunday,
Aug. 27, at! p. m. Bring table
' Service. Everyone invited.
THERE WILL be an annual
Barcus reunion held at the
Kanauga Roadside Park on
August 27. All Barcuses and
families are welcome.
MONDAY
GAL!JA CHAPTER, OCSEA,
will hold a · regular busines!l
meeting on Monda-y Evening,
August 28 at 7: 30p.m. at tbe
Grande Squares Club Room
on Eastern Avenue . Plans for
convention to be discussed.

REVIVAL SET
FLATWOODS
A
revival · will !lart Sunday
(lhll .,..ing) at the Flat·
wooda United Methodlll
Church ·1111 County Road 211
near Five Poinll. The Rev.
we.~.,. Thatcher of Little
IJocklal
wIll be
the
evanplllt and there will be

.. .

.

HERROD ROT AL CROWN

.

. SUNDAY
HOMECOMING Old Baptist
Church Greasy Ridge .

GlDIIII ac.II.IIMIU ~TO EUIY

..

We're trying- to keep the cost of a good ediJ('ation down.

w.

THERE
WILL
be
a
homecoming at Faith Temple
Church on Rt. HI on Debbie
Drive Sunday , Aug . 27
beginning at 10 a.m. with .
dinner 11 noon. There will be
specialllinging and preachinC
throlllhout the day.

.

PICNIC SET
Gf'\LLIPOLIS - The annual"picnic of Lafayette Post
No. 27, American Legion, and
American Legion Auxiliary
will be held Sunday, Sep,
!ember a, at 2 p.m . on the
patio of the Legion Home on
Bob McCormick Road . It will
mark l'he· kick-off drive lor
membership lor 1979.
All members of both Post
and Unit with their families
are invited to bring a
generous basket and their
table service. Meat, rolls and
bevera~e wilt be furnished .

noodle casserole, buttered pudding, bread , butter, milk.
Cof!ee, tea, buttermilk,
lima beans, canned .peaches,
tossed salad. corn brea d, skim milk and juice served
daily .
.
butter, milk .
Please register the day
Wednesda~ Meatloafgravy, mashed potatoes, 3- ilcf9re you plan to eat. ·
bean salad, butterscotch
Plldd!n~. bread, butter, milk. ' PORTLAND - Telephone
Thursday- Baked chicken, 843·3364. COAD Senior
mixed vegetables, jellied Nutrition Weekly Menu for
sa la&lt;\, fruit the Satellite Site at the
c ranberry
cocktail - chocolate chip Reorganized Chureh of Jesus
t'OOkie, bread, bUtter, milk. Christ of the Latter Day
Friday - Sauerkraut · Saints, Old Towrt Flats, Is
wieners, mashed potato, ... similar to the above menu.
celery stick - peanut butter, Please call in your resergreen beans , baked rice vation .

•

TRI-ADVISORY Council
picnic at the Vollborn home,
Sunday , Aug. 'J:T atl2:30 p.m .
BARCUS reunion at Addison
Roadside Park Aug . 27 .
Dinner at 12 or )2 : 30 .
Everyone is welcome.

Vol.l
George Gobel 5ays:

,0-·

I

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�B:fi- The Sunday Tim~nlinel, Sunday, AUjj. 27,1978

d

t4

SHIRLE;Y JEAN SAYRE

r-- - -------;---,
·'l'
I
I Welcome .Wagon· . II
..

Hold
piano
recital

\

Announces Engagement
Announcement is being m~de of the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of Miss Shirley Jeat1 Sayre, daughter
of Rusaell E. Sayre and the late Thelma N. Sayre to Brian Lee
Billlngs, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond (Eva) Annanll'out.
Miss Sayre is a 1975 graduate of Point Ple11811111 Hlgb

Secallll n rr n

Students of Kathleen
Greene held their annual
piano recital recerrtly in
Vinton , Ohio, at the
Fellowship Chapel, lltartlng
at 2:30 p.m.
,
Forty-eight guests and
twelve
students
were
registered by Opal Calliban.
Three students were unable
to partiMpate. The)' were
Peggy Patterson, Bradley
Burdell and Judy Hively.
The jlrogram was opened
with Melissa Newsome
playing "America" and the
audience singing. The
program was presented by
the students playing numbers
from the Grade Book they are,
presently working ln. They
are as follows: Firll Grade;
Aiena Wray, "Evening Bells"
~nd "Little Bo-Peep"; Lori
!Iolli, "A Spanish Fiesta" and
"The Frog Chorll8." Sec&lt;Jnd
Grade: Melissa 'Newsome,
·•starlight Waltz" and "The
Gypsy Camp"; Karen

I

7 PJD.

ORIGINALLY UP TO

Homemakers'
featuring

Annie Anybody
8\' BETfiE Ct.AI\K

---Etc. o

GALUPOUS - ''Leaders
are born, 1101 made." This
belief is being challenged
today as more Is learned
about the art of leadership.
Who is a leader? Practically everyone - depending
on the situation - as we
Spend a majpr portion of our
time in groups · with family
and the community ~ at
play, at wnrk, and at school.
The Ohio E1tension
Homemakers Council is

•

(

0\
('()

""
""
f"'..
\0
~
I

Mikki Casto's
Ballroom
Dance Studio
211 6th St., Point Pleasant

I Acro111

from Court Housel

~

\0
\0
\0I

""
,.......
\0

Mikki
· as ballroom lnatrucl.ur at Arthur Murray Dance Studio
in Columbus. She is qualified 1.u teach both smooth and Latin dances including Fo•
Trot, Slow Dance, Swing. Discotheque , Waltz, Polka, Cba-Cha, Rumba, Samba,
M~rengu ~.

and Tango .

1. Singles D·I·S-C-0 Class (Great way to meet new people ... fWJ and
exciting! )
.
2. Couples Only (Disco and Ballroom) Class or private inlltruction.
3. Junior and High School Students - {Special class for this age
group in D-1-8-C-0, and only 'h price!
4. Women Only (Daytime classes In D-1-S-C-0. Fun way to exercise
... greatther!lpy for the body!)
•

J1 ~illiug

dane~

to teach groups, clubs, and civic groups
of your
c mce.
10 REASONS FOR ENROLLING
I1) FWJ, {2) Popularity, (3) Exercise, (4) R.elaxatlon, (5) Meet New
Friends, (6) Hobby ur .• Interest, (7) Brings out' Grace &amp; Poise you
never thought you had, (8) Impress Othen, {9) Gives one Self- Coo. fidence on dance floor, {10) Sense of achievement.
ACT NOW!
Fa,ll classes beginning the first week of September.

lJ

REMEMBER CALL

are finalized

Circle

~600

675·4539 or

675~6664.

FOR ENROLLMENT OR INFORMATION

..

-·;·

.... .

· .

sponsoring a .workshop lor
leaders of local Extension
Homemakers groups, 4-H
clubs, and any other community groups .on Friday,
September I, from 9 a.m. ·,
until 12:15 p.m. at the
Jackson Area Extension
Center. Anyone who is interested In becoming a more
effective leader Is invited to
attend and participate.
How to enjoy being •
leader, creative leadership,
and how to involve members
of your group ih leadership
are among the topics to be
covered . !lctivities and
exercises are desill!l~ to
provide Insight ,Into effective
leadership.
Anyone interested in'
learning
more
a bout
leadership should benefit
from the morning session,
and altiJough everyorie Is
welcom.e to stay for the al·
ternoon meeting, it will be
aimed toward Extension
Homemakers Groups. Team
teachers, members of E•·
tenslqn Homemakers groups
will be Merle Howaro and
Evelyn Walters.
There will be • a U
registration fee for everyone
and lunch will be avaUable
for f2.50, or if you prefer you
can bring your own sack
lunch. However, we do need
to know how many to plan lor
• (both for lunch and the
program), so please caU 446.. 4612, ext. 32 before 4 p.m.
Tuesday·. Augull 29, if you
plan to attend - whether or
not you want lunch.

Cindy Kay Young has
completed plans for her
marriage to Mark Lee.
Hiorrison. The wedding wiU
be an event of September 2 at
7:30 p.m. at Wilmington
United Methodist Church in
Wilmliogton, Ohio.
The custom of open church
will be .observed.
Cindy is the daughter of
Capt.aio and Mrs. R. 0.

.

MR. AND MRS. DON~LD WELLING'roN

·
length dress.
Joann Lavon Plants and
The mother of the bride
Howard Wellington
wore
a light green dress, and
on June 30 in a
the
mother
of the gr~ wore
ceremony held at
a
peach
dress.
p.m. at Fellowship
A reception was held in the
Chapel Church. The rites
fellowship
room of the church
were performed by the Rev.
following
the
ceremony . The
EliJier Geiser.
wedding
cake
was three-tier
Mary Lynn Ruff acted as
with
pink
flowers
set off by a
maid of honor; John Wellingwhite
table
drape.
ton served as best man.
The couple left on · their
Music was supplied by Mrs.
wedding
trip on Sunday, July
Shelly McBride.
2,
for
Virginia
and
The bride wore a long.
Washington,
.D.
C.
They
sleeved gown of white with a
,
len-foot train on the veil. She returned on July 6.
The
bride
is
the
daughter
of
ca!Tied a bouquet of white
and pink carnations and pink Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L.
Plants of Rt. 1 Gallipolis.
·
roses.
The groom Is the son of Mr.
Mary Ruff, the bride's
and
Mrs. Leo C. Wellington of
maid of honor, wore a blue
Rt.
2,
VInton, Ohio.
short sleeved, floor·le·ngth ·
Mr.
Wellington is a 1973
dress. The bridesmaids, Rita
graduate
of North G~llia
Miller and Rita Nolan, wore
High
SchooL
and is employed
light pink floor-length
at C. C. Caldwell Truc~lng.
dresse~
The ushers, Paul King and The bride is a 1978 graduate
Leo Wellington, wore ice blue of North Ga Ilia High SChool
and is employed at Bob
tUlledOS.
Regma Rose was the flower Evans Sausage Shop in Rio
girl, wearing a pink . floor- Grande.

Form

Young, who are former .
residents of Gallipolis. He Is
presently starioned in
Wilmington with the Ohio
State Highway Patrol. €indy
is in her final year of nurse's
·training at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mark is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Marion (Jack) Harrison
of Lariat Dr., Gallipolis, and
is employed by G &amp; J Auto
Parts.

""'fl'
Style Center

Q
011&lt;' look at !he budget will
show tlutt the Penlllgoo is
way overstaffed, generally
Hpeaklng, aays one lieutenant
in Foggy Botl.orn.

,,

Cuunty Senior Citizens an-

.

l

.

_

Meigs Junior High seventh and eighth grade football
practice wiU he gin tomorrow at Middleport stadiwn from 6:30
pm. to 8:30p.m.
- ·
THE !26TH anniversary of the Bethlehem Baptist Church
will be celebrated on Sunday, Sept. 3.
The church Ia located in Great Bend at 1l)e intersection of
SR 338 and 124.
.
A covered dllh dinner wiD be held at noon at Lewis Park
with fellowship in the afternoon.
JACK MATSON, 144 Whittier Street, .Colwnbll8, formerly
of Pomeroy ,Identified Mlaa Citizen Fair II shortly after 2p.m.
Thuraday near the nrrth end of the Ohio State Fair grandstand. Mataon WCII •100 for Identifying Mlai Citizen Fair II. He
wu onlyCII the grounds a fewminutesbefrre he identUied her.
Matson \Ia brother of Addle Buck, Rt. 2 Pomeroy.
. CONGRATULATIONS to Ben Quisenberry, Syracuse, who
celebrated hla 91at birthday Thurllday. Ben . remains very
active. He drives h~ car and is very helpful to others. Every
day he can be seen going to post Qffice getting mall for his
friends who lack tranaportallon.
BELATED BEST WISHES ...

Clyse family ·reunion held
.
at Bob Evans Farms
.

STOR~ CLOSING FOREVER
SATURDAy, SEPT. 2nd

..

SUNDAY SPECIAL

•

JUST IN TIME

FORBACK·TO·SOIOOL
GIRLS SADDLE OXFORDS ·

$1290

N&amp;M WIDlltS-RED OR BlACK SOLE

EVER·Y., YARD OF KNIT

W~TE

IN THE STORE ONE PRICE

BlACK

PAIR

SHOES

SILVER BRIDGE PWA

ALL fURNITURE AND STORE.FIXTURES FOR SALE!
'

· KNIT MILL STORE

HOURSa
'

'

529 JACKSON PIKI
GALLIPOLIS'

'

ROUTI 35 WIST

~

I'

9100 A.M.
1100 P.M.

The descendants of H. C.
lll)d Nellie Barger Ciyse met
at th~ Bob Evans Shelter
House Aug. 20 lor their an·
nual get-together. The table ·
was laden with aU kinds of
good fond for which Richard
Davisson gave thanks.
The afternoon was spent
taking pictures and visiting.
There were . 64 members
and 2.guests present to enjoy
the day.
The guests were 90 year-old
mother of Richard Davisson,
who makes her borne with
Dick and Hope In Rich·
mondale, Ohio, and ~ yearold Mrs. Jennie Davis of
Colurnbus,themotherofMrs.
Gene Clyse of Pickerington,
Ohio.
Others present were: Mr.
and Mrs. ·Eugene Clyse,
Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Clyse and grandson,
Mark Handley, Ironton,
Ohio; Mrs. Barbara Dodgion
and three children of Ironton,
Ohio; Mrs. Myron Parry and
Mr. and Mrs: David Parry
and two sons of Hillsboro,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Davislon, Rlchmondale; Mr.

and Mrs. Larry Bunsold, Lori
and Valerie of Marysville;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Simms
and Adam, Charleston, W.
Va.; Mrs. ·Greg Roberts.
Ewington; Mr. and Mrs. John
C. Wiseman, Chilta and
Paula, Mr.• and Mrs. Jay
Wiaeman, Shawn and Aaron
of Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Triplett,
Warfield, Ky .; Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Doolittle, Morgantown, W. Va.
·Mrs. Betty J . Brown and
grandsons, Lobo Langdon
and little Re~ Brown, Mlnford; Mrs. Edna Cook, Mrs.
Donita Cook Simms, Mrs.
Rosena Rees, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwane "Rees and son, Doug,
of Rio Grande; Mrs. Lester
Davia, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Wiseman, Mr. and Mrs. E.
Merrill Wiseman, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Wiseman and
Annie, Mrs. Dick Carter, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Carter and
twin sons, Joe and Bryan,
Mrs. 'Larry Hardesty, Julie
andJennifer,GaUipolis; Mrs.
Griff Cook, Jr ., and Annie
and Kris, Rio Grande.

tI

OPENS AUG. 29th

~

Facilities of Flnt Baptist Church
I~ Gallipolis, Ohio

A1mual Thomas
reunion held
The !IMUBl reunion of the
descendants ot Luther and
Ethel Thomas was held at
Cora on Sunday, Aug. 20.
Thirty-nine family members
and one guest were present.
A weD-organized protram
was presented under the
direction of President Keith
Thomas. An intere1t1ng
reading was given by
Elizabeth Cloud called
"Prayer For The Aged."
·Mrs. Tom Ttlpe presented .a
monologue which was en·
joyed by everyone.
Games and contests filled
the afternoon. Members
departed bY evening, with
sotne returning to Troy,
Lancaster. South Point, and
Charleston, W. Va.

Center Plenie
POMEROY - The Meigs

1/ants-.Wellington
exchange June .VOW'S

by

SPliNe; VALLIY PLAZA

•

I By

I

Soft.
seamless
fiberfill cups give· you
a smooth look and
perfect shape needed
for today's fashions.
Flat,
flexible
underwi re keeps you
· in place comfortably,
elastic sides and back
provide comfortable
without ·
movement
slipping . Designed for
the 'average to full
figure .
Fibers:
100 Pet.
.polyester
Elastic:
. Nylon
spandex.

Wedding plans

Super Summer

Katie's

nual pknic is planned fur thi s
Wednesday at Forked Run
Park. Reedsville . Trapsportation will be furnished
!rum
the Center to the Park,
I .' .
for those who cannot find
other transportation . The
Katie Crow
picnic will begin at 12 noon
and
a hike will be conducted
I
•
by Park Naturalist, Dave
A REMINDER that Jane Brown, TB nurse, wiU be giving Kuechner in the afternoon.
free TB skin testa Tuellday at the Racine Fire 11Uftionlrom 6:30 Bring your favorite dish and
p.m. to 7:30p.m.
.
table service. Cold beverages
will be furnished by the
THE MEIGS County Unit of the American cancer Society Center. We are looking forwm meet at the Veterans Memorial Hospital Monday at 8 p.m. , ward lo seeing many of you
The unit Ia In need of volunteers to carry on the many on Wednesday.
·
programs they would Ulte to offer.
Social Security
They write that they would like for as many people as
Information
possible IJieet with them and diacltll Ideas that will be
Benefits to widows and
beneficial not only to cancer patients but alao to their families . . widowers who remarry after
U anyone would like to be a volunteer but unable .to attend age 60 will not be reduced
the meeting they are asked to call 1192-7531 Tuerrday or Thurs- under new Social Security
day between I and 4:30 p.m.
amendments. The provision
They hope people will give of themselves to help ''wipe out becomes
effective
in'
cancer in our Ufetime."
January 1979.
Under present law, benefits
MR. AND MRS. George Shiveler, Sr., ~26 Fox Road. to widows and widowers· who
Clitclnnatl. 45239 will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversary remarry at 60 or later may be
(II Sept. 8.
.
reduced.
Mrs. Shiveterlathe frrmer Alberta Grueser. Mr. and Mrs.
Other important benefit
Shiveler ·were born and reared In Pomeroy.
changes w~re made by the
Mr. and Mrs. George Shlveler, Jr., frrmer Martha Myers, new law, and they include:
and daughter, Jayne Ann, will entertain with a dinner at a
1. Public pension offset restaurant 111 Sept. 8 and a dinner at their borne on !jept. 10. .. Social Security dependent's
Mr. and Mrs. Shivelei- are iq excellent health and Mrs. benefits to the husband or
Shlveler recently underwent eye surgery.
wife or a retired, disabled, or
Congratulations - not many reach 60 years - some are deceased worker will be
lucky if the marrtage .lasts 60
reduced by the amount of any
.._days .

I

I

' SEAMLESS CUP"
STRAPLESS BRA

Tschikovsky.
Following ihe comments
about the 'Student's progress,
made by '-Irs. Greene, the
program was closed by the
audience singing "God Be
With You." Refreshments of
punch, ·mints, nuts and
cookies were served by
Janice Wedemeyer, Jane Ann
Denney and Opal Callihan.
Mrs. Greene thanked everyone who had helped her in
anyway and Rev. Elmer
Geiser lor letting her hold the
·
recital in the church.

(:lose To You" and

Senior Citizens '·Scenes

lKo~ner

Pictured left. to right: Firllt row, l.ori Holley, Melissa Newsome, Q.~l Ward and Mrs.
Greene, inslructOr. Secood row, Ruth Ann Loveday, Ann Burdett, Marveleoi BroWn, Alena
Wray, and Karen Reynolds. Third row, Kimberly Hash, Trhonda callthan, Robin Harder ·
and Debb1e Mays.
'

· A September 30 wedding Ia being planned.

WEAR .SIZE
12Y2 to 24Y2

1

. Welcom~ Wagon is open to any interested party in the
area. can Olris Mitchell at 446-7739 or Ann Raub at 3811-9804 for
mo•e in.formatio~.

Department.

DRESSES

club activities

,'

9 a.m. to 12 noon . No ijp-

~

. August 30- Exercise Group, RSVP, Julie Onnsb;r 446-2070

Reynolds, "They Long To Be and " Tarantella" ; Carl
11
1'11 Ward, "I'll Fly Away" and "I
Have
Been
Nev~r Fallin Love· Again"; Should
Debbie Mays, "Round The Crucified"; Fourth Grade:
Vllla«e" and "In tburch." Marvelea Brown, " The
Third Gr~de: Ann Burdett, Entertainer" and "lnlRuth
Ann
"A Dream of Love" and promptu";
"Living For Jesus"i Robin Loveday, "The Spirit Of
Harder , "By The Seaside" Jesus Is In This Place'' and
"Only One Life." Fifth
Grade: Kimberly Hash, ·"The
School, attends Marsl)all pniverslty majoring In aCC()Witlng Hour Of Memory " and
and Ia an employee of Hecb.
"Liebestraum." Advanced
Her fiance Ia allo a 197S graduate ol Point Pleasant Hl&amp;h Grade: Trhonda Callihan,
School and Columbia School of BroadcasUng, Ill employed by "Bohemia Caprice" and
WMPO - Middleport, Ohlo and the Mason County Sberjff's Piano Concerto Bb Minor by

Special!

·r._._____...._. . . ___. .

KINDERGARTEN

'

~WM~M9

'

1. STRESSING ACADEMIC·EXCELLENCE

t
t
t
t
t
t

·••

•••

The &lt;
,--·-·- --"-'1' modetn art of
A representative of Lhe

Social Security office is at the
Center each Wednesday !roD)

I
I

II

Social
II
.
Calendar I
SUNDAY

bootmaking

OLD-FASHIONED hymn
sing Sunday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
Individual and group special
numbers; public invited.
McELROY ' FAMILY
reunion at Portland Park,
12:30 p.m. Sunday; basket

·.....

dinner.

HOMECOMING Sunday at
Chester Church of God.
Basket dinner at noon . Afternoon services at 1:30 p~m .
The Rev. Bertha Kingery,
former pastor, guest speaker.
Special singing by Soul
Seekers. Rev. Donald Combs
pension or annuity he or she
pastor. Public Invited.
.
receives based on his or her
ALL NEW students this fall ·
work in noncovered public at Meigs High School, grades
employment. The change is 9 through 12, should report
effective for benefits paid for from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. this
December 1977, based on week or next to school office
applications
filed
·in
December 1977 and later. The to be registered.
HYMN SING Sunday at
offset provision does not
Nease
Settlement Church on
apply to those .who would be
Forest
Run Road . Dan
eligible for pensions by
Hayman
and the Hymn
December 1982, and who
Timers.
Dinner
at noon .
could have qualified for
Bring
covered
dish
. . Hymn
Social Security Dependent'.s
sing
at
1:30
p.m.
benefits under the law in
McELROY FAMILY
effect on January I, 1977.
2. Length of marriage reunion at the Portland Park
before divorce - the length·of Sunday with a basket dinner
marriage required before a at 12:30 p.m.
HOMECOMING AT North
divorced woman can be
eligible for benefits on the · Bethel United Methodist
record of her forrner husband Church Sunday; Sunday
is reduced from 20 to 10 school, 9:30a.m.; wonhip at
years. The change is ef.lective 11 ; basket dinner at noon .
Afternoon worship and hymn
1979.
sing with lots of special
3. Retroactive benefits when a person applies for singing, beginning at 1 p.m,
reduced benefits, generally Public Invited.
no benefits will be paid for
WEEK~ LONG
Revival
monthS before the month of starting this evening at
application unless the Church of Christ in Christian
benefits are lor disability or Union, Pearl St., Middleport,
unreduced
dependent's with Rev. George Scott,
benefits are involved. The Columbus, speaking; public
change is effective for · ap- invited to all services which
plications filed in ·January start at 7:30 p.m.
1978 and after. Previously, up

-I

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CAFE

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Lafayette Mall

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LAST WEEKI

CLEARANCE
SALE
SAVE - SAVE - SAVE
• SOFAS

•RECLINERS

•LIVING ROOM .TABLES

•LOUNGE CHAIRS

•DINING AND- BEDROOM SUITES
.

t

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. UP TO

OFF

'

.t '

2. IN A CHRISTIAN ATMOSPHERE .
3•.TEACHING BIBLICAL PRINCIPLES ·

4. Wlnt STATE CERnFIED TEACHERS
Applications may be piclled up at

the school office, Third Ave.
It Locust St.; Glllpalis, Ohio

pointment is nece:•sary .
Material Needed
to 12 months benefits could be
As
many
of our volunteers
paid for months before the
keeping
busy cutting
are
month of application in all
blocks
and
sewing
and tieing
cases.
lap
robes,
we
are
In
need of
A free leaflet entitled "How
goud
scrap
pieces
of
Hecent Changes In SSA Afmaterial.
fect You." gives a more
In the late spring we
detailed explanation of these
received
quite a bit of cotton
as well as the many other
·and
polyester
material pieces
changes in Social Security.
to
be
used
In
this project .
Copies can be obtained at the
'
Athens Social Security Office,
located at 221 '&gt; Columbus
Road , Athens , Ohio 45701 . The
tetephone number is 992~22.

'

However, the supply d this · ..,
material has been uaed and ~
once again we are asking for .:(!
any scrap material you might •~
have. Material can be ·~
brought to the Center or call ·~
992-7884 and we wm arrange :...
to pick up any material.
We hope to have a gond
supply of lap robes available ~.·
again this !aU for distribution .:-:
to senior citizens iil need.
~~
Have a nice week.
·:-~

.
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Ohio VaU~y

Chrl~tlcan khool

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Furniture
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SECOND AT GRAPE
•GAl IIPCIJS,. OHIO
PHONE .446-0332
I

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Design

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�-----·
~-TheSundayTimes.&amp;ntinel ,

Sund•y. Aug. 27,1978

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C·l-Tbe Sunday Times-scuti~el , Sunday, Aug. 'tl, 1978

Brenda Bishop to
wed in afternoon
ceremony, Sept. 30
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.
ADen D. Bishop, Route 4,
P'omeroy, are announcing the
engagement and appr011ching
marriage of their daughter,
Brenda Sue to Glen Lee Kennedy. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Kennedy , Route I,
Rulland.
The open church wedding
will be an event .of Safurday.
Sept. 30 at I : 30 p.m. with
music to begin at I p.m., a\
tl&gt;e
Ha rri s on v ill e

-·

::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Taiwan team
wins LL crown

Wright five-hitter paces Red Sox win

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa.
UnilecJ PreulniHDaUonal
fly .out •. Rice launched the snapped a 27 mnmg scoreless three runs and Bob McClure
Jim Rice blllsted his 33rd first pt\ch by Call forma st reak a.t Fenway w1th a run ram ..~ hi&lt; ninlh &lt;Rvn wi•h
. IUPI) - Pan Cbao-Min
plkbed a flv&amp;-hltter and
home run and drove in three starter and loser Paul · m the mnlh.
two and two-thiros innin~s of
•lammed a two-run homer
runs -nd Jim Wright fired a Hartzell far over the left field
In other aft~rnoon games in hitl es~ relief. Milwaukee
five-hitter to lead the Red Sox wal), giving Boston a 2.() lead. the American League, start er Bill Travers, 9-7,
SatuNiay to lead Piagluog,
Taiwan to an Il-l vktory
to a 7-1 victory over the
In the sixth, Scott hit his Molwaukee beat Detrmt 9-S received home run support
California Angels.
lOth homer to close Boston's and Toronto edged Mmnesota !rom Don Money and Gorman
onr DaovJUe, CaiU., lor
lloe eltamploublp of the . • Rice gave Wright (8-2) au scoring.
4-3 In 10 innings.
. Thomas to end Jack
•3ZDd at1111111l Utile League
the runs he needed in the first
All eight of Wright's. wins
Buck Martmez drove 111 Billingham 's
nine-game,
World Series.
inning. After Rick Budeson have been at Fenway, where
winning streak. Lance
doubled and went to third on a he has a 1.84 ERA. California f/::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:;:::

Presbytenan Church. A
receptioo will be beld at the
Masonic Hall at Harrisonville
inunediately followi!lg the
wedding.
The bride..,lect is a 1977
graduate of Meigs· High
School and is employed at
Crow's ·Steak HoulU!,
Pomeroy. Her fiance is a 1976
graduate of Meigs High
School and works at
American Electric Power.

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: .

.;:;:: .:

Irwin slipS a· little

ParTish and Rusty Staub
homered for the Tigers .
NATIONAL Lt:AGUE
HOUSTON
Bruce
Bochy's two-run double
sparked a five-run first inning and J . R. Richard tossed
a six-hitter S~turday to lead .
the Houston Astros to a 7_2
victory over the Pittsburgh
Pirates.
·

::,:,:

Richard (14-11 ) pitched .his
12th complete game and
.·.·
:;:; struck out eight to raise hls
!.!···!
PINEHURST, N. C. (UPI) -Hale Irwin slipped a } . major league - leading total
.
little with twu bogeys ov¢r the !In! lour buies bUistiU held ::;: to 144 as Houston won its fifth
{ a share of the lead midway through Saturday's third :) in a row. Bruce Kison (4-.li
:;:: roWJd of the $250,000 Hall of Fame Gtllf Classic. Irwin \ was the starter and loser for
:·:: blistered the course ·Friday with an 8-under-par &amp;:l·bul the :::: the Pirates.
•::: famed Pinehurst C..untry Club No. Zgot a little revenge as }
RAIN DELAy
:.:.: the third round began under smmy skies .
After six inni ngs: ·Ci n/ cinnati 4, Chicago 2 (rain
·,:,::':::::':::'::,:,:, ':' :'::::::::: ':': ':': :: :': ':':::::': ': :::,::::::::::::::::::::::::'": ': ::::::::::: :':: ::::::::::::,:::::::::::::::::,:::::::,:,:,:, delay l .

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MEAD ZOO SHEET
.

.

FILLER PAPER
BRE!IIDA BISHOP ·

Gallia Girl Scouts
look at prejudice
A new 1dea to discourage
prejudice in sc hool-age .
children is coming to Gallia
County via the Seal of Ohio
Gi rl Seoul Council. This past
summer at Ga!lia County's
Girl Scout Day Camp, the
girl s pa rti cipated in the
Green Circle Demonstration.
The demonstration given by
trained volunteers helps the
chi ldren have a better understanding of themselves
an d the differences and
similarities of other people .
The Green Circle Progr~m
is a national. non-profit
organization . Nan cy Beu,
F'ield Director for Seal of
Ohio Girl Scout Council, is
currently looking for fundmg
to help support Green Circle
activities. Any civic, social,
or ed ucationa I groups in·

terest ed in having a program
about Grcen Ci rcle for their
meeting or anyone having
questions, please call Ms.
Nancy Beu. 611-773-2146 Girl
Sco ut

Serv ice

Cente r ,

Ch illicothe, Ohio.

c:.Art Carved

I'ERf o; r.

Perf idia by A rtCa rve d .
Sty li zed flor al des ign in a
dramatic ant ique fi nish .
The fash ionable look o f
toda y. fr o m ou r co mplete
Ar tCarved coll ect io n.
Come 1n soon and ou r
trained personnel will help
yo u se lect a ma tched set.

TAWNEY'S
JEWELERS,
~14

Second Ave .
Gallipoli s

49!.

Heck's. Reg.
Galiery Hours - saturdays and Sundays, I p.m. until S
p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, lOa .m. until3 p.m.
Exhibilfor the mooth of August; l978 - "VIolet Korfhage's
World in Watercolors 197D-1976.
SePtember 27-28 - Eighth Annual Antique Seminar with
Orva Walker Heissenbultel from Washington, D. C., Riverby .
October 7 - Octoberfest, Riverby . .

99• Pkg.

junbav

MEAD
WHITE OR. GREEN PApER

SPORTS

STENO PA"D

3.3e

Heck's
Reg. 59•

HQUSEWARE DEPT.

Community!
I
Comer ·I

,1

By Charlene Hoeflich

I
~

If there· was always something you wanted to know about ·
nower arranging , but were afraid to ask, the arTanging clinics
to be held nexlmonlh is probably the place for you .
MONDAY
And you don't have to be a garden club member. This is !or
BETHEL 62, Inte rnational
evetyone,
men, women, children, and begins with the basics.
Order of J ob·'s Daughters,
The
partlcipalioo
work.shops will be held in the social room
7:30 Monda)· ni ght at the
of
the
Athens
County
Savings and Loan Co. and the first one is
Pomer oy Masunie Temple .
Monday, Sept. II , 7:30p.m. They'll continue for !our weeks on
Mondays.
OPEN MEETING of \he
The regislrdtion fee - and this is for all lour weeks -is $2.
Rulland Garden Club, Mon- Janet Bolin of Rutland, an accredited judge of the Ohio
day night 7:30 at the Rutland Association.of Garden Clubs and an outstanding arrdnger, will
Cl1urch of Chris\, Mrs. Joe be the instructor.
Bolin will b.. giving an arClasses will be infonnal and it's a great change to le¥rn
rangement oemunstration. flower arranging from the beginning.
Members of a ll Meigs County
Interested) Just call Pat Holler, 992-7261, or Marie Birga en clubs arc invited.
chfield, 742-2178 to register. The workshops are being sponsored by the Meigs County Garden Clubs Association.
MEIGS BAND Boosters
Fur t..lenl in flower arranging you might look to the
Monday 7:30 p.m., in band
room at high school.
Carpenters- Bernice, Suzy, and Jay. ln the Friday show.allbe
Meigs County Fair, \hey were all blue ribbon winners in the
ALL EASTERN High girls arrangement classes.
going out for volleyba ll report
at high sc hool. 12 noon
And speaking of flowers, those dahbas exhibited by Mr. and
Monday: those interested but ·Mrs. Francis Shaeffer ~ere out of this world.
unable to attend call \he
school. during the day· and
Everytime we visit the Albert Roushes on Bailey Run Road,
leave rrame.
we marvel at the house which was a family construction job,
RACINE BASEBALL Assn. and the allraclive things whlch.lill il including an extensive
pic ni c and swim party sal land pepper shaker collection displayed on buill-in shelves
Monday. Picnic 5:30 at in the spacious living room. And Veisia is another on.e with a
Syracuse . park ;· swinuning green thumb . Her flowers are absolutely beautiful and they're
party, 7 to 9 at umdon Pool. t!Vt!rywhere.
For tee-ball. pee wee, little,
I
pony and girls tea ms,
Our congratulations to Dana Hamm who celebrated her rthcoaches
and
fam ilies . day (93rd, we think ) Thursday . She's a patient at \he Pleasant
Families to take meat dish Valley Hospital having been taken there Tuesday for treatand covered dish and own ment. She is slowly improving and Friday was able to be up
tab le service . Bu si ness andaboulsome.
meeting to be held and
uniforms to be turned in.
Out Rutland way , a fall flower show, " Autumn's
WEDNESDAY
Treasures", is-being planned by the RuUand Garden Club for
WOMEN REPUBLICAN Sept. 9. It's the first of several being planned by Meigs garden
Cl ub of Meigs County picnic clubs.
6;30 p.m . Wednesday at
Pomeroy Gun Club with Mrs.
LOCAL "seens"-Vickie Epple leaving for Miami University
lorene Johnston, Wellston , where she's hopeful of playing basketball .... Roscoe, Mary,
lOth district committee, guest Jennifer ar\d SuzaMa Wise returning from a camping t1ip to
speak er . Meat will be Acadia National Park in Maine with scenery sightseeing
prov ided.
d
through Maine, New Hampshire, and Verrnoot.

ate

Rigid steel frame with comfortable vinyl
handle. Adjustable for · IO" or 12" blades.

CHESHIRE
Thanks to
the interest and medical
training of a dedicated
faculty member, a new
program has been adiled this
year to the
athletic
departments of Kyger Creek
High School.
Working without any
additional pay Maurice Todd
Mayes, Poi.nt Pleasant,
veteran French and history
·-

Heck's Reg. '6.69
ARE DEPt,

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

PRESTONE
12 0%.
BRAKE FLUID

CLEANER

2·step process . Cleans and pr'eserve's auto vinyl
and Interiors. Ideal for all v inyl products, golf
s, shoes, handbags, boat Interiors, et,c .

•2•• .

Heck's Reg. '3.66 Kit
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

CHOICE

For use with standard 2"x4" lumber. Holes
for screws and nails provided for
permanent cons! ruction'.
•

.

.Heck's Reg.

'5A9 Pair

each

Heck's Regular to 1.89
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

'-,!M&lt;Ili
STI\Ntl Y

SAW HORSE
BRACKETS

99~

WOOD HANDLE
HAMMER
16 oz. stained, lacquered hickory
Rim-tempered" face minimizes chiot1lnc1.

Heck's Reg.

'7.39

Miller reunion

••••

Price includes : 305 V8 engine,
white side wall radials, custom
air conditioning, electric clock,
sift ray glass. remote control
mirror, automatic transmission .

Bumper strips and guards, rocker
panel mldgs .. wheel opening
mldgs .. power disc brakes, front
power steering, radio, 12 mo.·
12.000 mile warranty.

Open House
invi14tion
'·

· Nathan and Florence Clay
will be honored by an open
boUle to ctlebrale their 2&amp;th
anniversary . Family and
frlen,ds are cordially invited
to their home from·. 2-4 p.m.,
on Sunday, September 3.

•

BOW CASE
ADIUM SEAT

lu1r:n•ouflag1e cloth, with snap-end c•o.,uro••·
S3"x19". Standard Pack - 2~
Individually peg·board bagged as p•~T.uriiQ.

Heck's Reg. '

'6.99

] 11

60 . 67

7

2 11 ~

.412

55 7) .430 17 1 J
57 76 .406 15 h
1

W. L . P et .
76 52 .594

GB

C in ci n n at
San D iego

74 54 .578
71 57 .555
67 62 .519

'2
5
9' 1

Houston

60

LOS Ang

San Fran

At lan ta

68

. .469

16

56 71 .44 1 19 1 7
Friday ' s Results

St. L ou is 11 , A tlant a 10, ni gh t
Ch ica g o 5, Cincinna ti 2, nig ht
Houston 7, P ittsbur gh 5. ni gh t
N ew Yo r k 2. San Diego 1.
night
Los Ange l es 6, Ph i ta 5. night
Montrea l B. San Fr an S, n igh t
Sunday 's Games
Montreal at San F ran c isco, 2
Chicago at Cin c inna t i
Piltsburgh a t Hou ston
St. L ouis a t Atla nta
N ew Yor-. a t Sa n Diego
P h ilad el phi a a t Los Angel es

East
W, L. Pet.
79 47 .627
71 54 .568
n 5:; .567
71 56 .559
68 58 .540
56 11 .441
52 17 .403
West •
W. l . Pet.
70 59 .543
68 58 .540
63 63 .500
6'2 68 . .d77
56 73 .434
53 73 .42 1
49 78 .386

Ptsbg h
OOJ 001 001 - 5 11 2
Ho us
200 131 OOx - 7 10
Rooke r , Wh i tson (6 ) and Ott ,·
N iekr o, Sambi to (7), Andu j ar
(8 ) and Pujot s . W- N iekr o ( 11 10 ) . L - Rooker ( 8 9 l
HR sHouston . Sexton (2l.

o

NY .
020000000- 27 0
San Ogo
000 000 010- 1 50
Swan and St ea r ns ; Perry ,
Lee ( Bl and Tenace . W- Swan
( 7-51. L - Perry 115-6) . HR _:_ San
Diego , Winfield (20 )
Ph i l a
003 000 200- 5 8 0
L .A
100 020 012.._ 6 16 I
·Ruthven ,
Reed
(9 1
and
Boone ; Sutton , Rau t zhan (9 )
and Dare s, Y eager , Grote . wRautzhan ( 20 ) .. L - Reeo ( 12 ) .
HR s--+ Ph i ladelph i a , Boone ( 12 1.
M c Bride ( 5 );
Los Angel es,
G ar vey 118 l ,_ Monday (\5 ).

Monlre J
910 200 320 - 8 16 1
San Fr an
201 000 020- 5 8 4
Sc hatzeder . Ga r man (8 ),
GB Kn owle s ( 8 ), Bahnsen ( 8 ) and
Carter ; Montefusco , M inton ( 6 ),
7' 1 Curt is (7) , W ill iams ( 7), Moff i tt
7' 1 (9 1 and H i ll . W - Schatzea er (6{Q. JJ
HRs81 7 il l . L - M inton
Mon tr eal. S c h a r z e d e r ( 1J.
11
231 7 D a wson ( 23 1, Vale n tine (2 1) .
28 2 San Fran c 1sco , Ev ans 2 ( 14 ).
1

GB
-

1· 1
11

Eastern
Kentucky
University.
.
Mayes . received . a
certificate for his course of
study plus additional college
hours toward his Master's
Degree work .
Mayes received his EMT
training from the Mason
SOPHOMORE GUARD Mark Gilmore Is getting his foot and ankle taped prior to taking
County Vocational School. He
the
field
before a practice session of the 1978 Kyger Creek football team. Faculty trainer
completed it in November,
Todd Mayes is doing the taping.
1977.
Prior to \bat, be has had
medical j!xperience lrom his
work in the Pleasant Valley
Hospital emergency room.
ooo
Mayes served 'a s trainer for
the KC basketball team last
winter.
By Greg lll!fley
Crabtree attended a
II most of you have been following me in my articles on a student · athletic training
day with Meigs County Game Protector Andy Lyles, perhaps workshop this summer at the
you gathered that I enjoyed myself very much, although there University of Kentucky in
were aome aspects of his job in which I was glad I was j~ a Lexington, Ky.
spectator. On that day and the day following, I got to see a part
Major function of an
of their work that was very gratifying. We worked with athletic trainer is to prevent,
treat (without medicine) and
migratory birds.
One project that is carried out every year in cooperation rehabilitate injuries. Maves
with the Federal (;lovernment is the banding of migratory and his ·assistant do aU leg
waterfowl, especially woodducks. Andy and Special Wildlife tapeings lor the Kyger Creek
ooo
Agent Jim Spieet had set out two "live-&lt;:atch" wire traps lor football learn and will treat
woodducks. And m that day, two juvenile woodles (birds that minor injuries to ankles, legs ,
had been hatched this year) had wandered into the com-baited arms and knees. Any player
tr&amp;pll.
.
found to have a serious injury
First of all, let me assure you that these traps were very will be directed to consul\ a
humane and Jim and Andy handled each bird very carefully doctor immediately.
and tenderly. Alter laking one bird a\ a time from the trap, a
A trainer's visit begins with
small. Ughtwelghl band was placed around Its leg. On each a short history written
banding, Andy and Jim were sure to bave the band just right, concerning the mechanism of
not too tight and not hurting the bird. With their knowledge of the injury, whether it is an old
wUdlife, the two men then aged and sexed the animal before injury or new ooe. Mayes
writes down !·he exact
releasing it q ulle unharmed.
P\lrpo8e of the banQing is to follow the duck's migratory exercise
or treatment
CHECKING FILES -Maurice Todd Mayes, veteran faculty member at Kyger Creek ,
jlattern and other things . II ooe of the banded ducks would be recommended to rehabilitate
the
school's
new athletic trainer, checks the file card before discussing an old baseball
shot or otherwise captured In, say louisiana, then the Federal the' injury, such as cold or
injury
with
junior
gridder Tom Rees. KC's athletic training room has been constructed in
Government could check its records, record the migratory heat applications.
the
boys'
locker
room.
In order to help Mayes and
data, age it, and then put this knowledge to work for other
Crabtree with their duties,
ducks, and perhap11 even us hunters.
. All one can see, it's vllllly important to report any killed or the Kyger Creek Athletic injury treatment.
captured banded fowl to your game protector or mall the band Boosters Club has agreed to
In addillon, Fruth 's
to the Divllllon of WUdllle. A Guarantee - you will get a purchase a hydrocolator, a Phannacy of Point Pleasant,
written reply, thanking you lor your cooperation. Andy says machine used for moist heat has dOnated an industrial
.
therapy and the school and first aid kit· and several
sol
, Did you know thai Ohio produces more woodducks every boosters are sharing the cost school parents bave donated
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. don 't intend to, " he scoffed. last year holding or sharing
year than any other state? That's something, considering that for a freezer to store ice for towels.
(UPI) - Is this the year Joe
"We're going to bave ample nineschool passing records.
Olilo's duck hunters aren't too numeroWI, at lellll not in lhis
opportunity to prove one He threw for 2,221 yards and
Paterno finally gels to raise
part of tlMi state.
·
the natiooal championship
thing or the other this season . 15 touchdowns last year and
- The other lltUe jaunt thai I had the privilege of observing
I'm not going to get involved coughed up the ball just nine
fiag atop Mount Niltany for
Wll an annual dove co~mt. II waa a rather boring job, but
in that silly business." ,
times on interceplioos.
all in the football-crazy
nonetheless, It had to be done_ The Government selected
Happy, Valley to see?
Paterno's rejeclioo of preBut just because he is
twenty miles of co\Uity·and to'Wiilhip road at random, and we
The cherished No. . I season polls and projectioos coaching "the finest quarter·
traveled It, counting the number of doves we obeeMII!d in
ranking, the one prize that ·- doesn' t mean · he's not back we've ever had a\ Penn
llelda, on poles and trees, and in the air. This Is done in every
has eluded Paterno during his
bubbling with optimism over State,'' don 't think Paterno is
cOunty In the stale, all over the Ul)lted Slates, and from this
highly successful 12-year. the 1978 Nittany Lioos. The going to . go pass-crazy this
count a fairly accur.ate estimate of the dove population can be
anticipation , he says, is season.
career as Penn State head
made. Then ae81011a and other decisions concerning the very '
coach, appears to be within
similar to that which faced . " I'd like us to slay in the
gamey bird can be made. By the way, the.r e will be no dove
reach this year ·since the
his 1969 and 1973 learnS, both range pf 20 or 25 passes a
.uon in Ohio this year as the pollliclana and other decision
Nlttany Lions ' return 37 of which finished unbeaten. game," he said. " I don'\ want
makers don't want to touch this very controversial subject
lettennen from last season's
"We're ccming off a good us silting back waiting for the
UIIW alter electllin In November.
II· I team the\ finished fourth
season and have some key big play. I hope we never get
So, as the ll)'ing goes, I guess we Ohioans will f.-ed the
in the polls.
people back," he said. "I to the point that we can't
dovea so the Southern hunters can shoot them or else the birds
think we'll be more explosive control the running game."
Among the returnees are
maydleon their own. Seems silly for Ohioans to IDMOUI.
quarterback Chuck Fusina, this year. We have a fine
Paterno can back this up
A couple olnoltel - On September 23, National Hunling
whom Paterno calls a "bona- squad - physlcallywehavea with a quartet of talented
and Flmlna Day will be oboerved all over the natim . .'Ibis day
fide Hei.lman Trophy can- real fine squad. But we're running backs, including
11, HI llllde to chw· 'atteMion to the hunlinC and fl.lhlng
didate," . all-America
going to have to be awfully Suhey, who· led the Niltany
herltap of America and to pnmote goochrtll. Allo, the day II
disciplined, mentally tough." Lions in rushing last year
olfenelve tackle Keith Dorney
. eitared apedaUy towardl the youth to make beiter, Iller, and
and candidates for postAnd, Paterno , admits, with 638 yards. Bob Torrey, a
mare COIIICienlloua 1portan111 out ·aliiMm.
·
seiuon honors such . as
ready to teckle a schedule bruising 2JO.poWJder, backs
Again lhil year, tbe 01p0111man'a cluba of Metes County
defensive tackles Bruce
thai inclodes Ohio Stale a\ up Suhey.
'!Ill celebrate by havtna a youth day with loto of actlvltlea for
Clark and Mat\ Mlllen,
ColUII)bus; archrlval Pitt;
Booker Moore and versaWe
11M younptw1ln the arel to llhare. Aglln,lbe acUriUee 'lri1l be
lloobacker Rick Donaldson
Kentucky, which inflicted the Mike Guman, who played
by the lluk Walton l.eajple, K111 Amsbary
and fullback Matt Suhey.
Lions with their ooly 1977 half of last season ' in the
Olapler, bit other clubl of the Clf!UIIIy plan on hayq a biC part
But ask Paterno about the
loss, and unpredic\able defensive secondary and can
MEIGS COUNTY Game Protector Andy Lyles bands
ID U. clay, Cooperatllon like lhll lhould make a day to
No. I hoopla and he 'U get a
Temple, the Lions' season run, catch and throw with
a
YOWlll
trood cklck II WUdllfe Agent Jim Spleet looks on.
IWIIIIIIblr lor Olr yOiqllen.
,
look oo his face like he juat
opener
Sept. I.
equal abiUty, will share the
Mcmllllllater, the ducll wu ...Jealad unharmed with a
Min dl&amp;aiil on lhla wiD follcnr, but qlln, thanks to that
swallowed sour milk.
The offense revolves chores at tailback. Paterno
very small bind aroWid Ill lee that would help the Federal
helpfll Horace Karl', the actlvtlill wiD be held at Royal Oak
"To tell you the truth, I around Fulina, the, tl-1, 1911- said Suhey ~!so might see
Government
in detenninlna mljp'atory patlernl, hunting
Plrt. Walda Ulll lor men !nfCII'IIIItlca.
didn't look at one football
pound sharpshooter from some action there.
- . a , and other lmpartant alplda col U. wooclchlclc'e
lqulrnl-n OJMll1l m Setpember I, eo Oood.lfunttnl!
magazine
!hill
SWIUiler
and
I
McKees Rocks who finished
The Nitlany Lions lost
life.

.·

....... r.

CAMOUFLAGE

64 62 .508
63 63 .500

Nittany Lions could -be No. 1.

well attended
The;aMual MU!er's reunion
was held at the Junior
Fairgrounds Aug. 12. It was
well attended by out-o(•town
guests from Bidwell, Springfield, · MarysvU!e , South
Charleston, London , Ohio,
Detroit Michigan, Lexington,
Ky.
There were seventy-live
attendihg the gala affair with .
plenty of food and lots of
refreshments.

instructor at KCHS, serves as
the school 's athletic trainer
while David Crabtree, a
junior college p~ep student, is
student trainer .
Mayes is a national
registered EMT (emergency
medical technician) and
recently completed an
athletic training conference
sponsored jointly by Cramer
Athletic
Products and

Den Talk

OR
CARB AND
CHOKE

VINYL GUARD KIT

L. Pet . GB
66 59 .528 -

Alia
004 040 002-- 10 10 0
F or sc h, Lopez (6 ), Br uno .( 7J,
L 111e11 I ll and Sw i sher , Si m
mon s ( 1) ; M ij; Wil l i ams , Camp
15 1. Garb er (6 ), Skok
(9 ),
Bogg s ( 9 ) an d Nolan . W - Br uno
(.d .1J L -- Garber D 3 J. H Rs- St .
Lou is. Hendr ick ' 7 ( 17l, Re i tz
( 9 ); A tlanta , Horner 'J ( 17 L

Major L eague L ead ers
By United Press International
5
Batting
O~k l and
811
(based on 325 at bats)
Minnesot
1Jl
Nat iona l League
Chicago ·
15 12
GAB. H Pet .
Seattle
20
Burrogh s Atl
121 396 125 .316
Smith L A
Friday~ults
lOB 386 120 .3 11
To r onto 7, M i!J ne~a 3
Clark SF
128 .d67 145 .3 10•
Ba lti more 5. Seatt le 0 . nigh t
Parker P i tt
113 .d46 138 . 309
Boston 6, Cali forn i a 0, night
Rose Cin
127 531 163 . 307
Ne.w York 7, Oakland 1, n i ght
Madlo ck SF
94 346 106 . 306
D etroit 6, M il waukee J, n ight
Bowa Ph i l
122 507 154 . JO.d
Cleve land 2, Chicago 1, n ight
Cr uz Hou
122 454 137 . 302
Texas 7, K.ansas Ci ty 2, n ight
Cromart Mil
124 479 144 .301
Con ce pcn Cn
127 458 137 .799
Sunday 's Games
American League
Cle veland a t Chicago
GAB- H Pet.
Milwaukee at Detroi t
Car ew M inn
122 460 156 .339
Mionesota a t Tor onto
126 525 171 .326
R ic e 8os
Seaffle at Baltimore
P in iella NY
95 341 108 .317
Oa kland at N ew York
Ol i \ler T ex
99 390 122 .313
Cali fornia at Boston ,
Rober t s Sea
102 350 109 .311
Kansas Ci t y a t TeKas . night
Brett KC
94 379 114 .30 1
Thompsn Dt
119 .d 63 139 .300
Major League ltesulls
Munson NY
118 479 143 .299
By United Press Inter-national · Bostoc~ Cal
121 465139 .299
American l eague
• W h itaker Dt
109 384 115 .299
Ca l if
000 000 000- 0 4 0
Home Runs
Bos
101 102 O h. ~ 6 17 0
National League : Foster . Cir\
Aao;e ,
D .M ilt er
(6 J
and 29 ; LUtinski. Ph il 28 ; Sm i th , LA
Down ing ; E c kNstev an d Fi sk
27 : Daw son , Mfl and Parker.
W - Etkersley {1 5·5) . L - Aase P i tt 23.
(B.aJ . HRs- Boston , R ice ( 32 ).
American l e.a gue : Riq• . Bos
32 . H isl e , Mil 29 . Thoma's . M il
Sea
000000 000- 0 2 I 27 . Ba ylor , Cal and Tho r nton .
Bat t
000 100 21x - 5 11 1 Ctev 26 . .
M i tchell ,
Toda
(7 )
and
Runs Batted In
Plummer ; O .M art i n e z and
National league : Fosl er , Cin
D empsey . w - D .Mar ti n ez t i D· 95 ; Garvey , LA 89 ; Clark . SF
101 L -.-Mitc hell (6 13) . HRs 85 ; Sm i th , LA and Parker , I? i tt
Balt i more, May ( 20l
.84 .
1
Am erican League : . Rice. Bos
Oak
100 ooo- 1 6 2 106 ; Staub, Det 100 ; H isle , Mil
N .Y .
10000420x - 78 1 93 ; Thornton , Cle\1 84 : Thom p .
John son , Heaverlo (7 ), Br o - son , D el 82. ·
Sto-len Bases
berg (8 J and Robinson ; Gui dry ,
Natlonal league : . Moreno,
Goss ag e (9 ) an d Munson. wG u i dr y [ 18·2) L - JOhn son ( 10· P i fl
53 ;
LOpes ,
LA
36 ,·
71 . HRs.:.... N ew York . R iv er s '2 R icn ards . SO 33; Taveras . Pitt
( 10 ). Jackson ( 18 1.
and Sm i tn . SO 32.
American L eague : LeFlo r e ,
Milw
000 001 020- 3 9 4 Det 58; Oilone, Oak 4&lt;:~ ; 'Cr u z,
Del
040 001 lOx - 6 10 1 Sea 43 ; Wills , Tex 40 ; Wi l son ,
Cal dwell , Replogle (ll and K C 35.
Moore ; Young , H ill er [8) and
Pitching
Parr i sh _ W - Young [ 5-3) . t._ V i ctor ies
Nafionat ·League : B lu e , SF 16Caldwell [1 6-8 ). H Rs M il -•
waukee , Cooper ( 101; Detr oi t , 6 ; Per r y , SO 15-6 ; John , LA
and Gr imsley, Mtl 15 -9 ; N iek r o ,
L eFlor e (8 l.
A l l 15·14 .
American League : . Guidry 1
Cleve
100 100 000- 1 50
Chi
100
ooo- 1 6 1 NY 18 2 ; Tanana , Cat and
Wa its . Monge (9 1. · K ern 19 1 CaldwelL Mil 16-IL· Flanagan ,'
and Alexander ; Ba rr ios and Ball 1611 ; E c kersley , B6s 15-5 ;
..COibern . W - Wa its (9 . 13) . L Torret, Bo ~ 15.7; Sorensen , Mil
·~ar r i os (8 -11 )
15-8,
Splittorft,
KC
15- 11 ;
Palmer , Ball 15-12.
Earned Run Average
K .C
000020000- 250
T exas .
000 006 l Ox - 7 7 o
{based on·111 inni!19S pitched)
Ga te, B ird ( 7J and Porter ;
National League : vuckOV' i ch ,
Matla ck and Sundb erg . WSt .L 2_22 ; Swan , NY 2 ..d0 ;
Mattack l11 -10 ) . L - Gale ( 13 6) . Rogers, Mil 2,46 ; Blue, SF 2.65 .
HR s - Ka nsas Ci t y, Por l er { \ 1); Knepper . SF 2.81.
T exa s, Z isk (15 ~ .
American League : . Guidry ,
NY 1.77 ; Matlack . Tex 2.16 ;
CaldwelL Mi l 2.43 : P almer .
Ball '2 .58 : Hartzen , Cal 2.66.
Nationi l Leagu e
Strikeouh
Ch i
020 20 1 000- 5 13 0
National league : . Richard ,
000 100 010- 2 5 0
Cinci
199 ;
Reuschel. Su Tter
[ Bl and Hou 2l6 ; N iekro , "A ll
Blackwell ; L aCoss , Borbon (6 ). Seaver , Cin 166 ; Montefusco ,
SF 146 ; Blue , SF 136.
Hume (8 ) and Bench . WAm erican League : Ryan , Cal
Reuscnel [ 13- l ll . L - LaCoss (J .
205 ; Gui dr y . NY 199 ; Leonard.
41 .
KC 138 ; F l aMgan , Ball 135 ;
Kravec , Ch i 120
St. L
DOS 011 03 1- 11 17 2

•

PKG.

Heck's Reg. '1.75

w.

West

Ca t i t
Kan C1ty
T e Ka S

Faculty member
new .KC trainer

HACK SAW

CRAYOLA CRAYONS

Phil a
Ch ic ago
P i tt sb r gh
Montreal
St Lou is
New York

Boston
New York
M ilw auk e
Detro i t
B3 11 imor
_l eveln d
Toronto

DEPT.

There will. be a training for

It
r------·-1 I

East

American League

TRAINERS IN ACTION-Student trainer Davld.Crabtree tapes the foot and ankle or
Junior gri!lder Allen Sheets under the watchful eye of faculty trainer Todd May'es.

on Tuesday . September 9,
6:30-9: 30 p.m. at the Carver
Community Center located in r.·---------:--._..~
Chillicothe , Ohio.
Call Ms. Beu if you would
like to participate.

Ma.ior Lugue Standing"

Bv United Press International
National League

By United Pres s Internat ional

Green Circle Demonstrators

!' So CI"al .1I 1I
IC~~dMit

~imts·--~enthul

BASEB.ALL SCOREBOARD

,...._dad

,,

..

Jinuny Cefalo and Mickey
Shuler but return three
steady receivers in wideouts
Tom Donovan, Scott Fitzkee
and Bob Bassett. Converted
tackle lrv Pankey giyes them
a
256-pound
blocker
masquerading as a tight
end .
On the offensive line, which
lost only guard John Dunn to
graduation, \he 257-pound
Dorney will have a lot of
runners going over his back
while Chuck Correal gives the
Uons a solid center.
The . anchors of the
defensive line are Clark and
Millen, the junior pair who .
may surpass the 1969 duo .of
All-America Mike Reid and
Steve Smear before they
leave here. Clark, at 265
pounds, and Millen, "only"
260, each bench press more
than 500 pounds and were
timed at 4.1 seconds lor the
40-yard dash.
Clark and Millen flank
middle guard Tony Petrucdo
while underrated Joe Lally
and Fred Ragucci man the
ends.

·

Matt Bahr returns from his
rookie season in the North
American Soccer League to
handle the placeki!!l&lt;ing.

�' .

-.

C-2- The Sumlay Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Aug . tl . 1978

Reuschel defeats
·Reds again
.
.

.

teaming with relief ace Bruce
l'he Reds ' only run off the runs a game in our remaining ·
l'lNClNNA'i'l 1 UPII to
pitch
the
Chicago
Sutter
Cubs pitching ~ce came in the 34 , we'll still fall 106 runs
Manager Sparky Anderson is
abuut as ·silent these days as Cuhs to a :&gt;-2 victory over fourth when Johnny Bench short uf matching last year's,
the bats cor his· tail&lt;;pinning Cincinnati in the first of a followed two-out walks to total ," pointed out Anderson.:
•
three-game series. "They're George Foster and Danny
Reds.
;dl
trying.
We
just
can't
get
Driessen with a single to
"I can 't blame anyone ,"
left .
ootid' Anderson Friday niKht the job done."
THIS WEIK'S
The Reds loss was the loth
afll'r Rick Reuschel drove
A walk to Joe Morgan, Ken
home thre.e runs while in their lasl 1&amp; games. For Griffey's single and Foster's
Reuschel, the wln was his fielder 's choice gave the Reds
fourth consecutive over Clncy their final run in the eighth
IN FIRST PLACE
this · year and boosted his inning.
WAUKEGAN, Ill. tUPli - record tO 13-11 .
· "It doesn't matter who's
. Larry Gray shot games of 268
.. H yOu can't scor.e runs, pitching ," said Anderson .
and 2&amp;7 Friday night to move you can't Win games," said
from third to first place after Anderson, "and this is a club "We just aren't searing the
CONCORD
the sel-ond round in the that's supposed io win even runs we should."
I..ast year, the Reds scored
$60,000 Waukegan Open when it gives the opposition
5th WHEEL
1102
runs and still finished 10
professional bowling tour- four cr five runs."
games behind the Dodgers in
nament.
.r
A walk to Dave Kingman, a the National League , West.
Gray , Torrance, Calif., single by Manny Trillo, Ivan
TRAILfRS
moved past first-round leader DeJesus' sacrifice bunt and They have now scoced 5®
rwts
this
seasOn.
Rt.
»
Hartford, W. Y•.
Fred Conner, Mar Vista, an intentional · walk to Tim
"Even
if
we
averaged
four
Calif. Gray's 2-game total is Blackwell preceded a second2,766, 22 pins better than inning single by Reuschel
•
•
Conner.
that gave the Cubs a 2-0 lead.
Completing the top five
A "chinker " was the way
were : Neil Burton, St. Louis, Reuschel ·described his base
2,722 ; Garry Patterson, St. hit off Mike LaCoss, the Reda'
Louis, 2,711 ; and .Carmen 22-year-old rookie rightBACKFIELD DISCUSSION. - Kyger Creek's 1978
RU.seu, Paul Lasseter, Victoc VanSickle , Woody Burnett,
Salvino, Chicago, 2,677.
hll,nder who wound up with
backfield candidates are listl'ning to some advise from the
Bmn Sutphm,Randy Taylor and Bruce Gilmoce . Coaches
his fourth IOSll against three
Bobcat coaching staff. KC players are, left to right, Steve
are Mike Mulford , Deryl Well and Head Coach J1m
WAITS WiNNER
victories.
Spragu•.
CHICAGO (UP! I - .:rhe
A sacrifice fly by Reuschel
Chicago . White Sox played with the bases loaded
pitcher Rick Waits' game accounted far ooe of two
Friday night, so the Chicago runs In the fourth
Cleveland Indians ' left- inning. Greg Gross singled ·
haOder won his ninth vk1ory home the other for a &lt;Hl Cubs
even through he wasn't at his lead.
best.
In the sixth, with Pedro
"The White Sox are a good- . Borbon pitching, the Cubs
hitting team," Wais said, added their final run on
"and I seem to pitch hetter DeJesus' double and Black. CHESHIRE
Ten
KYGER CREEK ROSTER
against th e good-hitting well's single.
lettermen, none with an Player
Pos. HI. Wt. Yr.
clubs. They go at you and
Reuschel, who blanked the
abundance of experience, will Mark Curnutte-x
134 10
G:&gt;-8
they
don't
sit
there
and
take
Reds
2-0 in Chicago last week,
.
STEVENS POINT, Wis.
return this season to the Jim Misner
G 5-11 160 12
the
pitches.
departed
Friday night after
1UPII - Steubenville, Ohio,
Kyger Creek football squad , Gary Nibert-x
E 6-1
160 12
"Some
teams
I'm
really
giving
up
one run and four
scored the winning run in the
which · won its filth straight Steve RusseU-x
QB 5-10 163 12
confident against and the hits in seven innings.
eighth
inning
5n
a
wild
pitch
CAll TODAY FOR APPOINTMENUtl-7191
SV AC grid championship.
Bryan Su tphin-x
WB 5-7
143 12
·
Friday
to
post
a
3-2 win and White Sox are one of them."
Kyger Creek's returning Randy Taylor-x ·
TB:;.&amp;
128 12
eli mi nate Barrington, Ill.,
lettermen are seniors. Mark Woody Burnett
FB 5-4
133 11
fr01n
the Great Lakes
Curnutt e, Gary Nibert, Chris EWott-x
T6-3
24011
Reg
ional
American Legion
Steve Russell , Bryan Sutphin, Bruce Gilmore
WB 5-4
128 11
Baseball
Tournament.
and Randy Taylor ; juniors, Larry Harrison
QB 5-11 173 II
Steubenville's only hit of
Chris Elliott, Paul Lasseter, Mike Kelly
c :&gt;-9 163 II
'
.
the
game was by Terry
Allen Sheets, Doub Stover Paul Lasseter-x
TB :&gt;-11 162 II
Romey in the sixth. None of
and Victor Van Sickle.
Jason Proctor
WB 5-4
105 11
the
runs were the result of
Unlike past Bobcat teams, Tom Rees-x
E 6-1
176 II
·
hits.
The bases were loaded in
this year's JI¥)del will be very AlimSheets
E6-0
121 11
the
eighth
as a result of a
smaU. "This is the smallest Doug Stover-x
G 5-7
150 11
walk
,
a
bad
throw
and a hitter
team we 'Je~ ever had ," Victor VanSickle
FB 5-11 191 11
being
hit
by
a
pitch.
vetl'ran mentor Jim Sprague Scott Burnett
TB :&gt;-8 ' 137 10
The loss went to Ilarringtoo
commented.
Preston Coughenour
E 5-10 150 10
pitcher Kevin N01;een.
Sp ra gue·, entering his John Fellure
T5-9 207 10
In another game, Dave
seventh year as head Bobcat Mark Gilmore
G ':;.&amp;
105 10
•
Boomer
walked with the
grid coach, will he looking for John Heiskel
T 5-9 142 10
bases loaded to score the
his sixth league title in seven Mike McDonald
WB :;.&amp;
11510
winning nm in the ninth when
years. KC finished second Carey Martin
BUYER
G:&gt;-6 L17 10
No. Times Bought
Amount
Allen Park, Mich., defeated
behllld Southern in Sprague's Jack Minor
Athens Co . livestock
QB :&gt;-11 !50 10
s · 1.2uo
1
Owensboro. Ky ., H . ·
rOQkie season.
Bob Misner
C:&gt;-6 108 10
Jones
Boys'.
2
1,733.60
Gene Vacco belted a solo
Kyger Creek is expected to Terry Porter
118 10
~ E :&gt;-7
Jay mar Coal Co.
1
941.60
homer
to
open
the
game
for
be quick, but bas just two Mark Price
E:&gt;-6 113 IO
Vaughan's
Cardinal
1
981.75
Allen
Park.
Boomer
had
a
players over 200 pounds . Bill Ross
TB~
150 10
Kroger
1
solo shot in the eighth , his
468.00
They are tackles Chris Elliott Mike Shoemaker
T :&gt;-7
153 10
Ohio
Valley
Lives
lock
second
home
'
run
of
the
-1
840.00
and John Fellure. Elliott tips Bill Swisher
c :&gt;-9 I« 10
tournament. Phil Hyland
'Tri-County
Meats
1
the scales at 240 pounds while Mike Swisher
153.00
WB :&gt;-7
108 10
scored Owensboro's only
Pomeroy
National
Bank-Rutland
Branch
Fellure weighs 207.
1
1,022.13
Rusty Taylor
G:&gt;-6 126 10
home run in the fourth .
Lost via graduation were Shawn Thomas
Chester Agrico
1
307.13
FB 5-9
137 10
Jim Lada was the winning
all-SV AC players Darrell Tim Barr
wesley Buehl, County Engineer
FB :&gt;-8
150 9
I
169.10
pitcher. Keith' Anderson took·
Jones, Claude Cornelius, I.JJuis Brister
Diamond Stone Quarry
G :&gt;-7
155 9
2
I
,
109.35
· the loss .
Marcus Geiger, Mike Casey Mike Elkins
T6-0
155 9
Riggs Used Cars
1
200.45
and Mike Hendrickson .
Jim Fife
WB fHl
100 9
City 1ce and Fuel
4
1.559.35
Also gone are veteran Ed Halfhill
T:&gt;-6 174 9
Citizen's National Bank
5
2,34 7.73
linemen Rusty Lucas, Randy Steve Kelley
c~
129 9
Boggs Sates and Service
3
497.55
Lucas, Tim Nibert, Semaki Ed Moore
TB 5-9
135 9
•
Senator Oakley Collins
392.40 ,_
2
Corfias, Roger Spaulding, Matt Polcyn
ES-4
!20 9
P.N.B
.
Tuppers
Plains
Branch
1
Scott
Ri chards
and Tim Price
916.00
QB HO 140 9
Qua lily Print Shop
quarterback Greg Mulford . Terry Rees
1
699.20
E:&gt;-6 112 9
Casey
and
Geiger Craig Richards
Marion
Riggs
Ford
I
E :;.1
1,350.00
100 9
1
.-EAND
combined to give the Bobcats Todd Rothgeb
French City and Landmark Foods
G :&gt;-1
135 9
1
830.85
the best one-two running David Sands
E :&gt;-11 130 9
Farmers Bank and Savings Company
10
4.724.08
punch in th e league last year . Jeff Ward
C 0-4
144 9
Pomeroy National Bank
A Grear
3
860 .85
Senior Steve Russell, a :&gt;-io, Rob Waugh
QB :&gt;-11 159 9
Sugar
Run Mill
1
Combination
841 .50
163 pounder, will handle the
JC~ettermen
Landmark
2
349.90
For
Southeastern
Ohio
quarterba ck position this fall .
Southeaslern
Equipment
1
954.00
Running backs are expected
Modern Supply
to he 191-pound jWJior Victor problems. KC's two losses
1
141.25
BOBCAT SCHEDULE
VanSickle ; t6Z-pound Paul were non-league. battles to Sepf. 1- Af Federal Hock ing
Swisher and Lohse Drug
I
922 .50
Lasseter , 128 pound Randy Wahama and Hamilton Twp ., Sept . 8- Wahama
Meigs Branch of Athens Co. Savings and Loan
1
1,003.50
Sept . 15- At Alexander
Taylor and 143-pound Bryan Franklin County.
.
Ohio
University
Inn
I
844.00
Sept 22 - AI Hannan Trace
Sutphin.
Non-league opponents Uus Se
pf. 29- 0pen
Elberfelds
1
784 .90
Starcralt/Quachlta
Boat
Sprague and his assistant • fall mclude Federal Hocking, Oct. 6- At Eastern
Ohio
State
Representative,
Ron
James
2
342.70
Mercury
Outboards
&amp;
coaches, Mike Mulford and Alexand er, . Wahama hand Oct . 13- Southern
Dan Thompson Ford Inc.
Mercrulser
·
1
209 .00
Deryl Well , must plug some Birch
High
·sc ool, Oct . 20- Birc h High
Ocl . 27- Symmes Va lley
County
Treasurer,
George
Collins
1
252.70
big hole s in th e Bobcat Delbarton, . W. Va . The Nov . 3- At Southwes tern
DOUG'S
Burger Chef
I
offensive and defensive lines. Bobcats have a vacancy m
2,229.50
Nov . 1()-.Nortll Gal lia
MARINE
Jackson Production Credit Assoc.
KC will use a varied their schedule for Sept . 29 and
1
897.25
Holzer Medical Center
of fensi ve attack· which are still seekmg an opponent.
I
148.40
Sales &amp; Service
includes the Power I, pro set ."
The now famous Kyger
P. J. Pauley Insurance
323.00
~
wing 1, and don 't be surprised Creek - North Galha con_test
county Clerk of Courts. Larry Spencer
1
172.05
(614)992 -5652
Jupite r ·~ ITii::I SS is mure than
if a little bit of the old "shot- has been moved to the !mal
Depoy Garage
1
180:80
twice
the
mass
of
all
the
other
gun "
is
pr ~s ented, game of the season, Nov . IO.
Green Acres Farm
BOB w. Ma1n S t .
planeL' put together. It has 14
1
180.40
particularly in long yardage Kyger. Creek opens 1ts
Pl"'r-- · .. .
Racine
Home
National
satellites
antJ
a
de"'"
at5
3,1M3 .75
situations.
campaign Sept. I at Federal
mosphere.
Defensively, the Bobcats Hockmg.
will use the 4-4 . If this is a
rebuilding year, the under
classmen will obtain plenty
DONATIONS
In June, 1971 , Turkey
experience for the future . The
ag•eetJ to stop all opi wn pupBobcat squad is composed of
seven seniors, II juniors, 14 py production in return for
$:J7.5 million in economic aitl
10%
Racine Home National Bank (Steer! (I)
sophomores and 14lreshmen.
from the Unite'&lt;! · States. In
DISCOUNT
(I)
G&amp;J Auto Parts •
Last year , Kyger creek
1974 it ' announced it would
UNTIL
finished atop the SV AC with a
(2)
Pomeroy Nation a I Bank
rcswne oplwn produdiun,
AUGUST
:Ml record . The Bobcats did
(3)
Boggs Sales and Service
31ST
not play Suuthern because of with U.S. antJ Unit&lt;tJ Nations
(I)
Roy
Holter
Family
controls, for medical use onPHONE
So u thern 's c losing ly.
.
Landmark
(2)
98S·J372
(1)
Denny P1rker
(I)
Jackson Production Credit
( 1)
Ohio University Inn
( 1)
Kyle Meat
[I)
Green Acres Firm

LOWMAN TRAVR

C-'1- Tbe Sunday Time; ,Sentinel, SWJday, Aug. 27, 1978
P~ADENA, Calif. [UPI) Methodist Hospital
of
- Arnold Palmer will play in Southern California.
an exhibition golf tournament
Also playing in the
at the Annandale Golf Club e&lt;hibilion will be Laura
Sept, 25, with proceeds from Baugh and Dave Marr.

p•m•"•

to

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College footf.Jall: The West
By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sporto Writer
The big news in Western
college football this Fall, of
couroe,js the o:xpansim of tl)e
Pacific 8 Conference with the
addition of Arizona and
·Arizona state.
jloth schoois have solid
football lradit1011s and figure
· to make the Pac 10 one of the
strongest conferenCes in the
nation.
However, neither
is
expected to make much of an
impact this fall, and \he fight
for the Rose .Bowl spot
opposite the Big 10 champion
will be among Washington,
Southern Califoniia, UCLA
and Galif&lt;rnia .
Washington's Huskies not
mly surprised their Pac 6
rivals in winning the
conference title last year but
fans across the nation as well
wben they upset Michigan 'J:/20 in the Rose Bowl.
Of that championship
team, 18 of the 22 starters are
this year, and
back
seemingly Washington stands
a cut or two above the pack.
The only problem facing
Coach Don James is finding a
No . I quarterback to replace
Warren Moon, who has
moved on to the Canadian
Football League. Duane
Akina, Moon's backup last
year, and redshirl Tom Flick
are the candidates.
In Washington 's runoriented
offense.
the
Quarterback need not be an
exceptional thrower. He
. needs to be durable, though,
and be able to take an
occasional shot or two and
bounee back. ·
There are nine starters
back on offense and nine on
defense . World class hurdler

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Ri~&amp;men, J. E. SamMS, lawrence Donahue and
Dan Smith. Thana to Ken GnMr for donating his time
in taking_and deualapina the pictures.
I

&gt;

the season , · has its usual

share of U.lent but could get
hurt by InJUries. The
offensive backfield is as good
as any in the nation. Rick
Bashoce is the quarterback
and the running -backs are
Theotis Brown, Olympic hurdler James Owens and Free man McNeil.
Calif&lt;rnia 's strength 'is its
offense although a lot will
depend on how new coach
Roger ·Theder handles the
quarterback situation . His
problem, as was the fired
Mike Whie' s a year ago, is an
abundance of talent. Theder
will have to pick from Charlie
Young, Gary Graumann,
Eric Anderson and Rich
Campbell and then stick with
him .
The rest of the Pac 10 has
Stanford, the Sun Bowl
winner last year, Arizona
·State and Washington State

CLEVELAND (UP!) ~
The New England Patriots
won't encounter the regular_
season version or the
Cleveland Browns in their
final exhibition game at
Foxboro, Mass., Sunday .
. Browns
coach
Sam
Rutigliano admits he is
concentrating on the season
opener against the San
Francisco 49ers a week from
Sunday ,
" I want a fresh. healthy
football team for the
opener ," he said, adding that
the Foxboro contest will be
the tuneup he thinks he needs
for his offensive and
defensive tines.
Starting
guard
Bob
Jackson and offensive tackle
Barry Darrow are returning
to duty from injuries.
"The interior people need .
to play a great deal Sunday,"
the coach said. "We also want

~~.;a~~y

maintenance
requirements.

78 .fORD PINTO
1978 FORD
FAIRMONT

1978 FORD
STATION WAGON

2 Dr .. 4 cyL engine, .:1 speed
trans .. body side moldin gs. white
sic;tewall tires .

Was
U781

•Now 5 3648

--•

•
•
••
•

Was

Was

power rack and pin ion ste ering ,
air conditioni ng , wh i te si de wall

pinion steering . a ir condi tioning ,
protection grou p, ro ck er pane l
m ould ings. Stk . No. 59 1.

N
5
93
J;res . lk . o. 5 ·
Was

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ra ck a nd

Now '3830

COURIER

2 DR SEDAN

4 c y l. eng ine, pow er stec r1 nq ,
au tom a ti C tr ans . air condi tion
1n q ,
AM ra dio,
body si de
moldinqs .

w.s

'4780
1978 FORD PINTO
STATION WAGON

S5196

NOW

NOW

4 cy l. engine , 4 speed trans ., AM
ra di o. Stk . No. 742 .

Was

'4860

V-6 engine. power ra ck and
pinion steering , automatic tran s·
mission, wh i l e side wall t ires .
5tk . No . 745.

FORD PINTO
3 DR RUNABOUT

1

J cy l engine, 3 speed . automati c

6 cyl. eng ine, 4 speed trans .• AM

t in ted g l ass , rea r step
bum per. whites i de wall tires . ac
cent pain t stri pes Stk . No . 31a
1r ~1 n s . ,

wa s

Now '4267

S4802

NOW

radio , WSW tires . Stk . No . 749.

'4290

4 Dr ., l ight i ade gl ow, 302 engine.
power ste ering and brake ~ .
automat ic
tran s ..
atr
co nd itio n ing , de l uxe b ump~r
group . AM-FM s t~r eo, ra d to ,
visi bili ty group . t mted glass ,
tloor mats .

i cyl. engine, power ste er ing ,
automatic transmission . power
brakes, exterior accent group .

WSW !Ires. Stk . No. 755 .

qui ck !:P!v1 ce

•

Was
$4400

•

•.

•

AM radio , llnted glass. 5tk . No .
738.

w..

S4314

--

Now '4038

Was
$4644

.

••

The

~rci.Ql
25 Court StrM!

Was

Now '4650

SS166

1978 FORD
FAIRMONT
2 Dr ., J cyl. engine , 4 speed
tr ans .. AM radio , inter ior accent
group, tr im ri ngs hub caps. vin~l
Insert bod y si de moldings.

Now '421

Was

NOW

$4116

'3840

FORD SALES

cars BankQ

~

'4150

4 .c yl . engine , 4 speed trans ·
m ission. i nterior decor group,
hea vy du ty pkg ., vi nyl Insert ,
body si de moulding ar;d stri pes .
51k . No. 668 .

4 cyl engine , 4 speed trans .
m ission , heavy du ty package ,

-

NOW

No. 325.

1978 FORD FIESTA
3 DR HATDtBACK

1978 FORD FIESTA
3 DR HATDtBACK

--•
-

4 c~l. engine , 4 speed tr ~ns ., Ghia
group, AM radio, moveable front
vent wi ndows. WSW t ires . Stk .

M ecl. chestnut met .. 4 cy l. eng ine ,
4 speed 'tr~ns .• power steering ,
white side ·wall tires.

Avoid ltnes
Sprmg Vailey b1anch

--

-- .

Now '3504

1

Now'5600

--------

Was
S3969

2 1978 LID
STATION WAGONS
AND 5 1978
THUNDERBIRDS
NOW IN STOCK

FORD GRANADA

1978 FORD FAIRMONT
STATION WAGON

Now '3250

SJ821

1978 FORD
COURIER

Avoid traffic

Our
off er s VERY

Now '451

BOBCAT

4 c yl . enqine. 3 speed, autornotic
tr.1 ns.. AM push bi.Jffon r adio.
we stern swi ng lock m irr ors.
w t111c si de wal l t i r es , r·ea r ~ tep
bum per .

•

•
•

sty led sport wheel s. Slk . No. 623
Was
1

Was

office.

tape s tri~ air con~ i ti on ing , A.M .
FM manual radt o protec t Jon
group, dua l sport m irrors , 4

54
57~5~~~~~~N;,ow~~·~4~~~4~S:42~7~2~- ~~~~~~::~==.t-S~5;:;05~l~;;i;rum~;j';~~--~
~~
~
·
1978 rr:ORD PI
1978
1978 MERCURY

$4970

------

cy l. e ngine, power s teec r ing ,
automafic transmission, accent

4

power

was

--

Now'4150

1978 FORD p1N'II:Q
3 DR RUNABOUT

V·6 engi ne,

$4790

our
Sprlng Valley

•

4 c y l. engine. power ra ck and pi
nion stee r ing, power br•k es . Ex
re'h or accent gro up . Tint ed ql ass
co mpl ete .

4 c yl. eng ine , autom at1 c trans ,

•

Stop by

4 cyl . engine 4 speed tran s·
mission , power ra ck and pin ion
roof lu ggage rack, whi l e side wall
t ires . SHe No . 644

1978 fORD PINTO
2 DR SEDAN·

Was

In a hurry?

1978 FORD
MUSTANG

''

S4431

1978 FORD PINTO
2 DR SEDAN

i5/S4

•

John Norman will run the
option offense and when
Norma n is healthy, he 's as
good as anyone rWJning or
throwing . Lack of depth will
hurt the Beavers.
Lack of depth also is the
problem at Arizona a nd
Oreg"'n. I ony=Mason is in his
second year as coach at
Arizona and Rich Broo~s is in
his second year at Oregon , On
th e bright ~(de, the Wildcats
have a do~en or so top playe rs
and recruited well while the
Ducks are going Ill play
youngs ters and hope the
experience will pay off in
1979.
In the PCAA, Fresno Slate
1s the defending champion
but San J ose SU.te, with 45
returning .

combined *LOW scheduled

possible we'll
keep both players, with .
Evans concentrating on
learning the quarterback
position," the coach said.

().7.

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Cleo Migler and rookie Larry
Collins secure at that

Monday's victory over
Detroit, butshowing
Evans made
creditable
in thea

best passer in the conference
- and maybe in all the nation
- in Jack Thompson and as
long as he is on his feet , the
Cougars will be in the game.
There's a new coach again
this year - Jim Walden and he's the fourth one in as
many seasons.
·
Arizona Stall', as Robinson
noted, lacks overall size to
play week after week aga inst
top.teamo . Frank Kush is 16449-1 over the years but he's in
a tougher conference this
year than the We ste rn
Athletic and there are lew
soft spots. Mark Ma lon e is the
quarterback and at &amp;-4 and
212 he could wind up as the
finest running quarterback in
the
schoo l's
hi stor y.
Defensive end AI Harris is
hest player. '
That leaves ' Oregon State.
Arizona and Oregon .
Craig Fertig's rebuilding

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to look at some of our running
backs and our quarterback
situation a little more. n
The running backs in
question are Larry Poole and
Tom Sullivan. One may go in
the final cut since Cleveland
has Greg Pruitt, Mike Pruitt,

po!:niighting down to the
wire to keep a job will be
punter Greg Cole~n , who
has to vie with quarterbackpunter
'Johhny
Evans :
Coleman had a fine 49-yard
plu• average punting in

somewhere in the middle and
Oregon State, Arizona and
Oregon near the bottom.
Of this group Stan! ord is
the mystery team . After
having lost Guy Benjamin ,
Gordon King and J a mes
Lofton fr om last year's 9-3
team, the Cardinals could be
as low as 4-7 and as high as
the sky. A lot depends on an
offensive lin e th at is as big as
any but lacks experience.
Steve Dils looks like a solid
replacement for Benjamin
and might even be better.
There's also little Darrin
Nelson at running ba ck.
Nelson , as a fre shman last
year , ran for 1,069 yards and
caught 50 passes for 524
yards . That's a first in NCAA
history . The Cards are solid
on defense and will go with a
~ alignment because ef an
abundance of linebackers.
Washington State has the

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a variety of

Spider ·Gaines is an
·exceptional pass catcher and
Joe Sleele rates with the best
running backs in the college
ranks.
John Robinson and his USC
Trojaris did not reach the
Rose Bowl last year and
while the team went 11-4, it
was considered a bwnmer .
Robinson thinks the Trojans
can be better this year but he
also thinks Washington may
be hard io catch.
·
"Our's is going to be the
best co nference in the
country, " !lobinson. sa)'s .
"Last year we placed three
teams in the top 20. This year
we could ·do even better . I
think four schools bave an
excellent chaliCe to win the
conference . That's.
Washington, us, the (UCLA)
·Bruins and California. It
should be a helluva race.
" Right now I don't think the
two Arizona schools are
physical enough to win but
you never can tell. They have
fine reputations and could he
factors, although I think it
won't be until next year, after
they've had a chance to really
size up the league."
Like W a.s hi n g ton ,
quarterback is a weak point
at Southern Cal. Junior Paul
McDonald is the top
candidate. The Trojans have
only II returning starters but
they were s0 deep a year ago
that their backup players all
got experience. A huge
offonsive line should make
things easy for running backs
Charles White, Dwight Ford
and Lynn Cain,
•
UCLA, which missed
making the Rose Bowl last
year because of a last second
loss to USC in the last game of

program at OSU md&lt; big
strides last year and this year
the Beavers could be tough .
Not good enough to conll'nd
for the tiUe but solid enough
to knock off some of the
het!er teams. With the right
bounce OSU could have won
at leas t four conference
games in 1977 instead of going

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�C-'1-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel. Sunday. Au~ . il, t978

Meigs Roster
PLAYER
Terry Gardner
Den Icenhower
Bob Ashley
Greg Becker-x
Dan Thomas
Chris Ingels
Tim Basham
Rick Williamson
Rick Hovatter
Rick Blaettnar
Brian King
ToddEads
Harvey Wbitlach
Doug Clelland
Van WiUI&lt;rd-x
Jeff Wayland
Dave Blake-x
Jerry Fields
Chris Taylor
Todd Smith
Troy Griffith
Scott Stout
Chris Judge
John Morris
TimFaulk-x
Dave Wilkes
Mike Drehel-x
Rick Basham
LarryByer
Bob Chapelear
Mike McGuire
Henry McCoy
Todd Snowden
Tom Schoonover
Richard Dean
Dave Davis
Robert Harmon
Paul Matson
Dan Edwards
. Tim Wyant
Randy Arnold-•
Robert Parker-x
Larry Stewart
John Stout-x
Brent Bolin-x
Dave Hysell
Craig Nicinsky
Joe Powell

Pos. HI. T. Yr.

5-91&gt; 135 Sr.

WB
TB

HO
QB &amp;- \\
TB 1&gt;-10
QB l&gt;-10
QB !&gt;-9
FB 1).5\\
QB :&gt;-9
WB :&gt;-8
TB IHJ
WB 1&gt;-411
FB :&gt;-8
E :&gt;-8
WB :&gt;-8
FB 1HJ
E :&gt;-8
WB &amp;-0
FB IHJ
TB :&gt;-8
WB 1).8
TB 1&gt;-7

c
c

1).8

:&gt;-9
G :&gt;-8
C &amp;- II
G 1).8
G &amp;-2
G 1&gt;-9
T 1&gt;-10
T 1&gt;-9
G 5-10
E :&gt;-5
G &amp;-1
G :&gt;-8
G 1&gt;-!0
T :&gt;-8 \1
T &amp;-2
T 6-'1
T &amp;-2
G HO
. T 1&gt;-11
G IHJ
E 1&gt;-3
E 1&gt;-9
E 1&gt;-11
E :&gt;-10
E 1&gt;-9
E :&gt;-8\1
E 1&gt;-10
E &amp;-1

Brian Swann ·

Bob Seelig
X -Lettennen.

155
150
145
150
147
137
132
139
173
119
139
135
146
167
136
197
202
130
130
149
140
140
140
162
145
225
186
180
195
155.
115
201

Jr.
Fr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr .·
So.
So.
So.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Sr.
So.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
So.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr .
Jr.
So.
So.
Jr.

16;1

176
266

So.

'Jffl

177 Jr .
207 Sr.
201 Sr.
196 Sr.
180 Jr.
179 Jr.
147 Sr.
155 Sr.
168 Jr.
131 Jr.
138 So.
142 So.
186 Sr.

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'Cautious optimism' sounded
BY GREG BAILEY
"Cautious optimism " is the
phrase Meigs Marauder
football fans are using to size
up the 1978 edition of their
gridiron squads.
With. nine returning lettennen , better overall size,
and some experience at key
positions, this year's team
could be one of the best in
recent years. However, the
Marauders of head coach
Charlie Chancey do have
some problems to overcome.
Three relative!J in rx-

perienced undercta'ssmen are
vying for the signal-calling
part.
.
'Junior Dan Thomas and
cl•ssmate Rick Williamson
have the edge over freshman
Bob Ashley , but the
youngster is giving both
juniors all the competition
they want. If one of these
three quarterback candidates
can prove himself, then the
rest of the backfield could
follow suit.
The overall speed again

.OSU cagers traveling
By GENE CADD&amp;&lt;;
the kids .
UPI Sports Writer
" I . took a team from
COLUMBUS (UPI) - lt 's Western Michigan to Europe
off tn Europe for Coach Eldon when · I coached there and
Miller and his Ohio .Stale they got a lot out of it. But, the
big U)ing is," he said, 11 We're
basketball team.
Miller and his 12-man going to have our kids
Buckeye crew willleav~ Aug. together ."
29 for a !!).day tour of Sweden
The 12 returning members
and Finland, during which of last year team, which
they will play eight or nine finished with a 16-11 record,
are scheduled to report
games.
The tour, which had to be Thur~ay for the first of five
sanctioned by the NCAA and days of workouts before
the Amateur Basketball As- departing .
sociation-USA and approved
Miller,
·along
with
by
the . U.S.
State assistants Chuck Machock
Department, will not only and Gerry Sears, who also
give Miller a chance to get an will make the trip, plan seven
early look at this year's workouts during the five
talented club.
days, emphasizing . the new
"We're going t 0 alter our offensive philosophy.
offensive style of play this
" We are going
to
year," said Miller; starling emphasize work on the last
his third year at the Buckeye break, the high percentage
helm. "This tour will help us · shot and getting the ball in
do that and it's a great close to the big men," said
educational experience for Miller.
Miller would like tn take
more advantage this year ot
the scoring talents of his &amp;-11
sophomore
center Herb WilRIV_ER DOWNS
liams;
as
well
as the speed of
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
such
players·,
as Kelvin
Lark's Cry took the lead with
Ransey,
Carter
Scott and
a quarter of a mile to go and
Todd
Penn.
won the $:;,000 feature race at
The team is to return to
River Downs Friday by a
Columbus
Tuesday, Sept. 12,
neck over Bravo Miss.
four
days
prior to the Ohio
John Oldham guided Lark 's
State
football
opener against
Cry over the seven and onePenn
State.
"We wouldn't
hall furlongs on the turf in
want
to
miss
the
Penn State
I :31 4-5, for returns of $2.80,
game,
"
said
Miller,
who
$2.40 and $2.20. A Runner
suffered
a
broken
ankle
five
came in third .
weeks
ago
during
a
pickup
Committee Hearing and
Mr. Strange won the first two basketball game and has just
races for· a 3-3 daily. double recently tnssed away his
cane .
worth $35.80.
The tnur party of 25 also
The 3, 458 fans bet
will
include trainer Mike
$368,671.
Bordner, team physician Dr.
Bqb Murphy and his wife,
Athletic Director Hugh
Hindman and his wife and
basketball aecretary Debbie
Hill and her lmsband.

Daily

\

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HUNTINGTON'S ie
MEMORIAL FIELD HOUSE* ·?

·

*

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· ··· - -~ ~ ...
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FISH
DINNER
SPECIAL

5=¥8
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PHONE 446-1611

MEIGS SCHEDULE

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'78· PONTIAC CATALINA
PE

Nov . 3- Gallipolis

TO GO OR EAT HERE

PIPUU.

0. ]. shines
•
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zn 24-13 UJZn

HOMEMADE OXYGEN

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( ~eaular Size)

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..

Sunday thru Saturday
Aug. 27 thru Sept. 2

Sept . 8- At Pt . Pleasant
Sept . 15-At Wahama
Sept . 22 - Belpre
Sepl . 29- Wel lston
Oct . 6-Af lronl on
Oct . 13- Jackson
Oct . 2G-At Waverly
Oct. 27- Athens

Pitt quarterback unknown

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FORT WORTH, Texas
( UP! )
Interna tional
Gymnastic
Federation
officials Friday annoUnced
the 1979 World Gymnastic
ChampionShips would be held
in F&lt;rt Worth next j'ear.
Officials said the event
would draw some 500 athletes
from 60 different countries.
Federation vice president
Frank Bare was in Fort'
Worth
to
make
the
announcement. He said it was
the first time the gymnastic
competition would be held in
North America .
'

~-· )?~a.ts..!.!!~_,
•FRENCH
~."'---

*
* -

.Sept! 8th, 9th, 1Oth

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
AUGUST 27 THRU SEPTEMBER 2

~e';"s;;"mm~r Ho7r~
10 a.m . Iilli p.m. ,

....

*· TSSS is· coming

·'··
~AGL&amp;&lt;; ROSTER
Player
Poa. Yr. HI. WI.
l!iO.
1'8 Sr. :&gt;-9
flandy Browning-x
175
Sr. &amp;-I
Greg Ginther-x
140
Ti Sr . :&gt;-9
Jeff Goebel
ooe game, Sherrill started six pounds and 1\.foot-3 in size l
By POHLA SMITH
E Sr. :&gt;-II l!iO
Mike Hayman-x
freshmen .
UP! Sports Wriwr
with lots of depth . The heart
160
G Sr . &amp;-I
Randy Keller-x
"What helped us last year of the line will be two
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
185 "Who's going to be our is that we played 61 players
'FB ·Sr. &amp;-0
Dan Spencer-x
returning starte rs , ·rivht
193 quarterba ck~ " Pitt's head oo the average each game ,"
T Sr . :&gt;-9
Russell Starcher-x
guard
Matt Carroll, a 6-3, 255180 foo tball coach aske.d the SherriU said. As a result, the
By Grtl Salley
G Sr. &amp;-I
players. With 36 players on for the jOb of calling signals · Rusty Wigal-x
pound
senior, and right tackle
176
E Sr. &amp;-2
Although Ali-.SVAC choices the field and some being_ all- at quarterback.
Bryan White
team has 44 lettermen Mark May, a &amp;-5 , 270-pound
reporter.
•
QB Jr. :&gt;-11 !55
Randy Boston ·and Joe. Kuhn around athletes, versatility
With that experience, the Brian Bissell-•
" I was just going to ask returning and virtually no sophomore.
FB Jr. :&gt;-10 160 YOU that, " the report er weak spots.
· graduated last spring, 14 will help in the upcoming backfield could be strong. Tim Dillon-x
The biggest problem facing
215
T Jr. &amp;-I
lett.ennen return to Iorin the season .
The only inexperienced DcnEynon-x
The ouUook:
answered.
the
offense will be the youth
c Jr. :&gt;-10 155 "Well," Ja ckie Sherrill Running backs : Juni or of the
nucleus of the 1978 Eastern
In the backfield, all- position will be the tailback Greg Hayman-x
quarte rback . But ,
130
HB Jr. :&gt;-9
Eagle football team. ~k for leaguer; senior Dan Spencer spot. Sophomore Steve Scott HiU
shot ba ck,,( " I'm asking Fred Jacobs, who started Sherrill s aid , "We're. not a
HB Jr. HI 145 YOU."
an improved Eagle club as 36 and junior lettennan Tim Browning and senior Jeff Mark Norton&lt;~;
alongside Walker last year, drop.back team where the
HB
So. 5-3 110
young men vie for a postioin, Dillon will be at the fullback Goebel will be trying to fill Steve Browning
and sophomore Rooster quarterback has got to stand
Then Sherrill laughed .
FB So. IHJ · 160
Dennis Durst
giving the Eagles more depth spot with DiUon also perhaps t})at gap.
He knows he 's supposed to Jones, named most improved
220 be .singing the blues about the offens\ve player during back there and pass, pass. We
T SO. · IHl
than last season.
seeing action at the haHback
Eastern will be the first Rodney Keller
100 loss of Matt Cavanaugh, spring practice, are the likely have a more ba lanced
· QB So. 5-3
Although there will be a few post with junior letterman Meigs County team to get into Tooy Kennedy
attack. " .
E So. :&gt;-11 175 probably
key holes to fill, nine seniors Mark Norton.
•
action as they kick off the Ken Larkins
best starters. There is plenty of
, the
Kicking teams: The same
!50 quarterback in Pitt's long· depth behind them, including
G So. :&gt;-5
will try to direct the squad
Junior letterman Brian !9'78 campaign this Friday at Greg Scarbrough-x
as
last year's succe13sful unit.
c So. :&gt;-10 185 football history, to gradua- junior lettermen Steve Harris Returning
through its 1~ame schedule, Bissell and sophomore Greg home against Waterford at 8 Ray Werry
are place-kickers
135
Greg Wigal
QB So. :&gt;-9
giving incentive and en - Wigal, who lettered as a. p.m.
tion and the New England and Larry Sims.
Mark
Schubert,
a junior, and
1).7
126
E Fr.
couragement I? the younger freShman, will be competing
Receivers : Gordm Jmes, a so phomore Dave Trout,
Patriots - especially since
Head Coch Joe Mitchem Mike Baker
120 the top candidates are two bonafide All-America canHB Fr. 5-3
wiU again be assisted by Arch John Beaver
sophomore punter Joe Gas130
QB Fr. :&gt;-8
Mike
Bissell
didate, is back at split end to parovic and punt returners
sophomores
and
a
junior
Rose, Dave Weber and Ed
c Fr. 5-3 145 college transfer from Rancho continue his assault on Pitt 's Gordon Jones and jWJiQr Jo
Cromley, with the latter two Lee Gainer
135 Cordoba, Calif.
G
Fr. :&gt;-4
record books. He alreaily Jo Heath, respectively 9th
handling the junior hi gh Mike Hauber
135
Fr.
:&gt;-5
G
Nick Leonard
"Matt Cavanaugh wiD be holds records for most and 12th nationally in punt
squad also.
150 the hardest person we have tn touchdown passes caught in a
T Fr. :&gt;-4
Eastern's offensive line, if Charles Massar
return yardage last year.
134
FB
Fr
.
:&gt;-5
Todd
Norton
replace ," Sherrill said. But season (15) and in a career
!bey can stay healthy, could
TB Fr. 1&gt;-10 135 prior experience has assured (24) and f&lt;r season yardage . Defensive line : Two of last
carry the Eagle's hopes of an Johnny Riebel
T Fr. 6-3'f.! 220 him the situation isn't'as dire by receiving (793) . With both vear's starters are returning
SVAC crown. All seven . Joe Sayre
:.._ sophom&lt;re Hugh Green
209
T Fr. :&gt;-8
Taylor · and
backup and senior Dave DiCiccio, at
as
it
seems.
linemen are returning let- Ray Spencer
115
G Fr. 1).3
In 1977, everyone said Pitt 's Reutershan gone, the flanker right
termen and know their Virgil Taylor
and
left
end
T Fr. 1&gt;-11 160 season was over when Cava· position is a little thin in
Dave
Wolfe
respectively. Senior David
footbaU .
GALLIA 446-5554
naugh broke his ann in the experience, but Sherrill said, Logan and sophomore Jerry
Seniors Greg Guinther and
first half of season opener, a " we brought in three recruits ' Boy arsky , both of whom
Mike Hayman are at the ends
MEIGS 992-5554
who I think can do the job." started a few games at
loss to Notre Dame.
while Junior Don Eynon and ·
Tight end: Pitt is strong middle guard last year, are
But the gutsy and cocky,
· Senior · Russell Starcher will
here
with returning starter fighting for the starting spot.
though
unpolished
be
at
the
tackles.
JACKSON 286-5554
performance, of freckle- Steve Gaustad, a seni&lt;r , and Several players are in the
Seniors Randy Keller and
faced freshman Ricky sophomore Benjie Pryor.
Rusty Wigal are the guards,
runnin g for the tackle
Offensive
line :
Big positions.
Trocano kept the Panthers on
and Junior Greg Hayman will
the road to a No. 7 ranking (averages more than 250
•
be centering the pigskin. That
'
·a 9-2-1 record during
and
line averages about 180, and ·
Cavanaugh's
absence.
they could be solid.
And Trocano, and a host of
Coach Mitchem; believes
Washington on 68-yard pass other young but experienced
By
BILL
CAHILL
RESI'IRATDRY SUI'f'Om SYSlTM
that Kyger Creek and North
from Billy Kilmer io wide players, should be able to
UP! Sports Writer
Gallia·will be fighting it out
It was the battle of the receiver Danny Buggs.
keep the Panthers in the Top
for ·the league title. A few
James Betterson scored 20 a!(ain this year .
oranges Friday night at
.
weaknesses, youth and Denver's Mile High Stadiuin bot.h
Philadelphia
· SALES ·&amp; SERVICE
Trocano
earned
the
inexperience, could hamper - the juic~ versus the crush. touchdowns with runs of one
LIFT KITS . GRILL GUARDS · TIRES · WHEELS starting job with his play last
the Eagles, but most fan s feel
"The Juice, " rtmning back yard in the third period and
ROLL CAGE FOR JEEPS· KC LIGHTS · 3" ROLL
the Eagles could claw a few O.J. Simpson, grabbed a 63- three yards in the fourth to year . He started three games
BARS.
that the Panthers won by
unwary opponents.
Visa or Master Charge
yard touchdown pass from lead the Eagles to their scoring a tntal 149 points.
OWNERRON SHEET0:-25!-1484
backup quarterback Steve Shutnut over the Jets.
Playing a total of 23 quarters
OPEN EVENINGS &amp; SATURDAY
DeBerg to pace the San
Bob Griese passed for three last season, Trocano finished
Location : South on Rt . 71o SR 218 to Merce~ville, left
Francisco 49ers to a 24-13 touchdowns as the Dolphins as the team's fourth-leading
on Bladen-Mercerville Rd . . first house on raght.
pre-season triumph over the outlasted the Buccaneers. scorer with 36 points. He
EASTERN EAGLES
Denver
Broncos.
The veteran quarterback rushed lor 265 yards on 63
SCHEDULE
Sept.· !- Waterford
San Francisco got off we II connected with Nat Moore for carries and completed 17 of 39
Sept. a-Ca ldwell
with a first-quarter 2-yard 66 yards, Duriel Harris for passes for 317 yards and three
Sept. 1 5-0p~n
rtm by Greg Boykins against seven and Gary Davis for 23. touchdowns.
Sepl. 22- At Ale•ander
the
Broncos' "Orange erush" The Bucs tallied on two field
Sept. 29-At Federal Hocking
But
Sherrill
says
WELLINGT9N
defense. In the second goals from Neil O'Donoghue, so phomore Jetter'man
Oct . 6-Kyger Creek
Oct . 13- At Southwestern
quarter, the Broncos' evened a 7-yard pass from rookie Lindsay Delaney and junior
Oct. 20--Hannan Trace
it when Craig Morton hit Doug Williams to Isaac transfer Scott Jenner will
SAFETY TOE
Homecoming
Hagins,
and
a
73-yard
punt
rookie
Dave
Preston
with
a
&amp;Oct . 27- At North Gallia
provide keen competition lor
return by Danny Reece .
Nov . J,-Af Symmes Valley
yard TD pass .
Trocano, while a couple
Nov .. 11 - Southern
In tonight's pre.:season freshmen, including the
·The 19ers went ahead for
good on DeBerg's bomb to Bction, Baltimore is at brother of tormer. Pitt
.Simpson in the second periOjl, Detroit, San Diego at the New quarterback Billy Daniels
and Denver's Jim Turner York Giants, Si. Louis at are expected to press the
booted a field goal to move Kansas City, Cincinnati vs . upperclassmen f&lt;r the third
within 14-10. The Broncos got Green Bay at Milwaukee , backup spot.
Mon . &amp; Fri .
. their only points of tl)e second Pittsburgh at Dallas; Los
t1l8p.m .
·"All of that depth and ·
Tues., Wed ., Sat. til 5
half on Turner's 41-yard field Angeles al Oakland, New competition is certainly to
· Thurs . til .
·
goal in the third quarter . San Orleans at Houston and our advantage, " Sherrill .
·
12
noon
Francisco' addeP · a third- Boffalo at Minnesota .
•
said .
New
England
hosts
(le&lt;'iod field goal by Ray
Beside s Cavanaugh,
Wersching from 35.yards out Cleveland in Sunday's lone Sherrill is looking to replace
and closed the scoring with a game - ending the 1978 11 other 1977 starters who
WOLVERINE 10"
1&gt;-yard run by Paul Hofer.
exhibition season .
graduated last spring,
WESTERN BRAZOS
The 49ers embarrassed !he
including two All-Americas,
Broncos'
restructured
BOOT
defensive tac kle Randy
offensive line, sacking
Holloway and center Tom
Tan, tough oil -tanned
Morton
and
backup
Brzoza, All-East running
cowhide ,
quarterback Norris Weese
Welt construction
back
Elliott
Walker,
eight times.
Oil proof sOle and heel
Bob
Jury,
defensive
backs
SALT
BONNEVILLE
Full cushion insole
1977
AFC
Denver,
FLATS, Utah (UPI) - Doo LeRoy Felder and J .C.
Steel
shank arc:h support
champion , takes a 2-2 Vesco has broken his own Wilson and receivers Willie
exhibition record into the land speed record for Taylor
and
Ra~dy
regular season opener motorcycles but the.EI Cajoo, Reutershan.
against Oakland.
·
But
Sherrill
began
Calif., daredevil says he will
In other NFL exhibition try Monday to break his new preparing lor those losses
games, Atlanta edged
•
early
last
season,
Washington
10 -7, mark . •
with
substituting
frequenlly
Vesco
covered
the
F~ll Vinyl Cordova To~ paint_ed Electric Clock. soft ray glass.l
Philadelphia blanked New measured mile in a two-way underclassmen. In fact. in
York 1+0 and Miami nipped
accent stripe, 301 VB eng me. whs~e lamp !lf'Oup. AM radio, remote
average of 314 .355 mph
Tampa Bay 24-20.
side wall radials. custom atr control mirror. 12 mo. 12,000 m1le
Fred Steinfort's first field Friday. The. previous record
conditioning. List Price $7048.95. warranty.
was 303.812, which he set Sept
goal of the NFL exhibition
season, a 2~yarder with 9:27 28, 1975.
"I'll try to go for 320,"
remaining in the game, gave
Vesco
said. That attempt will
the Falcons their win over the
have
to
wait until alter the
Redskins. Both teams scored
weekend
because he has to
oo touchdowns in the third
renew
his
insurance, which ·
quarter, Atlanta oo a :&gt;-yard
ran
out
·Friday.
run by Bubba Bean . ¥d

Eastern has 14 veterans
returning this· campa~

this year is just average, but tember 8. Coach Chancey .Gallipolis being much im- this year by Fenton Taylor,
John Bentley, Don Dixon,
there are many positive spots thinks Ironton will· again be proved .
on this year's squad. In the strong with Athens and
Chancey Is assisted _again Mike Barr, and Sam Crow.
backfield, senior letterman
tailback
Greg Bec ker
returns. The speedster can at
times evade tacklers as well .
as any running back . He has
compeht ion from Don
Icenhower at 155 pounds arid
Rick Blaettnar at 173 pounds.
Both are juniors.
At Fullback, junior Van
Willford , a 167 pound'e r
returns, but sophomore Jerry
Fields, weighing in at a
muscular 202, could see a lot
of action, especially after he
"tttL .
...
Presented by
gets some varsity experience
U{lder his belt . ·
·
.
~*
THE Au'oiO PEOPLE
.
Seniors Dave Blake, who
handles the kicking chores,
w
and Rick Hovatter, will be
challenging lor the wingback
post. Blake is 197 lbs. and
~
HUNTINGTON &amp; CHARLESTON
Hovatter is at 139. Blake,
~~--~~~~~~~~~----~
Willford, and Becker are all
lettennen.
The offensive line has a few
gaps, but it also has some
walls in Randy Arnold, Brent
Bolin, and John Stout. Arnold
is a 196 tackle, Bolin weighs
142 and Stout at 155 are ends,
who got some starting
assignments last year. AU
three are lettermen.
Tim Faulk, another letJennen, will be seeing a lot of
action at center this season.
Other than those four, the li(!e
seems to be open to the young ·
man who-wants a position bad
enough.
Switching across the tine to
defense, things look pretty
good. Returning to anchOr the
defense is 225 pound middle
guard Mike Drehel, who
played well last year . Three
players who saw action at end
last year are back Including
Robert Parker at 180, Blake
at 197, and Faulk at 162.
•Large Fish Ta.ll
Willford is a linebacker with
eCholce of Potatoes
more experience thia year,
and Becker is a safety.
eCole Slaw
are
Forty-nine boys
cracking pads in t»:o-a-&lt;lay
REGUlAR 12.55
•Roll &amp; Butter
drills at the high school,
getting ready for the opener
at Point Pleasant on Sep-

...

LUNCH TIME GOODIE• ..

C-5-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Au!(. 27, 1978

Meigs Branch

The Athens County
Richard E. Jones, Mgr.

NIW STORI HOURS

•

THERE'S NO WAY TO STOP
OL' MAN WINTER, BUT YOU
CAN BE MORE COMFORTABLE
WHILE HE'S HERE WITH AN
ARVIN ELECTRIC HEATER.
Arvin Model 30H

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1500 WATTS

9 to 6 MON.!SATI

Arvin Model 30H 25·1 ••••••••••••••••• 2()21

12-6 SUN.

1320 WAllS
Both Models Have SatetJ np Over Switch

992-3662

Pomeruy,O.
'

ANNOUNCING

BEGINNING SEPT. 1st

Savings &amp; Loan
216 W. Main St.

"Ace is the place wjth
the Helpful Hardware Man"™

c•

5

ACE HARDWARE, MEIGS PLAZA
'•

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S.EE US•••
For A.ll Your Building or'
Home Repair Materials.~,-,; ~

Carter &amp; Evans hl'C.

87 OLIVE ST.' .

GAU.IPOUS, OHIO

�.l-

C-O- The Sunday Times.Senlind, Sunday. Aug . 27, 197B

Year-round grazing reduces costs
By John C. Rice
Meigs Co. Ext. Agent
Agrtrultur.e
Cattlemen ca n redu ce
winter labor ~ost s to 25
percent of that normally
required to winter heef cows
by grazing them year-round .
R. W. Van Keu r en ,
professor of agronomy at the
Ohio Agricultural Research
and Development Center .
tOARDC ), sludied all-season
grazing. at lM'Eastern Ohio
Resour ce De velopment
Center (EORDC ) and the
Southern and Southeastern
' branches.
The major rusts of wintering cattle are feed harvesting , storing, and feeding .
By using all-season grazing,

tered in Ihe bam .
Winter pasture should he
well drained , provide a
windbreak and ha ve sufficifnt amounts of water for
!he cattle.
Tall fescue is the best
winter pasture since it holds
its quality as round hay bales
and as standing regrowth ,
Myers said. At the So'llthern
and Southeastern branches,
0. 7 acres of tall f~scue was
needed to carry a heef cow
from November 15 to April 15.
Ammonium nitrate was
applied in early spring and in
Augu si with period ic applications of potash an d
phosphate fenilizer.
Winter pasture should be

should be removed trum the
pasture ·in late March and
early April to prevent them
from cutting up the ground
during spring tha w and heavy
rains .
'Fhe tall fe sc ue winler
pa sture should be handled
separately from the summer
pasture . .Cows graze pasture
close to the ground 10 the
winter, exposing plants. to
adverse conditions . By not
grazing the winter pasture
during lhe summer season, it
will have a chance to regain
its vigor.
·
Some stored feed should be
kept in case of an emergency,
such as an unusually long
snow cover.
divided into four or five
Cows can be maintained
cattlemen can eliminate smaller areas. Co ws should through the seven-monlh
some of these costs as well as clean up each area before summer season on 1.0 acre of ·
the rust o( manure handling being moved to the next, orchardgrass or 1.3 'a cres of
and most of the cost of since they will eat more feed bluegrass per cow. Although
hou sing . However , some than necessa ry if it is either one can be used for
sheller must he provided for available. Controlled grazing SUIJlOler pasture. a -com·
co ws that are calving in s ubstantially increases bination of the two makes
$€:Vere weather , said Van carrying capacity, Myers management easier. Cows
Keuren.
said. He added that co ws should graze the orFertilizer and improved

chard gra ss t'arl y in the
season when it is producing
seedheads. In early June, the
co11·s should be moved to the
blue · ~rass and roated between the two for the rest af.,;
the· sununer,
Summer pastures are
fertilized in much the same
way rt·as winter pasture but
only lh e orchardgrass
re ceiv es the second appli cation of ammonium
nitrate . .
'lea ving an entire season' s
growth reduces the amounl of
feed available . Growth froin
an entire season · will only
ha ve the _amount of feed equal
to the fall growth . Therefore , ·
th e· spring and summer
growth should be cut or .
gra zed to get optimum
utilization of the pasture.
Clipping pastures once a
year will remove tall growing
weeds . When such weeds as
ironweed appear , an application of 2,4-D should be
applied in May or June,
Myers said.

Sheep ·raising began in 1810

llV JAMJ::li SANDS
were knuwn atl over Ohio, and Ashur Hamilton . The cloth , flannels , tweeds ,
Serious sheep raising in having rumpeted in a number former had previously ~a s simer e ,
satinets,
Ohio began about IBIO when uf fa irs in Cincinnati, operated for some years a
stockings, sheets, blankets,
Seth Adams, Rufus Putnam. «:olumbus, and Zanesville. carding mill al Vinton .
mverlets, jeans and colorful
Paul Fearing, and Increase
The first woolen mill in the
The products ol these fabrics. "
Mathews imponed Merino eounty was built at Vinton in Gallia woolen mills were
In addition a number of
sheep from Spain . The the' 1870s
by James McGhee quite numberous: broad- families operated looms that
.
market for merino wool was
produced finished product.
tremendous in the years IBIO
We
can mention the Van
until 1815. It is said that Paul
Vleck family who not only
Feari11g or Marietta once
produ ced a number of
gave 1,6()() acres of land for 1
lsome of which are
coverlets
full-blooded Merino ram. The
still
around
), but also
prit'C paid for Merino wool in
of the fanproduced
many
1815 was $2.15 per pound.
ciful
carpets
that
were used
Ordinary wool brought about
by
Gallia
families
.
40 cents per pound.
By 1850 in Ohio there were 3
GALLIPOUS - A new
times as many sheep as any Economic Emergency loan money secured by the
other animal. At the begin- service for f.a nners who have government through sale of
ning of the Civil War Gallia financial problelns caused by its securities to the public, loans can be made either
had about 20,000 head of credit shonage or cost-price plus an administrative add- through a commercial
sheep as compared to 12,000 squeeze is now ·in effect on of up. to one percent. The agricultural lender or the
rate initially will be 8 ~ county FmHA office serving
catlle and 12,000 hogs .
through the U. S. Fanners percent. Guaranteed loans the county where the farm is
By 1868, Gallia farmers Home Administration
will be made at rates located. The Act calls for
were raising on the yearly (FmHA). ·
negotiated
between borrower . decision by FmHA on inaverage more than 38,000
David P. Urwin, the and JenJ!~r. with FmHA dividual applications within
head, compared to 15,000 agency's County Supervisor
callle and 16,000 hogs. But by for the Gallia, Jackson and providing the lender up to a 90 30 days.
While introducing the new
IB83 the number .of sheep Lawrence County area, percent guaran.t~ against
loss.
·
Economic
Emergency farm
pastures mcrease the
raised in Gallia had dropped reports that FmHA is
FmHA
will continue all
loan,
productivity and reduce the
Loans
for
operating
purto 19,000. By 1901the number prepared to take applications
pre.,existing
services. They
.
land needed per cow, achad shrunk to 12,000. In .1960 at the FmHA County Office at pOses will be made for terms
include
various
programs of
rurding to Donald K. Myers,
there were only 3,200 sheep 529 Jackson Pike, Rm. 3088, of up to 7 years, with loan
non.:emergency
real estate
Extension agronomlst at The
consolidations . and ·
raised in Gilllia and by 1910 Gallipolis.
and
production
loans to
rescheduling
for
another
7
Ohio State University. Orthat number had been halved.
Emergency years permitted, and 20-year. family-size farms, terms of
Economic
chardgra ss or bluegrass
the dishwasher to qo the cob heat &lt;1 long time. If cobs to 1,600. In 1967, Gallia far- loans are authorized under
BY DIANA S. EBERTS
provides sununer pasture.
for you . In addition to being aren 't completely cold before mers were raising 10 times as theAgricultural Credit Act of payment authorized under which will soon be broadened
Extension Agent
under the recent Credit Act ; .
Winter pasture is provided by
wasteful of energy and water. placing them in the freezer, many cattle and 3 times as 1978, signed by Presillent special conditions. Real
Home Erooomlrs
emergency
'loans to farms
he
made
for
estate
loans
may
large round bales of tall
the dishwasher does not heat off-flavors are likely to many hogs ~• sheep. The Carter August 4, 197B. They
Meigs County
by
natural disaster.
damaged
up
to
40
years.
Loans
for
fescue and t he standing
boom years for the sheep offer special help to fanners
POMEROY - Blanching water to the terilperatures develop.
and
loans
or grants for
.
regrowth.
annuallyrecurring
expenses
effeclive
Wrap and seal the ears industry in Gallia were then who are hard-pressed by
sweet corn is an important required . for
housing,
community
facilities
reP.Byable
annually.
will
be
VanKeuren found that the step before freezing it, but blanchmg.
well, excluding as much air in the lime of the Civil War recent shonage of credit
in
and
business
and
industry
winter feed is nutritionally
Urwin
said
initial
inquiries
Some people like freezin~ from each package as you and the time of World War I. from their regular lenders, or
many people try to avoid that
rural
areas.
about
Economic
Emereency
adequate. Cow herds · that step. Blanching is placil)g the eorn on the cob. This isn't
With the rapid growth of
can . l'reeze the corn as
were on winter pasture had eorn briefly in boiUng water; always successful, Joseph quickly as possible. Finally, the sheep business in the by debts accum4laled during
the same calf weights as did explains Robert J oseph. warns. But if you want to try try to use the corn on the cOb early 19th century, carding the recent peripd of low fann
those herds that were win- Ext ension foo d specialist, it, here are hiS sLiggestions. within 3 or 4 months because and f4lling mills sprang up all prices.
Urwin said the Economic
The Ohio State University. Increase the blanching tin1e il doesn 'I keep its quality as over Ohio. After the wool was Emergency loan program
There are several reasons to 7 minutes for small ears long as com cut from the cob. cleaned· and picked, ·it was was enacted by Congress
::: I:Ji :IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII why blanching is needed, he and 11 minutes for large ones.. F'or information on freezing carded to pull the fibers with Administration support,
points out. First, it stops After blanching, be sure to corn or other products . apart . Fulling mills scoured, in recognition of the fact that
enzymes in the · corn from chill thoroughly . This is cont act the Meigs County cleaned, and softened the "economic conditions,as well
working . If they continued to critical because the cob holds Extension Office al 992-3895. material after it was .dyed. as weather, are often beyond
The earliesl carding and farmers ' control." FmHA
do their job while the corn
fulling
mills were powered by emergency credit
was frozen. the kernels would
has
By Fred Dee I
racing stallion Secretariat.
horses
. Later ones .were previously been confined to
lose sweetness, develop off
Gallla
Co.
Ext.
Agent,
f-H
There
will ·be tours of other
.
_, - ~·
water or steam driven .
loans for recovery from
The calf that has tbioga. too ·flavors and change text4-re.
Here
is.
an
opponunity
for
farms
.
Sunday,they will be in
lbe first mill in Gallia was natural disaster, or the
Other reasons for blanching"
good on the ranCh or farm
4-H
livestock
advisors
and
l.()uisville,
Ky., to witness the
at Gallipolis, but perhaps the guarantee of private lenders'
may be the calf that winds are that th e heat sets the
with
-livestock
projects.
'national
junior
sheep and
youth
hest of the early carding 111ills loans to livestock producers
up dead in the f.eedlot, ac- co lor and kills microbus
has
been
·
national
junior'heifer
shows.
a
46-passenger
·was lhe one at Yellowtown affected by economic concording to Dr. · George organisms on lhe food.
·comMonday
highlights
will
inreserved
and
plans
Lambert of the National Joseph adds .
.. which was &gt;taned by the ditions .
•
POINT
PLEASANT
The
pleted
to
take
a
group
of
46
elude
the
national
collegiate
Animal Di9ease Center.
f ollowing lhe dedication Frenchman , Nich o las
Here's the ·easiest way to
Under the new Economic livestock e~thusiasts on a judging contest, national
Studies prove what pr.epare sweet corn for the new $2 million Plea sant cererponies, public tours of Thevinen. "This mill charged
Emergency
program, any tour of tlie Nonh American Angus heifer show, national
Valley
Nursing
Care
Unit
researchers have long
one roll of wool as payment established farm operator fr eezer, he says . First , which wjll open Monday, the new building will be held
suspected. once . the calf
International Livestock Hampshire show and sale,
beginning at 3 p.m.
for carding 8 rolls . Carding individual,
partnership, Exposition on November 11, market lamb show , plus
leaves home and heads remember to ,harvest or buy September II , is the newest
Resident res~vations are mills were also buill at an corporation or cooperative through the sale barn to the the corn just before you plan and most modern extended
now
being accepted for the early date at Vinton, Center- experiencing scarce credit or 12 and 13, The cost of only 557 seeing steers, market hogs
it
If
yo
u
buy
the
to
freeze
feedlot, it 's going to be hit
care faciiity in the state.
Will offer you a trip of a and sheep o' all bvreeds.
IVith a whole , barrage of com at a local market, get it
When it opens, the Pleasant new Pleasant Valley Nursing ville , and Wood's Mills. Thl" an overload of debt coming lifetime, at a cost that would
If you are really interested
diseases. "Animal• that as soon aft er pi cking time as Valley Nursing Care Unit will Care Unit. llor information latter mill was a combination due, may apply for up to
be
impossible
to
match
if
you
in
livestock as an advisor or
have been expoSed to most you can.
call (304 1 675-5236 , or write : flour , saw, carding .and $400,000 ol credit through
be the only extended care
would
travel
as
an
individual.
4-H
member, you should not
respiratory pathogens on
For the best quality, keep fa cility in West Virginia and Plea sant - Valley Nursing fulling mill .
in
order
to
survive
in
FmHA
Some
of
the
program
hestitate
to make immediate
the farm will probably come the lime from harve&gt;1 to
Care Unit,. Sand Hill Road ,
Wood's Mills became so farming and runtinue their
one
of
the
few
in
the
nation
of
the
trip
will
reservations
for this firsthighlights
out •f that movement in
Poinl Pleasant, West Virginia famous in the 11!30s that some normal level of oJ)eration.
reasonably good shape: freezing as short as posstble, that meets or exceeds all 25550.
include
Saturday
tours
of
come
,
first
sign-up trip.
Gallians thought that a large Economic Emergency loans
They will be stressed. but the specialist suggests. Sugar fed eral and sta)e confamous
thorough
bred
There
will
be
five reser"town would some day spring will not be made to expand a
they will survive." Studies in ·corn quickly turns to struction requirements .
and
cattle
farms
vations
held
for
each
county
breeding
up there. It was for this farm operation.
show tbat the compact, fat starch a fier ha rvest. So
Dedication services are set
in
and
around
Paris
in
the
Jackson
Area
so
please
located
reason that a petition was
calves have the highest maintain th e sweetness of Sunday, September 10 at 2
Loans made directly by and Lexington, Ky. They will call our office at 446-4612 ext.
presented to the County FmHA will be at an interest
percentage of sickness while swee t corn
by rapid p.m. and t~e public 1s invited
the tall, narrow, thin. long processing.
Commissioners
in !832 to rate equivalenl to the cost of visit the 3200 acre Claiborne 32 for more infonnation.
lo
attend.
Farm and see •he famous
kind of calf had less .
make Wood's Mills the county
After husking and trimGeorge E. Pich1t, M.D.,
Lambert suggests, "We ming the ears. place"them in
scat.
Director of the West Virginia
should start with a good
In 1B4B on Vine Street, A.
program in the herd of origin boilin g waler 4 minutes. Stan Depanment of Hea lth. will be
CINCINNATI
tUPli
The
LeC!erqc,
R. Memiger, and
and get that calf protected counting the time as soon as the featured speaker.
first
Riverfront
Stadium
rock
buill the
Reuben
Aleshire
before he moves, wtth a good the ea rs go into the water .
concert
,
held
earlier
this
Union
Woolen
Mill
. This
preconditi?n.i ng pro~a~ . When 4 minutes are up. chill
month , ha s cily fathers fa ctory consisted of 3
Farm of ongm has a s1grnf1- the ea rs immediately and
STRIKE DECLARED
whistling a happy tune.
cant effect on the gains compl etely ln ice wa ter .
buildings - the main factory,
BELMORE. Ohio iUPI J ~
PORTABt'E
Stadium Manager Glenn the dye house, and the
posted by those calves for Drain, cut the kernels off Ihe About 3,000 fann laborers
the first 50 days in the cobs and pa ck in the moisture
Redmer ann ounced that the boarding house. Laborers
have left the tomato and ove~flow crowd of 51,855 feedlot."
- va por proof containers.
cucumber fie lds of nonhwest which paid $12 a seat to see were brought along with
artisans
from
skilled
Some people t ry to avoid Ohio a nd about 150 workers
the blanching step, bul it 's were picketing a major the Eagles, the Sieve Miller England and Urbanp , Ohio.
Union carded, dyed , fulled ,
needed to maintain navor cannery in Leipsic Saturday Band and Eddie Money broughl $91,000 total income wove and dressed woolen
qua
lity
if
the
corn
and
texture
during the'first fu ll (lay of
SprinQ Ave.
is to he kept frozen- for migrant workers' strike for to the city: Parking receipts fiber. In later years this finn
P-J!lnrov Ohio
COITRAL SOYA
for the concert amounted to wa s known as the Slar
seve ra l month s, Joseph highe r wages.
111111111111 iII i i: iII i lllllllllli 1111111 states . Also , don 't try to get
about .$20,000, meaning the Woolen Mills.
of Ohio, lne.;
city profited handsomely .
In 1869, Gallipolis' second
G '•6
Gross
ticket
sales woolen mill was buill by John
I . ' Oh".,
amounted to $622,260.
Halliday, John McCormick,
"I'm e xtremel y pleased Joseph Blazer, William
•
with just about the whole Waddell, and Charles Min-,
thin.~t - the concert goers ·tum . This finn when first
beh~ved 1 promotion wa s organized was known as the
excellent, the acts, the 'sound, Gallipolis Woolen Mills. It
the city people. I can't say was later called Waddell and
.there was'a weak point in the Blazer Woolen Mill.
whole thing ," said Red mer.
Both of these companies

Economic loan service
available for farmers

Blanching sweet corn

aarl·

Jacts

Livestock .tour
plans announced

-~

I~ .:

$2 million unit
opening at PVH

Concert huge

Right now
1974

IWf
THOMPSON

4 Or~ hardtop. VB . .!lu to., P.S , P. B. , cruise control.
AM FM, super sharp .

fORD
~

1974 PLYMOUTH GOLD DUSTER
318-v .s . auto .. P ,S., P . B., a ir .

1976

FULTON-OOMPSON
.TRACTOR SALES

a

.

Agriculture and-

of trades at no-fat prices!
1976 CHRYSLER CORDOBA ................ '3995
v .a, aufomatlc, air cond .. P .S., P. B.. vinyl roof. AM.

FM stereo.

1978 FORD FAIRMONT 2 DR .............. $AVE
1977 PINTO RUNABOUT.. ..........: .. ,... '3295
4 cyl .• auto .. trans.; AM rad io, full glass Jrd dr ., rallye
wheels. whlfe W·red trim .

1977 GRANADA 2 DR ...................... '4795
6 cyl ., auto . trans ., P.S.f A, C. , vinyl roof, AM radio, t i lt
steering wheel, re(l w . 112 vinyl roof. white . Sharp.

1973 MAVERICK GRABBER 2 DR •• :.... ~, . '1895
v.e, auto. trans .• P.S., AM radio. red W·white trim .

1973 DODGE CHARGER SE ................. $AVE
· V-8, auto . trans., P.S.. P.B., A.C , AM-FM, split bench
seats, wire spoke wheel covers.

1973 DODGE DART SWINGER 2 DR .......'1895
6 cyl.. auto. trans .• P .S., AM radio, viny l roof. local
owned car . 44.000 miles. Shows good care.
.

1973 PINTO WAGON ....................... '1595
4 cyl., auto. trans .. luggage rack, Squire option

1974 MAVERICK 2 DR-..................... '2295
302 V-8, auto . trans ., P.S., A.C.. AM-FM, tape. sharp.

' Blue trimmed in white .

1974 MUSTANG 11 ...... ~.~.~-~;.~~~ ........ $AVE
1974 D-100 SHORTBED DODGE..... .'.. .... $AVE
1974 CHEV. C-10 ........................... '259S
197~

•
our commumty

IT SURE FEELS GOOD TO DO IT RIGHT.
tf you 're looking for results. 10011. to the International Harvester 284
Compact Traelor. It's a professional p1ece of equipment engineered
for small farms ..
With _28 horses , it can deliver over 24 PTO hp - plenty ot muscle
to make shor1 work oot of the plowing, disklng, lilling or hauling.
. And you get all the rellabHity, quality and service you 'd expect
from the finest piece of equipment in the field.
Come down and see one soon

FOR PIUESSIOIIAL "eM.TS, TRUST A S M«
SAVE 11,000.00 on 284 tractor in stock at the old
price. We have this tractor in paid inventOIJ and
must sell at once.

MEIGS EQUIPMENT, CO.
3RD in Pomeroy, 0.

992-2P6

By Bryson R, &lt;Bud! Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

1976 CHEV. C-10 4X4 ...... ~~~.'!.~.'~....... 14595
1977 FORD F-150 .......... ~................ '4295
1971 CHEVY. C-10 ........................... '1395

.

OPEN TILL 7 P.M.
Except Thursdov &amp; Saturday Til 5 : 00
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD
see Ro~ky Hupp, DAr:rell Dodrill or Pat Hill, Gen~ral
M.ln•uer. for a Good Deal on a New or ~~ed Vehicle.
~

992-2196

•ddleport. 0.

By Bryson R. Carter
GaWa Co. Ext. Agent
Agrtc!J]ture
Growth is a measuring stick of progress, and the Ohio
State F~rm Sctence Review has grown steadily since it was
started 101963. ThiS 16th ~nnual Review highlights, as have all .
Rev1ews, the latest In .scientific findings, both in agricultural
crop,s and fann machmery. New techniques and educational
aids are the norm rather than the exception at this assembly
point of the 1978 "model" agriculture.
·
The 1978 Farm f;cience Review offers you :
-More than 400 commercial diJplays of new technology.
- More .than 2.5 million square feet of exhibit area .
- 700 acres of crops and other displays .
-Crop demonstrations of soybean varieties, rurn hybrids,
sorghwn, alfalfa, sudangrass and chemical weed-cOntrol
plots.
- Latest !arm equipment in actioo.
-Corn drying equipment .
- Antique !ann equipment display.
'Take a gOod look and take home many Ideas to improve
yow- farm or home. Advance tickets are on sale at-your County
Extension Office. Advance Sale Price $1.50.

Local owner . clean interior . AM· FM CB radio, good

tires.

1976 Mustang ..~·:.c:: ....s2795
~ cyl .. automatic, good ttres, blue finish. rad lo, good
economy &amp; real sporJy .

Landau V-8, automatic, P.S., P.B.• air, AM, 8 track
stereo r-adio, power- door- locks and wj ndows. High
mileage but a r-eal bar-gain .

1973 Chevelle.~:::·::~::·•.s1995

Van~ ••••••• s3995

CGnverolon 318 V-8, automatic, P.S. , &amp; P. B., good tires,
sound mechanically, nice Interior conversion, h;e box,
bed.

16 FOOT.............'........................'325
12 FOOT................................... '275
CHASSI$ .......................... ,....... '125
OVER $100 SAVINGS FROM. LAST PRICE!
ASSEMBLY AT NO EXTRA CHARGE

KAVENSWOOD, W. Va .
Da vid J . Callmun has been
named manager of communieations
for
the
production facilities of Kaiser
Aluminum and Chemical
Co rporation, a leading
·producer of foil products and
aluminum sheet for aircraft
and other indusiries .
In Ihis newly · crealed
position, he will be responsible lor establishing the
internal communic8tions and
community relations for the
company .
In 1974, Calhoun had beeh
the public relations mana ger
for the Alum10um. Company
of America 's tAI.COA i heavy
forge facility in Cleveland,
manager
for
Vateer
t.bemical Products in 1975,
and 10 1976 joined the public
relations staff of PPG Industries at their corporate
headquarters in Pittsburgh.
In his most recent assignment, Calhoun handled the
external publicity for the
Coatings and Resins Division
of PPG. maker of Pitt sburgh
Paints.

COURT NEWS
GALLIPOLIS Gary
Bums, Gallipolis, entered a
plea of not ·guilty to charges
of physical harm in Gallipolis
l!lunicipal Court Friday .
Bond was set at $500, case
tuntinued .
Junior Chmlip, Pa triot ,
pleaded not g~ilty to charges
of rec'kless operation on
private ~roperty . Bond was
set at $100, case continued.
Entering a plea of guilty to
charges of DWl, Sherman
McGuire, 32, Gallipolis, was
fined $300, plus a six month
sentence, all b-ut 10 days
suspended .
Wanda L. Saunders, 34,
Gallipolis, waived $27 on
charges of left or center .
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of excessive speed
Friday were Tony L. Roger.
25, Shellyville , Ky. , 121 ;
John
C. Harpst , 43 ,
Westerville, 0., $26 ; Cynthia
L. McMillin, 19, Vinton, $29;
Ivan R. Shaw, 72, Gallipolis,
$15; Joseph F. Cornwell, 31,
St. Albans, $24 : James D.
Henson, 19, Gallipolis, $26;
and, Arvie Hensley, 20, Scottown, $46 .

'

IN STOCKI NEW CHEVY VAN CONVERSIONS, MOTOR HOMES,
EL CAMINO,
SUIURIANS

POMEROY

•

co.

"YO&amp;fr Cllevy D. .ler" ·
m-1121

Pltmtroy
()pin Evtnlngs TIIJ:OOp.m.

Meigs - Jackson - Vinton
Countie s Bo okmobile
Schedule for Meigs County :
Monday , August 28 Snowville, 3-J :30; Pageville,
3:45-4 : 15;
Harrisonville
Store, 4:30-5; Wolf Pen, 5:1f&gt;5:45.
.
Tuesday, August 29 Great Bend, 3-3:30; Sliversville, 4-4 :30 : l.()ng Bottom, r.5:30; Success ·Road, 6~ : 30;
County Road 20-Dave's
Grocery, 7-7 :15; Enterprise,
7:30-3.
Thursday , August 31 Portland Post Office, 3:lf&gt;3:45; Racine Wagner's
Hardware, 4:15-!i: 15; Racine
Bank, 5:15-6:15; Syracuse
Swimming Pool , 6 :30-8;
· Minersville Trailer Court,
B:lf&gt;-8 :30.

s4995

sharp.

1973 PINTO STATION WAGON
4 sp ., radio.

1976 CHEVY NOVA
$3695
CARLO
CHEVY

FOR A USED
CAR YOU CAN
COUNT ON

v .e, auto .• P.S.. P. B., vinvl roof , low , low mi-leare.

4 Or . hardtop , auto .. P.S., P.B., air . Ex1ra nice.

$1

CHEVY

4 Dr . v..a, auto., P.S.. P. B.. air, P . seats .

1975 DODGE CHARGER SE

2 dr . hardtop, v .a, a.uto.. p.s.• p .b., air, p. seats,
console . 35 .000 miles .

Auto .• p .s., p.b., air , v .a, rally wheels .

. $3195
USED TRU K
1976 CHEVY 1h TON

1977 Ford Mustang II, extra sharp. air . Real Nice . Only
$4495
1977 Chev. · Monte Carlo, sunroof. air, p.w., p.b., vinyl top. low
mileage.
$5995
1976 Buick Regal, red with while lop , local one owner. extra
clean .'
$4695
1975 Chev . Imp . , 4 dr. sed .• red &amp; white, clean inside &amp; out,
S2t95
1975 Buick Lesabre Cusi. 2 dr _, local one owner, last of the big
ones.
$3895
1975 Dodge Monaco 4 dr. sed., real nice Dodge, air, local car .
$2695
1975 Chev. C-10, '12 ton pickup, 6 cyi. , std. trans. Nice.
$3195
1974 Ford T-Bird, red &amp; while, vinyl top. Real nice.
$3695
1~74 Ford Maverick 2 Or., white with beige vinyl top.
$2395
1974 AMC Matador4 Dr. sed_, real nice, air, low mileage.
$1895
1973 Ford Gal. 5002 dr., green &amp; vinyl top, local car.
$1695
1973 Buick Century Cust. 2 dr . HT. Green &amp; white, air .
$2395
1973 Chev. Imp. 4 dr. sed., air, vinyl top . Nice &amp; clean.
$2195
.1973 Ford Cust. 5004 dr. H. T., make a nice family car. air .
$1795
1973 Plym~utll Gran Fury 2 dr . HT, air cond., vinyl top .
$1995
1972 Ford Gal. 500 4 dr, HT, runs real good . Nice car.
$995
1972 Ford Mav.e rick2dr. Local car. one owner .
$1495
1970 Buick Lesabre Cust., 4 dr. HT . Vinyl lop, air .
. $995

Long wheel base. 6 cyl ~ , super sharp . .

1972 FORD FlOO
Sport Custom , long wheel base, 302 v .a, auto ., P.S.
•

1968 CHEVY
'695 .
19764 spCHEVY
C20 lA
., p.s ., e)(tra nice.

We are The Friendly Dealership . Don't forget you owe it to yourself
to check with us before you buy any car, New or Used. We can save
you inone.y . Se.e or call one of these friendly salesmen: J. D. Story,
Ray Douglas· or Bill Nelson.

•

Long wheel base . Pickuo, 6 cyl., stand .

WE HAVE A REAL GOOD SELECTION
OF 1978 DODGE W-150 4 WD
PICKUP TRUCKS, "SHORT AND LONG
WHEEL BASE WITH OR WITHOUT AIR
CONDITIONING. 1-1978 DODGE RAM
CHARGER

2-1978 DODGE D150

J. WD PICKUPS. CLOSEOUT PRICES
NOW IN EFFECT ON AU DODGE,
PLYMOUTH OR CHRYSLER
1978 MODEL AUTOS

MOUNTAIN STATE
CHRYSLER
PLYMOU TH
.\I THE FOOT 01 1 Hi
Sii \II

n
.I

AND SHAD!
I

f' lc ll [) f1

r

VI~;

rlRI[)(;f S
( ;:

\"I I VIN MOON;'

12.75 at the stan of the fair .
The cOmmission arranged
the purchase by renegotiating ~rom 55,000 to
!25th ed't'
f th fai is up · $10',000the privilege feeDisco
I lon
e r
World promoters paid, In
by nearly 100,000 from,_ last addition to space and utility
year. The 2,269,4a6 Vl&gt;llors f
.
have boosted gate receipts by
• cs .
$50,000 over last yeJ!r.
For the last two days of the
Hardy membef" of Lenfair. "Disco World " will be
operated free. The Ohio ingrad's Walrus Club plunge
· t.:xpositions . commission into the Neva River every
boul!ht out tlte.new attraction &lt;IH)I of the year, even when
and dropped !he $2 admission Ute temperature dips to -20
f~ . J)i!;t'u \\' r id charged
tiPt'n-.•s F.

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OHIO VALLEY
LIVESTOCK
MARKET REPORT
Augustl9, 1978
Trends : Cows 1-3 or higher.
f~eders active to 5 higher.
'/'eals f&gt;-10 or htgher. Total
Head : 11 .30.
CATTLE - Slaught er
Steers 45.76-!i2.75, Slaughler
Heifers 44.50-49.50.
feeder Ste ers : (goodchoice ) 250 to 300 lbs. 58 . ~
73.00, 300 to 400 lbs. 52.5072.30, 400 to 500 lbs . 50-011.25,
500 lo 600 lbs. 47.50-02.50, 600
Io 700 lbs . 43-49.50, 700 and
over 38-47. 50.
Feeder Heifers: 1good choice 1250 to 300 lbs. 4B.~ .
300 to 400 lbs. 46-!i7.50, 400 to
500 lbs . 41.50-54.75. 500 .to 600
lbs. 42-55.75 , 600 to 700 lbs.
40.50-51.50, 700 and o~er 37.5047.
Feeder Bulls : (good choice ) 250 to 300 lbs. 60.5071.50, 300 to 400 lbs. 57.5068.50, 400 to 500 lbs. 50.5064.75, 500 .to 600 lbs. 48.~,
600 to 700 lbs. 44.50-53, 700 and
over 41.50-47.50.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
lbs .J 38.7$-45.75, Slaughter
Cows : utilities 34 .50-40,
canners-cutters 30-35.25.
Veals : choice and, prime 6273, stanaards and mediums
55-0a.BO, Baby Calves (by the
head) 32.50-77.50.
Hogs: (No. I, barrowsgilts, 200-230 lbs .) 411-49. ·
Butcher Sows ~9 . 50-43.75 ,
Butcher Boars 30-34.50, Pigs
I by the head ) 29-!il.

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COLUMBUS \UPI&gt; - The
Democratic State Committee
will meet in Columbus Sept. 6
to cenify a ·candidate to run
for an interim term as chief
justice of the Ohio Supreme
Coun 'in the Nov . 7 elect ion.
Democratic State Chairman C. Paul Tipps announced
the meeting Friday and also
named a nine-member
screening committee to in·
terview potential Democratic '
candidates at state party
headquarters next Wed-

nesday .

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Can Schlichter start
By MIKE SHAUN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI) - With
the second umpire strike in
major league history a
· reality, .makeshift crews
handled the schedule. Friday
night - and things went
.
surprisingly well.
"The guy behind the plate
missed two oc thr~ ca Us, but
every wnpire does that,"
Texas Manager Billy Hunter
said of John James, a
Southwest
Conference
umpire.
·
Judge Joseph I,.. McGlyn~
of the U.S. District Court
Friday night ordered the
striking umpires to return to
work irrunediately - but all
13 majoc league games were
played with the makeshift
crews.
McGlyM issued the order

after the American . and
Natiooal Leagues sought an
injunction aga inst the
walkout earlier in the day,
but the judge said the backto-work order would be
contingent on a further
hearing before the court oo
Wednesday, Aug. 30.
Major league umpires
walked off their jobs Friday
in an attempt to renegotiate
their current contract. The
u_,J;tlpires are asking for,
afuong other things, a fifth
member for each fol,IT-rnan .
crew, which would entitle
~:i!.ctl member to a one-week
vacation during the season.
The ooly ''name" umpire
hired Friday was former
AI
National
Leaguer
Foreman, who called balls
and strikes in New York for
the A's-Yankee game.

Foreman was also the 'only running up the steps and say as we are needed."
"new" umpire to have a real that everything's okay and
Dick Butler, Ame.rican
League
Supervisor
of
problem of any kind , they're W'ocking."
Makeshift crews were Ull)pires, said the league has
throwing Oakland first
baseman Dave Reverillg out hired ail around the major been preparing for the strike
the game foilowing a called leagues Friday, with each since last Monday.
Following the injuction
third strike _ Revering threw umpire being paid $102 per
his batting helmet, ·which game pius mileage - the
Friday night, Butler said that
meant mandatory e:xpulsion. major-league minimum.
if some umpires returned
The crews were made up IDday, he may go with split
The strike began at Toconto
Fridav afternoon when the mostly of high school and -crews, meaning some regular
four-man crew working the roilege umpiD's, some , of wnpires and some of the
Blue Jays-Minnesota TWins whi ch had minor league "new" ones.
game did not report to the experience - and the same
"Obviously, I wish it hadn't
ballpark, and the walkout · will probably occur today .
happened, said Butler from
gave aspiring umpires a
" You ask yourself the ques- his Dallas office. "I ·can see
chance to show what they can tion of whether you could do both sides of the situation .but
do in major-league situations. the job and now the chance the umpires' cootract has
In Boston, two former presents itself," said Bob three years to go and the
minor league umpires Roesner, who worked the people in baseball feel that
approached their assigrunent Oriole-Mariner game. contract should not be
" We're here to work as Ion~( renegotiated."
with different objectives.
''I have been out of baseball
since 1972 and I'm dying to
get back in," said Bill
R~inson, who worked behind
the plate in the BostonCalifocnia game at Fenway
Park. "I'll never get another
_!ports Tnmsact•ons
reserve list.
opportunity like this again. I By United
Preu lnlernafionat
Oakland - Put tackle Joh n
don't think anyone ran blame
FriCiay
Vella and w ide receiver Rich
Pro Football
Martin i on the. iniured reserve
me. This is my ooe big shot
Cleveland Wl!lived l ine . iist . Waived wide receiver Joe
and I'm going to do the best I backer
Mark Johnson and Wide_ ·conran, . linebacker M~rk , N i ean."
receiver Rober! Woods .
. '· c hols , center Tom. E?av!S, f1 ght
Gr een Bay - Acq uired rook•e end Mark 1wanowsk 1 and guard
The other former minor wide
rece iver Willie Taylor on
Keith Uperesa .
league urnp, Robert Giard , waivers from Tampa Ba\' and
Pro Bueball
Los Angeles - . re:teased
wocked three years in the cu t running back Gordon Bell .
Buffalo -. Wa i ved tight end "!ihortstop En zo HerMndez to
F1orida State arid Southern Paul Seymour . Claimed corner . make room for catcner Steve
League ahd has no ambitions bac:"k S}. lp Thomas from Oak . Yeager's return from. th e
disabled list..
for returning as a full-time land
aa"ttimore ·- Cut defens i ve
Colt~ge Foo?ball
tatk le wavnc Hammond , center
Golden Vlllley Lutheran Col umpire.
in Olsen . r unn ing
back lege named ex - Minnes~ta
"I had my shot," said the Orr
Howard
Steven s,
linebacker Vik ing safety George Abz1ck
31-year-old
Giard,
a Ca lvi n O' Neal. defens•ve back defensive secondary football
im Bayl or and punter Steve coa ch .
counselor in the Lynn, Mass. TBroussard
. Pul d e fen"si~e back
,.,
public schools. " Any minute Frank Dar'k , runnin~ back
now, I expect the major · Mont e Anth0ny' and f•g .ht. end
league umpires to come Jimmie Kennedy on the 1n1ured .

Transactions

POMEROY·LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
540 E , Main St . .
Pomeroy, 0 .

INDIANAPOUS (UP!) Mostest Yankee raced to the
fastest time in the world this
year' to win the $21 ,000
Hoosier Futurity 2-year-&lt;Jld
Colt Pace at the Indiana State
Fair Friday . 1
Billy Herman reined the
Pittsburgh-based Sidney
Mallet ~olt to a 1 :~6.4
clocking in the secood of two
heats for the record. He ha~
woo the opening mile in
1:58.1. In each heat, Legend
Hanover of tl1j! Messenger
Stables. in Golf, Ill., was
second with Joe O'Brien on
the sulky.

as OSU quarterba~k ?-?
By GENE CADDES
UP! Spuru Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohi9 (UP!)Can Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes make a starling
quarterback out of a
freshman in three weeks?
That's the big question on
nearly everyone's mind as
Hayes begins his 28th season
as Buckeye coach Saturday
he
greets Ill
when
candidates.
Art Schlichter, the 6-3, tOOpound former UPI Class AAA
· back of the year from Miami
Trace High School, is the
.Quarterback in question. ~e
iS, by almost everybody s
admission, not yoU.. ordinary
freshman.
His high school team was
Wlbeaten the three years he
was its signal caller and he
led his South team to a 23-0
winoover the Nocth a couple
of weeks ago in the annual
Ohio High School All-Star
Game at Canton .
It was that game ~ against
the Qest high school talent the
state has to offer - which
made believers out of many,
including · som~ doubters oo
Hayes' own coaching staff.
Hayes, of course, has twoyear regular and all-Big Ten
quarter.back Rod Gerald
returning for his senior year.
But, the lalented Gerald has
his sights set on a pro career
as a wide receiver and
repoctedly would welcome ·
the chance to play that
posilioo for the Buckeyes this
season.
.
"The decision has alreadv
been made," said Hayes.
"Gerald is our quarterback.
But, I'm certain the other
fellow (Schlichter) will play
some there, maybe even the
£irst game."
Hayes, leaving the door
somewhat open however, admitted he "wouldn't hesitate
to put him Gerald at split
end," and said he felt
Schlichter, while probably
not able · grasp all the
Buckeye offense in the three ·
weeks prior to the Sept. 16
opener against Perin State,
"can absorb. a lot of it."

While quarterback remain# with Joe Robinson at right
a Buckeye strength, with tackle, Fritz, ..Emle Andrea
capable
juniors Greg and Jim Savoca at the
Castignola and Mike Strahine guards, Tim Vogler at center
also available, left tackle and a wealth of light ends
could prove to be the Achilles which Include 1977 starters
heel.
Jinuny Moore and Bill jaco,
Hayes has yet to find a Ron Barwig and Chuck ·
replacement for graduated HWlter.
aiiAmerican Chris Ward,
Roo Springs, who gained
with as many as five players over 1,100 yards last year,
getting . a look , including heads a talented tailback
junior Ken Fritz, currently a cooting~nt and Hayes looks
starting guard.
for hi!n to he better than ever
But Ftitz will r.emain this year.
.
.
where he is unless Hayes
Backing up Springs is
can't find his man from Ricky Johnson, a slashing
· among Keith Ferguson, Tim runner with good speed, and .
Brown, Doug Mackey and Calvin Murray, selected the
Tim Burke.
most improved player during'
The rest of the line is solid spring practice.

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Italian Cardinal Luciani elected new Pope
ByJAC!CR.PAYTON ·
. VATICAN CITY (UP!) "- Italian Cardinal John Albino
IAJciani, 65, was elected pope of'the Roman Catholic church
today in the shortest conclave in modern history. ·
Luciana, the patriarch of Venice, chose the name John Paul
I. He is cilnsidered a coo~ervatlve by church experts.
The ll1 cardinals took only four ballots over eight hours and
54 minutes to choose Luciani as the spiritual leader of the
world's 700 milliion Roman Catholics. It was the, first day of
voting in the cooclave which started Friday.
Going into the conclave, Luciani had heen rated as clear
oqtslder among the cardinals mentioned most often as Papal
candidates.
The churchman, who wears wire-rinun~ spectacles and has
a ruddy face; ooce said he found it hard 'to accept the
progressive reforms enacted by the Second Vatican
Ecum~nlcal Council that ended in 1965.
, The election of the 263rd Roman Catholic pontiff was in doubt
for 45 minutes.
.
Wheri the smoke from the Sistine Chapel's tin chimney
billowed from black to white and then to gray.
Black smoke signifies the voting was inconclusive; white
means a new pontiff has been chosen.
Even Vatican Radio was uncertain that a new pontiff was
elected and did not announce Luciani's election until almost iiQ
minutes after the first smoke appeared.
When the smoke first began billowing from the round, tin
chimney, about 5,000 tourists, priests, and nuns were in St.
Peter's Squar~.
.
As tbe !ltloke changed colors and WJcertai~ty rose, bars,
cafes, and restaurant,s near the Vatican quickly emptied and
'

.

.

the crowd in the square grew within minutes to about 100,000.
When the VatiCan annoWJCed the successful eleetion, the
crowd in the .square broke into wild tt'pplause and cheers and
grew even larger as apartment buildings in the neighborhoods
emptied.
.
The conclave that elected Luciani was the shdrtest this
century. The shortest conclave in the church's almost 2,000 ·
years of history came in 1503 when Julius II was chosen pope .
Luciani is the third patriarch of Venice to be elected pope
this century. The others were Plus X in 1903 and John XXIII in
1958.
•
Vatican experts said Luciani's choice of the name-John
Paul I - could be interpreted as an indication he would
continue the policies of ·his two inunediate predecessors.
The son of a Socialist migrant liricklayer from a Dolomite
mountain hamlet Albino Luciani once said of ·himself: "I am
ooly a poor man, ~ccustomed to small things and silence."
Luciani, 65, is now Pope John Paul I.
Few people outside Italy ever heard of Cardinal I,.uciani
before preparations began for the Cl!rrent papal election
conclave, But the same was true in their time for two of his
predecessors as patriarch of Venice - Giuseppe Sarto and
Angelo Giuseppe Roocalli, who went on to become Popes St.
Plus X and John XXIII .
Despite his active interest in the lot of the poor, Luciani is
rated as a church conservative. He admitted to a reporter that
·he foWJd it hard to accept the Ecumenical Council's teaching
that all religions are entitled to liberty, in contrast with the old
teaching that Roman Cathollsm, as the "only true religion,"
has rights that others have not.
"The thesis I found hardest to live with was the on.e on

which only the truth had rights. In the end, I convinced myself
we had. been· wrong .''
Cardinal Ottaviani, now 87 and the Vatican's No . I
conservative, was Luciani's mentor through part of his career.
But he also enjoyed the support of some liberal prelates arid
was among the first bishops appointed by the late Pope John
XXIII .
Luciani was born Oct. 17, 1912, at Forno di Canale, a hamiet
in a scenic but poor valley in the Dolomites, 33 miles south of
the luxury skilng resort of Cortina O'Ampezzo .
His father was a bricklayer who worked in Switzerland in the
surruners and returned home in the winters before moving to
the Venetian lagoon island of Murano as a glass worker .
Although he was a Socialist party activist in his spare time, the
elder Luciani never opposed young Albino's decision to
become a priest.
Luciani attended seminary in the town of Feltre and
graduated in philosophy and theology at the seminary of
Beliuno, the t&gt;emetown of 19th century Pope Gregory XVI. He
then graduated in dogmatics at the Gregorian University in
RO!ne and was ordained a priest in 1935.
He returned to his home area to work as a parish assi51ant, a
religion teacher in a mining technicians ' school and a
professor of theology, morals, canon law and sacred art. He
later was in charge of catechism teaching in the Beiluno
diocese an~ wrote a book about his experiences, titled with
typical modesty "Catechism Crumbs."
Pope John XXlll, acting on a recommendation from Padua
Bishop Girolamo Bortignon, appointed Luciani bishop of
Vittorio Veneto at the foot of the Alps in 1958.
One of IAJciani 's first problems in that post was a scandal
involving two of his priests and a number of bad checks . He

Searching
•
contmues

two passengers were being' Hamilton.
held for • questioning after
Hamilton, whose wife was
airport officials conducted an also ott the plane, scanned a
inquiry.
19-page letter written in
"All passengers and crew confused English.
members were cleared and
"It was the work of a
released after thorough in- madman," Said TWA Vice
vestigation at the airport," President Stewart LQng ."
Kunzi said.
The letter demanded the
· One of the passengers on release of Hess, 84, from
board, Robert Clark Brown, Berlin's Spandau Prison and
telephoned his brother, Ohio freedom for Sirhan Sirhan,
State Rep. Sherrod Brown, the Palestinian serving a
and said the hijacker had . prison sentence for Kenalready been taken . into nedy's assassinatioo in Los
custody.
Angeles on JWJe 5, 1968, hours
Brown told his family that after the New Yo~k seriator
authorities retrieved a wig had won the California
nushed down the plane's Democratic presidential
toilet , then iqspected every primary.
male. passenger and found
The note also demanded
one " with a sticky face," freedom for five Cro~tian
whom they apprehended.
nationalists who hijacked a
The hijacking began as the TWA jet on Sept. 10, 1976, on
plane passed over Ireland. its way .from Chicago to New
Most passengers were dozing York and commandeered it to
or watching th~ inflight Paris.
movie, " F. M."
1be man's note said there
The disguised passenger · were bombs in the baggage
handed a bulky envelope to hold, one of them timed to
stewardess Patricia Prince explode at 5:30 p.m. (12:30
and orderedner to deliver it p.m . EDT) and another
to the pilot. Capt. Robert capable of blowing up at any

·Miller issues results
of Poll at Meigs Fair

. SOUTH POINT, Ohio
(UP!) - Police planned a
second day of searching
wASillNGTON, D. C. IDday for a 34-year-&lt;~ld man Congressman Clarence
who allegedly abducted his Miller today released the
estranged wife at gunpoint results of a public opinion poll
and escaped in a sheriff's conducted· by his mobile
deputy's cruiser.
office at the Meigs County
The man's wife, Linda Fair.
Forty-six percent (46
Lewis, ·Safely escaped to
Huntington, W.Va . Friday, percent) of the poll respon·
according to Lawrence dents viewed inflation as the
County Sheriff James H. major problem facing the
Howell. Howell said she was country. Forty percent (40
"l:ruised all over," but other- percent) considered taxes as
wise in good- shape.
the top issue followed by
A day-long search of the welfare abuse with eight
county by helicopter and on percent (8 percent) . National
foot Friday turned up no defense, crime and other
trace of alleged abductor issues received two percent
David Edward Lewis. Howell (2 percent).
Mea residents ga ~e the
said the search would resume
· today.
following perfom1ance rating
Howell said th~ incident to the .Federal government:
began Thuraday night when The President - twenty
Mrs. Lewis told the sheriff's percent (20 percent) good,'
office she feared her 1\usband thirty percent (30 percent)
.would harm her and asked for fair and fifty percent (:;Q
a sheriff's escort to her.home percent) poor; Congress to pick up clothes.
·
twelve percent (12 percent)
!ile and her three ~ildren good, forty-seven percent (47
and a grandchild had been . percent) fair, and forty-&lt;lne
'staying at the Lawrence percent (U percent) poor. Of
CoWlty Ohio Chil~en's Home the various federal agencies,
since July.
the Veterans' Administration
Deputy Rock)' Mootroso es- received highest inarks with
corted Mrs. Lewis to her tw.enty-seven percent (27
• home, but when they arrived, percent) saying It was duing
•. the deputy was surprised by a good job.
•
- Lewis, a big, beefy man who
Sixty-two percent (62
• works as a truck drlvlier. The percent) $aid they have less
~ deputy was forced to e 1ace confidence in the Federal
• ·. down on the ground.
government today than they
.._· Lewia allegedly tu;ed two had a year ago. Stx percent (6
* shots over Montroso s boay percent) have more and •
and forced his wife Into the thirty-two ' percent (32 percruller at ~int.
· cent) have the same.
'
Montroao called for help
When asked whether the U. '
1111
and other deputies purUS
~ s. lfhould counter Cuban and
_ r-ia u be Oed down · ·
Russian military activities in
and CillO Tallow Rld&amp;t= Roed. Africa with mlUtary eqW,:
uld 1-w wu ment
and
economic
*lvincat a high~~~ Ullltance, flfty-fllne percent
he ran throllllu .......,.
(110 percent) said yes and
fence, aero. 1 puturealrbomeand forty-ooe percent (41 perthe vehicle wu
.
cent) l8ld no.
when It erlllhed Into thedeU:
Thlrty-•111 percent (36
' Pollee found blaod lnll
pei'CIIIt) of IJioM reapondlnc .
'cruia'.
'
to ~ JIOU favored Federal
Dap tram the ~~ a_.lu credita tor colleae
Ky.,CIIIIlne.ut'"" .. .._. 'Udprlnteadlooltultlonand .
to Jld ill tile aurdl ~~ ll&amp;ty.four perealt (14 perthe caYH'Iddln briar uu~""T' Cllllt) - - QIIIIOied
fl. tilt Little Buffalo Crtllt 0a wbelher Con1re11
-·
lllould atend the aeven-)'lflr

..

I

time .
Hamilton landed the
Boeing 707 in Geneva at 8:25
a.m. (3:25 a.m. EDT! almost
precisely
the
scheduled landing time and told the passengers, "As
you have probably deduced
by now, we have been
hijacked."
The captain kept the
engines ruMing to use up as
much fuel as possible in the
event of an explosion ..
After all the jet fuel was
burned, the airline, Swiss
authorities and Hamilton
decided . to evacuate the
plane.
The hijacker apparently
got off with everyone else.
No bomb was found etther
in the baggage or in the
aircraft.
The plane left for Nice
today, where many of the
passengers headed for
vacations on the French
Riviera.
"I'm going to take a, lot ol
trains from now on," one
passenger commented.

period for states to ratify the p&lt;!rcent 165 percent) support
Equal Rights Amendment , easing air pollution standards
thirty-&lt;Jne · percent (31 per- to bum more coal and thirtycent) said yes while sixty- five percent (35 percent )
nine percent · (69 . percent ) were against such a
registered opposition.
relaxation .
Forty-two percent (42
Forty-two percent (42
percent) favored prohibiting percent ) favor Federal
medicaid funds to pay for . subsidies of rail passenger
abortion while fifty-eight lines such as Amtrak and
percent (~8 percent) opposed fifty-eight percent (58 persuch a ban.
cent) were opposed.
Of those polled, sixty-five

Comisar child
returns home
CINCINNATI (UPI) - suburban
neighborhood,
After the broad-daylight ended Friday morning after
kidnapping of his 3-year-&lt;Jld the boy was pushed from the
son, a UOO,OOO ransom alleged kidnapper's car in a
exchange and a hlgh-speed Greater Cincinnati Airport
chase involving the alleged parking lot during a ransom
kidnapper and the FBI, exchange.
Michael Comisar had but one
Authorities would not say
reaction·: "Everything is just where the boy had been kept
great."
overnight, but on Friday
Comisar's son, Jason. was morning FBI agents said they
safely back with the saw him being pushed out of
prominent
family
of the suspect's car in a parking
restaurant operators Friday, lot at the airport - dropoff
19 hours after being abducted point lor the briefcase
at gunpoint from his conlai!ling $100,000 ransom
suburban North Avondale that had been requested by
home.
telephone.
"We got Jason back, thanks
Once the boy had been
to .the efforts of the FBI and safely
recovered
by
the Cincinnati poli~e," · authorities, FBI agents
Comisar told reporters after inunediately tried to stop the
a 24-year-&lt;~ld Cincinnati man suspect from driving away.
who knew a ~ember of the
FBI Special Agent Thomas
Comisar family waa arretlted Kitchens said when the
on kidnapping charges suspect tried to run down an
following a high~ chaae agent, the agent fired a shot
with the FBI.
at the car. The slllpi!CI was
"I can't thank Oil' frlencll not hit, · but suffered
enough. Everytlling jual auperficlal wounds from
turned out terrillc," llllid a Dying glaa .
j ubi Ian t Co mJ aa r .
The suapect'a car then
"Ewrything Ia jtlll ll'tat," careened olf 1111 FBI car and
Bnree Nelul Ballzer, It, heeded out of the airport.
W81 lodged In the Boone
Autborltlea gave chase,
County jail Friday qich&amp;, caught up with the car abo,ut
under federal kldnapplnl a half-mile outside the airport
and
ballcl • . and aJTelled the suspect
'lbe t - ep'Odt, wllldl wilhout furthoir incident. The
bqan with the ~ of 1100,000 ransom ·money was
J.- llhortly llftB 3 p.m. recovered.
Th....:ay ll'lllll the well-to4.

chars•

-.ooo

called a meeting of the diocese's 400 priests and announced he
intended to refund the missing money out of the revenue from
church property rather than seek ecclesiastical immunity
from Italian civil law.
· Pope Paul VI made Luciani patriarch of Venice in 1969 and
named him a cardinal in 1973.
For historical reasons, Venice and Lisbon are the only
European cities whose bishops hold the title of p.atriarch. The
Venice see won additional prestige from the fact Pius X and
John XXIII held it at the time they were elected popes in 1903
and 1958 respectively.
Luciani plunged into his work with enl)lusiasm, riding to
mainland parishes by bicycle, doing a~&lt;;ay with official pomp
and ceremony and instructing parish priests to sell their
churches' gold ornaments to provide for hantlicapped children.
"The church's real treasures are the poor, the little ones,
who should not be helped by means of mere occasional alms ,
but in such a way as to insure their promotion," Luciani once
wrote.
"
At the same time , the patriarch opposed the workeipriest
movement and other forms of whai he considered undue
church involvement in the class struggle in Venice's industrial
. mainland suburb of Porto Marghera.
An advocate of theolog ical moderation, Luciani Sjlid too
many churchmen either refused to go beyond the First Vatican
Co.uncil of 1869-70' that proclaimed the dogma of papal
infallibility, or tried to liberalize the church farther than
allowed by the Second Vatican Council in 1962-05.
"Vatican One has many followers ·and so has (an imaginary)
Vatican lbree, but Vatican Two has too few, " Luciani said in
an official address to Paul VI when he was. made a cardinal.

iunbcnr X[imts - i~ntitttl

'Mad' man sought·
• By JOHN CALLCOTI
GENEVA,
. Switzerland
(UP!) - A mystery man
·described as "mad" staged a
cruel hijack hoax that kept 88
people in a TWA Boeing 707
jetliner in Geneva for eight
terrifying hours and . then
walke&lt;j off the plane, Swiss
officials said Saturday.
The hijacker, who wore a
wig, mustache and false
beard, demanded the release
of Sirtuin Sirhan, the convicted assassin of Robert F.
Kennedy, and Rudolf Hess.
deputy fuehrer of Adolf
Hitler's Nazi Germany .
" I was terrified, very
frightened,' ' said Myriam
Wallach of New York, one of
79 passengers and nine crew
members Clll board TWA
Flight 830 from New York
Friday.
Jacques Kunzi , the police
inspector in charge of the
investigation, Saturday said
that officials found a wig, a
false mustache, a pair of
glasses and a large plaid coat
in the aircraft lavatory.
But he denied reports that

.

'

'

'

.

VOL. 13 NO. 30

~

SUNDAY, AUGUST 27, 1978

FUTURA STONE has been used effectively for the
driveway at the Dr. R. R. PickeOi.home in Pomeroy.

PAGE 1-0

THE ATTRAC"r!VE pool ol Dr . and Mrs. R . R.
Pickens in Pomeroy, where the Futura Stone has been
installed.

Saudi ,Arabia
big customer
By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Saudi Arabia has become far
and away the biggest
customer for U.S. arms and
military construction aid ,
spending more than Iran,
lsr;~el and Egypt combined.
The
latest
State
Department arms sale
figures indicate that two new
facts of life m the Middle East
high - pric~d , oil
and
AT THE THOMPSON Ford Co. in Middleport, Futura
expensive, modern anns Stooe has provided an attractive, maintenance free showhave entwined the economies
room floor .
of the United States and Saudi
Arabia.
The figures also point to
another troubling trend : All
sides are rapidly acquiring
modem weapons of. war and,
if
the
Middle
East
negotiations fail , the stage
could be set for a dash
BY BOB HOEFLICH
tested in all kinds of weather involving
the
most
MIDDLEPORT - A new conditions and it does provide destructive and expensive
product - Futuro Stone - to a different looking, attractive conventional weapons.
enhance sidewalks, drive- surface in various areas. Dr.
Of ·the five top arm s
ways, patios,. pool decks and R. R. Pickens already has customers . of the United
even the interior entrance had II ,000 square feet of the States, four - Saudi Arabia,
ways to homes is being in- · new product installed at ,his Iran, Israel and Egypt - are
troduced to this area by Pomero}' home . Futura Stone Middle Eastern states. The
Fut ura Stone of Ohio is effectively used about the fifth is sOuth Korea.
headquartered at 93 Seventh Picken~ pool and on two sets
According to State DepartAve ., Middleport .'
of steps leading to the pool. ment estimates for the
Operating the new com- The attractive driveway to current year, the Saudis will
pany are George Hackett, the home feat ures the spepd $4 .9 billion for
Jr., and his two sons, Biil and product . The Ford Motor Co. American anns, technlcal
Dennis, who also serve as in Middleport has installed aid and the construction of
installers of the product Futura Stone to make an naval ports and airports.
which has been around some attractive auto showroom
That will partially offset
eight years but has never noor and Crow's Steak House the estimated $6A billion a
been used in this area before. is also among the first year the United States spends
All three underwent special customers. Sidewalks around for Saudi oil.
trail)lng in Florida to learn the Steak House have been
Some of the Saudi mooey
the procedures of in- done in the stone.
will go for the toJ&gt;-line 60 F15
stallation.
.
Phone
numbers
for jet Fighters (list price : 117
Futuro Stone is actually, residents wishin g more million each) approved by
tiny , hard shelled gravel information on Futura Stone the administration and
which is dredged from a' river include George Hackett, Jr ., Congress this year, plus the
at Selma, Ala. It is baked and 992-2444; Bill Hackett, 992- ground support equipment,
then bagged for shipment. On 3886, and Dennis Hackett, 992- spare parts and technical
a job site, the gravel is then , 7485.
training that go with them .
mixed with a special blend of
According to the State Def
epoxy through use of a conpartment figures, Iran, the
crete mixer. It is placed in
largest U.S. arms customer
CLOSED LABOR DAY
the designated area with
in 1977 ($5.8 billion), has
COI.UMBUS - Director
installer!! using trowels to gel
slipped . into second place,
the proper placement and Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio partly because the shah was
Department of Liquor told he could have either the
shape.
· Interest in dealgn Is Cr8f1ted Control today aMounced that warplanes or the naval
all state liquor stores, frigates he wanted, but not
thro~gh the u.e of the Futura
Stone in two colors - tan and agencies and departmental both,
brown - tu provide special offices will be Closed Monday,
He probably will take the
effect~.
SePtember 4, a legal holiday planes and get the ships il)
· Western Europe.
The product has been for state employees.

.

Futura Stone Company
offering new product

Iran will spend an
estimated $2.6 billion foc U.S.
weapons and construction in
fiscal year 1978.
Rounding out the top live,
israel will buy $1.3 billion
worth of U.S. arms and
related aid this year, Egypt
will spend $800 million and
South Korea $500 million . Ail
are
buying
advanced
warplanes : ' F15s, F~E 's or
F4s .
Together, those five nations
buy slightly more than Half of
th e American arms sold
overseas, which will add up to
a total of about $13 billion for
the year, according to the
Pentagon.

..

-

Charges
traded
By RUTH YOUNGBLOOD
HONG KONG tUPI) Vietnam and China Saturday
traded charges over their
latest and bloodiest border
clash, which left seven people
dea d and scores injured.
Vietnamese Vice Foreign
Minister Hoang Bich Son,
who heads the Vietnamese
delegation io a session of
border negoliations with
China, accused Peking of
assembling
" tens
of
thousands" ot trained
saboteurs who are ready to
cross the border in Vietnam.
Son made his speech at the
fourth session ol the parley.
His remarks were broadcast
by th e Vietnam News
Agency.
The talks began Aug . 8 in
Hanoi to resolve the dispute
over 160,000 Chinese who
streamed across the border
frot]i Vietnam until Peking
closed .the gate in July. I
Earlier today China said
that Vietnamese authorities
attacked · the
Chinese
refugees .at the gate with
" bayonets , daggers and
sticks" and drove them away
from the crossing point.

�.
I
D-2- flk Sw)day Tun~s-&amp;ntm.t , SunU..y, Aug. 2i, l978
I

um.Dt 1Tli'imllb.
""' _ -

our-sel ves-

And immortality
We Slowly drow e- He kntw

no has re
And I had put away
My labor &amp; m y le•sur(' too,

For h is CIVI li t y-

We

p~ss ed

the

scttool,

where Children strove

At rl!cess- •n the nng
We pau sed th e helds of
gazmg gramAnd who knows what s ne1e t
to br1ng
We pa ssed befor e a house
That se em ed

A swellmg '"the ground
The r oof
VISible

wa s

scarce ly

The

corn •cc - •n

Smce

thts

th e

ground .

- ' t ts

only

a

year-and vet
Fee l s short er than the day
Th en I know tt ' s h m c agam

But wha t else can 1 say
I lead m y lite. m y l•fe leads

me.

Stra.ght toward s e te r n1ty
send you our lo\le,
through our h earts
The family of M errtll Flet cher
' Curl y "
Ke mper
Sadly
m •s.sed by w•fe ,
V1rg•n•a ,
ch1ldren ,
I sabelle Swam , An n abe lle
&amp; Jun1or Stanly , Franc es &amp;
Bob
Scoff ,
10
grand
childr en ,
8
g rea t
We

grandch•ldren.

Hdp*ant~d

lklp \hnt~d

THE FAMil Y of Aud r e-y Woode
wonts to thonlo.l our tn ends a nd
ne tghbor s fo r
the cords
pra yers food and tlowers dur
1ng her rll ness an d d eo.~h Th e
Che!. te r
Communtty
f or
flo wers the nur srng st aff and
all e m plo.,.ees at Veterens
Memonal Hospt tol Or Te ll e
Dr Vd lo neu va and hts staff the
Re v W H Perrtn fQr rd!i the
~ wtn g fu nerla Home lor th4f'r
krndneu a nd the pa llbearers
Elsre and W rll ord Hm es Roy and
Roger HmeS a nd Famtltes a nd
td rth a nd Bdl McC 4I Ioch

-

The fO m df of Herman Lawhon
would hke to e)l'pr ess th ~w
tha nks 10 a ll a t thet r g ood
fr tends a nd net ghbors lor ther r
k tn dne ss help a nd lood dur1ng
the dl ne ss and death of our lov
ed o ne
S pe c 10 ~ !honks
to
Wa re h1me Fu neral Home Rll!v
C J Lemley l o r h1s consoltng
w o rd s hos p ttol stat! at VA
Hospit a l
1n
Huntm gt on
e!i.p~Cto l ly Wa rd 2 B
Wtfe '4orgr ee !Ions lorry Ttm
and Marc
WISH to thank a ll m .,. fr rends lor
the car ds and man y prayer s
r ece•ved wh de I wo § til 1n the
ho spi ta l a nd at home
Henry l::r vtne
1

CANN IN G peache s good qua l1t y
~ree r. to n e
connmg pea che s
$7 Q8 •n past tc bog contotners
Retad and who le sa le Bob s
Market
Ma son
M tdwoy
Marke t Pome ro y Oh

W~

WOU LD lt ke to thanlo. our
many lrtends e nd relat.ves who
helped us In on.,.
durm g the
rlln eu and death a our belov
ed wrfe mothe• and st&amp;ter
Mary Elizabeth Ttb Cooke
hpeC JOIIy do we wrsh to thank
the m a ny person s who sent
food to eQ(h o f ou r harp•• The
ones who sent co rd s Ho~er\
and the many lette rs of con
dolenc; e Everyone who con
to
the
Amen con
trt buted
Ca ncer Socretv and the New
Ho ve n Unrled Method tsl Ct'tur ch
Memor tol Fund The enlrre stall
o l Ho lzer M.dJCal Cente r and
Drs
Pren der ga st
Sch m1dt
Cl e r ke
and Moh er
The
f og le!ong Fune ral Home tor
the ktnd and efftC1e nt servtce
The Re" John Ca rflpbe l l an d
~e v Geor ge 11oscho r l or the1r
and consoling
com f o rttng
words
Th'e many o the r
l'niOISJers
for
theu
vrs• ls
prayers and concern Thank s
also to the pallbearers and to
onyon~~ who helped u s tn any
way May the Cod who w et
ch es 011er u s b ien ea ch a t you
Husbo nd Roy Cooke Chtldren
Da vt d Cooke and Mrs St eve
{Co zy ) Hal stead Stste rs M rs
Wayne {Margaret ) l&lt;.t nCOt d and
Mrs Reuben (Sarah ) McCoy
Bro ther Al onzo D1cke-n s

war

Wt yw'ANT to e•tend o ur stncere
thank s t o
each one that
potronued the Sullen Un 1ted
~d t s l Chu rch food sta nd ot
the M etgs Co Fo tr Our thank s
to th ose who dona ted food
May C od Ble!.S You
Sulton Un 1t ed M e th odist f ood
Sta nd
~

IN LO V ING memorv of Man ne
P F C Thoma s R l md .vho was
COMMERCI A L AND PO RTRAIT
k ill ed 1n Vte l nom an A ugusl 'lb
PH OlOGRAPH Y Re un'ions oc
1908
I
Ctdent and oer ro l phot ography
A te nder cha t d o f memory
· Ca ll day' o r ntghl 44 ~ Ib i S o r
Is so ft l y touched rh ts dav
440 1244
LO\Itn g though ts of our dear son
W II never fade av-.oy
Tt me wt l l ne ver dtm our memory
Of the one we d early loved
Hts IIO I Ce htS sm de IS mtSStng
Stn ce God call ed htm abov e
011 O R ga s lease f ree 30 oc res
Sadly mts sed b y hts pa ref'lls Mr
7 fTHies north of Pomeroy
li Mrs Ret no Lmd
614 71~ 27~ eve nrn~g'-''"-~IN LOVI NG memor y o f G urn ey l
Mt choel who left u!. Augu st (8 P~A HA ULERS Co untry CB Sales
a nd l::qutpment CB ra dtos tope
1975 aged 97 yea rs Hts lov e
pl a yers ste reo sys tems all ac
and care mflue nce us slll l In
cesso rtes
hom
eq"urpment
th e w ords ol h ts lo ..,orote hymn
ovod
oble
Open
Tue sda y
Shal l we ga ther at the n1.1er
thr ou gh So turda.,. For more 1n
Where brtght angel lee! ho ve tr od
l or matron (all 8.:1 3 2()0.4 3126Q
W1 th tl'i cry sta l t tde f o rever
lovell
Rd Po rt la nd Ohto
f-'lowmg b.,. the th ron e o f God
Sadly
mt H ed
by
wde
JOHN TEA FORD G olf Equ tpment
doughier gr ondchtldren and
Buy sell tr ade 0149853901
great grandch tldren
TO All ou r customers Th ts sta
IN M !::MORY o f Betty Ad am s
!ton w d l be closed fr om Frtdoy
Jochon wh6 pa ssed away on
!:.ept 1st to Tues doy Sept S
her btnhdyo Augu s t18 1973
1978 !::rwm s Gu lf Serv1ce N
A silent th ou ght o secre t tear
~eca nd
Str eet
Mtddlepor t
f",eeps he r memory ever dea r
Ohro
~odly
mt ssed by her mo lhe r
M tldred Spencer and Dor an and fOH Df:.AO STOCK REMOVAl
L A t l245 55 14
Bt lly Jack son
(I Tl' CA B
In memmy ol ~ Co lt W M tller Sr
7 OA'r' S 61 o 12
A ugu st "l7 1Q77 It has bee n
Ca ll 446 0451
hard so hard One year lr... mg
w1 thou t you Hut behmd e ... erv
cloud there ~~ ,a srlver hnmg
L ALl US"f cir yo ur wed d mg photos
~ ree alb um w 1th every wed
f 1rne hos healed Ol.lf broke n
dtng
lowne .,.
Sludtos
hear ! !&gt; ~ · ne e tho! day you ) 0 d
446 16 15
goodbye a nd t om 'iO rtred But
we ore loo ~t n g f orw a rd to rho t
AN TI QUE~
bowt ght and sol d
da y .... he n we shall mee t you
Wh tte S •' Anttques
Rt
35
ogatn an d ~ oy howdy and we
~odney Call 245 5050
w lloll slep obootd rhot Shtp o f
W~ AIU l AK ING o rder !. l or 1978
Zton wt t h you
Sad ly mtssed bv dough rer s
Humrnel bells a nd pla tes
w l e son ond fr tends
Tawney Jewele t5
W riTten by Cl aro
M arge
A Gl~ l S BES T FRIEN D spa r klmg
Borden
dtamond§
/rom
Ta wney
In lo vt n g m emorf of m y huobond
Jewelers
The ve r y spe o ol
l:dword C Krr b y Our la ther
even t 91ft 1 , coral gilt specro l
and gro ndl othe( wh~ paHed
SI SO Easy lerms at 4?4 Second
A ve Com e m today AdO 161 5
OWO)I A ugu !. t2f 1Q75
Sadly mtc; sed by a l l
8UVING A ll Unt ied Stole!. sdve r
cot nr. lop prt ces Htgher prtces
lor ~~lv er co llar s- and ea rl y
coms M TS Con Shop Ca ll
SW~~P~ R and ~ew ng mochtn e
446 18 4'1 or 446 0090 Pay cash
repo1r parr ~ and sup p les Ptck
----~
up and delrv er,- Davts Vacuum ~
M------------r.
Cl ea n er
m il e up Georges
Cr ee k Rd Ph &lt;1 46 0?1:1 4

---

SOMEONt TO clean up con App
ly m person Har old Hysell
Rutlond Oh1o
~
OFFICE SUPERVISOR , degree. 1n
BuS!nen Monogement wrth
motor 1n Account rng ond •)I'
penence
·
re a son ably
p r .ced
Wi t h Central
Opero tmg
Com pany
guarantee G rfts fo r t~e wt'lote
f'h,l tp Sporn Plant New Hoven ,
fam1ly For 1nform otton call
West Virgrn~a 25205 Phone
7_.2 2377 or 99'} 7056
3 ().1 882 2028
WOHI&lt;
OVERSEAS
Australia-- Aft~co South Ameuca Eur'ope
OfFICE ·~UPER V ISOR degree tn
e tc
Constr u clton
So l•.'
bu~untss management w1th
m o1o r tn A ccounting o nd ••
Engtneer s Cle rtcol etc $8000
to $50 000 plu s hpenns pa id
~errl!'n&lt;e
Cent ral Operohng
~ or &amp;mpl ayment 1nformalion
Company Ph1lrp Sporn Plant
wnt8 Overseas l:imployment
New Ho1.1en WV 2S205 Phone
Box lOl l 8os ton Ma 02102 P
882 2028
R

-

- c;

--

INSTRUMENT-ELECTRICIAN
Applicants should have previous experience
or training in industrial pneumatic and
electronic instrumentation.

-

WEBB OFFSET PHESS Must be ew
pertenced and ab le to tuna
Gon Commun4ty or Urbontle
Preu
Solor v commensurate
with e)l'perienc e E)( C fringe
beneflts w11h rop tdly growmg
pdntrng Co S~nd resumes of
preY rous f'•P
and sa lory
tm tory fo• Bol( holder P 0 Bak
295 Hrnckley , Oh1o 41111 233 All
replies conf1d entrc l

TIONAL OEVHOPMENT w1ll
report to protect d tre&lt;tor lor
mental r etordot•on program
Develo p fn ser..,rce tnshtuhonol
pla n spec:tftc cont tnutng educe
tron
pr o grams
on
MR
behvo•oral
toptcs,
•dent tfy
prtnt 01.1 d to "''sval materlol l
f" tc., lor MR focrlt ly ltbro nes for
A FUTU.RE TO COUNT ON
conhn u1ng educo l\on for. health
for 17to l1 ye1r olds Train
staff
Bachelors
protess 1on
ing wtlh full pay and
defrett requ.red m
spe&lt;:tal
benefits PLUS trnel and
educol ton o r health re lated
adventure In the U.S.
enrolle•s 1n related
f 1eld
Navy. Call or stop In 221
Moste r' s or doctoral programs
Columbus Rd., Athens . Ph .
prefe r red Must be w lll tng to
S93-3SU (Collect 1.
relocate tn e1the r Cambndge or
HOMEMAKER
Galltpo l•s Nine- month post
To wor k &amp; doys per week 6 ho!-.HS
I ton w ·solo r y of $9 000 fo r
per day o ppro~:1mate ly 2pm lo
lime
l rmge beneftls
Send
8pm Year round posttton No
res1.1me by Seplember 10 to
11onol Cempony beneftl free
P 0 Drawer 825, Athens Oh10
medrcal dental lite rns uronce
45701 An equal opportun1ty
pa id holtdoys and po 1d voco
_:~ lo.-er _ - - - - ~-~
lion Pos1 t1o n IS located '" crty
BABYSITTER NEEDED 3 30pm to
of Go tl tpohs Call th1s humber
1om Galltpolts Crty School
co llect
a r ea
code
O!St Wtlf''"t oke chtldren to the1r
30A 3_.2 5174 A n equal op
home Call 446 2829
port unrty employer

eo·;.

~~----

•6.19 to

•7.~9

Per Hr.

Interested persons should make application
request by contacting:
Personnel Department
The Goodyear 'Tire &amp; Rubber Co.

P.O.

BOx 9

Point Pleasant, W . Va. 25550
Phone (304) 576-2041 Ext. 280

INTERVIEWERS

Diesel Mechanic

for

.. .., -&lt;' ..

4-.• ..,. •

. . . ... .... .,.

•i"

Phone142·2806
Between 9 &amp; lOP M .
BABYSITTER NEEOEO m my home
Trans
necessary
Colt

4•1&gt;-3230
----._____,__,_
BABYSITTER wtth own tr ans

-~---

7• m
to 3pm
2 chtldren
In
Gollrpo l1 s Coli 440 739 .. after

FOUND AT Edson Hart r.esrdence
Oo rwtn
a por t Germa n
Shephard dog Fnendly Pho ne

992 50:,1c:9C:::=-:-:-:.,.-=-:-c
LOST NORWEGIAN Elkhound
w1 th cha1n followed by beagle
pup In the vtc m•ty of the State
H1g hwoy Garage and Sand
Rtdge
Rd
985 4276
a nd

-

Call44~·0lSI

$150 REWARD

--·

lOST wht te pood le fro m brt ck'
house o n l b() IUS! outs1de Vm
ton City ltm• ts 10 yrs old
Ch ild s pe t Coll 388 83.. 9

SPECIAL

LO ST German Sh epherd ~er
gray 3 yrs old female nomett 1
Gretchen
REWARD
Coli; :
37914b8

YO UTH WESTERN saddl e blo ck 3
used pony saddles 3 used
Western saddl es also new
pony and horse saddles 2 auto
washe r s S75 each Reeve' ,.
Trod tn g
Post
Pagev tl le

He-,l TV PIG S $25 00 and
:Phone 9.11119 2460

M,.()TORCYCLE ~ OR sol e Kawasaki

As Low As '252

"kZ-400 843-3053

Best of all , w1th each of our 201 ,353 poss1ole choices,
you get
• performance--tested , guaranteed fabrics
• a written two-year Assurance of Quality
• solid hardwood frame co nstruct ion for years of
comfortable use
• top- quality shape-reta 1mng virgin polyurethane
cushion material
• matching arm protectors
•
• durable , comfortable , guaranteed spring systems
• more than 75 years of proven manufacturmg
excellence

CHAIRS
As low
As 1163

Po1m111roy Landmark
&amp; condit1on your

Avalllblolo match
olmoot ""Y Ne&lt;walk
10f1 Growln; more
popu111 ""'f day. 47
otyloo, 1101 tobrlco
Cullom Order
Setacllon : 28,247

wtth Co·op water

'Stlfllener, Model UC·SVI.
Only

The most comlortable

chairs mac:Je They move
with you for houra of
rela~~:ed comlort 22 at~lll ,
601 Fabrics Custom Order

Tw 1n- stze , Full- size
or Q ueen- size Make
any ro o m a spare
bedroo m 5.C stv lea,

SOl !atmcs Custom
Order Selec tion
32 ,454 Sleepers

CARPET
REDUCED
NEXT 10 DAYS

Selection 13,222 Swivel
Rocker a.

CITY
1 d e 1 I tor pu rM, Photo
ho lder on b1c k, stldl out
t'nhro r
n1nd·uP c as•
.. %" x 2~". No pu rc f'IIM
wv (A.dultsovef 18 Yfl.

~

!HOOT TRUCK topper $175 14

:Jbot aluminum John boot 5 h p

r -motor
and
~9.t9 2Q.56

SAVE

t r oller

$300

OILfV FOR cover crop Grown
*from cerhf 1ed seed Poul Sayre
prtland ,Ohto 843 4591
LLON FISH aquarium w1th
-ttorescent light and stand
:JlrtYin motor , f11h gra~el

-

.Jlli2 3162.

NAME
ADDRESS

Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Set-up

and R•leftlllll Call.
'

...

used

Umca

'

USED TRACTORS

f;!JJIH·'IlJ: .1 ]t\l

• washer

8U.'S

446-2642

c

gold

top notch shape $125

A nother
good buy fr om
Pomeroy landmark 992 2 181
MF 165 d1eset tractor
MF 255 dtesel tracto r
MF 265 d1ese l tracto r •
MF 1135 d1esel tractor
MF 200 two Row Chopper
AC Clean er Comb•ng w1 th 4 row
corn head and 13 ft grain
table New Ideo o ne row corn
ptCke r

Bupdy

TWO STORM doon $40 each GE
relngerator $50 985 3893
1'968 FORD 1/1 ron short bed step
s1de W1th topper . 6 cyl .. stan
dord , runs real good easy on
gas . $900 Cal l onyllme after 5

pm , 992 51\7
16 SUPER SKEETER bon boot

7 1/, h p Mercury motor flectrtc
trollmg motor and o ccenones
Tro tler 992 3483

J6

GAS COOl&lt; stove
used
retrtgerotor
boat
troller

99] 3573

MF1 35 D1esel
MF230 01esel
MF 150 Orese l MF235 Otesel
MFJb5 D1esel M f 1B5 Otesel
MFI135 D1esel , Cab orr and
Heolttr
NEW &amp; USED IMPLEMENTS
MP~ Baler
MF 10 Baler MF120
Bol e r Matthews Rotor~ Scy the
MFBBO Sem i Moun ted 6 bottom
plow MF520 12 dtsc MF2 2
row chopper
MF39 2 row
planters
mec hon 1c al
transplanter SHINN S TRAC

TOR SALES
Pho ne .. 58 I b30

LEON '{I VA

228 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1975 FORO TORINO 4 dr rodro
2 1 000 mtles A 1 cond Call
379 2363 after 5pm

c-:-c-c:-::-- -- -

l973 IM)~AlA au to , PS
cond Co ll 245 9510

good

floor

sh1ft

992 2197

Rodrols

s1575

Phone

1972 MERCURY fu ll power $900
992 5623

~~~C:c~~~~-.,..~~
1967 VW BUG Runs good S-350

992 3566
1974 DODGE ClUB cab ptclo.up
54 000 m des 8 foot truck
cmoper Both for $2200 W1ll
sell separately 742 2460

l97S CHEVROLET MONZA 1

V-ti

4 speed mag wheels , like new
t1res. 24 000 m1les E•cellent
cond1tton 52600 Colt 992-7473

191&gt;8 DODGE CHARGER . 318
outo b ody a l1ttle ro1.4gh but
runs good S150 992 2428

1971&gt; REO AMC PACER I&gt; cyl 3
speed AM FM lope 43 000
m1les S2500 H2 2211 before
5 742 2874 after 5

1974 DATSUN PICKUP good cond
Col/256 1484
'

1975 TRANS AM Call&lt;•b 31SI&gt;
1974 GOlD DUSTER 38 000 m1les
one owner good cond S1995
Call 31!&gt;7 -7238 or 367 7710 after

5pm

TOR lA S Best reasonob le offer
Very
g ood
cond
Call
1 304 -458 - t65b
1970 FORO F 100 st'\ort ~
p tckup 302 eQg
std trans
25.000
fll 'les
$3000
Call
4 .. 6-7304

1975 MONTE CARLO. block good
cond Call446 2911
1973 OLDS CUTlASS S, PS PB atr
e)l'c co nd one owner $1995

Coli 245 9283
FOR SALE OR TRADE
1978 Ford F lSO Ranger prckup
V 8 auto loaded low m1les
Custom deluxe Insu lated tap
per Call 446 bbb9

1972 PlYMOUTH OU STER

340

auto many hrgh ped extras
Senous 1nq only Also 1%5
Ford Fa rr lane 289 auto good
mech , cond
fo1r body , ex cellent work car Also JIB 340
or 3bO comshaft from cam
dynom•cs and ther mo quad
strtp ktt lor 800 and 850 s Call
,.46-3299 e'o'&amp;ntngs

1975 FORD GRAN TORINO 4 dr
PS PB AC good cond
446 4961 after 6pm

Ca ll

1965 MUSfANG CONVERTABLE 1971 VOLKSWAGEN BUG Call
992 5792
o7S 3485
1973 BLUE NOVA 350 SS 2 door 1971 MUSTANG II PS, PB 4 spd

·TELEVISION
VIEWiNG

2(X) FARMAll wtth loader plows

mow1ng mochme

d1sc

and

bu shog $ l 150 Ph 319 2354
7 x 9 Tent floo r 2 sleep1ng bogs
trumpet 2 yrs old hke new
Trombon e
reasonable

SUNDAY, AUGUST27, 1971

441&gt;-.380
1975 I&lt;AWASAKI 500 8 kC cond

Call•ofl&gt; bl&gt;89
Bi: PREPARED lor w 1nter Order
your tce meher now Call
.. 4b· 41 09 after 5pm
SEARS B 000 BTU 01r cond~t 1oner .
4 yr warranty Coll44b 9572
ELECTRIC
mode l

FIREPLACE
corner
4800 wa ll s
Coli

441&gt;-9572
KING WOOD BURNING STOVE ,
all aC:cessarres
anytime

Cal l 440 9744

PIONEER CASSETTE SUPER TUNER ,
model KP -550 under dash
mount
$1 50
one pofr
AudiOVO )I car speolo.en SJO
o n e parr
Marantz home
speake rs 75 walls per chon·
n el model HD 550 $200 All
practically ne w Coli 379-2346
BUNK BEDS complete
rrd tn g
mower
se wmg m ochme
t:obmel double bed 13 ttre
and rrm Ca ll 4_.6 1468

~

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPT. 2 AT 10:30 A.M.
Locetlon from Gelllpollo: Take Rt. 160, go one milo
north o1 Holler Hospital, turn righlan Kemper Hollow.
Watch lor Auction Slgns.

Auctlen-, ~111111111 lwelll, GIIHpolll, 0 .

••

1975 VEGA STATION wagon 4·
sp new Mkhel tns AM rodto
36 000 m1les Excellent condlfton Great economy cor SI JOO
592 5015 o r 797 4604
The
Plom!

307 7187

~..!.!r 5 30p.cm..:_~~-~~-::­
TWO 1955 FORO CROWN VIC

&lt;

crl

lJ ,OOOmdes E•c cond
Ca l 367 0523 after 5 JOpm

1975 DODGE VAN CONVERSION

Now

DISTRIBUTOR
be.ng selected

Ga ll aa

and

for

surround1ng

selling, will
not interfere w•th present

counties. No

employment See aur ad on
sports page. S&amp;S Inc .• San
D•ego, Calif ...

360 auto PS PB ot r AM-FM 8
track comp letely equ1pped for
com ptng 54000 FIRM
Call

992-2395
1978 Ford Von factory custom!l
ed mag whee ls 5 000 mtles
ex tra sharp msr de and ou t
srde
Must
See
Phone
44tl-4360
\977 CUTlESS SUPREME Red w
red vmyl top and enten o r AM
FM stereo PS PB A30 000 mt

S5

ooo

367 o•78

1974 DODGE VAN PS PB auto
custo m ized
1nlertor
Ce ll
446 41 0~ after Spm

197b

BUICK

SKYHAWK

FREE

SPIR IT liMITED EDITION V -6 S
spd sl1dm g sun r oof PS PB
low m1les
Exc cond
Coil
•46 66l I

1968

PLYMOUTH

SPORT

SATElliTE 383 good body and
m otor
$200
1971 Hodako
Super Ret IOOcc $125 Co li
.. 40-333 1t
•
1916 CHEVETTE e•c cond
mtleoge Call 446 3331

low

SIX MI XED breed pupp1es 7
weeks old Turn nght at Te )I'OCO
m Meson about 1'/, mrles out
Estep s res •denc e Watch for
~ ~ gn s

TWO PERSIAN cots to good home
Adorable pets 1 IS oil yellow
and one yellow and block
Housebroken 94.9 241 7
SIX YEARS old We•meshe1mer
Doberman m tmatu re
New
Haven J0.4 882 2755
ANY PERSON who hos onvthrng to
g1ve away and does not offer or
attempt to offer any othe r fh 1ng
for so le may place an ad 1n lh ts
There will be no
column
• charge to the od1.1eri1Ser
TO A GOOD HOME One female
dog and 4 pupptes 6 wk s old
3 males , \
fema le
Colt
•4b 7313

WOOD TO
388 8400

GIVEAWAY

Coli

Miss BlackAmerlca Pageant 6; 700 Club 8; Movie
"Hurricane Smith" 10; PTL Club 13, Janakl 33

6:GO-AG-USA 4; For you ... Black" woman 8; This Is the
Life 10.
6:30--Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Jerry Falwell 4; Talking
Hands 8, American Problems and Challenges 10
7·oo-This Is the Llfe3 ; Eddie Saunders 6; Thinking In
Black 8; Treehouse Club 10, Newsmaker '78 13.
7·3G-TV Chapell ; Your Health 4; Show My People 6;
Jerry Falwell 8; Urban League 10, Bible Answers
13, Jimmy S'Naggarl IS
B·oo-Mormon Choir 3, Day of Discovery 4, Grace
Cathedral 6; Church Service 10; Christ tor the
World 13; Some of God' s Children 15; Sesame 51. 20.
8:3o-oral Roberts 3, Jimmy Swaggart 4, Celebrallon
of Pralst 6; Day of Discovery 8; James Robison
Presents 10; Willard Wilcox 13; Open Blble15.
9 GO-Gospel Slngng Jubilee 3; Robert Schuller 4; Rex •
Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass 8; Oral Roberts
10, Jim Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15; Mr Rogers
20.
'
9:3G-What ~s the Bible Plainly say? 8. Ills Written
10; Church Service l3 : Zoom 20.
IO :OO....Chrlst Is the Answer 3, Church Service 4,
Communique 6; Christian Center 8; Sesame Sl 20;
Movie "The Geisha Boy" 10; Jimmy Swaggar.l13,
Gospel Singing Jubilee 15
t0·3G-Rex Humbard 3; Yours for the Asking 4; Aware
6; Dr . Thea Jones 8, World Tomorrow 13
ll .OG-Doclors on Call 4; America's Black Forum 6;
Ernesf Angley l i Rex Humbard IS; Rev . Henry
Mahan 13; Infinity Factory 20
H:3G-Big Blue Marble 3; Animals, Anlmalo, Animals
6, t3 ; Focus on Columbus 4; Electric Co. 20
12 ·oo-At Issue 3; News Conference-4 4; Issues and
Answers 6; Face the Notion 8; Rebop 20, The Issue
10; Rev. R. A. West 13; This Is the Life IS.
12:»-Meet the Press 3,4,15; Tennis 6, Testimony
Time Today 8; Fece the Nation 10; Evangelist
Calvin Evans 13; Dick Cavett 20.
I. GO-Time and the Cities 3; Little Rascals 4; Bob
Jones University B; Washington Week In Review
33; Wildlife In Crisis 10; Issues and Answers 13,
PTL Club 15; To Be Announcld 20.
1:30-Super Bowl XII Highlights 4; NFL Today 8,10,
Ironside 13; Hocking Valley Btuegrau 20; Black
Perspective on the News 33
1:-IS-NFL Football 8,10; 2 · ~Movle "Knock on any
Door" 3; Minor League Baseball 4; Tannls 20;
Soulhlel 33.
2 »-Pro-Celebrity Tennis 6, 13.
3 oo ~ Time and the Cttles15 ; Gnat Performances 33.
4:GO-Sportlworld 3,15; Golf 6,13; 4·30-Ashtand
Gospel Sing· 33.
s:~Hawall Aloha 4; NFL Perspective 8,10; TurnaboUt 20; Nova 33.
5:30-Funny Farm 3; Life In your Hando 15; Elactlrlc
Co. 20.
5 : ~ Important Part Time Job In World IS.
6 GO-News 3,41 Andy Griffith 6; Last of tha Wild 8;
Honey-a' Trip toE urope 10; Town Topics 13;
Better Way ... 15; Zoom 20; Opere ThMtw 33.
6: 30-HBC News 3,4,15; Haws 6; ,,.,..,.n I;
N....meker '11 13; National Geogrephtc 20.
7:oo-World of D!UIIy 3,4, 15; Hardy Bora 6,13; 60
Mtnut. 1,10. 7: 30-Crockett's 1/lc:tory Gerclen 20.
I:~ProliCt U.F.O. 3,4,15; How the Welt W• Won
6,131 1M Body Human 1,10; Ewnlng at Papa 20,33.
9:GO- E-lng In Byzantium 3; Movie "Murder at the
World Sirles" 6,13; Pollee Story 4,15; All In the
Family 1,10; Po~rk II 20,33.
9:30-AIIce 1,10; IO:OG-Peul Anka 1,10; Day to
•
R-mblr: AlltiUII 21, 1M3 20; Firing Line 33.
10 »-Bill Moyet 1' Joul;nal : lnternltiOnal Raport 20.
11 :0G-N- 3A.6.1,10, 13, 151 Wall StNel Woek 33.
11 : 15-AIIC N.... 6; CBS Nawa I, 10; PMA Pu1M1S.
11 :30 Mo&gt;'ll "Oaep Velley" 3: N\01111 "Declaton
Befllre Dawn" 4; Movie "The Storyteller" 15; 1971

'

'

1974 CHARGER SE Call367 7220
1971 GMC TAl AXLE $8500 Coli

USED FURNITURE

OWIIU-LORIN 111\YIR
SWAIN AUCTION SIRIIICI

...,.,._1111

1975 MONTE CARlO Block wt th
block mtenor, loaded new
steel belted rad1als new bat tery Ex cellent candtlt on S3500
01'4 592 - ~15 or 614 797 4~
The Plarn s

""'"9

Hovo sold form and will sell the following : Five H P
Briggs &amp; Stratton engine, rotollller, 10 h.p. tractor with
snow plow - turn plows . diu; . cultivators - trailer,
tandem house trailer axles, 2 wheel trailer wlfh pickup
bed, Farmell Model· C tractor wlfh mower &amp; turn
plows, horse drawn rake, Ford hay baler, Farmall
mowing machine, Oliver hey rake, disc, scrap Iron.
Seigler fuel ott heater, stoker-matte heater, tewn
mower parts, upright freerer, McCollouGh. chain saw,
wheel balancing outfit, pori-a power. mObile home fuel
oU furnace, Yamaha 350 tor parts, chain holst, roll away bed , torch hose, stereo, color TV, llcyctn .
Antique &amp; Collector Hemo: No 1-A Burnside heater,
copper tub wringer waoher, cream can1. milk
separator. 6 camp chairs, 2 was~ stando, oak chest, 3
buffets (paggldl. wafnul bed , stand table with claw &amp;
ball fMt, 2 cane bottom chairs , 5 gallon oak whlskoy
barrel, Iron tea kettlo, Iron pols, 2 cast waffle ;,...s, 2
sausago grinders, 3 Mil ol wd Irons with handles, 3 lob
corn ptanlers. loll of stone lan, 3 oU lampe, lois of
gla11wore. tkCoy &amp; Hull Doltory, army helmet,
sklllal1, nail kegs, lea ktffle, pop &amp; milk boltln
markld Gallipolis, 4 star flag, black Amethtst &amp;
Gulas gla11. 3 ~ pltchero, wood butler bowl &amp;
peddle, 3 Ice cr•m scoops, trow, rope pullay, tee
tongs, plpa wrenches, occuplod Japan IU.II&amp;r &amp;
creamer, hand blown vacn. hand-ptlnled 8-H ott
lamr,, apple peeler, China bank, lantharns, large bran
app abutter kettla &amp; attrrar. Farl'lllll F-20 tractor, rll\s
good with steel w!IHII &amp; rultber (lm).

25%- 33lf.l%-..,

PH. 446-0203

USED FARM MACHINERY

3 pc
room su1te color
te"'evtst on rech ner Co r bin, ond
Snyder Furmture ' 955 Se-cond
A 1.1e Gollrpclts

SHINN STRACTOR SALES
•sa 1630
FOR SALE
992-3405

'142

'339

'289.95

LoveMeta

As Low Aa

A s Lo w As

s

refflgerotor fr eeler
mote good condiflon Also two
,,. mch Chrysle r Co rp wheels
_ _w rth goad ftres Coll256 6494

1974 FIREBIRD, good cond , AM -8
trock , console bucket seat•
econom1 col b cyt Call 4-46 7248

1976 HONDA 750 e)l'c cond Col\
446 0003 alter 5pm

leon WV

SWIVEL ROCKERS
SLEEPERS

Awnings.

USED FARM MACHINERY

LOVESEATS

Call446 9458

Ancftorllllt Sklrthll·

G f l V •. K.
HutptHIIt /\1qd
'l II' l' I I( ' •,
J,l(k \·\/
,\f',j y
t,~ q r

1972 Hondo •50

191• FORO I 50 Ronger pick up
"\1 8 auto P S , P 8 radto
:J.os• -trochon
rusl
proofed
100 000 mrles S3795 742 - 27~3

SOFAS

liME
SERVICE

F:!Jr hll Yt•iJI

cZIJiEHART CONS00s-tereo B
,rack ,
AM FM
Mult tp le)l'
J.Yh•rlpool
12 washer
and
'W'h1rlpool dry er Call 992 0062

by

992 572•

POMERO·f
LANDMARK

..... $50 00 Coll992·7692

15 CU. FT

s,

0

SWIMMING POOLS In and above
g rou nd Full serv tce Suppli es
and pools rn stock D Bumgard
ner Sole s, 31711 Nobel Summ tl
Road
M1ddleport Oh
Call

TRUMPET
Excellent cond tt1on
Has case &amp; stand 949 2358

--~-

Lowest pnces. greatest selecllon
q uali ty wood or cool stoves
New ou tl et 1n M1ddleport off
M•ll St behrnd Tony• Corry
O ut hery Sun 12 noon to
3pm Col1698 7191

446-2642

NEECHI
PORTAB l E
!l&amp;w tng
mochrn e Brand new Ne ... • r us.
ed Wtll do everythmg Ongrnol
cost 'sJOO w•ll se ll for $200
firm 992 577b

2--i by 16 x 7 wheets Pr
fJ5 00 2 700,. 16 Wt n le r ttres

SPOR STER chopper, 8kC cond

Bill'S

992 350
= 5 ~...,..----,--,-

ANllES
Fibpatnck Orchards
] tote R9 ut e 689
Phone
.lhtlkesYIIIe 66Q 3785

lr.

R-·--------DAVIDSON
197 3 HARlEY

Aluminum Siding
Accessories. Call

1?7-4 HONDA 360 •street b1k e
Good 11/'es G ood cond1lron
l rk e new 9()(X) mdes S500
94Q 212 3

up

____---- -- - -

bP• b
Sean 33 k 67 Al so 2 Cemetery
lo ts at Ohto Va lley Memory
Garden s Coli 367 7 150 after
4 15pm

dows, PI"..J Covers,

pt clure 10 yards 4B ,slipcover
or drapery fobnc 2 fol d up or
my cots , 1 cor vac , 4 electnc
dryer vent k tt 2 pr appliance
dot he s 48 qt •ce chest 1 sddnt
Scotts Mower 1 sump pump
100 II of 1 1nch galvonrzed
~pe Phone 992 ~7:.82::7.:____

- ---

-~--

:992 525)

to r m

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

FOOT upr~ght fr oe ze r 3
••ors o ld Con ta ct Mrs Leslie
'Hoffman , 742 237 1 1

--

2 Sears 23 x 35'1• 3 25

IMPROVEMENTS

Ton ne Fo trlone or Com et 7. d r
hard top Rear •nd,to ftt above
Al so wlttdsh•eld to ftt obo1.1e
and Ranchero Se t of header s
to Ptnlo 1000cc e ngtn e Phone

Cle la nd

- - --

Truck Headquarters
t976 GMC '!, T
1q72 CheYy 1/a T
1973 GMC , 01r cond
1975 Chev , 011 cond
1973 Ford Von
197_. 't1 T Chev PU
197 .. 1hree fourth Chev PU
1973 F700 Fo rd Dump Tru ck
TIMBER Top pnce for to p quol•ty
1976 P1nto
Pomeroy Forest Products Call
1975 ' • T GMC
992 591&gt;5
1974 Che1.1 1ft 1 PU
Snow Blade for tnt Cub Cadet 1977 Ford P1ckup
245 534B
1972 Ford Von
1975 GMC 1 T Truck
1976 Ford v. T Truck
Bedhner s heavy duty rear sl e p
bumper
SOMMERSGMC
1974 124 FIAT Sptder Converttble
TRUCKS INC
(very good condlltcn)
Low
133 Prne St
m1leoge
Call 992 78b0 or
44b 2532
992 3904
Hours B om to 6 30 pm
1972 DA TSUN 4 door stohon
wagon 2b (X)() mrles, 4 cyl
goad gos m tleoge 2SO N 3rd, 1970 CAMARO 4 spd 350 cu tn
$1500 Call 4.. 6 741 7 or leave
M•ddtepor t
Phon e Q92 7329
number at 446 5131
after4p m
'

••b

~

E__.___,

-BODY PARTS to frt b8 69 Montego

green

- -

~

MF 165 d1esel tractor
LAYNES NEW AND USED FUR MF 755 dtes eltroctor
NITURE
MF 2b5 d1esel I rector
NEW
MF 1135 dtesel tractor
Baby bed s $65
Sofa bed onQ MF 200 two Ro w Chopper
-.
chotr
S150
sofa
chatr ~ AC Cleaner Comb1ng w1th 4 row
r----UftU
___
rocker . onoman , 3 tables
corn head and 13 ft.. gratn
"""'
S500
Bed r oom
suttes
tab le New Ideo one row corn
5165 S250-SJOO-S500 Ear Am
ptcker
solo and ch01r S300 m odern
~HIN N STRACTOR SALES
sofa chc1r , loveseot $275
458 )630
Star m
WIndows.
recline rs $100 and up Tables
leon WV
' .
$60 each Sw111el rockers , $80
. S
o or
Maple or pme table 4 c ho~r s
Replacement • WinPLAYER PIANO o..-er 50 ro ll s
$225
Hutch
S300
7 pc
good cond Call 44b 3383 or
~
drn ette $109
5 pc dmetle
446 1951&gt;
$59 5 pc d me tte wrth swrvel
lnd
cho ~r s $300 , Bu nlo. beds com
pl e te
S150-$225-$275 mot •
tresses or bo&gt;e spnng s, ftrm
I.L
S50-$b0 $70 each
capto1n s
bed $225 queen sets $ 175 5
CHIP
WOOD
Pole!.
max
drawer chest $49
d•ometer 10 on largest end $8
GOOD USED
per ton Bundled slab $6 per
Chest ,
nrghtstand
Orvers
to n Delivered to Oh1o Pollet
r
anges
,
freezers
.
coffee
and
FARM FENCE PpSTS All SIZES
Co , Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 2689
end tables TV s beds tab les
o ver 6 CX)() to choose fro m
lamps sew1ng moch 1ne other TIMBER POMEROY Fotest Pro$1 99 and up shrngles S14 95
tlems Coli 446-0322 Monday
ducts Top pnce for stand1ng
per sq , Anderson wtndows ,
thru Frrdoy 9 fQ Bpm Soturdoy
sow limber Cal l 992 5965 or
st uds other bu 1ldmg mafenol
I&lt;: tnt Hanby , 1-446·8570'
9 to 5pm J m1 out Buloville Ad
Open d a1ly 9- 7 Franks Bargo1n
Ce nter At 160 Porter Oh1o
8 h truck topper, 48 rn h rgh wrth OLD FURNITURE , tee bo•es brass
bunk and mattress , sltd rng
beds, tron beds desks etc
REFRIGERATORS WASHERS AND
complete househo lds
Wnte
front wmdow tnsuloted eke
DRYERS WRINGER WASHERS
cond
446
3400
MD
Miller
Rt
4 Pomeroy o r
RANGES All SOLO WlrH
colt 992-7761J
GUARANTEE WE ALSO SER FOR SAlE OR TRADE Busmess
VICE APPLIANCES SKAGGS
p roperty rn G a llipOl iS for form OLD COINS pocket w atches
APPLIANCES 19l8 EASTERN
e qurpmen t Ca ll 250 b038 after
clan r tngs wedd1ng bonds
AVE . Co114_.b 7398
dramon ds Gold o r s1l'o'e r Cal l
6pm:~~~~~~~~~Roger
Womslev ~4 2 2331
PENDELTON REBUILT BATTERIE S 197b HONDA ?SO K 2400 mrtes
$ 18 w1th e~Cch ange new ones
lo aded w1th e• tras
Any WE PICK up 1unk auto bod1es buy
~? 1 guaranteed 388 859b
r easonable offer Cotl 446 496 1
mg 1unk cars scrap trQn , bot
ter~es
and metals
Rtder s
oher6pm
SWIMMING POOLS and suppltes
Salvage
SR 12_. Pormtroy
mground and above ground METAl TOP for late model Jeep or
992 541&gt;8
HOUOA l' POOl S Hunftnglan
wrll trade for soft top Co li
W Vo Coll304 4:}q 4788
367-0651 ofter Spm

-------------:

l~U

1~ CJS Jeep

UPHOlSTERING Free Estim ates
P1 ck up and delivery ser vtee
coli Mowrey s Upholstery Pt
Pleasa nt W Va b75 4154

N EW HOLLAND
Super 68
Hay l tner hoy ba ler good cond ttron $1500 Phone 992 5.:142

TOMATOES

-·- - --

CANOE
17
ft
Mohbwk
ftb erg lass
$250
Outdoor
!:qUip Soles Konouga Oh
440
__ _,.3070, Jet Rt 7 and 35

FOR THE BEST IN FURNITURE

PIGS FOR sole 7. 42 2545

W. Cirsey, Mgr

Great

- -

1977 HONDA CB 550 K. e)l'cellent
condrhon $1300 fiRM Call
440 973 1

block , bn ck . sewer p1pes wrn
dews
lintels , etc
Claude
W1nters Rio Grande 0 Pho ne
24S 5121 after 5

WARM MORNING coat heater ,
comp le te w+ th p1pe 100 lb
capoc1ty Some as new - Con be
seen at 264 Rutland St M•d
dlepart Ohro $ 175

992 so:lb

Pomeroy Landmark

fMppers Gerold tne
oone Oh1o

~~'\

Pl!one 1'92-2111

23 CU FOOT chest ty pe freeze r

Photit 992-2111

We know how Important your home furnl~hlngs
setect1on IS. So we have the finest custom order
program anywhere . With our Incredible selactlon of
styles and fabrics , you'll find 201,353 possible
combmat1ons . Many of them will be perfect for your
decor , comfort and lifestyle .

9e.:!.ack w. Carsty. Mflr.

-=-----

-201,353 SOFAS&amp;. CHAIRS
C.,t4NING

PomiiiiJ landmark

197 1 FORO TORINO 1968 Ford
p1ck up Worm M ormng stov e 2
wheel tra1ler Used lumber
742 2174

SPECIAL
PRICE
Exptres
Sept I 0, l918

35 DAYS OR LESS

oROOF PAINT

SUPER TRYK E J wheel motorcy
cle .:16 act ual mdes $495 Con
b e ~ee n at Roush s lond tng
Rocrne or ccl l 949 2520

BRING IN

AND WE'LL DELIVER YOUR ClJSTOM FURNITURE IN

IDE WHITE

!II!.

Savre

- -- ----

1

NEWGMC

JUNK au to o_nd scrap m etal Ph

388 877b
'
. ----USED FURNITURE not
APPALOOSA GOOD
u pholstered . and opp l1onces
geldrng and whtte Tennessee
Ph 4•6 0322
wallo.e• go t t e~ ~o ~l Jb~ 7! '27
- - ~ - ---- -~ -·
GOOD USED REGRIGERATOR
HECTfllC GUll AR and tr umpet
AND FREEZER UPRil,l T OR
Call 446 7334
-CHEST, Ph.
0322
STORM WINDOWS

Col!256 63 15
FOUR YR OLD

USED FURNITUR E
$1800 Call Oak H•ll 1&gt;82 1&gt;569
~ --'---~-----3 5 PC DINETTE SETS l 3 PC
1974
HONDA )(R 75 good cond
DINETTE SET , I ·7 PC DINETTE
Colt 25b - t4 84
02H &amp; N Day o ld or start ed
SET, 1 FUll SIZE MATTRESS I
leghorn pullets , both floor oe
LIVING AM SUITE LIKE NEW, l 1975 BUlTACO 250 gooc cond
cage grown ovo•loble Poultry
SMAll ORGAN
I HOBBY
Co li 256- 1111184
Housmg ong
Automotron ,
HORSE ' l CLOTHES HAMPER 2
Modern Poultr y 399 W Marn
TWIN SIZE BED FRAMES RICES TRUCK BED I T !lot wtlh catt le
-· Po m eroy OH Pho ne 992 21b4
NEW AND USED FURNITURE _ ~~k~~nd ramp Co/1388 9083
854 SECOND AVE , 4AI&gt; 9S23
FOUR ' ANTIQUE VEl VET CHAIRS
All TYPES of bu tl d1ng motenols
Colt 446·0429
APPALACHIAN STOVE CO
--- --~--- *-·-~-

FM 8 track Everythtng needed
f ar. co m pmg
$_.000 frrm
_ ,99J 2395
TWO TABLE lamps 3 bookcases I

Any U 5. made c1r - parts
e~~:tra if needed. Excludes
front-wheel drive C:ilrs.

:lJ COW HO l !:iTEIN m1 lkmg herd

f erent models of dtsc.ount
pnces . Middleport store beh1nd
Tony s Corrvoul
fo rmerly
Oovrd C Mrller ~umber Co
t: very Sunday 12 noon lo 3 pm
614 098-7 191

1975 DODGE VAN conversion
Jb() auto P S P 8 otr AM

$1295

CHIMN t:Y BLOCKS
bu tldm g
1\'tolenals GallipoliS Hlock Co
44b 2783

/V'PALACHIAN STOVE CO 23 d1l

614 b98 543b

WHEEl
ALIGNMENT

YOU CHOOSE FROM

CommerCII I

Stop in ••• let's talk over
your house plans and our loan plans.

~

Reward If Found

l arge Col lie dog lost ,on 0 J
Wh1 te Rd Lo st seen tn Porter
ar ea Hos 1 1 whrle pews Co lt
446-0370

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

counflng
machme
Phone
992 2156 The Darly Sen ttne t
Ill Court Street Po meroy
Oh10
BEAT THE October rus h G1ve us
your order now for a rro ws
custc;.m mode t he way you wont
them and cut ro your •ndtv!dual
length P1ck up anyltme be for e
October 1 $5 depos1 t wtth
order
(Ea!lton Gamegetter )
o l ummum arr ows
$2b 95
do zen
Ftbergl os s $24 95
dozen
We refl etch arrow s
gtass , olum1num or wood m
eludes 3 new ploshc \lO nes nt ck
and tnserl S1 per arrow Also
~e strarghten alum rnum or
rows $ SO each arrow Tn
County Sport Shop North ond
T1rr
Co unty
Sp or t
Shop
Downtown 304 -675 2988

-

843 249 1 Tom
Bend SR 338

-..----SENSI MA TIC ac

$200 OFF

Avatlable . Aestdential

You don't ha ve1o be a farmer to
quah fy for a' rural home loan from the Lmd Bank
We also make loans to nori farmers who l1ve-or'
want to hve-in rural areas A Land Bank loan ca n
be used to buy. budd remodel or refmance a home.
It feat ures long terms. pr(' p,\yment p nVIIege 11v1thout
penalty and reasonable tnlerest.

g;;;1

BURROUGHS

--

t'orMle

Discount ·-------Prices
Kennebec and Supertor . Phone

COAl liMESTONE sa nd
calc•um chlonde, f err dtzer dog
food . and aM types o f salt h
c.. ls1or Salt Works Inc E Morn
St , Pomeroy 9&lt;/2 3B9 1

COUPON
AND RECEIVE

p,runters

Here's a "home loan" bank
you may be overlooking.

.

---- - .:.....:.:..:...:.::.:.:

--

-

'

t'orMk

POTATOES RED pomt tac and
Kennebec $6 50 per 100 lb
AIR BtOS. for an e•tro bed folds
We•t of Oorwln on Gold Ridge flat for storage
1deol for
Cecil Tobon Rt 2 Pomeroy
recreoltanol use
All Srle s
OhiO
ovodoble Corbt n a nd Snyder
Furn , 955 Second Ave
POTATOES FOR w1nter Gobbler

1972 Coventry 1'2 • b5 3 bedroom
1'969 Statesman 12 )I' bO 2
bedroom

Calapiller &amp; Terex.

•·

STMAW FOR sale Kenneth We lsh
614 b98 37 19

sont W Va bes tde Heck s
1973 Broodmcre 14 • 041 2
bedroom
,
1973 Darton l.ot k 60 2 bedroom
197~ V1c tonon 14 )I' 67 3 bedroom

on Ke rr Harnsburg Rd .

Part-time, temporary positions .
available in Gallia, Jackson, and
Meigs Counties for Health Opinion
Survey. Pays $3.50 per hour plus
mileage and bonus. Contact "648"
Board (614) 446-5515. An Equal
Opportunity Employer.

~

- :B &amp; S MOBILE HOM ES Pt Plea

tiOO lb. Holstetn He1fer, lost

An Equal Opportunity Employer

C&amp;R PAINT

flrofess1onal

--:.

2 bath

LOST

GOODifoR

my
Call

HELP WANTED
Experienced

- - --

lHURMAN HQ U)l on ttques ~ ur
n •ur e ~ l r o pp ng
repo11 ond
re l tn1'&gt;1"1 ed Co unty Rd 1:! oil 35
Cen r e r~ rll e
Vdl oge
C l o~ed
M on day ~ Tu esday he nm g~
bv oppoon tmcn! 745 9479

.w.- ~ .,.

For Best Results Use Sunday Tilnes-Sentinel Classifieds

985-42S 5

Seeking qualified mechanics for · general
plant maintenance. Industrial or related
experience required.

-

tn

2 COORDINATORS FOR EOUCA

MAINTENANCE MECHANICS

, _

"

\

WAltER·WAITRESS COOK
Must
be 18 Apply '" p4tnon before
• Sprn dorly ot the Pm:o ~ul .

•6.19 to 17.09 Per Hr.

m my ho me Spnng
Valley A rea Ph 4.:1b 4'39 7
~

--

The
Goodyear
Tire
&amp;
Rubber
Company's Point Pleasant Plant located at
Apple Grove in Mason County is seeking
qualified applicants for the following
positions :

~A B YS I TT tNG

Will DO BAB Y!:.ITTING
haem
tn
Centn eory
44b J573

-

I

3 IU:OROOM HOU SE 1n 1-'om eroy
o r Mtddleport
Oespeorotely
ne eded. Phone 992 63 lB

\\b!i!ll~' ~

I

DHtAMING OF a w-htte Chris tmas
wtlh no b ills? Wonderful to
thtnk abou t but rt could come
true Be a To .,. lodtes hostess !
In your home or by orde,. from
yOur fn e nds fern to vs and glh•
!tee
Name bra nd toys

-------

.- -

'

D-3-'fhe Sunday 'l'tmes-&amp;ntmel, Sund..y, Aug . 27, l~lti

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memory
of Curly
Kemper .
Because I could not stop for
Death
He kmdly stopped for m eThe c.unage held bur just

'

1.31)-Marcus Welby, M .D. 4; ABC News 13.
Movie Channel 4
S and 9 p.m -While Buffalo (PGI
land II p m -Too Late for Tears (g)
MONDAY, AUGUST 21,1971
S·-IS-Farm Report 13; 5 51&gt;-PTL Club 13, 6 · ~PTL
Club 15, Summer Semester 10.
6·30-&lt;:olumbus Today 4; News 6 ; Summer Semester
8; Public Affairs 10; 6 45--Mornlng Report 3.
6 50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13, 6 ~News 13
7:GO-Todlly 3,4,1S, Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Underdog 10 .
1 25--Chuck While Reports 10. 7· 31)-Schoolles 10;
Sesame St. 33.
B oo-Captaln Kangaroo 8, 10; 9:GO-Merv Griffin 3.
Phil Donahue 4,15, 13, Emer,g ency Onel 6; Brady
Bunch 8; Tic Ta~ Cough 10 • .
9 30-Andy Griffith 8, Family Affair 10
10 ()()-Qird Sharks 3,4, IS, Edge of Night 6; Tic Tac
Dolltlh 8; Joker's Wild 10; To Tell the Trulh 13;
10: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6;
Price Is Right 8, tO; $20,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :GO-High Rollers 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13.
11 ·3G-Wheel of ' Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Patridge Family 4 ; Love ot Life B,lO; Sesame
Street 33.
11 · 5~BS News 8; Loving Free 10
o2. GO-Newscenter 3, News 4,6, tO; America Allvtl 15;
Young and the Restless 8, Midday Magarlne 13.
12 3G-Ryan's Hope 6 , 13; Bob Braun 4 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8,110; Electric Co . 33
l :OG-For Richer. tor Poorer 3; All My Children 6.13;
News 8; Young and the Restless 10; Not For
Women Only 15
30-Days of our Lives 3,4, 15; As the World Turns
8,10; 2:0D-&lt;lne life to Live 6, 13.
2:30-Doctors 3,4,15, Guiding Light 8,10; J:OG·Another World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias,
Yoga and You 20.
3:3G-AII In the Family 8, 10; Economically S~aklng
20.
4:oo-Mr . Carfoon 3; Superman 4i For Richer, for
Poorer 15, Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame 51. 20,33, Match Game 10; Dinah I 13.
4 30-My Three Sons 3 ; Gilligan' s Island 4,8; Batman
, 10; Little Rascals 15
5 oo-Bonanra 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8, Mr
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Voyage to the Bottom"
of the Sea 10, Emergency One! 13; Petticoat
Junction 15
5:30-&lt;)dd Couple 4; News 6; Electric Co. 20.33;
, Hogan'' Heroes 15.
•
6:GO-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
MaklllO Things Grow 33.
6:30-NBC News 3.4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easv 20; Antiques 33.
7:oo-Cross-WIIs, 4; Newlywed Geme6,13;-Lasl of the
Wild 8; News 10; Gilligan's loland 15; Daniel
Foster, M.D. 20; Shepherd's Pte 33.
7:31)-That Nashville Music 3; In Search of 4; Witness
, to Yesterday 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeilLehrer Reporf 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid
Camera 13; Nashville on the Road 15.
a:oo-LIH!e House on tho Prairie 3,4; Baseball 6,13;
Jefferfons 8,10; Billy Graham Crusect. 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Person to Person Selactad
Interviews 33.
8:30-MASH 8, 10; Turnaboul20; Live from Wolf Trap
Farm Park 33.
t.oo-Evenlng In Byrantlum 3; Movie "Flying High"
a, 10; John Cage 20. 9:30-Rock Sonata tar Pt•nd Ampllflld Cello 20.
IO:oo-Qulncy 4,15; Newt 20 ; IO:JO-Over Easy 20.
11:00 Ne011 3,4,6,1,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33
11 ·»-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Pollee Story 6,13; Movie
"Whel'e Eagles Dare" I; ABC news33; Movie "Hot
Spell" 10.
I
12:GO-Janakl 33 12 : 40-Bawlt~had 61 News 13.
1:oo-T-row 3,4.
Me¥1e Cl!enMI 4
5encl7p.m. - You Light Up My Lit. (PG)
9 end 11 p.m. - Bobble Jo and the Oull~ (R)

'

�-. .

'

........

.;

-... .·

--.- ..

"

'!'he Sunday T1mes-Senllnei,Sunday, Au~. T/,1978

[}4-

~-The Sunday Ti

·

For Best
Results Use Sunday Times-- Sentinel Clas.sifi~ds
.

•·

..

· -· .. ··'

,~ ,·

,.

.:

' .

•

-~-·
mes..,.,ntmel,
Sunday, Aug . :!7. 1978

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunda
ltul.&amp;tut" fur Sate

COUNTRY MOBILE: Home Par~
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
large l.ots Co119927479

IF YOU hove o servtce to offer
wont to buv or sell somethmg
or
oe looktng for work
whatever
you II get result!
fos ter wrth o Senfrnel Wont Ad
c.9119n 2tSt::t

ONE BI:DNOdM opt Contact
Vrlloge Manor Apt
Mrd
dleport 99~-7_787

YARD SAlE Saturday and Sun
doy '1 mrles out on IA3 Everett
McOamel resrdence

3 AND 4 RM furnrshed and un
furnuhed
a~ls
Phone
997 S.rl34

YARD SALE Monday Tuesday
and Wednesday on Bone
Hollow Rd oft Rt 7 Bypass
Too ts tires • and aU krnd ol
mtsc tJems

APARTMENT o~o•loble for sleep
.ng quarters room fur for four
men I 0 mtnutes from Moun
tt oneer Plant . Hartford W Vo
Phone I 304 882 3356

'YA~O

lWO BEDROOM hQu'&gt;e Rose H•!J
$175 per month No pets
Lease
sec urtt.,.
depo srt
0 1 4~ 7 82513 or wrtfe A Mar
l rn Rt I Bo• 214 Vrncent
Ohro

SALE Mond'oy and Tuesday
on SR SS4 about 8 mtles from
Lheshtre and abOut 5 mrles
I rom Porter
,..........

_______

--

YARD SALE August28 'l9 30th 9

to o4 Dorrell Dugan s restdence
Brood way Sf Ronne

provements Ph 4.olb

BACKHOt:
dump

YARD SALE Man and lues on St
Rt 554 about 8 mrles from
Cheshtre ond s' mrles from
Porter

~~~~~

SlEEPING rooms for rent Gallto
Hotel

trucl.

Concre l e

w01k

~4

mtle off Rt. 7 by-pass on
51 . Rl. 114 tow1rd Rutland,

UMESTONI:: .gro11el ond san d All
srtes At Rrc ho r ds ond Son Up
per Rrver Rd • G ol lr polr s Ohro
A A A CONTRAC I ORS Ba ckhoe

do ze r dump tru ck Wo rk done
by 1ht!' hout or by the rob f-or
lr ee estrmotes Lall25b 1921
TWIN RIVERS MAHINi:. 301 Uppe1
RPJer Rood ctu.,. &lt;.; ler Solc5 8.

5ervrce Complete Hull Repo11
Custom bud ! tro rlers f-'h one
UPHOlSlERY ~HOP
11b3 Sec A ve 4467 833 even
m~s 4~b Ht33

HH STAH

RfESE TRI:NCHING SI:HVICI:
wa te r sewer elect11C gas lull?
or drtches 12 tn ches wrd e to~
ft deep Woterl rne hookups
Call alter 4 p m Jbl 7560
RU SS &amp; MAX ElliOTT
l enno)( Heating and orr condrtron
mg Rop co l oom msvlotron
446 H515 or 446 0445 Coli alter
430

NICE LG mob1le home spaces
neor Add1son Call Hb 4265
Call

High SchOOl

SENIORS

S~VfRAl_H()US,fS Cq!\4.6J2J)"

- -- ---------

BOGG S EXHMINATING CO
(formerly t-=ames 8 0 del l) Ook
Hrll Oh Coli coU en b81 0249
V f

FILliNGER wa te r del rver'(
servrce Co iiJlq 212tl

COAL
lump
stoker
deiL vered
limestone
Vaughn 245 5309

AI

MOORE'S
Muffler
Shocks

Call Us Today

The Photo Place

ACROSS

74 Wetrd
129 Lean-to
76,Sodtum c hlo- 131 T1lle of re1 Btackbtrd
rtde
specl
6 Ba c kbone
Southwest132 Number
11 Ttnt
ern lndtans
133 Game
16 Newly made
78 Basketba ll
135 L1mb
21 Imp etuous
feature
138 Dance step
22 Russtan
79 Showy
139 Nop
gutld
flower
140 B1tter vetch
23 One de·
82 Meshwork
141 T1nt
lea ted
84 Medtte r142 Diphthong
24 Htndu queen
ranean
143 Hebrew
25 Worthless
vessel
•
month
leavmg
85 Afternoon
144 European
26 lroq uotan ln part1es
145 Monk
dtan s
147 Furze
86 Slave
28 Entran ces
88 Part of
149 Arab 1a n gar30 Ktln
speech
ment
32 Su n god
89 Sect
150 Cerem ontes
33 Symbol lor
90 Rrc ochel
152 Brtel
ntckel
92 Bay
154 L1nger
34 Beverage
wtndows
156 Goods cast
35 Ne gattve
94 lnform e•
ove rboard
pref t .:
158 Rock
98 Wolfhound
36 Pr epare tor
159 Co nc tse
99 Pelt
pnnt
100 Moham 160 Flocks
37 Yellow oc her
medan name 161 Pillages
38 Lamprey
102
European
40 Sq uan dered
dormouse
DOWI'I
42 Htgh moun103 Month abbr
tam
104 Vogor
A1ver In
43 Ltberate
105 Wtfe of Zeus
France
44 Fastens
106 Make
2 Eagle ' s nest
45 Nat 1ve metal
amends
3 Large tub
47 Lovmgly
108 Mornmg 4 Man ' s ntck 49 Duck s mr109 Hebrew
name
lteu
letter
5 Brood of
50 Droop
110 Teutontc
pheasants
51 Cyltndncal
deity
6
Went
by wa 54 Ph one fea 111 Gtrl "s name
ter
ture
112 One who
7 Smoothed
55 Char t s
moves
the leather s
56 Gltstened
QUICkly
of
59 Bea,m
114 Ab stract
8 Pronoun
60 Snake
bemg
9 Compass
62 " Queen ' of
116 Wrtt tng
Po1nt
the JUng le
Implement
10 Old (poet )
64 Frenchman
117 Bends
11 Sai11ng
65 B eho ld'
119 Hastened
vessel
66 Near
120 Genus ol
12
Mustcal
tn 67 Sunburn
holly
strument
69 Slatners
122 Burns With
13 Beast of bur70 Narrow
s team
den
o penmg
124 Ex1sted
14 Prehx · down
71 Ktng Arthur ' s 125 Young boys
15 Worn awa y
lance
126 Kind of resin · 16 Part of vtoltn
12 Foolltke pari 128 Poem
17 Hurried

n

••

19 European
l1nc h
20 Cures
27 Knock
29 Solttary
31 Contend
36 Sea eagles
37 Omen
39 Ktnd o f parro t
40 Brtstl e
41 Shad o w
42 M 1xed metals
43 Dudes
44 Buckel
46 Note of
sca le
48
49
50
51
52
53

Fora y
Free ttckel
Close
Snares
Dined
Chemical
compo unds

55 Medieval
magocoan
56 Capuchin
monkeys
57 Encomtum
58 Re c 1prent ol
Qlfl
61 Brazoltan estuary
63 Ttdy
64 Merrim e nt
68 Country of
· A Inca
70 Dwarfed
71 Cltmbrng
palm
73 Petty rul e r
74 k 1nd of
cheese
75 Red dye
77 Commonplace
78 An c te n t to ol
80 M ex tcan laborer
81 Compass
poonl
83 Drunkard
84 Fat

~.-r.1-r.,~q~
.a ~ · r,.-r,,~
,,~l~~~~
~~

,,

·~

1.. ..,

Brakes

.

-

Tires

-

Pomeroy, 0
3-15-tfc

Ph 992 2848

CONTINUOUS GUTTI::R IN G no 1ob
too Iorge or small Gary s Gut
tertng Co &lt;&gt;82 b616 Oak Hdl
Ohro

,, 1..

MAN CUM
ROOFING
SPOUTING &amp; SIDING 70 yr s
expeoence J88·9851

J

DENNEY AND G LASS ( horn l r n~
fence hee es trmot es Call
?45 91 13 Ken S ol e ~ Gollrpolt s
RON S Tl/ SI:RVKE Spe crol1z rng
tn Zen rfh
H o u ~ e coil s Call
_1 30t1 576 23q8 9 ~ 4t16 245&lt;1
lilt INSUlAT ION Ceromrc !:rlote
Ouony 15 year!&gt; e.-: per ence
Phone QQ1 3085

R08ER1 S !:IROTHl:R S GA RA GI:
All ty pes of repor t Upper loll 'l
Coli 446 2445
~I: PTI C

SY STEM 1NSTAtlE0 Corn
ple te by qua ltfted lrcensed rn
stoll er f1ll dirt ha uled stone
grovel etc AAA Contr ocio rs
coli 2'56 192 1

THEI SS BLU MA"J&lt; FOAM INSULA
T!ON ~ r.ee estimates
New
home old homes and mobrl e
hornes Coll.446 1971
S ROO ~ I N C. HOME R E P~IH
Ot scounl l or senror crtrre ns
Call 446 9501 7om to 4prn
Mon tliru Fn

O~A N

~UllDOHR

BA CK HO t:
lrme stone sep11c tonk tns tallo
general
ca nslruclton
t 1on
M cNeal Conlracttng Co
"J79 2258

PA!NT1 NG
mtenor and e)( ter1or
born and mobil e horne roofs
hee estrm tes 15 yrs exp Coli
3b 7 7784

~e s tde n trol

SANOY AND Hl:AVEfl lnsuron( e
Co hos altered serv rces lor lr re
lll!!.U ~ Once coverage rn GoU la
Count'( for ol mos t a century
~orrn home and person al pro
pedy cove roge5 ore o ... a.lobl e
to mee t 1ndrvLduol needs Con
lo ci Foster lew rs
your
:wr ghbo r a~d ogent

l&gt;o

19 71 fi rIt L rolt 14 )(70

'1 bdr
1973 Roya l Embassy 14.'10 3 bdr
1971 co ... entrv 12xb0, 2 bdr
1971 Buddy 12)(b0 2bdr
1970 Amhersl 12x50 1 bdr
8 &amp; S MOBilE HOME5
PI PLt:ASANT W VA
19 1~

OAKWOOD mobr le horne 2
bdr I '' baths oil electrrc cen
tr ol
01r
washer dr ve r
car pet ed
underptnnrng
located ot Rodney S11 500
~ all '14~_ 5073 ?Iter 4 30p~ _

1973 CAMERON mobile home 12
)( 64 3 bdr. unlurn Applronces
rnduC:fed
Underprnnrng, &amp;ICC
J cond
tolol electrrc
Call
388 9803
- -- _
1973 17 )(50 COMMUN1TV mobtle
home 2 bdr Call 2Sb 14b7 after
5 JOpm
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ACREAGE PLUS! - 21 2 acr es of tillable land There ts
a 24'x54' doubll:~w 1 dc wh1ch 1ncludes 3 bedroom s. a ,.th
could be a sew tng r oom or den. 2 lull baths, nice large
k•tc h en Owner says SELL Has tnstall ed centra l atr
and pav tn g to be 1ncluded C1 fy schools $29,900

Ml LL CflE E K - Good home wr th 3 bed room s, bal h,
din1n9 room . 1/ 2 basement, good buy. onlv Sl0,500

10~~;;~~~~~~~~~ BUY - 1972 Globemster ldx6.4, has 2
·.,:;
bath w1th shower-, part1al furnrt ure, biDck
foomclati;on , Lf2 acre n tce levelland $13 ,500

•

IN TOWN - New Moon 12x57. 1 bedrooms. h as had ex·

VACANT LANO - OFF RT 160
7~ 3 acre tracts S5 000 eac h Also 2 acres at cleared land - beau tiful
bulldtng Stf e $4 000
LOWER RT 7 - Aro und Eur eka - 2 bv•ldtng Sttes
wtth r•ver fronta ge
UPPER RT 7
14 bull d1ng choiCe - Prim e lots: $5,000
each
RACCOON CREEK 2 bUtldrng Sties - Banker 's

lent care, atr cond •t ion , good block storage bUild i ng.
buy for $11.200
BUSINESS - Good haUitn~ bUStness W1tt1 2 packer
1rucks, has contracts wtth Vtllage and bust ness laces,
call tor more 1nformat1on

2 ACRES - Good buldlng Stf e, cou nty water avatlable,
loca ted on Neighborhood Rd

d~ lrght

AFRICA RD. - Appro&gt;&lt; 11 2 acre trac t wtth some road
frontag e Coun ty water a'v'atlat&gt;le A real barga 1n at
$30,000 00

HOWE~Y

AND MARTIN
cavattng
seprrc system\
dozer backhoe dump truck
lrmes tone
grovel
blacktop
povrng ~ I 143 Phone I (614)
b98 7331

3S ACRES - Good rolltng !and tor hunttng or camp tng

446·4042
446· 1049
446-0451
J67 7529
440 0458

Wi th Old house on Thompson Rd off R t 160 s 14.500
31 ACRES - Lrots; of pot~nt tat here, 38 acres n1ce land
along Ra ccoon Creek, m os tly tillable, toba cc o base,
larg~ pond , good 10)(50 mobtle hom'e, $40,000
86 ACRES - very n1ce farm wtth a modern home , has 4
bedrooms . bath , m odern k1tc hen, dl ntng area , for ced
a~r furnace , n •c e ro l1rng land, toba cco base, pond ,
block bu1ldtng , l arge ba rn Located on Clark Church
Rd.

HOBSTffiER REALTY

-----

Evenings Call

THE CHIMNE Y Sweep Reduced
rates trl Sep l 1 614 373 bOS7
weekdays unt rl 5

Damn Bloomer, Assoc. 245-5083
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
John Fuler, Realtor 446-4327

-- ----

J9J6 NASHUA 14 )( 65 3 bedroom
1' 1 both underptnn 1ng $1500
and assume loon 949 1b83 or
8-4 3 3311
BIDS WANTI:D on a 1974 bO )( 24
Modular home Domoged by
ftr e The home ts well burtt and
contotned 3 bedroom Iorge lrv
Lng room formal drnrng room
krtchen
lamrl y room
I'1
baths You ore 1nv1tOd to Ln
New Listing - This nice homt loc:atacl on State Routt
spec t th rs home loc ated ' 1 mtle
124 has 4 bedrooms, living room, dining ~oom. kllchtn,
east of Hormonvtlle St llt U 3
bath and sunporch. Coal furnace and 2 outbuildings.
Th e purchaser mus t move the
Nice big yard with plenty of trees and !lowers. Ownar
home n o t later than Oct 15, '
desires quick sale. Selling Price $30,000.00.
1978 Matt ~ec led btd s to 73
Hoose .... elt Or R A F 8 Ohto
New Listing - Nice s room home In Middleport with
432 17 to orn"e not loter than
bath and delache&lt;l garage. Large yard Selling price
Sep t '10 1978 Jnc!ude relurn
$30,000.00
address and phone number
Announcemen1 of acceptance
ol o bld wt!! be mode not lcter
Ntw Lesting - 61f2 acres at cross roads with .500 ft
than Sept 23 1978 l'erms
frontage on State Route 124, Small cottage and mttei
Cosh Cert1lted check or bonk
out building. lde!l for rental or busine&amp;l properly .
Asking $20,000 00.
droll The owner r.eserves the
"ght oo retoel any or oil bids
WE NEEO ALL TYPES OF LISTINGS. WI ARE
For opporntment to tnspec t the
SELLING FASTII
home coli 7&lt;2 3122 or Colu m
Cheryl Lam ley, Assoc ., Home Pllone r42-HQ
bus 49 1 131 7
Horold D.
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc., Homo Phont M'·Uit
Graham Owner
George A. Hobstttter, Jr., lrolcer
10 x 40 MOBILE HOME , complet•
L;...._ _ _ _ _ __:_H;:o.::m.::e:_:.P_:IIo=::n:a_:992::::·:1r:.;lf;:__ _ _ _ _ _ __J
ly furntshed Quick sale price 1
$1888 00
CoH
992 2238
Fires tone Store or 9•9-2328
...t.,..
• TWO BEORIJUM mobtle home
Comp'-te ty lur!'ushed ALr con
GO CAMPING AM!RK:.;;
drftonmg Con be seen after 5
CARTERS PLUIII\&amp;ING
~
pm 742
With Coachmen RVs QuoltfV·
but It , pnc.d right Oolens of
Nc'EC:
W:;:.:Jc_:::b:...:..
edc:roo
.:.;_m
__
mo
-:-b-::,1-o~
home
models with o w1de range of Phone 4~3188 or U6.«7n 6.
Norrrs top quality, 1'/, boths ,
fam ily pleo11ng f1oorplons S..
tota l electric Tht s mcludes oil
5T AN DAltO
'"
them today! Apple C•tv Recreo· •
..
urtderp•nnlng, olumtnum af•pa
PIumblng · Heollnt
~I onof V•hkle's Rl 35, I mi
and heavy duty ochors cement
wnt
of
Joduon
Oh 715 Third Ave .t'6-3782
blocks. Also stoVe Mogtc Chef
1&gt;14 -286-5700
GENE PlANTS &amp; SONS '
washer and dryer Con be '""
PLUMitNG - Heating - Air C.:,
ocros~ from the Hydro Electric
Plan t at letart falls , Ohio
dltlonmg 300 Fourth Ave. "' '
&lt;41&gt;-1637
'
MOBILE HOME for sale 1%8 Vln·
DEWITT'S PlUMBING .,
dole 12 x 60 w1th boy wLndows
AND HEATING
•
UnlurntShed 992 3954
1976 APACHE Camper Phone
· Route160otEvetgreen •,
,.
16~------------- Phone _... 2735
1977 NASHUA 14 • 70. 3 bdr 2 ~~2=·1~3~
1971
FORO
ton
camper
s,pectol
lull both$ much more Ong
Power, 01r auto dual lonks DRAIN I SEWER CLEANING • .
516000 . Aaktng 513 000 Colt
VICE . Open 2• Ht. 7 dayt , o
hcellent running conditiOn.
U6· 27b5 before 5pm or
Star&lt;'- I Son. f'h
$1475.
992-2392.
2•S·9~q offer 5pm
___ _
256· 1391
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Super
Special - Carry-out doing excellent busl""ss,
tmmaculate bedroom home plus 2 two bedroom
cottages. Also 8 !lleeptng rooms to rent with total of
131 If trontag~ on Eastern Ave, suitable tor any
business, 215 ft . deep on Ltncoln St All for
unbelievable pnce of $120,000

s

New Llalln1 - Beautiful brick, 3 bedrooms. lull
basement, very nlcely groomed tot Th1s nome Is
immaculate Y&lt;~PU need do noth1ng but move 1n Bet •
ler Hurry'!
New Llst11111 - En loy the quoet of thiS country set ·
ttng Get tMt rocktng chatr &amp; relax on thiS large
front porch, • bedroom tram~. 2 storv , e)( tra large
ltvlng room, just p l ain comfor1able, 2 acres fran ·
lage &amp; backing on hardtop road .

•

WE NEED USTINGS
SALES ASSOCIATES
441t-3121
EARLWINTUS
nHr40
LEE JOHNSON
Golllpolla, Oftlo
4S2·:tnd Avo.

OFFICE 446-7699

To Sell

=
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Mercervill e - Well kept bnck ranch wtth -..
a full basement She wdl l ove the spactous 0
kttchen Wt th lots of cab tn ets and bu tl1 tn ""'
appltanc es
_
and r ef ng
BR, 2 full baths, lull He wlll lr~ e the large flat lot and the
ba sement tuated on a two th1rd acre flat spac1ous basement Call for an appotnf
:J
tot Thts home ts l ocated a t the edge of men t now $44,000
. 10
Galhpo11s and tl ts heated wttn natural gas.
$36.500
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Take a loo,k and make us a
of n
fer Two BR . ba th, Lg k1l and DR. attach Q
ed ga ra ge and screen ed rn back porch :r
Loca ted at the edge of town Reasonable C'D
C'D
a"'
rropertv - Rent one , live tn utLitltes Natura l gas heat $22.900
,:; on e, or ..ent both Two 2 BR names, located Mob1le Home - R1ver front lot , central ;liO
~ on Rt 218 JUSt 2 m• frorri Rt 7 Both are atr, equtpped k•t , washer and dryer , C'D
en present ly rented Owner wilt cons tder severa l 1tems of furn ttur e wtll rematn 1n !,
helptng qual•f 1ed buy er w 1th ftnanc tng cludm g Oble bed , kmg s1ze bed , den and -+
1.. Prtced al $27 ,500 tn c tud tn g n ea rl y fou r LR turn , oth er 1tem s as slated on our&lt;...
acres of land
11strng, all drapes and deck furmture
..
:::l ' Looktng for a country home WIth qut ef sur
$13.900
:
0 round1ngs'&gt; Better chec k thJ S one out soon
&gt; Two story 4 or 5 B R 's new heaf tn g and very Clean ~ And only $25,000 We are -t
.::Jt. w tr tng , dt:&gt;ep well w tfh electriC pump, talk •ng about our l ts ltng at 156 Garfteld
C cella r w 1lh overhead storage, s1tua ted on Tht s fine littl e home has J br s. bath, ktt. ~
LR and lots of stqrage plus natura&gt;~ gas A
n:J 3 54 ac r es Eve ca ll Tom Whtte 446 9557
heat
Call for an appo.n tm ent
: : Two Story well cared for nome tn Eureka
.., Fron t porch ov erlooktng the r rver lots of
0
... shade trees Th ts hom e has rec ently been Modular Ranch w1lh a ll thecxnas Central C
:;; pane led and ca rpeted th roughout Owner at r , modern ktl , w1th hood, range, oven ,
&gt; IS amctou s to se ll and has reduced th e pnce refrtg dLsposal diSh W formtca topped ~
IO $11.900
counter s Two full baths. 3 Lg BR s. 24x l4 LR. DR . and FR Carpet throughout ex ; ·
1411:70
Mob•le
Home
located
on
Woods
Mil
l
Ql
Rd , s1tuated on 3 acres land otfen ng cept k•t Th1s 24x60 un•l LS situated on l ~
II!: severa l exce llent buLid1ng St t es Lots of ac r e a t l and Call tor an appotntment to j
\Q
Cl.1 road front age Wtll con stder selling lrmd day S:i7 500
Gl sepa r a te $16,500

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M . L. (Bud) McGhee, Broker,
446-0552 Anytime

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Tom White, Salesman, 446-9557 Eve.
Gene Oesch, Salesman, 446-7440, Eve:

f·
·listing

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Growing Woth Southeastern Ohto

)o

"Thank you

For Sunday , Aug . 27

ASTRO·GR.APH
Bernice Bede Osol ·

105 ACRES - Good fatm w rth a modern 2 bedroom
home, has a large barn, 40x2SO. wtth equtpmen t for
ra1s1ng poultry, nt ce pond , Ferguson 35 w1th all equip
ment Let us show you tht s f 1ne farm , loca ted tn
Morgan TownShip, good buy for 555,000

GeorgeS. HobsteHor Jr., Brokar
Pomeroy, Ohoo, Phona ,.Hl33
OHico Hrs. 9a.m.-S p .m .
Closed Thursd•h &amp; Soturdoy ot nOOfl
Your Full Time Ru l Eliott Brokar

AUTOM081lt: INSURANCE been
cancelled? Los t your operclors
ltcense? Phone 991 214J

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Agency

Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor
Ph. Home 446-9539

Ill

11 ACRES - Ntce roll1ng land su1tab le for develop
ment close to Plant s Subd tvt ston, Ctfy schoo l dtstnct,
call tod ay

ATHDME
VICKIE HAULDREN
BOB LANE
BECKY LANE
KENNY RATLIFF
WALT LANE

Real Estate

.2

MOVE IN BEFORE SCHOOL STARTS - The owners
of tilt S brtck anp frame home have moved to Fla &amp; are
an x tou s ,to se ll The home has 3 8 R • lg llvmg room ,
cozy k•tc hen dtn1ng to It self and c arport N atura l gas
heat In c tty sc hool d•str rct Any r easonable offer wtll
be con s•'der ed 1

WILL do roolrng construcl10n
plumbrng and heottng No tab
too Ior ge ar too small Ph one
142 ?34ij

-

.

IH&lt;)ME WITH RENTAL - Buy fhts J bedroom home
bath . dtnmg room enclosed back porch a nd let th e
from a 2 bedroom garage apartmenT help make
payment Good l oca tton tn tow n, $34.000

COUNTRY LIVING - Almost new 3 bedroom wtth full
d•vrded basement , 2 dnlled well s. new 30' )(40 ' barn lg metal garage wtth 10 acres off Rt 118

EXCAVATING dozer ba ckhoe
and d1tche r Char les R Hot
field
Bad Hoe Serv1ce
Hut land Ohro Phone 742 200EJ

--

) c lose to Thurman Let us show you fhts f1ne
today Good buy lor $69,000

SEC()N 'D AVE . - For conven 1ent 1n town l!vtng. took
t older brt ck home. has 4 bedroom, JJI• baths.
fam il y r oom , room for beauty shop, large
stora11e b,uilding . Allor $34,900

BARGAIN PRICED AT $16,500 - 6 room house Wtlh
312 ac r es ot land Tht s woul d be a good rental 1nvest
ment InK C Sc hool Dt s tn c l

StWING MACHINE RepoL rs ser·
vrce oi l mak es 992 228&lt;1 The
Fobrr c Sh op
Pomeroy
Auth ort zed Srnger Sales and
Servrce W e sh a! p_.:n ~~ s~o~I: X( AI/AliNG dozer loader ond
baclc.hoe wor k du111p tru ck s
ond lo · boy~ for hr re wrll haul
l rll drr t to sod lunestOne and
grovel Call tiob or Roger Jef
fc rs dov phone 992 7089 n1ght
phone 992 JS25 or &lt;JC"/'} 5237

RH VES TRADING Post Poge vtlle
Grocer res dry goods hard
wore feed tock shop SpeCial
25 lb of dog food S3 88

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~~~l~~~~~B
f.replace. pat10, 1 car garage, good barn.
on 4 acres of n1 ce ro llmg land ( 10 add acres

80W f RS REPAIR Sweepers tooster5 tran s all
~ rno!l opplron ces lawn mower
neJd IO Stole Hrghway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (014 ) 985
Ji1S

HIL L S MOBilE HOMES an d Home
lmpro ... ements Free e~tr m o t es
Cotl440 2647
ROSf S REMODfliN G
245 ql64 after 5pm

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Thermal insulation

~lWOOD

Fastest Growing

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Cellulosic (wood fiber)

BRADFORD Au ctroneer Com
plete Serv tc e Phone 949 2487
o r~949 2boo Racr ne Oh1o Crtll
Bra dford

~

We Need
Your Home
or Farm

-

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'&gt;

NTRY LIVING - Thts n1 ce bn ck home has J
wtfe approved kttche n, large famtly room

ffi..w.-:,~~~~

Gallia County's

.-.

-'

CLOSE TO TOWN ~ - Lovelv ranch wtth 3 bedroom s.
P~ baths , central a1r condilton, fam il y room wt1-h bnck
fireplace, beautiful ca rpet, radto 1ntercom system ,
2 ca r garage Brand new home, tmmedtate
poSSE!SSion and crt y sc hool dLSfrtct

Save 30 pel. to so pet
on heattng cost
Ex per1ence and
fully insured
Free Est.
Ca 11992 -2772
8 10 lmo 1Pd)

a.

If you are movmg lo th e area vou should tD
thts fully carpe ted dolll house located XI
Owner IS Anx•ous to Sell - Frame ranch tn Northup It's n whtte fra me wtth three I'D
wtth sol1d Hrdw
f loors , re asonable BR s. eat 1n k tl doub le entry bath and an a,
._ uflltt 1es wtth natural gas heat Thts hom e attached ga r age, al l srtua ted on a well
l andscaped II at lot $36,500
&lt;
0 fea ture s lots of storage space and ts
.,... Sttuared on a large lot 1n a country ar
''
::::t mosphere Ca ll today, $39,900

1,

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

PULLINS l::XCAVAT1NG Complete
Servrce Phone 992 2478

TWO BOR mobtle homes at Quotl
Creek Coll 745 502\

..

Chester, Oh1o
10 30 c

SlUCCO PLASTER plo!&gt;l er 1epa r
leJrlured
c e rlrn g ~
Free
es tr mote s, Coi!I2Sb 1182

-

ID

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NEW LISTING - One of the ftnest homes
bedroom, 1'/2 baths. plus shower 1n the parft
ed basement 2 car attached garage, fully eQUtpped k1t
ch en wtth beaut•ful Sh er•ch btrcn cabtnets E)(cep
t•ona lly we ll butl t home tn clud.ng such 1tems as hard
wood f loors throughout under the beautiful carpeting,
oak tr1m. btrch doors. Thermopane w1ndows, and
much more Feel l1ke a kmg 10 your castle Wtth • V2
acres of surround ing c ho1ce land over look tng the
scentc Oh1o Valley on Lower Route 7

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoX 3

:r

Ill

NIW LISTING - Attractive ran c h tn the woods, has 3
bedrooms, 11J2 baths, full basement wtth br1ck
fireplace, large carpor t, located on 1 1 o~ acres on nrce
woodea 1and.

- J&amp;L
t: )(te1mr tol 1erm rfe 8 Pe st Control WATER WEll drr lltng Wtlliarn T
ol Gallrpolts OhLo Wtlltom
G rant 7"2 2879
Thomo5 44b 280 1
WILL 00 babv st ttrng tn mv home
CO NCRETf AND BlOCK WORK
09,!!._1_4 P~o~e.qq7 7b8q_
Done reasonably by hou1 or 10b
free eshmote5 Call 3b l 0295 PAINlEH lntertor and e)( ter10r
_vo_u _: upp! y the porn! 9&lt;l~ 2629
• or 361 0131
Will BABYSIT tn my home alter
schoo l start s Betty Von Meter
Syra~u_:~e 9_91_728B
QUALIFII:D SHHR Wrll srt trl you r
home
onytrme
Phon e
949 204'1

87 Aat sed the
sprrtl of
89 C trcus performers
90 S leeve l ess
cloaks
91 Wldeawake
92 Gumbo
93 W rld plum
95 Woody plant
96 R an eastly
97 Smoo ths
99 Deposots
101 Stoux ,e g
105 Jotnls
106 Stmtans
107 M orays
t 11 Htghway
112 Tak e ones
pari
113Soaks
115 Htghland er
116 En treaty
118 Is tn debt
119 Har ness
part
121 Sword
shaped
123 Patd noltce
125 Newest
126 Table land
127 Woos
129 Masts
130 Nun ' s outftl
131 No ts e
132 Stale
134 Thongs , 1n
law
136 C lertcal co llar
137 Wherew ithal
139 Foundation
140 Transgresses
144 Latr
145 Preposot1on
146 Cheer
147 Needlefosh
148 Cloth measure
149 Tome gone
by
151 Preposttoon
153 Prono un
155 Pronoun
157 Matden
loved by
Zeus

18 Prtnl er's
measure

.

lnstallahon Service

SUNDAY CROSSWORD PUZZLER

'

Pomtq

ReStdentlat and commer ~
c1a1 Call tor est1mate. 24
Hour Servtce. Any day,
anvtlme
Phone 985· 3806
Jack G1n1er 985·3806

Battery .

( Bob Hoeflich)
109 Htgh 51
POmerov
B 'l 1 mo

HOUSE FOR RENT In furek o 10 • The pornt Shop 12!1 Rr ¥er Rd
m1 below Galltpolts on Rt 7
Kono ugo Aut o body worlo. col
Gollipolt s and Hannan Trace
lrsron e~ trmote s f.' h 44b 651 t1
School Oi:ll Coli 256 1198
S1ANli:Y
SaAMI:R
Car pel
FIVE ROOM APT No chtldren na
Cleoner Seerng t!!o belrevmg
pets $100
r mo Utrl rttes pd
when Stanley ~teomrng Coli
Call _.4b 3437
~44b &lt;1 208

-

..-·

955i

Doug Enoth -iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~•iiiiiiiiill Loveday
Realtor Associate
Realtor Associate
Ph. Home 446-2745
~h. Home 24~·9114

G)

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

See
Denver Kapple

We are currently maktng
appotntments lor semor
portratfs W e use trad1·
honal settings and also
paroutdoor
f eature
tratture

J46

t'l

8-20-1 mo ( Pd)

For The Best
Price In Town

..

-·
·"'-·

446-0552

44b Bb55

BRADBUR Y RENTALS
Aport
ments Adults only No pets
Cot! 44&lt;&gt; 0957

neor
SLEEPING ROOMS AND ltght TWO HOUSE "AlLERS
Re fe ren ces
Eureka Oom
hou sekeeping rooms
PARI&lt;
depos1t Call b•3 -2b4A
CENTRAL HOTEl
--.._...,......._--~-~--NICH Y FURNISHED' '1 bedroom FOR o 10b well done feeli ng
clean carpe ts w1fh Blue Lustr@'
lease req
opt Adults only
Rent electriC shompooer $2
lnqutre at Sheppard Sales and
Central Supply
Servtce Frrsl and Olr¥e

428 Second Ave.

Call Soon Concermng our llstmg on M tll
Creek Rd Look for our !J.Lgn Thi S large ~
bn ck home has a world of poss tbthf•es
Pnc e quoted at showtng
Excellent Location -~ 2 BR (could be 3 1,
LFC DR . bath and ktt , cellar wtth :J
overhead storage pl us a very good garden 10
spot Natur al gas hea t St tu dted on a 1 2 ~
ilcre lot $19,900 Eve LCall Tom Whttt&gt;

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
PIL !92-2174

"R~

OFFICE 446-7013

OFFICE 446-7900

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

4-30-IIC

M~GKEE

~·we Sell Better Living"

TONEY REALTY (0

Gutters and
Downspouts

Aute &amp; Truck
Repair'
Also Transmtssion
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

lteat Jo:statc for Sate

0

·~wf

&gt;-

1218 EASTERN AVE•• GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

New or Repair

0

Coll44b 778 5

12x60 TRAILER Frve pomts $ I 40
per month
No children
9915834

lWO BDR M081lf HOMf
446 0508

''

H. ·L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE •

Half•eld Backhoe Ser ~utlo nd
Oh Ph '142 -7{)()8 or 440 :Uf:lb

~SS- 3979

-----

..-

360i:l

DOZl:R OIT CHI:H a nd

Times~Sentinel

"Tilank you for listing with 'Bud ' McGhee Realty" "Thank you

fENC ING Ault
AWNING~
co\len
:!i
Horne flot
lmto '~
- --------------------------------~--_J-

DATSU N PICKUP 35 000
mtles Good ttres, new pornt
JOb Step 9umper $2900 Phone

GIGANTIC VARQ SAlE 6 mrles
out 141 turn left on 775 4 mr les
on rrght lots of homemade
baked goods canned thtngs
clo thtng everylhrng you con
men_!_l~~~§l!.~.!~ ~- _
YARD SAlE 8 m1 out Rt 141 JUS!
before 775 Whrte house on left
4Ab 446 I
Mon thru Thur s
I Oam to 8pm Frr ond Sot
lOom to Spm Baby 1t~ms
mens XL and women s clot hes
tr uck m1sc

I,.

CHAIN LINK Ft::NCING WOODE N

1915

GARAGE SALE Thurs &amp; Fn 9 ?
1
, m•le from Holzer Hosprtol on
Rt l.bO

Busz·ness Servz·ces

oonR
WORK e&gt;&lt;o•o'"9 lond
cl~ormg Ph 4.4b 005 1

7

·

August 27, 1171
Thts com tng year you wtll be
movmg tnto more promtnent
soctal c1rc1es tha n yo u have
been accustomed to Some of
the good fortt.me o(lhe mlluen tlal people you meet cou ld rub
'
off on you
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt. 22) Vou
could be approached IO lake
leadershtp of a commi ttee by a
group tn wht ch yo u' re lnvo l'fed
The task IS tough , but your
peers have fat th tn your abtl!ly
to get tt done Ftnd out more of
what !1es ahead for you by
sendrng lor your co py of A SireGraph Leooer by mao l lng 50
cents for each and a long . self•
addre sse d stamped e nvelope
to Aslro·Graph , P 0 Box 489,
Radto Ctly ~lalton , NY 10019
Be sure to specefy btrth s1gn
LIIIRA (Sept . 23-0cl. 23) Competition IS the soul ot your
enjoyment today You feel you
have a little more reserve
strength to draw u ~on than
others do - and you re right
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The
old adage l hat expertence Is
the b~st teacher rings true fo r
you today You'll studiously
avotd makmg a mistake that
once cost lou bitter moments
SAQITTAR US (Nov. 21-Doc.
!1) One who constders you an
easy ourk In business could be
In lo• a rude awakening today
It push comes to• shove, you
could be both tough and
shrewd
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . tl)
A11hough you are eapable of
drivtng • hard bargain today ,
you wllf take patns to be fair
Both parllos will benefit equal1
•
ZauARIUS (Jon . 21-Feb. Ill
The ser~lces you render today
will be given freely and wtll lngly . No one should expect a
freebie, however You value
your work and you expect
payment.
PISCES (Fob 20-llarch 20)
·People you encounter socially
today are drawn Jo y~u be·
ca use lhey like your style
They'll be entranced by your
wlnntnq Ways and yo1.1r cherm
ARIES (March 11·Aptflll) Time
la too preoloua lo aquander
today . Sharo 11 with thoaa you
trul y Iowa, wont lo bo with, and
perh•c• don't ••• enuugh of
TAUII I(Aprtiii-Moy Ill Ctoor
up long-standing sodal obllga-

" ::r
for listing with 'Bud' McGhee Rea ItY ~

lions toda y Your mood le nds
Itself 10 t hts and it can be lun,
even 1f there ts so me busm-ess
mterm1ngled
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) It
you're looktng for somethmg to
do today , try browsmg 1n an·
IIQue shops or httle stores aU
the bea te n path You could we lt
unear1h a gem or two
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) People have no doubt where you

stand today They'll appreciate
you more fo r your candor I(
they se.ek crlttclsm or adv1ce,
they know you 'll tell them the
Iruth
LEO (July 23-Auq 22) An old
obltgaho n tS wtlh tn you r grasp
today You are capable of ap~
proachtn g the debtor so that
he 'll get the message wtthout
resentment
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

Soturday, Aug. 21

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Chort I'lng last is best
NORTH

11-26-A

+ A84
• 9.

t IOJSIJ

+ KQJ
WEST
• QJ 7

EAST

• Q 1085 2

• KJ 6

• J

• 10 9 53

a2

+13

t K
+109752

SOUTH

+ K62
• A 73
t AQ$4

+ A64

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weal

Nortll E811

Poss
pou

3 NT

So•lk
!NT

Pass

Pass

plunked on his ace.
Then South continued with
his queen of diamonds and
East showed out. Some five
minutes later South finally
conceded down one.
He did give the hand th_e
old collese try by cashing
lhe last two clubs West had
to make a diamond, but he
made the right dec11ion and
let a spade 10
When Eaat did play that
tins of diamonds the roses
had bloomed nicely for
South provided he had just
let that kin&amp; hold. The de·
lense would have three
tricks In but since East waa
out of heorll the three tricks
would b.ave been all they
could 1et.

Opening lead : • 5
We keep 1ettlne questlqna
obout hanell with · 11-c:ard
1ulu or almllar mo111troal·
Ilea.
By 01watd Jateby
We wonllo W11 our read·
aadAI.. a.a..l
on thot blddlnl methoda are
"Evor)'tblnl Ia comlne up lor normal hancll. With abroau," cbortlld South as he •urd freak handl anyone's
tooll: bla threHiotrump con- . 1ueaa may be riaht or
trac:t and thnw It lalo the wrons If rllbl, more power
l&amp;rbalt pall.
to them.
·He bad a..rted out fin, by INII:WSPAPJ:RI!NTERPRIIEAIIN I
ducldal tba flral two heart • roo you
1 qu.,t1on lor
leada.
lht -xptrls? Write ''Aik tht
Then ht tllterod dummy ·' E•por/1, ··.,,of thla n'"''"'
with a club In order to lead a ptr Individual qutlllon• w11t
diamond with every lnten· bo •nswottd 11 accompailltll
Uon of flneaaln&amp; with his by st1mpod, •~'i-addr•••~
quHn.
onvalopu Th • moar lnltrtll·
Then Eaat produced the lng qu11tron1 wrll bo u,.d In
11:1111 which ltd to South's thll • column •nd will recelv,.
fatuoua remark u he cop/eo of JACOBY IIAOOE,N.J

h•••

LARGE AND BEAUTIFUL
,
JUST A FINE HOME
Lovely 3 B R brtck country home sttuated 3 B R , family room tn basement N tC~
on 2 A of extra n1 ce land Large livtng wh•te steel s1dmg ( no upkeep) Full base
room Wtfh It replace , c;ou ntry ktfchen wtth
ment Lots of e'M:tra n1ce built tn cab tne ts 1n
lovely built m cab tnets, dtsposa t, a !I oven
k•tchen , wall oven &amp; counter top range
counter top range &amp; gnll pantry , dtn 1ng
N1 ce la rge landscaped la wn Garage wr t h
room &amp; 2lf2 baths Large famtly &amp; re crea
con cr ete dnve Wtthm walktng d1stance to
f1on room wtth ftreplace &amp; ba r , ut 1hty
Green Elem Sch On St Htghway 141 ap
room plus plenty of storage area N 1ce
prox 3 m 11es from Ga tllpot• s C•tv School
covered pafto, storage bu1ld1ng &amp; pony sh
System Very ntce netghborhotl SEE IT
ed Rural water plus well w•th pump TH 1S NOW
HOME WA S BUILT WITH YOUR FAMI
A LOT OF HOME
LY INMIND LOWPRICE!
A ver y tmpress•v e home
NICE WOODED
from the ttrst ttm e you step
4 2 A . LOT
.nto the door You ca n see
CLEAN DUPLEX IN
Thts 1s a great 1ocat1on to
the ftne malena ls use d •n
GALLIPOLIS
butld . Approx 1!2 m11 e from
thtS home Ther e are B
Plus 4 room house tn ba ck
Centenary &amp; only 3 m11 es
rooms - 3 B R , for mal
Downsfa1rs apartment has
from
Gall1pohs
Rural
d•ntng room wtt h bu il t 1n
3 B R ., kitchen, ltvtng room
water tS available Lot s of
buffet N 1ce storm doo~s &amp;
&amp; bath Same Tenant for
trees &amp; country stde ~
ttlt tn
1hermopane
w•n
over 4 years
Upstatrs
dows Large 1tv 1ng r oom
apartment has 2 B R , ltv
SITTING PRETTY
16' X20' w 1th wood burnLng
tng room , kjtchen &amp; bath
Cl ose to Holzer Hosp1ta1
stove, real ntce st epsaver
same tenant for over one
Beaut1ful 4 BR bnck hom e
kttc hen wtth eve ry lh •ng
year Natural gas heat, c1ty
wtth posst ble 17 A more or
built rn Ctt y water . lar ge
water &amp; sewer Grea t 1n
tess Large ltv•ng room , • tr ont porch &amp; bac k c ov er ed
vestment property for onl v
dmtng room &amp; k1tchen wtth
patto Large 116'xl26' la nd
$18,900 CALL NOW
lots of bUilt tn cabtnets.
scaped lot 2 c ar garage
wall oven &amp; countertop
All ot lh1S &amp; more , too
A LOVELY SETTI"NG
range Farm tly room &amp; k1t
YOU CA N ' T BE LIVE TH IS
2 A of extra n1ce land plus
chenette for casual ltvmg
HOME FOR THE LOW
a very well kept mobtfe
or posstble e-ntertaLI)LJ1g
LOW PRICE
home . Lots of c abtnets &amp; all
Large
uttltty
room ,
appltances stay tn cludmg
EXQUISITE HOME
workshop &amp; posstble den or
washer &amp; dryer Extra n1ce
CHAROLAIS HILLS,
study Extra n1ce patto &amp;
storage butldmg wtth cori
3 lb A r c.lltng
BeauttfUI
lands&lt;;ar:ung
SEE TH15
c lea n la nd tS th e se tltrg t or
cre te floor . M ust see to
ONE
TODAY'
MU ST
belteve tht s clean land &amp;
th ts unu sually g rac1ous
SELL NOW!
hom e
brr c k home 3 spactOUS
I LOT
B R 's, 21'1 baths and lar ge
Nice Lot 58 In Patnot All
IUACRESOF
uttltty room Lar ge Ioyer
PRIME LAND
leadtng to formal l•v •ng
level.
Rural
water
Vacant all
fen ced
tn
room , formal dtnmg room
ave1lable N1ce lot , only
Gall 1polis &amp; Green School
&amp; large famil y roo m wilh
$3,750 .00
Distrtct ,
rural
water
open f trepla ce Charm tng
8 ACRES-LOTS
available, many . many
k•f chen wtlh snac k ba r
OF
PINE
TREES
Corntng counfertop r ange ,
uses &lt;Sub d1V1S 10n, some
Deep well. Elecfttc pump
wall
ov en,
d1 s po sa1
far mtng, hunttng, pasture
Well house. ept1c rank , 4'h
d 1shwasher and l ovely
or 1ust place your own
mtles
to
M
1ne
No
1
Ap
Shenandoan cabrnets Thrs
home tn a c ho1ce spot &amp;
prox 5 acres ot ttmber A II
spactous home ha s a 2 car
keep e veryone else a dts
acr@s level land
ga r age w 1th automat1c
Has trees ,
tant away)
sPRING 'VALLEY
opener and centra l a tr
small st ream, level bot
SUBDIVISION
Th ese ar e 1ust a few of the
tom , fJat on top of a sma ll
Vacant tots, ntce SIZIJ
htll SEE I T NOW
ex tr as Prctures or wo r ds
bu tldtng lots wtth a~
cannot descr1be thrs home
123ACRES&amp;
LOT SIZe
uttlt1tes thereYOU MUST SEE IT
I ROOM HOUSE
lOt 8' by 171 2' Bet1er .ge?
NEW BRICK RANCH
3 B R
al l rooms are
'urn now
GALLIPOLIS CITY
carpe t ed. form al d1n1ng
SCHOOL SYSTEM
room Th• s home has had
4 BEDROOM HOME
Beaut•ful green l andscaped
blown tn rn sula tt on Cttv
N1ce, clean home wtfh.
yard. 3 B R d1n1ng area .
water, large butt tn bac k
wood or coa l burn1ng
lt vt ng roo m , nt ce stc p savC"r
por c h Los of shade trees
ftreplace · brtc k mantel
k. rt c h eh , uttlrty room &amp; Jl 1
Large garden ar ea Ha s
MOdern kttchen w1th ran ge
baths. Central a1r For ce d
cellar plu s 'l outs•de
&amp; refrig
Rural water
a.r fur ance Th er.fllooane
s t orag~ bldg s Approx Stz e
system . F A furnace , 2 car
wtnd ow s Just off Rt 35
l.t' x2d ' and 12'x l2 ' Lots of
garage &amp; storage area, 6
w est ol Ga lltpolts N IC E
frurt tr ees SE E THIS ONE
large shade frees Good
HOM E
NOW
large level garden space
9ROOM
Ntce mode.st home at
17 ACRES
COUNTRY HOME
modest prrce
PHONE
HOME NESTLED IN
5 B R Nrc: e fr on t porch ,
FOR INFORMA TION
THE TALL PINES
n1cE' k•tchen wrth burl t rn
BeautifUl 7 room modern
COMMERCIAL LAND
cabtnets doub le s s src k
brt ck &amp; fram e, 3 BR home
Along Rt
35 west o:
Bath w1 t h shower ll1I S o f
over look tng Htghway 35
Galltpolts A ll teve! Rural
shade Ires &amp; tru •' trees
west Neslled 1n and sur
waTer available On two
Nr ce " garde n spo'
Th1S.
rounded by lots of tal!
s•des approx 8 to 10 A
home has blown •n 1nsu1a
ptnes Fam1ty room. wood
PHONE FOR DETAILS
tron
Located besrde St
burntng flrel ace. ga rg e &amp;
42 ACRES
H rghway 160 84 acr e of
bree zeway , seve( al fr u•t
VACANT LAND
land More ca n be pu rc has
trees. peac h, apple, pear
LOt!i of road front age or
ed wt tn lh tS nome&gt; 2 mobt le
plumb Large garden area
M org an Lane Some good
hom es tha t now ar c br
Truck garage , pony shed
ltne fenctng Som e wh 11e
1ngrng 1n a r('ntal of SI 7S 00
Lin e fen ces Beauftful set
oak t tmber Appro~ 15 A
per month plu s a t ota l of
ttng for thiS lovely home
ttllable . All cou ld be
J 84 acr es of land All
pastured ALL FOR ONLY
COZY AND
located
bestde
Sta te
$13,900 00
COMFORTABLE
H tQ I1way 160 CALL FOR
N1ce large shade trees sets
V .A. APPROVED
ALL DETAILS
off fh tS lovely 2 B.R home
5 ROOM COTTAGE
FANTASTIC
w1th large ltv 1ng room . ktt
CHILLICOTHE RD.
LOCATION .
c hen &amp; bath All furn1ture &amp;
Well kept 2 bedroom home,
Walk tnfo the lovely en
drapes stay Just move m
bath, livtng room, formal
tranc e way of tht s spac tous
Kyger
Creek
Scho l
OR. Nice size kttchen, full
br ic k bt level 5 B R , large
baement , attached garage.
Dtstrict
famrly room wtth wood
Two porcnes, one ts a large
burn•ng f 1replace, form al
4LOTS
front porc h, ntce to enJOY
dm tng &amp; l• v•ng room 2
Lots No. 31, 32, 33 &amp; 34 tn
There tS also a large
baths, large uttlttY r oom, 2
Patrtof
Rural
water
garden
area
and
yard
Thts.
car garaeg Lov ely k1 lchen
avatl8ble W1ll sell tn ~atrs
property must be sold tt is
wtth d1sposa1. diShwasher
or all CALL TODAY.
pr.ced nght, you can buy 1t
&amp; range Heat pump &amp; cen
today Move in tomorrow .
frat a1r C!ose to H olzer
EXTRA INCOME
H ospllal
C1ty
Sc hool
&amp;HOME
13.35 A. MORE
2 mobile homes lor the
Syste m
OR LESS
prtce of one. S1tuat~d on
vacant land . Approx 65 A
level land Ltve tn one &amp;
of t1mbe r Dug well Creel&lt;
M'AIIDfl 'W~.VWZM':
rent the other N tee scen1c
S. sprtngs
PRICED
45 • Kn of tiOOd land plus
localton . PRICED LOW
RIGHT
unfinished tr1 level ' home
FOR QUICK SALE
that you can fin1Sh , all
4ACRESMORE
NEW JBEDROOMS
materials are already
OR
LESS
In Green Twp &amp; schools
available. Owner wilt
Wooded lot, Som@ pi""
Carpeted throughout. 6
tleiiOiiole price.
trees. Appro• 1 mfl@ from
rool'n home, modern ktt
c~nt,nary
on
Herman
chen with mce built tn
Northup Rd Pick your own
RIVERFRONT HOME
cabinets, . Front concrete
bldg
site
3,BEDROOMS
patio 10 fl . • 20 fl . While
Beaut1tul 11 1ew ot n.e Ohto
A I TENTION BUILDERS
prtme Stdlno with black
Rtver nght from your ltv
Choice burldlng sights ad·
shuMen Located on State
tng room Ltke to boat, ftsh ,
join,ng
Porterbrool&lt;.
Sub·
Highway w , 4 miles from.
and relax each evemng on,
division Five acres level
Gallipolis. WON'T LAST
our own nver front ? 6 room
land
all
perfect
t or
LONG
remodeled hom e , ntce
building
VERY MUCH
modern k1tchen1 F and B
DESIRED LOCATION.
• porches . na1 gas forced a.r
LEVEL LAND &amp; HOME
HOME &amp; COTTAGE
furnace , all rooms are n1ce·
6 room home with 3 BR &amp;
ON I A.
ty carpeted
Your own
bath, F A . furnace &amp; rural
ThtS roomy 7 room country
wafer system Wh1te alum .
water . Approx .
A. of ex ·
home has eat m kitchen , 3 outstde cover1ng , 2 large
rr• nice level land .' Could
B R . livmg room &amp; famly
nt ce ly shaded lots wtth
bo building lots or used lor
roo m The 2 B R, cottage ts cherry trees and one
farming call for more
ntcely pane led &amp; nas some
peach A very econorr tea l
del ells
carpetl
Just oft Rt 160 place 1o t tVP. .

e

I

•31•

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.. ..

.....

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...

. .

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.·-

~-The SundayTimes-8entlnel.Sunday. Aug. 27,1978

0;7- The Sunday Tlmes-8entinel, Sunday, Alii(. 27 ,' lln8

Your Best Rea!- ·Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
•*+ ~

I

Rf AtrOR

i~

- · ·

INDEP.ENDfNnY OWNED

..

H

"

- -- - -.- --

..

We Have A
Home, in Your

changing

-

the Sunday Times-Sentinel
._tittYki' -~ i! :· j

will be

EACH OfFICE

SOUTHE_RN HILLS

GALUA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

CANADAY

REALTY

.

Range
.
-

dally.

NEW LISTINGS THIS WEEK

-

446-3636

Russell D . woOd
Evenings
446·4618

•

RUSSEll WOOD

I

'

REALTOR

CALL 446-3643

.l

J

''

446-1066
Artllur A. Nibert

· sonio.r .Mtl)!lw'
American Socie 1
Of ApPraisers

MAYBE "SOMEDAY" IS NOW know the moment vou walk Into the
custom built bi -tevel that it is the home of
your dreams. 3 bedrooms (2 are extra
large with private baths &amp; dressing
areas), spacious livi!l9 &amp; family room , for mal din•ng w ith patio door5, opening on1o a
large sundeck overlook ing lake, plus 2 car
&amp; use of clubhouse, pool &amp; lake .

WITH NATURE ON YOUR DOORSTEP You 'll enjoy the 11 rolling acres that surround th is fine home. Plenty of trees, pond
&amp; lots of room tor horses . The well built 3
bedroom nome offers a large family room
w ·firela ce ·, formal din ing, 11'2 bath s. eat·ln
ki tchen , 'l car garage and basement .
Owner must sell ! $55.900 .

PR
LIVIN'? - Th is 63
acr e farm in Kyger Ck . Schools offers 20
ti llable acres {the balance in good pasture
and woodland), 5A8 lb . tobacco base, 2
ponds and m ore . Picturesque 2-story farm
home, has equipped kitchen, 3 .bedrooms, 2
fi r eplaces. and family room. Lots of fruit
trees in bac kvard . SSO,OOO.

NEW LISTING
MODERN HOUSE-POOL
3,300 sq . ft . over all, 4 BR, 2
.baths, shower, modern kit chen,
larg e
ant1que
decorated family room ,
·noo sq . ft ., c onc re~e swim ·
m ing poo l 18'x 35', very
much in use pJcn tc area.
lots of liv in d'. State Route
141 ,· GalliP.olis School
District . Priced below to·
day 's market.
~ 212

. Bonnie' Stutes
Evenlngo
:46-2NS

CI1Y PROPERTY. EX ·
CELLENT CONDITION
Owner anxious to sell this
brick hom e situated on a
spacious wooded lot within
c it.y limits. Cozy w.b .
fire place , 3 bedrooms. 2
ca r garage. A good quality
bu i lt hom e. Look this over!
126

WONDERFUL HOME ON BEAUTIFUL
ACrlEAGE - Approx . 9 acres with 2200 lb .
toba cco base &amp; a solid Old 2 story farm
hOme . This lovel y home mc ludes 3 .
bedrooms, family room w ·f ireplace, equip ·
ped k itchen , util it,y room &amp; bath . City
SChOOlS.
PRICED BEHIND THE TIMES - Tnis
well kept 3 bed r oom home in town is i ust
per fect lor your fam ily'. Includes a huge
family room , bu llh n kitchen , dining , 2 ful l
baths, plen ty of closets , good carpe t
throughou t, garage 8. private bacKyard . A
stea l at $35.000 .

l l6 E . Second Strf!'et
EQUIPPED KITCHEN- 4
tjedrooms . natural gas
heat , 11 1 baths, 2 car
garage with shop over .
Le...,el lot . $27 ,500 .
RACINE
Good
4
bedroom home . N ice large
eat -1n kitchen , natural gas ,
central heating and large
lol $7 5,000.
~USI'I ESS LOCATION and • ··~· ~ residence with
bath ."' rr~&gt; e n and bedroom .
~il l t
r~ ' od for a star ter .
Only S L ,c JO
COUNTR Y HOME - New
J : bedr oom , 2 bath home .
1-Cas eq uipped k. 1tchen , nice
carpet ing , lo g
house ,
w'oods . and garden land .
fo&lt;&gt;k ing $40.000 .

CROWN CITY - A cnance to make a real
home buy on this 3 bedroom r anch . Large
living room &amp; bat h, ni ce s1zed bed room s,
equipped ki tchen &amp; huge 2 car garage .
Near l y 11., acre fenced 1n oackyar d . SJO,OOO .
EXCELLENT RIVER FRONTAGE 50
ac r es &amp; a mobile home with lovely view
of Th e On 1o Apprax . 3 acres r iiJer frontage,
balance in woodland . 1972 14x70 B uddy
mooi le home includes cent ra l a1r , huge
deck in back overlooking tt'le river , l ull
basement &amp; large porch .

a

A

'Are You profiting from
'inf l ation?? Buy Land
,and you will!! !

PERFECT MATCH -

Might exist for

vou and th is Spring Valley Home - Brick
with J roomy bedrooms, 1•12 baths, built·in
k1lchen . dining room , spaci ous l i ving
roo m , lull basement , pa tio &amp; carport .
Ready to move into .

30 ACRES and 3
tiedroom renovated home.
li-1 ba ck of town w 1th ru ral
Water . Wlil1ake a trade -m .
Wont $24 ,500.
BASHAN
Large 3
~edr oom
home
with
"atural gas and T P. wa ter .
Over an acre of land wit h a
j car garage . Lot s of
outbulldings. Just $16 ,000.
YOU ' LL
PROBABLY
FIND A BETTER BUY
TODAY
THAN
tOMORROW . STOP IN
,li(ND
SEE
OUR
tlRO P E RTI ES .
•·
Helen L . Tea ford
Gordon B. Teaiord
Sue P. Murphy
Assoc1ates

IT'S WHAT' S INSIDE THAT COUNTS -,
Tt1 1s Rio Gra nde Jl;• story nome has a
large l i ving room , w ith verv pretty carpet,
dining r oom , buil t -in ki tchen, huge famil y
r oom, 4 bedrooms, l arge ba th &amp; an oversi z·
ed ga r age plus a huge tree shaded yard .
SA2 .000 .

A GROWING FAMILY? Then this
spraw ling oak dr ive home fits the bill.
Very large living roo m , 3 nice sized
bedrooms , 2 1h baths, buiiHn kitchen , fu ll
basemen t w ith family &amp; r~c . room , 2 car
garage, central air , sundeck, plus a huge
landscaped yard .

SUPER STAinER -

plan in good condi tion . Located on a qu iet
street in town, this home includes large I11J·
ing room w1 th fir eplace, 2 ntce sized
bedrooms, eat ·in . kitchen
(range &amp;
refr igerator ) bath &amp; gar age . New storm
windows &amp; partial basement . SJ3 , ~ .
LIFE IS TOO SHORT TO WAIT - !enjoy
th is qual ity -built br 1ck now . J nice sized
bedrooms, 2 baths, built· in kitcehen w -bar,
dining area, with pat10 doors, f ull base·
ment , 2 ca r garage &amp; an acre yard f or
·rompin ' room .
•

BUILT LIKE . MISS AMERICA
Beautiful all the wav around . A t ine 3
bedroom bri ck &amp; frame ranch w ith a most
lovely 1.79 ac re landscaped vard . A large
li iJing room w·fireplac e, 2 lull baths,
adorable eat-in kit chen, custom dr apes,
l.srge 2 car garage &amp; central air It's ju st
really too beautiful for words . L ow S50 's .
ONE OF OUR FINEST HOMES - Tnis
im macula te 2 story is within walking
distance of the business di st rict with 131'
f ro ntage on Rt . 7 and 40' along the waters
edge (perf ect for boat dock) . This lovely
home offers J ni ce sized bedrooms,. living
room. with w .b.f .p., eat ·in k i tchen . dining
room , tamily room with w .b. f ireplace, Jlt;o
baths, full basement includes workshop,
uti lity room, etc ., 3 liice porches &amp; 1 ca r
garage . You must see th is impressive
home before you buy . Bv appoin t ment on ly .

..

HOMESITES IGH. i ole . I acre and
iup . Middleport . near Rutland
:coll992·748l .

Nfw J- bedroom house 7- both~
'oil elec ., I acre, M1ddlepon
close to Rutland Phone 997-

748 \ .

V"·FHA. 30 yr . financ ing . also
/refinancing . Ire land Mortgage.
!77 E. Stcte. Athens . phone {b 1.4)
1592·3051 .
T~REE BEDROOM f rom~;me - In
•M iddleport . Call 992-3457 .
IN SYRACUSE · 2 bedroom house.
lNew storm windows . New
aluminum building . 2 porches .
9'12· 321~.
.:.._ _ _
.4

~room . new borh. new kit·

; 1 ~hen city water . On Rl. 3J in
~Burli~ghom 992· 7_?~- _ _

NEW LISTING . Owner tronsferr ing. O"er 2 acres close to
schools . hospital , town . 2 cor
goroge. pat io breakfast de&lt;k J
b~droom ·
N1c@ basement .
hardwood floor:. . Central air
Forced air fu rnace . 992-5792 .
LARG-E
building in
Meson . 3200 sq. ft . Ground
floor . l ·JO.e-882-3JS6.

CENTURY Jl

MOBILE HO MES

G~LLIPOLIS

SUO 2N&amp; AVE.

HOUSE FOR sole near pool in

_Sy~~!:._c:_ol l 992-5767.
60 ACRES . house ond furniture

IN SYRACUSE : On 'l r ocre lot ,

tPQcious 3 bedroom with Iorge
utility room , living room
carpeted . fruit trees and
$32 .000.00. Immediate posses·
shrubs .
slon Phone 7.. 2· 2988 after 5 In Racine: 3'-'r ocres, beautiful ~
__..!:_m_. ____ --·
beodroom , 3 boths . completely
remodeled , torpeted . bo th gas
SIX ROOM houae and bath. an
and electric furnace . 3 fire
countrv on II acres, cen tral
places. klrge carport and
heal, mineral r ight$, 15 minute
Storage building. For lnformo·
drive to town. lmm.dlote
tlon.Phone 9441-2018 .
WEll CONSTRUCTED ANO IN
po:.senlon. 113.000. 742·3074
.
GOOD condition J bedroom
or 992-5825.
BUILDING LOT for sole in
w1th 1•.:, bo1h in Pomeroy. Fully · lflb7 HOUSE TRAILER t2x60. All .
Pomeroy- . 32 ' 100 of on acre ,
insulated with blown . in'
~hono '1'12 · ~25S .
fibergla ss , stOrm windows ond
electric. furnished , air cond ..
,_____
doors . Carpeted , In ~.......1
wo.h•randdryer. 21ots In liar· HOUSE IN Mi.Jdleport , remodel·
WVV"'
ri•onville. l42-2a2b .
ed. 7 room$. both . central oir .
neigh'?orhood , wlking dillon&lt;:• - - - --- - - of town . Call 99'2 -3872 after 111. ACRES locored I mile from
992·SOC.•.
--·5.30 pm or Saturday and Sun·
MetgJ Mine I , Drilled well and ACRE
LOT on ttt . I . Nice building
day .
l&gt;e.ptlc tys te~m~ 304 - 882 · 2~34 .
site. 9'17 75"14
----,-

- susiNESS

.....-~ -~

------- ------

----- - --- ___
-

---

--

STORY AND 1h
WOODED LOT
Super loca t ion, St. RL 35!
This c harm 1ng older home
is sitting on .7 acre amon g
sever al large shade t rees
Home features L .R .• F .R ,
formal
dining
room ,
modern bui lt -in k itc hen .
l'fility room . 3 bedrooms,
gas for ced air hea t . Be the
fir st to s.ee this charming
home . Won 't last long !
Shown bya ppt . onl v! fl 180

OWNER SAYS SELL
No r easonable offer refus
ed! This hQme setting is
seren e and peaceful, enjoy
the eveni ngs in a c ozyc ~oun ­
.,. y atm osphere, but vet
lc..ca ted only one rr' ; 1e and a
half ol ~
·
35. 2
bedroo ,
)UIIt-in
kitchen, , · •'4 r oom with
hardwooa f loors, living
room and nice bat h. New
garage 24'x30' has paneled
walls and textured ceiling .
A REAL BARGAIN! '!SA

E . M . Wiseman, Broker, 446·3796, Eve.
Jim Cochran, Associate, 446·7881, Eve.
E. N. Wiseman, Broker, 446-4500, Eve.
Nancy Smith, Associate, 446-4910, Eve.
Betty Hairston, Associate, 446-4240, Eve.

Headquarters

FANTASTIC HOME
You ' ll love this J B.R.
r anc h located on Debbie
Dri ve . Complete kitchen ,
all appl iances go, form al
O.R ., L .R ., IJerv cozy , 1•12
ba ths, shower Everyfh1ng
like new, all ,.~ -·ed, ex ·
cept k: ~\J[) ~ car
garage ' ~
. ...,pener _
Lot
1(.~,~ x 150 ' .
Low
m aintenance, toW" upkeep,
onl y 2 yrs . old . Immaculate
condition ,
i mmed i at e
possession . One of our best
list 1ngs With Century 2L
should m ove fa st Shown bv
appt. Priced to se ll .
fll77

WHEN AVERAGE IS NOT ENOUGH Let tnis professionally decorated spl it level satisfy your ta ste. 3 spacious
bedrooms, 21J, baths, a lovely living room ,
formal dining , equi·pped ,k Jtchen , fa mi,Y &amp;
rec room plus 2 car g arage . su ndeck &amp; an
outstanding landscaped yard .

WE NEED LISTINGS

Housing

OWNER SAYS SELL
This lovel y bricl\ and
frame home located on St .
Rt . 141 in ci ty schoOl d ist .
feature s L. R . with a rusti c
w .b . fireplace, dini ng area
with slid ing doors lead ing
to a n ice sun deck, 3 B.R.,
large modern kitchen, full
basement w ith F .R., rec.
room and large ut ility and
work area , single car
garage w1th elec. opener,
gas forc ed a ir hea t &amp; central a ir condit ioning, tenc·
ed in back yard. Shown by
appt _only . Th is home is an
exce llent buy Priced in the
!ower S40's..
N179

2 bedroom I fl oor

WHAT ' S IT WOrlTH - To be loca ted a
short di stance from town on Rt . 35 near the
hOspital in an att ractive 3 bedroom ranch
with l 112 oaths, din1ng room , cozy jivi ng
roo m , ki tchen, ther mo windows, garage &amp;
n1ce lot . we sl:ty SJ7,900 . What do you
think ?
·

I

-

RESIDENTIAL

MOillE HOME
GARAGE
.81 acre / more or len, 2
bedrooms. living ,oom,
modern buHf·in kitchen,
Iaroe 2 car garage- &amp; tool
shed . Very nice setting , lots
of
l't ice
landscap ing,
located at Kerr ..
I I"
QUIET RETREAT
New 14'x70' tully equ ippecl
mobile home on creek fron t
lot dee p water frontage .
E;cellent swimming and
fl• hing .
UGI
DOU'JLE WIDE
MD BILE HOME
8 rooms, 3 bedroam1, 2
hillhs, complete kitchen,
&lt;~-&gt; ntr l! l air, water tap~ verv
tozy . Sitt ing on 2 lovelv
ac res , loca ted off frorn
Bulaville Pllrer Rd .
1 nt

LARGE HOME IN CITY
Larg e 2 story house, 9
rooms. House is modern
and in good condition . Pri c ·
ed r easonabl e
Owner
needs to move this property immediately . Please call
for more information . 1 US

o;~~~~~~Wb~~~~Y

L .R ., 2 bedrooms, m odern

edf ·in kitchen , hardwood
floors, full basem.ent and
utili ty room . L oca ted r ight
out of town . Pr iced ver y
reas onably ~ $24 .500 00.
w 191

TWO STORY HOUSE
Moderr · ~Air kitchen,
bath. H
~ &gt;d cond i t ion , ga, a 1.n:: . ................ IP.vel extra 10
bldg
worth
1,000.
B idwell. Ohio.
1112

PENDING

BJ.LEVEL IN
WOODED AREA
Th is lovely brick and
frame bHevel is setting In
1•12 a c re-~ of beautiful
~ woodland . Onl Y· 41;., yrs. old
f ea turing toyer , L.R. ,
mod ern kitchen. dining
area. 3 bedrooms , full base ment area All this and
more in KYGER CREEK
SCHOOL
DI S TRICT .
Shown by appointmen t. 1
194

rAHM ~.,

CENTUR Y 71
VERY CLEAN FARM
Vinton area, 123 acres.
modern 1117 story re side nce. 2 barns. pl en ty
DU IId•nos. 1/ 2 mile from coal
valley toward Vinton on
Mt. Tabor Road.
, 204

GOOD BUY
100 acres, Harrison Twp ,
Pasture land, tobacco
base, coal r1i;Jhts, timber
and nice wooded area for
lots . 1972 12'x60' mobile
hOme alr~adv In place . Can
be purchased with or
withOut mobile home. Sell·
tng price only S30,00Q. 1 175

BEEF FARM
l )8 acr es, over 40 aHes
lnve l tillabl e land , th e res1
is pa o:. lu re and woodland .
Toba cco base, 6. room
hou s~. good barn, other
ou1bu ildings . Selling below
tadav 's m arket .
1106
GENERAL FARM
Located off St. Rt . 325,
Perry Twp., 52 acreil
T illable land , pasture and
some wOOded.area. Modern
6 room house and barn .
over 800 lbs. tObacco base.
Gallipolis City School Dist..
PRICEDTOSELLI
11•4
95ACRE FARM
AND HOME
Just listed this nice farm
loca ted In Moroan TWp
w ith 4 yr . old mllklll!i
parlor ,
18'x42 '
barn
138'x60' corn c;rib, chickerl
hOuse, cellar house &amp; loft,
plus other btags . 3 ponds.
All mineral rignt! go.
Modern 8 room farm house.
HOme hos new Siding . Mor·
tgage ~an be assumed for
right portv . •
1201

EXTRA CLEAN FARM
"' room house, barn and
equipment shed . Knee deep
grass all ' over . Plenty of
spring water for stock.
Good fencing .
1167

19 ACRES
CLAY TOWNSHIP
· House, 2 barns, , tobac c o
base, very scenic: area , 2
beautiful lakes. stocked
with fish . Excellenl for
flr.lllng , booting or hunting .
Just UOOd living .
t 161
\

FARM
EXCEPTIONALLY
CLEAN
.t1 acres. good fences, pro·
ductlve pasture . Approx. 10
tillable acres. Beoutiful
- d a r u s. Approx . 1200
lb. tobacco base. llveatock
and tobacco barn . House ls
very attractive. well taken
c are of, 3 bedrooms, lf1
basement, almost new oil
F .A . furnace . Thistso well
balanced farm .
12M

SOUTHERN HILLS•
SPI;CIAL PRICED LOW
6 room!.., full basemen1. IU
garden area, gO,Od stora!lf
' bldg . Rt . 141, 'iVIIOUtofclty
' limits - ohould oell rut.
Wort.h
everv
,penny- 125,000.
I 121

I 181

BEAUTIFUL SETTING
Lots of shrubbery , flower s
and shade trees surround
this very well kept home
Features L . R., fa.mlly
r oo m with w .b . fireplace ,
dining
area.
modern
kl!chen, all birch cabinets . .
Has a large front porch , 2
car garage, gpod garden
area . All this sitting on llh
acres In a sereng and
peaceful area . City School
Oist .
I 195.

A BIT OF COUNTRY
Call today to see this nice
cou ntry hom e located on
1.99 a\:res of level produc·
five land . J bedrooms, fullv
equipped kitchen, utility
rm ., red metal barn l ike
new . Running creek on side
makes tor plentv of water
and ni ce setting, Ohio Twp .
• 541.000.00 .
~ !97

country nome near Kyger
Creek High School, 11h
story frame home with
aluminum siding. 3 BR ,
family rm. Lg. front porch
perfect for summer e.... en ·
ings. Natural gas forced air
furnace. Rural wat er .
Beautihillg . rolling l awn.

Well kepT 2 story, 3 B R
br ick and f r ame . Family
room . Franklin fireplace.
Offers lots of privay , Ky ger
Creek
Schools .
Rural
Water

If you' ve been looking for a r ea lly nice home you can
alford to take a look at this 2 storv in Kyger Creek
School Oi st. N ew root a"hd spouting, alum . Sid ing, 3 BR .
fam ily r m . and fUll basement . Fully ca rp ete-d . Nearly
J~o acre with nice garden spot. L ess than 6 m i. from ci ty.

$30,000
Downtown near shopping,
schools, etc . Very n ice 2 BR
frame, Ph batl'IS, cute as a
button, kitchen , plush
carpeting throughout . Formal .dining. lovely lover
with open stairway . Lg .
spacious rooms . Low S..O. OO
gas budget.

IMMAC\AUTILY
KI,T .ANCH .
Thll
II IIPOrllilng
cleen and ft.- ollie · of file
moat tte•iilllul kltcMnl
wtt~ . 1 - , of cobtntrs.
lerge foriNIIIIvlnt ,._.,, 3
IIP'CIOUS - . r n a Wjlh

Like to see your no me being built? Make. an appoint ·
ment to see tnis jjr lck and cedar L _- sha_ped ranch. For ·
ma l entry hall, 3 BR . fam ily rm . W1th f1replace . form al
dining , kitchen will haiJe snack bar, range ,
di~hwashe r . and displ)sal. 2 full bath s, 2 car g~rage ,
heat pump, cen t. .1ir _l/• acre level lot . Cent . locatton.

..~lly
~~
* ii.o"
. Jlr'

:~

dec:GP

d.

....

off '

mnter _
_ , , , Tills
hOme IS fully CM'~ With
qiHlllty · co'"""'· Totet
electric. 2 c.,. ger. . .. All
this siTting on 1.5313 K,...,
more or 1e11 . You
II how to- to IPOI't&lt;ll ...

,

Mobile
H o m e , 19 7 1
Ri chardson, 65x 12 w ifh
4x \.t fo ld out. 3 BR , 1' 1
oaltis, d r il led wC'II on 1.3
acres, 7 miles fr om c ity in
· Gr ee n Twp .

$39,000
Beat the high cost of living
tn th is 3 BR fram e.
Spacious k itchen, attrac tive living rm . with picture
wi ndow . Utility rm., hard wood floor~. Gas forced air
furnac e. ca rport . Fenced
lawn has beautiful shrub bery
In ci ty on quie t
s lreet . VA· FHA FINAN (.
lNG AVAILABLE

GRAB IT FAST - It won 't tast. Sprawl ing 3 BR brick
ranch is priced to se ll &amp; offers H10 sq . ft . of living area
with 3 baths, formal d ining rm ., fa mi ly rm . with stone
fireplac:~ -~ equipped kitchen &amp; heat pump PLU S a large
2 car garage &amp; partia lly finished full basement .
Loca ted on the W.T . watson Rd . near Rodnev . Shown
by appoi ntmen t only .

Cozy 3 BR in city, eat-in ki t chen, low cost gas h ea t. ~
carport, very nice fenced
back lawn. Storage bldg .

st,5oo
Six acre wooded lot with
dug well , septic tank and
hook ·up for mobile harn e.
17 miles from town in North
Gall fa School District.

2STORY HOME IN SYRACUSE: 4be droom s,not . gas
f .a . furna ce, village water ($3.00 mo .). storm doors &amp;
windows, pr ic:e includes 2 addi t ional lots . L ocated on
Water St . Pr 1ce $16,000 .
BEAUTIFUL NEW 2 BEDROOM home situa ted along
Rac coon Creek . Approx . 4 acres of land. priiJate dniJe;
id eal tor reti r ed couple o r new ly w eds Price red uced to
$32,900.00

acre f arm, OIJer 60
acres ti ll ab le , balance
wood and rolling pasture.
· 14 73 lb. t oba cc o base.
M 1nera1 rignts to be sold
witn f arm . Comfortable 1
story farm hom e in ve rv
pic turesque setting sur·
rounded by giant trees. 3
barns, ot her outbldg . ·
283

$42,600
FORTY ACRES near Vin ·
tOn, 15 acres tillable, rest
rolling
and
wooded
pasture . 4 BR frame home
w ith alum . siding, nice
mOdern kitchen with lots of
cabinets and range, barn.
other out bldg.

$150,000
117 acre dairy farm , near
Rio· Gr11n~"~e eeautiful new
4 BR home, 2 full baths, lui ·
ly carpeted, tam . rm .• 2car
garage, plus older home
suitable for tenant or ren tal. This is truly a
showplace . would be ideal
for business venture , golf
course, country club , e·a sy
access from Rt. 35.

$53,500
106 plus acres. 40 acres bOt ·
1om , remainder ln pasture
and timber . Approx . 1,100
lb. tobacco base . Two
barns, 36•60 &amp; 36•48. Corn
crib and ut i !ity shed . Lots
of lfontage on little Rae ·
coon Creek . North Gallla
Schools .

AL.L LISTINGS SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.

RON CANADAY, REAL'IOit
Lou Lutton

Realtor Associate

446-3636
ANY HOUR

Audrey Canad1y
Realtor Associate

l!venlngs 444·3005
25112 LOCU$T ST., GALLIPOLIS, 0.

BEEF CATTLE COUNTRY-. One of Gllllo CouniY '.s
better stock farms . This one h1111Hn in the wme fam•·
ly lor 15 yn . 174 ocr10 totol. Approx. 90 A. of permonon! groostond hll boon tlmlcl, litrttllzlcl &amp; Is In • high
stato ol procluctton. All boHom lind hoo boon tiled.
owners are retiring 1 1'\avt •tretd to give up their
comtortoblo 2 story, 7 rm. &amp; both homo. Other luturos
are 2 good blrnl, 4 sheds, celllr houst, corn crib, luge
tob. INist , · J ponds plus taod well, some commerciil
ttmlter reported, loto of rd. trontogo In Porr&lt;/i ·Twp .
ShoWn by eppalntment only. 517,500. STROUT IlEAL ·
Ty, W ·OOOI.

I I

r

. MORGAN TOWNSHIP - 36ocres near Meigs Mineo , 5
acres level , most o~ balance could be pasture, small
stream, township road, $11.900 .
RACCOON CREEl&lt; 13 acr6 of flat land· wlth
approx. 1,500 ff . of creek frontage, sandy soli, barn , ·
ta.;oted In Northern Golllo Co. S13,000.

OVERLOOKING EUREKA : 90 acres. no build ings,
· ·
lai d · up basement, nver view . ·Buy for $35,000.00.

COMMERCJAL. BUILDING on Eastern Ave ., 80' fron tage x 150' deep. 2 rent als (1 house , 1 apt . plus comm.ercial bu ilding) . Price $75,000.00 .

COMMERCIAL LAND FOR LEASE- .00 ft . frontage

on State Route 7 appra x. 6 mi. north of town. Will lease
oil or part .
HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL- 5 rmo .• both, fireplace,
needs repa irs, located on old Route 160 at Evergl{een.
112.000 .
.
FARM FOR SALE - Mei~s Co., Leading Creek,
appro• . 1 mi . off Rt. 7, 232 ac .. appro•. 90 A. tillable,
balance woods. modern ranc:h sty1e home, full
basemen t. free gas. $100,000.

PROFESSIONAL BUILDING : 15 ,000 sq. It: located ad ·
jacent to golf course , one le...,el. .nC? ~teps, 1dea1 for ?f ·
. f lees, schools, prof ~ssioMI act•v•t•es . For more m·
formation call 446 1066.
PRICE REDUCED on t his 2 bedroom home on _Lower
River Rd ., 't 1 acre lot. ci ty water. Owner anx1ous to
sell . Pr iced for $13,000.00.

AVE ., needs some

BUILDING LOTS": 75'x 120', al l underground uti lities,
rural wafer, cent ra l sewage collectiop , blacktop
streets. No mob ile homes Pri ce $4,000 .00 .
NEW LISTING : Siluoted on ' Rt . 218 ; 3 bedroor]l
. carpered home, ins ula ted. all elec tr ic with f i rep l~ce,
·located on 100'x300' lot . Also, 14'x16' storage bulldtng .
· Buy for $35,000 .
INVESTMENT. PROPERTY : 4tn Ave .. Gallipolis.
Three rentals exceed S300 monthly. buv for no more
than $23.000.

'

IF YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT SELLING •.GIVE US ·
A CALL ANO WE'LL BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS OUR
LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU. WE H,A)/E
BUYERS BUT WE NEED LISTINGS! I LET US SEll
YOUR HOME WHEN YOU'RE READ:Y .

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ALL · ROUND
FAMILY
PLEASER - 33 A. with 1
vr. old ranch, finished
buemonl, 4 BR. 2'12 baths,
2 kitchens, LR, DR , family
room
with · Franklin
fireplace &amp; more, located
near C•dmus . $64,000.
STROUT
REALTY .

FHA &amp; VA HOME LOANS McLEN•
DON MO~TGAGE COMPANY
Loon Repr•sentotive. Violer
··cookie "' Viers , 46.J Second
Ave .. Second fleer , Gallipolis .
Oh;o 45631. Coii••Pt72 .

I~ELAND MO~TGAGE CO.
Give us o call for expert guidance
446 ·0001.
ond oSI IIIante 1n obtaining
· your FHA or VA home loon,
mortgage money olwoy s
available wilh our company
HOUSE . completely remod•led, 3
and our interest rote and f lnonocr•• · Will take rroiler in rrode.
clng term• or• more favorable
Will Gl or FHA. Fully carpeted.
thon local financ ing. Gallipolis.
S28.000 . Coii256· 132J.
PI-I . 446-1~17 .

(]

ITRAMPE'
I K) ()

2.82 acres . 3 miles from City
limits. county water . Ph
· 338-8871 or 446--434,.

.!AOHORRI

[) I I _ ()

8V OWNER: 2 bdr bi'ick ~ome , all

elec tric, newly carpeted , on Rt .

. . !~ S35 .ooq. c;:au ~~~~?.:.___ _

flcu, ,..,,.,.,.•• r00111, 1•'11 cJerical room and recep·

--·

- . , ... ,I roll.-ml . G•a tu,., &amp; 11r c -. Plrtt-clou
candlllan1 plentY • - ,.rllln, , S27S mo • . fttlono

..

BE THE FIRST TO SEE THIS ONE . Lovely 2 "ory in
town , 3 BR 's, 2 full baths, large LR , forma l dining rm .,
formal foyer , moder n ki1 chen, 2 WB f ireplaces, ful l
basemen t, gas heat and carport. Shown by appoint ment onlY

2SO ' x150' BUILDING LOT near EIJergreen , along
highway, rural water, pr ice $5,900 .

BUILDING ON UPPER 2ND
repair. Price reduced .

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31f, ACrlES SITUATED on the beaut iful Oh!o Rive_r
be low Eureka ~ Scen 1c view, lot and home, W1th ad~1 ·
tiona! acreage availab le, some aRpl 1a nces go w 1th
house. for only S19,SOO.

$47,900

s115,000

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE in the wilderness of the
. Wayne National Forest, 5 to 8 tracts of woodlanc. now
ava ilable adjoining thousands of acres of governmenf
land . Publ ic hunting, fishing and camping permitted .
Prices sf.srt at S2,.WO with f!nanclng available.

THrlEE BEDROOM, commanding view of t he Ohio
River . City water, f.a . fuel oil furna ce, loca ted on cor ner of Rt 1 and Rt. 218. Also 20'x30 ' bloc I&lt; bulldmg, ex cellent' re sidential · or commercia l loca tion. Pr :ce
$45,000 .00.

Brand new brick and frame, over 1500 sq. ft . _li ving
area . 3 BR, family ,rm . with fi~eplace,lg . eat-In k tlchen
equ ipped with range and refng. Attached garage . Still
time to choose our favoritE: carpet colors.

.,

COUNTRY MANOR- FIVE MILES OUT- 123 acres,
approx . 50 acres tillable , balance pasture, tob. base,
lots of fru if trees, spr ings, 2 wells, 2 ponds, rural water,
large bat n, milk parlor, several sheds. Ele.gant
colonial hom·e t.as been completely remodeled and
1eatures new vir1ylsiding, l'lew gutters, new plumbing,
modern kitchen. w-w carpet, cent. air, 3 or 4 BR 's. Call
tor an appoinfme'nt .

$35,900
Excellent condition. 24x57
double w ide on permanent
foundation . 3 BR , family
rm ., fully equipped kit
chen, d1n ing rm . and 2
batns. Cha 1n link fence
with 2 car garaljle on two
levetlots in Centenary .

111

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NEW LISTING : In GallipoliS , brick , 2 bedroom , fu l l
ba se ment , new carpet, central a.c ., atta ched garage .
· Here's one you won't have to
anything before mov ing in ... Call tor an!~·~;_r·~~~· --

$23,500

1:1011111. 11. Office lpoco In mot11 ond brlc~ bldg., Third
&amp; Otlvo . .xt to •••R• •nterpriHt, Inc. 3 priVIIO ol-

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RING IN THE PROFITS ~ Sma ll grocery and ga rage,
good Mom and Pop operation, eq u1pm en t and iniJen·
tor y in ::: luded, exce ll en1 gross . $55,000.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING, in Jackson, 0 ., now under
lease . Buy both far S40,000 .00.

hOme

hYge

$13,000

$57,750.00

MOST
ATTRACTIVE HOME
Beautiful , one of Its best,
Main ·St., Vinton, 3 B .R .,
bath, large formal D.R.,
delu•e bullt·ln kitchen, kit· ·
c henette,
L . R.
with
fireplace. basement, F .A.
fuel oil furnace1 large well
landscaped lot 97'x497',
gorog~ . !rant porch. One of
the best. Much more.
Shown by apPOintment.
.
1207

'We're The Neighborhood .Professionals"

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$21,500

.1 93

JUSTA LITTLE
BIT COUNTRY !
s rm s. &amp; bath, 3 bedrooms,
F.A . fuel 011 heat , screened
in porch , nlc:e level la t.
garden , lots ot fruit trees.
Vi ll age of Add ison SJ0,900.

POCKET THE RENTAL PROFITS - T hr ee story
buildmg downtown corner lot in Pom eroy . Has f 1rst
fl oor shop and office plu s two large aparTmen 1s, al l oc ·
cup 1ed . $40,000 .

J year old brick ranch in Gallipolis City School D istrict ,
Green Elemeritrv . 3 BR , 1112 baths . Fully carpeted ,
birch doors and woodwork, marble sills, crystal
chandelier, 2 ca,...fin ished garage only begins the I 1st of
extras available in this beautiful home.

$31,000

$32,000
GOLDEN POST SPECIAL
This very nice. t,lome has a
slate entry , li ving room ,
family room : rt;"\ing area, 3
bedroom;.•\ ~ •ths , very
moder ~ , 14n
with
dishwa _, ,
ti l .. . lSal,
range and "ft\~e_ 'ur~l
gas neac~'utl'V-, oor
garage ~~ '-~ uom e has
over UOu sq . ft . over all, on·
ly 5 yrs . old. Sitting on a
good size lot . Close to
Holzer Medical Center . All
this for under $40,000 .00. 1

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COMMERCIAL LAND FOR SALE - Front s on US 35
at Rodney , Ohio . For more mforma tion ca ll Strout
)&lt;ealty, 446·0008.

$52,000.
$44,500

4 acres on

FARM FOR SALE - 99 ACRES - All c lea'n , mostly
tillable, prese ntly in gra ss, 2 ponds, sever al good ba r_ns
&amp; sheds, 3 cow mi lk parlow, tab . base , 12x60 mob•le
hOme is. now rented, 6.50 ft fr ontage on State R1 . 554 at
Eno, Ot1io, 2.000 ft . frontage on county rd . $15,000 . Call
tor m or e deta i ls.

.......

NEW LISTING 139,900
All perma stone home in
Crown City, featuring 3
bedrooms, liv ing room ,
family room, wood burner
&amp; all th e essential S any
hOme could need . It sits on
a beautifully landscaped
lot wni ch has several ve ry
productive fruit tr es. Th is
nome is priced ·well below
replacement cost . Call for
~ 173
more details .

PROFITABLE
GOING BUSINESS
Here is the link to your
future . Profi1able buisness,
ever.ything looks exc iting ,
Grocery store, carry out ,
beer &amp; wine , most all
~ulpment goes. Large ser ·
vice 5tation business ,
.;everal new and rec apped
tires are included . Six
room apartment built at
back of •busi ness, treiler
pad, out bldgs ., 21h acres ,
gOOd bu i lding sites, tobacco
base Much more. Please
call for apt. Selling Pr ice
$.05,000.
, 171

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BUILDING OR MOBILE HOME SITE Glassburn Rd . in Springfield Twp $4, 000 .

QUALITY HOME overlooking the Ohio Ri ver Va lley . A
pa noramic view ex tending from Gallipolis to tile Si iiJer
M e morial Bridge. 4 bedroom, ca r peted home, 2 1h
baths, central a.c., nat. gas, 2 w .b . f irepl aces, fam ily
room, beautiful yard with swimming pool and bath
house. ThIS is one of the finest homes in Gallipolis Twp .
and is situa ted on 2.7 acr s of land . snOwn by appint ·
menr 1
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The lawn is being landscaped and seeded, ju st a few
mor e days and this beauf 1ful colonial will be ready for
you ! 3 BR. livmg rm . ha s p ic ture window and
' fireplace Ki tchen equipped with range, hood, disp , and
dishwasher . Formal dining area , 2 ' car insulated
garage . Heat pump , cen t. air . Plush carpet throughout.

CENTURY 21

SOlD

EXQUISITE HOME
Bea utiful 5.73 acres, some
woodland is the setting for
this gracious bri(: k hom e, 3
or 4 bedrooms. Jill bath ,
modern bu ilt -in kitchen
wi th sevel;'al nice cabinets,
fami ly room with w .b.f .p.,
full bsement w ith a canning
kt1chen . Th is spacious
horne has a 2 car garage
with au tomatic opeiler.
Central air , large ni ce back
pa tio, concre te drive . Also
shop or ex tr.a garage &amp; an
• alum . bl dg. with shed. This
is a quali ty built &amp; im·
maculatel y kept home.
Lovely flow ers &amp; landsca p·
ing. Many, many extras.
Pi c tures or words cannot
desc ribe th is home . You
must see It!
t 161

BriCk and cedar ranch has c;eramic tile foyer, . ~ir
rored walls, massive stone firelace covers one l1v 1ng
r ;n wall, pluSh carpeting, formal d1ning, eat in ki_t
chen, 3 I g. BR. 2 tul baths. 20' deck plus concrete pat•o
with brick grill tor ou tdoor entertaining 1 car garage.
Over .,., acre velve ty lawn . Irres istible ins1 de and out!

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BEAUTIFUL
RIVERVIEW
Thi S 3 bedroom mobil e
home sits high a nd dry on
1.523 ac r es and nvertook.s
the Ohi
Spend
evenings
just en ·
joying th L _,._cnerv from the
front por ch . This proper t y
won 't last long at SI 1,500T
Ca ll far an appoinment today I
N 176

WITHIN WALKING
DISTANCE OF SCHOOLS
City property. 2 story, 4
bedrooms, ga-s heat. Very
reasonably priced !
N149

Immaculate and charming, 3 BR brick ·ranch in
beautiful resident ia l area near Holzer Hospital. All
electl"tc , fully carpeted . Well planned kithen has range,
dishwasher, disposal. Snack bar separates work area
from formal dining area . Ut ility rm. with Hotpolnt
washer and dryer . K ing sized garage for 2 cars. Nearly
lfl acre level/awn.

BEAUTIFUL
RIVER
VIEW
Buy two for the price of
one! Thi s home has 3 large
bedrooms,
full
bath ,
showe r in basement, lots of
trees ahd shrubbery, and a •
nice fireplace in the living
room. PLUS A RENTAL.
C ~ t _l for appointment! # 139

RIVER FRONTAGE
Storv and half house, 5' rm., bath , 2 extra storage
rooms ups1airs , . full basement ; gas furnace . House
needs some repair. Shrubbery, trees, very scenic area ,
close to town. 2 acres plus or minus, extra lot . _Priced to
..,II , $"2,500.
I 210

CENTURY 21

Jim Stute s
Even1ngs
446-2885

PLACE
owner is leav ing state and needs to move
this all brick home located off St. Rt. 35 in
Plea~ant Valley EStates . J BR , 1112 baths,
modern built-in kitchen , living room , gas
heat, central air, double car garage. Can
be seen anvii[nP_.(.heck this one out! I 214

HOUSE HUNTING?
6 rooms, bath , e)(tens1vely
remodeled, modern built-in
kitchen, formal O.R., 2
B.R .• full basement . Can be
purchased with 3 acres or
22 acres. Tobacco base ,
some timber . FamHy mov ·
ing, will take nice mobile
home on trade -in. GOOd
neighborhood. S3S,OOO Total
Price .
• #211

CALL NOW
42 acres. untouched at
$10,900.
nll

Merrill torte·
Evenings
37•·2184

POSSESSION - FHA·VA or Con·
Anv way vou go this 3
ventional bedroom ranch is ideal tor vour fam i ly .
Very clean &amp; very well kept with a cozy liv·
ing r-oom , lovelv eat -in kitchen, large bl\th,
utility room &amp; garage . A yard witn louver
fence &amp; sundeck . Ci ty schools - $36,900.

A LOT FOrl THE MONEY - That'; wh;tf you get with
this 3 yr . old brick rancher . 3 BR 's, 1•12 baths, 16x22
family room with heatilator fireplace, fully equipped
kitchen, double garage, central AC, central "acuum,
woodburner, and much more .
-

. $53,500
BARGAIN OF THE YEAR
Modern home, 7 rooms, bath, 1 story house
only 1 yr . old, also has full finished base·
ment , •moctern kttchen, D.R., formal L .R .
w tth firepla ce, F .R., util ity rm., workshop,
8. study . Patio, rose garden, beautiful
shrubbery, good garden. Appealing over
a ll to any one. ove"r an acre of ground .
$35,000.
, 209

&lt;&gt;IIICK

PRIVATE .... NOT ISOLATED - A fan ·
tast ic sett1ng on a qu iet Cui de sac - (.7
acre wi th lots of tall trees &amp; creek ). A
quai •IY brick home with 3 bedroom s, at
tracti ve living r oom w ·firelac e, 1•;., baths,
bu ilt · in kit chen. new carpet, full basement
w rec . room piUs garage . L eSs than· 1 mile
tram H .M .C . M 1d $50' s

1b?, ACRES . 8 room house ,

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found

This ad

IB446-661o

ESTATE AGENCY

'

N.EW
LISTING
Secluded . 3 bedrooms,
t~n ch , family room , large
rec'reation room . built-in
litchen, separate dining
.rea. carport. patio. ONn
Water,
wood
burning
fireplace, and l;.- acre only .
~20, 500 . 00 .
NEW LISTING - . Really
nice 3 bedroom ranch, in
lhe country , close to
Pomeroy , wood burning
firep la ce, large 2 car
garage . Carpeting , small
'arde n space and 2•12
acres . A good buy 525,000.
~EW LISTING Would
you ' bel ieve in Middleport,
a nice 1 floor plan , 3
~ed room s
with din ing
room . enc lo sed porch,
large workshop . garage ,
Plus a 12 x 60. Furnish.ed
newer tra iler . plus another
tr ailer , plus a nother lot for
)railers. All rented. Total
tnoo th ly gross $370 .00 101'
on ly S29,500 .00.
4'0M EROY - $6 . 7~5 OR
make an offer. not bad 11/,
.story home with f ull
pase men t , needs some
ren ovat ion .
fi ACRES - In Syracuse ,
inodern 1 floor plan . wood
Our"ning · f i repla ce.
3
bedrooms, large kitchen ,
din ing room . IJiew of the
:Beaut 1ful Ohio . 2 ca r
garage , bea uti fu l ba ck
yard for cookouts. etc .
f'ski ng 532.000 .00 .
MINI FARM - CLOSE IN
~
Ni ce
J
bed roor:n
remodeled home , fr u1 t
Cellar , barn, milk house ,
Pasture , fenc ing , large
9 oo d
garden ,
ofher
1eatures. over 5 acres .
516 .500 00.
GOOD STARTER HOME
- 4 lofs, 11/:z story frame
with fu ll basement . Storage
bu ild ing . M.any feature s in
to wn . A real story at
$9,500.00.
LIST WITH US FOR
PHOTO
LISTING
6ERVICE , MEMBERS OF
INDEPENDENT
REAL
J;STATE CONSULTANTS.
NATIONWIDE
REFERRAL
'SERVICE.
: HENRY E . CLE~AND
,
REALTOR
1 HANK . KA.THY , LEONA
'
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 ·2259 , 991 ·619!

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23 LOCUST STREET

THE WISEMAN REAL

' : POMEROY; O.

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~ ~AIN

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TWO lOR MOBILE HOME in coun·
try. ~pprox . V, acre, near Rio
Grande . Coll4,.6·.t313
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FARM HOUSE with or without fur ·
nitur•. Avallab• In October.
Call 379-2552 for intjr~tlew . lrl.
nighT or wlftkend.

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SALE BV OWNER
l026.first Av.nue. Rl..,erview properly with frontage on Flrtl ond
Second Avenue1 . 8 room1 . 211,
both1 2 car vorog•. Colt week
days, 446·"'383 ; evenings and
Sunday ,.4tl-Ot39 Shown by op·

GRACIOUS LIVING----.,· !
IN TOWN

Holl'f~

Lorgo Vldorl•n
with 2IIIICI bolhs ond IIJ both. 4
bedroomo, llbrory, dining room, llvlng room with
.....,.ry wociclwwk, 5 firopiecoo . tully IMullt.d ond
. . . m windows. 2·tOr gouge on olorgo lot ovorloololnt
tht Ohio on lslondolde. A flno pllco lo roiH o fomlly In
·groclous comtort. Cell Manning Wothorholt 446-•MJ
O.ys ar w.oi:Jt Evening• lor oppointmont.

~ACRES .

RurOI water top , born ,
pond, weu fenced mecdows ,
pa•tur• , 1ome timbe r, Mouth of
Thompson Rd. ond Rt. 160 . Coli
•46·'1805 or 388· ~ 1 8 .

_ .J..~i ntm:-:•n:::I':'"::.:.:.
" 'Y~·...,..,----

1.6 ACRES, nice building 1ite,
near grade sChool , rural water

8YOWNER
2 bdr home in country. Beoutlf~l
setting All modern . On one
aerr. lot , or adieU tiona I land
available. lloclllop rood, Coli
440·3997 or 2•5-9213 .

THREE LOTS IN SUNKIST VILLAGE,
oH o~ Rt. 35. Good location,
concrete 1tr. .fl . Lot sixe: 96 x
177 . Caii446· 257J or &lt;146· 11 7 1

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ovailoble , jutt off Rt . 7, 8 miles
out. Coll256·0.094 .

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START RAISING &amp; GRAZ- &lt;
lNG - 110 A. form On COUll·
ty rd., includes 4 IR horne, ~

several barns ancl biGtl., ·
mineral rightl, 2 ,._.., 1
Walnut
Twp.
US,Oot.
STROUT
REALTY .

446·0008 .

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ONE AND A HALF ACRES, lent~
wirh water tap . 3 rm , but~ .
Located ot EvergrMn. Cil
... ~ 1771 before l0:30em Met
after 5:30pm ,
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· 0-8- The Sunday Tinll's:..'-;l·lltlfll'l, SundH)'. Au~ . 27. 1!178

244 youths ribbon winners at '78 Meigs Fair

Beat.·••

POMEROY - Two hun· Holder Helton , Brenda
dred and 44 Meigs County Holter, Diana Kesterson ,
students won ribbons at the Scott Phillips, Tara Dawn .
Meigs County Fair for their Bacon, l.ynn Epple, Sus1e ·
school exhibits .
Barker, Steve Crow, Danny
Mrs . Gretta Suttle, a Thomas, Donald Stone,
Bob Hoeflich
county school supervisor, Debbie Boring, Linda Riggs,
announced the winners Brenda targent , Marissa
CHRISTY BAER will be marking his 92nd birthday this Friday . Of the total 89 Baker, Amy Blake.
Thursday. Christy has won the admiration of many with his received blue ribbons· and a
Cathy l.audermllt, Anthony
hanging right in there on his three-wheel bicycle. Cards may premium of $1.50, ninety-six Rowe, Mindy Spencer, Tim
he sent to him in care of his daughter and son-in-law, Mary and woh~l'ed ribbons and a $1 Cassell, Teresa Little, Crys·
premium ' and 59 won white tal Manley, Kristi Richmond,
Bill Grueser, 312 Condor St., Pomeroy.
ribbons and a premium of 50 Jeff Acre, Dave Dodson,
LUCKY KIDS in the Southern Ux:al School District will cents. Two hundred and 76 · Deanna Henderson, Shannon
have Valerie Johnson as their teacher this year . Valerie, a other students exhibiting McCarty, She!Ia Pullin,
resident of the Racine area, was hired as ari elementary received green participants David Shuler, Traci Walker;
Gayla Haning, Jon Perrin,
teacher by the district's board of education Thursday night. ribbons.
Winning ribbons and Sue Norman, Philip Tromm.
Valerie is a beautiful girl with a matching disposition .
Tisha Jarvis, Crystal Bur·
premiums were ~ .
Blue Ribbon Winners
man, Geneva . Wise, Danny
JOHN II. KA UFF, 238 Lincoln St., Middleport, was the
Shelley Bears, Mary Hibbs, Blackson, John Longstreth,
winner of a $50 savings bond awarded by the Citizens National
Bank as a result of its display booth at the Meigs County Fair. Sheila Koenig, Tammy Curtis Lambert , Cindy
Visitors to the booth register~ for the bond with no ~urchase Sayre, Betty Jo Hunt, David Peyton, Mark Corbitt, Carla
involved of course . Ull'i Kloes and Janet Horky, Metgs Htgh Edwards, John Edwards , King, Michl King, Gerald
students: had a ball staffing the bank's booth during the week. Scott Starcher, Barbara Moore, April Brickles, Jodi
Person, Donna Person, Harrison, Barbara Hatfield,
Richard
Bartimus, Travis Darren Hayes, Patty l.an·
DON'T LET the new votarnatic scare you.
Newlun,
Mandy Bissell, daker, Doug Eblin, Jay
You'll be using the little machines to cast your votes in
Chapman,
Chris Hemsley, Jack Howell, Kin)
Debbi.
e
future elections. They are quite simple to opera te and there
will be someone at 'your polling place to provide you with some . LaDeaux, Cindy Halley, Roush.
Miller,
Tom
Mike Kennedy, Tam.m y
basic instruction of how the machine works. The votes, as a · Me Iissa
result of the use of the votamatics, will be counted in no time at Morrisey, Mary Parker, Meadows, VickY Deem, Kent
all and finally , we'll be getting away from the long, long hours Robin White, Scott Gheen, Woife, Paul Ours, Tommy
Carl Moodispaugh, Melvin Greathouse,. Richard
waiting for election results to be announced .
Dorothy Johnston and Evelyn Cook were demonstrating Mullen , Joey. Poulin, Mike McHaffie, Vicky Barber ,
Wade Connolly , Dencil
the new equipment at one booth during the fair and Mr . and Stone.
Melissa Wise , Charles HudsOn, Paula Justis, Jqy
Mrs. Chester Wells at another booth . Incidentally, Mr . and
Mrs. Wells are certainly enthusiastic about the approaching Davis , Kat.rina Donohue, Stobart , Angie Hill, Mark
Porter, Roger Dowell,
winter and enjoying .their fireplace when things get tough. And Rhqnda Haddox , Jason
Drenner, Nikki Whitlatch , Damon Fisher , Greg Hoff,
they may, so such an attitude Will go along way.
We ndy Barker,. Stanley
Rachel Reiber , Ronnie Rice,
Brian Warden , Wendy Wolle,
THE ANNUAL pretty baby and Little Mister and Miss Boorne, Donnie Bunce, Eddie
Baer,
·usa
Frymyer,
Scott
Wendy Wolfe, Tracy Cleland,
Meigs County Fair contests had over_170 entries and that's
Hanning,
Missy
Snyder,
Gina
Dixie Dugan, Lois Frank,
quite a lot of participation, The Middleport Business and
Foil
rod,
Laren
Suzan
Thoma,
Sandy
Wolfe, Chris Deemer,
Professional Women 's Club with Eloise Wilson as chairman
handled all of the paper work involved and did a great job on it Mattox, Bobby Staats, Roger
Carol Hendrix, Jane Jett,
. Dingess, Kristy Haynes,
- again.
Richie V~nHouten, Dickie
WE PICTURED an ·•unidentified rider" in photographs Jarvis, Robert Bishop,
taken during the county fair. The horse show rider later was Angela Myers, Paul Council,
identified as Tammy Ervin, Route 1, Racine - one member of Sherry Sayre, Phillip King ,
a nice family - that of Mr . and Mrs. Howard Ervin, Route 1, Donald Lambert, Kevin
Mowery.
Racine .
Mary Moore, Terry Smith,
FAMILY REUNIONS are really happening this sununer. Angie Pratt, Robbie Cun·
ASHTABULA, Ohio iUPI)
I'm sure this has been a record year. Be assured we're doing ningham, Jim Hupp, Kim
- Residents of ·a five-mile
our best to get them figured out and published. We have been Morrow , Linda O'Brien,
area were evacuated Friday
informed that the name of Elizabeth V~ughan was omitted Tonja Salser,
Danelle
after· a chemical tank truck
from the Lambert-Johnson event.
Weddl e, Sherry Beegle ,
collided with a flatbed truck
Robin
Burnem,
Brian
on Interstate 90, and leaked
LET'S TAKE thai one more time ...
Cleland, Tammy Ervin, Scott
phosporous trichlo'ride
We're happy to get letters to the editor. Let's mention Frederick, Kathy Lawson,
fumes .
again, however, that all letters must· be signet\ - like in ink. Kell y Pickens, Rita Sloter,
The two truck drivers,
Your name can be withheld from public~t.ion but it must be Mary Winebrenner, Cindy
three
'Sta.te Highway Patrol
signed . An unsigned letter just can't cut it. Sorry 'bout that.
Evans, Bruce Johnson , Zane
troopers and Philip BaM!II, 25,
Beegle, Becky Lee, Greg
WANDA EBUN must have been leal surprised to find DuVall, Patricia Pauley, of Jefferson, a State Transportation Department worker
herself listed as a senior citizens bus driver in Friday's edition. John
Pickens , George
at
were
hospitalized
Th e driver is Wanda Vining who also must have experienced Weddle, Marty Cleland , ChMs
Ashtabula General 'Hospital.
some sort of surprise to be omitted.
Jewell, Billy Jones , Sarah
Brazil was listed in guarded
Wiles. Robbie Delong. Legina
condition
and the other~ in
MRS . MURIEL Bradford, 5ecretary of the Meigs Fair Hart. Traci Hubbard , Kelly
fair
condition.
Board , reported Saturday that this year 's fair had really done Grueser. Eric Thorne, Paula
The troopers were believed
well in spite of the fact that a rain hit the grounds Saturday Winebrenner .
to
have inhaled the fumes
evening and played havoc with that last big spurt in tbe
Red Ribbon Winners
while
investigating the acattendance .
·
Teresa Wilson, Cheryl
cident.
The drivers were
For the year the gate receipts were down $94 but Folmer, Aaron Parker,
for injuries suffered
admitted
membership tickets were up $144. Proceeds from the rides Jennifer Grover. Willie Hill.
in
the
crash.
were also up to the tune of $371 over the previous y~ar .
Melvin Reed, Becky Ed·
Interstate 90 between Ohio
- ·wards, Steven Barber,
193 and 97 had to be closed for
Mit A!'{D MRS . James Weber are living in a Presbyterian Elmo
Pierce,
Kristi
much of Friday night.
Church housing complex in Lakeland, Fla ., these days.
Sheppard, Traci
New·
'
The Wehers were back a few weeks ago and sold one of lun . . Robin
Chapman,
their homes and held a ~blic sale to dispose of some great Steven Barber, Elmo Pierce;
antiques that they collected over the years. They resided be· Kristi Sheppard. Traci
tween Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Middleport since the J9[&gt;0s Newlun, Robin Cha pman ,
but now are a little more permanently located in F1orida. We
do hope that they will manage an occasional visit " back
home." Th e Webers' address is 6 Terrace Gardens, Lakeland ,

Of the Bend
By

F1a ., 33801.

BIHAitPA TCH

-

breed~ . all style s Ph . d4 6·02:il

wA USEON, Ohio !UP)) - and a friend who was dri ving
Ftve people were killed and the van , Bernard Schilling of
th ree critically In jured Hill sdail•, Mich.
Fnda y when two tru cks
The ot her Victim was
Oh1u Turnpike.
.
The Ohio Highwa y Patrol
said three of those killed and
the t hr ee injured were
members of the Simon
Graver family of Camden ,
Mi ch., who were returning
hom e fro m a v·acation .
Killed were Simon and
Emma Graver, bot h :.17, their
1 7 -y car~vld

Dlt A GO NWVND
K!:NN~l
.A.K C

d o gs

a • a •

St mr on. Jr ., 20,

Hubbard, Ohi o. the driver of
one of the trucks.
Injured were three other
Graver children : Emma. 12,
Silvia, 13, and Martha . B.
They were taken to the Fulton
County Medical · Center at
Wauseon and then trans~
fcrred to the Medical College
uf Ohio at Toledo.

•

A! Ca.

•

4-~

To·d ay
av

e

You' \le sold your home .
• Your buyer obtained new
• finanCi ng with a new mort .
• gage . There fore , your old
m o r t g a g e
wa s ,
• undoubtedl y, paid in full
• with part of your proceeds
e from the sale . Paying off a
• mortgage in advance of i ts
• or i g ina l · loan length is
known in the trade as
• " prepa yment ."
•
Man y le nd ers today ·
• req u ire a prepayment
e penalty if a mortgage · is
• paid off pr ior to its orig inal
due date , and you'll find

e lhls can amount to several

• hu hdred dollars.

•

'

It you paid th is penalty.

·• don ' t

forget

t hat

the

e
e

br eds

0,

~OUW COCKt:K ~PA NIH p u pp • e~
; ono . old Call 74&gt;·!&gt;0'1&gt; a&lt;
L-45 · ~~97

HO OF HOL LOW Ho rse s Buy sell
rrode or 1fa•n. New and used

l.!I~ I NC, 3TAJ.i Ke n nel s. ~oo r d •n g

e
e

LO VA!Ht WHIH snow d1d! greot
P't' IU: N~~ !;,
fl uppies
Pho ne,

and QIOO rTIHlQ ·oi l b1eed\ .
Che stw e Jb7·02(jj7 or J67.0106

I

•

I b l 4 1:167

J HJH .

AK C , IRJ~H ) HTI::N puppies

S~

eoch Call :J0&lt;4 -T/ J . 5S:J8

AK( fU GI~HH~U m ole old E n gh~h
from •
~hee pdog . Good· w l th child, en

If there is an\-thlnt we tJ
can do to help' you in the t
field ol real estate plea" •
or

drop

'in

THIS SPACE .
.RESERVED
FOR YOUR
LATE MODEL

·1-976 .FORD

Classic
black finish wlth
matching landau top and 60-40
seating . Options you would
expect like cruise control. tilt
wheel, power windows, seat , door
locks, automatic temp, control,
air and chrome plated wheels .
Only ~6.510 miles on ttl is stunning
coupe .

Bei ge fini sh wi th a conlrd sfing
ta n vinyl roof and ma tching sport
1nter ior . Equ ipmen t 1ncl udes an
economi ca l b eng i ne , Pow er
steeri ng . fac ror v air condi t ioning
~nd styled r oad wh ee l s.

Smith Buick Pontiac

Prked AI

1t •

LEADINGHAM
REAL e
ESTATE. 512 Second Avo ., e '

• penaltf the same as
• lnteres - which can be a

Glllipolis. Phone ""'·" "· •
We're here to help.
•

!
"
·~···················~·····

~- - --

SWAIN

AUCTION

smu

ICenn•th lw•in. Attct.
Corn•r Third &amp; 011••

.'

1976 DODGE
ASPEN

Vol. 2!1, No. !14

1970 BUICK
LESABRE
This full size sedan is clean Inside
and out. Glacier blue exterior

equipped with Chrysler's famous

Options include air conditioning ,
power steering, poY¥,. brakes
and AM radio. new orem lum
tir es. 78 Limited 1radc . 50,804
miles.

With matching cloth interior .

slant six engine , automatic transm ission and power stHrlng. This
loca l one owner has only 17,293
miles .

See This Hard To Find
Moctel NO'(f

•3295

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
Come in &amp; browse around.

40 MORE
TO CHOOSE FROM

~BAlH

•BASSINETTES

•TOILET TRAINERS

•BED RAllS

•WOOD HIGH CHAIRS

•DRESSING TABLES

•HAMPERS

•TOY CHESTS

•CAR SEATS

•SWINGS

·•STROUERS

.

•WALKERS
•DRESSERS

.

•BABY GIFT SETS
•atESTS

'Eiberfelds
In Pomeroy
.
'

SMITH SPEAKS
Republican
attorney
general candidate George
C. Smllh, a Columbus
lawyer, spoke brieRy this
morning on the steps of .t he
Meigs County Courthouse.

Smith
attacks

Brown

HOSTEssES for the annual pienic for the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce were 1-t,
Lillian Moore and Allie Simon .
.-.:}::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: .·..·.·

ITwo persons injured I
..

)

.·.·

t
r}

·.;:

in four auto
wrecks
.

Two persons were treated
for injuries sustained during
four weekend accidents in·
vestigated by the Gallia·
Meig• Post, Highway Patrol.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-vehicle crash
Saturday, at 9:55a.m., on SR
7, at the junction of CR 30, in
Meigs County.
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Patricia
Circle, 30, Racine, turned
south from CR 30 into the
path of a vehicle operated by
James
McDougal,
23,
Pomeroy, north bound on 7.
The Circle auto struck the

" Ohio taxpayers 'cannot
afford an attorney general
who hands out pay raises
averaging $2,700 a year for
each of his employees,"
Franklin County Prosecuting
Attorney George C. Smith
said Monday. Speaking at
Pomeroy, Smith called the
attorney general's spending
of tax dollars for such in·
flationary
pay
raises,
"disgustingly wasteful".
"It's a crying shame that
all Ohioanll couldn't get that
kind of a pay raise to try and
keep ahead oE inflation last
year," Smith said in speeches
So successful was the first
during a campaign swing
through southern
Ohio bicycle rodeo of Boy Power,
Inc., held Sunday afternoon
Monday.
Springs
Employees of the attorney at the . Rock
general received average pay Fairgrounds that another
raises of $2,764 In fiscal1978, similar event is being
equal to a 17.6 per cent in· planned for next month.
crease over the previous
Officials of Boy Scout
year, State Office of Troop 249, Pomeroy, which
will receive the proceeds
1 Manageme~t and Budget from
., records show.
the event, were on hand
The records show the at· to conduct the races featured
torney general's 648 em· during the day and they were
ployees got pay raises assisted by troop members'.
totaling $1.8 million in fiscal
Cash prizes were awarded
1978. Records also show the . to first place winners in the
attorney general had to get events lor youngsters five
an additional $89,t49 from the through 18. Overall winner of
State Controlling Boa~d the day,- Craig Bolin,
because he overspent the Rutland, was presented a
1
' legislature's budgeted at- trophy for accumulating the
torney general appropriation most points in all events.
in 1978.
First place winner$ in·
Although the general eluded:
assembly appropriated $1~. 8
Wheelle race, age ll·l4,
for the attorney Craig Bolin : wheelie, 7-10;
in 1978, It was the Brian Korn; blg wheel, Jason
f SE!Vt!inthyear in a row he went Wright; barrel race, Rodney
red. Brown's deficit Roush; motor cross, 7-10,
(J•spend!tog over the last seven Brian Kom; motor cross, II·
is over $U mllllon.
14, Mike Stone; motor cross,
""'h•·n the common 15-tB, Rodney Roush and
In this state were Cr1ig Bolln, tied for first; two
get11lng pay ralsea aversging by four race, 7·10, Jeff Epple;
and seven per cent two by four race, 11·14, Craig
year, I don't see how the Bolin; Jtl-speed, Craig Bolin;
ltttlmi'Y general can justify !).inch bicycle, 7·10, lohn
tax dollars to dlah out Epple; !).inch bicycle, 11-14 ,
kinds of fat pay raises VIncent Knight; 15-18, 20 inch
employees,". Smith bicycle, James Gheen.
Bolin accumulated 20
points while l!ecomlnli the
overall winner. Secooo place
went to Rodney Roush with 16
polnta.
'
&lt;lla!nnan was Bob Annes,
scoutmaster 1nd other
workers 'Include . H.k

'
'
McDougal vehicle in the left
front.
.
Both drivers claimed in·
jury, but were not immediately treated.
A passenger in the Me·
Dougal. a.uto ,' Patricia McDougal, 23, Pomeroy, wa s
transported by SEOEMS to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
where she was treated and
released.
Both vehicles incurred
severe damage. Circle was
cited on charges of failure to
yield.
The patrol investigated a
three -vehic le
accident

Bicycle ·rodeo
huge success

TUBS

•FOLDING METAL HIGH CHAIRS

.

Fifteen Cents

'4495

Forest green metalliC exterior
with matching cloth interior . Th~s
economy model from Dodge Is

•CAR BEDS

•STROll.-A-BOUTS

en tine

-at

wheel , cruise control, wire wheel
covers, accent stripes, much
more. Driven only 23,4"9 miles .

Needs
'For The Baby

•BABY CARRIERS

e

•

..

vinyl 60-40 seating and a gold
landau top . Equipped with AM·
FM B track. ·air conditioning , !Itt

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•PORTA-CRIBS

contract providing a 19.5 percent wa~e and cost of living possihle thing" that could happen to the service and its committee for the three uni ons, called Bolger's position
increase that was within a&lt;tmlnistration anti-inflation employees, he said.
·" irresponsible " and a reflection of his "inexperience in labor
guidelines. The contract would raise the average worker 's
Federal mediator Wayne Horvitz met with both sides in the relations .n
salary from SJ5;8n to $19,200 in three years.
dispute today, and a spokesman for the Feder-al Mediation and
"We think he 's being heavy-handed in relying solely on the
" I could not in good conscience agree to anything more atthe Conciliation Service said the discussions were going on without law to settle a labor dispute ," LaPenta told a news conference
bargaining table now," Bolger told the annual convention of a timetable .
late Sunday. "There's nothing in the framework of that law
the National League of Postmasters, a rural postmasters
" We are trying to find some way to resolve the situation that prohibits him from sitting down at the table and
group .
now," spokesman John Rogers said. Three of the postal unions negotiating a settlement at this time, which would be
Bolg_er said postal employees "certainly have ' the right to were represented, Ro~ers said, but they were not meeting acceptable tb everybody."
face-to-face with negotiators for the Postal Service .
reject the contract, but they don't have the right to strike."
LaPenta is an official of the 40,00tJ.member National P&lt;lst·" People are running into each other in the halls, but they are Office Mail Handlers union . which rejected the contract but
Any walkout by postal employees could spell the end of
Postal Service control i&gt;f first class mail, he warned, noting a not sitting across the table from each other,'' Rogers said.
did not give it~ offi cers a mandate for setting a strike deadline.
1970 walkout lost the Postal Service customers that never
The letter carriers' union constitution called for a walkout at That union wa s expected to go aloi1g the larger unions' action.
returned. The Postal Service fa ces increa~ing , competition midnight tonight. President Emmet Andrews of the 280,000
Bolger is under pressure to hold down the money package
from pri~a.te delivery firms.
ll.
member American Postal Workers Union was under pressure in the contract for two reasons: he says it will a'llow him to
"Frankly, I can think of no greater way to help ti!Qse who . to set a strike for midnight Wednesday -five days after union prevent a postal rate hike for 2'h to 3 years; and President
want to repeal our monopoly on first class mail than for our members voted to reiect a three-vear contract.
Carter is pushing for restraint to help hold down inflation .
James LaPenta, secretary oi the bargaining coordinating
employees to strike," Bolger said. A strike is the "wn.,t

,

finished in ivory white with gold

191

---·-·-

Pomeroy·Middlepllrt, Ohio ·
Monday, August 28. 1978

ELITE ·

BUICK
PONTIAC

.

~

A super intermediate from Ford,

TRADE-IN.

•2995

GMAC AND BANK
FINANCING

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Po~tmaster General William
refusing to reopen contract·bargaining, today warned
representing 500,000 workers a postal strike could
eoparcHze the future of the Postal Service.
Bolger's remarks carne amid continued mediation with
union leaders in an effort to avert an illegal strike
~reate1oed to begin at midnight.
Leaders of the largest postal unions have refused to indicate
·~~",: !bey would honor or ignore a federal court order
"'
a walkout.
.
.
§~~~ J . Joseph Vacca of the 180,000.member National
of Letter Carriers scheduled a mld-day news
to announce whether his members would honor the
order.
·
Bol.ger, who met informally Sunday with the heads of three
"""'"•• said today he would not return to Ute bargaining table,
would honor tlle results of compulsory arbitration .
The postal unions last week rejected a proposed thre.;,year

New limited trade .

•a d dle• . Ruoh Ree ' e' Albany
(OI 4) bqEI:J'JCXJ

e Internal Revenue Service
e treats · the prepayment

I

All

Jb7-02 '12 .

valuable deduction
your income tax .
e 5 7 ~ 91:iS ··tll1 o r 9n.nos
But , in spite of the tax e f!OU I( HALF lf! sh Se tttH ond hall
br~ak; , always try to •
Cerrnan shor t ho n pups mole
bargatn for the smallest •
f-'crnole 1egr!&gt;lttred 'J ~eo r old
prepayment penalty or ~o
German !&gt;hort hou '1'-'/ 1 ~ 40
penalty at al l. In tact , tn •
many states , consumer . e
or iented laws have been e
passed which prohibit any •
prepayment penalt ies after •
the home loan has been in
effect from three to f i ve •
years .
e
•
• ,

phone

1976 BUICK UMITED
2 DR OOUPE

•BASSINEITE PADS

Coli

Booodlng

•e
e
e

PREPAYMENT PENALTIES

•4395

Rt&gt;JNG &gt;IAR K ~ NNH

•

Willis T. L.eadinghlm
Realtor

•8990

•PLAYPEN PADS

groomi ng.

i·nterior . Equipped with air
conditioning, power steering &amp;
brakes . This locally owned
automobile has only 25,6S2
careful miles . New Buick trade .

19,323 miles .

•BUMPER PADS

Che5.h 1re .

saddle vinyl top and matching

leather interior . A cadillac
clclssic with all the options you
would expect and driven only

AKC H!:G Gt:fi:MAN w' r eho lf ed
p o 1n ted pupp•es . ' b wk ~
l or
hu n t or ~how . Call HCl 100tJ
and

Chestnut fin ish with a contrasting

matching

padded landau top and oxblood

•MATTRESSES

Oober

mbn Ph 44b 7795

eal •
. sta ll.J ••

a

•CRIBS

b• eeds also AK C reg

e

finish with

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT 3RD FLOOR

HILl C Rl: ~l
MNNH !:,
boord1 ng
l o c.l.t.es /01 Io rge o r s mall

e. _A ..a.a ..a.._. \

Platin~m

Warning issued; Bolger ·won't reopen talks

1976 FORD
.ELITE

1977 CADIUAC
EIOORAOO

•3395

and

Jt.7-0!0b

~

.

( A TH:RY
Chow ( how

S10mese

Brilli ant black exter i or with
match i ng
custom
Inter lor .
Equipment includes 4 speed
transmission
and
AM -FM
cassette radio. Driven only 12,635
careful miles. Nice.

H 1m a loyon
c ot s
N ow
a v adoble
f- lame
Po1nt
H,m aloyon and Bl ue Poi nt
~ · omese K•llen o; 4A b &lt;il:l 44

son Simon Jr .,

~~ll,lll=" _.....~~

O A

. HATCHBACK

evacuated

WOODS
Pt:T
GltOOMING t-AClll ll~~ Pro ·
l e ~s i o n ol Se rv ices altered &lt;Oi l

Five die on Ohio Turnpike

1978 CHEV. CHEVETTE

1976 FORD MAVERICK
2 DR

C ~NHNAitY

Teaford, Minla Conger,
Angell' Bostick, Pat Circle,
Dion Jones, Melanie Van·
Meter, Michael Deem,
Wendell Clark, Usa Parsons,
Sean Riffle, Terry Bell,
Teresa Hill, Chris Hobba,
Lori Grueser, Becky Adkins,
Lori Stewart, Mark Salser.

QUALitY CARS

SAVE$$$

Hoarding ,

Carl. Davies, David Hobbs,
Mary Sturgeon ; David
Capehart, Brenda Sinclair,
Angie .Patterson, Jimmy
Parker, Robin Miller, Paula
Swindell, Thomas Cum·
mings, John Porter, Allen
Tucker, Shane Kincaid ,
Kevin Teaford, · Steven

~~~-~~~~~~~;;~;~~--1!11••••..;.~~---.;_JIIIliiill••••••••••••

Residents

Gr ooming AKC Gordon set ·
ter!, Engl1~h Cock er Spon 1e ls .
Ph 446 ·41 91

NOW I wonder what makes that Ivory fl oat. Are there little
pontoons built in or what ' Keep smiling.

smashed apart a va n un the Fra nk

Kenne l ~

loary Foley , Melody West.
Carr, Betty D'arst, Shelly
W~lte Ribbon Wbwers
Edwards. Mike Frash, Tami
'rracy
Hein,
Bryan Hoffman, Martha Nelson,
Chadwell, Charles Cleland, Hobin Qualls, Christy Farley,
Scott Trussell , Megan Cale, Donald Stein , Gene Fink,
Derrick Jackson · Eddie Kickie Long, Patrick ShrimpMiller Beth Wolf~ Sherry lin Carole Bailey, Laura
Arnold, Wesley Prea:.. Retha S~ith, Lisa Rider, ' John
Yost, Becky Ward, Lesley Clonch .

Cleland, Lee . Roush, Mike
Cosner, Ray Laudermilt,
Jerry Colmer , Frank Casto,
Joe Bolin and Danny Will.
George Korn assisted by
mothers of some of t~e troop
members,
operated
a
refreshment stand.

{
;:::
Sunday, at 1:55 a .m., on SR 7,
one-tenth of a mile north of
U.S. 35 .
,'
Officers report that an auto
operated · by Derrell P ·
Canaday, 28, Gallipolis, was
south bound on 7, followed by
a vehicle driven by Charles
Casto, 2() , Cheshire.
Ca naday signalled to turn
right, but turned left. The
Casto auto was unable to
st op, . and swerved left
striking the Canaday vehicle.
The Casto auto continued,
striking a parked vehicle
owned by Jackie Janey ,
Gallipolis.
A passenger in the Casto
auto, William Emmitt BostiC,
26, Gallipolis, displayed
visible signs of injury, and
was transported to Holzer
Medical Center. Bostic was
(Continuedonpage 8 )

Weather
Warm and humid through
tonight
with scattered
showers and thundershowers .
Highs in mid or upper 80s
with a low between 65 and 70.
Probability of precipitation
50 percent through tonight, 40
percent Tuesday.

Music, dancing and good food was on tap at ihe annual
picnic of the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce held at
Royal Oak Park Sunday. Providing music for singing and
dancing was Armand Turley at the organ. Also featured

was Stan Houdashelt who played the guitar and sang.
Approximately 50 persons attended the annual event.
Hostesses for th e event were Mrs. Lillian Moore and Mrs .
Allie Simon .

Strikes close two districts
Teachers struck the 3,000
pupil Warren Lo;cal School
District in . Washington
County today and nonteaching employees struck
the Chardon Public School
System in northern Ohio.
Teachers in the Warren
Ux:al School Distict near
Marietta ratified a contract
negotiated with a federal
mediator on Saturday, but
th e Warren Local Board of
Education rejected the pact
Sunday night.
Teachers set up picket lines
at the five elementary and
one high school early today,
the first ·day of school.
Superintendent Ed Jones
said the school buildings
would be open today and
classes would be taught by
supervisory personnel and
substitute teachers.
The Washington County
Sheriff's offi ce said a chain

had been placed across the
entrance to one of the schools,
but .it was removed . A
spokesman said there were
no other incidents.
" There are pickets on the
line, but we have no big
problems, "
said
the
spokesman.
The non. tear hi n g
employees in Chardon went
on strike in a dispute over
suspension
of medical
benefits.
Geauga County authorities
said the strikers, members of
Local ISO of the Ohio Associalion of Puhlic School Employees, set up picket lines
early today. Ux:alt80 represents about 65 bus drivers,
c a fete r i a w o r k e r s ,
custodians, secretaries and
mechanics .
It was not irnm¢iately
clear whether teachers were
honoring the picket lines. A

Jurors were being seated
this morning in a civ il suit ·
filed by Shirley Ann Evans,
Rt. 2, Ra cin e, and her
children ,
Jason
Scott
Lawson , Sherrie
Lynn
· Lawson, Amy Lawson and
Robert Lawson, Jr., against
Robert P. Bums, Gahanna,
Robert Franklin Lawson, Rt.

1, Portland , and the Board of
Meigs
Coun t y
Com·
missioners.
The suit for damages is in
the amount of $478,000. Th e
plaintiff, Shirley Ann Evans,
alleges that road conditions
were responsi ble for a two·
car accident that occ urred on
Oct . 1, 1975 .

spokesman for the Chardon
Classroom Teacher s
Association · had made no
· decision late Sunday on
whether to honor the picket
lines. The spokesman said it
would be left up to each
teacher to decide.
Only, teachers and staff
were to report for work today
in the 3,200-student Chardon
district. Pupils are scheduled .

to report for the first time
Tuesday .
A strike also would affect
Geauga County students of
Notre Dame Academy, Notre
Dame E lementary School, St.
Mary's Elementary School,
Chardon, and Lake CatholiC
High School, Mentor, since
their bus transportation is
provided by the Chardon
system.

Jurors Seated in civil case

"'

,..

---I

TROPHY WINNER -Craig Bolin, Rutland, center, receives a trophy as overall winner
of Sunday's bicycle rodeo. From the left are Hank Cleland, Troop 249 committee member [
Rodnly Rolllb, P-oy, first runner-up; Bolin, l.el! Roush , troop committee, n11&lt;t
Scoutmaster Bob Arms.
~

Over the ramps go the big wlieels to provide some
added excitement to Sunday's bicycle rodeo .

4

-

- -- -

~-

j

'

f

-

. ..,,...
I

I

These small fry areal the.starting line for the big wheel race at Sunday's bicycle rodeo.

~

II

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