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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Friday. Mar. 2.1, I!!79

;

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Policyholders own Ohio's
largest Blue Shield plan

Southern board seeks
6.5 mill school levy
Meeting in regular session
Thursday night the Southern
Local School District Board
of Education voted to place a
6.5 mill operating levy befor e ·
voters of the district on June
5.
The di strict has been
plagued with fin ancial
problems, foll owing a trend
in the state . Just recently ,
teachers went on strike
several days when the board
Indicated It could not pay a
1.80 salary inde" approved
through binding arbitration.
The board accepted the
resignation of Jess Browning,
instrumental
musi c
instructor , as of March 7 and
hired Joseph Ma\esick, Jr., to
serve as band director for the
remainder of the school yea r.
A new sc hool calendar was
approved . Under the new

calendar, students will attend
classes through June 7 in
addition tAl attending classes
on three Saturdays as well as
Good Friday , which was a
holiday on the former
schedule.
Saturday classes wUI be
· Apri\7, April 28 and May 12
with dismissal at 2:30 p.m.
on those days . Seniors will
not be affected by the new
calendar and they will
graduate on May 20.
The board approved Title
IV -B funds for 1979, used to

purchase library books. The
financial and activity fund
statements were approved.
The resignation of Mrs.
Ba rbar a Lawrence, an
elementary tea cher, was
accepted and another faculty

member, Deborah Harris,
was given a leave of absence
for the 197~0 school year.
Added to the substitute
teachers tist were Nancy L.
Black and Gayle Price.
Carl Wolfe and Howard
Caldwell were authorized to
attend the state boys'
basketball tournament and
Connee Enslen was given
permission to attend the
girls' state tournament. Two
record players were accepted
as a gift from the -Racine
Elementary PTO.
Supt. Bobby Ord was
authorized , , to
make
application to purchase two
new school buses for the 197980 school year.
A special session to
negotiate with non-certified
employes of the district was
set for 7:30p.m. on March 28.

Officials trying to
halt rebellion today
By RICHARD TOMKINS
Associated Press Writer
SANANDAJ, Iran (AP) Representatives of Ayatollah
Ruljollah Khomeini continued
negotiations today to try to
check the Kurdish rebellion
In western Iran as army
troops and the guerrillas
besieging them observed an
uneasy cease-fire and Shops
and restaurants reopened.
Ayatollah Mahmoud Ta\eghani , the Shiite Moslem religious leader in Tehran, met
with KurdiSh leaders for the
second day trying to prevent
the five-day-old rebellion
spreading to the rest of the 4
million Kur-ds. Thousands of
angry members of the tribe
whose members are

TRY OUR

EXTRA
CRISPY
I( EN lUCKY

FRIED CHICKEN

CIHM'S

members of the Sunni
Moslem sect - Shouted him
down Thursday afternoon
when he -called on them to
submit to let the army take
over on behalf of Khomeini's
revolution.
Troops of the local garrison
ventured out of their
barracks for the first time
since Sunday but stayed close
to its the thick walls of the
compound. Armed guerrillas
watched them from across a
no man 's land, and the Kurds
remained in control of the
city.
Under terms of the truce
Taleghani worked out
Thursday, 150 Kurds held
hostage inside the barracks
were tAl be freed. But the
.captives were still held this
morning~ and an Iranian
captain at the barracks said
the garrison had received no
instructions to let them go.
The captain said under no
circumsta nces would the
army turn the barracks over
to the Kurds.
"Listen to me! Listen to
me! " Taleghani pleaded
Thursday as he urged 20,000
Kurds
in
Sanandaj's
Freedom Square to hand over

Sanandaj, the capital of the
Kurdistan region, t.o the
army .
" We don't want the army!"
the crowd screamed back.
"We want our freedom!"
There were also Shouts of
"Death
to
Gharani,"
referring to the anny chief,
Gen. Valioah Gharani, who
accompanied Taleghani to
Sanandaj.
"We know what you want,"
another representative of
Khomeini, Ayatollah Mehdi
Beheshty, told the crowd.
" You want your customs,
freedom of leaderShip and
freedom of selection. We
know you have been
pressured in recent times, we
know you are right.
" But this is not the right
way to do· these things. You
must let us dO these things for
you. You must give us time to
do these things."
.
The Kurds, a Sunni Moslem
minority outnumbered IJ.to-1
by the 32 million Iranians of
Khomeini's Shiite sect, have
been agitating since the
revolution for an autonomous
state within Iran. The
revolution's 'leaders say they
are considering the matter
but have not decided how
much autonomy can be
granted.
Local Kurds attacked the
garrison and took control of
Sanandaj on Sunday after the
army distributed arms and
ammuni lion
to
Shiite
.civilians but refused to give
them to the Kurds because
they were Sunnis.

By TOM GilLEM
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) Some 4 million policyholders
now own Ohio 's largest Blue
Shield plan under an antitrust
suit settlement reached by
the state attorney general
and the Ohio State Medical
Association.
Attorney General William
J. Brown said Thursday the
association has agreed to
give up ownership of the Ohio
Medical Indemnity Co. · as
part of an out-&lt;&gt;f-court
settlement of the federal

Project•••
SHOP REMODELED - Mickey Williams' Barber
Shop on E. Main St. in Pomeroy, has been remodeled
featuring extensive paneling. The barber shop was
formerly the Don Mayer Barber Shop and was purchased
by Williluns who was located on Lynn St. for many years.

HOSEA McGRAW
Hosea Logan McGraw, 85,
Letart, W. Va., died Thursday at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
He was born Feb. 19, 1894 in
Apple Grove, to the late
Henry and Sarah Mathilda
Roush McGraw.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs.
Betty Shields; Letart, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Saturday, 1:30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason. with the Rev. Wilbur
Bal&lt;ter officiating.
Burial will be in the
Evergreen cemetery.
Friends may call today
from 7-5 p. m. at the funeral
home.
ROBERT C. WOODFORD
COOLVILLE - Robert G.
Woodford,62, Rt. 2, Coolville,
died Thursday morning at
Ohio State University
Hospital, Columbus,
following an extended illness.
Mr, Woodford was born in

Gilmer County, W.Va., son of
the late Tracy and Oma
Valentine Woodford. He was
also preceded in death by one
daughter, Sherry Rhodes.
Mr. Woodford was a
member of the Fraternal
Order of Eagles, Aerie 2307,
Parkersburg, he was an auto
body repairman and painter
in Parkersburg and Coolville
·area for several years.
He is survived by his wife,
Juanita Richards Woodford;
one daughter , Saundra
Woodford, Windom, Ohio ;
two sons, Robert J. and
Thomas W. Woodford. both of
Coolville ; one sister, Lucille
Johnson , Lancaster, Calif..
and six grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Monday at I p. m. at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev.
Timothy Snyder officiating.
Burial will be in Rockland
Cemetery, Jilelpre.
The family will receive
friends Saturday after 7 p. m.
and on Sunday from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9.

Heavy rain hits nation
By The A,soclated Press
Heavy rain puShed slowly
across
the
nation's
midsection today, causing
some in . Kansas, Nebraska,
Iowa and South Dakota.
Showers drenched eastern
Kansas, much of the
Mississippi Valley and the
upper Great Lakes region
with
some
lieavier
precipitation spreading into
the Ohio Valley.
Thunderstorms
reached
from the central Gulf Coast
region through western
Kentucky and eastern
Missouri while to ' the
northwest snow spread from
western Kansas and eastern
Nebraska into northern
Minnesota.
Major
flooding
has
occurred along several rivers
in . west-central
and
northwestern Iowa with
seve;al roads and highways
in the area closed due to high
water.

(Continued from page I )
endeavor is cooperation. The
Society
has
certain
requirements to fulfill. The
same applies to Ohio EPA
and to the local project
sponsor. But in the process of
every agency and interest in
this matter attempting to
meet the letter of the law, the
families who have been
waiting
for
adequate
wastewater services for over
eight years now are forced to
witness a bureaucratic
process that is costly and
time consuming. We trust
that the Society will agree to
the solution we are proposing.
"In the interest ·of all
concerned; we look forward
to your favorable reply."
Attending, in addition to
those already named, were
E. E. Thompson, mayor of
Rutland , Vernon Weber,
derk-treasurer of Rutland,
Larry Edwards and James
Spangler , Rutland council
members ; from Racine,
Charles Pyles, mayor, .Mae
Cleland, Clerk, Albert Hill,
president of council and also
member of Sewage District
board, Benny Petrel ,_ and
Clarence Bradford, council
members; from Syr3.cuse,
Eber Pickens, mayor,
Herman London, president,
Katie Crow, Mick Ash ,
Jimmy Joe Hemsley, Troy
Zwilling, and John Arnott,'
council members, and Robert
grants
adWingett,
ministrator; and Ed Neutzling, president of the
Syracuse - Racine Regional
Sewage District.

court suit.
fifth largest, disagreoo.
,
"The bottom line is the cost •
"The medical association
has not permitted Blue Shield of Ohio Blue Shield policies :
to use well-known cost compared to others, like ·
those in New York, Boston or
co ntainment devices, "
Brown claimed. "Blue Shield california," said Homer S.
senior
vice·
has been little more than a Harrison,
president
of
Ohio
Medical
collection agency for the
Indemnity. " We are less •
doctors."
expensive
at the present
Brown said changing . the
·
plan to a mutual company time."
The settlement of the sult,
·could result in up to $28
filed four years ago in U. S.
million in cost savings to
District Court in Colwnbus, •
Ohioans. But an official of the
Blue Shield plan, which
makes the Ohio plan conform 1
serves all but five of Ohio's 83 with the nation's other Blue·.
counties and is the nation 's • Shield plans, whi~h are all
subscriher-&lt;&gt;wned.
.
The Ohio plan was the only•
one in the country owned by a
medical association, a
EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
spokesman
for
the
Tuesday: Fair through the
Washington office of the Blue
period. Highs from the mid
Cross-Blue Shield
30s to the mld 40s Sunday,
Associations said.
wanning ., the 50s and low
Physician ownership of the
Blue Shield plan through the
60s b~ Tuesday.l.AJws in the
medical association enabled
20s Sunday and Monday
and the 30s Tuesday.
the doctors to block efforts to
contain costs in violation of
federal and state antitrust
.laws, Brown claimed. •
"This was a clear case of
the fox guarding the
chickens," Brown said. "The ·
doctors would set their own
Retail and motor vehicle fees and then use their
sales tax receipts in Meigs ownerShip to insure that Blue
County for the month of Shield would pay the fees in
February were both up full without protest."
considerably over February,
However, Harrison called
1978, according to the report the allegation "totally
of State Treasurer Gertrude inaccurate."
Donahey.
"Payments are made on
Retail sales· tax for the basis of data we have
February of this year totaled collected over the years that
$97,950.50 compared to . Show us the charge patterns
receipts of $74,167:27 for across the state foc each
February, 1978, an increase medical procedure," he said.
of 32.06 percent.
The agreement calls for:
Motor vehicle sales tax
- The medical association
receipts for February, this to receive the $56,000 it paid
year , totaled $49,213.41 for the company's stock more
compared to receipts of than 30 years ago with no
$32,947.79, an increase of interest.
$16,265.62, or 49.36 percent.
- The Blue Shield plan to
make a $1 million grant to
enhance the new, geriatric
HEAVY FIRE DAIIIAGE
medicine programs at Ohio's
The
Pomeroy
Fire seven medical schools.
Department was called to
- Physicians to no longer
Mulberry Ave. at 8:48 a. m. influence the policies of the
Friday when a car driven by ·plan.
Mrs. Harry Moore, Pomeroy,
The attorney general
caught fire. There was e.l&lt;- instead of the medical
tensive damage to the motor association · will choose
of the vehicle.
directors for Ohio Medical
Indemnity, and only four may
be doctors.
A J:IDDLE!
Brown released a list of 21
Where was Millersburg In
pe;sons,
representing
Meigs County? Meigs History
business,
labor,
education
Book free story deadline
and
the
medical
profession,
April 5. Yesterday's answer:
the front part of Elberfeld's who will asswne control of
the new mutual company .
store.
within 60 davs.

Tax receipts
show increase

Rivers also were rising in
central and parts of eastern
FAMILY RESTAURANT
Nebraska causin g minor
.
992-5432
lowland flooding . Some
Pon\~rqy, 0.
lowland and agri~ultural
flooding also was reported in
Hospital News
northern
Kansas
and
southeastern South Dakota. ·
Something New At Our Drive·Thru Window
FlaSh flood watchs remain Veterans Memorial Hospital
I
in effect today across Iowa,
Admitted - Patricia Wood,
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,210 5 !CL.OSE 1
southeastern South Dakota Long
Carol
Bottom;
1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I
and southern Minnesota.
Hayman, Middleport.
Thunderstorms which
ST., POMEROY.
.
·
I
Discharged - Kenneth
brought heavy rain also Wolfe, Oscar Klein, Jestie
~~-~----~--~-----------~
produced more severe Molden, Grace Bailey, Sara
weather. Wind dam~ge was Du!m.
reported in south-central
Missouri. Tornado watches
were in effect from south.
Holzer Medical Center
eastern Missouri
through
most of Mississippi.
Discharges, March 2~
Meanwhile, snow and
Gladys Allen , Anna Coilins,
strong
winds
caused' Denver Cox, Mrs. Wendell
hazardous driving in the Davis and son, Lena Davis,
Central Plains. Winds of 40 Hattie Fewell, Traci Fowler,
mph or more blew over much Glenna Gregory, Lillie
One person was injured and
of
western Kansas and Hester , William Hoffman,
two cars were damaged in an
Audry Holmes, Alicia Houck,
eastern
Nebraska.
accident on North Second
William Jackson, Ruth Karr,
Ave. in Middleport at I p.m.
Ernest Lavendar, Wenton
Thursday.
Luster,
John
Mayes,
Middleport police said a
Raymond
McManaway,
southbound vehicle driven by
James McQuaid, Donald
Vicky Fink, Middleport ,
Merry, Amy Napora, Phillip
OUr Roast Beef and Baked Ham Sandwiches start with
stopped in the line of traffic
specially
selected USDA inspected meats. The meal is
Nisly
,
Pamela
Nitz,
and was struck in the rear by
sliced thin and STACK ED HIGH on a sesame seed bun.
Margaret
Price,
Connie
Ray,
a second southbound car
There is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entire
family needs daily.
A van belonging to the man, Rt. I, Rutland, had been Mary Rigs, Barbara Smith, •
driven by Joel A. Wisecup,
21, Pomeroy.
Meigs County Councll on taken from the Pomeroy Gladys Williamson, Craig
Yeager, Raymond Zuspan.
Fink was taken to Pleasant Aging, formerly used for Parking lot.
A
Births, March 22
Valley Hospital by the transportation of senior
At I :27 a .m. Deputy
Tr-y Our Drive-Thru ln•tant Seroice!
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Middleport Emergency citizens, was found over the Manning Mohler stopped the
Squad.
riverbank in Middleport ve!)icle on County Road 26 · Boggs, son, Oak Hill. Mr. and
Mrs. Curtis Newsom, Jr.,
Minor damages were in- Friday morning.
following a brief chase.
son,
Point Pleasant. Mr. and
curred to the cars. Wisecup Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
A suspect identified as Kim Mrs. Dewey Slone, sofi ,
was cited on an assured clear Webster said that the vehicle Hayman, Racine, Was taken
Pomeroy, Ohio
which was on the Smith- into custody. Charges will be Gallipolis.
distance charge.
At 7:42 p.m. Friday, the Nelson lot, had apparently filed according to the sheriff.
Middleport Fire de Depart- been stolen and driven to Hayman was lodged in the
ment received a call to the Middleport where it was Meigs County Jaill.
Blue Tartan on S. Third Ave. located over the riverbank.
However, liremen found no
Attempts to remove the
fire when they reached the vehicle will be made today.
scene.
The van was to be sold for the
MEET MONDAY
connell by Smith-Nelson
The Meigs SoU &amp; Water
Motors and It was no longer Conservation District Board
BRUSHFIRE
used by the center.
of Supervisors wiJI meet on
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Meanwhile, Sheriff James Monday evenihg, March 26 at
Department answered a caU J. Proffitt received a caU at 8 p.m. instead of March 28 as
to Laurel Cliff at 1:15 pm. I : 21 a.m . from Pomeroy regularly scheduled.
Thursday to extinguish a Police that a 1974 Chevrolet
The meeting will be held in
bruSh fire near the Rich truck owned.by Theron Work· the second floor conference
Jones residence.
room of the Farmers Bank.
pomeroy
The
public is welcome to
rutl&lt;!nd
attend.
1uppers plams
Special _reduce~ prices on men's sport shirts - men's denim jeans _
women s coord.nate sportswear - stereo components - yard goods _
the bank of
~~~~lie sets - RCA color TV sets and many other items you'll want to
SQUAD CALLED
Interested in helping improve the lot of
the century
The Pomeroy emergency
America's ·poor? VISTA (Volunteers In
squad
was called at 4 : ~3 p.m.
established ~872
Service To America) need committed people
Thursday
for Teresa Mulford
to work in rural &amp; urban areas. College degree
COMMUNITY CLUB AWARD SPONSOR
of Pomeroy who had fallen
desirable, but not necessary. Monthly living
from a bicycle.
allowance, health benefits, S900 stipend at end
She was taken to Veterans
of 1 year's service. Call (313) 226-?928
Memorial Hospital where she
COLLECT.
was treated for minor
injuries and released.

r--u~ooMrlotl;o:o~--,_

I

OPTO~ETRIST

I

1.

One hurt
•
•
zn
mznor
accident

Officers probing

Paying by mail
is convenient.
Checking Account
makes it
safe and sure.
Pay your bills at home.
Don't run
hither ... thither . . . and yon.

..

ROAST BEEF OR BAKED HAM
SANDWICHES

stolen vehicles

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un:ba

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VOL. 14

~ay

~0.

8

tmes

enttne

SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1979

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

•

•

MIDDLEPORT POMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

have to~ lower navigable waterway

""""•c~!!~~~....~!!!!. ~~,~e;rway to remove barges

und~rw~y Saturday at the Gallipolis
nav1gallon dam to remove two sunken
barge_s which threaten to caus_e the
lowermg of 74 mtles of navigable
waterway - 43 miles of the Ohio River
Jllld 31 miles of the Kanawha River.
The_ 35-by-195-f~t coal barges are
. preventmg the d osmg of dam gate
, Qumbe~ 3, according to the Arm~ Corps
.'If Engmeers which IS responsible for

Ohio and Kanawha rivers.
M-G
Trans;,~~· ~ade
arLt. Colonel F. w. Wanner Jr . Deputy
rangements for Allegh
M .
Huntington District Engineer: said a
Salvage c o·. of Coraopolis e~~ to ;:;~~
salvage firm has been working since
remova l attempts f II ~
rh
March 21 to remove the barges, one of recession of high r i e o flow m~ . e
th em broken in half.
mid-March
v r ows. unng
The barges sank following an
Gallipoiis Locks and Dam is on the
attempted lock approach on March 10 Ohio River about 14 miles downstream
by the Towboat J . Page Hayden
of Point Pleasant, WV, which is at the
pushmg _12 loaded. coal barges .. The . confluence of th e Ohi"o "rid Kanawha
"
Hay den IS opera""
t"• bY M-G Transport
rivers. Th e stru cture "O
' ntai· ns a

navigabl e. "pool" which extends 43
miles up the Ohio to Racine Locks, and
31 miles up the Kanawha to Winfield
Locks .
Lt. Col. Wanner explained that until
gate No.3 can be closed, the river will
continue to drain through the opening.
The initial impact, Wanner said,
could in clude t he suspension of
navigation in the Gallipolis pool, the
exposure of water intakes at electric
power plants and towns, and some

Sheriff files affidavit of
prejudice against Calhoun
GALLIPOLIS - Charging that
Common Pleas Court Judge Ronald R.
Calhowt is biased and against the
Sheriff of Gallia County, Sheriff James
1\1. Montgom ery filed ,an affidavit of
prejudice with th~ Court Friday asking
that calhoun be disqualified . from
sitting in a $1 million suit pending
against the Sheriff and the Gallia

County Board of Commissioners.
Charging that the death of an
inmate found dead in the Gallia County
Jail on Nov. 2, 1977, was due to the
negligence of Sheriff Montgomery and
the Commissioners, th e $1 million suit
was filed Feb. 16 in Common Pleas
Court.
In that action , which names Mont-

CAA .. recezves more
•

fun;d s for program
CHESHffiE - The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency has
received· additional monies to assist
low-income individuals and households
:- including the elderly living on fixed ·
mcomes - with outstanding fuel bills
mcurred during the winter months .
Applicants must meet income guidell"!'s, and are required to provide a
shut-&lt;&gt;ff notice from a fuel company in
order to be eligible for payment
towards a utility bill.
: Residents of Gallia and Meigs
co~ntles who feel they might qualify
are encouraged to fill out an application
at llny of the following locations :
: Community Action Branch Office
in :the Pom;,roy Courthouse 1992-5605).

Community Action IJranch Office in the
Gallipolis Courthouse ( 446-4612, ext.
72) , and the Central Administrative
Office in Cheshire (992-7000, 367-7341 ).
Senior citizens can speak with staff
personnel at either senior citizen center
about the program .
Those who cannot drive to any of
these locations due to lack of transportation or age should call one of the
a bove li sted phone numbers and
request an outreach worker to come to
your residence. Application dea dline is
May 31.
All area residents who feel they can
meet the · incom e guidelines are
encouraged to apply .

Man escapes from Gallia
j~, charges expected
LlALLIPOLIS - Five charges are
expected to he brought against. a
G:illipolis man who was arrested
Frjday night , escaped the Gallia
Co.!!nty Jail, and was later captured and
incarcerated.
~ Sherman
Lee Gordon, 20,
G:!llipolis, was arres\ed by Gallipolis
CilY Police following a disturbance on

Sunset Dr . Police were called to the
scene at 9:01 p.m. to investigate a
report of a fight in progress.
Arrivin g at the · sce ne, police
discovered Gordon, being held by
Sunset Drive resident Larry Lambert.
Lambert told police that Gordon had
attempted to steal his motorcycle.
!Continued on page A-2)

gomery , former commissioner Jolm
Belville, a nd current commissioners
James C. Saunders a nd Paul D. Niday
as co-&lt;iefendants, Betty L. McCune,
C1laun cey , the wife of deceased Terry .
Wayne McCune, charges that the death
of her husband was caused by a failure,
·~t o main tain adequate security
standards for inmates who fear their
personal safety is in jeopardy while an
inmate in the Gallia County Jail. "
Th e affida vit filed Frida y by
Sheriff Montg omery charges that due
to proceedings between the Sheriff and
the Court, the Sheriff, "cannot get a fair
and impartial hearing. "
Montgomery cites the following
charges in support of his allegation of
prejudice:
- There is presently a proceeding
be tween the Sh eriff and Judge Calhoun
concerning the jail rules governing the
jail. There is another hearing pending
-in this matter to be held on Aprill7.
- In a previous hearing concerning
the jail rul es , t he Sheriff had
Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L. Cain
file a motion of correction of the record
of what occurred beca use the Court had
made in~;omplete statements as to what
had occurred.
- During a trial in which a prisoner
was injur ed in tl&gt;ecounty jail, the court,
in an unprecedented move, issued a
journal entry making ail the jail rules
with the exception of three that the
Sheriff must COf11ply with immediately.
This journal entry having been filed
during the course of a trial in which the
Sheriff's Departme nt wa s the
investigative unit.
- In the same hearing, the Judge
·(Continued on page A-21
:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

EXTENDED FORECAS'f
Monday through Wednesday:
Fair through the period. Highs in the
lOs Monday, warming to the mid 50s
to the mid 60s by Wednesday. Lows
in the 20s Munday and Tuesday and
the 30s Wednesday.
·
:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;

prob lems at commercial dock
faciliti es.
Wanner said the Corps already is
anti cipat ing that , under current
conditions, the normal 9-foot channel
may not be available below Winfield
Locks by Sunday·
Wanner noted that the Ohio and
Kanawha navigation dams do not have

Board affirms
1976 decision
.GA LLI POLIS - Th e Na tional
Labor Relations Board last week
affirmed an Oct. 21, 1976 decision and
orde r in a pro cee ding involv ing

MICHAEL SWISHER

Swisher named
to Meigs post
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Commissioners announced Friday the
appointment of Michael ' L. Swisher,
Syracuse, as new administrator of the
Meigs County Welfare Department.
Richard Jones, president of th e
Meigs County Board of Commissioners
stated "we have chosen Swisher after
interviewing 15 applicants."
"OUr feeling is that Mike Swisher,
with his excellent background in all
phases of the welfare system, has U1e
education and ability to perform duties
of the welfare department in a supeFl&gt;
manner .
" We are most happy to have had so
many outstanding applicants and are
very pleased tAl have chosen a Meigs
Countian for the job, " Jones
commented .
Swisher , a resident of Rusti c Hills.
will begin his duties tomorrow.
He is 1966 graduate of Kyger Creek
(Continued on page A-2 )

the capability of storin g large volumes
of water ; that their principal purpose is
tAl maintain navigable depths yearround .
Navigation interests are being
advised of the s ituation through
communication methods ind ucting the
U. S. Coast Gua rd 's marine special
safety broadcast system.

Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc. and the UnitedSteelworkers of America in which it
found that the company had engaged in
and was engaging in certain unfair
labor practices in violation of sections
of the National Labor Relations Act.
The
representa tion
cases
underlying this decision was initiated
b~ the union when it filed a petition with
· the NLRB seeking to represent the
Production
and
main tena nce
em ployees at Robbin s &amp; Myers'
Gallipolis plant.
Three repr ese ntat ion electi ons
were held.
On Feb. 21, 1974, in the first
election, a maj ority of tile employees
votin g cast their ballots for the union.
On Oct. 29, 1974, the Board issued a
dec ision su stainiii g a company
objection to the vote and a second
election was directed.

On Nov. 27, 1974, a second election
was held and a majority of the
employees voting cast ballots aga inst
representation by the ul\ion.
On June 20, 1975, the NLRB issued a
decision upholding objections brought
hy the union and directed a third
election.
On Sept. 25, 1975, a third election
was held and lbe union received a
majority of the votes cast.
On April G, 197~ . the NLRB issued
it s decision a nd certi fica tion of
representation in which it overruled
objections raised by the company and
certllled the United Steelworkers as the
exclusive collective bargainin g
representative.
On May 5, 1976, the union filed a
charge with the NLRB alleging that the
company had violated sections of the
Na tion al La bor Relations Act by
refu sing to bargain with the union.
On Oct. 21, 1976, the NLRB issue&lt;l a
decision and order in which it found
!Continued on page A-2)

Commemoratory plaque
dedication set April 6

GALLI POLI S - -~ commewurative
plaq ue containing the names of 133
Gallia County ::;e.rv1cemen who tost
their lives during World War U, the
Korean Conflict and Vietnam War will
be unveileq during special dedication
ceremonies at the Gal\ia County Courthouse on Friday, April 6, beginn ing at
12 noon.
The ceremony was a rranged by a
group of concerned citizens consisting
of Dovel T. Myers, Atty. Warren F.
Sheets, Hobart Wilson, Jr ., Judge
Ronald Calhoun . Elmer E. Caldwell
and James N. M. Da\os.
OFFICE TO CLOSE
Gallia County lost 101 sons during
GALI.IPOLIS - The Ja ckson World War If, twenty-&lt;&gt;ne during th e
Production Credit office, 228 Upper ' Korean Conflict and II in the Viet nam
River Rd ., will close at 1 p.m . on War .
Friday, March 30, in order for
The commemorative plaque was
employees to attend a personnel erected tecenUy on north wall of the
meeting.
first floor lobby of the courthouse

annex.
The bronze plaque is 45 in ches wide
and 32 inches high, with a standard
plain raised border. Names of th e war
dead are se t with condensed deep block
sty le letters, with a n eagle at the top
center .
The plaque was made possible by
Bob Evans F~ rms, Inc., Commercial &amp;
Savings Ba nk , F irst Na tional Bank,
Jenkin s Concrete Co., Ohio Valley Bank
and Vetera ns of Foreign Wars.
Amyl Haffelt will donate five dozen
yellow roses for the occasion.
Th e commission tha nk ed the
followin g for support of the
pro ject : Ca rter and Evans; for
erect ing the plaque; Jay Simms,
Bill
Matthews
and
Edwin
Ede lblu te,
prog r ams;
county
commissioners;
J udge
Ronald
(Continued on page A-2)

Crow's Family Restaurant

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

COMMUNITY
CLUB

SPECIAL WEEKEND SALE

AWARD SPONSOR

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

pomeror

nationa
bank .

FDIC

COMMUNITY SERVICE lHRU VISTA

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

DR. JOHN H. RIDGWAY, center, was presented an
a\tractive American College of General Practice
~edallion Friday In appreciation of his work as a
' 'preceptor" for a medical student at the College of

Osteopathy Medicine of Ohio University . Making · the .
presentation on behalf of the Squibb Drug Co. were left,
Denny Engel , manager of the Pittsborgh Division of the
Squibb Co. , and Tom Foster, right, U&gt;e Squibb Co. area
representative.

fighting for their coWJiry in three wars wlU be unveiled
during special dedication ceremonies at the Gallia County
Courthouse on Friday, Aprtl a,starting at 12 noon .

THIS commemorative plaque containing the names of
133 Gallia County servJcemen wl1o lost their lives while

.,

"'·:
•I

�__ ...._ ___

_

••

...
..

'

.h .
J SWIS er. • .

Commemorative•••

'I

s....
.,.

.,.

.,·r. j·
t\,

'·'.\

...'·,..
'

(Continued from page A-1l
High School and received his BS degree
in general business in 1973 .from
Moreh.eap University , Morehead, Ky.
He is the son of Lowell Swisher,
Cheshire, and the late Geraldine Ward
Swisher.
He is a member of Siloam Lodge
456, Cheshire, Free and Accepted
Masons. He has teaching and
vocational certificates and was
employed at the Ohio Valley Bank as
commercial bank .teller.
His most recent employment has
been with the Gallia Countv Welfare
Department as s_uperVisor.
He and his wile. the forlner Cynthia
Werry, have two children, Misty Kay
and Kelly A1111 .

Rio CC contract
RIO GRANDE - The Ohio Board of
Regents recently renewed the Rio
Grande College and Communi ty
College contractual agreement.
A live-year exte nsion ol the
contra ct in which Rio Grande
Community College has an exclusive
contract with Rio Grande College fo r all
educational services was approved by
the board .
This agreement, whereby a statesu pport ed community college and
private liberal arts college co-exist on
one campus. remains the only one ol its
kind.

!Conlinuc'&lt;llrom pllgC A·l )
Calhmm ; Elliott ·Appliances lor the
pulJli e address system ; c;allipolis
Tribune and W.JJ-:11 Hadio and Sunday
Times-&amp;&gt;ntinel and WYP&lt;A' M. public
service .
During U1e dedication program,
1\tt v. Warren F. Sheets will serve as
maSter of eeremonies .
Members of the GAllS Brass Choir,
w1der th• direction of Rod Tolliver, will
lead group singing ol the National
Anthem. Mark Pyles will serve as
soloist.
Invocation will be given by Rev .
Albert MacKenzie, Episcopal Church,
followed by a brass choir selection,
America ..the Beautiful.
Rev . Charles Lusher, pastor ol the
Calvary Baptist Church, will deliver
the dedicatory address. Following
another selection by the brass choir and
recognition of kin of Gallia 's war dead,
Rev . Everett Delaney, pastor ol the
Bell Chapel Community Church and
American Legion and VFW Chaplain
will give the benediction.
Taps by Charles Corbin will
conclude the afternoon program.
Gallia County 's war dead to be
honored are:
World War It
Albert J. Barnaby, David W.
Beard. Char les A. Borden, Kenneth E.
'B rewer ,

Floyd

Brown, Charl es

W.

Bu rke. Wilber E. CalL Harold W.
Ca lvert, Eugene C. Canaday , John N.

Ca rnes, Harley 0 . Carrol l,

Ray R.

Casto, Sta nl ey E. Casto, Edwa rd T.

Charles. Shelby Clagg, Lew is V. Clark,
George R. Clonch, Phillip W. Clonch,
Samuel V. Coon , Cha r l es Corvi n,
Haske! J . Cox, -Joseph W. Craig . James
E . Eads, Hor ace M . Fa rley , Lawrence
L. Fellure, Pa ul E. Ferguson and
Lonni e Fitch .
Leo A. Fontana . Howar d W. Foster,
Joseph French, James M . Gatewood,
Leonard P. Hager, Samuel A . Hart,
Ca lv in Haskin s, Alan W. Hobbs , Robert

Sheriff
•••
Continued !rum apge A-1)
I

dismissed the jurors and cross.examined several witnesses concerning

mattecs which were totally unrelated to
the trial, but questioned 'the officers ol
!he Sherifl's Department about what
happened in the case.
As co-&lt;lelendants in ·the $1 million
suit, the Gallia County Commissioners
unanimously passed a resolution on
March 15 requesting Judge Calhoun to
step aside in the case .
·
That resolution, passed following a
meeting in executive session with
Prosecuting Attorney Cain, reads :

K. Hutchin. Wor ley D. Ja~ks , Stanl ey
F . Jankowski , Vance K. Jeffer s, Clyde .
W. Keller. Richard C. Kinder . Clyde
Krause, Harold J. Lanier, Marvin V.

Long , Walter L. Lo ng, l:eonard E.
.McCa ll, Alfred R. McCarley, Kenneth
R. McCar le y, Oley E. McCar ley,
Robert M ccar l ey, Carroll Mc Cauley.
Car l E. M cGui re, Royce E. M eacham,
David M etcalf . Wendell J. M organ and
John Moss .

Merrill E. Niday. Lyman Peppers,

Jr., Me rr ill R. Phillips, Hermon D.
Pol ing , Robert F. Pr ice , James J .
Queen, Ru ssell 0 Ratliff , Luther V.
Reese. Alva C. Reynolds. Willi s C. Rice.

"Whereas, tllere is a case pending

..

••

A-2- The Sunday Ti~es.Sentinel. Sunday, Mar. 25, J!Yin

in the Court of Appeals between the
Court and the Prosecuting Attorney, ·
our legal counsel, and ... there is still
presently pending a matter between the
court and the Sheriff of Gallia County
over jail rules and ... there is a
considerable amount of taxpayers'
money involved in the case· which has
been filed against us, and .. . to insl!fe
justice and fairness in this case ... We,
the Board of County Commissioners
respectfully request that Judge Ronald
R. Calhoun please step down as judge
f in the case) wherein we are named as
defendants. "
A motion asking !hat the $1 million
s uit be dismissed was filed last Friday
by Prosecuting Attorney Cain .
The motion lor dismissal 'cha rges
that the suit has failed to state a claim
lor which relief can be granted.
Stating !hat it is the general rule
that · counties and boards of county
commissioners are immune from tort
liability, the motion cites a ruling by the
Court of Appeals ol Franklin County,
whi ch reads, "A county and its
agencies are completely immune from
suit lor negligence in the absence ol
statutory authorization lor such a suit. "
According to the motion lor
dismissal , no such statu tory
authorization exists.

Albert E. Rober ts, James L. Roberts,
Eugene Run ion . Orville A . Rupe,
Robert L. Saunders1 Harry Shafter ,
Lew is .A. Shaffer, Alfred E. Sheets,

Howard C. Sheets, John L. Sheets,
Merr il l W. . Sheets, Willard L. Shupe,
Aubrey H. Smith , Claude N. Smith,
Phillip F. Sorrell, Clifford Sullins and
Wad e Swisher.
Homer M.

Tate,

Luther

Tate,

Chester L. Thevener, 'Earnest R.

Th evener , Sh ir l B. Thevenin , Raymond
Th omas , Charles C. Thomp son,
Will iam B. Thompson , Lloyd E. Ward,
Leonard D. Warman , Ma xo n W.

Waugh , Brin1on P. Whl1e , Paul A.

Will iams, Donald N. Winters, Richard
Yeager. Edward E. Zimmer ly and

Charles D. Zook.

' Koren Conflict
Ric hard Burdette , VaQ

Edward

Clagg , Thomas E. CordelL Homer D.
Drummond, Robert T. Glover, Boyd
Ham pt on , lowell G.
Woodrow F . Kerwood,

Har r i son,
Rob ert L.

Mc Clas key, Ivan L. Montgomery, Cline
E. Oiler, Clell 0 . See, William L.
Sh ifflet, Edwin Skaggs. Cecil J. Smith,
Russell D . Stewart, Woodrow W.
Shoe m ak er , Lero y 0 . Taylor , Toney

Voreh,

Columbus E. Ward and

Woodrow W. Wil son .
Vietnam War

Russe ll L. Bl anton, Le sli e L.

Bruche , Ri char d L. Criner , John 0 .
Finnic um , Kevin R. Gri ffin , Russell L.
Ham ilton , Roger L. Hawley , Archie A.
Hayma n, Wi lliam L. HiCkman , Charles
M . Neal and Paul L. Yost.

EARN THE HIGHEST
INTEREST ALLOWED BY
LA Will

Board. •rwutr.•

·

r r.1V"IIinn~d frnrn

A· l l

,

.Man .••

.

that the company "has engaged in and
was enRaging in certain unfair labor
practices in violation of section Hf a I ( 11
and Ia) and Section 2(61 and (7 1 ul the
Nati,;nal Labor Helations Act,' ' and
ordered Hobbins &amp; Myers · to take
affirmative &lt;:H.'titJO tu remedy unfair
labor practices.
Robbins and Myers petitioned the
United States Court ol Appe~ls for the
Sixth Circuit to review the NLRB's
order, contending that the order should
be set aside upon grounds that it was
based .upon an invalid certification of
the union.
The company argued that the
NI .RB had improperly sustained the
union 's objections to the second election
in which the majority ol the employees
had voted against union representation,
had improperly. over ruled the
company's objection . to the third
election, and thus, had improperly'
certified th.e union.
The NLRB filed a cross-application
lor enforcement ol its order.
On June 20, 1978, the Court issued
its decision reversing the Boa,rd 's
finding that certain of the Wlion 's
objections to conduct affecting the
r esults of the second election warranted
setting aside the election and remanded ·
the case back to the . NLRB lor
consideration of remaining objections
to the second election which the Board
had found unnecessa ry to decide
originally.
On August 29, 1978, the Board
advised the parties that it had decided
to accept the remand and delegated its
authority in the proceeding to a threemember panel.
·
On March 16, 1979, by a two-lo.()ne
decision' the three member oanel
upheld the NLRB's Oct. 21, 1976
decision and order.
The . sole issue considerect by ·the
oanel in the most recent decision was
whether the second election, during
which employees voted against
-representation, was properly set aside.
The panel ruled that it was.·
In making that decision, the panel
focused on the contents ol a speech
which Robbins &amp; Myers president
Timothy Hennessey made to different
groups ol employees the' day belore the
election, on company property and
during working hours.
The panel found that certain
statements in the speech constituted
objectionable conduct Sufficient 1.o set
aside the election.
"
Specifically, that th·ree passages
constituted misrepresentations
involving substantial departures from
the truth at a time which prevented the
union from making an effective reply,
and wl\ich could reasonably be
expected to have had a significant
impact on the election.
The followin g are statements
quoted within the decision which were
attributed to jiennessey:
- "What the pushers have not told
you, and hope ypu do not realize, is that
once a union gets in, there is basically
·no turning back - you are stuck with it
from then on."
-"A union is nothing more than an
outsider. When this outsider comes on
the scene the employees lose all rights
for direct . communica lion with the

ll'om pal!&lt;' t\ ·11
Gordon, who was at that time
Wlidentified, was transported to the
police department lor questioning. He
relused to identify himself.
The man was then taken to the
&lt;.:allia County Jail where he was
tentatively identified and incarcerated .
At 10,04 p.m., Gordon was brought
into the waiting area ol the jail lor a
positive identification · by an
Wlidentilied female .
When sheriff's ·officers on duty ·
turned to process a subject who had
been charged with a minor traffic .
offense Gordon ran down the hallway,
took the elevator to the first floor of the
courthouse, and exited the building.
Following a joint effort by
Gallipolis City Police, the G.a llia County
Sheriff's Department, and the Ohio
State Highway Patrol, Gordon was
captl!fed by city police in an alley in
back ol Tawney 's Jewelry, 424 Second
Ave., at 11:32 p.m.
City police said this morning lha t
charges ol assault, destruction ol .
property and carrying a concealed
weapon are expected to be brought
against Gordon. Officers S.id that a
straight razor had been confiscated
from the accused.
Gordon is being ~barged by the
sheriff's department with disorderly
conduct aitd escape.
1rcl!ltinucd

•GROUN

BEEF

Ground Fresh
Several Times Dally

u

•

CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO
SOUP

selected the employees are excluded
from contact with the employer, and
that the employe es' job security is
dependent on full union membership
and thus is subject to union discipline.
The misrepresentations came from a
credible source (the company
president) and were made to several
groups ol employees comprising a
large majority of tbe WJit population,
and occlirred the day before the
election at a time when the union did
not have an opportunity to make an
effective response and when the impact
olthe statements would be greatest."

00

-"The first thing they go alter is a
closed shop. Closed shop means that the
company agrees that no non-union
&lt;Non-excluded) employees will be
employed by the company-that every
one is union ."
The two-to.()ne decision was
swrunarized by the panel as follows:
" ... these
'misrepresentations
distorted the c onsequences of voting for

CANS

VALLEY BELL

1%

~·

WANT AD
CHARGES
Efft!ctive May 1, 1978
3(k;

line

25c,line
23c line

MILK

I

'

.

I

GAL PLASTIC JUG

One-day ill.'!erlion
Three~ay

Insertion
Six-day insertion

fAverage 4words pt't Une )
Y~:~nl

Sale1 In Memory, Card of
Thanks are l!L'Cepled only Cash in
Advance . SOc charge for ads carry-1
ing Box Nwnbets In care ofTriburlt!.

The Publi1:1het r esel'\'t'S the right
to edit or re~t any ads deemed obje&lt;.1iorwl. The PubHsher wiU not be
responsible for more than one incor·
rec:~ insertlqn.

Phone 446-23•2

tnDEN
RIPE ·

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
.

BANANAS

Mond.Hy
4:30 on St.ltunlsy

•

Tu~ sda y

lhru Friday

1,30 P.M.

the d.l&amp;y bt!fo1 l publicaUon

NOW!
One Spray
OR

DIET PEPSI

816 OZ. BTLS.

PWS

Controls Insect Pests of

182 DAY CERTIFICATE
'1 0,000 MINIMUM

.

I

Vegetables• Flowers•
Fruit Trees•Shade Trees•
Shrubbery• Lawns
Including Chinch Bugs
and
Sod Webworms

* INTEREST PAID ON MATURITY
Substantial Interest Penc. lly for Early Withdrawal.

Deputies
check
.
.

..

.

lheft incident
COUPON

DINNERS

L

•

*

DEPOSIT
$1,000 MINIMUM

COUPON

Expires. Wedn~, .

M•.
.
,;.

Meigs Branch

Athens CoWltV Savings &amp; Loan
" Large enough lo se rve you, yet small enough to
know vou"

RICHARD E . JONES, MANAGER

W. Main St.
992-66SS
Pomeroy, 0 .
All deposits insured to S40,~00 by The Federot

2 16

savings &amp; loan Insurance .

.

4'~::;$1~!

8 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF

•

~

CAROLINA · LUMBER
And

SUPPLY COMPANY

312 Sixth Street
_ 675-1160
Point Ple1sant
Store Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m. To 5 m., Sat. 8 a.m.. 12 noon ·

•: GALUPOUS ~ Dr. J .
traig Strallord, MD, of
Oallipolls has been appointed
~ serve on the Corporate
Board of the Automobile Club
01 Southern Ohio, according
· ~ Charles W. Clark, District
!I'Janager lor the Gallipolis
~A Office.
• A life-long resident of
~uthem Ohio, Dr. Strafford
a'ltended school in Ports·
aiouth, graduated from Ohio
Upiversity, ·The Ohio State
l!h!iverslty College of
Medicine, and completed
residency at the Indiana
U~Jiversity Medical Center.
':He is associated with the
Holzer Clinic, Ltd. , in the
pf.actice of Obstetrics and
G¥necology.
::Concerning his appointll!ent to the AAA Board, Dr.
strallord stated : "I am
hepeful that my represen·
tiition for the area on the AAA
B~'ard will improve the
Cl)mmunity ufiderstanding of
MA services and policies.
:&lt;ipeclflcally, I hope to
elicourage the development
· o(local tourism in our area as
more and more visitors learn
o(, the beauty of Ohio's
SOuthland."
··pr. Strafford joins 29 other
~mmunity leaders from the
12 -county area served by the
Ailtomoblle Club of Southern
O!Uo.
''J'hese 30 board members
werve without pay, set policy ·
foi.. the club, and guide its
deitiny.
The Club Is an affiliate of
tiYl' American Automobile
Association, made up ol over
20il.other affiliated clubs with
he~rly li;OOO offices in the
Ul\lted States and Canada
'that serve over 20 million
matorist members. The AAA
was organized in 1902 to help
.In'.' the development and
pl ~asureabie use ol the
automobile.
Services to members in·
clll:d
emergency road
sine;!:;
personal accident
~
e, reimbursement ol
' leg~!
,s, guaranteed trip
prote a, maps and routing
sef.v1 ·,r auto trips, $5,000
ba~· :
, and much, much
more. ' ur the non-member,
too; they oller complete
t~tvel agency reservation ·
an!l,Ucket service, legislative
re!!fesentatlon benefiting aU
mok!rists, and safety actlvlties ranging from school
sal~y patrol and high school
dri!er's ed to community, ·
state, and national safety
actlvlties.
-Dr. Strafford replaces Bob
Ev4fls, who had served as a
board member since 1967.
J~ Shennan Porter Is the.
other board member from
Gallla County.
Gprdon Morrow, newspaiJI!r man from Wellston,
and: Charles Blakeslee,
retU·ed county agriculture
agetJt from Meigs County,
a~ serves as Auto Club
board
members from this
'
area.
•

..

. Kraft Macaroni &amp; Cheese

HIGH' YIELD
CERTIFICATES

•

No-Iron Matched Work Sets
SHIRT

PANTS

597

697

"

. irreversible, that. once a union is

••Money Market" Certificates

0
WF
~· :-c (ID
0

:; DR, C. J. STRAFFORD

·-"

$trafford
appointed

the union . The employees were left with
the impression that a vote lor a union Is

9.483%

*

••, •• lhru .....,
Marcii2S, 26, __,
27 ancl28
. ,..,

'

company ."

THIS WEEI&lt;'S RATE

~ew!

4DAYSa

"We reserve the.rlght

to limit

P:0MEROY
Meigs
CoUnty sheriff's deputies are
inv~stlgating the attempted
the(t of three chain saws from
a l~gging operation on Bull
Run.
I1an Stanley, owner of the
saws, recovered the equipmeQt in some weeds, The
incident Is still under in·
vesttgation.
·
1\(.arvin Cremeans, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, was arrested
FriiJay night by the sheriff's
deJI!Irtmenl following an
inCident
In
Coolville.
Cremeans faces disorderly
conauct and felonious assa!llt
chafges in Athens County.
Mso arrested was 21-yearold·: Bruce E. Bowman,
Ponieroy, on·charges of DWI ;
no hlld operator's license,
dls~rderly conduct and
res"'ing arrest.

Pre-shrunk, permanent press blends of po lyester and cotton .
l ong sleeved shirL Sizes S, M,l ,XL . Ponts , Siz es 29 to 44 .

Padded, Doubleknit or "Superlatives" Bra

Simulated Walnut
Room Divider/
Entertainment Ctr

(A) Pod_ded dou bleknit nylon wi th se am/en cups. Sizes 32A-38C.
(I) Do ublek nit nylon . Cross-you r-heart styling. Sizes 32A --40C.
"

4894

JACKSON.and
PERKINS
VIGO ROOTED

0

PI

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Sport Socks
Cushioned blend of
cotton / stretch nylon.

SAVE '20.
Pl enty of space for TV , ste reo, books and
more. Solid construction . Stain -resistant
waln ut fi ni sh . 59 '\', x l 5'1• x 59'/o' high ·.
EASY TO ASSfM8Lf . .. NO TOOLS NffDfDI

:::~ES $3~~

Si.ies S,M ,L (6 to 11) .

In Plantable Box
Pre-Priced '5.45

100 % Olefin Polypropylene
Sculptured, Room-Size Rug

Regular '4.91

2488

-SUPER HOUSEHOLD BARGAINS~
AIRWICK

WIZARD

JUBILEE

. ·PKG. OF 2

8 OZ. SPRAY

10

ROOM DEODORIZERS
REG.

89'

AIR FRESHENER
REG.

47~

81'

0~

*10

" Ro yal Palace" scu lp tu red, h i- lo l oo p pollern .
Waffl e b a c;: k i n g. Sm art so l id colors. 81/2x 11 Y1 ft.

SPRAY

·REG.
$1.78

Stick Ups
Air Deodorizers

72C

PKG.
of2

Spring Fqresl, Fresh
lem on or Evergreen .

fUIJI\IDfllliN

Modot

" Brawny"
Paper Towels

Woven Grass
Place Mats

57CJUMBO
ROLL

4FoR$}

Llmlt 4 Rolla
No Ralnchecka

Decorative, handmade
mats. Natural color.

"Northern"
Toilet Tissue

83C

4-ROLL
PKG.

Limit 2 Pkga.
No Ralnchecks

LIMIT 4 PKGS.

Wake up to music or alarm. Lighted, easy-to-read
clock face . Features a snooze switch, 1-hour sleep
switch. Built-in antennas. Walnut-look cabinet.
MODEL 3439

SAVE

KITCHEN WAX

· 47~

.IUUI\IDErllil\l AM/FM Clock Radio

1

4012

S-Track Tape Player

Dazzle-Aire ®4-Ply Yarn ,

24

KNITTING WORSTED WEIGHT

94

77e

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speaker. 3-way power! AC
and car/ boot adapters are
included. BaHeries extra.

3 OZ. SKEIN

Creslan® a cry lic/ nylon.
Mony shimmering solid
colors and ombres.
0

TM AMERICAN CYANAMID

Urn it 12 per customer
Rain checks

Um it 2 per customer

•••• or

CLAIROL"'

Condition®
Shampoo

Lander®
Shampoo

99C16oz. 48e oz.
s2

Normal, dry, oUy
· or color-treated.

$2QOO

E~, baby or herbal.
" ecion um" bottle.

Plant
Starter Tray

Jacqu elin e Su san n 's

"Yargo"

Toddler
Pampers

)5'7

)'78

J54

"S elf-watering. With
28 three-inch pot1.

Her newly discovered

Day and Night. Fit
babies over 25 lbs.

I'' novel I Paperback.

lOX
OF

12

2 Liter

Pepsi®

99¢

Peter Paul
Candy Bars

8FoafJ

3-Tray Tackle Box

8~G~AR'I2.00 .

REG. 18' EACH

All your favorites!

FACTORY
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SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

FIVE BAND FM SCANNING
RECEIVER WITH TEN CHANNELS
•POLICE
eFIRE
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NO CRYSTALS

REGUlAR

249.94

1

$}9994

CHARGE

NO RAIN CHECKS

IT

�..
A-S-The Sunda v Times .Senti~ c l , Sunday, Mar. 25. 1979

A-4- The Sunday Times,&lt;;,·ntin!'l Sunrl;oy, Mar. 25, 1!179

r------------------------Letters ol opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor I
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication . However, on request.
names will be dlsclosed . !,etters should be in good laste,

•'
•

addressing issues , not personalities.

I

Student recipients get warning
t: ld .l.ll'UI.I S

·

Soc wl (, a JJipolb. s:ud n·po..t·ttnJ{

.sefurit ) ~1ud cnt IJcnehcwrtcS forms an• being mailed to the
wc~ c 11 amcd

Saturday that more th&lt;m 850,0till stud ents 18
their monthl y &lt;'hecks will to 22 whose monthly socia l
't op if they don't complete ' "'·uritJ checks currently
and return a rcqutrcd school totul $l.i t11lhon a year.
enrollment report.
"This spnng . for the flr.,t
Tri sr he Dancs t. soctal tlmc, school ofhcu:tls arc
~ccur it ) branch manager 'in being asked to verify on the

form th"t the student IS
rnroll cd on a full-time basiS ...

l&gt;e stopp ed."
Studmts 18 to 22 may

lwm·si said.

q uahf~

" If a student fails to return
the form . or the form eomes
bac k \dthout tht: n c cc ss&lt;:~ ry
sc hool certification . the
st udent's monthly cheeks will

for socta l security
payments if a pa rent JS
f i'CC IVInb r cttrcmcnt or
di sa b iht~

benefits or has
d1 ed. Da nes! explam ed
'!nose students arc reqUired

to report on their school
enrollm ent status twice a
}Car.
" We 're llghtemng up on
those reporting reqUirements
because some students either
are not retummg the fonns at
all or they are stating they

Maurice Thomas reminisces

•

•
I

•

•'

·'

•

•
'

:'
t

-

:

..
'•'

'.•
•.

Dear Editor.
A few news Items dunng the past 1ssues concermng
certa111 accounts 111 'the past history of Gallla County needs
some further research completely to identify other
landmarks; also some of events to give us some background
for past records to be more complete ;
First we hear and read about the temperature being
broken by sub-zero readings yet 1n February 1898 the
temperature was - 38 degrees below zer o here where I live on
White Oak, known as Charity Post-o ffi ce at the Blue Sulphur
Springs 111 Cheshire Twp. registered -40 degrees below, on the
" Wiseman Fann" near Eno -38 degrees and at James Kail
farm near Little Kyger Grange Hall had similar readings,
enough for these few readings. If you also recall 1937 also had
-25 degrees to -3o degrees for a few mornmgs- yet this
February we have had as low as -10 degrees to ·-15 degrees
during these cold mormngs -5 degrees at 4 a m. this morning
yet it was 40degrcesat 5·30 p m " l!J' ' February.
The February of 1898 - water 11as frozen solid on mantle
with fire in grate bw-ning fully as smeone tended the fire all
night-some shallow springs a lso were frozen over but not
heavy tee as other things contaming water froze.
, The covered bridges "' Mo&lt; gan Twp. were at least two ;
one on Clark 's Chapel Rd . across Campaign Creek, anothe r
was reported to be on SR oo4, two and one-half miles east of
Porter, Springfield. There was a bndge on Morton Woods Road
ac•oss Campa1go, another at Prospect Rd . at Estel Mmk's also
one a t the Erwin Bridge on Bulaville-Porter Pike.
Some history of this bridge was in need of repair in wmter
of 1898 February was when work was done, new floor and
Siding to be repa ired ; the men that d1d most of the work were
Perry Thaxton , Ross Thaxton , Harland Fulton, and John Wilt.
The lumber was fw-nished by DaVId W1lt and Georee Fife and
h. l~d by isaiah Thomas. The price of good "oak" was $10-$12
pe1 M - it was zero and below when this work was done ;
ladders were placed on the ice to put on siding, a fire was bwlt
on 1ce to help warm workers.
Later some 10 or more years the same br1d~e was in need
of repair and likewiSe work was m w1nter and ladders were
placed on the ice to make repairs Th e same people worked on
br1dge except John Wilt - and lumber this tune was furmshed
by Perry Thaxton and Isaiah Thomas at $13 to $loperM.
This bridge was torn down m late '30s or early '40s,
replaced by the present steel stmcturc There may be more
bridges than these and the1r hi story must be interestmg, all
these bridges had three pruposes (I ) to make a way of
crossing, (21 shelter. (3) protectiOn of material used in
construction .
Roof was cedar shingles - Maur1ce M. Thomas.

CETA program funds approved
POMI-:HOY - 'ln e Meigs
Local Schools' Youth Employment 'framing Program
Project proposal under the
Comprehensive Employment
and Training !Itt of 1977 has
reccl\ cd approval by the
Governor 's Office and the
Ohio State Department of
E ducallon. Division of
VocatiOnal 1-:ducation m the
amount of $14 ,261 ~'ederal
CETII Funds
Da n E Morns, &lt;hrector of
Curnr:ulum and mstructlon of
the Meigs Local DIStnct ,

formati on and per•onal
growth 1n vocational and
career opportunities for a

program Lab or cllmcal
experien ces planned for
participants are mtended to
promote vital learning skills
and particularly to promote
reading and comm unication
performance
Pa rticipa nts will complete
a series of work samplin g

Evaluation System 's Singer
System vocational units. This
SJ S!ern pr~v~es both a
vocational asst:'Ssroent and an
occupatwnal explo ration
Student s will rece1 v ~
"hands-on " pre-vocationa l
experi ences that will encourage them to make wtser

choices 'when they opt for a
vocational program at the
junior level. The vocatiOnal
umts used m the project have
been selected for their application to the VEPD's
junior and senior level
vocational offerings.
The ultimate goal of the
YETP Program in the Meigs
Local Vocational Education
Planning Distrkt is to reduce
the dropout rate and to assure
that a more relevant and
effective vocational program
be provided Ior youth.

Driver cited
after mishap

.~

loo t

••

are in school when theY. .are
not,"
Danes!
~.l:ll
" Payments to students who
are not eligible cost .ta•payers millions of dollat•: a .
year.
•..... I
Danes! said students--Will
have 60 days to complete and
return the reporting fonn.
If a student does not rlltw'n
the form , or fails to have-the
school verify enrollment as
required, social security
checks will be suspended and
the student's eligibility for
·previous payments will be
mvestigated.
" If a stud ent received
checks for months he or she
was not a fuiHime student,
then those benefits must be
repaid," Danes! said.
Danes! encouraged any
student who needs help in
completing the form or has
questions about it to contact
the Gallipolis Social Security
Office.
The Gallipolis Social
Security Office, 49 Olive
Street, is open to the publi~
Monday through Friday froin
9 a.m. to o p.m. The phone
number is 446-7660.
·
!I

selected grouo of eligible inschool youth ages 16-18. Each
participant will be assessed
utilizmg the General Aptitude
Test Battery and the Ohio
VocatiOnal Interest Survey.
Other assessment will be station" ll "inl! th,. Vo('ntinnal
provided as recommen ded by
each parti cipant's Vocational
Co unselor. Job and labor
Rotarians hear
market ori entation · along
with a prescribed program of
"survival skills experiences" Daniel Morris
will be provided fo r all
announced the fundmg .
MIDDI.EPOR1 - Dan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Mc1gs Local YETP participants throughout the Morris ,
director
of F'cderal agents moved in on
program Will constst of a program Guidance and curnculum and instruction an Easter Seals campaign
Counseling services are the for the Me1gs Local School when a handbill that vaguely
srnes of pl anned expcriehccs
des igned to provide in - ma1or components of the IJIStnct , was guest speaker resembled a $1 bill was used'
whe n th e Middleport - for publicity.
Pomeroy Rotary Club met
The local sportscaster and
Friday night at Heath Umtcd httl e girl pictured on the bill
Methodist Church
don 't look much like George
DearEctitor :
Morrts revtewed cha nges m Washmgton, but the Secret
We can still save the Panama Cana l as the House has to the district smce 1ts for- Serv1ce isn't takin g any
vole on impleme nting leg islatiOn and the bills for th e money. mation in 1966 He stressed chances .
Hearings m U1e House are now betng conducted.
the mcrease m operational
They seiZed about oO,OOO
It has been learned that a campa1gn of deceit , fraud and costs and the number of Ea ster Seal Telethon handm1smforma llon unequalled in history was the foundation on ce rtifi ca t ed empl oyees bills Thursday that are about
which the "Panama Payaway" was built.
required for the district's the same SIZe and general
The president and others sa id it wouldn't cost the ta xpayer enrollment.
appearance of a $1 bill.
a smg:le dollar. "
During th e mcctm g,
"We're not too proud of
" It will cost each taxpayer at least $472 this year alone. " presided over · by John Rice, what we had to do her e,' '
The transfer costs alone of the payaway exceed 4 billion the group formulated plans Ga rry M. Jenkins, special
whicl1 Is a conservative estimate. Contmgency costs of the for pa rticip ating in th e agent m charge. ''It's like
payaway equal at least 2 billion. Panama will receive $100 Easter Seal Telethon this going against motherhood.
million a year of your taxes in "forei gn aid'' giveaways.
weekend Women of th e But it is a violation of the
Now, Panama is demanding the right to retroca!Ively tax church served dinner.
le~w . ''
Amencan busmesses in the Canal Zone back to 1903; the total
J enkins
said
no
restoration ("to their original state") of Coco Solo Naval Base
reproduction rese mbling
and France r'Ield and for transfer of all U.S property in the
cu rrency can be used Ul an
·
Canal Zone.
advertt sement or promotion,
It now appears that Panama will confiscate every church
accordmg to fede rla law.
on Amencan property aud will hold them for ransom, forcing
Reproduction IS perPT. PLEASANT - Around
the congregatiOns to purchase them back.
missable
lor educational or
The land surrounding the Canal at the Isthmus of Panama 75 suspected manjuana news purposes, the agent
is valued at $20 billion. It was pw-chased by the American plant s. growing in a said.
terrariwn, were confiscated
Dear Sir:
taxpayers
In regard to the letters concermng the United States
Millions of dollars have already slipped through the cracks Friday from the back yard of
Savings Bonds - cham letters going around this area, let me to begin paying away the Canal through the designs of a North Main Street
reSidence by the Mason
Stanley Cup
say that I am just as interested as the next guy when 1! comes bureaucrats actmg in defiance of Congress.
The Stanley Cup in hockey
to making an easy buck.
Of the 68 Senators who backed this boondoggle, 19 faced County Sheriffs Department.
Deputies Detner Roush III is the oldest trophy competed
I work flea markets, play bmgo, buy lottery tickets, and reelection in 1978andlldldnotreturntoCongress.
and
J E. Perry, with a fol' by professional athletes in
Please write Immediately to your Representative to
have even been known to bwld fences or wrestle hay to make
search
warrant issued by No rth Am erica. It was
an extra buck:
support the HR 1958, the Taxpayers' Relief Amendments to
Magistrate
Andy Wilson, took donated by Frederi ck Arthur,
But when 11 comes to the cha in letter business, this sucker Panama Treaty Legislation . The bill prevents Irresponsible
of
the large glass Lord Stanley of Preston, who
possession
and even illegal transfer of American property and assets and
scheme is too ridiculous for words.
bottle
containing
the plants at purchased the trophy for 10
Disregarding the fact that there is a very small chance of the prohibits any use of U. S. Taxpayers money to implement the
10:34
p.m.
after
finding it m gumeas ($50 at that time) lo
late buyers making any extra money, the people who buy these Panama Canal Treaties.
SALE ENDS MARCH 31st
the
back
yard
of
a residence be presented to the amateur
things don 't seem to realize what they are letting themselves in
Also write the follo.wing : Cong. John Mw-phy, Chairman,
for
1334 Longworth House Office Bldg., Washington, D. C. located at 2101 North Main champs of Canada. Since
Personally, I don 't care to hiive my name and address 20515, Chairman carroll Hubbard, 3576 House AMex No. Street.
1910, when the Nabonal
According to Deputy Perry, Hockey Assoc1abon took
being mailed all over the_palce for every con artist or anybody.)&lt;' 2, Washington, D. C. 20515.
DEAN &amp; BARRY PAINT TOWN
an arrest is expected to be possession of the cup, 11 has
else to get hold of and leave myself wide open for some more
Your mfluence counts, use It. Thank you.
sucker lists.
I received my information from the Spotlight. - Edna made as soon as the in- been symbolic of professiOnal
700 Second .Ave.Phone 446-2583Gallipolis.
vestigation IS completed.
A person has few things that he can protect a nd keep Edwards, Minersville, Ohio, Telephone 992-2002.
ice hockey supremacy.
good m today's society, but his name should mean something
to hun.
I, personally, get quite upset by some fool approaching me
about somethmg as stupid as this - especially on my
employer's t•me But, these people don't seem to realize that
they are:
(1) Cheatmg their employer by peddling this trash on
company time .
(2) Wasting the valuable time of th e person to whom they
are speak ing. My tlme is worth $5 per hour minimum, and if
they want to talk to me about matters such as these, I will sell
them as much of my tlme as they want.
' .
..
... '- ~ • • ..J
(3) Costing each and every oneofus taxpayers for the tune
OPEN
that the government employees, who handle the bonds, spend
I
domg all of the vanous steps that are mvolved after the bOnd is
MONDAY
pur chased .
THRU
I
(4) Wastmg the tune of the people who work at the bank
I
I
We don t sell ord mary pa 1nt. It s Dea n &amp; Barry qua l1ly pa mt Made by pa1n t
and have to sell them.
SAllJRDAY
'
(5) II;Iconveniencing the other citizens who have to wait at
spe
cialiS
ts.
a
nd
sold
by
pa
ml
sp
ec
ialist
s
Over
1,000 custom co lors , JUSt
,.
the bank when they a re there to do some unportant personal
8 AM nL 5 PM
brmg us a swalch or loo k thro ug h o ur co lor samples They look grea t go on
·I
I
busmess while some sucker is buying bonds to give away.
smoot h, a nd last
J
So rather than cause all this trouble, if these people want to
That's why we ca ll ou r paint sa le Va lue Week. Because 1t's what you get at
--'
giVe away money , I will gladly accept the $18.75 cash tha t is
•.
a
spec1al pn ce tha t makes a valu e Sale starts March21. ends March31
needed to pw-eha se a bond from anyone who wants to get rid of
It and say "Thank you."
I might even buy them a cup of coffee or coke (on my own
tune of course) . ! will gladly do the above for anyone who giVes
me $18.75. I'll bet that even the "thank you" is more return
SUPER VELVETON
KUVERITE SATIN
LATEX SATIN
than most of the cham letter mailers will receive for their
VINYL FLAT
SAVE
trouble.
SAVE
SAVE
Name withheld by request.

Agents probe
seal campaign

IT'S

'

Resident wants canal saved

GA LI.li'OI.l,S- Almost 100

walking on air.

75 marijuana
plants taken

Mushrooms are the revolurionary shoes mode w1th
the Moleculoir®Sole mil lions of nny air bubbles
ore rropped 1ns1de The sole so They g1ve you
noi\Jrolly comfortable support by odjusMg to the
contours of your feet AND any
surface you're walking on
Come see oil the great
looks, Then rol1e The
Mushroom Wal11 You'll
be wol111ng on o~rl

25%Cff:

2395

eolors Available

$

Naij
Beige
Wh1te

,

The

,

§i" s~o?!.~!e

..

"1'11 _ 11 ~-'J M ~\.Aliff

•.

/

t.arayelle Mall

Ga llipolis, 0 .

SPRING CLEANING SALE Tax issues

Pick one and save!

$39..0

$39..~

Now sgss'

$39..~

NOW $1255 '

NOW$775'

Regula rly S15 55

Regularly$10 7!

Aegularly SI2 55

Introducing State &amp;rm
Newer Home Dis£'0unt

S~pEFI VELVETO~
I~

''"II ly • Ill' ' ' '" "'

tha n 7 years old,
you may save w1th
State Farm Find
out how much.
Ca ll me tOday.
Like a good neighbor,
State Fann is there.

w&gt;lh /1 ,• ~ •

• Or O b to tcur t
20 rt U' Uh' 'i

"'

The arlst ocut t ot l nt er1 or

~LIVERITE SA 01 ~
1
11
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"j " 11aut; ,rl kyt1 " " ' ' "

11

--

• IN.I Sh• ~ 1 , 1 rl ~ rOI O• &lt;l.
~ t &lt;IV

a

bllljh'

()r1o•l••~

ename ls lo r ln s1de
welts &lt;I ri d woodw ork
8

On ~

CO&lt;I t CO H ' rS

mos1 bUI! ,rcub

• O•ufl Oic w t ::; l~ortJIC
•H•rl long lab i " 'Y
• !(tea l l or k•tchen ,111&lt;1
ll il l hroom wnlls
• Apply eas•ly w r111

Long lasting color wlth
a hmt o f lu t tr e for

SA. LATEX •• ~~
' 'tiN EN.AIV' '
··~ · '

'·

t:&gt;r u 5h o r ratter

• Oooness

..

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'

any In terror wall
• Fo r p li riH! (l Or y w a!l

woo dwork

m a ~o m y

o r p r"n c&gt;d meH.Jt
• 8 rushos or ro tler sc te an
u p wrt h SOci P il n c! w a te r

•

~· us t&gt;

lfll\IYL FLA1
1

1\w

••t

1

•

1
lil r t&gt; o t1 wllll P"1''

•

-:ln roll on

•

or !ipt\ly on
• Colo r s keep the rr

•

bn ltr ance lor ye a rs

10% OFF ON ALL PAINTING ACCESSORIES.

-S N Y KOLO IOS

I~

S NYKOlOID ' ~

SPACI&lt;L.ING

CENTUA't' 2

M\19· 9 ROLLER SET

NYLON BRUSH

ln ct urles lll'tte •
qualrly p an
;otlor ll.'l f1111&gt;:1

COMPOU ND

hteal t o r 1r1rn

1/~l t f'l r&gt;S II f1

O~ln i PlO V¥ 1!11

•• •ua r ~ o ,t ~ 'l:'

.my r y p~

""'~ I I IJ QM I I C C H t! &gt; l.j ~

rJ• v ll • lll~n

tlr1t! jl

!lUll Ill (.!

o~u11

PAINT EDGER
Fo• IHmm1ng
r !!tlrng door s
wmd ows And

oaseboan.ls
lhl! ~iiSY l'f 1ly

• - .: ..... .

1\•

SHUR LINE

'

Traditional Occasional Chairs
Queen Convertible Sofa

DURABLE

HERCULON

R EG. $799
SAVE S220

Wood ·Frame Casual SOfa &amp; Chairs

GREEN
PLAID

REG. S939
SAV E $200

Wood Frame Casual Sofa &amp; Chairs

RUST

Ear~

American Sofa &amp; Chair

ss&amp;goo

$270

PRINT

REG . $945
SA VE $177

BEIGE

REG S939

NYLON

SAVE $260

PLAID

R EG &gt;1056
SAVE S287

REG. S799

Good La t"x wall palnt
at a baautlful prlct .
One coat usually
covers previously
pamted d rywa l l or
wall !)&lt;I per
Go es on l11st dr1 n
fas t
Easy clean up w1ti"'
so11p a nd water
No pa1nt smel l

Trad~ional

Sofa

Velvet

SAVE Sl 70

REG . $729

Matching Loveseat Beautiful Velvet

..

WOOD
REFINISHING ••· """"'-'" •"""
KIT
Nood o&gt;Oi m lo ool " '"I '"O

SA VE $180

REG . $769

Trad~ional Sofa

SAVE 5185

"

R EG SB0-1

8d vrce 7 J UI I U k Ul Pa int I

m l!nt Ana we II grvt y0 1.1 110...

drscounl on brushes ratters
and atl pB!ntrng a cce no r~u
Chargeltl

BAsE COAT, GRAIN
COAT, FINISH COAT AU. IN ONE BRUSH

on ballots

REG . $393

NYLON
FLORAL

Colonial Sofa &amp; Chair

CHOICE

SAVE

PLAID

Trad~ional Sofa

SAVE 5165

Trad~ional

SAVE $301

REG . snoo
'

'" t

I •"

Sofa &amp; Chair

Will Be Closed Monday Evenmgs Until Furth er Notice

C. K. SNOWDEN

WHITE'S DEAN and BARRY PAINT TOWN

Second Ave.
Gallipolis, o.
Phone 446-4290

417

State Form F1re And Casualty Company • Horne Office Bloomtngton, llbnotll
p 78808

700 SECOND AVE.

"'

PHONE 446-2583

'

"

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PHONE61' :46 -1171

New Store

COLUMB US, Ohio (AP I School tax or bond qu esttons
arc on ballots m twelve school
di stncls next week.
Voters of Bath Local Sch ool
Distri ct, Allen County, ballot
Monday on a 4 7 mill, 5-yea•·
educatiOn lax .

In Ross Coun ty, Pa int
Valley Local School DistriCt
seek s approval of a 5.9 mill 3yea•· school tax Wednesday.
North Olmstead City School
Di strict, Cuyah oga County,
has a 9.9 mill 5-year school
tax vole on ThUI sday.
other school levy votes
dunng the week are on
Tuesday. They mclude :
Bonds : $2.lo m1lllon for
renovati ons m Mad River
Green Local School D1stmt,
Clark County , a nd $2.6
m1ll10n for unprovemt! nts m
Bloom-carroll Loc"l School
DIStrict, l' airfteld County.
Tax lev1es : Loveland City
School D1stn ct, 4.o mill
contmu mg,
Bloom-Carroll
, Local School DIStrict, 1 m•ll ,
5-year levy , Columbus City
School District, 8 3 rmll, 3year lev y; Springfi eld 1Lu cas
Count y)
Local
School
D•strict, 9 8 mill, 3-ycar levy ;
Celina City School District,
1.8 mill, 5-y ear levy "nd 3.75
m1ll , 2-year levy, a nd
Antw erp Local School
Di stri ct . 7.5 mill , 2-year levy.

M~~.r9\

Thurs . C.losed

~:i . ::~

The ori ginal . tenn of a
c opyr ight
j'C H !'~

GAU.IPOUS

..

endurE's

f ur

Assoc iation

J1m
Mack,
Josephine
Mo rand o, Ma r y Sl illwcll ,
Mary Fenny and Carl Zimmerma n; all, art st udents of
Miss Shaw
Franklin Art Glass Studio
was responsibl e for the actual
cutting an d fitting of the
window. Art students and
M1 ss Shaw were able to
witness the final stages of th e
complet ion of the sta med
glass in May of 1~78
The sta ined glaos window
has added mu ch authenti city
as to the use of the Multi-

mcm bers attended th e formal ded ica tion of the stained
glass wmdow and the st udio
pi ano at the Gall ipolis State
institute' s Activity Center.
Cer emoni es cul minat ed
untold hou rs ol personal
dedica tion by PVA members,
GSI staff an d clients to
achieve this monument to all
those persons who devoted
the ir tun e to the betterment
of hfe at GSI
purpose room as the ar ea for
The stained glass wmdow Sund ay Church Se rvices. For
Idea conceived by the late all her hard work m t he
Nelli e Shaw, art teacher at completiOn of the project, the
GS I. was r emarkable 1n wm dow was dedtcated to
many ways The design was Miss Shaw
made fro m a collage of
Th e p1 ano , purcha sed by
deSi gns created by Della money earmarked through
Bendur a . Do rothy Duk e. donations by PVA members.
V1 olet Edward s, Mi ldre d famil y member s, volunteers
Farus, Katherme Hall , Frank and staf f members of th e GSI
Heulkamp , Margaret Leo, w1ll be used in all church

acti viti es

1n th e Multi -

purpose area The don a to r~.
Momca Bru no, F. E Buf-

fington, A. Dorothy Hecker,
Olhe Middleton , Loren McCausland, Fra nkie McHugh,
Lam Ross, NelheShaw, Keith
K. Ty ler, Florence Curry and
Dr Kenneth Upp, have all
been me monalized by a
plaque accompanying their
gift
Persons incl uded m th e
dedtcatwn cc rcmoru cs were
Betty Hubba rd. p.anist and
Bea Kulm . ur gamst provtdmg
the music prelude, John A
Beattie, Supermtendent, the
Welco me, James L Muldl etown , PVA President the
Invoca ti on ;

R10

G ra ndc

28

co mm itt e e m e m be r s ,
Margaret Bradbury, Mlles
and Mon1ca Bruno, E N and
Toni Buffington. Glenn and
JackiC Graham, A Dorothy
Hecker, James and Doreen
Middleton, Pa ul and Huth
McC utcheon and Winona
Heynolds, by John Beattie
Supermtendent.
Beattie m his praise of th e
PVA stat ed. " a mor e
homeli ke a tmos phere and
progressive trea tm ent of ou r
c ll ent s h a s been m ade

posSi ble
t hro ugh
th e
motivation of the PVA
W1th the Act ivity Center as
a core fo r actIvities, the PV A
has made It possible for
hund reds of peopl e l o usc th e
Acti vity
Ce nt er .
For
exam pl e, over 400 persons
use t he sw1mn11ng pool

Co ll ege, Grand Chora le; H1W
Ca rdwell ,
PYA
V1ce
PreSident , He cogn1l 10n of
Families , Robert Kennedy, weekl y.''
PVA Committee Chmrman,
Dedt cation a nd P r t!SC ntatlons; Rev. Rohe•t Kuhn ,
GS I Cha plam Lit a ny of
Ded1c at10n , and E. Glcnn
l'nd ay at the Hock Sprmgs Fairgrounds so that I could get a Graham,
PVA
Pa st
ph oto of a large part of the crowd attendmg the auction of the President, BenediCtiOn
personal property of· Mrs Norma Wilson
A plaque readmg "We take
Kenneth, who is a multtp le sclerosis Vlc lim , was in hts van g1eat pleasur e 1n com·
wh1ch is well eqmpped so that he can travel about since he 1s mendm g
t he
P ar ents
confmed to a wheel chair At any rate, there is a lift at the s1de Volunteer Associate and it s
of !he vehicle which elevates the nder so that he ca n easily comnutt ee m em bers for their
enter the van. The hfl is vital for Kenneth and 1t cer tamly tn bute and ded1cat1on
helped me.
commitment winch helped to
ma ke t h1 s Acti vity Center

God gives us our daily bread and the highway deparlment
gives us the da tl y tr eatme nt to P ome r oy' s East Ma lll St 1-Jey you kee p stmlmg

become a real\ty for th e
Gallipolis State Inst itute ,"
was prese nt ed t u PV A

It's
Spring I
Clean

Crash site unforgetahle
THIBE S HILL, N Y I ~P )
- It w as a stght J eff Wat son
\\ on't soon f org et
th e
ma ngle d sta ti o n wa gon,

young
peopl e
mstd e
screa ming, the crushed door
tha t wouldn 't ope n - and the
ftr e
J
" If I'd had une (a f1re extinguiShCI 1. I lhmk I m1ght

Fultonville.

" The enr

Classes were d1srmssed at
m1dday Thursday for tl•e 600

students of Fonda-FultonVI lle
Hi ~h

School, where the

SIX

wer e stud enL-; The school' s

nag was lowered to half-staff
and the mam entra nce was

draped m black. Classes \\ ere
schedul ed to 1esume today

have pu t tl out," s;,nd Watson,
of Sprakers, N Y

Au thonti es scud Thu1 sday

t11e
ScrecHns Six teen-agers dted

cra sh 'I hey sllll \\ er e not
sm·e why the ~ t d l t o n wagon
slammed mto a tree and
burst mto flam es.

the} had been unable to fin d
Wh!l e Wa tson so ught help , anyone who wttn essed the

a n exploston s tlcnced

- th e oldest tl , the youngest
I~

mvolvmg s 1x yo lulgste r s 1n
the1r teens ·
He satd 1t \\as se ve1·al
hours befor e th e bodieS could
be pn ed fr om the cha r red
\\ r'~cka gc Authon lle!:i had to

d1 1ver's license less than a
week ago ; Patnck Found eur ,
lG a nd hiS SISter , I Ji UT i e , 14 ,

both of Fultonville, Tma
Rose. 16 of Fonda ; Carol
Wh1Le. Iii, of Randall and
Ma rga re t Sa nf or d, 16, of

CARPET
CLEARER

ANY LIVING ROOM
AND HAll
Off er enclud es l t v mg
a nd hall onl y up t o 300

ft .

relv on dental reconls to
Im{ke pos1live Jden tlfJcat1on .

Wa tson was dri ving on a
rural road oulstde of thi s
com m um t y o£ 1,184 persons
abou t lJO miles nor thwest of
New York C1ty when he came
upon t he accident only a
rn1n ut e or tw o a ft er it

happened Wednesday mght
lifter determi mng he couldn't
open the door by hunself, he
went for help at a nearby
ho me . The station wagon ex~
ploded wh 1le ile was gone.
The dea d Included the
dnve1 , Dame! Bedell, 17, of
'l'nbes HJII, who rece1ved h1s

wH s wr apped

around thl' tre(. but 1t was al·
most doubled 011 It self m the
center .. said Llr. !-'10r1 Pi p1to.
th e Montg omer) Coun ty
curonPr ··I\e seen some
acctd t&gt;nts 111 my t1me, but
nothmg as tlram at tc as Uus -

Gtlllla , M e tg s , Vmt o n Co

'Si~otchgard

61444&amp;-4208

PLEASE JOIN US FOR
A

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SPRING BRIDAL FAIR

:: ·:

AND STYLE SHOW

.f?

MARCH ·25th --SUNDAY

HOLIDAY INN, KANAUGA
No Admission-Everyone

Welcor~e

SEE AD ON PAGE 3-B

)ACK&amp; )ILL'S
GALLIPOLIS, 0 . and JACKSON , 0

YOUR

DECORATOR
FABRICS

Wood Frame Casual Sofa &amp; Chairs

I~-----------------------~~Oi-,"~;;~~~~;-~~~~~~~~~~~:;~~~~::::----~~--------~~~~-,----------~----~ _,.,

I ~ 'i~·:.:;:::~ ::.

IUU IU M

The bestla te•-ba se d
decorator ~Hun t fo r
mte uo r wall s
• Bru ~ h r 1•! 0 1 rfl lt r:&gt;n
• H 1(.1!1 U11 lr,l fi• I"

-·

If your home 1s less

Regularly 517 40

Our Tuppers Plams histor ian fnend, Mrs . Agnes Hill,
advises that Wilham S. tB•II i Cole who recently became an
associate of th e law firm of Oths, Foley and Heiser m We llston,
ts a sixth generation Meigs Countian.
Bill is a descendant of Charles Cole and Amy Ann
Hardsock Cole who were early Mei gs County settlers movin g
to Orange Township m 1840.

Thanks to Kenneth Romme, I was elevated to a poSitiOn

Your chance to save
on our qua~ity inside paint.

.

Meig s H1gh School music students and their dir ector , Mrs.
Paige Hunt, deserve your suppor t Friday and Saturday nights
when they will present "The Sound of Mus1c" at 8 p rn 111 the
high school auditoriUm
Hardly a nyone will go to t he amount of work involved 111
sta gmg a Broadway show . It IS a tremendous task and, of
course, the budget doesn 't provide for any great luxuries m
settmgs and costumes.
However, I think you 'll fmd the presentation q111 le
entertammg and th at the youngsters and Mrs. Hunt have done
a good jOb.
Advance tickets are $1.50 for adults and $1.25 for students.
Advance tickets are not r eserved as such, but they do ent1tle
you to s1t m the block of cha1 rs a t the front of th e auditonum .
T1ckets can be purchased !rom any cast member or at the
New York Clothm g House or Sw1sher-Loh se Drug Store

While Dr. and Mr s. Clyde Ingels were vacationing 111
Florida recently vandals gav e h1s car an egg tre atment and
bent chrome strips.
~
Dn. Ingels is recuperating from qw te senous surgery and
it certamly would have taken heartless vandals to have
committed U1e act.

Dean &amp;Barry paint value week

..

Some of the money coll ected thus far has been used for
travel expense and medicatiOn for Tracy who must un de r ~o
frequent dialysis at a Columbus hospital
Latest donors mclude Berni ce Hawk , Ridenour TVAppliance and GasServ1 ce, Ada Van Meter, Mr and Mrs. Carl
Lee , Riggs Used Cars, Inc , Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bahr, Mr and
Mrs. Virgil Roush , Rock Sprmgs Unite d Methodlst Church and
the Rock Springs United Methodist Sund ay Sc hool, Commumty
Wives Club, Mr. and Mrs Wal ter Schreiber, Elberfeld's, Mr .
and Mrs. Arthur Atherton , Ha rold Brannon, Baum Lumber
Co., Mr. and Mrs Herman Lawson , Meigs Coun ty Ad-taker,
and the Me igs County Church Women Umled
Those w1shmg to help may send donahons to the Tra cy
Hein Fund, c-o Community W1ves Club, Box 26, Chester , 0 ,
45720.

Deadlme lor th e f1hng of candida tes for posts 1n Pomeroy
and Middleport Thursday found Mi ddlepor t VIllage w1thout a
clerk-treasurer candldate
Long-time holder of th e office, Gene Grate, di d not choose
to file and there were no newcomers for the techm cal post
If no res1dent is chosen through a wr1te-1n campaign then a
clerk-treasurer will have to be appmnted the first of the year .

Uke walking on

1

canisters pla ced in several busmess houses .

Since we ment10ned a week ago that the Me1gs bookmo bi le
had better be used or it will be exiting fr om the county, an
mflux of people boa rdlng the umt has been no ted
The bookmobile is really a great service a nd 11 can provide
you With JUSt about a ny book 01 a ny readm g malenal you
want. If you've bought any books lately you know they're
costly.
But you can ge t th e same books to read through the
bookmobile at no cost . 1f you don't fmd what you're lookmg for
on th e unit JUSt ask a staff member for help.

(j) mUihroom1.

WHITE'S

Vo lun tee r

A fund drive for Tracy Hein, Eastern High School
fr eshman , who will undergo a kid ney transplant in the near
futur e, IS going well, Mrs. Lila VanMeter of th e sponson ng
Commumty Wiv es Club reports.
The fund ha s reached $562.91 mcluding momes put 111

The sixth grade patrol at the Pome roy El ementary School
has a great tnp lined up - kind of a reward for th eir hard work
m helpmg younger students gello a nd fr om classes 1n all kind s
of weather durmg the pa st school year
Over 50 youngsters and SIX adults will be gomg to Geauga
Lake and to Sea World on the outmg on May 31 and Jun e I
John Arn ott IS m char ge of the patrol

·.

WALLCOVERINGS· .
imperial

st aff members and Parent

By Bob Hoeflich

Helen Williams who retir ed from teaching and started a
new career, so to speak, w1th a craft shop has been "bra VIng"
the recent na sty weather in Phoemx , Ariz. , wi th temperatures
m the 70s and 80s
·
She's commg back home when we can assure her that our
weatl1er is better. It is , Helen , It is I

Mushrooms~ylt~ like

'
•

persons Incl udi ng c hents,

•

_,
'

Opposes chain letter scheme

•,

Of the Bend

GALUPOLIS - Richard Gettles vehicle.
D. Tolliver, 32, Gallipolis
In further action, C1ty
Ferry, was arrest ed on Pollee Investigated a two·
charges of DWI, driving vehicle collisiOn on SR 7, at
while under court suspension, the entrance to th e Silver
and leaving the scene of an Bridge Plaza Fnday at 7 40
accident following a hit-skip p.m.
accident Saturday morning
Officers report that a south
on the 600 block of First Ave. bound auto operated by
Gallipolis City Police were Da vid D. Greer, 27, Pt.
infonned at 3:59 a.m. that an Pleasant, turned mto th e path
umdentified vehicle had hit a of a north bound veh1cle
park ed auto ow ned by dn ven by Donald Cox , 24,
Beverly J. Get ties, Gallipolis. Ga lli polls.
Pollee stopped a vehicle
Bot h vehi cles mcurred
with heavy damage operated moderate damage. Gre er
by Tolliver minutes later on was cited on a charge of
the 1200 block of First .
failur e to yield.
Tolliver was arrested and
incarcerated in the Gallla
County Jail . There was
moderat e damage to the
SHERIFF DIES
CLEVELAND i AP)
Vernon M. Smith, ll!i , Loram
County Sherif! for nearly 23
HEAVILY DAMAG ED
years , d1ed Fnday at Elyria
MIDDLEPORT - The Memorial Hospital
Middleport Fire Department
Smit h wa s adm itted
was called to Rt . 1, Cheshire, Monday w1th a heart ailment
at 12: 18 p m. Friday where a and
later
dev eloped
car owned by Hollis Rope was respiratory and pulmonary
burning. The motor wa s complications.
extensively damaged .
The shenff was serving hiS
At 2:21p.m. the emer gency sixth elected four-year term
unit went to the Cheshire area and had ann ounced more
for Dale Mulford who was than a year ago that he would
tak en to Holzer Medical be a candi date for re-election
Center .
In 1980

' .,.

Dedicate window, piano

Beat•••

Sunn y days .. acti ve wa ys.' Kid s
keep bu s y at th e i r fa vo r it e
pa stim e s ... ha v •ng
fun 1 .. a n d
we've all the cl othes th e y ' ll ha ve
fun 1n! A whol e wardrobe, in fa ct,
of look s they ' ll lov e ... from sun up
to s un down ... rugged 1ean wear
with tank s and t ees. baseball tops .
shorts , and pr elt y dr e sses , too!
Se lec li on s ar e great. at both
Ja c k &amp; Jill lo cat ion s, on fam o us
bran ds of childre n' s Wear .

Boys Sizes 8-16

Boys Sizes 0-16

LAYAWAY

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A-0- The Sunday Tnm·s~'&gt;enlme l , Sunday, Mar. 25, 1~79
A-7-The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Mar. 25, i!l79

Five injured in four Friday traffic wrecks.
vehicle ac:
GALLIPOLIS - · Five a two
persons were injured during . cident on SR 7, fourfour Friday accidents in- tenths of a mile south of the
vestigated l)y the Gallia· A,thens County line, at 5:30
Meigs Post, Jlighway Patrol. a.m.
Officers report Adkins ·
Kermit Adkins, 59, Plains
south
bound auto went left of
City, 0., was cited on a
charge of DWI lollowin~ center and struck a north

MINNIE JAY
INSPECTION HELD - Inspection was held by
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F &amp;AM, Thursday night. Officers
pictured at the event include: front,.] tor, Michael Kelly,
senior deacon; Eric Gryszka, junior warden; Ron Young,
master ; Kenneth Wiggins, educational officer; John

PT. PLEAsANT - Mrs.
Minnie Jay, 86, Apple Grove,

Jenkins, senior warden; George Nesselroad, Jumor
deacon; back row, I tor, Willis Durst, chaplain; Bob
Durbin, junior steward ; Donald Vaughan , senior
steward ; Tom Edwards, secretary; Theodore T. Reed ,
.Jr , treasurer, and Millard Vail Meter, tyler.

DERBY WINNERS - These members
of Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245 were the winners of
prizes for the best created vehicles of the annual
Pinewoo,&lt;l Derby .held .Thursday night. The winners

received identification bracelets . They are from the left,
Hithard Long and Tony Heaton, the best of sho~ ,. a tie;
Tim Cassell, most original, and Jeff Nelson, wildest.

Joint meeting planned
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Department of Transportation and Jhc Federal
Highway Administration
have joined forces to make
federal transportation funds
for development of public
transportation available to
smalle r , non-urbanized areas

in Ohio.
Nea rly $,3 111illion is
ara ilablc to regions with a
population of less than 50,000
residents.

ODOT Director David L.
Weir said recently that a
participating community or
region co ul d rc cci vc one
Bright, cheery nowers.
Perfect for folks in the
hospital. Call
or stop in ..
We send
flowers

olmost
onywhere.
the
FTO
way.

dollar per person by participating in this plan . The
Public Transportation office
of ODOT has identified in
excess of I 10 potential
recipients eligible lor funding .
Possible recipient s are
being urged to attend
meeting s sc h ed ul ed
throughout the state during
March to learn more about
th e pro grams. Tho se attending will have an opportunity to ask questions
and recci ve in£qrmation for
starting and operating a rural
public transportation system .

WISH'NWEIL
BOUQUET
"When words are notenouqh Send ... "

grief.

A NEW BOUQUET TO WISH THEM WELL

OURFTD

FLOWERS BY GEORGE
28 Cedar St.

Gallipolis

a .m . in the Coral Room ,

Co unt y Administration
Building, Medina, March 27, 2
p.m. in the Administration
Building. Trumbull Branch
Campus of Kent Stat e
University, Warren; March
28, at 10 a.m. , Courtroom No.
I, Carroll Countv Courthouse.
Carrolton; March 28, at 3
p.m .. Zanesville Holiday Inn ;
March 2U, at 10 a.m .. City
County Health Building,
Ath ens ; March 2U, at 2 p.m. ,
Common Pleas Court Room,
Gallia County ·Courthouse,
Gallipolis.

Industry under attack
By JEFFREY MILLS
1\ssuciated Press Writer
WASHINGTON .(AP) years
after
Sixteen
publication of a well-known
book detailing how funeral
homes sometimes exploit
bereaved consumers, a
federal agency is considering
regulating the industry.
The
Federal
Trade
Commission was expected to
decide today on ihe basic
provisions of a proposal to
regulate how conswners can
be treated in their hour of

®

Meetings are scheduled to
be held on March 27, at 10

Und er the regulation
recommended by its staff,
funeral directors would have

Phgne 446-9721

LONG
GOWNS
REGULAR AND
EXTRA SIZES
DISCOUNT PRICE
Reg . $6
Easy

care

f400
pol yes te r -co

died Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
alter a short illness.
She was a homemaker.
She was born in Cheshire,
Ohio Dec. 4, 1892 to the late
Samuel and Elizabeth Hit·
chen Manley.
Her husband, Byron Jay,
preceded her in death in 1966.
Surviving are a son, RObert
K. Jay, Columbus, Ohio; a
daughter, Mrs. Buena L.
Casey, Apple Grove ; a
brother, Robert K. Manley,
Montgomery Heights; a
granddaughter, two greatgrandsons, and a great •
great - granddaughter.
The funeral wUI be Monday
at 2 p.m. at the Stevens
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Marlin Campbell olllciating.
Burial wUI be in the River·
view Cemetery, Middleport,
Ohio.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 6 p.m.
Sunday.

NATALIE SOMERVILLE
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
Natalie Somerville, 73, Route
2 Letart, formerly of Boca
Raton, Fla., was dead on
arrival at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital Friday at 4:45 p.m.
She was born May 18, 1905,
in Letart to the late Everett
Thomas and Mrs. · Margaret ·
Smith Thomas·, Letart, who Is
living.
Her husband, Stanley K.
Somerville, died May 10, 1975.
A son also preceded her in
deatll.
· Survivors beside her
mother are a sister, Mrs.
mary
C.
BuchbQitz,
Cleveland,
Ohio;
two
brothers, Russell Thomas,
Letart, with whom Mrs.
Somerville made her home
for the past lour years and
Harry Thomas,
Point
Pleasant; and a grand·
daughter, Mrs. Margaret
M~ain, Washington, D. C.
The funeral will be held
Monday at 2 p.m. at the Crow
Hussell Funeral Home with
the Rev. Rufus Cromartie

.

Variety of lace nd em broidery
trims . M aize. p ink or bl ue, ln
sizes : S,M , L,X,XX .

SALII·ItRICID NOWI

INFANTS' BRUSHED NYLON

to provide customers with
clearly worded price lists and
SLEEP 'N PLAY SETS
descriptions of the services
One pi ece styles for Qir!s or boys.
for which they are paying.
Size s Smaii -Med .
r'uneral homes also would be
required to give pri ce
information
over
the
telephone and would be
forbidden from requiring a
casket for cremation.
The commission consideraREG.
REGULAR AND
tion comes alter a 1963 book,
1
EXTRA SIZES
5.50 ·16
"The American Way of
Death " by Jessica Milford,
Beauriful g i ft . worthy
gowns of c9refree 100%
told of consumers being sold
nylon with dainty embroineedlessly expensive and
dery and applique trims.
elaborate services when their
Dozens to choose from.
loved ones die.
S, M, l and X, XX.
"Choice doesn't enter the .
picture fo r the average
individual, faced , generally
for th e first time, with the
necessity of buying a product
of which he is totally
ignorant, at a moment when
....•0&lt;'-"'
..-he is least in a position to
quibble," Miss Mitford wrote.
She called funerals in
America ~&lt; a fantastic array
of costly merchandise and
services ... pyramided to
'•:.:=.:::·JOHNNY
dazzle the mourners and
WALKER
facilitate the plunder of the
MODEL
'
next of kin. "
.4130
There are about 22,500
.
,.,,
RODAIID
funeral establishments in the
United States making up an
"ACTIDII PATTEIIS"
estimated $6.4 billion per 1Dettol'tlt4H' Coverl. .
year industry.
The largest industry group,
the
National · Funeral
Directors Association, has
sa id the recommended
reg ulation "is completely
unnecessary and would be
costly to the conswner."

IIYLONa1G

waLTz ::r~~IONI

\REG.\·
· 4 ·~0
~ 1~.
.

loose, easy lit lor leisure-time
comfort. Soft nylon with brushed
or smooth finish . lots of pretty
solid colors. On
e fits all.

SIZES
S-M-L

JUIIIIHS' -~~:.:~~::

~~~

REGULAR

'$2.19

·~·

~~:

11 ••••n
~~ 4V
__
_
---

.,.7

CLASSIC Til

LA~

Maktsa
Aclcl lleauty to your
kome or .ltuslnan 1111•
tprlng. Plan now.

JCOlAllt
12:~.itJ-1!
41

State St.

~~1DO

LIGHTIRS
lEG.
'3
•••
FOR

ollicialing. Burial will be in
the Lone Oak Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral borne between the
hours of 7·9 p.m. Sunday.

Mary Lynch, Gallipolis.
Two sons, Stanford and
Fred preceded him as did
four brothers and two sisters.
There are .also 19 grandchildren, 11 great - grandchildren and three great great-grandchildren.
He spent uis life in Ga!lia
County.
·Funeral services will be
conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday
from Mt. Zion Church near
Crown City. Rev . Charles
Lusher wUI officiate. Burial
will follow In the church
cemetery.
Calling hours iwll be held at
the
Waugh-Halley -Wood
Funeral Home from 2-1 and 79 p.m. Monday.

MAXINE ORTH
GALLIPOUS - Maxine
Mercia Orth, 73, a resident of
282 Debby Drive, died at 12: 30
p.m. Friday in Holzer
Medical Center. She had been
in failing health the past two
years. She was a retired
nurses aide.
She was born Aug. 24, 1905,
at Kewanee, IU., daughter of
the late John and Flora Cook
Painter.
She is survived by the
following chlldren: John
Frederick Ortb, Palatine,
Ill.; Mrs. John (Mary)
Beattie, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Gene (Maxine) VandeZande
of Colorado Springs, Colo.
Six grandchildren survive.
Mrs. Orth has resided in
Gallipolis with her daughter
and son-in-law the past seven
months.
She was a member of St.
Paul's Episcopal Church in
Colorado Springs.
Funeral services will be
held at Law Mortuary in
Colorado Springs on Tuesday,
and burial will be in
Evergreen Cemetery,
Colorado Springs.
Local arrangements are
being handled by the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.

CHARLES L. LAYNE.
GALUPOLIS - Charles L.
Layne, !Hi, a resident of the
Bladen Community, died at
11 :15 a.m. Saturday at the
Huston Nursing Center,
Hamden, 0. following a brief
illness. He Is a retired far·
mer. Mr. Layne was born
June 26, 1883 in Ohio Twp.,
son of the late Ziba Layne and
Mary Jane Johnson Layne.
He was married to Emily
_Montgomery Aug. 2-1, 1910.
She preceded him July 19,
1958.

SCRIPTO DISPOSABLE

3

damag e to the Snyder
vehicle .
Two persons claimed injur)·. IJut were not im mediately treated following a
bit-skip accident on Bob
McCormick lid .. at 5:2:i p.m.
The patrol reports an
unidentified north bound

. Survivors include the
following children : Clarence,
Crown
City;
Calvin,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Mildred
Bias, Huntington, W. Va.;
Mrs. Everett (Jule) Clark,
Gallipolis, and Howard of
Sunnymeade, Calif. Two
sisters, Mrs. Almira Cox,
Eureka Star Rt. and Mrs.

Basic
top
in
carefree ,
polyester. Short sleeves . .
White. lig~t. dark solid colors.

LIMIT

bound vehicle oporatcd by
Kenneth
Snyder.
23,
Pomeroy.
Adkins displayed visible
signs of injury and was transported by the patrol to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
There was severe damage
to the Adkins' auto. moderate

'I

HARLEY MERRILL
GUYSVILLE - Harley L.
Merrill, 75, a resident of Rt. I,
Guysvllle, died unexpectedly
Friday
morning
at· Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
Born in Ripley, w. va . he

Scars and a passenger.

Lloyd Scars. Jr .. 1;, displayed
visible signs of in jury from
the broken glass. liut were not
immediately treated.
One person claimed injury
following a two-vehicle accid.ent on Sll 160, at milepo&gt;t
I, at 7 : 45 a.m.
Officers report that a south
bound auto operated by
Honnic P. Jones, 22, Bidwell.

had stopped in traffic on 160.
A second south bound
vehicle driven by Chester
W" rd. '!i. Bidwell. f:tih•d to
stop and struck the Jones
auto in the rear. .
1\ passenger in the Jones'
vehicle. f'inr!y A. JonPs . 22,

Bidwell, claimed injury , but
was not immediately treated.
Ward w·as cited on a charge
of assured clear distunce.
Bot h vehicles in curred
moderate damage.
One person claimed injury
fo llowing a two-vehicl e

collision on SR 160, at
milepost I. at 7: 45 a.m.
Officers report that while
passing. an auto operated by
Larry A. Hupp, 37, Crown
City, cut back into a north
bo und vehicl e driven by
1\oyal /\ . Cook, 73, Hemlock
Grove , 0.
A passenger in the Hupp
auto, J ack McGuire , 40 ,
Crown City. claimed injury,
but was not immediately
treated.
Both vehicles incurred
moderate damage . No

STOCK
REDUCTION

citation was issued.
The Gallia -Meigs Post
investigated a two-vehicle
collision Saturday on SR 160
at Ewington. at 8:15 a .m.
Officers report that a north ·
bound auto operated by
Christopher Aney, 19, Vinton ,
turned into the path of a south
bound vehicle operated by
Connie Graves , 28, Albany.
There was severe damag.e
to the 1\ney auto, moderate
damage to the Graves'
vehicle. Aney was cited on a
charge of failure to yield .

'

Quantity

LIVING ROOM

Regular
Price

Sale Price

360.00
1 ONLY
2 pc . Webb Early American wilh wood
669.95 573.00
1 ONLY 2 pc . Orange &amp; green Early American with wood
729.95
550.00
1 ONLY 2 pc . Early American Partridge cover
639.95
480.00
1 ONLY
2 pc . Solid brown Early American swivel chair
699.95 •525.00
1 ON~Y 2 pc. Sealy hide-a-bed suite orange and green
759.95
570.00
1----+----------"""---------------t-~---1~~-::-:-1
1 ONLY 2 pc. Collins Sealy floral Early Amer . Swivel chair
619.95
465.00
1"'--~--t---...,---------------------t----+---...
1 ONLY 2 Pet . Webb Early American solid green w - wood
479.95
360.00
. .----t--------....;_______________...,_
_;..:..:_+..:;:.::::;:=-1
1 ONLY 2 pc. Modern Collin !lrown
639.95
480.00
1 ONLY 2 pc. Green floral ( Slylecrestl
529.95
373.00
1 ONLY

479.00

pc . Sealy green floral couch

I

was a son of the late John and
Rozie Carter Merrill. Mr.
Merrill was a member of the
Rader United Brethren
Church of Ripley, W. Va. and
had been a resident of the
Coolville-Guysville area the
past 41 years.
He was employed with the
.2 ONLY 2 pc . Cumberland Contemporary brown floral
689.95
Athens County Highway
Department where he worked
l ONLY 2 pc . Collins green Early American w - ~ood
489.95
for the past 15 years. He was
a former employee ·of the
state highway department.
1 ONLY 2 pc. C~llins gold Early Am. w-wood and swivel rocker
619.95
Survivors include two
daughters, Mrs. Bill (Alice)
1 ONLY 2 pc . Collins green &amp; floral E A with' wood and Swivel Rocker
589.95
Mace of Parkersburg, W.
Va., Mrs. Charles (Maxine)
1 ONLY 2 pc . Collins Velvet Contemporary w-wood· chair
Griffis of Guysville, and a
699.95
grandson, Gene Griffis of 1-----i------~~!"------------------+-~~~-1~~:-:::~t
Guysville. He was preceded
1 ONLY
2 Pc. Brown velvet floral Contemporary w--swivel chair
699.95
in
death
by
his
wife,
Elma,
1"'----i--------------------------t----+~~~~
three brothers and two
1 ONLY
2 Pc. Gold floral Couch &amp; Solid gold Chair modern
499.95
sisters.
Funeral services will be
1 ONLY
2 Pc. Green Couch, Green. Love Seal
held at 3 p.m. Monday at the
779.95
White Funeral
Home,
Coolville, with Rev. Roy
1 ONLY
2 pc . Bronze Early American with swivel chair
679.95
Deeter and Reb. Ralph Smith
officiating. Burial will folloW
1 ONLY
Floral Love Seat ·
319.95
in fulckland Cemetery at
Belpre.
Frienda may call at the
1 ONLY
Hide-a-bed
399.95
funeral home after 2 p.m.
Sunday.
1 ONLY :J pc. Brown plaid Early Am. Couch, chair, love seat
749.95 .
2 Pet. Brown Vinyl Sofa Suite, Sealy Bedroom
The first British settlement
in Australia, in 1788, was a
penal colony at Port Jackson'
now Sydney.

.

Stop In for a
low···cost
'

AVAILABLE ONLY AT YOUR G. C. MURPHY STORE

\Thil"k went left of center

and •1ruck the mirror of a
so uth bound truck operated
by Lloyd ~c a rs. 40, Bidwell.

auto loan.

BEDROOM

Quantity

443.00
575.00
525.00
399.00
620.00
510.00
240.00
300.00
575.00
280.00

369.95

Regular Prit Sale Price

1 ONLY

4 pc . PC ' Pine Colony

1 ONLY

4

pc. PC Oak Webb

799.95

1 ONLY.

3 pc . Maple (brown)

460.00

1 ONLY

3 pc . Maple-Athens

549.90

1 ONLY

3 pc . Maple-Kincaid

1009.95

1 ONLY

4 pc . Oak- Webb

559.95

1 ONLY

3 pc . Pecan-Coleman

459.95

1 ONLY

4 pc. Oak Colony

766.00

1 ONLY

9 pc. Universa I Dining room suite

650.00
600.00
340.00
420.00
760.00
420.00
345.00
595.00
900.00

849.95

1199.95

. 407 PEARL STREET

DEKALB XL-72b

992-3662

Stands Strong
For A Yield Edge

Store Hours 9-6 M-S

PRICES GOOD MARCH 25 THRU MARCH 29

CENTRAL SOYA
'

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

We'll get you going.

All
PICTURES
LAMPS
END TABLES
CHAIRS
DINEITE SUITES

Sunday 12-6

· Here it is .. .DEKALB XL-72b . A strong standing
hybrid with The Gen etic Edge for big yields . Put it
to work in your fi elds.

.

25% OFF

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Round
or

WHEELBARROW

Square
. Point
Shovels
$595

5-FT. OAK
PORCH SWING

•2788
5.8 CU. FT.

We think every one should have a new car
some time. Even if that new car belonged to
someone else. If you are lookirtq for a new
car or a good used car, stop in at the C&amp;S
Bank. We will get you going in a new set of
wheels with a low cost auto loan.

0/

cars Bank
The Commercial 8r Savings Bank
25 Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

Spring Valley

Member FDIC

10 10

SYLVAN lA COLOR TV's
"THE BEST PICTURE MADE"

25" COLOR CONSOLES Starting At s53995
19" COLOR PORTABLESStarting At s33995
17" COLOR PORTABLESstartinOt ;35000
13" COLOR PORTABlfSStarting At S29f5

t

SYLVANIA
ISCOUn - All. - - STEREO

Consoles Starting
At $279.95

YOU CAN BUY lETTER FOI &amp;.iSS AT• ••

ALLISON ELECTRIC CO.
218 THIRD AVE.
l

I'

d"

COMPARE

'WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELl'"

GAI.LIPQUS

�·:.t •• , ...

fl.•"'"'

..

.

B-1 - The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday. Mar. 25, 1979

B
Big

Sav~ngs

20%

On Bedroom Suites

OFF Regular Price

On All 3 Piece Suits In Stock.
For Example; A Regular 1599.95 Bas$etf. Suite
Now selling for only

A Big 1120.00 Discount

SAVE ON ALL LIVING ROOM
SUITES IN STOCK!

20%

20 -y. DISCOUNT ON ALL WOOD DINEnES IN STOCK
We Have Many More Sets To Choose From, Above Dinette IS Just An Example Of ·

50%

TO

OFF

What You'll Find.

I
I

We Have One 3 Piece Early American

UYN

LIVING ROOM SUITE
Sofa, Love Seat, &amp; Chair

Reg. 1699.95

In Green Plaid

'55995
For all
.
three pieces

Now
Just

i

~
LOOKING THOUGHTFUL as she "rides" a stationary exercise biCycle at the spa is
·Cindie Blankenship, an editor of the Point Pleasant "Register." · ·

3 Piece Living Roo_
m Suite
·Sofa
0
1
·Love Seat
. Now Only '399 95 thre! ~i:! es
·Chair

REG. '499.95

STICKING YOUR TONGUE OUT won't help, Cindie! Cindie is doing sit-ups on a slant
board.

'

i

I

i.;

"ONLY ONE TO SELL"

-CHAIRS BY

BERKLINE, PONTIAC, NORWALK, CLEVLAND &amp; OTHERS

Reduced 20%
On Selected Group!

Editor's note : A special thanks go to Cindi e Blankenship
lor consenting to model for my pictures - and to the male
patrons of the spa for not kicking a nosy female reporter out on
her ear.

YOIJR CHOICE.

The GLINKA • K2510W - 25" diagonal Chromacolor
D Table TV. EVG - Electronic Video Guard Tuning.

BY SALLYANNE HOLTZ
U that mysterious "slap-slap" you've been hearing all
winter turned out to be your thighs smacking together or, if the
last time you tried to buy a dress, the clerk steered you toward
" Maternity Wear," maybe it's time you faced reality and
realized - you've got to shape up for spring!
The ~" itness Center Health Spa, located at 417 Second
Avenue across (rom the theatre. has a complete· array of
exercise equipment, including stationery bicycles, Dorsi bars
for arms, side-bend machines, slant board:;, leg extensions ,
treadmills, rowing machines, a Universal machine - which
has fa cilities for several different exercises ~ and a saWla,
steam bath and whirlpool.
The spa also offers weight counseling. One of the three
knowledgable instructors there can offer advice about which
machin es you should use to conquer your particular problem.
According to Madge Neal, manager of the spa , the
instructors will help you set up a program designed especially
for you - whether you want to Jose or gain weight. They will
weigh you, measure you. give you advice on what machines
you should use and show you how to operate them .
There is more than one of each ma chint!, so there is very
little, if any, waiting.
Mrs. Neal stressed that the spa caters to both men and
women. "We have more women than we do men, generally,"
she smiled, "but we have a good many men who come in
regular ly at night. "
The evening hours - 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. - are reserved fo r
men; the ladies come daily, 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. On Sa turdays ;
women come in the mornings, men in the afternoons, until 5
. p.m. There 1s a male instructor for the fellows, and two female
instructors for the women.
"The trouble is," Mrs. Neal lamented, " that people
associate the word:; "health spa" with weight lo ss. We're here
for people who wish to gain weight, as we ll.
"It's a well-knon fact that exercise riot only makes you
look better, it also makes you feel better. It keeps your mind
alert and ke eps your body in good shape physically.''
The atmosphere at the spa is one of relaxed camaraderie,
with what is usually thought to be a tiresome task turning into
a cheerful one.
"It's just easier when you're exercising with a lot or people
than it is to do it alone at home, " noted one male patron. "It's
more lik ely I'll keep it up here. ! always found myself quitting
at horne because I became bored. "
Dodi Seth and Kathy llile, both of Pomeroy, were relaxing
with diet' soft drinks when I found them.
" ! lost 52 pounds and now I'm busy getting rid of the nab,"
laughed Ms. Seth. "I guess there's no way to do that but work it
off ; that's what I hope to do here."
"There's no place else nearby quite like it ," broke in
Kathy !hie, gesturing toward the interior of the spa . " We drive
aJJ the way from Pomeroy just'to come here ; but we feel it's
definitely worth it."
Charlene Spaulding of Bidwell echoed the tho~Wht.s of
nearly everyone in the spa when she concluded, " I put on
wei ght over the winter - all that sitting around, unable to get
out because of the weatiler. I came here to exercise a nd make
new fri ends. And, by George, I'm going to FEEL
BETTER!!'"

of ·t hree
elegant styles

Durable , vinyl-clad mefa l cabinet finished In Simulat ed grained American Walnut with Nickel-Gold
color trim.

ONLY

•549°

0

.

$648

00

You Also Get A Free Base!
'·

HARBOR HOUSE TABLES

The GOUNOD • K2516P
Modern styling. Pecan wood-grained
finish applied to durable wood products
on lop and ends with select hardwood
so lid s framing top . Front and base of
s imulated wood . Casters.

No Trade-In
Required
MIRROR, MIRROR ... The time is 7:15p.m. and all is well as the men begin their
exercises at the Fitness Center Health Spa.

The MASSENET • K2520
Mediterranean styling .
Wood -grained fini sh
applied to durabl e wood
products on top and ends
with select hardwood
solids framing top. Front
and base of simulated
wood . Dark Oak color
(K2520DE) or Pecan color
(K2520P). Casters.
~ 54 X

20

X

"HEY, THIS IS FUN," Cindie says as she works out' on one of the many pieces of
exercise equipment at the spa. Cindie is doing leg-lilts.
·
The CHADWICK • K2518M
~= Early American styling. Maple wood-

grained fin Ish applied to durable woor
products on top and ends with sa le &lt;. .
hardwood solids framing to·p. Wraparou nd gallery, front and bracket feel
of simulated wood. Casters_.

15)

SQUARE
124

.II

24

)I

201

~ELECTRONIC

VIDEO GUARD

~ T~c~~~~ v~~~!~l~ers

are electronic,

they have no Internal mc;&gt;ving parts to corrode,
wAar or cause pi cture problems .

PLUS
• 1DO% Solid-State Chassis
• Power Sentry Voltage
Regulallng System
• Brilliant Chromacolor Picture
Tube

wHEW! seems to be what Gary Lewis, Gallipolis, is
thinking as he works out on one of the side-bend machines
at the spa. It's those deep knee bend:; that will really get
ya, Garv!

• One-Knob VHF and UHF
Channel Selector
• Picture Control
• Automatic Fine-tuning Control
• VHF /UHF Deluxe Spotllte
Panel
.

Relatives gather in
Florida recently

;p,

~~·"
II AOiiRSHIP llt!OUGH QU .. LII'I'

The first choice of millions!

We Also Stock These Brand Name Tables

• Bassett

• Riverside

And ·Many Others

l1JE UNIVERSAL Machine has universal appeal with exercise buffs. There are several.
exercises which can be done on this machine . .Cindie and other patrons of the spa
demonstrate.for this photographer by doing arm exercises.
\

.l

PINELLAS PARK, Florida
- On February 25, friends
and relatives gathered at the
home of Irene Payne in
Pinellas Park, Fla . for
potluck dinner an~ a day of
visiting. This has been a
yearly occasion since 1963.
' Those who attended this
year were as follows : Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Metcalf, VInton ,
0 .; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Sigman,Cheshire, O.; Clyona
Brucker Baker, Piqua, 0 .;
Mary E. Powell, Minster , 0 .;
Rosina and Merrtll Saunders
he watches
"OOH. I HOPE HE doesn't drop it," says John Collins', left, exprcsolon
and Catherine and Gilbert
David Siders, Gallipolis Ferry. lilt a weight. Looking on but Jess concerned is Wes Burnett,
Mea ls, all of Gallipolis; Janet
right, Gallipolis.
and Bill Riggs ; San Ber-

as

nardino , Calif.; Ann and Jin1
Sayre, St. Cloud, Fla.; Kay
and Bill Stanton, Tampa,
Fla.; Mrs. George E.
Roberts, and Mr. and Mrs.
Norris Carter, all of Lees·
burg, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Dickey . Zephyrhills, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Blazer, Dunediri,
Fla.; Mary Sullivan, Ada
Johnson , and Clyde Thompson, all of Largo , Fla.: Ed
and Ca roly n Checse br cw,
.Rev. Larry Freeman, and
Anthony and Tammy Price
and daughter, Brandi. all of
Pinellas Park, Fla.

�lo, r•

~.-. ~~·

~•.

.,,

•J r, ...

• • - ' ''•

"' I ••.

•

•

•

f',..:~•--

..., ,.

• ..

~.

B.J-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sund&gt;oy, Mar. 25, t979
B-2- The Sunday Times-&amp;mtinel, SundHy, Mar. 25. 1979

'

Maria McQuaid

Birthday celebrated

elect,ed as

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Gib Milliron, Gallipolis,
recently entertained with a
birthday party honoring their
daughter, Lisa Kay , .on her
sixth birthday March 17.
Helping Usa celebrate her
birthd ay were ~ommy
Milst ead, Hollle Davis ,
Wayne Amsbary, Jeremy
Harrison, Jo.dy House, Barry
Call, Julie Dressel, Danny

High Priestess

GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette
Shrine No. 44, Order of the
White Shrine of Jerusalem
met Tuescjay evening with
Mrs. Beatrice A. Kuhn ,
Worthy High Priestess, and
Robert W. Kuhn , Watchman
of Shepherds presiding lor
the annual reports and
Election
of
Officers.
Distinguished
officers
Sunday guesis of Mr. and
presented and welcomed
Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr. and
were : Mrs. Est a Reese,
· Mrs.Eddie Hupp and . son,
Supreme Instructor ; Miss
Jeremy were Mr. and mrs.
Gail J . Russell, Supreme
Roger Manuel and Amyu of
Matron of Honor; Lawrence
w. McQuaid , District
Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Wilford and Alisa and
Chainnan lor Material Objective. Past Officers were:
Tabitha , Mrs. Gloria Manuel,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hupp and
Mrs. Vennie Casto, Mrs.
sons, Jinuny and Billy, Mr.
Elizabeth Cloud, Mrs. Emily
Frazier, Mrs. Mary George,
and Mrs. Russell Roush, Ed
Past
Worthy
High
Roush, Don Manuel, Homer
COMMUNITY NURSERY students from this year's afternoon class are shown at play.
and Shirley Belt and Mr. and
Priestesses. Talmage Evans,
Edwin T. Thomas, a 65 year
Mrs. Rocky Hupp and son,
Rocky James.
Mason, John W. Evans,
Delbert A. Byers, Past
Watchman of Shepherds.
BLUE LAKEGALLIPOLIS - The staff for kbtdergarten. They learn Moor e, administrator and
Mrs. Kuhn, Worthy High
•'riestess gaveua short at Community Nursery such things as basic colors, teacher, 446-2795 or Bertie Mr. and Mrs. Richard
history of the Shrine ac- School, First Presbyterian cutting with scissors, are Roush, ~ide, 446-4274 or come Stocker and children are
movin~ from Davenport,
tivities during the year. Esta Church, 51 State Street, are . exposed to the alphabet, visit at school.
Iowa to a home At Addison.
Reese gave the Worthy now bt the process of taking numbers, motor skills such
The children pictured are
Mrs. Verdie Halley was a
Scribe report ; Florence enrollment for the school as: hopping, skipping, etc. from this year's afternoon
recen\
guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Willis, Worthy Treasurer year 1979-1980. If you are Cost of this class is $25 per class.
Ronnie
Knotts and family.
report; Elizabe.t h Cloud, interested in your chlld bebtg month. This class attends
Trustees ; Emily Frazier, bt a pre-school program and school five days a week, 9Finance Committee; Gail J . if you have a three, four or II :30 a.m. The alte\lloon
Russell, auditing Commjttee. five year old, take a look at class meets Monday, WedOfficers elected · for the the program. The pre·school,, nesday andFriday,l2:,45-2:45
year were: Mrs. Maria D. as it is presently operated, p.m. This is for three-year·
McQuaid, Worthy High has been in effect for nine olds and is a social time,
Priestess; Talmage Evans, years. The school is operated learning to share and getting
Watchman of Shepherds; and maintained solely by along with other children.
Mrs. Bess Canterbury, Noble mothers that financially Price lor this class is $17 per
month.
' ·
"Shoulder - High Fashion " with v.
,Prophetess; Robert W. Kuhn, support it.
The staff has found that it is
If
anyone has any
Associate Watchman of
overhead Opening , Wide Elastic
Shepherds; Esta Reese, to the children's advantage to questions , or wishes an apWaistline, all around . Back Zipper,
Worthy Scribe ; Florence run two separate programs plication of enrollment please
Side Seam Pockets. Pull -on Stitch
Nannette
Moody,
Willis, Worthy Treasurer; because of age span. The call
Crease Slacks in Polyester Nylon.
Mrs. Brenda Tucker, Worthy monolng class is lor 4 and 5· president, 441HH22, Sharon '
Swan Knit
Chaplain ; Miss Gail J . yearoldchiidren. Its purpose Johnson, secretary Russell, Worthy Shepher- . is to get these children ready treasurer . 446-1488, Barbara
dess ; Miss Mary Clendenin,
Worthy · Guide: Delbert A.
Byers, Trustee, three years.
Installation of Officers
Tuesday, April 17, at 7:30
MIDDLEPORT-Plans for the home of Nellie and Hallie
p.m. Business meeting at 2 hosting the Region II meeting Zerkle.
From
p.m. Practice for Officers of the Ohio Association of
Club members received a
Saturday, April 7, at 7 p.m. A Garden Clubs on April 21 at certificate of appreciation
potluck dinner wiU follow the the Meigs Inn were made dur- from the Gallipolis State In·
Your
instaUation.
ing a meeting of the Mid· stitute regarding parties for
Invitations ' received dleport Garden Club held at patients there. The next party
from Nazarene No . 28
there will be on June 21. A
Chillicothe March 24 ;
flower show as scheduled for
Lakewood No. 26, March 24; Pomeroy, April 6; Marion the May meeting.
o
Lllarleston No. 7, March 25, No. 15, April 7.
For'roll call members namDistributor
Following the meeting a ed the book which has helped
Sunday afternoons ; Scottish
Rite Temple, Charleston, W. social hour with refresh· them most with gardening
Va., Hoc)&lt;btg Valley No. 51, ments was held on second proplems. Mrs . Grace
April 5; Mary No. 37 floor with Esta Reese as French gave a report on the
hostess,
hook ' "After Dinner Garden·
ing" by Richard Langer who,
in a humorous vein , discusSed
P.E. T. offered
gardening in a small space,
Parenthood is skiUed labor, the problems he encountered
and like other skilled labor and how be solved them .
Refreshments were served
positions, some trabting is
by Nellie and Hallie Zerkle
most helpful.
The office of contbtuing and Mrs. Irene Davis from a
education at Rio Grande table decorated with white
College and Community mums and carnations with
College is offering the greenery and white tapers. A
nationally known Dr. Thomas salad course · was served.
Gordon's
Parent
Ef- Hostesses were Mrs. Louise
fectiveness
Training . Thompson, Mrs. Emogene
Crooks, and Mrs. Nancy
Program for this reason.
Taught by Dr. John and Reed.
Lydia Groth, certified and
QUARTER CLUB
licensed instructors, the
MEMBER - Delbert R.
course will meet eight
Yost of Lancaster has
Thursday evenings, March 29
become a member of
through May 17, from 7:30 to
Columbia Gas Trans10:30 p.m. Class sessions will
mission Corp.'s Quarter
be held in Anniversary HaD, Century Club after comroom 225, located on ·the Rio pleting 25 years of service.
Grande College and Com- He Is a well maintenance
munity College campus.
foreman at Sugar Grove.
Dr. Gordon's methods
instruct parents on how best
to deal with Jack of com- fifty staies.
munication between you and
Cost of the training Is $25
your child, parent-children per person or $45 per couple.
conflicts, tantrums and All texts are included. Inscenes,
and
un- terested persons can register
derachievement in school. for the program by callbtg
Gordon's · methods have Bernie Murphy, director of
already been taught to over a continuing education, at 245·
quarter million parents in all 5353.

Apple Grove

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A nn Marie Eiland and Stephen Bennett'

To wed in September
GALLI POLIS - Mr. and September 8, at the St. Louis
Mr s. Leonard A . (Anna) Catholic Church, State Street, .
Hiland , !96 Sanders Drive, Gallipolis.
Gallipolis, are proud to ·an·
nounce the engagement and .
forth coming marria ge of
thei r dau ghter, Ann Marie ,
19, to St ephen William
Bennett, 20, son of Mr. and
Attendance at The Free
Mrs. Robert G. (Patricia )
Bennett, Bittersweet Drive, Methodist Church Sunday,
March 4 was 94.
Gallipo)is.
World Day of Prayer was
An open church wedding
held
at the local church on
will be held on Saturday,
Friday evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Higgenbotham and baby
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Shook.
•'
•
Jfrf 'illt e
Mrs. Beulah Ocher of
Lancaster
visited recently
Tonightthru
with her daughter and son-inThursday
law, Mr. and Mrs. Loyd
Wright and attended services
at the local church.
Mr. and Mrs . James
THE POWER,
Gilmore
visited
their
THE SWEEP,
daughter,
Mrs.
Sandy
Dorst
THE SPECTACl E of
and children at Milan
an Epic De,&lt;'rt
recently.
Adventure!
,
Mr. and • Mrs. Ernest
"' Powell and Mrs. Maxine
" ...,
Michaels recently visited
' ) f ' \ 1';1--,,,~, 1'· ~
"'',(\~',l-Mrs. Nellie Tracy at Kimes
t0--'"' /
Rest Home in Athens:
Larry Smith is a patient bt
A JN I VUhA. ~f, f •q
Holzer Hospital.
f r,l!l ~' ll 1.. H"-1\.:Jl\..W
Ms . Edward Dailey,
.
.., ,_,_,
Wilkesville, visited recently
with Ms. Emma Fox.
Ms. Bertha Parker spent a
week in Coll!Dlbus with Ms.
CARTOON
Jeraldbte· Ferguson and son,
Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Alkire and Miss Cleo Parker.

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

(:OLO\) ·

'R.N'\Yi.~~~

~-'

Community nursery· opens enrollment

'

Arthur , VickY Bush and
Dwayne Lawson. Rhonda
Pyles also sent a gilt.
A St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out featuring a
Shamrock cake with pbtk
decorations, Kooi-Aid and ice
cream.
Miss Sharon Scouten
assisted with games. Others
assisting were her l!;randmothers, Mrs. Dorothy
Millirori·'and Mrs. Essie Lee,
and her aunt, Mrs. Charlene
Milliron.
Lisa also received presents
from her ' maternal great·
grandmother, Mrs. Emma
Spencer, Kanauga, .and her
great-aunts, Mrs. Florence
Allen arid Mrs. Dessi e
Holcomb of Pl. Pleasant, W.
Va.

II

Plans 'made to host meeting

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SIZE 4-14

!!=._swan

"i.

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L-.366 SECOND

floors with

·Hoover Celebrity II
with Powermatic
Nozzle

r HF: STF:R -- Ta mm y tlw empire bodice e~n d t·dging
F:arlt•m• Nibert , da ughter uf nf alencon lace trimmed the
MJ·. and Mrs. F:arl ·Nibert, . org&lt;:~nza ove r -ski rt e~nd
Ga llil•'lis Ferry. W.Va., mod slec\'t' s. Her nnly jt.~wt• l ry \\las
f.dward Michael Martin, sun u heart shaped necklace. a
uf Mr . and Mrs. Albert I .. gift to her from Mrs. Martin.
· Martin , Sr ., Cfwstt!r , were She c&gt;o rril'l a bouquet of baby
married un lle&gt;t. 22 •I lhe mums in gold, blue a nd white
Point Pleasant Uniled Trinity wit11 streamers of bl ue. The
Methodist Chur•·h in the groom wore a winter white
presence of membe rs of the suit.
immedi ate (ami li e~ .
Mrs. C. L. Head presented
The Rev. Tally Hanna per· selections including " Love
formed th e double .. ring Story", "Oh Promise Me",
ecremony .
"Evergreen", '' You Light Up
The bride was escorted tu My Life" and the traditi onal
the altar a nd given in mar:.. " Wedding March."
riage by her father. She chose
For her daughter's weda forma l length gown with a ding, Mrs. Ni bert wore a
chapel train. Lace accented street length lavender dress.

I.angsviJlt•; .Ji m cmd Pa mel;.~
Glassburn and family, J. C.,

.lane Ann , and Amy, &gt;o nd
Pa ulette Roberts, Bidwell ;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard BHi ll'v
Hnd CArole, Middlepoo1; Ml·.
"'" 'Mrs. Tom Cooper, Sherry
with Ferne Harri s, Dunn ~ and Sharl&gt;o , Cheshir&lt;•: Mr.
Clark and her husband , Sher- ""d Mrs. Jim Ball, Nl'w
.man Weiman, hosted the · H&gt;oven, W. Va .: Mrs. Mary
shower. A luncheon of sand- Lo u Carter, Mrs. Con11ie
wiches, potato chips, r~lis h Carter Turl ey, Hartford, W.
plate, cake,_punch and coffee Va.; Mrs. Aim" J ohnson. Spr·
was served.
ingfi eld, and Mr. and · Mrs.
Attending were Mrs. Har- Art Gilmore, Pomeroy.
ris, Mr. and Mrs. Weimann
Mr. and Mrs. John Clark '
Mrs. Susie Rigsby, Mik~
AGENT FIRED
Weimann, Sue Rinchiser,
CLEVELAND tAP ) -City
Carol Clark, Andrea Clark Purchasing Commissioner
Junior and Ann · Carter and William J . Hyde has been
daughter, Norma , all ul Lan- fired for alleged neglect of
cast er ; Mrs. Ca rolyn duty , in su bordinatio n,
Demoskey, Middleport ; Mr. in effici ency
and ·
inand Mrs. Jay Rowe and son, competence.

PuppJ,~~- ·

fit com•ortably
everywhere
Here's a p erfect
m a tch to Your b usy
d a y From morning to
night. t his sanda l
meets whatever
you 're d oing with
soft , flexib le comfort .
Good looks never
felt so goad. Even
the p rice is
comfortable .

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22.95

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BEL AIR

Camel
Whi.t e
Black

AV(------~-~ GAUl POliS, OHIO .J

MEMBERSHIP
hold a pancake and sausage
POMEROY - With the supper for the public. Tickets
beginning of the new year, are $2 for adults and $1 for
many senior citizens are . children under 12. All
renewing their membership proceeds from the bazaar and .
with the Meigs County Senior pancake supper will RO
Citizens Center. In 197B there towards the local support
McARTHUR - " Wh• t Do
were 907 paid memberships, needed tb continue senior You Want F rom Girl
bt 1977 there were 1,073 citizens programs in Meigs ~couting" is the theme of the
memberships and in 1976 County.
Area X Association of the
th ere were I , 194 mem·
Seal
of Ohio Gir l Scout
SENIOR CITIZENS DAY
berships.
Co
uncil
spring meeting at
The Third Annual Senior
Although there are no Citizens Day in Ohio is Mc;\rthur, Th ursday, March
chHrges made to senior scheduled for Tuesday , May 29. The Association is a part
citizens for any of the many 15, 1979.
of the go verning body of the
servi ces provided by the Plans arc underway lor Council. All registered Girl
Meigs County Council on activities in Meigs County; Scout work ers, leaders
Aging, the $2 membership lee included are a potluck dinner ass istant leaders, cooki~
helps to cover the cost of the at a county-wide gathering, chairmen, troop committee
newsletter that is published awards to persons over 100 members and girls over 14
monthly and mailed to over years of age and prizes in are en couraged to par·
2, 000 senior citizens. To dillerent categories to senior ticipate. Regist ration will be
receive your membership citizens attending the county· from 9:30 to 10 a. m. with the
card and help to continue wide meeting. More details meeting at 10 a.m., followed
mailing the newletter to you, about this important dHy will by potluck lunch.
stop by the Senior Citizens be announced later.
Interested per:,ons may
Center or mail $2 to Box 722,
cont act Mrs. Penny Stimpson
Have a nice week.
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.
I Handa!l ), servic e unit
N,\SHVILLE TRIP
The
Nashville
trip
scheduled
for
this
Friday, March 30, ha s two
openings due to last mbtute
cancellations. If you would
like to go on this three day
trip, call the RSVP office
immediately at 992-7884. The
cost if $140 for a double room
and $160 for a single.
Departure time from the
Center is 7 a.m . Friday
morning with arrival back in
Pomer9y at approximately II
p.m. Sunday evenbtg, April!.
EASTER BAZAAR
Items which can be purchased at the Center's annual
Easter Bazaar are on display
in the Elberlelds kisplay
window in Pomeroy.
Remember the bazaar will
be held April 5, 6 and 7 at the
Senior Citizens Center, East
Main Street, Pomeroy.
Friday, April6, we will also

N&amp; M
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BRIDGE PLAZA

Mon . thru Sat. lO.to 9
Sunday 1 til 5

'

june wedding planned
VINTON- Mr. and Mrs. A.
J . Rabies, Vinton, are proud
to announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of
their dsughter, Becky, to
Gary Mitchell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. otho Mitchell, Rt. 2,
Bidwell.
The bride-elect is a senior
at North Gallia High School.

A NEW DIRECTION IN
•

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Suction Power

Stay s St ro nger

Longer

Ship-Shape

Complete with Attachments

Baster Mates

F~JJhions

ahoy! Our naulicallooks for boys
and girls aro becoming .tbe most popular
looks around!

_.--...._Children 's Fashions by BRYAN

SAVE •3000

•
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•
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RITA
BEV

MARY
PAULA
·PAUL

All Steel Agitator · Steel BOlter Blrs
Replacoeble Brushes
Adapll to any carpet outomotically
3-Position Hondle ...so usy to lteerl
Edge-Cleaning Suction Power

Goes from carpet to bare floors
without special attai:hmentl

(;RAND OPENING APRIL 2

Nt1r StiHitrt
In Pllme..oy

..

.KIDDm SHOPPE

2nd ltrttt

Pameroy, O.

m.u,.

Call 446-9510 or 446-9511
After
March 25 For Appointment

1"-. .~............j '. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ; . ;. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .·~-. . . .. .
•

presented ca mations to hl·r

father and Mr. Mart in .
. The nt'\.\' Mrs. Martin is a
197i gradu ate of Poont Plea·
sr:mt Hi gl1 School and is
employed HS n _n urse technJ·
cicm at the Plcl:.lsant V&lt;llie v

Hospital. Point Plea sant. ,\
1969 gr"duate of Meigs Hi glo
Sc hool,

the

Wlployod

at

g r oo m

SUNDAY
YOUNG PeOJ&gt;ii's Service,
Paint Creek f!Cular Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. · ·
REVIVAL, Maffll 25·31, 7:30
p.m. nightly ,
Rodney
Methodist Church. The Rev.
Ca rl Hicks, : evang elist.
Special singing each night ;
Salem Baptist Oloir, March
25, and Frank Kunszabo,
Gallipolis Christian Church,
featured Tuesday .
PARENTS Without Partners,
family bowling party, Skyline
Lanes; 2 p.m., children and
single parents invited.
MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS Jr. Women's
Club will meet at the Gun
Club. Bob Marchi will give
demonstration on Wine.
TUESDAY
RIVERSIDE Study Club, 1 p.
m. at Kinfolks Restaurant .
Florence Wickline, host ess.
WEDNESDAY
PYTHIAN Sisters, 7: 30 p.m.
Come and bring macrame.
SATURDAY
STORY HOUR at Rio Grande
College Library from 2·3 p.m.
every Saturday aft ernoon
through May . With the help of
the Chil dren's llter" tur e
cl as~ . J ack Hart, in structor.
For more information, call
the library.

A l uminum
Ple~nt
a1
Rave ns wood .
The couple reside e~l Nl•w

Haven, W. Va. ·

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as
seen
on

• It rolls on wheels
• No plumbing needed
• Does 24 Lbs. in 30 min.
• Rapid spin dryer
• Family size capacity
• Use it at any sink
• Store in any room
• Real miser on electricityhot water-detergent

TV

f"t: .....Qu
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Mr. and Mrs. Edward Martin

Shes always been
a little gem,
no~ shes earrings.

director and co uncil delegate,
for forming carpools io
/'"'!. .-~ "·: '),
McArthur. other key Gallia
r
~:·;~ ,.·~ ~. -~ ~~:·:~'")... County Scouters arc Mrs.
('. '&gt;, ?.·,;~ &lt; -- .,..,. . ;
.
Barb Epling (Miles). Board
~ :;:~ ;.~;
memb ers . Mrs. Mildred
•1:
:~· ';,&amp;:, \\ &gt;-.0 :•
Donahue, !Clyde), and Mrs.
., /(\~~J.''" f' ~l,;_;\-... 1 Am e rica 's
Nancy Clark (Delb ert) ,
''!i ;1\';.\':k~"
· favorit e lil.tl egirl
1.
delegates, and Mrs. Cheryl
. no w ava1 I a ble in
~
~.'lft.,. - -.;:_t:~~:. :,\
ts
{obie on th e nomin ating
~
,Z.·.~'l1\ . A. I.· ': hypo-allergenic pi·e r. &lt;:o&gt;cl
committee.
g
tf' -~~f?;-\~
nn gs .
Business will btclude voting
~
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'
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~
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C
h
oose b lu e ca meo o n ster~
on
proposed
By-Laws
t
'
&gt;
/
';../
ling
s ilver or carnelian
changes, your evaluation of
~
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_:
.
·
ca
rnt'o
o n verme il.
the Family Partn ers hip
~
~Ji~A.J'""
Holly
Hobbie
' earr ings ... the
program of giving, an ex0~
~
'\
latest
additi
on
to
!h
e Hollv Hobbi e
planation of the Deferred
C..:.~:~
-~,
collection
wh
ich
includes
Giving program, The Green ,
"
pe
nd
an
ts,
pi
ns
and
bracelets;
Circle program, and the new
each p iece in it s own
stall teaming plan, a report
"keepsa ke" pouch .
of th e October 1978
From $6.
NATIONAL COU NC I L
MEETING , and the election
of Association chairman, and
a Vinton County delegate and
nominatin g comm itt ee
member. Mrs. Roxie Under·
417 Second Av e .
Gallipol is, 0 .
wood tJohn ), Jackson , is out" Across from the Th eate r "
going Association chairman.

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JO-ANN FABRICS

Her fian ce is a 1976
graduate of North GaUia
High School. He is selfemployed.
An open church wedding is
being planned for June 2 at
2:30 p.m. at the Vinton
Methodist Church, Vinton,
Ohio.

IN COOPERATION WITH
HAIR HAPPENING

Saving Pnce

* PARKW()()D

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS
.HASKINS TANNER (MEN 'S WEAR)
FULL HOUSE OF CARDS

J

ReQuest the ho no r of
you r presen ce at a

SPRING BRIDAL
FAIRE&amp;

ON

THE

PAIR
NOW!

LIMITED
TIMEOFFER .

Plug1 into standard electrical outlet!
• 31 %"

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24" • 16%" • No sptcill wiring

• N,p venting rtquired • Roll• on whHII
• 3 11perite cyciH · t:leoular; Parmanent

Pr"': FluffS. Tumblt •

Cool down peJiod

1t HO,l.LY PARK

.t
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*SCHULT
LINCOLN PARK

t . K&amp;K
MOBILE HOMES
t
3411 JICbon An. .

·t

Polat

67:::-

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Sunday, March 25th, 1979

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~uthsr~!c::fl•lcl J

STYlE SHOW

i.~·

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Pl~lllll .

FLOW ERLAND

LEAR PHOTOGRAPHY

alib~Ho.....
mes...A
..t - ,

A Budget

..

...

at 2:00 p.m.

.. , t"'

'•. .·,: .. .. "4.; ~
:_....... 1 · ,~

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11

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Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Ohio

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the 'Kaise r

DERIFIELD JEWELRY ·

Becky Raines and Gary Mitchell

"'r·
·ID p • ·r
~ -\CC

Qt. bag!

roses to uoth his mother and
Mrs . Nibert and the bride

Holly Hobbie'
J~lry

t;.ll

Featuring.·_
CHRISTY
KAREN
MERRI

GALLIPOLIS - Thomas
Jay
Smith
recently
celebrated his eighth birth·
day.
He is the son of Tom and
Mick ey Smith , Rt. 3,
GaUipolis, and the grandson
of the late John and Helena
Hill of Gallipolis, and Jim and
Vada Smith, Rt. I, Langsville.

Girl Scout
Council meets

Hush

Mrs. Martin was in H fl ora•
IJrown ensemble. The groofll
presented long stcmmPd J'('d

Thomas Smith

Senior Citizens ' Scenes.

~

J.\CROSS

one Cleaner!

Nibert, Martin exchange vows

Ryan. David Demoskt•y, MHI·
dlt• port: Sheil a Fett y.

1&amp;.

Clean carpets&amp;

.

POMEROY- A sho\Ver was
· held last Sund"y at the Sherman Weimann residenc:t• in
Lancaster for the Carter
family whose home recently
burned. The family lost a ll of
their possessions in the fire.
Mrs. Ca rter is the sister of
Mrs. Weimann who •olong

SEE WH1
RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE
COMMUNITY
COLLEGE
IS THE
BEST

f.U\S

Sunday shower held

Public mvited,
Free admission
Please pl an to at ten d our
st yl e show fea,uring more
t han 40 fashions pr esented
by HasKi ns T anne r of Pt..
PleasanT &amp; JoAnn Fabrics .

�IH.::The Sunday Times~entinel, Sunday, Mar. 25. 197!!

Grueser discusses health services
POMEIIOY..{)pal Grut•St•r.
R. N., Mei~s County H~altl1
Dt•partmt•nt, disl'usscd tht•
variety of ~«.•rvic'es availablt•
to the publi&lt;' through the
departml'nt at the Tuesday ·
ni~&lt;ht
meeting of the
Salisbury PTO.
She explained some of the
work done by the sanitarian ,
told of the clinics offered free '
of charge to the public, and
encouraged those attending
to take advantage of the ser·
vices offered.
Jack Welker, coach of th"

sixth grade lmsketbHII tl•am,
pn·st• nlt•d .Juhn J.islt•, prin·

dpal , with the first pl:~&lt;·e
trnphy Wi&gt;n hy the tumn in the
Meigs Invitational baskt•thall
tournament. The trophy will
go into the school trophy
~

L'CtSC .

Durin g th e busin ess
meeting it was announc~ d
that the PTO wil serve a din·
ncr fot· Pomona Grange on
April 20. A skating party will
be held for the entire school
sometime this spring, it was
dt&gt;t'iC!(~tJ .

·Homemakers'
Circle

New officers elected were
Susa n Pullins, president ;
Yvonne Young, vice presi-

dent ; Paulette Harrison ,
treasurer; J ennie Warth,
seerutary. They will be in·
stalled at the April meeting.
Also at the April meeting the
Rio Grande Chora le will per·
form and the public b invited .
Fathers were counted twice

featuring

RE IT AT THE
JUST ARRIVED

60" TEE SHIRT
White KNITS
B~ck yd. '2.95
60" GAUZE
KNITS
yd. '3.49

\

\'
\•

Wide Selection
of Pastel Eyelets

Tamara Kiesling
Y2 PRICE
On
McCall's,
Simplicity, Kwik Sew
Patterns
wi-th
purchase of $10.00
more Fabric now
March :\1, 1979.

On the T
Middleport, o.

.

I

May wedding planned
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. High School, a 1978 graduate
Henry Kiesling, Rt. 2, Bid· of Morehead State Univerwell, are . announcing the sity, and is employed by
engagement and approaching Robbins-Myers.
marriage of their daughter,
The wedding will be an
Tamara Kaye, to Maurice event of May 26 at 2:30p.m.
Edward Swisher, son of Mr. at the First Baptist Church,
and Mrs. Robert Swisher, Rt. . Gallipolis, with Pastor Alvis
1, Bidwell. The bride-elect is Pollard officiating at the
a 1976 graduate of Gallia ceremony .
Academy High School, and is
The gracious custom of
employed by Holzer Clinic, open church will be observed.
Ltd. Her fiance is a 1974
graduate of Kyger Creek
TEACHER PROTEST
UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS,
·Ohio (AP) - Classes were
canceled Friday lor 597
students at Wiley Junior High
School after most of the
school's 43 teachers walked
off the job.
The teachers in the
Cleveland Heights-University
Heights school system were
protesting the school board's
handling of an alleged
student assault of teacher a
few weeks ago.
The walkout followed a
'boa rd ruling that the incident
was a case of verbal rather
than physical attack.

a

Night with the fourth grade
winning the banner.
Refreshments were served.

Saron fames

Miss james engaged

The course will prepare
students to safely participate
in scuba diving. Certification
can be achieved upon completion of required open
water dives.
Cost of the class is $175 and
includes all d,iving equipment
and text.
Instructors for the class are
Brad Krings and Joey
Jacques. Students should
Brenda Glenn and Charles Manuel
provide mask, fins, snorkle
and swim suit.
Students wishing
to
register lor the scuba class
should call Bernie Murphy,
245-5353, ext. 255.
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. School. The groom is a !973
Enrollment is limited to 14 . Joseph Glenn of Racine are graduate of Southern Local
students.
announcing the engagement and a 1977 graduate of Rio
and approaching marriage of Grande. He is presently
their daughter, Brenda Lee, employed at Southern Ohio
Salisbury honor roll to Charles Raymond Manuel, Coal Co.
The open church wedding
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
will
take place on Aprill5 at 2
Charles
Raymond
Manuel,
SALISBURY - Fifty-seven
p.m.
at the Racine Baptist
Sr.,
Racine.
students
at
Salisbury
Church
with the Rev. Don
The bride-eleot is a senior
Elementary School have been
Walker
officiating.
named to the honor roll for at Southern Local High
the fourth six-week grading
period John Lisle announced.
Students must maintain a
"B" or better to be named to
the roll. Named were;
·
First ~ Traci Bartels,
Melanie
Beegle,
~my
Brothers, Heidi Caruthers,
Kelly Douglas, Wally Hat·
field, Jay Humphreys,
Kristin King, Marsha King,
Deanna Norris. Michael
Parker, Aaron Whaley,
Sandra Whaley, Mark Wyatt. ·
Second - Michelle Taylor,,
Nick King, Marc Corsi ,
Wesley Young, Mary But·
cher, Jody Taylor, Melodi
Carl.
Third - - David Beegle,
Bill Brothers, Sue Fry, Lisa
Frymyer, Audra Houdashelt,
Artie Hunnel, Kevin D. King,
Kevin V. King, Shannon
'Slavin, Angie Sloan, Tamra
Vance.
· Fourth - Lin Chase, April
Clark, Todd Cull urns, Phil
King, Brenda Sinclair, Darla
King , Lisa Pullins.
Fifth - Rose Barnhouse,
Jodi Harrison, Rod Harrison,
Darren Hayes, Angela
AJIINIVERSARY. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Alva E. Johnson
Patterson, Scott Pullins,
celebrated their forty-second anniversary Feb. 25. Alva is
Cindy Sauters, Tim Sloan,
the son of the late Frank and Edie Mae Johnson. Marjorie
Anita Smith, David Warth.
is the daughter of the late John and Goldie Broyles
Sixth - Rilth Fry, Cindy
Johnson. They were the parents of four sons, three of
Hazelton, Sandy Hoyt, Jeff
whom died in infancy, and Alva who died in 1975. Helping
Kauff, Tim LeMaster, Teresa
them bl celebrate were their daughter-in-law, Charlotte
Johnson, and grandchildren, Alva Ill, Shawn, Sandra and
Pratt, Denise Stegall, Jackie
John. Their cake was baked by their granddaughter,
Welker.
Sharon .

' -·

CLIFTON, W. Va . - Ms.
Betty James of CUlton, W.
Va. and Donald James of
Hartford, W. Va. are an·
nouncing the engagement of
their daughter, Sharon
James, to Mike Rhodes, son
of Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Rhodes, Letart Falls.

The brtde-elect is a 1975
graduate of Wahama High
School and is employed at
Long ~John Silver's in
Ravenswood, W. Va. Her
fiance is a 1973 graduate of
Southern High School.
Wedding plans are in·
complete.

DAFFODIL DAYS - April 6 and 7 are wbeh Mother Nature will be helping the
American Cancer Society's Gallia County Unit by providing thousands of beautiful yellow
daffodols. These flowers ol hope will become flower power to raise money for research, and
service for li&gt;cal cancer patients. A corps of volunteers of the Gallia 'CountY Unit will be
taking dQnations for these daffodils at various 'locations throughout the county as weli as
taking presale orders. The flowers will be available individually for a 25 cents donation or in
bouquets for a $2.50 donaiion. If anyone wishes to make an advance order they are
requested to call the Cancer Society office at 443-7917. Dr. Tim Kyger, chairman of Daffodil
Days said, "Putting a breath of spring in your home will help to raise your spit its; putting a
donation in for the American Cancer Society's Daffodils will help raise the hopes of many
cancer patients."

LaMar

BEAUTY SALON
101 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, 0.

992·7056

PRE-EASTER
PERM SPECIAL
Was
$15.00
· ·$20.00
$25.00
$30.00

Now
Perm .................. $11.50
Perm.:................. $16.50
Perm •••••••••••••••••• ·$21.50
Perm ...................$26.50
1Effect. Mar. 20-Aprll 17,19
Call for Appointment
Terri Walker, Owner·
Operator
Operator Jean Blevins

MARCH 25th -SUNDAY

HOLIDAYINN,KANAUGA
. No Admission-Everyone Welcome
SEE AD ON PAGE 3-8

LAST ONE!

$28,500

L lncluaes: Delivery
Y and Set Up.

For Easter Sunday, April

15th, make your greetings
as heartwarming as spring.
"Flowers do it!"
Spring Blossoms

For Someone You wve
•UUES •MUMS •AZALEAS
•CORSAGES •CUT FLOWER
ARRANGEMENTS
•PERMANENT MEMORIAL FI.DNERS

Top quality furniture throughout, carpeted, 2 full baths,
garden tub with separate ~hower, whole ho_use insulation
with Fom -Cor total wrap, frost free refngerator, self·
storing windows, slate entrance way.

Pomeroy Flower Shop

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

Mrs. Millard VanMeter
Phone 992-2039
106 Butternut Ave. ·
.992-5721
Pomeroy, O.
We Accept All Major Credit Cards and We
Wire Flowers Everywhere .

,,

,

992-7034
"'

"Fmest Manufactured !lousing''
1100 L MAl", POMEROY, 0.
•'

Myrna Custer a~d Mrs. Cindy
I.inn .
Plans we re made for a

or the

~best-looking
~,

Easter ever.
- otrideRite

Wh~e

or Black .
Patent

New Hope
BY ADA KEELS
James Dewy Keels '
brother, r,.Ioyd Keels visited
their faiher, Dewy Keels
Saturday.

"

North Gallia
honor roll

r·- ·-·----..-..,.
Social I
1 Calendar 1

YOUR FATHER'S MOUSTACHE ATTENDS
SEMINAR - Mike Williams, right, Mark Mord , left, and
Dan Adams have just returned from the "International
Hair Show" held in New York City. While there, the Your
Father's Moustache staff attended seminars with
educational directors from "Jingles of London,"
" Flongueras of Spain," " The Chadwicks" of Britain and
many world renowned hairdressers. (Photo by Sallyanne
Holtz) .
Shirley Morris, Penny
Pennington, Penny (Tackett)
Justice.
ll·A - Kendi Barr, Mary
Cantrell, Tammy Pa tton ;
Connie Holley, James
Jacobs , Lucretia Justice ,
Tajana Justice, Cindy Sisson,
Julie Smith, Greg Thacker.
11-B - Geri Betts, Sherry
Browning, Jeff Gardener,
Rita George, Sally Kemp,
Richard Payne, Regina
Priddy , Rach a el Rece ,
Robert 1'homaschek.
JO-B - Patricia Denney,
Rebecca Hash. Otis Lun·
sford, Glenna Mill~r. James
Morris, Lorrie Pope, Karen
P{)wers, Tami Spencer,

Virginia Staton, Lisa White.
10-C - Lisa Fuller, Cheryl
Hammons, Lori Miller, Pam
Snyder, Ruth Sowards.
9-A - Richard Erwin ,
Charlene Hammon s, Eric
Holle, Jay Moore , David
Roberts.
9-B Dana Green ,
Rebecca Jones, Lisa Mar·
cum, Jamey Mink , Nikki
Thaxton, Willy Thomaschek.
9-C - Bobby Blackburn,
Gregg Dee!, Yvonne Jacobs,
Joanne Jones.
·
9-C - Mike Null, Amy
Pennington, Tommy Ragen,
Robin Stinson, Tammy Ward.
9-D - Ginny Adams, Vicki
Campbell, Teresa Legg,
Janette Oiler, Rita Payne.

.---------liiliii-iiiii/oooii-oioiiiiliiiii
Optometric Vision Center
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy , Ohio
614-992-3279
Office Hours;
Monday , Friday
9-12 - 1-4
Examinations:
by Appoin tmenl

Optometrists :

Dr. A. Jackson Bailes
Dr. T. Jay Bradshaw

HARRISONVILLE Senior
SUNDAY
MARY Shrine No. 37 Order Citizens meeting, 7 p.m.
of White Shrine of Jerusalem Tuesday at the town hall with
will meet for rehearsal birthdays to be observed.
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Pomeroy Annual dues will be collected
Masonic Temple for the and refreshments 'of ice
purpose of installation of cream and cake will be
REFRIGERATORS· RANGES· FREEZERS
served. All senior citizens are
officers.
MIDDLEPORT Youth welcome.
WASHERS • DRYERS
MEIGS LOCAL School
League 7 p.m. in council
SPEf 0 OUEEN
25' CONSOLF
room at Middleport City Hall. District O.A.P.S.E . will meet
fiEAVY DUTY
COLOR TV's
All interested persons are at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at th e
WASHER &amp; DRYER
invited. II is for all ages and Meigs Junior High School,
$518
$588
especially girls' summer Middleport.
WEDNESDAY
Softball:
l 11 CU F 1 ADMIRAL
11" CU FT. FHIGIUAIIIE
POMEROY
MIDfHD51 PHUUF
MONDAY
FROSl PROOF
RACINE Summer League DLEPORT Lions Club
REFRIGEBA TOR
REFRIGERATOR
noon
program meet Monday ~t 7 regular meeting
$]99
$549'
Wednesday
ijt
the
Meigs
Inn ;
p.m. at Racine Elementary
School for all adults all members urged to attend.
MANY MOll VALUIS. HUIR'(f
interested in program.
WILDWOOD GARDEN
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30 CLUB, 7:30 Wednesday night
p.m. Monday night at the at the Riverboat Room of the
MIUDLEPORl 0
school. Reading program to · Meigs Office of the Athens
County
Savings
and
Loan
Co.
be discussed . School pencils
and T..;hirts to be on sale.
RUTLAND GARDEN
CUB, 7:30 Monday, home of
Mrs. Vernon Weber with Mrs.
Lawrence Milhoan, cohostess.
Mrs .
Robert
Canaday to discuss "Salt
Injury to Plants" with Mrs.
Boy can you have a good time
Bernice Ledlie to give work
in these sandwich bottom wood wedges!
saving ideas, and Mrs.
And do they ever have a comfortable padded
=--- - ,I, Russell Little, current
insole
to make you happy while you're on
. gardening tips. Members are
· the move . Come on, try 'em. You'll have a really
to take flowering twigs for
fun time'
identification and there will
'be a demonstration on forcing
branches and ways to use
tbem.
OH KAN Coin Club regular
business meeting Monday
evening at Riverboat Room
of the Meigs Branch, Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.,
w. Main, Pomeroy. Out-of·
town coin dealers will
be
present
to
buy,
sell, trade collector items
during the social hour
preceamg tho 8 p:m. meeting ..
Following the business
session, a coin auction will
&amp;e'beld and refreshments will
be served. Anyone interested
in collecting coins or paper
money is invited.
REGULAR MEETING,
Gallipolis
Eastern Local School Board,
7:30 p.m. Monday in school
library. .

BAI&lt; ER FURNITURE

tryfhese wedges,
just for FUN!

Wolfpen
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
and Kevin were Wednesday
visitors of Mrs. Lena Knapp
of Langsville.
'Mrs. Iva Johnson was a
Saturday afternoon visitor of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Lincoln Russell, local, was
a Sunday visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin Russell of ·
Middleport.
Earl Russell and Donald
Russell were · business
visitors in Kentucky one day
last week.
Iva Johnson was a Sunday
dinner and afternoon guest of
Mrs. J. R. Murphy, Peggy,
Barbara and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Murphy and children.
Charles Knapp was an·
overnlght Saturday and
Sunday guest of Keith Kinzel.
Iva Johnson was an
overnight guest Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma.

Products part y to be held at
the Meigs ·Inn, Wedn esday,
per pound.
March 28 at 7: 30 p.m. Anyone
FREEZER NEED
So - To make your freezer wishing to order any products
DE.'ROSTING?
GALLIPOLIS - Even· economical YQU should use · can do so by attending the
though your freezer may be your &gt;tored food, not save it ! party or by contacting any
" frost free" it will oc· To get a constant turnover of board member.
Plans were finalized for a
casionally need
some food. usc your freezer for
preserving
seasonal
food
yard
sale to be held April 3
cleaning. Deciding when to
such
as
fruits
and
vegetables
and
4
at the Carl Searls
give the freezer a complete
when
the
supply
is
abundant,
residence,
484 Pearl Street,
cleaning will depend on how it
quality
high,
and
cost
usually
Middleport
.
Anyone having
is used . Usually, a freezer
reasonable
.
When
these
any
items
they
would like to
requires little cleaning, since
it is not used in the same way seasonal foods and meat· and donate for the sale can do so
as a refrigerator. If your · poultry are removed, fill up by ca lling, 992-5147. 992-2234
freezer is not "frost-free/' the vacated space with or 992-5480. Items will be
you will want to follow the cooked, baked and ready to picked ·up . A bake sal e will
be held in conjunction with
manufacturer ' s recom- eat foods .
Some general tips on the yard sale.
mended
method
for
Board members attending
defrosting each model. Most . freezing home prepared food s
tli.e
meeting were, Nan cy
are:
suggest that defrosting
All
flavorings
should
be
Carnahan,
Joy ce Quillen,
should be done before the
added
when
the
dish
is
Pauline
Reut~r.
Ca li sta
Irost is !&gt; inch thick on the
freezing surfaces. A thick prepared for heating before Searls, Diana Taylor and
layer ol frost not only lowers serving because: Black Ralph Werry.
The next meeting is set for
the freezer efficiency but also pepper, clove, onion and
increases the operating costs. garlic in casseroles become April 2 at 7 p.m.
Even if you decide your stronger during freezer .
freezer doesn't need- a storage. Other seasonings
thorough cleaning at this tend to weaken in freezing.
- Stews keep better than
time, you might want to take
fried
or broiled meats.
'
an inventory of what you
Some
foods
do
not
freeze
have and begin now, to use
North Gallia High School .
your frozen foods not only to satisfactorily, or have a very announces its honor roll for
make room for the new crops limited storage life ... the f0urth six-weeks period.
that will soon be ready Mayonnaise does not keep as
12-A-Kim Hash, Rebecca ·
(possibly, asparagus and well as salad dre ssin g. Hash, Clarence Kirby, Tami
rhubarb by next month,) but Whites of hard cooked eggs Phillips, Torona Stanley,
also because any frozen food get tough and rubbery.
Kendra Ward, Stacey Win·
- Foods to be frozen ston
is best if used within a year.
.
Many foods begin to lose should be removed from .heat ' 12-B - Roger Cremeens,
qualify if frozen for more before they reach the well· Gladys Dodrill, Fauna
done 'stage .
than a leW months.
- Cream-style sweet com Donahue, Tim McComa s.
For most families a freezer
is more of a convenience than retains its flavor better than
·
a savings. Whether or not it whole kernel corn, and far leaving. The public is in vited
·
better
than
corn
on
the
cob.
pays you to have a freezer
to atten d.
Label
packag
es
clearly
will dpend on how you use'.it.
TUESDAY
,
DREW. WEBSTER Post 39,
The more food you put into with contents and freezing
American Legion, annual
the freezer in a year, the less date .
Arrange packages so that birthday party , 7:30 p.m.
your cost per pound. For
example, if a freezer of 12 those whi ch have been in the Tuesday at post home for
cubic feet is filled with only freezer the longest are the member s of PoSt, auxiliary
and families .
360 pounds of food in a year, first ones used .
Arrange foods by groups to
the storage cost for the food
MOTHERS OF Southern
will be approximately 19 save time when looking for a Local Junior Class Tuesday 7
cents per pound. If the particular product since p.m. at high school cafeteria.
freezer is filled with 540 keeping the freezer open Alumni banquet plans will be
poimds of food in a year, the increase s your operating made .
storage cost will be around. costs.
. MEIGS AREA Holiness
13h cents a pound; if the
Association will meet at the
freezer is filled· with 900
Rutland Community Church
pounds of food per year, the
Tuesday 7: 30 p.m. Lloyd D.
storage cost is only 9 cents
Grinun, Jr., pastor of th£
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene will be the speaker.
The public is invited.

1

Patent

~

directors. 'Jbcv a re: Mrs.

HomeEeoaomJe~

RIO' GRANDE - If you
have ever wanted to get in·
vol ved in the sport of scuba
diving, this is your op·
port unity .
Rio Grande College and
Community College and the
Central Ohio School of Diving
will offer a six session
Beginning Scuba Diving class
Tuesdays, March 27-May 1, 6·
10 p.m.
Lyne Center will be the site
of the class sessions con·
sisting of two hours in the
pool and two hours classroom

DUTCHESS

new mem bers to th e board of

El&lt;leuloa Alleal,

in observance of Father's

April wedding planned

Sewing Center

·Inc. announced today two

BY BETI'IE CLARK

time each session.

Sewing
Fever?

SOUTHEAST OHIO
Southeast Ohio Junior Miss,

Annie Anybody

Scuba class offered

GOWEN ANNIVERSARY - An open house will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. on April 8
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Alburtice Young , Clifton, W. Va. on their 50th wedding anniversary.
The couple were married on April12, 1929 at Columbus. Hosting the anniversary celebration
are their children and grandchildren , Mr. and Mrs. Harold Young, Clifton; Mr. and Mrs.
George R. (Dick) Young, Grandview Heights, Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Mrs. Gary Clark and
Mrs. Chester Young, both of New Haven, and Mrs. Butch Schwarz, Mason, W.Va .

junior Miss
adds members
to ·Board

--

•

White
Patent

Infants, Children'S, &amp; Misses Sizes W~h .
8, C, D &amp; E WIDTH IN

We ordered and received Three Shipments of PIANOS
and ORGANS to CELEBRATE our 3rd ANNIVERSARY or
BILL-WARD'S BIRTHDAY SALE Thru MARCH 31~ 1979Hurry on in! ·
l

,

'

DRESS SHOES
Stride Rjte®. The right choice for
growing feet. .
·

SAVE '300-'400-'500 ~:~~

(P$) WE Will HAVE NO PRICE INCREASE .APRIL 1, 1979-ISN'T THAT NICE?
· FINANCING AVAILABLE-LAYAWAYS ARRANGED
446-4372

CHAPMAN'S QUALITY
SHOE STORE

heritage
house

f'RIENDS OF THE Meigs
County Libraries Monday
7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Library. A treasurer will be
elected due to Kathy Foster

Next to Elllilfelds In Pomeroy, 0.
"

of shoes
N. -iND AVE.

OPEN FRIDAY

TIL8 PM

�B~-TheSunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday.

B-7-The Sunday Tim~s-sentinel , Sunday. Mar. 25. Jil79

Mnr. 25, 1979

,

GALLIPOLIS
The
French
Art
Colony
Photography Exhibit for
amateurs, local and otherwise, will be available for
viewing this Cllftling Saturday, March 30, when Riverby
opens its doors. at I p.m .
Three judges, knowledgeable
and experienced in the
photography field will have
previously viewed
the
exhibits and awarded ribbons.
Bill Wolf who has been a
photography · ~netructor at
Ohio Univer!llttlhe past ten
years received:.lils degree in
photography ' from
the
University Of Southern
California in 1952. From there
he wentto Pensacola, Florida
as a marine COrPS instructor
in photography &amp;t the Naval
school. returliiRg to Los
Angeles to teat&amp; Microfilm
photography priOr to movinf
to Athens. . , .::tr.
· Barbara . .ock live&gt;
near Cbesapeili8, Ohio and
teaches photogriphy at the.
Huntington Galleries across
the river. She '~elved her
instruct!on ·at , Marshall
University, : illirning · a
Masters In Jollfllalism and
completing eltbteen post
graduate h -· in mass
c ommu11i~n and
photographji · . e taught
photography .
Marshall
and the Iro " ' branch of
Ohio 1Jilivetsftt and was
. employed as a jlbotographe,r ·
by Patron's . Insurance
· Company in .Beuefontalne,
Oh.
: .''
Ric MacDo~as been a
West Vlrginiai:&lt;Since 1968
when he moveiC to a farm
near Hamlin ·liJ Lincoln
County, working as a teacher

.. ,
!.•I

/I .

...
·'

•' • ·I

.' "

,,.
' I'

' ,.

' '·

,.

0

'·

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and principal in the public
schools and participating in
environmental projects. As a
photographe r he ·is par~
ticularly concerned with the
Appalachian region and its
people receiving first place
awards in two state competitions as well as a first In a

national VI:'&gt;TA photography
contest in 1975. His work was
selected for a show sponsored
by the U. S. Department of
the Interior and also for the
Ame .. ican Waterways
Floating Center for the Arts.
The U. S. Information Services chose Ric's slide show,

"H ural Appalachia " lor a
Euro-African Tour in 1978.
Th.c Huntin~ton Galleries
where he is associated with
the education dtpartment has
commissioned
him
to
produ ce a multi·media slide
show.
.Exhibitors may bring their

pictures , ... not more than six
... to Hiverby between I and 5
p.m., Sunday the 25, and on
Monday, Tuesday or Wed·
nesday ~ween I and 3 p.m.
or from 7 til 9 p.m. Wednesday evening . At that time
they can fill out the application form which will

require either Art Colony
membership o,r a $5 fee.
Pic ture titles and the
photographer's name should
be printed on the back of each
picture which shout&lt;! be
mounted on m at board
(available at White'·s Paint
store) with approximately a

two inch border. Framed
pictures are acceptable If the
total size Is no larger than 14"
by 20" . AU pictures must be
wired for hanging. Value and
selling price if desired will be
requested on the application.
The AI:'! Colony requires a 15
percent commission on aU

~casserole

Robert Leberman 's

French Art Colony photography exhibit planned ·!

for the best. .
Or you can loss fiscal
caution to the wind; mortgage
your home and call in the ·
experts. Robert Leberman is
teady .when you are .
As ohairmart of Casserole
Catering, the granddaddy of

By YARDENA ARAR
Assoelaled Press Wrtier
BEVERLY HilLS, Calif.
( AP) - There are several
ways to throw a party. You
can scribble BYOB on your
invitations, put out some
bread and cold cuts and hope

pictures sold from Riverby tq
help maintain the galleries /
Camera make will also IMi
requested.
The show will be on display,
throughout the month o~
April. Pictures may be
picked up the first week irl
May by exhibitors.

Southern California caterers contender for the title of the Branda, who ordered a dinner dr.opped into town. Leberman
for six in his .Japanese-style discloses that the Fab Four
and the largest of the breed, entertainer's entertainer.
He 's calered for everyone home. " It was the first time just loved a hamburger
l.eberman's been responsible
for some o£ the ritziest bashes from Tihy Tim - "a bug on · the s1aff had ever served a concoction that included Coke
cleanliness ... he only ate or- meal in stocking feet ."
in town for 33 years.
"and cornflakes.
In the 1960s, Casserole also
And if Hollywood is the ganic foods served only on
It was dubbed the Beatentertainment center of the sterilized plates and only by played housemother to the ieburger, Leberman says,
world, l.eberman is a strong ·one man" - to Marlon Beatles whe never they and " I sti il have the letter

~.

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~.
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,6; r •

'

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ARE 8EEF • U.S.i).A. GRADED CHOIC.

eless Whole

$
om
.R ound •••
16 to 25-lb.
Avg.

..

FREE

INT.O STEAKS, ROAST~ OR GROUND
' "-'~~~ ..

THOROFARE BEEF U.S.D.A. GRADED CHOICE
'

THOROFARE •'Jwl"'
C
Non-Dairy Creamer ~~~~·
CYCLE 1·2-3-4
C
Dog Food aiicken or ..., 14·01. ea.
7-VARIETES . .'
.
C
Royal Gelatin • • • 6...1. ao. ·
·
MIRAICLdEWDHIP • .
5 1·68
Sa a resstng • • 41-ol. Jar
WELCH'S •GRAPE.
C
Jelly or Jam • • • • • 2-lb. Jar
RALSTON •3-VARIETIES .
C
Cookie Crisp Cerealu-o.. ...
.
THOROFARE
C
Aspirin 5-Gnlne ••••• 2SO·ct. aot. 68
PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH
Noodles :E!~· . . . . . 1-lb. Bag

24
32
34

I Sr. · Citizens t

t
Calendar . 1

POMEROY
Meigs
Senior Citizens Center activities located at the
Pomeroy Junior High School
is open 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m .,
· Monday through Friday.
Monday, March . -26 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m .;
Square Dance, 12 :30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, March. 27 Movie " Where Timber
Wolves Call," 11 a .m .;
Physical Fitness, 11 :30 a.m .;
Chorus, 12:30-2 p.m.
Wednesday, March 28 Social Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.;
Movie " Where Timber
Wolves Call," 11 a .m .;
Physical Fitness, II :30 a.m.;
Progressive Cards, 1-2: 30
p.m.; Games, 1-2:30 p.m.
Thursday, March 29 Physical Fitness, 11:30 a .m .;
K.jtchen Band, 12 :30-2 p.m.
Friday, March 30 - Art
Class, 10 a .m.-12 noon;
Physical Fitness, 11:30 a.m.;
Bowling, 1-3 p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program,
· 12 noon to ,12: 45 p.m ., Monday
through hiday.
Menu March 26 through
March 30:
Monday - Boiled New
Engla nd dinner (ham),
boiled cabbage, boiled
carrots, boiled potatoes, fruit
cocktail, bread, butter, milk.
Tuesday - Baked chicken,
cranberry sauce, green
. beans, ••
noodles, sherbet,
' roll, bililil, milk. ··
Wednesday - Fried fish,
baked
potatO&gt;, • stewed
tomatoes. appletl8lJCe cake, ,
bread, butter, milk
Thursday - Pork chops,
crea med corn 1 hrussel
sprouts, custard - garnish,
bread, butter mUk.
Friday - Baked,spaghetti
and meatballs-dim, tossed
salad, butt er ed peas , Ice
cream, Italian bread, butter,
milk.
Coffee, tea ot. fluttermUk
ser ved dally. Pie~ register
the day before yO\! plan to
eat. Pomeroy, 992-7386; Portland, 843-3364.
Menu for the Satellite Site
at the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of the Latter
Day Saints, Old ro'lm Flats,
is similar to the l!fove menu .

. ...

34
32(
1u

,

W~RS~W ,FA~

C

"

"

,

..

•

"

..

1-lb. Pllg.

tmALIAJt GIOIMD

·Quartn Pounders

Beef
Patties

Ctll.

S9

$

Ground

. ',.

hum

ARMOUR .z.a,BACON .

' Qrlly
.

ARMOURr, STAR
Sliced
Bacon
"CONSUMER OFFER"

....

ARMOUR * STAR

Chicken

SMART.flll
GRIDDLE

s

OSCAR MA YI:R

Corn
Does

Meat Wieners
or
1-lb.
Beef Franks Pkg.

lb.

"""

• EAS1Eit ca•Y •
.... Jelly Ia••• ...• : ,,.., ... 49c

Powiii.W,·Ie!&amp;J ••••• , ~ ...... W

ARMOUR ·;: STAR

.MCcon.lci

Cooldls ._,., • ·
Pa. htcll
:,,..,

, BotlzSoldFolliP- ............ 5 1~ · ,_lxAI
Botlz So•d Slllll~glcMit ..........~"
Lilitte Egp 't.O!.-=:•.: •.•• .f .,.. . . ·; 2111 ·
. . . Egg Crlft n • • • • IUt..... W
... ,.,.. r.lf Cit~ ........
... a..
· llllllltl=··~

fJIIr'•"""'

I ... ....

1.... .....

5169 .

139
$ 1$9

,S

12-oa. "-'·
'

12-u. "'·

THE

SESAME STREET
LlllRARY

U.S. NO. 1 MEDIUM

Yellow
Onions
White
Grapefruit

Week Let
Your Children Enioy

Volume 9

SHRIMP DINNERS ·• • • 1~1. ,... s1.19
SEAFOOD PLAmR •.•• ,.,,..... 5 1~ 19

U.S. NO. 1 FLORIDA

Volume1

only

t't'fi\YAN DE KAMPS • ~ StA~;~
1-lb.
,.,,
FISH FILLm. • • • ,... S1.99
.
..
SJ09
SUPER BEEF PAniES •• ,..L~.
.FISH KABOBS ••• u... ,.. 51.99

39C
Carrots. • • • • 2 i'!i 59 Endive or Escarole •.
39C
49 Romaine Lettuce • •. ·
PRISH CRISP

/.

L ,.._

-~­

FarYalr-·

.

..

BOLOGNA
PICKLE LOAF ••••••••· •••••••

OLD FASHION LOAF ••••••••••

TASTE.O-SEA

$

'

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FROZEN FOODS
BEEF &amp; ONION PAniES
BREADED VEAL PAniES

~-Hot
Dogs • • • • • • • • • • • i2......... SID
ii.;JD;,gs ••••••••••••
s159

....•. 5

SLICID

w

JIFFY

ARMOUR ·:: STAR

1.83
.. ·..•. 5 1.89
GriliDogs • • • • • • • • • • •
.• j-Jii. · 5, 199
or
• ·
•
5
..
199
COOlED SALAMI or
... I........ .•

..........

H••r,.tllliiae• -~ ........... 51.11 ,a a:••rW

. ''

Gel I he

,ARMOUR * STAR

.

HERR'S POTATO CHIPS .••• ~ ••••• ~ ••••••••• ~ ............................
8 oz.
,nw.

,.

. I b•

BLOCK STYLE

Boneless Swiss Steak ~;'it' .......... ,~. 5 1. 99 Boneless Eye ofRound Roast. ••••• : • •••.52.79
51..99 Boneless Bottom Round Steak ••••••••••.52.09
't ; Boneless
Bottom
Round
Roast
•••••••••
'·
,
"
am
.
$
5
BOneless Bief for Stew................ 1..99 Ground Round..., ... -.... • • • • • • • •. • • • • • • •. 1.79

Y&amp;Y's Q'
om s • • • • • • a.5-o•. ~'~~•·

French's Mustard •• 2 1
1i

Rump Roast

••
'·

.Cit ••

sac c
~ - sac a;~s;ksWh~;

..,..,
••

MUSSELMAN'S
l-Ib. Can
Apple Sauce ~
JOAN OF ARC •DARK RED
Kidney Beans • • • 15-ol. Can
PALMOLIVE •LIQUID
5
Dish Detergent. • 32..... aot.

88C
Polish Dill Pickles. •
98 MRS. T's •FROZEN
e
l
i
Pierogies. • • • •
79 SEALTEST
.
.
.
68c
Sour Cream • • • • 16-oz.

r----·- ·--·1

I

patrician-looking
whitehaired man in his 60s, makes
no secret of the fact that his
favorite clients are those who
care enough to serve the very
best a nd can afford to do so .
" A custom couturier gef c;
$1,400 for a garment, so wh:t
shouldn 't a custom caterer
charge $1 ,400 for a dinnc,
·
party?" he reasons.
Actualiy, $1,400 is Sll!ali JX··
tatoes for a firm that specia•·
izes in corporate bashes -·
like an Arabian Nights
extravaganza tha t 1\BC
threw for National Footbali
League executives, or a
gargantuan cocktail party fo r
25,000 at the opening of an
Orange County fashion
center.
Affairs of that size require
the logistical plarming of
military
action ,
with
Leberman as quartermaster
extraordinaire.
He ca n tell you how m~ ch
ice you need to serve drinks
for 10,000 (10,000 pounds, a
pound a person ) or how much
those paper-thin slices of
smoked sa lmon cost th e
generous host ( $1.87 11.! a slice,
incl udin g Cassero le 's
markup ).
Casserole, which started
out in 1946 delivering home
meals more on the level of
Chicken
Delight
than
Escoffier, pioneered what
Leberman ca lls public
relations entertaining m the ,1
early 1950s. But while the bi~
party remilins Casserole's .
bread and butter, there is
nothing too miniscule for its
services - if the price is
right .

Harrisonville
Society~News

ASK TO' WED
GALLIPOLIS Two
couples applied for marriage
license in , Gall Ia County
Probate Court friday .
Making application were:
Gary Dennis ·Michael, 26,
Crown City, GSI supervisor,
and piana Lynn Elder, 21,
Crown City, hospital aide.
Keith Allen McCarty, 21,
Gallipolis, city employee, and
Donna Kay White , 17,
Gallipolis, waitress.

.

authorizing exclusive use of
the name.'' He's not sw-e why
the Bealieburger has never
seen the light of day : "I never
tasted it."
You don't have to be
famous to call in Casserole just ri ch. Leberman, a

enngfare

enngfare

" ~"

,,

catering, .

-·

I l

•

PUSH SOLID .,

Eggplant .........

C
C

PUSH CRISP

PRIIHCRISP

Mr. and Mrs . Robert Epple
and family of Pennsylvania
visited Saturday evening with
his father, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Epple,
·.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Collins·
and family , Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Welsh a nd family of
Ridgeway, Mr. and Mrs.
Denzil Welsh and family ,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Welsh and sons and Mr . and
Mrs. Darrell Napper and son,
Mrs. Leatha Cowen, local,
gathered at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. K. C. Welsh on
Sunday to help them
celebrate their 40th wedding
armiversar y.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
visited in Lancaster Monday
with Mrs. Cat.,rine Turner.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Carrol were Mr.
a nd Mrs. Rodney Leady, and
son of Kentucky ; Mrs. Rex
Vance and family , McArthur;
Cheryl
Leady ,
Ga llipolis, a nd daught er,
Linda and two children from
Kentucky .
Mrs. Sue Payne has been
employed at the GSI in
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Glenna Colburn, Mrs.
L&lt;&gt;ueUa Haning of Lancaster,
Mrs. Minnie Foil · and Mrs.
Eldora Col um bus were
Thursday afternoon visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple.
RObin Gibson , Columbus
spent her spring break week
with her grandparents, Mr.
a nd Mrs. Robert Alkire.
Mr . a nd Mrs. Kermit
Walton and grandson, Juan,
visited Tuesday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
and Robin.
Mrs . Louella Haning,
La ncaster, is spending a
week with her sister, Mrs . .
Leatha Cowen.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
have returned to their home
after spending three months
in Florida.
Mrs. Margaret Dougla s
attended the graduation of
her grandson, Mark Gibson,
. from Ohio State University on
Friday .
Mrs. Barbara Ruff and
children of Sugar GroYe
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs . Doug Bishop a nd
family .
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith,
Carpenter, visited with ·Mrs.
Frances Young , Sunday
afternoon.
Mr. Duane Stanley has
finished work on the
Presbyterian Church which'
was a new steeple, cement
step run, new doors and
extensive work on the
vestibule.

FILE;u

PAPERS
GALLIPOLIS - Secretary
of State
Anthony
J.
Celebrezze, J r . reported
Saturday ·articles of incorporation have been filed
with his office In Columbus by
G.P.W. Accounting Services, .
Inc., Gallipolis.
tncorporators are G.
Ronald Atkinson and Keith A.
Bochard.
·

�__

B.j~-The Sunday

'i

B:II-The
Sunday
Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Mar.
,.
.,.,.._..,.._.
~,

THE PUPPET §HOW, " Little Red Riding Hood" , was presented by Valerie Johnson's
fifth graders this week. Robin Savage, right, was the nar1·ator , and Kerri Beegle, in charge
of the stage setting. Working with puppets which they made to tell the story were from the
left, Jay Bostick, Kelly Rizer, Joe Hoff, Dixie Dugan, and Alana Lyons.

BONE! ESS

CHUCK
ROAST•••••••••••
BONELESS .
·ENGUSH ROAST...........

CONTEST WINNERS-Reading has been promoted through posters and winners in the
classes were left to right, first row, Chris Jewell, Melanie Van Meter, Legina Hart; second
row, Donnie Riffle, Rachel Reiber and Tanuny Holter; and third row, Debbie Holter, Sandra Harden, Kelly Rizer and Lori Adams.

BONELESS

WALKING TOWARD BE1TER READING- Kathy
Ible, a first grader, has read 30 book~ and is pictured here
putting up another colorful footstep in her walk around the
school foyer. For each five books read, another footprint
goes up m the wall.

BEEF STEW.·•••••••••••••••• ~~
'

FAMILY

PA~

100% PURE LEAN ·

lONrS-STOREMADE

.·

MEAT .SPREAD •••••••••••••••••·•••• 99e
.

5 LB. OR MORE

GROUND BEEF ......... ~~ ...

'1

49

.,
SHOULDER. ROASt •••••••••••• ~~---1
ROUND BONE

LB.

.

Newlveryday Low Prices
~

WE'VE CUT PRICES ON ITEMS FOR YOU..- NOT WEEKLY SPECIALS BUT EVERYDAY·--MMONDAY THRU SUNDAY-SHOP
AND COMPARE.

SMUCKER

GRAPE JELLY ••••••••••••••••••••••••• !.~:~~~-~ 1

29

WISHBONE

.

ITALIAN

.

or FRENCH DRESSING..t.6.~~-~l};. ggc

MARYLAND CHIEF

16_oz.

.

$ OO

BUTTER BEANS.~ •••••••••••••••••••• 3 CANS
KRAFT

·

1

JJA OZ.

3 ggc

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNER...

BOxEs

GOLDEN ISLE

This WeeJcis Gateway Specials

BLEACH•••••••••• ~ ............~~~~- .~ 69~
1

GOLDEN ISLE

CANNED VEGETABLES

GOLDEN ISLE

3 CANS

CUT GREEN BEANS

CHEESE SINGLES ............~~~!.~~~
COTIONNEllE

MIXED VEGETABLES

BATHROOM TISSUE ••••••••~~~~.~~;

SWEETPEAS

COUPON

I

LAUNDRY DETERGENT
.NO. 105
32 OZ. BTL

$159

MAINE
POTATOES -

U.S. NO. 1.

W/C

LE'nUCE

20 LB. BAG

wx
DISH LIQUID
22 OZ. BTL

FINAL TOUCH

79~

64 ·oz.

W/C

Limit one pl~oase with this coupon
Coupon EKpires March 24, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

an.

3tiUL

ggc

age.

CLASSES WILL
BEGIN SAT., APRIL 7TH

48~

$}59.

W/C

Limit one please with this c_oupon
Coupon EKplres March 24, 1979 ·
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

99~

BTL

$159
.

BEGINNERS - INTERMEDIATE - ADVANCED
·

For Further Information .

CALt:

W/C

NO. 155

6 OZ. BOX

W/C

JEU.O GELATIN

99~ W/C

CHOCOLATE CHIPS
NO. 205 .
12 OZ. PKG.

99~

'

MO. 105

w/C.

Limit one please with this couPon
Coupon Exp1res March 24, t979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·

4 79'
3 OZ.
BOXES

NO. 105
W/C

,LB. CTN•.
.

·Ltmitcme PLease with this coUDon

992-2088
After 4:00P.M.

RACINE - Robert K. and
Elaine E. Sayre of Racine are
announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Becky J.
Sayre, of San Antonio, Texas,
to Val Taylor, nephew of the
Rev. Delmas Taylor, Coyelle,
La. with whom the •groomelect made his home.
The bride-elect is a 1979

..

''The No Name Diseo" tChuck Ewing, Gregg Winston,
Gregg Nowlin) will provide music and disco lights.
.

,.

.

DRESS CLOTHES OR DRESS JEANS
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SOLD
CHI LOREN- 5:00 p.m:to 7:30p.m. $2.00 each at the door.
TEENS-8:00p.m. to !2:00p.m. $3.00 each atthe door.

Dance t.:ontest (t~ophies going to 1st, 2nd) 3rd place winners! l
.
For More Information Call
· Mikki Casto 675-4539 or 67~-6664

. W/C

Umit_one please with this c;oupon
Coupon EKpires March 24, 1979
TWrN C'!'rY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires March 24, 1979
, · TWIN
GAT_EWAY

~!!!
'

59'

."Ytt~ ~~ i=fti::
..

.

"

s23.99
Bone
Navy
Black Patent

BUTTER

'l

•

M

Mon. &amp; Fri. til8
Tue5., We&lt;L Sat. til S
Thursday lilll

I

I

'..

Engagement announced

MARCH 31, 1979 (SAT.)
POINT PLEASANT INN

IMPERIAL MARGARINE·

been held and currently a
bookmark contest is underway at the school
In many of the classes, sustained silent reading is carried ou( each day. The
teachers have also found that
the " buddy system of
teaching " - using fourth
graders to help first graders
-is proving effective.
Reading stories and then
acting them out with puppets ·
which they ma ke is the project of one class. Costwne
day was featured with lhe
children coming attired like a
favorite storybook character.
Charts are being used in a
variety of ways (p show how
much reading i5 being done in
each classroom . One chart
shows that all but two in one
classroom have read at least
five books.
Creating interest in reading
through fun thmgs to do
'seems to be the motivational
technique and the teachers at
Racine are findin g that it
works. The children are
reading more and better,
they niport.

Val Taylor and Becky Sayre

BANQUET ROOM ABOVE MOTE.L LOBBY)

BAKER'S

If you're a gal on the go, Auditions
has styled the BUTIER for you.
Raised-stitch vamp treatment lool\s
great. Nylon tricot lining assures ..i .
comfort. This s hoe is basic to yo.u r
wardrobe, so get yours today!

1:00 'Til 6:00 .

Mikkl Casto's Ballroom Dance Studio will
sponsor a,nother Disco Dance for area
Children and Teenagers. Both dances
wil 'be chaperoned.

l.;imlt..P.oe_pi,e.Se ~ith thi_s coupon
Coupon Expires March 24, 1979
TWIN C.iTY GATEWAY

Limit ORe Please with this COUPOn
Coupon Expires March 24, 1979
GATEWAY

DifffJffJfiCe ..

Silver Bridge Plaza

-Disco Wit Us

DREAM WHIP TOPPING

SUPER SUGAR CRISP
No. 155
18 OZ. BOX

.CORP iiiPARADE UNITS
•PRIV ATE LESSONS
FOR

- '

LIIDil One please Wlfft thiS COUPOn
-. Co,upc,n Expires March 24, 1979
CITY GATEWAY

POST

.FABRIC SOFTENER
NO. 255

"N0.155

LARGE HEADS

EACH

ULJPCJN

M"DE INU SA

Miss Cindy Patterson wi II teach baton in the
Syracuse gym. She is a 5 time winner of the
D.M.A. State Title, tst runner-up in the
D.M, A. National Baton held in Ashville,
North Carolina and has won 490 trophies in
competition. She was saught by Sherrie
King, Judy Riggs, and Judy Novack, who is
from Ypsilanti, Michigan.

LOG CABIN ·SYRUP .

HEAD

FRESH CRISP

Limi_t one please with'this coupon:
Coupon Expires March 24, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY:

NO. 135

,.

l. .

auditions.
~E•perienc;;.a fh8

·NEW BATON CLASSES

:

WISK

by

SUNDAY HOURS

-

L

I&gt;Qok after book.
A variety of motivational
techniques to keep the
children reading since it is
recognized that practice brings improvement have been
initiated by Mrs. Sayre and
her co-teachers. _
Upon entering the foyer at
the school , one sees colorful
footprints moving across the
wall, over the door, and down
the windows, with each one
bearing a name of a child and
the grade he or she is in. Each
footprint repr~sents five
books read by the child .
Many of the children are involved in the Read to Win program
and will receive
emblems later. A poster contest to promote the theme
that reading is not only a learning experience but fun has

WATCH 11m THERMOl',fETER GO UP! Each
classroom at the Racine Elementary School has a reading
then:JOmeter. Reading .raises the thennometer. In the
third grade class, Patrece Circle with 18 books read and
Marty Cleland with 30 books are among the top readers.
All but . two third graders have read at least five books
since the Right to Read program got underway in early
February.
'

CREAM STYLE CORN

WHOLE KERNEL CORN

'Children are reading more
·and better'--Donna Sayre
By Charlene Hoeflich
RACINE-"The children are
reading more and better"
was Mrs. Donna Sayre's appraisal of res\llts of the
nwnerous Right To Read projects undertaken these past
two months at the Racine
Elementary School.
Mrs. Sayre, a mem her of
the Meigs County Right to
Read Advisory Council is enthusiastic about the program
which is designed to bring
success to children on all
reading levels. Children are
encouraged to read on a level
which they can handle and
them move on to more difficult books as they gain
reading practice.
The Right To Read Council's philosophy that "success
nurtures success" is applied
as the Racine chil~ren r•Hrl

. ,

~~~G;d

..

graduate of the International
Bib! College and is employed
in the Northside Independent
School System. Her fiance is
a 1978 gradute of the Bible
College and he is in construe, tion with the Shell Oil Co. at
Livingston, La.
The open church wedding
will be an event of May 26 in
Coyell~, La .

In 1973, President Richard
Nixon ordered the remaining
U.S. forces in Vietnam to stay
on until all American
prisoners of war were
released.
Ten years ago: Pakistan's
President Ayuh Khan stepped
down after 11 years in power,
turning control of the strifetorn nation over to the
military.
Five years ago: Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev and
U.S. Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger began talks in
Moscow on limitation of
strategic weapons.
One year ago: The
Palestine
Liberation
'Organization
said
. it was
1
stepping up raids on Israelioccupied
territory
in
southern Lebanon.
Today's bir\!ldays : Songwriter and entertainer Elton
John is 32 years old.
Entertainer Anita Bryant is
39. Actress Nancy Kelly is 58,
Thought for today : My
three chilren are at the
perfect age - too o]d to cry at
night and too young to borrow
my car - actor Walter
Slezak.

FOAM BACKED

THROW COVERS

20 % .OFF
•Machine Washable
•No-Iron •Seamless

&amp;Ox7o

70x90

SALE·PRICE

REG. PRICE

s5.99 To l7.99
s9.99 To ~1 2.99

s4.79 To '6.39
s7.99 To s10.39

•Frmged •Sta-Put

70x120

$14.99 To $18.99 sn.99 To $15J9

•Wrin kle Free

70x140

s18.99 To •21.99 515.99 To 517.59
•

.

"

''

�.

'

-

·

••••

----~

(.,

.

....

~

tl

,;

.....

.

.

f

I

'The Wicker House' opens in Gallipoiis

'
&lt;J
~

\
\

'

· B) S~llyannc Hultz
(;AI.I.ll'IO).IS - If you 've

.••

j)

.'
••

been leafing through all the
decorator rnagnzincs on the
market th ese days and
wondering where - oh where

.
.•'
·••.
...,
'.•

you muld find some of the

'

Second A vcpuc across from

lo,·cl}' and unusual wieker
pieces which arc shown.

the Sohio 't"tion. is "The
Wicker Aousc." a newly
~flcspair no more .
opened shop that carries
Now, housed in the C &amp; R nea rly every type and design
Paint Center , located on of wicker available.
"'!be Wicker House," coMargaret Cromlish
, and Shelby Sanders. both of
Gallipolis, was the brainchild of Mrs. Cromlish who
mused, "I just love wicker.
We carried a few baskets and
things before and they always

r - - - - - - -·- ·- · - ·- ·- · - ·- ·- .·- - . owned by

®.

"•
•
•
••

11
I
I

1

''
','!

"'

•

"

•

''

'•
•

,•

'r'
I

•

PROUD &lt;XUlWNERS - Shown in an insert in front of their newly opened shop, "The
Wicker House," are CIHlwliers Shelly Sanders, left, and MargaretCromlish.

..

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Lena Heilman.
Pomeroy; Naomi Bentley,
Middleport.

IDalia 20/12"" . . . a

Mw

Korner

Utscharged
Scott
Johnson. Alice Wolfe , Rosa
Ohlinger, Augusta Potts ,
Jessie Conger and Mavis
Weaver .

recipe for wcceu in stoinlns

1flotwar~l If's simply ingenious :..._ Dalia' s

European craftsmen mix 20'%, ckrom ium and '12% nickel
with the -finest stainless steel to .:~ate
superior flatwore thOt 's unusually tlo rd and
remdrkobly stain-resistent: Shown is ''Picouo"

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAI[Y &amp; SUN. 9 to .9:30
VINE STREn, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

p.m~

Wanda Wigal

Spring wedding planned
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Wigal of 912
South Third Ave ., Middlepor!
are announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Wanda Fay, to Jeffrey Brent
Shank; son of Mr. and Mrs.
Scott Shank, Union Ave. ,
Pomeroy.
· The · bride-elect is a
graduate of Meigs High

FRYERS

CHICKEN

CHICKEN

BREASTS

LEGS

THIGHS

·r--------------,~

69~

I
I
'

lB.

$18.50
(&gt;. superb choice for the bride who prefers
practicality and eleqanco.

..

I

WICKER COLLECTION- Shown is only a small part of the many wicker items which
can be found m "The Wicker House," located in the C &amp; R Paint Center Second Avenue
Gallipo]is.
'
'

.

I&gt;X SPRINGS
AND MATIRESS
FULL
SIZE

ea. pc.

HEAD .
LETTUCE

CELERY

CARROTS RADISHES

Gary Drcnner, Oarrin and
Jason, Beth Vaughan, Judy
Pape, Dianne Hawley, Louisa
Johnson, Philip, Ray, Eddie
and Janet Werry , Jim
Stewart, Ralph Stewart and
Armand Turley.

The class is in conjunction
with
the
Children's
Literature class, Jack Hart,
instructor . For more in·
formation, call the library.

STALX39'

BANQUET

LB.

BAG

HEXAGON
END TABlfS
Pine
and
ish

Maple

59

TUNA

6.!~t 69~
BETTY CROCKER

TUNA HELPER

BROUGHTON

COTTAGE
CHEESE

oz.

24 oz. cnt

ea

\ I

09

BUNK

\\

BEDS
Maple Finish
Boll on Rails

SAVE

$2 ro $4

BEDROOM
SUITES

•rL4_

2 PC.

UVING ROOM
SUITES

sofa$399

love seat $319

Sure. this sofa-Jo ve seat cOmbination is beautiful. But. unlike many flimsily-constructed contemporal)'
pieces, this combination is meant to be used .
The luN·slze sola offers sealing lOr three. Two more lit comfortably on the love seat. Ideal tor family

STARTING AT

ARGO
ARGO
FRENCH STYLE WHOLE KERNEL
CORN
GREEN BEANS .
16 oz. can
17 oz. can

gatherings.
The Iabrie Is stain-resistant and easy io keep dean. In addi11on, Norw!Jik's AssuranCe of Ouatily·

guarantees that the l!lbric has ~n wear-tested lor active family use.
To rutty appreciate the value ot these two pieceS, examine them soon in a v1sit to our store.

•

'•

••

(

·-·CARONI
&amp; CHEESE

17 oz. can

7.25 oz. box

CORNED
BEEF

LIGHT
SPREAD

CORN

SANDWICH or

CHIPS

BUNS

'·
'

SWEET
PEAS

FRITOS

$119 $}19

•
,,

GRAIN

PARKAY

FREE DELIVERY

JCT. RT. 325 &amp; 160

PHONE 30-1123

ARGO

ARMOUR

2 lb. BoWl

Missionaries appointed
French City Baptist Church
in GaUipolis.
The Rev. and Mrs. Blevins
have three children. Their
daughter, Bobbie, is a Senior
at University of Kentucky ,
studying
Medical
Technology. Their son, Jim,
is married and is a truck
driver and lives in Dayton.
Tim is a sophomore at
Stetson University, DeLand,
Fla. st4dy ing Music. He is
Minister of Music at Harbor
Oaks Baptist Church,
Daytona Beach, Fla.
An Open House is planned
for them at the home of Rev .
Blevins' parents in Porter on
March 2!i, 2-6 p.m. Everyone
is welcome to attend.

COLUMBUS - The Rev.
and Mrs. Bob Blevins of
Columbus will ·be leaving
soon to serve as missionaries
in South West Africa under
the direction of the Southern
Baptist Convention Foreign
Mission Board. They will
serve as volunteers with the
Swakpomund Baptist Mission
in S.W .A. for one and possibly
two years. Rev. Blevins is the
son of Louis and Lona Blevins
of Porter, Ohio. · He was
employed as sales manager
at Plummer Ford in Jackson
before entering the ministry.
He preached his first sennon
in the Grace Baptist Church
in McArthur, and has
preached four revivals in the

The RAVEL; K2530E
Country French styling. Anti que
Oak wood - grained fi rish appl ied

SAVE •120.00 NOWI

· Communityl
I
·comer I
t
By Charlene Hoeflich t

What we lack is vision.
There seems wisdom in fixin~ up rather than tearing down
or building new although the trend of the past few decades has
conditioned our thinking to "why renovate or remodel when
youcangonew.'' .
How many times have you walked into a building, saw the
peeling paint, the scuffed floors, and everything else wrong,
and failed to notice the architectural design and envision the
struclure with some renovation.
For e&lt;ample -- have you looked at the Racine Elementary
children will host the celebra- Schoollately?
·
tion which will begin at 2 p.IJl. ·
It's really beautiful. Built in 1911, it has an impressive enMr. and Mrs. Sanders were . trance, hardwood floors, a massive stairway and large open
rruirried on April 3, .1929 at 'classrooms.
·
Marion. They request no
If there is any building in Meigs County that should be listed
gifts.
with the Na tiona! Register of Historical Places to be sure that
it is always preserved, it's that one.

.Couple to celebrate
.
:.go./den .anniversary
:
'
·
.
:
,

REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Sanders of
Reedsville will celebrate
their 50th wedding anniversary on Ajiril I with an open
house at their ·residence.
Their children and grand-

The BRUSSELS • K121 - 12 " diagonal peiSonal
size blacK-and-wh ite portable

ONLY •&amp;8.00 DURING SALE

1
I
Doesn 'I a bouquet of daffodils on the kitchen table brighten
up the whole place. Spring, at last!
And with spring comes green, green grass, growing, growing every minute. There's forever the problem of who will cut
it.
Out in the Forest Run area there are several widows wlio are
really wprrying about how they are going to get their grass
cut. They are. willing to pa_ • reasonable price and think by
taking on several lawns in that community, a man on social
· security or a young person, could make a pretty good wage for
a day or so each week or as often as the grass needs cut.
Interested? Give us a call and we'll refer you to those in·
terested.

REG.
1
396.85
ONLY

S29r
WITH 4130
STAND
INCLUDED

Anita Hall and Ronald Robie

Wedding plans made
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Hall of 842 First
Ave., Gallipolis, wish to •
anno unce the engagen1ent
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Anita Sue, to

SAVE 25%
THIS WEEK ONLY

~~;~~::~·""'""-.:::~.,..,

Ronald
Robie,
son of
of Rodney,
Mr. and
Mrs. Keith
Robie
Oh.
Both are currently enrolled
at Buckeye Hills Career
Didn't know until about a week ago that Mark Mora had Center, Rio Grande.
completed his training at th~ Ohio Slate Barber College, Col- .. The wedding date is April
umbus, and ts employed at Your Father's Mustauche 21.
Mustache in Gallipolis.
Mark and others on the staff at Mustache were in New York
COUNCIL FORMED
City last weekend to attend the International Beauty Show 1979
BATAVIA,
Ohio (AP)
and .for him it was a great experience. Hair styling, both men
Two
local
groups
have forChains
DeMoss, Jennifer Couch, and women, is Mark 's big interest.
med the Clermont Safety
Scott Powell, Scan Jeffers,
Chains
At the Senior Citizens Center there's always something go- Council to promote safety
and Cindy Soulsby1 team' ing on to raise money. It is a matter of coming up with money habits is private businesses.
Chains
members, and Daphanie to match that coming in from the federal and state governlbe two groups are the
Dillard, Tracy McMann,
Chamber of Commerce and·
Selection of chains in 14 kt.
Tracy Shoulder, Sherri ments.
the
Human Services Board.
solid gold &amp; 14 kt . overlay . 1
Next
in
their
fund
raising
business
is
an
Easter
bazaar
Russell, Sandy Bailey, scheduled for April5, 6 and 7 with a pancake supper from 4 to
The council will cover all
Sherry Smith, Darcy Hysell, -llp.m.
businesses
in the county and
on on the sixth. The charge - $2 for adults, and $1 for
and Julie Sisson, cheerfunction
as
a voluntary
under 12. Of course, the bazaar and the pancake supleaders. Rex Haggy, one of . children
Ed Parish,
organization,
said
per are open to the public.
the players, was unable to
director of the chamber.
attend. Others at the party
Out Chester way a variety show is being planned and if you . "With a voluntary reporwere Kelly Hawk, Mark have a talent to share just call Patty Schaekel at 985-3981 and ting system, data will be
Tannehill, Roger, Susie and she 'll be more than glad to put you on the program.
avaUable for each business
342 2nd
446-2691
Travis Abbott, and Mr. and
concerning the nUJl1ber and
Parents
of
the
safety
patrol
boys
and
girls
are
sponsoring
the
! Mrs. James Soulsby.
type of accident and possible
· The group played basket- show and it's just one of many projects to raise the $1600 they
need to make a trip to Washington D. C. in June. The show is safety hazards existing in . IIW~=~~iii:::::.
ball and other games.
scheduled for AprilS at the Chesler Elementary School. There their own business," Parish
said.
are 22youn"d.ersanticipatinglhallrip. Wann~ help?

Pat and Jlmmer Soulsby
: entertained recently with a
party for the Pomeroy
.Elementary school fourth .
and fifth grade basketball
team, "The Green Machine."
-The two were coaches for the
team.
The party was held at the
SQulsby home and Pat and
Jimmer presented each
player with a trophy with
their names engraved. Cake
and Royal Crown cola were
served. Attending were Chris
Shank, Bryan Tannehill,
Parker Long, Chris Kennedy,
Kenny .Lunsford, Marty

CLARK'S
JEWELERS

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

TOPE FURNITURE GALLERIES

SEMI-ANNUAL
CARPET SALE

..

12 oz. can

VINTON HOME FURNISHINGS

Mr. and Mrs. ClydiJ Sanders

3FORag~

STARTING AT

SYSTEm I

.The Rev. and Mrs. Bob Blevins

Series I Integrated Stereo System

;Soulsbys entertain
The Green Machine

Bns.

CARPET
SAVINGS

59c

Chic:ken
of the Sea

7-UP or..
DIET 7-UP
816

49~

.

Gallon ·Plastic

State &amp; Third _ _ _ _ _ Gallipolis, Ohio

35UL
BAGS

DINNERS .••••..•.llOZ.
PK~.

2%
MILK
Peddler's Pantry

FRESH RED

29~

VALLEY BELL

Vinton Home Furnishings presents
furniture for the family that ·uses
its furniture.

'66
$55

FRESH TENDER

hd.49~

lildies host rehearsal dinner
.
POMEROY-Mrs. Karen Ms. Dorothy J.' Russell
'
Werry, Mrs. Helen Stewart, mother of the groom: Kim 1
and Mrs. Barbara Sargent Neal, Mr. and Mrs. Kit Neal
were hostesses for the wed· and Jeff, Susie Tillis, Bobby
ding rehearsal dinner of Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Bennie
Janet Neal and Jeffrey Wright, Mr. and Mrs .
Russell at the Werry home on Richard Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
SandRidge.
Mrs. Stewart is the grandmother of the groom and Mrs.
Werry is his.aunt. ·The turkey
STORY HOUR
dinner was followed with
There will be a Story Hour
t'llke, punch and coffee.
Attending were the honored held every·Saturday 2-3 p.m.
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Ike in the Jeanette Albiez Davis
Neal, parents of the bride, Ubrary, Rio Grande College.

•

•

· A.ORIDA

~l!lrN

HAVE A GOOD WEEK! .

1

. ICEIJERG

SALE ENDS MARCH 31
FINANCING AVAILABLE -: LAYAWAYS ARRANGED
C'MON IN - COFFEE'S ON!
AND THE MUSIC'S PLAYIN'.

School, class of 1976, and attended the Gallipolis
Business College. She is
employed at Bob Evans Steak
House.
Her fiance graduUted from
Meigs Local in 1973 and he is
A reminder lhat the Syracuse-Minersville Baseball
employed at the Kyger Greek
·Association
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at lhe Syracuse
Power Plant at Cheshire, and .
Municipal
Building.
·
is active with the Pomeroy
Fire Department.
Senior band members at Meigs High School are hoping to
A spring wedding is being
come
up with some money making ideas to finance their trip to
planned.
Cedar Poinr later this year.
In charge of the project is Dorsel Thomas and Jeff Daniels.
We wish you luck.

.S.piece setting,

.

Michael James Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Miller,
· Syracuse, and grandson of Gertrude Miller, Pomeroy, .has
been' promoted to district training manager in Tucson for the
Southland Corp.
.
He will be in charge of training employes for six of the 30
stores located in..Tucson. He a Itends Pima College · and will
receive his associate degree from there next spring.
In addition to his schooling and working he is a member of
the Tucson Metropolitan Ballet Co., as a junior.dance member,
performs on stage and also does commercials.
He hopes to move to California next' year to further his
acting career.
We certainly wish you every success in the world.

CHICKEN

!109

"Bill Ward's Birthday Sale"

j,

forthcoming.
.
Some station operators say the limiting of gaSoline is
definitely not necessary. Stations are planning to close on
Sunday and have shorter hours during the week.
·
Some folks believe that when the price goes higher and
levels off we will see an abundance offuel.
Personally, I lhink it is ridiculous and definitely not
necessary. Remember back when this same situation arose
and lhe gas price went up and then all of a sudden lhere was no
shortage? Is this what is happeni~g again?
Whatever, it is going to hurt us little guys - don 't you
agree?

CUT..UP

.· FRYERS

OR

~~ be
I am referring to the gasoline shortage they say will

'We Reserve the Right to Umil Quantity''

FRYER
PARTS

,", ( '

3rd ANNIVERSARY SALE

Where, oh where,_is ft all going to end?
From what you read in lhe newspapers and the rumors
that are flying it looks as"if we may all be walking or ritling a

.PHO"'E446 959:1_

WHOLE

I1-

., By Katie Crow

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 25 THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 31

MIXED

WARD'S KEYBOARD

I

I

1.

March 28, Macrame at Teresa-llihl's, 7:30p.m. Call 4461937 .
April
April j, Board meeting, Chris Mitchell's 7:30p.m.
April 4, Ladies' afternoon bridge, nooii-3 p.m., at Fran
Shaw's, 44S-7o93, Bring salad .
AprilS, Bake sale, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., front of Haskins-Tanner.
April7, Couples ' bridge, Teresa Bihl's, 446-1937, 7;30 p.m.
April II, Get-acquainted coffee, 10 a.m., Mary Howell's,
446-4479.
.
April 16, Crafts, 1 p.m., Mariann Jamison's, 446-2649.
April 16, General meeting, Jackson Pike office, Ohio
Valley Bank, 7:30p.m.; Speaker, Luxmi Priyanath, Indian
food and customs.
April19, Ladies evening bridge, 7:30p.m ., Susie Bailey's,
446-7765.
.
April 20, Couples' bowling, 9 p.m., Skyline Lanes, 9 p.m.,
call Mary Howell, 446-4479.
·
April 28, Co)iples' Italian dinner, at Pam Terrizzi's, 7:3Q
p.m. Must RSVP by April 20, 446-4485.

I

I

1

I~~--------------------------.
I
I

Welcome Wagon
club activities .

•

•
'''
'
~·~

...

I Katie's

I
I
I

1928

..

t
.
I .

new business only means
they are expanding the store.
They will stlll do paint contracting, custom framing and
the wall paper gaUery is
~ upstairs.
Mrs. Cromlish and Mrs .
Sanders plan a Grand
Opening March 2S-31, with
special prices on several
items .
. There will be a gift given
away by the store at that
time.

sold so well, we decided to
bring in a whole line."
The wicker collection includes
mirrors,
wall
hangings , chairs, hampers,
hanging trays, hanging
planters. stools, tables,
magazine and wine racks,
and ctageres. There are also
sundry small items which
would make ideal shower
gifts.
·-·Mrs. Cromlish wishes to
stress that the opening of the

'',_..---··-·- ---··-·- -·------,

B-11-The Sunday Times-8entinel, Sunday, Mar. 25. 1979

. 10.5 oz. bag

7

Complele p_rofessional installation
over solid foa.m padding. Over 14
· qualities and 300 colors for your
seleclion. .

OUR BEST SELLERS AT THE YEAR'S
BEST SAVINGS! !

8 ct. plra.

39~
..

•. 'II .

(Sale Ends Sat.. April7l
Minimum 20 square yards.
Corner Second and Grape
Gallipolis. Ohio

•

•

'

•

164030 -

'

SAVE
$189.90 -

Allegro · 3·Way Speaker System
• MC4000 • High-efficiency 3way speaker system with tuned·
port design for smooth , realistic
sound reproduc tion. Speakers
. fe ature a 12-inch cone-type
Woofer with high-temperature
2-inch phenolic voice call form;
5-inch cone-t ype midrange and
31f2 -inch horn Tweeter with
ph asing plug . Frequency Response : 35·20,000 Hz: Impedance : 8 ohms ; Maximu m Power
Hand lin.Q Capacity: 100 watts ;
RMS. Front-mounted Tr eble and
Midrange Controls let you ad·
just sound to suit room l\Coustics. Genuine Walnut wood
veneer finish .

WHEN
PURCHASED
TOGETHER

•

Component Stereo Receiver • MC7040 - AM/FM/
Stereo FM Rece iver with Power Output of 25 watts
per channe l, min imu m continuous RMS power at 8
ohms from 20 Hz to 20,000 Hz with 0.3% or less
total ha rmonic distorti on . Ampl ifier features : Detent Vol ume , Bass , Treb le and Balance Controls
p lus Loudness Control ; Stereo / Mono S91ec tor ;
Tape Monitor ; FM-Mute: Hi and Lo Fil ter s: ·Function
Indica tor LEO s and Headphone Jacks ; A, B. A I B
Speaker Selecto r. Tun er features : MOS FET fr&lt;?f"\1
end Pha se-Locked Loop MPX-IC, Tuned RF on FM;
and' Ceramic Filters; FM Mute ; FM AFC; FM Tuning
Meter and Signal Strength Meter ; flywheel Tuning.
Simulated wood cabinet, grained Walnut finish.

'

�B-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Mar. 25. 1979
!

•

,.

"'!!"

c

Something
from ·
· Sally
By SaUyaooe Holtz
begun to act just a trifle odd
You know, I would have - for instance, whenever
sworn I had some neighbors! someone unexpectedly turns
Why, just last week I thought on a bright light, she
I saw someone emptying a automatically
sits · up
garbage can, but I must have straighter and smiles.
.
been wrong, for now there's
When she Is busy, he often
not a soul in sight. The houses picks on me. (I do try to be
are dark, the shades are patient, God). I hesitate to
drawn, and the doors are sound "unfriendly' ' or
closed and locked. The only ·anything, but I'm afraid
thing I can figure out Is that standing perfectly still under
they must have HEARD!
hot lights for 30 minutes while
Yes, the word must be out. he fiddles with all 37 dials on
It's been like this ever since the camera, arranges my ·
my friend signed up for a clothing so it falls flatportraits course at Rio teringly, and keeps muttering
Grande. He has asked every- to himself, "This is gonna be
one he knows - and several the big one," is not my idea of
he doesn't .:,. if he can take a good time. And it never fails
their picture. Rumor has it he - he always takes the picture
.,
dragged
some
poor !there's that word again •)
screaming
unfortunate
into just at the very instant I
Kim
our
house
and
held
her blink, scratch something, or
•
captive for three hours under do something out of line ' ~, the hot lights. 1I can vouch like breathe.
for that the poor, screaming
And, people, if you'd rather
unfortunate was me!), And not have your portrai.t taken
he's· even beginning to get - let me give you some good
quite a reputation. All the advice: if you pass my friend
ladies he asks to pose figure 00 the street, whatever YOU
'. · M~REHEAD, Ky. - Kim winner to the Miss America right away, " Does he expect do, don't smile!!!
..
me to faU for that old line?"
: Batey of Middleport will be · Pageant in Atlantic City.
·; among the 23 Morehead State
Miss Batey, a freshman 1"!111 for it ladies, fall for it! I
' tJniversity coeds vying April physical education major , can't take much more of this!
To make matters worse, he
. 4 and 5 for the title of " Miss hopes to become a coach.
is very touchy about his work.
MSU" in the 12th annual
AU I have to do is mistakenly
scholarship pageant.
t
She Is the daughter of Mr.
cau a picture a "picture" and
he's off and chasing me
and Mrs. Andy Batey, Rt. 1,
GALUPOLIS - Activities
Middleport, and is a graduate
GALUPOL!S - Mr. and around the room with a hot
for
this week at the Senior ·
flash
bulb!
Had
·
I
known
of Eastern Hi!ih School.
· Mrs. Gib Milliron of 507 Oak
Citizens
Center are:
where
all
this
)Va·s
Twelve of the contestants Dr., SpringY alley, Gallipolis,
Monday,
March 26-Chorus,
going
•
to
lead
when
will present talent on the first ;~re announcing the birth of a
1:15-3
p.m.
I
innocently
suggested
he
night while the others are daughter, March 10." o
Tuesday, March 27 judged in swimsuit and on·
She has been named Lori take a beginner's course in
S.'l'.O.P.
Cl8ss, 10:30 a.m.;
photography,
I'd
have
tried
to
stage personality.
Beth and weighed seven
Five judges considering pounds, 13 ounces. Lori Is • get him interested in some Physical Fitness, 11:15 a.m.:
beauty, talent and poise will · being welcomed home by her other,less annoying hobby- Mid-East Dancing, 1·2 p.m.;
like training rattlesna~es or Birthday Party, 1:30 p.m . .
choose a successor to the sister, Lisa Kay, age 6.
Wednesday, March 28 current Miss MSU, Mary
Her maternal grand- collecting chewed gum.
Card
Games, 1-3 p.m.;
He has for the past three
Bety Fehring of Cincinnati. parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Uterature
Class, 1 p.m .;The Miss MSU Scholarship Lewis E. Lee Kanauga and weeks been picking' on one of
Mobile
Service
at Thunnan,
Pa_geant is an official her paternal' grandpa~ents ne.igh bors. She has been a
•
Ohio,
1
p.m.
preliminary of the Miss are Mrs. Dorothy Millirpn, good . sport about the whole
Thursday, Mal'ch 28 Kentucky Scholarship Gallipolis, and Ml'. Gilbert. thing, but lately, her friends
Bible
Study, 12:45-1:45 p.m.;
have mentioned that she has
Pageant which sends its Milliron, Addison.
Blood Pressure, Check at
Vinton Nutrition Site.
Friday, March 29 - Art
Class, 1-3 p.m.: SOcial Hour, 7
p.m.
The o Senior Nutrition
Program will serve the
following menus:
Monday - Boiled New
England dinner, bread,
butter, canned fruit with
garnish, ml1k·
Tuesday - chicken and
noodle
casserole, cranberry
1
sauce, green beans, bread,
butter, sherbet, milk.
Wednesday - Fried fish,
baked
potato,
stewed
tomatoes, bl'Cad, butter, fruit
col&gt;bler with garnish, milk.
Thursday - Pork chops,
creame.d corn, brussel
sprouts, bread, butter,
vanilla pudding, milk.
Friday - Baked spaghetti
'
and meatballs with cheese,
tossed salad with dressing,
peas, Italian bread, butter,
Open 9 to 7 Weekdays - Sunday 1 to 6
Ice cream, milk.
Choice of beverage served ·
Jackson &amp; Perkins Roses - Scott's Fertilizers - Spring Bulbs with each meal.
Gold Seal Fertilizer - Ortho Chemicals- Burpee's Seeds- Many,
"Services rendered on a
many more items ready for your spring lawn and garden needs.
non-discriminatory basis. ••

2 LITER
PLAsnc BOTTLE

PEPSI COLA
OR

MOUNTAIN

99~

CHOICE

~ Local girl

vies for
.· Miss MSU title

PLANTERS
DELUXE
MIXED
NUTS
CAN

2.79 CAN

1

OMEGA
ONE
SPINCAST
.REEL

FLOWER SHOP
FORMERLY AMBLESIDE

•Air Conditioning
•Tinted Glass

•Power Steering
•Power Brakes
•Vinyl Side
Moulding ·

PIIST9NI

BRAKE FLUID

CINCINNATI
Youngsters will be able to get
l'eady for their own baseball
activities as well as see exciting National League
'baseball by attending two of
the early season special dates
on the Cincinnati Reds
· schedule this season.
·• Each girl and boy, 14 and
under accompanied by a
separate·paying adult. will be
given a free Louisville
Slugger bat, suitable for
Little League and Knothole
play, by . attending the
jiopular Bat Day game on ·
SUnday, April 8, when the
. Reds meet the San Francisco
Giants.
They can also get their own

99&lt;

Zebco O,rneg11®
One
· • Stainless ball bearings for
quiet perlorman'ce _
• Smooth stainless worm
and bronze drive gears.
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HISTORIES DUE
POMEROY Meigs
County residents wishing to
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may do so from 1 to 3 p.m .
today at the Meigs Museum.

GAUON

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JOBE'S

broke two of Jerry Lucas'
championship game scoring
records with his 21 field goals
and total points.
Lucas had scored 44 points
in the 1956 title game against
Canton
McKinley
in
Cleveland Arena. He also had
19 baskets in that contest.
The 51 points by Kellogg
was the most scored in any
classification since the state
tournament became a
permanent fixture at St. John

named 'Coach-of·year'

HOUSEPLANT
,SPIKES·

ss~PKG.

By GEORGE STRODE
, AP Sports Writer
"COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) d&gt;lumbus East captured its
fifth state championship
Satul'day, despite a record)lhattering 51 points by
Cleveland St. Joseph's Clark
Kellogg, holding off the
Vikings 7U5 in the Ohio
Class MA boys high school
basketball final. .
· The 8-foot-8 KeUogg, the
Ohio Player of the Year,

Toledo's Bob Nichols

Ml IM,.IM'r.

____

. . .ARiftt* • .

Appreciation Day. on Sept. 30
!Atlanta).
There will be a number of
special entertainment dates
again this year, including
Country Music Night on June
9 !Montreal) ; the Marching
Band Festival on May ·5
&lt;Houston); Banner Day on
June 3 !Philadelphia) ; and
Shrine Night on August 17
rNew York).
Special dates of special
interest to special people
include :
- Four teen nights (April
6 - San Francisco; May 4 Houston; Aug. 3 . - San
Diego; and Sept. 28 Atla.nt'a) when fans throu gh
ag~ 19 can purcha se $4

rt!Served seats for just $2.
- College Night on April 27
rSt. Louis 1 wlien college
students and their dates can
purchase $4 reserves seats
for $3 .
- Six Senior Citizens Day
games 1April 25 - Pitts·
burgh: May 16 - San Diego;
June 6 - New York; July 4 Houston ; Aug. 9 - Atlanta;
and Sept 29 - Atlanta) when
fans 65 and over can purchase
$4 reserved seats for $2 . .
- Four Business Day
Special games with an early
12 : 30 p.m. starting time
1April 25 - Pittsburgh; May
16 - San Diego; June 6 New York; and Aug. 9 Atlanta).

-E ast stuns Cleveland St. Joe

WINDSHIILD

I

Reds cap by returnuig to
Riverfront Stadium three
weeks later on Sunday, April
29, when the Reds 'meet St.
Louis on Cap Day. A fre e cap
goes to everybody , adults as
well as youngsters.
Those are just two of the
many special features in
store for Reds fans this
summer. Other dates thai
fans will want to look forward
to include Poster Day, on
June 10 (Montreal), and
Team -Picture Day , on Sept. 9
(Los Angeles), as well as the
two giant give-away days
when fans will receive
thousands of dollars worth of
free prizes on Farmers' Night
on July 14 iC'hicago\ and Fan

•

Kellogg nets record 51 points

11ADCO

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0

remaining _
Mayfield sank the second
shot and Latin had one last
~asp at pulling even. Colin
Irish, a three-year regular for
the !.ions, missed a 41l-fool
shot just before the buzzer,
ending L.,qtin's season with a

22-4 record .
Latin appeared in control
with the ball and a 63-60 lead.
The Lions elected to stall, but
committed . costly erro'rs
down the stretch to seal their
fate .

Spartans thump
Penn, .101-67

HECK'S REG. 11J7 EA.

,-··---·-·-··-··-,
1 Sr. Citizens 1
Cakndar l

SMELTZER'S

lly GEORGES fRO DE
year.
AI' Spurts Writer
Latin, paced by Geoff WarCOLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) ren's 29 points, had won the
Bruce Williams' 12-foot jump 1977 title and finished second
shot with 12 seconds left lifted last year.
The Catholic school is
Oayton Jefferson to its first
Ohio Class AA boys high closing its doors for lack of
sc hool basketball
title finances .
Saturday with a 65-63 victory
Warren, ironically, was the
over Cleveland Latin .
goat, traveling twice in the
The Broncos, capping a 24-2 last 22 seconds, costi~g the
season, scored five straight . Lions big turnovers. Warren
points in the last 1:38 to foil was also called for an
Latin's bid for a state cham- intentional foul on Michael
pionship in it~ · fin :•l c:t•h q11) Mayfield with three seconds

POLYES1ER

Batey

Announce birth

Dayton Jefferson
claims AA title

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) For an unprecedented third
time, Toledo basketball
coach Bob Nichols has been
selected as Ohio College
B8sketball Coach of tbe Year
by: his fellow coaches.
· The 27th annual poll,.which
Nichols also won in 1969 and
1974, was conducted by The
ColumbUII Dispatch.
"This Is very gratifying,"
Nichols said, when told of the
selection by telephone while
attending the National
·Bask~tball
Coaches
Association conventjon , in
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Nichols guided the Rockets
to a 22-8 season as well as a
share of the Mid-American
Confel'Cnce champions an&lt;l a
berth
In
the
NCAA
lourlli!Ill~nt .

-~·

The Rockets gained an invitation to the tournament by
beating Central Michigan in a
playoff game.
Toledo upset Big Ten· trichampion Iowa in the first
game before being defeated
by then fifth ranked Notre
Dame.
"Anytime you are looked
upon well by your fellow
coaches it is of some
esteem,' ' he said. " 'They
probably know as much as
anybody else."
Nichols, who Is married
and has six children, received
both his bachelor's and
masters' degrees from
Toledo and became an
assistant there in 1964. One
year later, he was named
head coach.

Arena in 1957.
For the game, Kellogg
made 21 of 42 field goal
attempts, 9 of 16 free ttu"ows
and collected a game-high 24
rebounds.
Kellogg's awesome second
half performance - he
scored 34 of his team 's 39
points - nearly overturned

Last's brilliant first half
display.
The Tigers shot 66 percent
and committed only three
errors in the first 16 minutes,
rushing into a 54-26 lead.
Kevin Castleman, an allstater like Kellogg, led the
assault with all 25 of his
points.

"It was a tremendous effort
to save the baby," King said
of Shavers' victory which
saved
the
34-year-old

Morris, ·a second-team aU-

stater, put in 6 points despite
lly KEN RAPPOPORT
collected five rebounds and as 42 points in tbe last five his [ou l troubles. Irish,
AI' Sports Writer
Keiser scored 14 points and minutes .
another · seco nd-team aiiPrice, who fouled out with
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) pulled down seven rebounds.
Ohioan, managed only one
The Spartans went on a 19- 3:43 left in the game, led field goal and eight points.
Michigan State, led by spectacular Earvin Johnson and point scoring streak midway Penn with 18 points.
LATIN (63 1 - Ir ish 16-138,
The Quakers, who had been
steady Greg Keiser and a through the first half, with
Wash ing ton 0 b-0 0, Morris 8 0Iough
zone
defense, Johnson and Keiser doing complaining all through the 1 16, Warren 14 1-3 29, Hiano 2
overwhelmed Penn's Ivy most of the damage to rush
NCAA playoffs !hat they were 1-2 5, Carswell2 1-1 5, Tigh 0 0Leaguers 101-Ql Saturday . in into a 32-6 lead with 7:09 left · underrated because of a so- 0 0. Totals 27 9·20 63.
JEFFERSON
(65) ·
called poor Eastern image,
the semifinals of the NCAA before intermission.
Walker 0 0-0 0, Jackson 6 1-6
dido 't do much to support 13, Har rison 3 7-7 13, Watkins
basketball
championships.
Penn, 25-6, was not able to
The Big Ten Conference score a point for nearly nine . their argument at all 8 3-5 19 . Mayfield s 1-2 11.
Bohannon 0 0-0 0, Williams 4
Saturday.
tri - champions earned a minutes during one stretch,
berth in Monday night's and didn't break into double
The Spartans scored 13 of 1· 2 9. Totals 26 13-22 65.
Score by quarters :
the game's first 17 points, Latin
championship game against figures until 3:06. was left in
19 18 13 13-63
with Johnson leading the Jefferson
the winner of Saturday's the first half.
14 20 14 17- 65
Total fo uls Latin , 19.
other
semifinal
game
The Quakers' problem s attack, and grabbbed a 13-4
between top-ranked Indiana were compounded by early lead with 15:33 left before Jefferson, 17 .
Technical - Wil liams. A State and DePaul.
foul trouble to Ivy League intermission.
13,366.
Mter Bobby Willis scored a
Michigan State, 25-8, had Player of the Year Tony
the game sewed·up in the first Price, who was saddled with basket for Penn, Johnson
half, when the Spartans three fouls and had to sit fired a long-range jump shot, •
looked like a pro team toying down with nine minutes left in trigg~ring Michigan state's
with a college squad.
the first half .
19-pomt run that powered the •
Johnson , scoring almost at Spartans to their 32-6
The Spartans pounded out
an embarrassing 50-17 ' will from inside and outside,• advantage.
"'£ '
halftime lead behind their was the game's high scorer
The game became so
two superstars as the gifted with 29 points, while Keiser _ embarrassing for Penn that
Johnson scored 15 points, contributed 28 for Michigan at one point even the
handed out eight assists and State, which led by as many Michigan State fans cheered
two fouls shots by the
Alii
Quakers' Ted Flick with 3:06
COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP) ,left in the half that gave Penn
its ninth and loth points of the If you want to know what it 's
like to win a state basketball
contest.
11te Spartans built their ad- championship, just ask John,
vantage to 35 points, at 51).15, Watkins, coach of the newly
shortly before the half and crowned Class AA kings ,
continued to pour it on after Dayton Jefferson.

Glon"ous
teeJing••

Wall:!_S

Morgan ·belts
3-run homer

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Joe
Morgan crashed a three-run
first inning home run for Cincinnati in an 11-4 romp over
the New York Mets Sa'turday,
as the two teams combined
for 31 hits.
It was the second home run
of the exhibition season for
Morgan, the Reds' top hitter
this spring.
Mike LaCoss became the
first Cincinnati pitcher to
throw seven innings this
spring. He gave up 11 hits and
just three runs.
The Reds scored twice in
the third on a ~ouble by Ray
Kriight. George Foster and
Kriight each drove in a run in
the fourth with singles, and
Johnny Bench's base hit
scored two . ,

intermissiOn.

The final two Cincinnati

runs came in the seventh on a
double · by Rick Auerbach,
filling in for Dave Concepcion
who came down with chicken
pox Saturday and will be out
of the lineup for a week.
The Mets scored on a base
hit by Len Randle in the second. Willie Montanez had a
home run in the fifth and singled and scored on an infield
out in the seventh. Pinch
hitter Joel Youngblood drove
in the final run for New York
in tlle ninth inning .
The Reds also announced !"
personnel move Saturday,
sending catcher' Dave Van
Gorder back to their minor
league
complex
for
reassignment.

Promo...ter Don King confirms
Holmes- Weaver .bout in June
Hy ED SCHUYLER JR.
AP Sports Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. ( AP) The promotional wheels spun
in boxing's heavyweight
division Saturday, with
promoter Don King doing the
pushing and World Boxing
Council champion Larry
Holmes at the hub.
In a news conference the
day after Holmes defended
his title with a seventh-round
knockout of Ossie Ocasio,
King confirmed that Holmes
will fight Mike Weaver of Las
Vegas, a relative unknown,
sometime in June,- and then
fight
Earnie
Shavers
sometime in September.
Weaver Is not expected to
knock Holmes out of his
match against Shavers, ,who
·shocked Ken Norton with a
first&lt;'ound knockout Friday
night.

Latin 's four big men, Karl
Morris, Ed Washington , Mike
Carswell and Irish, were all
plagued with personal foul
trouble. Morris, Washington
and Irish all carried four per,
sonals througtJ the final min
utes .
Jefferson ,
a
197
semifinalist, was paced b
Joe Watkins' 19 points, one '
four double-figure scorers fu
the Broncos.
·
Darrell Jackson ,. an
Joseph Harrison had 1
apiece and Mayfield ha d II
The game was close allthc
way, with Latin compiling the
biggest margins. The Lion'
led by six points on five
occasions, the last at 56-50
with 6:17 left.
Jefferson then reeled off
the next eight poi.nts to take
the lead at 58-56, the first time
the Broncos had led since late
in the opening quarter.

"After last night we go in
there with King Kong," said
Frank Luca, Shavers' trainer ,
and business manager.
veteran's career
and
But in a serious vein, Luca
projected him back into the said when asked who he
championship picture.
would like Shavers to fight ,
King said he hoped to "I think all of you would
match Holmes and Shavers in agree that I should be
The Meadowlands in New careful."
Jersey or in Honolulu.
Any fight is a high-risk situHowever, it ,is known that ation for Shavers because a
Giants Stadium in The loss would knock him out of
Meadowlands is the exclusive the title fight in September.
property of the New York
Weaver, 26, is ranked No.8
Giants' football team in by the WBC and has won his
September . .
last five fights, all by
"Hawaii has been making a knockout, but his record is a
lot of strong overtures for a mediocre 21-8.
fight,'' said King.
"If he fights me like he
King wants to put the · fought last night I know I can
Holmes-Weaver bout in New beat him,'' Weaver said of
York 's Madison Square Holmes, who stalked the
Garden and also announced shorter Ocasio and made
tha t ~havers would fight himself a target which the
someone on that card.

Michigan State Coach Jud
Heathcote used his reserves
generously throughout the
lopsided game.
The result put Michigan
State into the NCAA final for
the first time in the school's
history. It was the (irst
appearance for Penn in the
NCAA's Final Four.

Wellston
coaches
•
resigD
WELLSTON - Wellston
High School's school board
accepted the resignations of
football Coach Joe Michael
and basketball Coach Rick
Perdue last Monday night.
Michael, who guided the
Rockets to a 7-2 record last
·fall, ending up in a three-way
tie for second place in the
Southeastern Ohio League
was also the athletic directo;
at the school a post he ·
resigned from, ' also .
Perdue posted a 15-43 mark
in his three-year tenure
overall and 13-29 SEOAL
mark, with his bebt finish
· being 1977-78 when the
Rockets were 6-13 overall and
6-3 in the league for fifth
place.
'

puerto Rican challenger
couldn't take advantage of.
"Ocasio hit him some
shots, but if I'd hit him he
wouldn't
have
been
standing,I f Ocasio said.
As Weaver, an ex-Marine,
talked, Holmes hid his head
in his jacket in mock fright.
" He's strong and has the
Ken Norton style of fighting ,"
said Holmes. "He's a .very
Working Wives
determined type of man ."
The younger the family , the
Then the champion smiled
and said, "Just sitting here more likely the 'wife is workand listening to him, I found ing, The Conference Board
his weakness. Alii have to do . reoorts. Some 57 percent of
women
in
is say,· 'Attention,' and he'll married
households
under
25
hold
stand stiU and I'll hit him ."
King also announced that jobs. In families 25-29, 53 per{l.obcrto Duran, the former cent of the wives are in the
lightwight champion from labor force. But the figure
Panama, would fight Bruce falls to 50 percent in
households 30-54, 41 percent
ClllT) of Los Angeles on the
in the 55-&amp;4 group and 16 perHolmes-Weaver card.
o•ent for those 65 and older.

,.'

'

''T here's never been a

more glorious or exciting
feeling that I've ever
experienced," Watkins said
after his Broncos pulled a 6563 win over Cleveland
Cathedrru Latin .
"We went down to tbe wire,
hut that 's what it's all about
when you get to the finals,''
Watkins said. "It's just
fantastic and right now I
can't think of anything that
we did wrong. We won it.
What else can you say?"
Watkins said his strategy
with :21 left and down by 1
point was to "'move the bali
inside to one of our three big
men and hope they could
either hit a basket or draw a
foul. "
11
When it works for you,"
he laughed, "the kids make
the coach look pretty smart.
That's what they did for me
today."
Bruce Williams scored the
winning basket with :12 left.
"He's that kind of player,"
Watkins added. "Bruce has
come off the bench all season
long, usually in pressure situ:
ations, and caused good
things to happen. That's
exactly what he did again
today. ..
·n was a bitter defeat for
Latins' Don Gacey to .
swallow .
"This is the second year
we've had questionable calls
by officials that has cost us
the championship," Gacey
said. " We definitely have not
had a fair shake in officiating
could
the last two years or
have woo three straight state · .
championships."
Gacey said he felt a cold
shooting performance by his
team and an unexplainable
loss of the rebounds were the '
main causes for the defeat.
"We just couldn't get the
points when they counted. We
had many opportunities and
let them get away. And after
they hit the go ... head basket.
We just didn't · have any
timeouls left where we could
set something up ," he
concluded.

we

I

�,.. '

-.--..
l:"

C·2-The Sunday Timrs~&lt;&gt;entinel. Sunday, Mar. 25. 197!1

-

Mansfield St. Peters, St. Henry in finals
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl Mansfield St. Peter's tried its
height advantage on un·
beaten St. Henry last night in
its bid lor a second successive
Ohio Oass A boys high school
basketball title.
Coach Tom Boehm, his
Zanesv ille Rosecrans team a
60-45 semifinal victim of the
defending champions Friday
night, isn't sure any small
school opponent can · ha11dle
the St. Peter's intimidators.
"You just don't see many
t1ass Ateams with that much
height , especially when·
they're that mobile," said
Boehm. "We were definitely

.

intimidated inside. It forced
us to take seve ral un ·
disciplined shots."
St. Peter's. in the title
game lor the third strail:ht
season, will match its 2~ :1
record against St. Henry's 25
triumphs. The Redskins ·
ousted another previously
unbeaten, CinciMati Summit
Country Day, In the other
semifinal 8Q.Ii7 .
Before the Oass A finale,
the Class AAA championship
Saturday matched four·time
victor Columbus East and
Lleveland St. Joseph. In the
Oass AA finals, Oeveland
Latin met Dayton Jefferson.
St. Henry Coach Fran
GuUbaut ducked newsmen's

'.
questions about the Class A line ol Brown. Kowull;ki and
mutch up with St. Peter's, Mulherin combined for 4&amp;
starting a front line or 6-foot-8 po~ts. easily offsetting th~ 22
All·Ohioan Leo Brown. 6-5 pomts
all-stater
llill
Tim Mulherin and 6-4 Cbris · McLoughlin
hit
for
Kowalski. 1he SJ&gt;&lt;•rtans have Hosccrans, 2r-3.
a height advantage ut all
The Spnrtnns ~f'n r' ''' t:l
three positions.
.
" I dind 'I see them play. 1'
sta}·cd in the motel with our
kids. Hut my philosophy is :
You worry about today today ·.
and tomorrow tomorrow "
Friday's Semifinol Results
,
•
I Bovsl
said .Guilbaut.
.
,
CLASS AAA
Then he added, "We've Columbus East 69, Akron
waited 57 years to get this far. Centrai-Hower 54
This is the biggest thing that Cleveland St. Joseph 73 .Cincinnatl LaSalle 56
has happened in our town and
CLASS A
we're not going to miss this Mansfield St. Peter's 60,
opportunity."
Zanesvil le Rosecrans 4S
St: Peter's imposing front St . Henry BO, Cincinnati
Summit Country Day 57

stroil:ht points late in the
fo urth quarter to turn a lour·
point lead into a rout. ·
St. Henry outshot Summit
&lt;:ountry Day 61-42 percent in
rolling up a 46-2'J halftime
lead.

The Silver Knights never
moved closer than 14 points In
the second hall, suffcrng
their first setback in 25
games this winter.
Mike Post, a springy 6-4
AII..Qhioan, scored 20 of his 23
points In the first half and
tb uck Stahl followed with 18.
Hick &lt;:ruse-. the coach's son,
led Sununit &lt;:ountry Day with
17 points. pexter Bailey,- an
all-stater for the Silver
Knights, settled for just six
points after getting into early
foul trouble.
Box Scores:

. Tournament scores

Tournament mcf

Friday's Resuln
CLASS AAA
At Sandusky
High School
Ashland 44, Parma Valley
Forge 42
Elyria Senior 52, Toledo
Central Catholic 45
At Canton Fieldhouse
Cleveland Glenvil-le 56,

NOW. IS THE TIMEI

T~T

· Meigs
Property
Transfers

BUY.YOUR
ORGANIC
FERTIUZER
AND WORK IT
IN WITH A
TROY BILT

Warren Harding 38

~arllt!rton

At Ohio

Wesleyan University

Akron St. Vincent . St . Mary
44, Columbus Whitehall 33
At Doyton Fieldhouse

Dayton Stivers-Patterson 4a,
Springfield North 42
CLASS A
At Bowling' Green
State Unlv,rsity
DelpHos St. John's 6a;
Lexongtort 33
Oregon Stritch 69, Medina
Highland 55
At Otterbein College

AKRON, Ohio ( AP) - The
National Football League
should
reconsider
its
rejection of instant replays as
aids to
officials
on
·controversial plays; says
Cleveland Browns Coach
Sam
Rutigliano.
Zanesville West Muskingum
46, Columbus Hamilton
The coach, who was an
To)lllnshlp 44
analyst of instant replays
Columbus Hartley 53, West during the 1979 Superbowl
Lafayette Ridgewood 40
telecast and who has worked

•

I

I

o

Browns coach favors instant replay on calls ·····

Cincinnati Hughes 54, Cincinnati Oak Hills 40

-

i

a• a commentator on NFL
games for NBC, said instant
replays would help officials
on plays that decide the
outcome of games.
Rutigliano said in·a WHW
Radio interview that the NFL
was looking for a 100 percent
remedy to the problem of
controversial calls, and that
nothing on the face of the
earth ~s 100 percent foolproof.

By voting down tne ~IS!ai£
replay proposal earlier ~­
year, Rutigli311o said he !;It
the NFl. placed undue;
pressure on its officials, whci
he said do a "super" job. _
'fhe BroWns lost games 1o
Pittsburgh and HousloJI 111ft
season on controversial calli,
Instant replays In each ca&amp;e
raised questions about tit
judgment of the offlciaiB.

F;ast, St. Joseph in Class AAA cage showdown
By George Strode

' '·

~sportsWriter

• ·-coLUMBUS, Ohio (AP);'C'ould Columbus East handle
-!::lark Kell01111 for the Tigers '
fifth Class' AAA boys high
Mchool basketball title • ·
:: That was the big mystery
. surrounding the 1979 cham·
pionship sh9wdown Saturday
~!.&lt;!~ween the Tigers . and
(!,leveland St. Joseph ,
powered by the amazing
~Jiogg.
' ~The game

wil boil down to
well East can handle
~:lark," silid Bin Cady, whose
dncinnatl LaSalle team was
manhandled by Kellogg for 35
poinl.\1 Friday in a 73-56 semi·
final loss to the VIkings.
"That was the greatest aU·
around perfonna11,ce by a
h!gh school player I've ever
seen," said Cady, the only
roach Lasalle has had in its
-1'9'years.

how

WHITE .HAT

.---

SPECIALS

..."'
"...

vi~ilctllhe

campuses at Ohio 1!151, 1!16:1, 1!168 and 1009, pro-.
Stale, Michigan, Nutre Dame.~ h•dt•tl its unbt.•ah1n re&lt;'nrt.l in
ami Kentucky.
St. ,John Arqm ily rollin~ tu
Eldon Miller, the Ruckeyes its seventh \'idon• on the
coacl1, watched the game and Ohio Statl'flm&gt;r. ·
said afterward, "Oark has
" Eat~t has t.•verything you
the most court awarene.s!:i of t•ouid ask for on a hil(h school
any player I've seen at his tcum, '' sa id Ct.•ntral -

East, meanwhile, qualified
by ousting Akron Central •
·Hower 69..'i4 with' a blanced
attack headed by Richardo
Hairston 's 18 points. Thl'
Tigers carried a 21-4 record
against St. Joseph's 22-3
mark.
· Kellogg, a 6-foot-8 senior
who was the Ohio Player of
the Year, put on a dazzling
perfonnance with 14 of 22
shooting from the floor, mostly from long range, 7 of 8 free
throws, 14 rebounds and 6
blocked shots. . .
Afterward, his father,
Cleveland policeman Oark
Kellogg, was hounded by
reporters on where his son
would attend college.
"It's here or Michigan that's it,'' the older Kellogg
said. "We 've got visits left
and we ai~t't even gonna take
them."
The younger Kellogg has

level.' '

Kellogg's performance
made sure LaSalle 's season
ended at 21-4, continuing the
Lancers ' slate tournament
hex. They've been in the final
f&lt;mr three times without a
championship.
Joe Gamp(er, a 6·11 junior
L'llnler, had 15 points for
LaSalle but only two of them
came in the first half against
the close guarding of Kellogg.
Ry that lime, St. Joseph was ·
enjoying a 35·27lead.
East, the state champion in

;;-

:E
-

...
.-

· Hower's veteran eua&lt;'h Joe

statt•rs, G.S Kt.•vin Castleman

SiegfPrlh, wl1o has i)(•en to the
.stah• S(!mi-finHis six times
without winnillg a title.
Sicgferth, whose tea m
wound ·up with a 23·2 reco~d.
hinted this might be his last

and 6-11 G•·anviile Waiters,
had 17 ami 14, rcsperlivcly .
F:asl Coach Larry Walker
said the Tigers' teague
season had a great deal to do
with their tournament sue·

Columb~s

Cit'y I ~'agut• (·r·uwn ancl that

lms haw1ted us. We feel we
have sonu.&gt; thing to prove,"
said Wa lk er , a play-m;oking
guard nn·lhe Tigers ' 1968 and
I!l691itie t~ams.
EAST (69) -· Thomas 2 0-0
4, Castleman 7 3-5 17 , Wait er s
6 ?·4 14, ,Hairston a 2·3 18,

d

1-a

Riddi ck 2 0-2

9,

4,

Johnson 5 5·9 15, Gooden 2 3·4
7, Grant o0-0 O, Math is 2 5-7 9.
Totals 18 18-34 54 .
Score by quarters :
Ea st
16 17 18 2Q-69
Ceni. -Hower 7 13 12 22- 54
Foul ed out Ridd ic k ,
Waiters. Totartouls - East ,
26 . Central - Hower, 16.
Technicals - East team . A -

13.000.
Johnson 0 0-0 0, Berger 4 2-3
10. Bobo 0 0-0 0. Jamison 0 0-0
LaSALLE (56)
E.
0, Bradley 10-2 2. Eberhard t 2 Herzog 7 0.2 14. Day .1 3 -~ 5,
0-2 4, Peach o 0·0 o. Totals JQ Gampfer 6 3-5 15, Dauer 2 0-1
9-19 69.
.
4, Schmidt J 0-2 6, Welnle 3 4-6
CENTRAL. HOWER (54) 10, freeze o 0-0 0, Woeste 0 0-0
....._ Williams 3 4-4 10, Cherries 0, T. Herzog 0 0-0 0,

Schoen field 0 0-0 0, , x-C.
Kellogg 1 0-0 2. Totals 23 10-20
56.

&gt;-C. Kellogg score&lt;! one
goal for LaSalle.
ST. JOSEPH (73 ) E.
Kell ogg 2 0-0 4, C. Kellogg 14
7-B35. Dudley 5 2 ~ 2 2, Kramar
2 0~ 0 4, Will iams 5 1-3 11 ,

Drozin 0 0-00, Stenger 3 1·2 7,
Roesch 0 0-0 0. Miskinis 0 0-0
0. Bergan! 00-00. Totals 3111·

15

73.

Score by quarters :

LaSalle
13 14 12 17- 56
St. Joseph · 16 19 19 19- 73
Fouled out -

'3.95!

Minnesota

7 6 .538

California
Mi lwaukee
Toronto

a.

B 7 .533
a 7 · .533

8 .500
7 7 .500
7 7 .500
6 7 .462
6 9 .400

5 8 .385
5 10 .333
3 12 .200

Los An~eles
St. LOUIS
Atlanta
Pillsburgh

9 4 .692
9 4 .692
9 6 .600
7 5 583

San Francisco

9 7 .563
7 6 .538
8 7 .533

Cincinnati

6 7 .462
6 , 7 .462

Montreal
San Diego
Chicago

FREE RACKET

6 7 .462

Philadelphia
Houston
New York

Inspection &amp; Cleaning!

6 8 .429
5 7 .417

DODGE

[).50
SPORt

POSTPONED
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The
exhibition baseball game be·
tween the Cincinnati Reds
and the_Uls Allgeles Dodgers
was canceled becallse of rain
and wet grounds Friday.
Meanwhile, the Reds cut
five pitchers from their
major league squad, Bruce
Berenyi, Bill Dawley, Jay
Howell and Geoff Comb, all of
whom were with the Class AA
club in Nashville last year,
and David Moore, who spent
last season with Indianapolis.
They were sent back to the
minor league complex for
assignment in the Reds' farm
system.

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THE AREAS NEWEST, MOST COMPLETE

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Dauer . Total

fouls - LaSalle, 14 . St.
Joseph , 17 . A - 13,941 .

Nationa I League

NO REASONABLE

•
Boys Basketba II
CLASS AAA
Co lumbus
East
7'
Cl eveland. St. Joseph 65 ..

9 5 .643
7 5 .583
8 6 .571

Texas
Chi cago
Baltimore
Cleveland
New York

* NEW GRIP Installed
*

Detroit
Oakland
Seattle
Boston
Kansas City

•7.99!

.,.
-c"""

•·l'lin·mcnt .
Clay .John!-inn led the much
shortl'r F:agles with 15 points
whil&lt;' East's pair of '111-

('('"· "We lost tlw

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With Blue Spiral Nylon

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F.ag lt•s ('oae h in hinting of

t ' ll;ll"hlll g

Exhibition Baseball
. At AGlance
By The Associated Press
W L Pet.

.SPRING
TENNIS
SPECTACULAR!

-~

Ohio Girls
High Sc'-1 Basketboll
By The Associated Press
Closs A Tournaments
At College of Wooster
Mansfield St. Peters 52, East
Canton 42
•

RT. 7

.

Newark 42, Wintersville 41

Carole Hamm Crujeiras,
Luis· Crujeiras, Charles W.
· Hamm, Nedra Hamm, Larry
W. Hamm, Betty Hamm
Johnson, Ray Johnson, Allen
W. Hamm, Betty Hamm to
Nancy Hamm, Mike Hamm,
lots, Pomeroy.
Michael Imboden to Roy T.
Combs, Beverly L. COmbs,
parcel, Letart.
Joe A. Imboden to Roy T.
Combs, Beverly T. Combs,
parcels, Letart.
Russell Cullums, Etta
CuUums to Gregory A. Davis,
Janice "H. Davis, parcels,
,Bedford.
• Florence 0 . Staneart to ·
Rex Cheadle, Jr., Sara Jo
Cheadle, Parcels, Columbl~.

nU£R

55, Eastl~ke North

ROSECRANS (~5)
ST.HENRY(IO) - C. Stahl
Mcloughl in 9 4-6 22. Eppley 2 66-718, Will73-517. Post 81-8
0-0 4, Davis 9 1 1 1. Kozak 4 0-0 23. Barlage 2 0-0 4, Ra~l'r
a, J. Eng lehart 4 0-1 a, Gay 0 Heitkamp 20-14, Shockrriaii.J
0-0 0, Noe 10 0 2, Boll Inger 0 o. 0-0 2. Lachey 4 0-0 8, Reicheri
0 0. Dem psey 0 . 0-0 0. 0 0·0 o. Droesch 2 0-0 ~. ::r.
Swack hammer 0 0·0 0. S. Stahl 0 0-0 0, Wehrkamp 0 0.8
Englehart 0 0 o 0, Wash 0 0-0 o. Royer Heitkamp o o.o 0
0. Totals 20 l -8 4l .
I,
Totals 32 16-21 80
' ·
ST , PETER'S (60).S'IJMMIT DAY (57) "'"
KowalSki a 0;9 16, Mulhenn 5 . Drake 4 2-2 tO, Cruse 7 3-4 Ji,
2·6 12, Brown 7 J -4 17, Day 4 1- Ba iley 3 0-2 6, Cummings 00.0
1 9, K~ller 2 2-3 6, Mlssory 0 0- o. Fleming 4 0-1 B, Phillips 0 o.
0 0, Le1bfrllz 0 0-0 0, McCabe 0 o o, McJoynt 0 . 8-0 'o;
0-0 0, Bryne 0 0-0 0, Bak 10 0-0 Schroeder 2 0·0 4 Breth oO!l!
o. Deley 0 0-1 0. Totals 27 8-15 o. Arington 5 0-0 10, Ravens.
60.
craft 1 O·O 2. Totals"26 5·9 57.
Score by quarters:
Score by quarters ·
Rosecra~s
7 15 6 17- 45 · St."Henry
27 19 iJ 21_;80
St. Peters
]3 11 17 19-60 Summit Day 13 16 12 10...."$1.'
Total lou~ - Rosecrans.
Total fouls _st. Henry,·~15. St. Peter s. 10. Techmcals Summit Day 19 A _ 12 7•)- Kowalskt. A - 13,685.
·
' • •-

'.

~-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Mar. 25, 1979

Eaaytenn•
available .

When you're looking for a savings plan,
something that will provide you with security later
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At Ohio Valley Bank, we know how · ·
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�C-4- The Sunday Tim'es_-&amp;enlinel, Sunday, Mar. 25, 1979

Twenty candidates working
out for .S HS diamond opener
'

.

.

""

~··;;··

IIV &lt;am&lt;: UAIU:Y

.. ..-

. HA t.:INE
Twenty
bascballcrs will be compding
for a starting spot on this
year's r cbuUding Southern
diamond squad. Coach Hilton
Wolfe,-Jr ., lo~t seven starters
from last yea r's 13-11 team.

.·,
... ·· '

-.,

.

·-·~.-

.···.

By lhc Asso&lt;ialcd Press
TENNIS
NEW YORK - · Dianne
Fromholtz beat Chris Evert
6-2, 6-3 and advanced to the
semi-finals of the $275,000
wom en's tennis championship at Madison Square
Garden.
In another match, Britain's

'

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..
..
'

'

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M.EMBERS of Southwestern's girls first winning team in the school's history are, first
row, left to right - Beth Salisbury, Penny Evans, Lisa Miller ; second row, left to right Sandra Hall~y . Coach Carter, Mecca Jordan;· third row, left to right - Barbara Stewart,
captain, Denna Cline, Dana Jeffers, Linda " Bic Mac" Edwards, Stephanie Fadeley , and
Bar bara Edwards.

•
.

•'

.'

: ..
'

'
.'
'

.'
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Sue Ba rk er beat coun·
trywoman Virginia Wade 5-7,
7-5, 6-2 and will meet topseeded Martina Navratilova
in the semifinals.
NEW ORLEANS - Ferdi
l'aygan moved into the semi·
finals of the $175;000 New
Orleans Tennis · Festival by
defeating Ray Moore 4-6, 6-2,
6-4.

•

'

S W girls post first
.
.
wznnzng cage season
'

PATRIOT - The South- on to win the dlstrlct tourwestern
High . School nament.
Highlanders' Girls basketball
Coach Mel Carter said that
team recently completed he expects his team to come
their first' winning season at back strong next year.
the district tournament in
Carter said that the team
Chillicothe.
The team's record was 7-&lt;i.
The offense averaged 31.3
points a game and allowed
By The Associated Press
opponents 30.1 points per
BASEBALL
game.
American League
.
The Highlander girls won
BALTIMOR E ORIOLES the Meigs' Sectional in three Optioned Ji m Smith, short.
games : Southwestern topped ~lop , Tom Chism.. first
North Gallia, 35-27; Hannan baseman, Jeff Rineer and
Jose Bastian , pitchers, to
Trace, 41·12 and Southern, 15- Rochester of · the
In 23.
ternational League.
Natlona I League
Th6 team lost to Paint
REOS
Valley 31-22, at the district SeCINCINNATI
nt Bruce B.erenyi , Bill
tournament in Chillicothe; Dawl ey and Jay Howell ,
the Paint Valley team went p itch e rs , to the i r minor

Transactions

.-

league camp for reassign.
ment .

..
.
~.

FOOTBALL
National Football League
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS
- ~i g ned Mike Cordova and
Ga ry
Foryslek . qua r-

WANT A

,,

I
I

•'

terbacks, Marv Frazier and

REAL ESTATE

·'

Rick Rivas , w ide receivers,

Tom my Reamon and James

ll'aso easy to be a member
of.. •
fest growing
profnsion. Start now, by
studying at GIC, 2 or 3
evenings a week.

W. offer the .ccrodlled
.p~ram of clats work
you re roquirod to compt.!• before taking t.,_ Ohio
Stale Board Examination.

,.

,.

,.

Compt.te In only 12 ~~.

,.

..,..u _, Classes

will

begin April 2. For moro
informltion, Contact

GALUPOI.IS

offensfve

ta ckle,

and

Joe

Novosel. defensive tackle, to

Kansas City 5. Baltimore · 0
Sa n Francisco 6, Ch icago INl
J

San Diego 9. Cleveland 1
Mil waukee 4, Oakland 1
Cal ifornia 6, Seattle 3
St. Loui s vs. Philadelphia,
ppd .. rain
· Los Angel es vs. Cin ci nnati,
ppd ., ra in
Boston vs. Mon t real. ppd :,
rain

Pittsburgh vs. Detroit. ppd ..
rain

.

New Yor k " A" 9, New York
•

1

' N" 3

'

Hoc king with th eir first
leag ue g•mc against Hannan
Trace at Hacin e, the very
•
next night 1
Four seniors who were
part-time starter s last year
wiU have to take leadership
rol es this year . Those
returtr"ees are SS-OF Dwight ..
Hill , C-OF Tim Brinager, POF' . J im O'Brien, and NlF
John West. Two other seniors
who sta nrj good chances of
getting starting spotS are
outfielder Jim Powell and _
ca tcher . outfielder Dave
Robinson.
Pitching could be a strong
point or a weak one,
depending on the development of some of the younger
hurlers. There are six candidates for the mound job:
O'Brien
and
West,
sophomores Bryan Wolfe and
Dave Nance, and freshman
· Kent Wolle.
Lost from last year's squad
were John· Sayre, Herb Er-

Taygan will go up against
loth-ranked Roscoe Tanner,
who moved into the semifinals by defeatin g Tom
Gullikson 6-3, 6-4.
ATLANTA - Roger Taylor
upset Ken Roswall to earn a
semi-final berth against .Cliff
Drysdale in the first stop on
the Tennis Legends tour.
Taylor defeated Rosewall ro und of the $440,000 Tour6-4 , 4-6, 7-&lt;i , while Drysdale I nament Player s Cham·
whipped Frew McMillan 6-4 pionship .
6-4.
'
Wadkins put together a 36GOLF
hole total 'of 135, 9 Btrokes
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. ~ under par, while George
Lanny Wadkins shot a 4- Bums matched the course
under-par 68 and took a 3- record of 66 to keep Wadkilis
stroke lead in the second in sight at 138.

.

vin, Richard Teaford, Mike
Huddleston , Steve Hill, Mark
F orbes a nd Kell y Winebrenner.
Candidates for pos i trons on

th is year~s varsity ar e:

SENIOR S - Dwlaht Hill ,
OF - S~; Tim Brlna9e~, OF.C;
J im O' Br ien. OF-P : John
Wesj, OF- P ; Jim Powell, OF
and Dave Robinson, c.P.
JUNIORS - Jack Dootiv .
OF-18 ; Mike Nance, INF-C;
John
Pape,
INF -OF ;
Jonathan Rees . 55 ; John
Da vis. IN F-OF ond Chuck
Michael, I NF .
SOPHOMORES ~ Bryan
Wolle, OF + P; Paul Cardone.
Of.C; Bob Lee, INF : Dove
Nance, INF : Dale Teaford,
INf.P; Jeff SoPher . INF ;
Mike Coll ins. INF -P and
Terry McN ickles, INF.
FRESHMEN ·- Kent
Wolfe, OF -INF-P; Joe Bob
HemSley, INF ; C. T. Chap.
man. OF and Jay Rees, Of.
INFC.
1979 SCHEDULE
Apr. 2- Federal Hock ing A

Apr . 3~ Hannan Trace

Apr. s- Ea stern
Apr. 6- Aiexander
Apr.9- Hannan , W. Va .
Apr. 10- Kyger Creek
Apr. 12-North Gall Ia
Apr. 17-Soulhwestern
Apr. 18- Wahama
Apr. 19- Hannan Troce
Aor. 23-Hannan, W. Va .

Apr. 25- Federal Hock.
Apr. 26- Kyger Creek
Apr. 30-MIIIer
Ma y1- North Gall Ia
May 3-Southwestern
May~- Wahama

May7- Eastern .
MayS- Alexander
May 11- Mi Iter

THJSnED()WN •IIII L

vs.

be given away ~il

A

13, 1979 .
Need not be Present to Wl'n . I

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r

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A

•

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INSURANCE :

Lincoln Midilltport,;p.
992-3969

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A
H

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-.·

Minnesota at

Or lando, Fla.
Atlanta vs . Los Angeles at
Vero Beach, Fla.

St . Lavis v s. Detroit '' A " at

By Ed Srhuyler ,Jr.
AP Sports Writer
I.AS VEGAS !AP I - Larry
Holmes is still on top of his
share of the heavyweight boxing world . Earnie Shavers is
in position again to reach the
top. Ken Norton is In limbo.
· Holmes defended the World
Boxing Cunei! title by knock.
ing down young Ossie Ocasio
four times in the seventh
·round - the first time with
three straight punishing left
jabs - and stopping him at
2:38 o!the round.
But the 34-year-old Shave
stole the show by stopping the
ll.S favored Norton all :58 of
the first round after knocking
him down twice.
"I really feel in all sincerity
I'll beat Holmes next time,"
said Shavers who earned the
WBC's No. I ranking and a
September title shot with his
. vidory, wlpeh was stunning
because of it's devastating
suddenness. Shavers lost a
one-sided 12-roUnd decision to
Holmes here last March 25.
''I'm gonna knock him
(Shavers) out," said Holmes,
who rode his victory over
Shavers into a title ·bid
· ·against Norton, which he won
on a spilt decision here last
June 9. "I'm not Kenny Norton. When I back up I know

\Vhat I'm d(,ing."
Rut fi rs! Hol mes will light
Mike Weaver, the No. 8 WHr
contender who repnrll~lly has
a 23-3 record.

, ~· Jt 's signed and !-lC[:Iled/'
s~ r d promotor Don Ki ng, Hd-

dmg that hr• wants to rut it in

Nr·w York's Madison Squa r·r•
C:nrden.

Montrea l vs. Toronto at

Dunedin . F Ia.
Philadelph ia vs. New York
" N" at St. Petersburg
.New York " A" vs . Pittsburgh
at Bradenton, Fla .

".

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.:.
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.''
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Seo11 Lt'doux on the

~.

Collins .successful cage

mentor during off-season

EVERYBODY'S DOING IT.
MEETING THEIR FRIENDS
AT

'

row.

San Diego vs . · CleVeland at
Tucson. Ariz .
California vs. San Francisco
at Phoeni x, Ariz.
Monday's Games
Boston vs . Houston at Cocoa ,

vs . Montreal

r

at

proficiency which we have

nut shown."
The Indi ans latest loss was
Friday in a 9-1 walloping by
the San Diego Padres. The In-

St . Louis vs . Cincinnati at

Eastern banquet
scheduled Tuesday

Tampa, Fta .-

Minnesota vs. Los Angeles at
Vera Beach , Pia.
Toronto vs . New York " N" at

St. Petersburg , Fla.
Detroit vs . Philadelphia at

.

"The li.me to star'L worrying
ctbout thesl! games we~s last
week," Torborg said. ··'We're
W!lfried now. We've only got
11 exhi bition games ·left. We
must start playing with some

'"

Fla.

Clearwater, Fla .

.."'·

Arnzen wins

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....".

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Ft. Myers. Fla.
·

Miam i. Fla.

Baltimore at

'

New York " A" vs. Chicago
"A" at Sarasota, Fla .
San Diego vs. Cleveland at
Tucson , Ariz.
San Francisco vs . Milwaukee

at Sun City, Ariz.
Cal iforn ia vs. Oakland at
Scottsdale. Ar iz.
Seattle "A" 'vs . Chicago " N"

.·

at Mesa , Ariz . ·

Seattle " B" at Arizona St., N

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He has bern a major factor in
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evt•r sinee he broke Muham.
mud Ali '~ jaw and scored a
split 12-round decision a!'i Cl

virtual unknown back in 1973.
" He'!; gone nuw, 11 sa id
Hnlrnes of Norton.
"!don't know," the :l:l-yearold Norton said ohuut his
lighting future . "! can't make
up my mind right now."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Veteran Coach Bob Arnzen of
Delphos St. .John is the 1979
recipient of the Pa ul Walker
Award, presented by the Ohio
Hi gh School Basketba ll
Coaches Association.
The award , named after
the lege nd ary Middl etown
High School coach, depi cts
longevity, success a nd
outstanding contributions to
the ga me in Ohio. The winner
also must be an active coach
to be selected .
Arnzen, who received his
plaque at halftime of the
Class AI\ ti ti e ga me
Saturday, has spent a ll 29 of
his years coaching at St.
J ohn . Hi s teams have won 438
games and lost 201.
Othe r winners of the award
were Her b Russell of Grove
City in 1977 and Carroll Hawbee of Waverly in 1978.

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Mar. 15 2·4 p.m .. Qpen Recreation
6-8 p.m .-Open Recrea ti on
Mar. 26 8-10 p.m .-Co llege Recrea t ion
Ma r. 27 8-10 p.m .-Open Recreation
Mar . 28 8-10 p.m .-Col lege Recreation
Mar . 29 8· 10 p.m .. Qpen Recreat ion
Mar . JO 7.9 p.m.- Fami ly Night

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•
HOME ATHLETI C CONTESTS

MM . 25 Baseba ll vs . Onondaqa

Comm. Co llege
Mar. 27 Baseba ll vs . Capital

1 p. m .-doubleheader

Uni ver sity

3 p.m .-s ing le

Mar . 29 Baseba ll vs . Southern

State

1 p.m,- doub leheader

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acquired from Sea ttle, if he'd
taken advice offered by club
vice chairman Bob Howsam.
Collins was drafted out of
high school by the Reds, later
by Kansas City and the
Angels before he signed. He
turned doMl the Reds' initial
offer to ·attend Mesa, Ariz.,
Junio r College.
~~ H ow sa m

sa id , ' You're

making a mistake.' He may
have been ri ght," said
Collins, whose problem now
is accepting a nonstarting
role.

Collins played in 120 games
for the Mariners in 1977, but .
last year was used almost exclu$ively as a pinch hitter by
Cin cinnati.
His
74
appearances in that role was
the second most in Reds'
history.
"I guess I've been labled
"no de fense'," and that's
frustrating to a ballplayer
who has all the other skills to
be a full-time major leaguer,
Collins said . "I switch hit, run

"

Run, indeed. The Reds used
him as a pinch-runner 12
ti mes las t year to take
advantage of his speed, which
may be the best on the club.
Collins might have been a
world class sprinter if he had
been a bl e to train year
around as a teenager.
" I never lost a race," said
the two-time South Dakota
dia ns' Caetus League record
high school athlete of the
is 5-10.
year. "But it was always so
The Pad res scored live cold up ther e. The first time I
runs off Clevela nd starter ran a :09.6 (second 100-yard
Rick Wise before collecting dash) it was raining."
any oul.s Friday in Yuma.
Ariz.
The Indians' single run
came when Toby Harrah alked with the bases loaded in
the seventh.
" II this happened during
the season, it would be one
thi ng," said pitcher Len
Ha rker , who gave up three
nms in the fourth inni ng.
"Spring !rai ning is a long
time," said eaptain Du::~ nc
G14X L 14 ~p Gear
Kuiper. " It would even be
long if we were winning. Tlie
fi nal week will tell the story,
the last SfVen games ..,
Torborg said he lost his
temper with the team Thursday. Asked about the
response to his outburst, he
said, "We lost two more in a

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racing hor ses and destroyed
two wooden barns at Audubon
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to the arson investigator.
Michael Owens, state
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th e Hend er son Gleaner
Friday that he suspects arson
in the case because of two
unanswered questions. But
the a nswers · to those
questions co uld also indicate
t he lire was accident al.
Owens said.

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may qualify lor Allstate's "New
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fl'l&gt;m his fi rst loss in only 14
pro fights, could find himsl'lf
in lhl' ring ag;linst an ex·
('hrtmion . " They ht lkt•d to me
lrKlay about . fig hti'ng Leon
Spinks in six months,'' ~aid
Rill Dolcy , Ocasio's
manager.
With things looking up lor
Shavers and the boxing pic·
lure sti ll hrighl for the 23ycar-&lt;&gt;ld Ocasio, what docs
the future hold fo r Norton ?

Indians lose
•
sixth zn row

$1.,... ....

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C'l&lt;:asit1 , wh11 didn't lose fwt•

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Boston vs . Ci nc innat i at

Tampla, Fla .
Baltimore vs . Te xas at
Pompano Bea&lt;h. Fla .
Kansas City vs. Chicago "A"
at Sarasota, Fla. •
Oakland vs . Milwa ukee at
Sun City, Ar iz .
Chicago " N" vs. Seattle at

NI CHOLAS STATE
Named Jerry Sanders head
bas ketba ll coach.

on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

wrmltl likr• lo mall'h Shavcr·s

The Associated Press Atlanta Braves' 'B' squad be· Mark . Lee
a nd
san in the fourth and eventually
The California Angels seem hind the four-hit pitching of . Fra ncisco's Bob Knepper sr:ored the .winning run on
to be serious about making a Vergie Je nkin s ·and Ed allowed one run in seven in- singles by Alfredo Griffin and
run at the Ka f\lias City Farmer. The Braves' '!\' nin gs as the Giants defeated RickBosetti as the Blue Jays
Roya ls' Ame ri can League team suffered a similar fate, the Chicago Cubs 6-3.
nipped the White Sox 2.1.
West .Division crown .
managing four hits against
Paul Molitor had three hils
Th e New York Yankees
With Rick Miller and Rance Vern Ruhle, Frank Riceili and drove in two runs to lead faced th e New York Mets in a
Mulliniks delivering twM un and Bo Mcl.aughlin in bowing the Milwaukee Brewers over night contest while rainy
singles and Nolan Rya n to the Houston Astros 1-0.
the Oakland A's 4-1.
weather in ~-lorida forced
yieldin g five hits in six
The San Diego Padres
Toronto 's Dave McKay cancellation of the St. Louisinnings, the Angels ran their whipped t he Cleve land struck out but reached fi rst Phil adelph ia, Los Angelese"hibition winning streak to lndians9-l behind the four-hi t on a two-out passed bali by Cincinn ati, Bo•ton-Montreal
four games Friday with a &amp;-3 pitching of Bob Shirley and Chi cago's Wayne Nordhagen a nd Pitt s bur gh-D e troit
tr iumph over the Sea tt le
· ga mes.
Mariners.
The Royals, meanwhile,
got combined two-hit pitching
from Ric h . Gale, Geor ge
Throop and Renie Ma rtin and
blank ed the • Ba ltimore
Or'ioles 5.0 as Amos Otis
homered, singled and stole
home.
·
Another
AL
Wes t
By TERRY KINNEY
baseball player with the coac hing a t a pa rochial
challenger , the Texas
AP Sports Writer
Cincinnati Reds and win ter school in Rapid City. Later,
Rangers , scored six runs off
TAMPA, Fla . (AP )- Dave basketball coach at league
Tommy Boggs in th e fourth Collins combines two unique champion Anaheim , Calif. , whe n he was wit h th e
Ca lifornia Angels, he heard
innin g "a nd whipped the sports careers, summertime High School.
the Anaheim job was vacant.
"It works out pe rfect.
Although Collins is still
Basketball
starts
in working on a college degree ,
November and ends early in in California, "All you have to
F e bru ary,"
Co llins have is a person wi th a
expla ined, Wilting out a rain degree on th e bench," he
de lay that eventually can- said.
celled the Reds' exhibition
Collins' career with the
ga me Friday with the Los Reds might have started
Ange les Dodge rs. " I get considerably befor e las t
about three weeks off before I season , whe n he was
have to come down here" for
spring training.
Collins, who also was a
track star as a prep in Rapids
City, S.D., came by the
417 2nd Av_,,
basketball coac hing job
na turally.
"Bas ketball was my best
workm
sport in high school. Later, I
dec ided that if I' m not
$2 per wdt-ln "'~'
TUCSON, Ariz . f AP) playing it, the nex t best tlting
'
Cleveland
Ind ians Manager
is to coach it."
Madae has 1~ CoHee Pol hoi~ Come on In and visit ·
eff
Torborg
IS not laking the
J
Collins sa id he started
tea m 's exhibiti on ga me
losses li ghtl y now that the
leorn has droppcxl six in a

To

basketbi'l ll coach .

Here in Gallia County .
Allstate can save )'00 10% ·

night's buuts at tht• I .Hs Vt.•gas
Hilt nn Paviliw1, also said ht•

Hulnw s- Wt•:t Vt.• r &lt;·ard.
.ShuvPrs s;titl ht• wuu l d~likP tu·
l m\'t' wtwt tw I'Hil&lt;•d €1 turwup

Angels make it four in row

.

.""-

, Kin!.{, who siHJ.:&lt;•d Fr·iday

THE FITNESS CENTER

Lak eland. Fla.
Seibu vs. Detroit " B" at
Lakeland, Fla .

COLLEGE
EAST CAROLINA
· Named Dave Odom head

No: 7s.o2•002B

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A

defender .

P. O.. hx74'
Spring Valier Plar1

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La1Ty HOlmes stops Ocasio in seventh round

p. '

$2.211.
':
Trlfecta winners were Bllld
Demon
(3),
Marti;Dis
Vineyard ( 4) imd Beau
Brambles (6). The trlfeita
paid $453.
::
Charlemagne
;::
·Charlemagne, or Charles
the Great (742-414), becaine
king of the Fl'!lnks in 764, llilt))
his brother carl()lllan, tho
, died in 771. He ruled Franee,
Germany, parts of Itily,
Spain and Austria and enforced Christianity. ·He 'Ills
crowned Emperor of the
Romans by Pope Leo ID inlt.
Peter'sin800A.O.

Sunday's Games
Housfon

Daytona Beoch, Fla.

POMEROY - The annual
spring
sports banquet of the
SOCCER
Eastern
High School Athletic
North Ga merican
Boosters will be held at 6:30
Soccer League
ROC HESTER LANCERS p.m. Tuesday at the high
- Pur chased the contract of school with Chuck Machok ,.
Da m ir Sutevski. defender,
assistant basketball coach at
from Toronto.
American Soccer League .
Ohio State University,
CI.: EVELAND COBRAS speaking. Tickets are $1 for
Signed Will ie Carrasco. students and $1.50 lor adults
m idfielder .
CO LUMBU S MAGIC - . and can be purchased at the
Sig ned Daniel Mammana , school from Coach Joe
~e fende r .
Mitchem or at the door.
INDIANAPOLI S ·DARE·
DEVILS Slgneq Ed·
and

Texas 7, At lanta " 8 " 0
Toronto 2. Ch icago '" A" 1,

Atlanta

a ser ies of one-year can.
,tracts .

Sinkus

At A Glance
By the 'Associated Press
Friday's Scores .
Houston 1, Atlanta " A" 0

j

NORTH RANDAU., •.ohlo
(APJ - Pert Ne•, a &amp;.Jeerold mace, wm the flllllu:d
$7,000 allowance race "8 t ,
Thl!tledown Friday, peylftg
$6.40, $3.60 am! S2.40.
:
Second place Gambcta
paid $5.40 llld S2.40 llld tJWd
place Barb's Dream paid

Redmond, defenders.
NEW YORK APOLLO Sig ned Da n McCr udde n,

COUFGE
446-4367
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Everett Lillie, tackle .
Canadian Foo.t~all League
CALGARY STAMPEDERS
- Signed Lloyd Fairbanks,

die

BUsiNESS
R

POMEROY - The an·
nu.al auction of the Ken
Am~bary Chapt~r, lzaak
Walton League of America,
. will .· be held Monday,
March 26. The ham dinner
.wlll begin at 7 p. m. wlth
the auction to follow.
Members and their wives
are asked · to bring a
covered dish and !able
service. Those attending
are also requested to bring
Items suitable for the
auction.

Richardson , running backs,
Br ian Masella , kicker , and

1.1CENSE?

.' ''

will be losing only one senior,
the captain Barb Stewart. He
went on to say,that there are
two returning juniors, Danna
Jeffers and Sandy Halley and
a fine group of sophomores
and fr eshmen, including
Mecca Jordan, Linda "Big
Mac" Edwards, Stephanie
Fadley, Penny Evans, Beth
Salisbury, Usa Miller, Denna
Cline, and Barb Edwards.

E Khibitinn R.:~~Ph~ Ia'

'

Although ,seven ga ps arc
hard to fill. Coach Wolfe feels
that the good attitude and
keen competition between his
boys could propel them to
another winning season. '::be
Tornadoes' 21!-game schedule
begins April 2· at Federal

bri~fs. • •

Sports
'.....'·

C-6- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Mar. 25, l!l79

" ., ...

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C.7-TheSundayTimes..~ntlnel, Sunday, Mltr. 25. tm

e

76ers whip Nets zn 'rare doubJeheader'
By JOHN NELSON
Af Sports Writer

O'Brien upheld the1r con- malje a lour-player trade -·
tention that there was no flnr,·ev &lt;'Atmtn~s noll R;oloh
provision in NBA rules for
, ·Fifty-eight points in one three technicals against one Simpson gomg to New Jersey
for Eric Money and AI
, ;night - not a bad evening's individual.
·
Skinner.
Catchings, Simpson
; work even for Julius Erving.
The second time, around and Money each got in the
·, But in two games.
the Nets lost 123-117 as the
• Actually, he scored 20 of Sixers' Erving scored 12 game for both teams. Skin·
: · ,those points on Nov" 8, so points in the final 17 :50 to go ncr, meanwhile, didn't play
for either team in the
• 1 what's this about 58 points
along with the 20 he had suspended game.
: anyway?
scored on Nov. 8. The 76ers
Pistons 124 Bullets 114
· ·' Well, that's the way it'll won the second game 110-98
Bob
Lanier ;cored 29 points
. • look in the record book.
with Erving scoring 2ti pomts
: :,, The Philadelphia 76ers and and helping a late rally.
'the New Jersey Nets played a
Elsewhere in the " NBA,
: : : rare National Basketball Detroit best Washington
· · Association doubleheader 124-114, Indiana outscored
: ·,. •Friday night. The first game Houston 141-134, Atlanta
· ·~ some 17 minutes , 50
defeated San Antonio, 115-108,
·.seconds of it - was to Chicago clobbered New
· : : 'Complete a game that began Orleans 116-99, Denver
:bn Nov. 8.
breezed past Boston 137-113,
' . . · NBA Commissioner Larry Phoenix drubbed Kansas City
By Herscbel Nlssenson
·O'Brien ruled that the two 126-107,
Los
Angel~s
· AP Sports Writer · ·
• clubs would have to · replay plastered San Diego 156-119
It
·seems
to be a Ruhle of
" ..the last quarter and 5:50 of and Golden State edged
thumb that the Atlanta
-*"e game - the point at Milwaukee 116-113.
Braves are all thumbs
:~hich third technical fouls
Although there "have been against Housion's Vern
·:.lvere assessed against Nets suspended games and NBA .
. :,.Coach Kevin Loughery and doubleheaders befor£, there Ruhle.
The Astros rescued Ruhle
:~layer Bernard King. The was one unique thing about
from the minors last July and
·oN ets orotested the original Friday night's game. After
:eutcorne (a 137-133loss), and Nov. 8, the Sixers and Nets he compiled a 3-3 record,
beating the Braves 7.0 with a
four-hitter on Aug. 5, 3.0 with
a five-hitter eight days later
and 4-11 on Sept. 27, although
he needed relief help in that
one.
Over the winter, Ruhle
obviously remembered how
to do it. On Friday, he
1lllowed one hit in five innings
against Atlanta- the Braves
didn't score, ol course - and
added insult to injury by
scoring the only run in the
1·0 exhibition
Astros'
triumph.
Ruhle signaled to open the
fifth inning and came around
on a single by Jeff Leonard
and Cesar Cedeno's double.
While the Braves' 'A' squad
was being blanked , on four
IT COULD BE RIGHT FOR YOU!
hits by Houston, Atlanta's 'B'
team suffered the same fate
against another club from the
Lone Star State.
Fergie Jenkins and Ed
Fanner combined on a four·
hitter and pitched the Texas
Rangers to a 7-11 triumph over
Atlanta's second-liners. The
Rangers jumped on Tommy .
Boggs for six runs in the
fourth inning.
Elsewhere, Rick Miller and
, Rance Mulliniks delivered
two-run singles and Nolan
Ry.an yielded five
.. hits in six

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LEETONIA
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) Ken's Charm, ridden by Mike
McDowell, captured the
$3,700featured eighth race at
Latonia on Friday night,
paying $20.60, $9 and $5.40.
Class To Bum was second,
returning $9 and $4.40, and
Seehaw Hilde finished third,
paying $3.60.
Cutter Pellor combined
with Ready Teddy for $168 on
an 11-3 pairing in the double.
The mutuel pool · totaled
$575,731 and the attendance
was 4,553.

4-1.

Toronto's Dave McKay
reached base on a two-out
passed ball by Chicago's
Wayne Nordhagen in the
fourt.h inning and e-ventually
scored the winning run on
singles by Alfredo Gri(fin and
Rick Bosetti as the Blue Jays
nipped the White Sox 2·1.
Rainy weather in Florida
(orccd cancellation of the St.
Louis · Philadelphia, Los
Angeles • Cincinnati, Boston Montreal" and · Pittsburgh
Detroit games. ~
LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) Embassy Express, driven to
the outside by Larry fisher,
· won the $1,500 featured mile
pace in the ninth race Friday
night at Lebanon by l'fz
lengths in 2:07 3-6 and paid
$4.60, $3.60 and $3.60.
GO Heilo placed, returning
$6.60 and $4.60 and HM
EXpress was third, paying
$3.80.
The 2-4 double of Eustace
Choice and Get Set returned
$51.ilO and the crowd of 1,765
bet $184,612.

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·

CIDCAGO (AP) - The
National Hocltey League and
World Hockey Asaociatlon
have receued their ta1b oil a
pt'oposal to make hockey a
one-league sport. They have
gone their separ8~e ways, for
now.

But afttT 27 hours of nearly
·non-stop negotiations. tl1ey
parted friends - and thllt's
someting new. In the past, II'
negotiation• came to an
unfulfilled end, observers
would have seen ligna tlult
the BeVen-year war between
the leagues would continue.
This time, the break in
talks · provides an Interlude

Flyers Whip
Flames, 4 to 1
ATLANTA (AP) - The years, logged a victory in his
Philadelphia Flyers have first appearance in Atlanta
managed to put a few points since being brought in to
between ~lves and the coach the F!yel's in midcellar of the National Hockey season.
·
League's rugged Patrick
Third-period g9als by Paul
Division.
Ho)m&amp;rm and Tom Corence
The ~ers whipped the sealed the triumph.
Atlanta Flames 4-1 Friday
"You had to be disa~
night to jump three points pointed with this game,"
ahead of the Flamea and pull Flames
Coach
Fred
within 'lhree of the second· Crelghtoo said. "It wasn't a
place New Yorker Rangel'S, good·rlight lor a lot of people.
who were Idle.
Some people who ususally
''It was definitely a big come up . bfll didn't come
gime," 118id Dennis Ver- through !01' ua tonight. But
nergaert, whose 18-loot shot the Flyers played a aound
past Atlanta goalie Dan hockey game.''
Bouchard was the . gameIn the other NHL game,
Willner. "We want second third-period goals by Craig
pllice and It's good. to beat Ramaay, Damy Gare and
anotbel' team that is com- Rick Martin rallied the
petlng with you for second Buffalo Sabres to a 4-3 victory
place."
over the Vancouvel' Canucks.
Atlanta came out sizzling, By winning, .the Sabres
outshootlng the Flyers 11-3ln opened an eight-point Cllllbion
the lint period and taking a 1- over third-place Tomntn In
0 lead when Jean Pronovost the Adami Olvlsloo and left
banged a rebound past goalie second-place Vancouver
Wayne stephenson.
seven points in front of st.
The visitors turned things " ·Louis In the Smythe Dlvlalon.
around In the second stanza,
The Canucks entel'ed the
getting the tying goal from final period with a 3-llead but
Mel Bridgman and taking the ·Ramsay scored at the 31·
" lead on Ververg&amp;ert's goal second mark and Gare tied it
with 58 seconds left In the at 1:07. :Martin fired the
session.
Winning goal past VanCO\IVer
"I can't pick any particular netmlndel' Dllnc Wilson at
thing that happened," said 12:05whenhedeflectedashot
Philadelphia Coach Pat by Andre Savard, who bad .
Quinn said, "but the game scored Buffalo's lint goal at
changed In the second period. I: 33 of the second period.
As a result, we came out with Vancouver's Ron Secllbauer
two points - a very lm· scored a dub record 39th goal
portent two points."
of the seaSOD oo a second·
Quinn, who played defense period power play.
lor the Flames for BeVel'al

STANDINGS
NatloMt
; S.sketbAII AssoclaHon
·
AIAGiance
By The A•soclated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Washington 49 23 .681
Phila.
41 33 .554 9
New Jersey. 3A 39 .&gt;166 1S'I2
New York
31 -14 .413 19•12
Boston
27 45 .375 22
Central Division
San Ant .
43 31 .581
At lanta
42 33 .560 1'12
Houston
40 32 .554 2
Detroit
29 44 .397 13'12
Cleveland
28 45 .384 14'12
New Orleans 23 52 ,307 .20 112
Western Conference
· Midwest Division
Kan. City
43 31 .581
Denver
41 33 .554 2
Indiana
33 41 .4old 10
o\1\ilw.
· 33 41 .446 10
Chicago
27 old .370 15'12
Pacific Division
Seattle
45 27 .625
Phoenix
44 30 .595 2
Los Ang.
43 30 .5119 2'12
San Diego
·41 34 .547 5'12
Portland
39 33 .542 6
Golden St.
33 42 .440 13'12
Frict.y's Games
Philadelphia 123, New
Jersey 117· (completion of
Nov. 8 su~pended game)
Philadelphia TlO, New
Jersey 98, regular game
Detroit 124, Weshlngton 114
Indiana 141, Houston 134
Atlanta115, San Antonio 108
Chicago . m .. New Orleans

Detroit at Washington
Indiana at San Antonio
Aloenlx at Golden State
Milwaukee at Portland
Kllnus City at Seattle
Monday'• Games
No games scheduled
Pre Hockey
AlA GLance
By The AsiiOCiated Preso
Natio.. l Hockey League
Camplltll Conference
Potrlck Division
wltpts ,gfga
x·N. Y. Islanders
old 13 12 104 326 190
N. Y. Rangers
39 24 9 87 ~ 252
Phlla. JS 23 14 84 247 221
Atlanta 37 28 7 81 287 255 ·
Smytho Division
Chicago 25 3A 12 ·62 215 259
Vancouver =

21 41 11 53 202 278
St. Louis 17 43 12 old ' 22B 311
·Colorado 14 49 9 37 1119 306
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Boston ·39 21 12 90 283 236
Buffalo " 32 25 15 79 245 235
Toronto 30 31 ·11 71 233 229
Minnesota ,
u 33 11 63 237 2old
Norris Division "
• ·Montreal
45 16 10 100 300 18(&gt;
Pitts. 32 28 11 75 250 250
Los Ang. 31 30 11 73 257 257
Wash. 21 36 15 57 245 300
Detroit 20 35 16 56 233 262
' x - clinched division
Frlclay's Games
All ladelphla ~. Atlanta 1
99
Buffalo 4, Vancouver 3
Sunclay's Games
CO!nver 137, ~ston 113
Phoenix 126, Kansas City
Colorado at Chicago
Toronto at Detroit
107
'
' Golden
State
116,
St. Louis at Atlanta
Washington at Allladelphlo
Mliwauk~~e 113
NY lslanders.at Pittsburgh
Los Angeles 156, San Diego
Montreal at . NY Rangera
119
Sunday's Gamel
Mlnneooto at Vancouver
Moncllly's Games
Philadelphia at Boston
Los Angeles at Denver
Buffalo at St. Louis
Chlcaao at New Jersev •

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WID

for reflection oo the mutter.
Among the dttails is" the
It is very probable tlwt the insistence by the Nil!. that
II) VERN ANm~RSON
playing before a hometown
Deane, a 6-foot-5 senior the second half after battling
WHA New Englllnd Wbaklrs, the WIIA be allowed to
Assc~·falcd l'rcss Writer
"crowd, to be named the Most playing for the West, hit nine to a 5~-55 tie at intermissiotl.
Edmonton Oilers. Winnipeg protect only two skaters and
Si\1.'1' LAKE CITY 1API -" Valuable Player of the East"That was one of the big
Jets and Quebec Nordiqucs two goalies from Its current &lt;;reg Ueanc of Utah says he West All-Star Basketball of 12 shots and finished with differences. Everybody was
19 points, but it wasn't enough
wUl be members of the NH!. rosters upon joining the NHt. was surprised and please-d, ' 'lassie.
as
the East held on in the playing together very well."
next sealion, but aome dif. next 'season . Unprotected
Winning East Coach Joe B.
second
half to take a 114-109
fereneea mill! be ironed out WJIA players who have been
Hall of Kentucky said he bad
victory
Friday
night.
before that · can take place. drafted by NHL tcarru; would
"I was totally surprised," no strategy to impart to his
"l frel great progress be- become pt'oporty of those
Dean
said of receiving the players at halftime. " I didn't
tween the two lea11~es has NHI, teams.
award. "! never thought I'd tell them anything. They just
been made," said Howard
Then the 17 NHL clubs
get it. I thought the big center played well. I just kept
Baldwin, pt'eaidcnt of the would compile a protected
on the other team played playing time, making sure
WHA. "There's a lot of givL~ list of I~ skaters and two
well. I guess the hometown everybody got to play aiJo.put
and-take and a lot of no-give- goaltenders, with all other
the same."
crowd helps."
and-no take, but that's the Ilfe players being placed in the
Duke's Jim Spanarkel
"The bi~ center" was 6-9
TAMPA, Fla . (AP) ~ obtaining a divorce which James
of negotiations."
draft pool that would stock
Bailey of Rutgers, made a three-j)oint play in the
"We'recloserto agreement the rosters of the "ex- Terry! Rubio has taken her later was granted.
who scored 20 points, pulled final seconds to help ensure
than we ever have been," pansioo" franchises.
fight to a collrt here to force
A spokesman for Miss down 11 rebounds and the East victory, and his !5
added NHL President John
Some WHA cluba, notably the Philadelphia Phillies ' Rubio said a !976 Florida swatt~d away severai W c~t points were scored against
Pete Rose to pay child Supreme Court ruling which shots.
Ziegle:r. "but we're not there the Quebec Nordiques, find
his college coach, Bill Foster
yet."
this proposal unacceptable. support.
declared the paternity
Bailey said the East played of Duke, who coached the
Apaternity suit filed by the restriction
One of the reasons is the They want to protect at least
discriminatory together _!!lore effectively in West squad.
WHA Still Ia digesting the four and possibly more of 25-year"'ld woman in Ohio
and
therefore
proposal the . 17 NHL their skaters. "
has been filed in Florida, too. constitutional
has come ID unthe ~!!~~~~~~~~!;1110-:,;'!:::~:-.,
'
F
·.1.
governors approved by a 14-3
The NHL representatives She claims her !-year-old plaintiff's attention.
ormer.v
vote Thursday. The WHA was could not agree to that Friday daughter Morgan Erin is the
The new case was filed in
O'Dell Pest
banded the document for the because their Board of product of a 22-month
control
first time ThursdaY evening. Governors had approved only romance with the former ~~;:;:;~ arcuu eourt
discussed the proposal until the proposalthat allpwed four Cincirmati Reds baseball
Tom Fain IJ(termlnatlng
Miss Rubio wants the court
after 4 a.m. (CST) Friday· . players - two skaters and star. She said their affair
ended
in
1977.
,
ID
rule
that
Rose
is
the
father
morning, then met again two goalies - to be protected.
A civil suit seeking support of ihe child and order him to
beginning around 8!30 a.m. in Any changes in the tenns of
ROK&lt;CHES. MOTHS · 51 LVERFISH
an attempt to add its ap- the. proposal must be a~ was filed iniliaily in contribute support and
WATER
BUGS. SPIDERS · ANTS· FLEAS
proval.
proved by another vote of the Cincinnati because Florida maintenance payments for
FHA and VA iNSPECTION &amp; CERTIFI~ATION
law stipulates that no valid the girl.
"But it took them (the governors. ·
Licensed by Tho Ohio State Oept. of Agncullure
Terms Available - Fully Insured
Miss Rubio said she has no
NHI,) three months to
Zieglel' said he could call paternity claim exists if the
Prompt Service Thro'!11houl Gallia &amp; Meig•
prepare for this and we've another meeting of the woman was legally married income since Ro.se cut off vol- .
·
Counties Smce 1958
only had a short time to governors at any time in the to another man at the time. untary payments to her in
MAIN OFFICE
digest It ftbe proposal)." said near future, adding a lot Miss Rubio, at the time of December.
Inspection
Rose said he has been inWithout Obligation
GALLIPOLIS
Baldwin. ·"It's taken a lot af depends
on
further conception, was married ID a
education on our part to discussions scheduled this musician named Ted Baker " structed by his lawyers not to --~~--~~acMMDDac~DC4M~=cH ,
onrl was in · the prnress of discuss the case.
understand the detaila."
weekend.
...

insulated.

/

Over 30 New Chrysler &amp; Plymouths In Stock!

By FRANK BROWN
AP Sporla Writer "

•

·East holds ·o n for

Expansion talks are·recessed

Warrion II&amp;, Bucull3
Lakers 15&amp;, Clippers 119
aftcr •thc' Bullets' Bob Dan- games for the Spurs.
to pa ce Detroit past dridge was called for a foul
Nate
Williams scored 17
,llull~ 116; Jazz 911
Kareem Abdui.Jabbara nd
Washington. which lost both and drew a tcochnical. Only
pomts
in
the fourth quartel',
Chicago broke u four-game Adrian Dantley each scored
head Coach DiCk Motta and minutes later, Washington's losing lltrea~ with some hot 25 points, and Los Angeles including a basket and two
his
assistant;
Bernie Tom Henderson drew the fourth-quarter shooting and roiled to its biggest point total free throws with five minutes
Bickerstaff, during a flurry of ·game's sixth technical.
the :!a polnts of Artis Gilmore. . and victory margin of the left in the game to break a 99· technical fouls In the third
Gilmore
s'a nk five con- season. The Lakers led 68-41 99 tie .
To supplement Lanier's
period:
.
secutive
shots
at the outset of at the half as Abdul-Jabbar Consecutive baskets by Jo
scoring, John Long had 27
The Bullets had S!X points and Kevin Porter 24 the final period as the Bulls scored 14 of his points and Jo White and John Luc~ iced
technicals whistled against points and 12 assists.
hit II of tll~ir first 13 shots in grabbed 16 of his.l8 rebounds. the win as Golden State lroke
them, five in an eight-second
Abdui-JabbaP also had nine a three-game losing streak.
that
frame.
The
Detroit
victory
span. Motta and Bickerstaff snapped a four-game Bullets
assists and eight blocked Williams wound up with 26
Nuggets:U7, Celtlcsl.l3
each were hit with two T's winning streak .
points.
Denver rolled to a 64-50 shots.
half-time l.e~d Qn the shooting
l'acers 141, Rockets 134
Indiana rallied from a 20- of reseryc Tom Boswell, and
'·
point, second-period deficit David Thompson salted the
behind Billy Knight and victory away for the Nuggets
Ricky Sobers, and the Pacers by !!COring 18 points in the
took the lead for good at 94-93 third quarter.
Boswell wound up with a
on a layup by Knight at the
250 SECOND AVE;NUE
22 points, and
season-high
end of the third period. ·
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
'
Knight scored 20 of his 28 Thompson bad 31.
614·446-3300
Suu 12&amp;, Kings 107
points in the fourth quarter,
Paul
Westphal scored 36
and Sobers also had 28 points.
innings as the California
points
and
Walter Davis had
Office Hours:
Moses Malone led Houston
Angels ran their winning
30
io
pace
Phoenix
to
its
Monday- Friday
with
33
points.
.
streak to four games with a 6· . Optometrists:
seventh
victory
in
10
games.
Hawks
115,
Spurs
108
9-12-1-4
3 triumph over the Seattle
Dr.
A; Jackson Bailes
Terry Furlow's career-high- Phoenix led by as many as 23
Mariners.
Examinations:
Or. T• Jay,Bradshaw
30 points helped boost Atlanta points in the second period
The Kansas City Royals got
by Appointme.nt
after
leading
35-25
after
one
past .San Antonio. The !Qss
two-hit pitching from Rich
·
was the sixth in the past eight period.
Gale, George Throop and
Renie Martin and blanked the "
'
Baltimore Orioles 5-0 as
Amos Otis homered, singled
and stole home.
The San Diego Padres
whipped the Cleveland In·
dians 9-1 behind the four-hit
pitching of Bob Shirley and
Mark Lee and San Fran·
cisco's Bob Knepper allowed
one run in seven innings as
the Giants defeated the
Chicago Cubs 6·3.
' ; Tommy john burled six
scoreless innings, jay
Johnstone. doubled three
times and Jim Spencer
homered, leading the New
York Yankees to a 9-3 victory
over the New York Mets.
Paul Molitor drove in two
runs to help the Milwaukee
Brewers beat the Oakland A's

Braves blanked

1911 Eastern Aw.

•

-~

.,

C-6-TheSundayTirnes&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Mar. 25, 1!179

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'

Game of baseball ~till fun for Gabe Paul
Ry MIKE HARRIS
later managed, was given his · dedk-ul ion to what we were
AP Sports Writt•r
first front office baseball job trying ~~ get done.
TUCSON , Ariz . (AP) - [)e. by Paul in 1956 when he
" In !how days, there was
spite free agency , no-trade became a scout for the far, far leSs fraternization.
clauses and million-dollar . Cincinnati Reds.
There was more of an
contracts, Gabe .Paul and
Paul , who was then vil'c intense battle - more bench
Phil Seghi, the ruling president
and general jo c keying,
knockdown
monarchs of the Cleveland mana ger of the Reds,
Indians' tiny empire, still elevated Seghi to farm
believe the most important director in 1958, a post he held
part of baseball still is " be· lor 10 years. Both skipped
tween the lines."
around baseball after that,
" The game is still fun lor but Seghi wound up in his
me on the lie ld, between the current post in 1973, ·
lines, " said Paul, the 69-year- succeeding Paul when the
old president of-the American latter moved on to the
League club . "But, o££ the Yankee presidency.
field , it's not. That makes it a
"Gabe and I work well toBy TERRY KINNEY
lot harder on those of us who gether," Seghi said, biting
AP Sports Writer
aren't playing the game.
· down on one of his large
TAMPA, Fla. tAP) - Vic
"Baseball is a wonderful assortment of ever-present Correll's baseball career hit
game to have withstood what pipes. "I think we have a lot bottom last year when he was
'
"1weI 1the people who run the of the same ideas about released by the Atlanta
'g ame ) have done to it. "
· baseball and people.
Braves. But the Cincinnati
Seghi, the 61-year-&lt;&gt;ld Vice
" Players today have Reds brought him back to the
President and General Man- different.philosophies and far big leagues and gave him a
ager of the Indians, said, more rights than when I was new lease on life.
"The structure of the game playing . For me, all I was
' •This is a golden op·
the way you have to operate concerned with was doing portunity for me," Correll
- has changed because of the Well and how well I was said, sitting of£ to the side of a
basic agreement between the progressing .
· players and management. • "I think that was the time
But I still think that baseball, in baseball when ownership
on the field, is the most heid the upper hand. We (the
beautiful
game
ever playe~s ) were more or less
invented. "
bound to do what they told us
LAS VEGAS, Nev . · Paul and Seghi, longtime to do.
Donna
Young carded a 4·
fri ends and sometime associ·"I don't think .it's changed
ates, became a team again all that much , though . under-par 69 at the Las Vegas
just prior to the 1978 season Players today have more Country Club, giving her a 36·
when Paul quit as president outside interests, but I don't hole score of 135 and a 2·
of the world champion New think there's any di.fference stroke lead midway throug~
York Yankees to come back whatsoever in talent. These the $100,000 Sahara Nation~!
Pro· Am.
to the Indians.
!elias are just as good as
Second at 137 after a 73 was
The two met in 1943 when ·anybody ever was."
first-round
leader JoAnne
they both were inducted in
Seghi, a handsome man Carner, ~ who had a couri!C·
the Army 'and stationed at the with silver hair, looke'd out at
same Florida infantry the field where a handful of record 64 on Thursday.
BOWLING
training post. Seghi, who players were taking batting
MILWAUKEE John
played 16 years as a minor practice and added, "Maybe
league third baseman and another difference was in Petraglia maintained his lead
In the $100.000 Professional

pitches . But baseball has lil t• ) 'r e st ill trying to
cau~ht up with th~ prevailing •w•·umpli};IJ the same thing social atmosphere.
"' win ."
"Players are still Cllm·
Paul, a sometimes stormy
· pelitive, but they're not as but usually pleasant man, is
overly aggress.ive as U1ey considered one of U1e most
were. The thing is, though , kn11wledgeable people con-

lle&lt; 'led with the game. He i:Je.
gan his baseball career as a
sports writer in Hochester in
1926 and was hired two years
later by the late Warren Giles
as publicity director and
ticket manager of the minor
league Rochester Baseball

classified ·

C1ub.
.
more and they get more,"
''I was going to be a sports Paul added. "Ther-e are .still
writer. but Giles gave me a just so many dedicated guys
six-weeks job and I worked and so many comfort guys.
for him lor 25 years. I've But bosebaU drew 52 million
never regretted getting into people last year . . So ,
baseball .
some~y must still like it. I .
"The pl&amp;yers today expect know I do."

Corr~ll has, 'new lease on ·life'
clubhouse card game after a
spring training workout.
"Playing with a club like this
makes a mediocre player
look good. I feel like I have
new life."
The turn . of events was
ironic. He was cut by the last·
place team in the National
League West and got picked
up by a team that finished
just 21&gt; games behind
division lead~r Los An~eles.

Sports shorts•••
Bowlers Association tour·
nament, claiming the top
position by 23 pins.
Petraglia rolled 1730 for his
final eight matches, finishing
with a total pinfall of 10,047.
He won five ·matches, in·
eluding a 228·to·215 decision
over Nelson Burton.
In second place was Bill
Coleman, followed by Burton
and Dave Frame. Coleman
edged Frame 225-214.
Earl Anthony defeated
Steve Martin to take filth
place.

Doc Says: ..
.
Business is BOOmli&amp;g - We will give ,vu top
dollar trade-in on clean, late TTWdel cars or

Buick
Pontiac

" Every player wants to . player-coach," Correll said.
play with a winning club. And He was called by the Reds in
with a team that wins a hell of June and played in 52 games.
a lot more ·than it loses.
It wasn't the first lime
there's a whole different Correll has been released, or
outlook toward the game," the first time he was told he
Correll said.
couldn't play major league
The 33-year-old Georgian, ball.
after 13 years in professional · "I got released one time in
baseball, holds no delusions
about where he stands in the
Reds' scheme or things .. "i
know my role - backing up .
Johnny Bench. who is the best
catcher in baseball," Correll
· ENTERS PLEA
said. "The top nine guys got
WARREN, Ohio (AP)
to carry us, the extra, guys, Dorothy DiBiasio, 62, of
and we help the starters out Columbus pleaded innocent
by giving them rest.
Friday to charges in a SO·
"I ' m hot a high-priced called murder·for·hire
player. But the dollar blll is scheme that l~lt two people·
not that important to me." dead.
Correll said that when he
Mrs. DiBlasio, former wife
was released by the Braves, of&gt; Girard osteopath Leo
'' I was fired the last Friday of DiBlasio, was indicted by a
spring training andwent into Trumbull County grand jury
seclusion . I had resigned on two counts of complicity in
myself to the fact I wou}d not aggra'l\ated murder, . com·
be in baseball because it was plicity
in
·attempted
so late in spring and I wasn't aggravated rnurder and
going to get on the phone and conspiracy
to
commit
beg lor a place on some team. , aggravated murder, the
"The Reds called on county pro~ecutor's olflce
Sunday, so that gave me a said.
pretty good indication they
Killed in the December 1977
were in need of a catcher in shooting outside her former
their organization.
husband's office were Mary
" I thought about it and all Muffley, 36, a nurse, and
of a sudden I realized I wasn't Patricia OiBiasio; 40, the ·
done playing yet. 3o I agreed doctor's second wile. The
to go to Indianapolis as a doctor was wounded.

•

my minor league career by
Cleveland and here I am
playing with greatest team
in baseball," Correll said.
"In high school, a lot of
scouts said they liked me hut
sa,d I wasn't big enough. I
made a liar out of a bu,nch .of
them, tOO."
Correll, at 5-fcct-9 and a
good 30 pounds lighter t~an
Bench, still has confidence in
his arm and his bat.
"I can throw out good
rullllers in the league. l'ni a ·
· good defensive catcher," he
said. "But I think I'm hitting
the ball better than ever.
After I changed my batting

stance· 500 or 600 thnes I
finally came up with
something."
In a hall-dozen exhibition
games, Correll's .368 average
is among the best on the
team. ..
.
· During the off-season,
Correll, who has a bit of the
good ol' boy in him, . raises
English setters and trains
them to hunt.
"My goal before I leave this
earth is to have one of the
finest strings of Engiish
setters in the country. I've .got a pretty good start," he
said,· no longer thinking of
baseball.

School funding hill may be ready this week
By ROBERT E. MR.LER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ The Senate Education Com, mittee Is elqlected to put together a tentative school funding
bill late this week, to be wired into the state budget and ready
for full scale hearings the following week.
• Chairman Marcus A, Roberto, D-Ravenna, waiting for
· weeks for tbe Rhodes Administration and legislative leaders to
agree on how much school m6ney the state has available, has
· been promised the information by Thursday.
''A substitute bill will be ready by the end of the week, to be
'used as a working document," Roberto said.
··. He referred to a measure he introduced earlier as a possible
alternative to Ohio's "equal yield" school aid formula, which
is being challenged in a case now before the Ohio Supreme
,Court.
• Gov. James A. Rhodes, along with legislative leaders of both
parties, said they will announce an educatiqn ' ~dollar amount"
· '11uD'sday after the eighth in their series of education swrunit
meetings dating back to early February.
,
· 'l1le swnmlteers also are expected to agree on how much is
needed to fund a state employee pay package, and possibly
some other fiscal matters. 'l1le legislature largely bad been
.,. marking time while awaiting key school and budget' decisions.

. Rhodes, in his State of the State address to the legislature state aid to districts making the highest local tax ettort, in the
Roberto's plan like the one Rhodes talked aqout in his State
Feb. 6, recommended an increase lor primary and secondary past has caused some school districts to receive fewer state
of the State addr;,.s, guarantees each of the state's 616 school
eduration, over the 1~77-1979 biennium, of about $636 million.• , dollars in one school year than they did the previous year .
districts an equal amount of state support based on a common
or 24 percent. That would boost the total outlay lor the next
Several Urnes, the legislature has had to shore up equal yield
local tax effort, the senator said.
.
biennium to a record $3.3 billion.
by enacting guarantees to prevent such losses, the latest in
Rhodes, who has not yet submitted. his program m the form
· However, Senate President Oliver Ocasek , D-Akron, and 1978 when it also had to establish state loaJ1 fund to keep some
of a bill - he eXPects to within two weeks. he savs- has called
others in the summit meetings want to boost Rhodes ' proposed · marginally financed districts from having to close.
for an increase in basic aid from the present $960 to .$1 •.250 m
$636 million increase to $700 million and possibly more.
"My position right along has been to try to correct those
Roberto's bill carries a price tag of about $700 million. He problems, and not worry too much about what the court might 1979-1980 and to $1,300 iri 1980.1981.
His proposal did not specifically earmark funds for teacher
said it was written with a " modified equal yield " formula , or might not do," Roberto said.
salary
hikes although he called lor $1 ,100 boosts over the b1en·
which could be tailored, if necessary, to accomodate an
In any event, Roberto and Roger Lulow of the state Edunium
in
his 1978 rl!-&lt;llection campaign .
,
adverse equal yielcl decision by the Supreme Court.
.
cation Department said late last week they understand a Su·
House Finance Chairman Myrl H. Shoemaker, D-Bourne·
The Ohio Education Association, the 83,000.member leach· preme Court decision still could be two months or more away,
ville whose committee is considering the governor 's overall,
ers lobby, and other groups, including the state Board of Edu·
The Cincinnati Board of Education filed the suit against the
cation, say a $1 billion boost is needed, unless the state just existing state aid plan, claiming it violates the Ohio Con. $17.ihillion builget for the next biennium, said he plans to i~­
wants to keep even with inflation . .
stitution by providing differing amounts or state support to corporate into the document the ~ount the. ~unum!
conference recommends for public educatiOn, when lt IS made
Ocasek said he shares that view, but that the state cannot Ohio's 2.2 million grade and high school pupils .
·
available this week.
provide $1 billion, or even $800 million, unless taxes are in·
Roberto's bill seeks to increase basic state aid from $960 per
He said he will do the same for the amount listed by the
creased- something no one in till! summit favors.
pupil per year now to $1,160 next year, and 1,200 in 1980.1981.
swruniteers
for a state employee pay package, variously estiRoberto said his committee so far has been mostly conHe would provide $500 increases in teacher pay in each of the
mated
at
$200
mlllion-$220 million.
.
cerned about inequities in the equal yield formula that are not next two years, and boost slate funding of vocational education
The
Senate
then
will
have
to
work
on
the
school
funding
and
in themselves a part of the court case.
units from $4,000 to $5,000 while hiking state grants for pay raise bills while staying within those limits, Shoemaker
For instance, the complirRted formula. which gives more disadvantaged pupils by $40 million.
said.

VOL.

RT

ilself to your foot
• Water repellent leather uppers
for comfort snd long wear
• Non·sliP Neoprene cord

j

947

By ELIAS ANTAR
Associared Press · Writer
CAIRO, Egypt ( AP) ~
President Anwar Sadat left
for the United States
Saturday and the signing or
an historic peace treaty with
Israel saying he was "happy ,

IAI!D WING I·€1
DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

2nd Ave.

Gallipolis

Low

miles.

balance

at

factory

warranty . Save Big. 3300 miles.

1978 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
Pletinum exterior with beautiful
carm i ne cloth Interior . Loaded with
options like air conditioning, power

windows, power door locks. cruise
control, tilt wheel. AM -FM B track
stereo. Rallye wheels . This stunning

·'5999 .

1978 PONTIAC BONNEVIllE
4 DR
Th is full s i zed 4 dr. family
automobile is extra clean inside and

out . Arctic white finish with air
conditioning, power steering. power
brakes, AM radio and radial tires.
See this bea utiful auto today .
r•

1977 OLDS 98 REGENCY 4 DR
Platinum fin ish with match ing vinyl
roof and black velour 60-40 seats.
Full power includes windows, door
locks, seat and tri -band electric
antenna . AM-FM stereo with factory
installed Citizens Band Radio. New
Buick trade .

'6295

Priced to Sell

1976 PONTIAC CATALINA
Here is truely one of the best family
sized sedans on today's market .
Acqua int yourself with , cruise
control. AM- F M-Cassette Tape
Player and crushed velour seats.
Brown metall ic with buckskin v inyl
top . Local one owner . Only 37,000 low

'3995

miles .

•

1976 DODGE CHARGER
SPECIAL EDITION
Silver

metallic w i th

Land au lop. Equipped

match ing

wit~

AM· FM·

Tape. c ru ise control. power
w indows , western cast aluminum
road wheels and rear defroster.

Only 17.080 miles.

'5995

1978 OLDS CUTlASS SUPREME
This stunning intermedrate has if
all. Beautiful Saffron exterior with a
buckskin landau top cmd matching
60·4Q seating . Equipped with air con ·
ditioning, power windows, power
door locks, tilt wheeL cruise control ,
AM ·FM cassette stereo svstem, and
chrome styl ed wheels.

'6295

*48 MONlH ANANCING

*SOUTHERN OHIO'S
lARGEST SELECTION .
1976 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
LJ.
Cruise control, P. windows, door

locks, AM. fM.tape,

landau top,

bucket seats . Sharp.

But needs

engine work . Test ya·ur mechanical

abili ty hera. As Is Special
Was Sl49S .OO

'700

'4695

1978 BUICK CENTURY CUSTOM
4 DR. DE~O SPECIAL .
ic:. intrrme&gt;di&lt;Ht" ser!iln, NrtV1tlus
hlu~ Outsid e with contrilsfi _ng hlue
60 .10 intrrior . Lo•dcd w1lh f~. ll
roW(Ir like SCnfS, door lor kS, Win
dnws plus tilt wht"t"l , rruisr rontro l
""d chromr styl r r1 whf'cls. Only
6, l'i'~ miiP ~.
. Retail List S8068 SALE

'6697

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
The G.M . success car. Finished. in
platinum with black 60 ·40 vinyl m ·
terior and a matching padded lan ·
dau top'. Air conditioned, tilt whee~,
radio, and Rallye II wheels. See 1t
now.

'5495

1976 MONTE
Rallye wheels, finished in Flret~orn
' P.lnl with a vinyl top. 38,138 m&lt;les·.
Expecl the best.

'4395

1974 OPEL TUDOR
Exceptionally nice, 49,000 miles. 4
speed. landau lop . Check this today .

'4195

1914 CHEVROLET MALIBU
2 DR HT

Exceptionally clean a'nd well carea
for . AM· FM radio, rear detrosler,
factor A·C and new Premium tires
make. this an attractive purchase.

cared for autos on the market . Four
door sedan , air, AM -FM, new
premium tires. One local owner. Expect quality .

'2295

Affordable .

1971 FORD LI.D. sEDAN
A super sharp older model . You
would be proud to have this one
parked in your driveway.

'1295

BUICK
PONTIAC
I

1911 Eastern Ave.

Phone 446-2282

RECLINERS
LOWEST PRiaS
YOU'LL FIND

Thi~

J

1974 MAZDA SMAll ECONOMY 1974 DODGE MONACO CUSTOM
MODEL
This c;ar is one of the cleanest, best
A Real Clean little car -

Real gas saver, small V ·6 engine,
factory air, rear window defroster .
Dark metallic blue . Les~ than 20,000
mileS. Exceptionally mce.

SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1979

retired teacher .' Five Pomeroy houses which held the
collection were emptied for the sale. 'l1le items took up all
of the space at both the junior and senior lair buildings at
the fairgounds. Jim Carnahan and Dan Smith of the
Racine area were the auctioneers.

extremely happy. "
As Sauat head ed lor
Washington, Syrian Foreign
Minister
Abdul
Hali.m
Khaddam called for "the
highest degre e of r e volutionary viol ence to strangle

THIS YEAR
FAMOUS NAME
BRANDS LIKE•.••

·*BERKLINE
*PONTIAC
*COLLINS
*ORT ·

JUST TO NAME A FEW . '

---EXAMPLES.--ROCKER RECLINER................................ Reg. '419.g5 .................. ·SALE PRICE '299.95
GOLD WAll-A-WAY.. L ............................ ·Reg.'369.95 ........... :....... SALE PRICE '288.00
PLAID WAU-A-WAY ................................. Reg. '369.95 ................... SALE PRICE '269.95
FLOWERED ROCKER RECLINER ...................
Reg. 1379.95 ...... ~ .......... ;. SALE
PRICE '288.00
.
.
EARLY AMERICAN WAll·A.WAY.................... Reg. 1349.95 .................. SALE PRICE '259.95
EARLY AMERICAN WAll-A-WAY ....... :.: .......... Reg. 1329.95 ................... SALE PRICE '239.95

RECLINER .•..•••••..•..•.••••...•• ~ .• ~ ...••.••......• Reg. 12.39.95············· .. ···· SALE PRlCE '139.95
. PLAID WAll-A-WAY .................................. Reg. 1339.9$ .............. ;;.~. SALE PRICE 1239.95
BIG JOHN VINYL RECLINER ........................Reg. 1299.95 .................... SALE PRICE 1199.95
WALL-A-WAY •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,•••••Reg. 1309.95···················· SAl.E PRICE '229J5
GREEN FUR ORT RECLINER ............ ~ .......... Reg. '299.95.................... SALE PRICE '219.95
ORT WALL-A-WA'L .................................. Reg. •269~95 .................._.SALE PRICE '199.95
ORT RECLINER ........................·..............Reg. '239.95·; ..... :............ SALE PRICE '179.95

WALL-A-WAY.••• ••• •• ••••• ••• ••• ••••• •• •• •••••••••••••

By MARK POITS

AP Buslileu Writer
GBIIOiine prices across the
nation are higher than ever,
and many service stations
are cutting hours or closing
on weekend!! because of tight
fuel supplies, an AP spot
check has found.

don't have the refinery
capacity to keep up with the
demand and even before the
Iranian ·revolution they were
limiting the amount o~ .
gasoline they would sell to
dealers.
The tight supplies have

Bell.

created a supply and demand
situation that is forcing the
·
price up.
The effect of all this? Less
gasoline at higher prices.
In Opa-t:ocka, Fla., Alex
Cifuenres, manager of the
Alex Mobil station, is closing

By RICHARD BILL
Bowen said the prclimin~ry
. Associated Press Writer
charges include desertion;
NAHA, Okinawa (API communication,
corre·
Marine Pic. Robert R. sponding
or
holding
Garwood ,
accused
of intercourse with the enemy;
collaborating with the enemy misconduct as a prisoner;
during the Vietnam war, attempting to cau se in ·
two hours earlier. His price could become the first subordination , disloyalty and
duty,
and
lor a gallon of premium American to be executed for refusal or
desertion since World War II solicitation.
leaded' gasoline is 87 cents Garwood " is undergoing a
II cents higher than it was a if he is tried and convicted, a
Pentagon
spokesman
says.
complete
physi c al
year ago and 6 cents higher
The
last
American
soldier
eKamination"
at
a U. S.
than three weeks ago.
to
die
for
desertion
was
Army·
Naval
hospital
on the
At Bud Shaw's Shell station
in Glendale, Calif., the hours Pvt. Eddie Slovik, who was Japanese island of Okinawa,
are still the same but the shot by a firing squad shortly Bowen said.
The Marine, who stayed in
price of a gallon of leaded alter the Battle or the Bulge
premium is up 14 cents in a in northern Belgium in Vietnam after he was captured then released by the
year to 81.9 cents. That's two December 1944.
Capt . Bob Bowen . the Viet Cong in 1965, flew to
cents higher than the March I
Pentagon spok esman, and BangKoK, Thailand Thursday
price.
·
But most dealers say the Friday that lesser penalties on a commercial flight lrom
skyrocketing prices don't for Garwood could include a , Ho Chih Minh City, forrperly
sentence
or Saigon. A. U. S. military
appear to be deterring prison
dishonorable
discharge.
transport fl ew him to the
motorists from filling up. "No
The
·
spokesman
said
the
Okinawa
Naval base Friday .
one is saying anything," said
Bowen said the .Marine
Lex Brodie, owner of Fast live preliminary charges
Gas in Honolulu. "They're filed against Garwood were telephoned his family shortly
based on allegations made after his arrival in Okinawa
just accepting it."
'' by other returning prisoners and " spoke with his dad lor
of war." The Marine Corps about 10 minutes."
begun formal in·
Garwood, who has asked
No estimate set has
ves\.igalions to determine not to meet with reporters,
whether •the 33-year·old issued a statement Friday
IRONTON, Ohio (API The president of Tanner Oil Marine from Greensburg , saying, " After 14 years in
Co. said Friday that no · Inc., will lace a court .m ar· Vietnam I am very. excited
formal dollar loss estimate tial.
and happy to be able to return
had been made In the
massive, fireball explosion
of a gasoline storage tank
Thursday afternoon.
•'
Robert Tanner said his
company, which works in
partnership with Rich Oil
Co., would rebuild the tank
and additional measures
would be taken to make
sure that nothing similar
could hapJII)o again.
Douglas Richardson,
president of Rich Oil, was
in serious condition Friday
at Cincinnati General
Hospital, where he and an
employee, Glen Lewis, also
in serious condition, were
taken for burns treatment.
William Pack, also
burned in the accident, was
in critical condition Friday
In University Hospitals in
Columbus.
The 300,000 gallon tank
erupted while· gasoline was
being transformed from II
to a tank truck driven by
Pack.
Tanner said the ex·
ploslon will mean the
company must putchase
FUND CAMPAI\.iN Ul'Wt;KWAY National
gasoline
from
other
committee persons are shown going over plans for the Rio
sources to make up for
.G rande College campaign announced .f'riday. College
what was lost In the lire.
officials are trying to raise $4 .9 million over a five year

And connections don't
appear to help. The gas
station in Plains, Ga. owned
by President Carter's brother
Bllly closed last week
because it had used up its
March allotment of gasoline,
According to the Labor !Je.
partment's coriswner pr.ice
index, gasoline prices rose 2
percent in February and are
By JAMES H. RUBIN
in broadening Curran's
up 18 percent shice last June.
Associated Press Writer powers to conduct the
Prices have risen so much
WASHINGTON (AP)- At· investigation, he is not
- in many cases a dime a torney General Griffin B. "knuckling under" k&gt; critics ..
gaUon or more in the past Bell, who has been ·under who said Bell should have
year - that many gasoline sharp
attack
from made Curfan .a "special
dealers say $1·a·gallon Republican members of prosecutor" instead of a
gasoline colild be a reality Congress, amounced Friday "special counsel."
later this year.
•
he is broadening the powers
Bell said he saw "no analo·
Gasoline )X'lces are highest of the special counsel he gy" between the Watergate
In Chicago and New York, named
to
head
an scandal and the current
with
premium
leaded investigation into President investigation into more than
gasoline selling at some Carter's family peanut $6.5 million in lo.ans from the
stations for more than 90 business.
National Bank of Georgia to
cents a gallon.
Bell told a news conference the Carter family peanut
"A dollar a gaUon'l Sure it's the changes should guarantee warehouse.
ccmlng, and soon," said one that Republican New . York
"There
is
a
vast
dealer in a subU!'b of Oticago · Attorney Paul J. Curran will ' diflerence,"hesaid .. "Wehad
who now is charging 90 cents. have the same degree of a great deal of evidence of
Bob Jacobs, executive independence that the office crime in government in
director of the Illinois of the special prosecuk&gt;r had Watergate."
GasoHne
Dealers in
investigating·
the
The attorney general said
Asaoclation, said he expects Watergate scandal.
he believed the furor caused
"tllepubllc is going to be pay.
Under a lonna! charter is· by his announcement on
lng $1 a gallon by July 4th." sued by Bell's office Friday, Tuesday that Curran would
"It's the worst period since Curran will have authority to . not
be
completely
the days of the '74 oil embar- · seek indictments without independent of the J.ustice
go,'t said James Benton, clearing his decision with Department was a misuneaecutlve director of the anyone in the Justice de r standi n g
over
Gasoline Retailers Department.
technicalities.
Allloclatlon of Northeastern
Bell said tbat since he
However Curran still
New York.
would be ~equired to get -ntaiils the power to lire
But the reasollll are 90111e· Bell's approval before Curran ere is no need to
an from seeking
what dllferEilt this time. AI• granting immunity to any
though the shutdown of witness in exchange for
ents
his own or
lranlln oil production for the testimony.
from
issin
e case if he
f!rat·two months of this year
Bell said that restriction decides here is n ause for ·
put a squeeze on tile world's also applied U. Watergate action.
supply of oil, gasoline prosecutors and that II is a
Bell ad d that if
supplies were tight even requirement of law that the Curran "o collrse I w ld be
when Iran was pumping oil. attorney general approve any accounta e to the Congress
.
Galollne demand roee 3.4 request to a court for ·and the ubllc.~·
percent 1ut year, with the jmmunity for a witness.
He s d firing CUrran 1s a
blgllelt jump cmling In the
At his news conference, deci · n he would not take
unleaded IIUOllne, which fa Bell said "I can't Imagine li y and that CUrran could
required In all new Amerlican anyone h~vlng more power c llenge · his dismissal in
can. ·
than Mr. Curran has." But c · rt.
The ccmpanil!ll say they tl)e attorney, general said tha~
.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::':::::::~::; :;:;:;:;:; :

broadens
peanut probe

,.,u

and overthrow the Sadat regime " but he told a Kuwaiti
newspaper that Syria would
not seek an Arab oil embargo
against the United State~ lor
mediating the treaty. Syna IS
'a leade r of the Arab

G8rwood could b ecome
first American tried
•
smce World War II

Gasoline prices · climb

1978 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR

coupe is super sharp inside and out.

'1695

Priced Right.

•

BRISK BIDDING- Bidding was hi-i..k and the crowd .
was tremendous Friday morning as a two-day auction
sale. got underway at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds· to
·dispose of the personal collection - dating back to the
Civil War -of the late Mrs. Norma Wilson, Pomeroy, a

.

1979 GRAND PRIX DEMO

NO. 8

PAGE l·D

Sadat enroute to U.S.

sole

See Bob Brickles, Gene.
Johnson, Harland
(Woo.dy) ·
.
Wood, or Greg Smith at
·the Sign of Quality New .
and Used Cars.
l

1~

'
• Ground cork under insole
shapes

trucks. See. ••
'

D

'J

to my country, my family and
rriy friends.
"I can't possibly put into
words just how good it feels to
be amon g my fellow
Americans again. I'm very,
very happy to be going
home .''
In a statement given to
NB C News in Hanoi on
Wednesday, Garwood denied
he collaborate'd with the
Vietnamese. "I was in
collaboration with the people
of the United States against
the involvement of the United
States government in Viet·
nam," he said.
Alter Garwood left
Vietnam on Thursday, the
Vietnam News Agency issued
a report in Hanoi that said the
Marine "crossed over to the
liberation armed forces in
1965 after seeing that the
then-U.S. war of aggression
against Vietnam was aq
unjust war."
The agency said Garwood
asked permission to remain
In Vietnam after the com·
munist takeover of South
Vietnam in 1975. It said he
was allowed to return to the
United States at his own
request to rejoin his family .

ha rdliners opposed to the
pact.
The Egyptian leader,
accompanied by his family
and top Egyptian officials,
left Cairo international
airport at 10:10 a.m . aboard
the presidential jetliner.
Officials said he would
make a refueling stop in the
Azores then continue on his
14-hour fh ght to Washmgton,
where he and Israeli Prime
Minister Men achem Begin
are to ~ ign the peace treaty
Monday.
Sadat originally planned to
stop overnight in Madrid for
talks with Spain's King Juan
Carlos. but Egyptian offiCials
said the trip was canceled for
security r easons.
Sadat appeared jovial when
he told reporters he was
happy to be going to
Washington , but moments
before he was locked in
concentrated conversation
with ·hi s vic e pre s ident ,
Hosny Mubarak.
The Egyptian leader waved
goodbye from the door of the
airplane . There were no
formal
de ,parture
ceremonies.
Among
the
official
delegation accompanying
Sadat was Prime Minister
Mustafa Khalil, Sadat's top
peace negotiator, and the
ministers of economy and
pla nnin g. Th e editors of
Cairo's three · major daily
newspapers were also aboard
but a separate plane that left
before Sadat departed
carried t he rest of the press
corps .
Begin fl ew to New York on
Friday , saying he was
" praying from the bottom of
my heart" that the treaty
would lead to a wider Mideast
p'ea c e. Begin travels to
Washington on Sunday.
Israeli Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan was meeting
with U.S. ne gotiators in
Washington today over a
memorandum
of
unde~standing
between
Israel and the United States.

penod to increase scholarship opportunities. Commjttee
members are left to right, Emily Leedy, Columbus: Dr.
Thomas Helms, St. Clairsville; Dr. Lowell Horton,
Dekalb, lll.; Bob Etans, Rio Grande, al)di!&gt;r ._John H~yt,
1
Washington.

�/

D-3-The Sunday Timcs"lcntint•l, Sunday , ~_ar . ?.1, Hl79

· (~

D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel," Sunday, Mar, Zi, 1!179
I.

Attack victim

'·

CLEVELAND ( AP) - A had asked the student
teacher who was attacked by whether he belonged in the
a ' student in a study hall school.
earlier this month admits she
"At first, I thought he was
is afraid to return Ill the just shadow boxing, but then
classroom.
he attacked me, punching
"I'm frightened to return," and kicking me to the point I
said Denise J . Frank, a could not defend myself;" she
~·rencb teacher at Eml'ire said Friday in testimony
.Junior High School, "but 1 before Juvenile Court Judge
haye to go hack. It is my job." Angelo J . Gagliardo.
.
.The · incident occurred
The youth 'was returned to
March 7 when a 15 year old · the detention home until
pupil froin another school another hearing is schedued
attarkl'fl Ms. F.rank after she to determine whether .he

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THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME
.by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

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Unscramble 1hese tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

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A NEW JAYCEE CHAPTER has been fonned in
Meigs CoWtty. This· is the &gt;;eCOnd such chapter in the
county. The newly formed chapter of the Shade River
communities have elected the following young men as
their officers for the 1979-80 year. They are, Victor Gaul,
president, Tim Baum, executive vice president, Bill
Buckley, internal vice president, Howard Bahr, external
vice president, James Amsbary, secretary, Pat
Morrissey, treasurer, Robert Keaton, state director.

Present for the election were members of the Meigs
County Jaycees, Dave Jenkins, president and Bob
Schmoll, secretary-treasurer and Herb Schul, Little
Hocking Jaycees, who is district director. The Jaycees
invite all yoWtg men interested in the progress of the
Shade River communities to'contact any of the officers for
additional informatioq. Pictured are, 1-r, front, Bob
, Keaton, Victor Gaul, . Bob 5chmoll, James Amsbary,
' Howard Bahr; second row, Dave Jenkins, Pat Morrissey,
· Bill Buckley, Tim Baum and Herb Schul.

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IN 5-UCH

Now arrange the circled l~tters to

form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the aboVe cartpon .

Print answer here:

Logan
residents
dissatisfied
-

.

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Vostorday·s

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Tucked away in southeastern
Hocking Hills, the city
•' ofOhio's
Logan is far removed from
',.
the pollution and other
•••
problems of big-city living.
But an Ohio State
•
University study indicates
that Logan residents are
'•
')'
generally
no more satisfied
'• with the quality
of life in their
•&lt; . community
than
residents of
••'
fnuch-larger Dayton .
~.
The study, which examined
•
the attitudes of 70 families in
Dayton ,
a
mid-sized
•
metropqlis of 250,000 people,
and 96 families iil . Logan, a
•
.,• southeastern Ohio town of
6,300, shows that the size of a
• community has almost no
effect on the overall content;.. ment of its residents.
••
About 70 percent of those
~
surveyed in each area said
•; they were satisfied with the
·: overall quality of life ill their
•• community, according to

..

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Nancy Rudd, assistant
professor
of
home
management and housing at
Ohio State.
She said Dayton residents
expressed dissatisfaction
over problems typically
associated with large ·cities,
such as pollution, crime and
traffic congestion. Logan
residents, free from many
such afflictions,
were
nonetheless dissatisfied with
the lack of employment and
recreational opportunities in
their community.
Residents of both cities
expressed dissatisfaction
with the way their tax dollars
are being spent.
Ms. Rudd said, however,
that factors unrelated to the
community's size played the
most important part in
determining whether people
cons ide red themselves
happy.
For men in the survey, the

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CMS TRAVEL

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WE GIVE YOU lliE WORLD.
446-9640

•
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degree of satisfaction with
their jobs was most important to their happiness.
Women's satisfaction increased most in proportion to
the amount of control they
felt they had over their own
lives.
'
For both men and women,
the survey showed that
financial and employment
matters have more effect on
happiness now than in earlier
studies, In which family
relations were considered
most influential, Ms. Russ
said.
" People feel that they don't
have any control over things
like inflation that eat away at

'

Robbers give u~

MANAGUA, Nicaragua
(AP) - Two besieged rotr
hers who held hostages in a
Managua bank for the ~st
three days surrendered 'to
police Salu!'day, authorities
reported.
·
Their eight hostages were
freed unharmed. Seven oilier
hostages had heen released
previously.
It had heen believed four
robhers were inside the bank
since an abortive hold.up
Wednesday afternoon, but
only two emerged today,
their faces covered with
handkerchiefs - a man about
22. years old and a woman
about 18.
·
They were dflven In a
military vehicle to the central
police headquarters in
Managua .

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SUNDAY, MARCH 25 THRU SATURDAY, MARCH 31

CLAMS ·CLAMS
DINNER
'241
INCWDES FRENat FRIES
AND COLE SlAW

ORDER OF ClAMS

'171

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

RT. 35 WEST GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

the quality of their life," she
said. "They are unhappy
about the amount they are
able to save and about what
they see as the general
deterioration of their · standard of living."
TheJ,Jumher of children in a '
family pad some effect on the
happiness of men in the
.survey, Ms. Rudd said. More ,
· children in a family meant
less happiness for the man in
most cases, she said.
Women saw the relationship ·with their husband as
important to. their happiness,
along with their own financial
status and their family's
standard of living .

~'(I

XI X]''

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles. DRAWL ELDER SATIRE BLUISH
Answer: What you might hope a professional orator
would do with some skill when he plays
golf-ADDRESS THE BALL
,

Jumble Book No. 12,con11lnl~ 110puul.., Is •••lltblelorS1 .75pottplld

from ~umble,Cioltlll newapaper, Boa :W, Norwood, N.J. 07a.l.lncludeyow
name, addrws1, ztp coclt 1ncl m1k1 checkl payebfe to New1p1perbook1.

rettJJ~ts

should he tried as an adult. colleagues.
Ms. Frank, who has been on
A female student who
assault leave since the reportedly scratched and
attack, said sh~ suf- pushed a woman teacher just
fer ed two black eyes over a week ago was
and a cut behind the e"!:,_ suspended for 10 days and
along with three broken then transferred to another
teeth. The attack also junior high school.
resulted in bruises on her
Teachers, however, wanted
back, knees and abdomen as the girl expelled for the rest
well as several stitches on her of the school year.
lip and inside her mouth, she
'' ... the alleged physical as·
testified.
sault upon a teacher did not
The judge lndictated he ' take place In the judgement
would like the welfare of the expulson hearing
department to investigate the officer," according to Albert
Abramevltz,
su·
boY' S famil y. TWO 0f the J .
'
b
othe
13
per'lntendent
of
the
t
de
I
su n s r
rs, ages
and 14, were recently Cleveland Heights-University
sent011ced to youth facilities Heights system.
for breaking into a Cleveland
Jack Quinn, an official of
home.
·the Cleveland Heights
· Since there are four other Teachers Union, said a
children In the family, Gag- person "doesn 'I bave to .be
liardo said he was concerned bloodied for there to be
that they !)lay not 'be getting assault. We will live with the
sufficient supervision since , . legal definition of assault."
the mother works during the 1 The teacher who was asday; the father is disabled. saulted has. filed charges
Ms. Frank testified that against the student.
several months ago, a
seventh grader slapped her
face; she has also had her car
stolen '!rom the school
parking lot and .she is
frequenUy cursed by students.
Teachers throughout
Cleveland say they're
concerned about student
Contracting in
attacks against them and hint
they may start taking
Pole Buildings
matters into their own hands
Concrete Floors
- although no one elaboAnd
Footers, Ditches
rated .
At Wiley . Junior High
6".wide to s· deep ·School in University Heights,
Free Estimates
about 40 teachers walked off
their jobs Friday in protest of
F!hone 367-7560
an administration decision
Herman Reese
not to expel a student who
Cheshire. Ohio
attacl$ed one of their

REESE

TRENatiNG &amp;
BDw;IE
SERVICE

.Peeps.

By Ada Keels
Rev. Caffie from Ironton
filled
his
regular
appoinbnent at New Hope
Church Sunday. He was
accompanied by his wife and
two daughters. There was a
nice crowd present alid glad
to he able to come to church.
Mrs. Minnie Garnes of
Buckrldge and her sister,
Mrs. Gordie Smith of Bidwell,
visited an old friend, Mrs.
Daisy Ross, and daughter oo
Saturday. ·
The trustees graded the
. ~e
S roads here last week which
we all appreciate.
Ml'. Dewey Keels received
word from his sister, Mrs.
"
.
Ceola Scott. She not very well
these days.
·
~der ~.ri.
I. Deacon Hurt and wile,
• I
JuriI LucUie, called on Deacon .
Robert Cooper and wife ,
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) - A Edna, afier services Sunday.
final judgement dismissing
Some of the farmers. took
all claims against the owners their last load of tobacco to
of the Beverly Hills Super market last week.
Club in connection with the
The children are all hack
1977 fire in which 165 died in school after being absent a
there has .been signed by good many days because of
Campbell C~rcu1t Judge John ' the bad weather and resulting
D1skm.
bad roads which buses could
The decision approving a . not travel.
$3 .015. million out-of-court
Mrs. Sam McDanlel who is
settlement was expected with one of her daughters at
after it was appro.ved last Toledo, is doing fairly well.
month by U. S. District Judge She and her family lived in
Carl Rubin .
this community.
Attorneys for the victims
Clayton Keels, who has
and Injured are proceedmg Wldergme SW'gery twice in
against several hundred Cincinnati, is doing fine. He
other defendants named as was reared in this community
suppliers of electricity, and attended church here .
buildin11 materials and
Deacon Robert Cooper
manufacturers.
went to the Holzer Hoapital
Suits seeking more than for a checkup Tuesday ..
$2.9 mllllon have heen filed In
Wesley Hurt was in
connection with the May 28, HWttington, W. Va. recei\Uy
1977 lire at the plush supper on business.
club in Southgate, Ky.
FriendS and relatives of
Rubin and Diskin have John Gamble were surprised
been reviewing litigation . at his passing away Thursday
jointly.
morning at Holzer Medical
The 4-R Corp. and its Center. He was a surgical
principal$, Richard Schilling patient. He was laid to rest by
Sr. and his four sons, which Mr. Wetherholt in Sancutarv
owned the club, were Cemetery with Rev. Lusher
released from further conduc'ting the last rites:
liability after the settlement
Claytoo Keels of Cincinnati
was placed witli the .court.
underwent surgery and is
doing o.k. He was born and
raised here before going to
Cincinnati.
Junior Howard of Jackson
The two highest active
assisted
the H.oward Brothers
volcanoes in the world are in
in
their
tobacco
me day last
Chile, 19,862-fool Mt.
week,
also
Sam
Hutchison
of
Guallatiri which last erupted
near
.Gallia.
in 1959 and 19,652-foot Mt.
MrS. Murle Howard was
Lascar, which erupted in
reported on the sick list
1951.

recently. .
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Elkins
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ivan Elkins near ·
Jackson Sunday afternoon. · .
Mr. and mrs. Randall
Podell of Detroit came home
Sunday to her grandmother,
Mrs. John Gamble, to attend
the last rites for her
grandfather, John Gamble.
They returned Ill their home
in Michigan Monday evening .

Ji-_•""" · zn.
•k
dismissal

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Cor- Sycamore &amp; Sof;ond, Gallhlolls, 0.
.

611 E'aSI Main, Pomeroy, 0 .

Open 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. WMitdays

,91115 Sit.

Pomeroy, Ph. m-ms
Gallipolis, Ph. 4,46t&lt;OJ03
Opon9o.m._. p.m. W..kdayS,9•S Sat. Phone444·0303
.

I

interim .

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.

''Operations and
hOspital rooms cost

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GALUPOLIS - Two weeks ago last Thursday the San Francisco Chronicle in its March 8 edition had a writeup about
Gallipolis ' Dave Roberts amurig three "Old men• • bidding for
Giants jobs during the baseball season about to start .
An article out of Phoenix by Ira Miller tells the stciry. Miller.
prohably didn't know and couldn't care less that Dave attended Gallia Academy High School for three years, but was
graduated from Cohupbus Centrai1Iigh School. Here's what
he wrote about the ex-Gallipolitan :
" Dave Roberts , 34, is working on a new style - and also the
leading candidate to stick. Roherts has something going the
others don't - the ability td hit. But right now he's thinking
mostly of his pitching.
'"!think I've been trying to go away from tlie hitters too
much,' Roberts said. 'They're so big and strong today that
even if you pitch them outside, they can still manage•to bloop it
over the infielder's head. so I'm gonna try to make the hitters
a little more aware, coming inside this year.'
"That adjustment was suggested, Roberts said, by Larry
Shepard, the Giants' new pitching coach.
"Roberts, who wants to be a coach when he's done playing,
has given a tip or two in his time. 'I've helped some guys take
my jobs,' he said.
·
"In Detroit' Roberts showed Bob Sykes how to throw a cut
fastball , which is similar to a fast slider but easier oo the arm.
'He threw it better than I did and he won my job,•said Roberts,
who is primarily a fastball pitcher.
· "Four teams selected Roberts in the free agent draft, in·
eluding his last employer. the Cubs, but none. came close to
signing him .
''As for last year, when he had a &amp;&amp;record and a career-high
5.26 ERA, Roherts makes no alibis. 'I have to take the blame,'
he said. 'I pitched a lot of ballgames I should have won and

a lot more ·
than you think~

:t

Mike Swiger

() ;

992 -7155

149 S. Third St.
Middlepor1. 0.

See me for State Farm
hospital surgical insurance.
Like a good · r...-..-..-..'"1

nelf:hbor,
Slate Farm
is there.

didn't. I

"Roberts has won as many as 17 games and had earned run
averages as low as 2.10 . .. "
ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH has received an
unusual request. A Louisianan wants to know the religion of
three eminent politicians. Father AI4Mackenzie turned the project over to Henny Evans, historian, who 's trying to find out
the answer; if you know, please let her know at 638 First Ave.,
Gallipolis. The three a,re Samuel F. Vinton, John W. McCormick, and John L. Van·ce. Fact that McCormick is buried at
MI. Zion is proof enough that he was a Methodist. :By the way,
the Gallia County Historical Society by the lime this Peeps column appears will have come out with the Springfield Twp.
cemetery booklet. Henny Evans has been researching the pa;1
on another subject, too, and that subject is homicide . Nearly
100 years af!o (it was 18801 a jury aequltted Col. James Montgomery of murder even though evidence pointed strongly to
his baviqg taken a life of someone else. This case is recorded in
old courthouse records.

R

Seaman convicted Friday
By BOB RAST
AssoCiated Press Writer
SAN DIEGO ( AI') _ Merchant
seaman
Larry
Singleton was convicted
Friday of kidnapping and
raping a 15-year-old girl and
chopping off her arms with an

N ter deliheratin g for 12%
hours over three days, the
panel
concluded
that
Singleton, of Sparks, Nev .,
did not use a deadly weapon
or commit bodily harm in
kidnapping Mary Vincent last
Sept. · 29. That finding
·
removed the prospect that
axA jury of nine men and Singleton would face the ·
three women foWtd the 51- death penalty iii sentencing
year-old defendant guilty of scheduled for April 20.
.
attempted murder in the first
Mi~s Vincent has been
WILUAM JAMES CARGO, 663 Allen Ave., Chillicothe degree, mayhem, two counts fitted with prosthetic arms
45601, sends something which he calls "for the seeker of things of forcible oral copulation, since the attack .
past." It's a map of the four former Clay Twp. covered sodomy and kidnapp,ing.
Both of the Las Vegas,
bridges, and his letter reveals handwriting so much like his
father's that it's uncanny . Here's his letter:
." I had traveled the four Clay Twp. covered bridges with my
•
late fa:her, Charles H. Cargo. We drove team and wagon Ill out macadam. There were stone ile posts sevne inches square
Gallipolis for trading. The township roads: mud. SR 7: worn and · 24 inches, tall . •
"In a way·the covered bridge was not only a bridge but also
the predl!cessor of the present-day rest areas.
"The late John Baker (Homer's father) had a roadside
watering trough , where the team got a needed drink. Bert
Finley, our late Clay Twp. cattle trader , also quenched his
cattle's thirst at this lrouigh.
"For years Garfield Ave. curved aroWtd a stagnant pond;
nearby was a five-foot elephant advertising something
opposite a metal man climbing over a bam gable advertising Mail Poch tobacco ...
"Arriving in Gallipolis, we parked in the Harry Frank's feed
lot, where the team was unhitched and fed from the wagon bed
while Father went about his business and we got haircuts
maybe at Haner 's (John and Lawrence) at Robinson's. There,
too, was the Farmers Restaurant (hotel); I think none better.
_ "I have heen tnld that yoWtg Robinson 's sister has the
private shaving mugs of such men as Kerr, Bovie, Henking,
Roadarmour .
"I have been intrigued by the Concrete piers (ice breakers)
above where the old wharfboals were. They've been in place
many years and appear soWtd."

Pomeroy

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY ONLY
MARCH 25 THRU MARCH 31

Nev., runaway's forearms
were severed in the attack
along a northern California
highway, and Miss Vincent
had pointed to Singlellln as
her assailant in dramatic
courtroom testimony.
Singleton did not testify in
his own behalf, but the jury ·
heard a 90-minute tape of
Police questioning Singleton
followin g hi s arre st. He
denied mutilating the girl,
say ing two male hitchhikers
also were in his van and that
he fell asleep drunk. ·when he
awoke, Singleton said, the
girl was gon e.
Sparks police Sgt. Terry
Rusk asked Singleton : "Why
would 'this girl lie, say that
you did it when someone else
did? ''

"1, I, I don 't know," came
Singleton's stammered reply.
" I could never raise an arm
to anybody."
Singleton said he picked up
Miss Vincent near Berkeley
and promised her a ride Ill
Reno, Nev .
During the trial, the girl
testified she was headed for
her grandfather's home in
Corona, east of Los Angeles,
but that Singleton drove her
in the wrong direction.
The trial, which begain
~-e b . 26, ivas moved here
from Modesto because of
hea vy · pre-trial
news
coverage of the case.

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s~o
·
I' .

BULK GARDEN SEEDS. SEED
POTATOES &amp; ONION sns

~

I

1------~----~-~~--------------~---------------~
,&amp;

WI

POMEROY LANDMARK
·
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR. · .
'
Drive a Little and Save A lot·Free Delively within 75 Miles - Yes! We Service At Your
~I Hotpoint Dealer.
.
_
Slore HouiS: 8:30 tO 5:30-MiU Closes at 5:00 P.M.-Serving Meigs; GaUia ~ Mason Collnties.

®

NOTICE

1_.

•HOT DOG

.'119

permanen t

..

AT

LUNCH TIME GOODIE. _• •

The

neutrality of the canal would
also be guaranteed.

BUY YOUR FERTILIZER NOW

liD&amp;
I.

tiikcover by Panama of tht•

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

No CouPons • No Limit

GALLIA 446 5554
MEIGS 992-5554
JACKSON 286-5554

INDICTMENTS
RETURNED
CINCINNATI CAP)
Three officers of the 43~,(100.
member
international
restaurant and bartenders
union named in an 18-count
conspiracy
and
em·bezzlement indictment . arf
scheduled for arraignment ir
U. S. District Court April 9.
Named Friday were John
Gibson, Cincinnati, general
secretary,
and · vice
presidents Herbert Schiff.
man; Palm Springs, Calif.,
and James Stamos, Quebec,
Canaday.
A spokesman at union
headquarters, in Cincinnati
said there was no one
nvailable for comment.

"If you don,
know tax
·laws .•. you
need H&amp;R Block!''·

•

ranal and withdra•va l of U.S.
troops, ((1 be completed in the

'

New Hope

••

I

Panama C3na1 Trl'atics
The United States ami
Panama initiated tw•&gt;
\n•alieH in 1977 thai · would
pr ovi de fur , a gradual

MODEL
U4175

FULL TIME
EDGE
CLEANING

�..

•'

'·
D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Mar . 25, 1!n9

Sohio'S)Jipeline plans going again

Cooperative Extension Service
The Ohio State University

Agriculture andr
•
our commwnty

I

1.15 ~er-r~ -ro B~
AHAS ~UN 11Ift!'\
ANeV~R WAS! lll~

"T-'D u~ 10 e~ lf-l:l

•

At:NISOR, a\RIS . BlJI
w~'L.L BE IYIOVING IN

Af~W

~~A~

~~E:D

1.'D

You

~Dw .1

HAiei'o S'fARI MO
1'o QU(f ~illeR.

By Bryson R. (Bud) Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

GROWING NO-Till.. CORN
.
GALUPOU5-No tillage _farming' !s saving millions of
gallons o~ fuel annu~lly in Ohio as well as 7 to 8 tons of soil per
.__
...
.,..
..........
. _.,
acre which oUterwJBe would be lost Utrough erosion wiUt
........_,..
conventional tillage practices.
However, ooly ten percent of Ohio's agricultural land is
being. n&lt;&gt;-.till ~!anted !'I'd most of Utis is in corn. Na-tillage
planting IS still relallvely new and ha s not yet gained full
Four-H advisors are needed to help 4-H'e rs enrolled in more than 9, 150 local clubs in
public acceptance.
Ohio . These advisors help members " learn by doing." Four-H c lubs a re active in eve ry county
Planting corn without plowing has been made possible today
in the United States and In more than 80 other countries. Whe rever you may move - 4-H
with planter changes and inexpensive. effective weed control .
~hemicals . Weed competition and poor plant stands are
unportant concerns. If you don't control competition from " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - weeds, no-till will result in lower yields than with your corn planting will improve timely planting, reduce soil losses
conventional plowing systems. Currently, there is no effective on sloping fields, save fuel , increase the number of acres Utat
control available for Johnsongrass and fields planted in no-till can be safely row cropped on your farm, and often increases
·
corn .
.
corn yield.
Many things can cause a low plant population or stand. A big
Every year in the l). S. the amount of horse power used in
problem in no-till is placing the seed where it will stay moist tillage practices, such as plowing, chiseling, rotary tillage,
while being warmed up enouRh to germinate and grow c1lscing, cultivating, and other phases of soil preparation ,
quickly. The tool, :your corn planter, must be equipped to place result in the movement of enough soil to build a super-highway
heavy pressure oo .each planting unit to ensure the equal seed- from Los Angeles to New York. Plowing eight inches deep
soil contact with conventional tillage.
moves over 1,000 tons of soil ·per acre. This is not only
. Insect damage tends to be more of a problem in no-till !'"ovement of a tremendous volume of soil, but requires large
f1elds because mulch materials are left on the surface rather mvestments m eqUipment, .labor, and fuel.
than being buried with a plow. Mulch cover keeps soils cooler
hence germination is slowed and chance for insect damage ~
increased.
Steve Hiblriger of the Soil Conserva tion Service here in
Gallia County says that of the 61 ,000 potential crop acres in
Gallla County, 38,000 of these acres would be suitable for no-till
BY:
corn production. However, Steve points out that 21,000 acres of
DIANA S. EBERTs
the 38,000 would need erosion control practices; 1,000 acres out
COUNTY
EXTENSION AGENT
. of the 61,000 would be too wetfor no-till corn production.
HOME
ECONOMICS
These notes are meant to point out that no-till is a bit more
MEIGS COtJNTY
demanding than regular tillage. You should start with a
. DISPLAY PROJECT- Pictured above left to right
limited number of acres to reduce the cost of mistakes. No-till
are Ralph Taylor, Keith Marcum and Todd Patterson
sta~ing be~ide Uteir completed project of the North
Gallia VocatiOnal Agnculture Class. This is just one of Ute
your
child' s
POMEROY
THE handle
projects that the Sophomore class has completed some of
Do
you
MYSTERIES
OF misbehavior?
which include : painting tractors, calf hutches, and
MICROWAVES Don't sometimes have difficulty in
LAST WEEK TO BUY I
tobacco presses. The class is now starting their wood
forget the program on communicating with your
working project which include construction of wagon beds
microwave
cooker y children'
and _farm gates. Reporter of North Gallia FFA is J. J .
You would probably benefit
scheduled for Thursday,
Jusllce. AdviSor is Jeff Pope .
·
March 29. Contact.the Meigs by discussing these situations
County Extension Office (992- with other parents. In order
3895) by Monday, March 26, to provide such an op·
to tell us if you are planning portunity, I am planning to
to attend the .afternoon or conduct classes which will areas of the county where other activities conducted by
evening session. Look for the help reveal different methods there is interest. This would the Meigs County Codetails · concerning this and insights into parent-child also be a worthwhile activity operative Extension Servprogram elsewhere in this communications that you for a group of y0ur friends or ice, are · open to anyone
may have not thought of club members to participate on a non-discriminatory basis
newspaper.
in. Please contact me if you without regard to race, sex,
SEWING MADE SIMPLE before.
I would like to plan these might be interested.
- If you've never had the
color, or national origin.
These programs, as well as
opportunity to learn the classes for meeting in various
basics of sewing, then this is
your chance! I am planning
to conduct classes for
beginning sewers that will
..
include emphasis on · the
COLUMBUS
The Resources (ODNR ) is of- planiing in Ohio.
selection of fabric and patThe packets contain 50
tern , pattern fittll)g and Division of Forestry of the ferin g an Environmental
alterations, and construction O~io Department of Natural Tree Seedling Packet foi' seedlings and cost $12 e~ ch .
purchase by landowners for Ther e is no limit on the
techniques.
number of packets that can
I would like to find out who
be ordered.
is interested and then work
Orders for the seedlings
with them to plan classes in
must be placed by April 15,
.different areas of the county
1979 . Delivery will be made
which would be most convenient. Maybe you have a
by United Parcel Service between March 20 and April 30,
group of friends or .club
1979.
members who would like to
CLEVELAND
Ap· titlement.
Included in the packet will
participate. If you might be
If that same veteran were be 10 seedlings each of
interested, please call me at proximately 43,000 Vietnam
era veterans in Ohio will lose to embark on a full-time flowering dogwood, autumn
CENTRAL SOYA
992-3895.
HELPS FOR PARENT- their entitlement to Gl bill four-year college program, it olive, red oak, white pin e ~nd
Ohil,
·
CHILD COMMUNICATIONS benefits during the next year. should be started this year so · Norway spruce.
VA
Regional
Office
that
it
could
be
completed
by
"These
fiv
e
species
will
- lsn 't it frustrating at times
knowing how to effectively Director, Ralph E . •Smith, 1983 . when the veteran ' s provide food and cover for
Jr., said the figure represents eligibility expires.
wildlife, act as a windbreak
the total number of veterans
In any event, benefits and help beautify our enwho will have reached the would be payable only until vironment," said Ernest J .
tenth anniversary of their the veteran reached the time Gebhart, Chief of the Division
separation from military limit no matter how far along of Forestry . ·
duty.
the program was.
Order forms can be olr
"There are so many ways tained from local Division of
The law provides 'veterans
with a ten-year time limit to the GI Bill can be adapted to Forestry or Cooperative
use educational and training individual needs and cir· Extension offices throughout
· cumstances," Smith said, " I the state or tlie Division of
benefits.
Smith said that while some hate to see anyone lose their Forestry, Ohio Department
45 percent of Ohio veterans rights to this program simply of Natural Resources,
A Gravely riding tractor cuts tough ha~e used some or all of their because they let time slip Fountain Square, Columbus
weeds or manicures your lawn.
Gl Bill rights, there are by."
43224 , phone (614 ) 466-7842.
. To do so many mowing jobs so well thousands who can still make ·
least partial use of their
a ~ravelxis b~ilt tough.It has all-gear · at
remaining time.
•
dtrect dnve With no belts. And instant
VA estimates that on a
forward and reverse.
nationwide basis more than
half
the number of veterans
Plus an eight-speed transmission
who have GI Bill eligibility
with a choice of 10, 12.16 or 18 hp.The today will lose it by 1984 .
11
....-m-~
tractor powers over 20 lawn and
What we're emphasizing

..._, __

ROBERT RUTT , PRESIDENT of . the GaUiaLawrence Farm Bureau, breakfasted with Congfesamari
Miller of the lOth District. The session was held during. the
Oh10 Farm Bureau 's Spokesmen's trip to Washington
March 12-14 where Farm Bureau presidents talked with
congressional and govenunent officials on Agricultural
· issues. Rutt is a resident of Chesapeake w.h ere he
operates a 750 acre dairy farm along wiUt his brother
Marvin Rutt , Jr. President Rutt also ope~ates Dewey'~
Radiator shop in Hunlington, West Virginia. Bob's wife,
Deloris and three children assist Bob with his busy
schedule between farm and business.
RESOLUTION
APPROVED
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) Butler Count y commioisioners
have . approved a resolution
authorizing the . county ' s
participation in . a proposed
new r.egionally managed air
polluhon. ~ntrol agency .
Corrumss10ners approved
the allocation of $53,500 as the
county's share of funding
reqUired for operatiOn of the
new agency for the last half of
the current year.

The new agency, . which
would provide monitorln2
services
required
to
·maintain regional air quality
standards now in effect
would succeed CincinnaW~
Division of Air Pollution
Control , which is scheduled to
cease operations next year.
Under the plan finances
would be shared' by Cincinnati, along with Clermont;
Warren
and
Hamilton i
counties.
:

A

GAUCHO

BARB WIRE
~~~:

$1995

'
I

\

FENCE POSTS, FIELD FENCE,

Vietnam veterans will
lose :GI bill benefits

OTHER BARB WIRE AND GATES
• ALSO ON SPECIAL
of
Inc.,
G•pols, Ohio

MARES SHORTWOR

~GRAVELY.

The ' Employees above of lhe Meigs
Equipment Co. will be looking forward to
seeing you at their open house . Pictured
from left to right are Tracy Whaley, Garry
Smith, Fern Daniels, Bob Cunningham, Jim
Heaton. Gary H9lliday, Evelyn Smith and
Mark Smith . Orin Colmer not present.

OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT .SALES
446-3670

R OPEN HOUSE FEATURES
THE NEW 3388 FOUR
WHEEL DRIVE TRACTOR
ON DISPLAY

HOME CARE SUPPLIES
SALES·•

''

garden attachments.
Call or visit us for
a test drive.And see
how a Gravely makes
s~ort work of any
· ' stze lawn. We service
what we sell.

here," Smith said, "is the
time factor: To make
maximum use of GI Bill
rights, a veteran must be
aware of the ten-year limit .
and get started well before

time runs out."
A typical Vietnam era
veteran, for example, might
have left the service in 1973
having earned maximum
training or education en-·

. ,,,
1,.

·\ ~"""'~

.

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
·- - ----r---

992·2975
MAMNING ROUSH, OWNER

Pomeroy, 0.
I'

The second plan, backed by
some federal and state offi·
cia is, was to repeal the anti·
export law.

. .:._' 4

oest
bona fide deal
you've been
offered. And it
ldn't take long
for us to offer a
............ deal. Then
it's time tor you
co take It and
celebrate.
ni'\,AI

RENTALS

COME IN MD TEST DRIVE
.lHE NEW 3388

Complete

REFRESHMENtS Will BE SERVED

·1979 FORD LID 4 DR.
302 engine, power steer ing, power
brakes, automatic t ran s., ai r Condi · .

302 eng ine, power sfeer ing and
brakes, autom a ti c trans .• ai r condi ·
ti oner . t111 wheel, Speed contro l, A M ·
FM ster eo, r ad io, ti nted gl ass, f r ont
and r ear bumper guar ds, r ea r
def roster, ex ter ior accen t gr oup.

tioner , split sea ts wit h r ec lin er s,
speed contr ol , tilt whee l, f r ont
bump er guard s, r ea r bumper

guard s,

exte r ior

accent

tinted glass. Stk . No. 334

group ,
·

VVas

US the

·

Slk. No. ~01
Wa s

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR
302 ef)g ine, power .steering and
front and r ear bumper
gua r ds , ai r conditioner , A:.M ra d io,
t?r a k ~s ,

~i~~~~nii1~~~i d~:~r~e~;~~~· ~:;ao;,s4

WSW tires . Slk . No. 500
Was

'6650 $7775
NOW
1979 FORD LID 4 DR 1979 FORD LID WAGON

S7601

302 engine, pow er steering and
brak ~s. automatic tr ans .• S:Peed control , front and r ea r bumoer quards .
air cond iti oner , · e xteri or accent,
tinted glass! complete dua l r em ote
mirrors. Stk . No. 471
•

302 engi ne, power steer ing, power
brakes, automat ic tran s., ai r c ond i ·
tioner , speed control, 9 passenger,
deluxe luggage r ack . pow er seat ,
AM· F M ra dio, ex t er or accent gro up,
pro tec t ion gro up, tinted gl ass. dua l
r emote mi r r ors. ~ tk. No. 458

Was

wa s
182\7

•

NOW

NOW

Slk. No. 38 ~

'6651

'Now

17 696

1979.. FORD LTD 4 DR
6

302 engi ne, power st eering and
brakes, autom atic tran s., air c6ndi ·
tion er, speed control, front and r ea r
bumper gu a r ds, el ec tr i c . rea r
defrost er, protec tion · gr oup, ti nted
glass, dual re m ote m irr or s. Stk , No .
385

Was
S71 52

'6690

302 engine, power steering and
brakes , automati c trans., fi nger t ip
speed cont r ol . f r on t · and r ea r
bumper guards , ai r condit ioning
tinted glass, dua l remote con troi
mir ror s. Stk , No. 386

'7100

was

mn

,
NOW

6 572

'6750

NOW

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR
302 engine. power st eeri ng and
bra k es, autom ati c trans., air condi ·
tioner , conv . gr oup, elec . c loc k, 1ron t
and rea r bumper guards, bumper
r ub strips, el ec. rear ·w indow
de t ro s t ~tr , AM · F M r adio ster eo, ex -.
ter ior accent , tinted glass. Stk . No . ·

Was

!781 6

NOW

'6&amp;00

1979 FORD LID
2 DR SEDAN

1979 FORD LID 4 DR

351 eng ine, power stee ring and
brakes, au tomat ic tr ans., air cond i·
tion ing, ·AM· F M ster eo 8 tr ack tape,
protec tion group, dual r emote mir·
r or s, front and r ear bumper guards,
fi nger tip speed contro l,' ' conven·
!ional spare. Stk . No. 312

NOW

448

Was

1979 FORD LTO 2 DR

NOW

NOW

302 engi ne, power steer ing and
brakes, automatic t ra ns.. ai r condi · ·
tion er. speed control, f ront and r ea r
bumpe r guards. r ear · def roster·,
t inted glass, dual r emote m ir r or s.

302 engin e, pow er steering and
brakes, ai r conditioner, speed con ·
trol, front and r ear bumper g u a rd s , ~
exter ior accent, tin Ted gl ass. dual
remot e m ir ror s. Stk. No. 430

Was

•

'7.190
1979 FORD LID 2 DR

'6478
1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

$7591

17305

NOW

Was

• SERVICE

1979 FORD LID 2 DR

302 engine, power steer ing, power
brakes, automatic t rans ., ai r cond i·
tioning , speed control, front &amp; r ear
bumper guards, exterior accent
gr oup, tint ed glass, dual r emote m ir r ors, wire w heel covers . Stk. No. 526

·Was
$7430

Now'6430

1979 FORD FAIRMONT
STATIONWAGON

1979 FORD
STATIONWAGON
200 eng ine, power' steering , pow er
brakes, automatic trans ., exterior
decor group, AM radi o, t inted plass,
air conditioner , day-night . 1nside
m irror , CR78 x 14 wsw tire s. Stk . No.
482

Was

'5620
S6056
1979 FORD FAIRMONT
FUTURA COUPE
NOW

Power st eering and power brakes,
automatic trans ., flip-up roof . w ide
body side m oldings, deluxe bumper

MEDICARE

group. radial tires, CR78x14 wsw,
AM radio. Slk. No. 477
Was
SS219
NOWt4950

.WELFARE&amp; UMW
CLAIMS PROCESS

Was

1979 FORD FAIRMONT
2 DR SEDAN
200 6 cyl. engin e, automatic tr ans .•
BR78x l4 wsw trres, da y-night inside
mir r or , du a l br i g ht mirror s,
pi voting front vent windows, tri m
rings, hub caps . Slk. No. 404

· Wa s
$~778

'4420
1979 FORD FAIRMONT
2 D.R FUTURA COUPE
NOW

$~731

Ymtr l&gt;e.11 buy[or the long run.

Buy Now At Regular Price
&amp; Get The Attachments At 25% Off

204 Condor SL

•·'i,\''"'l"ik

AND TWO FILMS DEALING Wt:nr
AGRICULTURE.

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

point out that there was no
national glut of oil. The oil
was just in the wrong pbce.
So Sohio ships it through t.h&lt;: ·
P.-nama CBru!l to Gu u C&lt;Jast
ports.

It's agreat niO.ment
nwe .lji( .·...
savey~u a
couple ol
hundred

$8105

• WHEEL CHAIRS
.BEDS
• PATIENT LIFTERS
• BEDSIDE COMMODES
.WALKERS
.TRACTION
• SUCTION PUMPS
• BENNETT IPPB
EQUIPMENT
• EXERCISING EQUIPMENT
• OXYGEN MFG UNITS .
• AIR PURIFYING EQUIPMENT

OF IDRG lAWNS.

Make hay
when the sun
doesn't
..
shi

IN
PASS.

...

Tree seedling packets available

crude oil into needed
products such as gasoline and
heating oil. '
The result was desc ribed as
a "glut'' of Alaskan crude on
the West Coast - about
400,000 , 42-ga llon ba rrels.
daily, most of it be longing to
Sohio.
Analysts were quick to

- began fluwing down to
Valdez, Alaska last year.
The re i I was loa~ e d on
tankers and shipped to the
West Coast .
llut it soo n beca me
appare nt that the West Coast
couldn't absorb all that oil.
There just wasn 't enough
refinery capacity in that part
of the nation to transform the

When Con gress ga ve
approval for the Alaskan
pipeline,
lawmaker s
sti pula ted that any oil
shipped through the pipeline
from North Slope fields must
be used domestically. It could
not be eJ&lt;))orted .
So the pipeline 's 1.2 million
barrds of oil daily - about 6
percent of U.S. consumption

r - ----- ----------- ----------- - .

RCHFENCING SPECIAL

$2050 ROLL

lly M.\RK PI.ITfS
,\J' Business Writer
NEW YORK (AP ) - The
on-again , off·again plan by
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio to
build a Ca lifornia ~ o-Texas
pipeline appears to be on
again, but the project is
unlikely to have any impact .
on what Americans pay for
gasoline or heating oil .
· Sohio is looking for the
most econom ical way of
transporting its Alaskan oil to
the eastern half of the United
States .
Cutting
transportation costs will r eflect in the finn 's profits,
not in consuiner prices .. But
the company says higher
profits
will
increase
incentives to further dev.elop
the Alaskan oil reserves.
Sohio
and other
companies involved in
Alaskan production - want
to get the pipeline completed
as soon as possible, so it can
·be operational when Alaskan
production is at its peak in the
next few years.
Sohio canceled the $1 billion ·
· THERON JOHNSON, Bacine, is one of eight persons to receive Ute 19'm Distinguished
pipeline
project March 13,
Alwnnl Award from the ollio State University's College of Agriculture, Home Economics
problems with
claiming
and Natural Resour.ces Alumni Associslion . The awards, given at the Association's ninth
necessary
getting
the
annuaiAiwnnl Day m Columbus, recognize outstanding contributions to the college and the
envirorunental
clearances
professions served. Johnson , a farmer and executive vice president of the Farmers Bank
state
and
federal
from
and Savings Company,_is shown receiving congratulations from Roy M. Kottrnan, dean of
governments to build it.
the OSU College of Agriculture and Home Economics . Mrs. Johnson is at the left. Johnson
That provoked criticism
was born ~nd rea~ on the farm in Meigs County that he now owns and operates. He has
from
California officials, who
been aSSOCiated wtth the Fanners Bank and Savings Company for 30 years as a director and
said
regulatory
approval was
for the past 15 years has served as 'executive vice· president. He received the ~'irestone
not
far
away.
Some
analysts
Champion Farmer Award'in 1939. 'He has served as acting county Extension agent in Meigs .
theorized
that
the
company
County, was a 4-H Club leader for nine years and an advisor for the Meigs County Better
made the announcement to
Livestock 4-H Club fer four years. He bas also served on the Meigs County and State
try
to
pressure
the
Extension Advisory Councils.
.
.
·
government into letting it sell
some of its Alaskan oil
abroad .
·
.
Doing that would be even
cheaper '--and hence more
profitable...:. than building the
pipeline, which in turn would
be cheaper than the present ·
means of transporting
Alaskan oil to the East:
'
shipping it through the
Panama Canal.
•.
Under fire from state and
federal official s, Sohio
suddenly reversed itself
Wednesda y, resubmitting
applicatiQns for California
air-quality permits, but it
· said it would again drop Ute
plans if approval dragged on
Gravely's all-gear rotary plow is a unique attachment
for
several more mon111s.
It plows up to seven inches deep.blending the soil into
'I
" The Secretary of Energy
a seedbed that's ready for planting. All in one operation.
and va( ious members of ConSomethif1g no other plow can do.· ·
.
gress made it very clear in
our
meeting in Washington
·
.
The Gravely tractor powers over 20 optional
(Tuesday ) that they wanted
lrl.fJ=t;:~ attachments.Call or visit us for a free demonstrathe PACTEX pipeline project
~1
tion.We service what we sell.
·
'~ ..
to go forward promptly in the
national inierest and that
they will do all they can to
· Your Oi!SI htt~'Ji&gt;r thclong nm.
encourage the issuance of the
necessary permits and
approvals," Sohio Chairman
Alton Whitehouse said in a
statement.
" If we received the green
light within 90 days ttrere is a
strong possibility we would
proceed. If we received the
green light .within six months
there is a probability we
might proceed, " he added .
" The project is losing
strength
antl character·. with
Junction Rts . 7 &amp; 35
Gallipolis
the passage of time ." ·
'--------'---~O.,_..pen Mon. -S_a _t._l_-5, . . - - - -- - - - '- -__j

NOW

•4510

6 cy l. engine, clotti bucket seats~
automatic tran s., power ste ering
and brakes, til t steering wheel , shi ft
fl oor mounted , air conditioning ,
t inted g l a~s . turbine wheel covers.
Stk. No. 379

~~gB

'5690

NOW

.,
STAFF SELECTED
NEW YORK (AP)
Special Correspondent John
Roderick and AP Newsfeatures Writer Victoria
Graham have been selected
to staff The Associated Press'
new bureau in Peking, AP
President and General
Manager Keith Fuller has
announced.
Fuller said Friday that
Roderick, a 3()-year China
watcher who will be the chief
of the bureau, has received
his visa and will open the
bureau on Monday. Ms·.
Graham 's application is
being processed.

Thaler Ford Sales., Inc.

lMEIGENCY SERVICE
Dew or dampness doesn 't stop you from
G:utting with the Deutz-Fahr Turbo
Mower. Without plugging . Has selfcleaning sw inging blades. Not affected
by juice or moisture . Enjoy high-speed
continuous mowing at low horsepower
with less down time . Ask us for a free
field demonstration .

D&amp;UIZ .

FAHIII
I .

FULTON·Tfi)MPSON
TRACIOR SALES
SPRI!IIG AVE.
POMEROY,O.

SALESPERSONS
Tom Sprague, M~!vin Little, Deb Hammack, Gary Rudoloh,
. Pet!! Somerville, Nancy Fowler •
Sales Managers, Bob ROS5 ana JacK Roush
24 Hr. Wrecker Service . Plione : 446-3575 Day · 446-3650 Nignl

PH. 446-3575

MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO.
3RD ST.
992-2176

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D-7-The Sunday Ttmes&amp;ntlnel, Sunday, Mar 25, 1979
(}6-The Sundil)' Times&amp;ntmel, Sunday. Mar 25, 1979

.

In M e mory

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds.
- -----Business Services -..
-

'

•

-

In Memory

-

,.._

-

INM~MOHV

IN LOVING memory of Albert

Boer who passed

owo~

March

30 1978

Gone but not lorgotten Sadly
m•ssed bv hi• w•fe Florenc"'
daugh ter Marfho and Family
Stepsons Guy and Vernon 1:1 ng
and lhetr lom tl!es Also lnend1o
There •s a land that IS fatrer than
do,
And by fa1th we con see I ala r
For the Fa ther wa •ls over the way
To prepare us o dwe tr.ng place
there

IN MEMORY of Nellte Eblin Who
went to be w1th Jes us 1 year
ago March 23 1978
Dear Grandma As we sd here
look•ng at your p• cture we m1ss
you IJery mu ch but we ~now
you wouldn I turn your hand to
come bock to th1s ole q uor
relsome world But Bob and I
prom1se to COMhnu e on a s you
would have us do to corry th e 1
slo ndbrd h• gh in th iS blessed
Hol me5s way And we II meet
you by those peorly gates one
day not fo r away
Your grandchildren Bob Nancy
C'Js!o.!. o~d_!~o:y~onl e~

'·
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I,

:·-:
.,
:'
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Notoc cs

QUALITY
CONSTRUCTION

«

Fantastte •s the word tor·

this NEW 3 bedrm all
bnck ranch
1' 1 baths

many extra s are mcluded
All rms are large and are

tastefully decorated Call
V1rgtma 388 8464
APPROX UAC
CATTLE FARM

Th•s 1S a real money
maker, good fence spnng
teed lake 4 wells, out
bu•ld•ng m1neral rtghts,
1600 lb tobacco base. 4
bdrm modern home, Sac
tra(t w•th electnc &amp; sepftc
tank Equ1pment may be
bought with th1S farm

V1rgmra L Sm1th
Real Estate
388 8464

s~te
New living rm
spectals New 2 pc $149 95
Rog S199 95 New 2 pc.
$199 9S Reg S299 95
Furntture
BS4 Second
446 952.3

RICE'S

Today In History
By
The
Associated Press
NI CE HOME w1th &amp;:reogo or sma ll
Today ts Sunday, March 25,
form Pho ne 682 6689
the 84th day of 1979 There are
281 days !eft m the year
Today's
highlight
m
history
On this date m 1634, English
co1omsts
under
the
proprietor, Lord Calvert,
1n 90 acrR of real
arrtved m Maryland
eslate sudnded by
On th1s date
Shade Rl~itr State
In 1821, Greek patr1ots
Park . lnchMies heavy
began
a revolt aga1nst
woods,
lovely
domination by the Ottoman
bu•ldmg sites and all
Emptre The upnsmg ended
mmeral ngflts. Best
12 years later w1lh the
of all•s the pnce, only establislunent of the mde$300 acre . pendent Kingdom of Greece
In 1865, Confederate forces
during the CIVIl War captured
Fort Stedman m Vlfgmta
In 188.1, a revolution broke
out m Ha111
In 1947, ll1 mmers were
killed m a coal mme
exploSion at Centralia, Dl
In 1965, the Rev. Martin Lu·
ther King Jr led 25,000 CIVil
nghts marchers to the Ala·
.
bama slate capitol buildmg m
•
Mootgomery

·~

ANVONE
INTERESJED?

•
•

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•
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'I

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••
•
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l UN SHOOT l{oruH Voh111IN'1
I " !1f'pl f vt 'Y Snhurlny f.. 30

1\n l1n11

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~m

tn•y r hn k&lt;&gt; 91111" n ly

th (' u

bt~~ lo:ln (l

He relo1rl B • utler~
Assonoton Al\nuo l Srnnq Show
and Sole 10 bu lls 14 fl'molt" ~
Solu rd oy Ma rch 31 Show 10
om sa le l pm at Jo r ~son s
'\ M ll We ston WV ~or ro lolog
vmte Moqone Our!: Rt 3 Box
W

VA

:110

8u r~honno ,

WV LbLO I

Nt:W BATO N classes Begmners

ntermed•ote ond advanced
Taug ht by Cmdy Patterson ot
the Syracuse Grod e Sc hool
Gym For more tnformoflon
co li 99'1 2088

Wanted to Rent

.•'

UN SHOO l llm ,.,., (".,
l l1 I
t vr- r 'I Su•H'iny I prn ~ CH ' " ' y
h , ~ f' qun~ only

cRAiG

SWENSO~TOR

1-59As11
THIS WOn
LAST lDNG

WELCOMt: WAGON Opcnmgs 1n
Pome roy M• ddlf'port area lor
energetic sell s lort ~r w th cor
who ltkes meetmg people
fle)(tble hours' C Kut sc hbach
85 Carousel Court
fH
1
Ch•ll•co th e Oh•o 45601 Equal
Oppo rtun 1ty Employer

HU~INI ~~ OI'PO~
' 1 I
For Sale
fNTI R THF glon 011, 11 , •r•tmg
wm ld of I osh1on • Own a h qhl~ W! HAVt chocoloi CJ'- d•ohottc
chornlotC'" onrf o thE'f candy
prof1tohlt' larlms tash1011 nr
, ,,pfteor; ftC"~" h!Pr randy doss
Jron and CO!. uol W("Ot shop
Coli Caro usel Coulect10nory 1n
f£&gt;olu!lng 130 not• o nally know!•
M1rldiC'por t 9Y7 6342
hrcmds f vf' fyt hmg prov H'ff'rf lor
$ 17900 Oprn your 5toro "a META L FOlDING cha1 ro;, l1ke Mw
few weeks • lALL TOLL FRH
$4 &lt;'0 100 or more $3 SO eo ke
I MOO 874 I 767
crl"mn cob1ne ts froz('n load
drsplay Wya tt p&lt;eflel or p11lO
GR IN DSTAH PE NN ZO!l 110w has
oven NCR cosh reg1s ter Pop
lull oulo o;.crv)CI"nnd rt&gt;po1 r 404
corn candy fl oss carmel om
f Mom St 1-'0illf&gt;r Oy Oh10
moch1ne s 614 231 44 0"1

--

Auto Sales
~

--

11.//IDA l StJNtlO 4dnn
SH(l(l 9Q') 511 I

ntll"l

TRANS AM f .. rr ll r nt conrl•
t1 on $4:.100 99') IW9

JQ / h

IQi'i' MONTf CARlO P S P 1:1
1-' W A C :.11 000 mlpo; Co li
9Y"J 1HH I or 747 7411
1'115 CHEVY. 4xd V H o Jlo
&lt;. pok(&gt; whe&gt;Pis
new !I ff'S
$4~()() f vC'IIIIlQS IJY') /066

TOOL SALE

•

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FRIDAY. MARCH 30, 1979
7100 P.M.
Located at Eastern H1gh School on Stale
Route 7 East of Chester, Oh1o. Sponsored by
the Eastern Band Boosters.
•

drolls d"ll P,oss air compressor socket sets tap &amp; die
sets, 'gear pullers e)Ctens1on cords electncal tape,
rules. saws floor lacks battery charger jumper cable
and lots of other tools
EATS

POSITIVE I D

CASH

•

94~2033

AUCTIONIER - DAN SMITH
UNITED INDUSTRIAL TOOL CO

NOBLE RATTS
Whitestown, lnd
Ylewong 1 hour before Sale

RUTII\ND FURNITURE
BAHGAIN CENTER
4 Drawer Chest, Reg. $69.95
3 Drawer Olest, Reg. $59.95
19" Black &amp; White TV
Book Case
Co{fee Talllir maple I
1h Site Mflttess !new seconds)

I

$48.00
$38.00
$69. 95
$38.00
$38 00

Start~

$48 .00
40" Mayt.._s Range, Reg . $169.95 $79 95
Fngidair~"IJec. Range. Reg. S399
S199. 00
3 GOLD Ef:I!CTRIC RANGES
Reg . $239,9$
$188.95
Reg. S269."
$199.95
Reg . S2~5
$199.95
New 2 pc. fteakfast Sets
Reg . $ 1 Q
$149. 95
8-19" Colat:'f)'s !good I, Reg. $300
$250.00
1
New 12 sltf''EX'Ira Long Mattresses
(secondiJ' '
$58 . 00 ea.
New Quell\ -5ize Mattresses
(second&amp;J: startmg $48 00 ea.
New Kint
Mattresses
(Sl!tonclit:"
startmg $48.00 ea.

lfz.

UpriQht.
~ er, Reg. 5129. 95
2 Dr. fte
ator, Reg. $169.95

. . "'a: . . . . . . . . . . .,. .

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2 Dr.

Refri

30" Whit
"Range, Reg. $100
30"
Rall!le, Reg. $199.95
Small
eezer. Reg. Sl39 95
Small CheiJit'reezer, Reg. $199.95
Portable Mittag Dryer
Reg. $129:9§·

Cop

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t
f

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tor, Reg $169.95

$69.95
$88.00
$110.00

$59.95
$149.95
$89.95
$149. 95
$69.95

Portable
for washroom with faucets
Reg .
$39.95
21 cu. H.
Freezer !like new)
Reg.
$229. 95
G1bson
Reg.$1H.:.

'!&lt; milt oH Rt. 7 IIY-11.., "''
St. Rt 124 toweo'cl Rulllond,
Truck
Repair
.l(lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
~"

Ex

cellent cond •t•on For mformo
CHf VY f:ll Azt.: R 4l(4
fton call992 3155 Pr~ce$ 1000
( hryenn£'1 pockogt" 79 000 or
HOSPITAL
BED Wooden head
tuol tnd&lt;"s TJit .sfNn AM f-=M
foot boards vi ny l mattress
1orl10 A C
two pockog{&gt;
cover
Chrome s1de ra1l s
( '" '"(' wh tC" &lt;. pokr whe(!IS fx
Good $60 9'12 3540
c-£&gt;11f'nt cond11 on Aft('( 5 call
99'l "19bl
AU{. li ON
FRIDAY
pm
1'117 GLASTHON TRI HAUL open
T 1ck load o f nE-w rnr• chond &lt;;r 1975 XLT RongN F01 ci 1ruck ?
fro 1t hoo t 55 h p fvmrude
1nducl111g Sdvf'rs tonr cook wa r
motor tr01IE'r 949 7537 oliN 5
ton With OYf'r load SflrlllQS :JU:l
nt Oh o R11ter Auctmn 517 H1~h
pm
rng m£&gt; Otto Irons 0 11 rand
St MlddiPpO! I
!ton Ex cPII O?n l ronrl1liO/l Call GOOD UStO rpfng NCllor CCI II
9975311
oliN 5 'IH5 JY'J'l
1973 PONTIAC Grand Prtx h
Wf HAVE chocolates d10bPhc
tras 99'2 J937
Lost and Found
r hocolot es nd other candy sup
--- --- pi1 P&lt;&gt; F re~ Easter ra ndy class
r&lt;ns
cAMARO
d
ar~
hlue
w1th
lOST All wh 1t c cot one blue eyP
(oil Carousel Confecllo ne ry m
block mtenor Goorf cond1t on
o rl one green cy&lt;' f ult on
~~ •rld l epo r t 99'1 b34')
94Q 117&lt;.1
Tl omp~on Eqw pmPn l o rf'Cl
Smal l reward &lt;N'} 35HO
IY/5 Ri=O PONTIAC VE' nlu ro ho t
TON- CHf VROLET P"""P s od
r hho(k 4 ne w hres Good cond1
lmns w &lt;lh lo ppec Good &lt;ond &lt;
l1nn Scars Ro ta id le r 8 h p ;J
lOST All wht te cot ~n e bl ue eye I o n 949 '2 119
sp forward and rcvrrsP h
onO one greftn eyP. f ulton l 9i'-1 OLDS CU TLA SS Su pre me sto
cl"' ll e nt rond111on Y4Y '1449
Thompson Equ• pmc 11 area t o n wagon $7500 or best oli N
Sma ll reword 997 3580
f
tFHE
N fOO T l owe l ine
Co n bE' SN'n ot ( tfl rC'n S Nollonal
al um nu rn boss boot 70 h p
Hon k
MrdriiPporl
or roll
LOST Lorge grey Wt&gt;HnaronE&gt;r 9'f.} 1M3
Me re st1c k steermg
fully
AppiP Crave Eas t LP !ort v1cm
cqu&lt; pped w •Oh tco dec Phone
ty Dallas Hill 247 70bA
1Yb9 CHE VY PICKUP Pho nP ofl er
~85 4339 after 5 p m
b 30p m 698 3809
mJ
HONDA CB 350 6700 m•l es
I OS T BHWHE N M1ddlepor1 ond
hcellent condit io n 7.42 'loqs
Dr Carsey s offl tP a pa ir of 1967 OLOS STARFIRE convert•ble
VNy good co nd it1 o n Stored
... ilvpr fram ed glo ... sf's w•th
REL&gt;Uct SAfE and las l w•lh
Wlll tNS C/92 3173
l•nted IPns ond '" o brown case
Go!Jese Tablet s and E Vop
PIPse coli M1ddlepo rl 993 3391
1978 FORD ' ton p1ckup 8 ft
wa ter ptll s Nelson Drug
or Po me- roy q9'} 3493
berf Rad1al t1res $3575 A 1
AP PlE S WI: ha ve RomE's ond
cond1t on Call992 2238
Wm esop Clpples Ulll 1ty grade
1974 CHEVY Z228 sharp $3000 o r
at $4 per bu E...cellent lor cook
!1~-~~!!t~c!
bes t offer 304 773 5959
~ mg Will close our o;.loroge on
Mar ch 73 frllpot nck Orc har d
KITCHEN HHP Qnd wo 1tress App 1950 FORD 4 door Good shape
SR689 Phone fl69 3785
ly m person Crows S l e o~
$1500 Coll992 56 IA
House
RI DING HO RSE an•/ saddl e 8
1978 FORO PICKUP super cob V H
years old S2SO 99'} 70 15 afte r
WOMA N OR man to represent
w•t h ca mper top Good cond•
Spm
local Id e msuronce agency tn
t1on Good gas m•leoge $5400
Me igs County Salary commts
1977 STA R(RAfT IS opi" n Iron!
949 2042
Slor sand b enefits
unl1m1led
- a nd Run about HO h p Mer cury
ea rmn gs potent10l
m1mmum 1975 CHEVY TRUCK 4x4 992 5335
motor Fu ll can vass top Good
age 71 Co li 992 6611:1 We pro lq66 G T 0 hcellenl cond1t10n
shape 992 0671:1
\/' Ide tr01m ng and pros pec ts
74'1 '1'149
WOOD DOOR For mf o rmott on
SOMEONf 18 years or older for 1970 MU ST ANG 6 cy l 250 Runs
col\ 985 42:U
r£&gt;sto uro nt work Doyor n1ght
good
S600
After
6
pm
call
IY 72 GLASTRON Tn haul opC'n
o;, h•lt 91:15 3BJ2
9WJ 3952
front boo t 65 h p Mercury
GAS STA TION a tt enda nt h1gh
mo tor Tro1l er 985 3335 S1BOO
19
75
CHEVROLH
true~ 350 V !J
school graduate Wnte f:lox
Auto Irons P S P Q tope r YOUNG ' Sem mtal beef cow
79'J E c o Do1ly SE' ntm e l
New tires '16 000 rn dE's $7850
1-' hor.~e tl 43 2653
Pome roy Oh1o
992 2Sqb

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1

New. repa1r,
gutters and
downspouts.
Wmdow cleaning
Gutter clea mng
Free Estimates
949-2862. 949-2160

PIANO
ru NJNG
14 Yr Expenenc:e
Aura-l Method

lANE DANIELS
- "'A"si0c1atecif
Elberfelds of Pomeroy
and Ktmball MuSic Center
of Athens
Phone"2 2581
or992 2082
3 11 1 mo

.--------------------.J
Your HeadquarteJS For
Armstrong Carpeting .

EWOTT
APPLIANCE II
220 E Main Street,
Pomeroy,O
C.OII"2·71l3
'For Free Estimates-

---

-- Estate for Sale
-Real
------ - - - -

SPRING SALE

-

• - -

~·-:-:-----c-

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____ ~a_!'d_5_a1E! _ _ _

If YOU hove a serv1rc to offer
wo nt to buy or sell somet hmg
oe look 1n g fo r work
or
wha tever
you II get resu lts
faster w1 th a Sentinel Wont Ad
Co ll 992 2156
FIVE fAMILY yard sole Clothes
d1shes toys E:l 30 un td 5 Sofur
day Co llege Rd
Syracuse
Watch lor s•g ns

O NE BEDROOM house lurnt5hed
Y9'} 2598

1967 TOTAL EL EC H!IC rnob1le
home furll!shed
3 bedr
washer and d rye r A1r cond •
honed I lo t 710 ft frontag e
$17 000 Pho ne 7&lt;4:.12B:'l6
bd c

1 19b5 General 6Ch 12 2 bdr
19b8 Eicona 52x t7 7bdr
1969 Buddy 60 • 17 d bdr
1970Sylvo 601112 2bd r
1970 Castle 60 x I 'J 1 bdr
1973 Arlingt on bO :c 12 ;; bdr
1Y73 R1dgewood 70 )( 14 3 bdr
YARD SA LE Oct 26 pnly 9am to 1973K•rkwood 501(17 7bdr
?
Too ls clothes etc 224
B 8 5 MOBIL~ HOM~ SALES
Walnut St M1ddleport
PT PL EASAI'IT WV
fOUR FAMil V Yord Sole of 394
Beech St m M•ddleport Thu rs
day a nd f odoy 9 3 We hove
flower po ts typewr. ter record
player d1shes and lots of
cloth1ng

POIH H SA LE Movmg out of state
FtH nl turp and flll &lt;; (
TV
wo~ h cr ond Oryer Dusky St
Sy rcuse Thurs thru Sun
FRIDAY AND SA TURDAV March
:t3 and 14 9 om untd d or~
Three fom•hes 2 m1les off
Route 7 l:ly pass r&gt;n flt 143
q91 52B2

67~474

1Y73 FRHOOM MOBIL E home
1'lx5"2 'l bedroom f•reploc£1
01 r cond1honmg underptnnmg
99261 11:1 afte r 4 or 9975413
anyhme 1
1'1 /3 F R~FD OM MOIJILE horne
Appl1onctH
un de rptnn1ng
lrreploce 992 541 3 or qq7 61 1!:1
55700

--::-:---c--- ~~

LOCATION From G.illopohs, T•ks Route 141 Wtst 4
moles ond turn left on to Lon coin Pike on Centenary and
go to Northup-P•trlot Road Go 1 mole (Do not cross
Northup Bridge)
The Followong woll be oHered
1971 Ford 5000 Diesel Tractor with Independent Power
and Duel Romole Hydraulic (2785 Hrs ), NH850 Round
Baler (1500 lb ), NHS7 3 point Sode Delivery Hay Rke
NH4S1 7' Mowing Machine ( Bell Driven) Oliver 3242
14' AdJustable Plows. 8' CockshuH Wheel Disc, 6' Bush
Hog, 16' Hay Wagon, 8 Metal Stock Racks Tracfor AM
radio, JD Corn Grfnder, 24' Hay Ele~Jator , Hr,draullc
Cylinder and Hoses Calf Creep Feeder, Catt e Bller,
Mineral Feeder, Praleln Feeder, 2 Matal Gates. 3 polnl
C.Orryall. Garden Tiller, and Moscellaneous farm hand
tools

4

Mrs. E. R. "Sonny" HeniJ, Owner

Pets for Sale

1972 ALL HECnuc tro•ler 12:te60
(Pntrol o•r underp inn mg On
RI SING STAR Kennels !Joord• ng
)nt m Mason 304 773 543fl
onrl groammg a ll hreeds
nl('S hlfC 367 0792
l? x60 tdt ou t frontogr central
..IOOF HOLLOW Engl1s h of\d
A C l ooMs as good as new 'J
Western Saddles nnd liornf'sS
berlr natural gcs h'!lot 8x24
HarM"!; and po lrr&lt;,
Ruth
porch Awn1ng on front Fur ~
..,e('ves b 1 I 6q~ 1')9{)
n1s hPrf ?92 5.157 or 949 :l20A

lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio
Phone 256 6740

-

Hammond

ORGANS

Name Brand~

Fam-

~:

PWlOS

PETE SIMPSON .....'

PACKAGE A
Includes Me!all1c Pamt
Custom Tr1m Package
Low Mount West ern U rror s
Chro me Gnlle Mag Style
Whe el Covers 811ght
Windshield Dnp and
Backlight Mo ld•ngs Ex plorer
Hood Ornament
Color Keyed F 0 A 0
tailgate letters end more

,.

Sa Ies Rep. For
Sundins
~·
Hammond Oraan~
Tyree Blvd.
Racine.
Phone 949-2118 evenlnt~
alter 5 P m
Weekend$
aftor 12 noon
2-5·1 mo,

Ohlo;

\[_ PM£
,...;:w.!l
0. !' ] '

--:-

.

"

$150 OFFI

-:

C. R. MASH

.... - -

VINYL &amp; ALUM; ~
SIDING

TRACTOR DRIVEN •
PTO ALTERNATORS
from 1S,OOOto
75,000 watts 1

MGntpliiJ

"'11railer Sales

PACKAGE C
lnclvdes Metall c Pam!
Custom Tr1m Package
Low Mount Western M1rrors
Chrome Gn lle Turbme
Wheel Covers Bright
Windsh eld Ortp and
Backlight Moldings Explorer
Hood Ornament Color
Keye d F 0 A D Ta•lgale
le!lers Power Steenng
Aulomat c Transm•ss•on T11t
Steertng Wheel Tmted
Glass A r Cond•t• on ng and
Convemence G1oup

;\-New Home
wAdd -ons
;If Remold1ngs
1i Free Estimates
992-6011

27320 Montg-ery Rd
U.ngsvll't; Ohio
614 669.-4245 veniii\,S
2Molos Eut

ofWtlkesvtlle

3·16-mo pd.

1._~----~~~2~·1~4~-1~m~o~,.J

FOH THE BEST buy m d•omonds
Go to Tawney Jeweler s 422 Se
co nd Ave Ca ll• polls Compare
pnc es anywhere

PACKAGE 8
Incl udes MetalliC Pamt
Cus1om Trim Pac ~age
Low Moun1 Wostcrn M1rrors
Chrome Gn lc Mag Style
Wheel Covers Bnght
Wtndshmld Dr1p and
Backhgt11 Mold ngs E~plorer
Hood Ornament Color
Keyed F 0 A DTallgate
Letters Power Steer ng
Automah c T1ansm•ss•on and
T11t Steenng Wheel

AVON
TO BECOME A REPHESENTAT!VE
CA LL 446 3358 FOR DETA IL S
RED UCE 5ofc &amp; !mil w1th GoBe!&gt;e
Tab le ts &amp; ~ Vap wa le! pdls
Gillmgham Drugs

$3000FFI

NOW ACCEPTING

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOtOR
SII)P.

OPEN: Til6 P . M. Except Thursday &amp; Saturday 111

FORD

11 Years Exper•ence
Will Make
SerVICe calls

APPLICATIONS

PACKAGE D.
In cludes Melal!•c Pant
Custom Tnm Package
Low Mount Weslern M1 rro's
Chrome Gnlle Turb ne
Wheel Covers Bnghl
Windshield Drip and
Back light Mold ngs EJCplorer
Hooel Ornament
Color Keyed F 0 A D
Tatlgate Leners Power
Steer1ng Aut omatiC
Tra nsm•ss on T11t Steer ng
Wheel Tmted Glass A r
Cond•bon ng Con11e mence
Group and Deluxe Pickup
Box Co11er
$35QOFF

..-----------...,

Full or Parttune Do not
apply hetween JJ a.m and
1 p m Apply m person at

URADFORD Auc tiOne er Com
plete Serv1ce Phone 949 2-487
or 949 2000 Rocme Oh•o (r II
Bradford
~LWOOO
BOW~RS REPAIR
Sweepe rs toa sters 1ro ns all
small applia nces Lawn mowe r
nex l to Stole H1 ghwoy Garage
on Route 7
SEWING MACHINE Repo~r s ser
\/' ICe all makes 992 2284 The
Fobnc Shop
Pomeroy
Auth omed Smge r Soles a nd
SerVICE! W e sharp en SciSSors
GOlF -LESSONS shoes gl oves
elc
J o hn
Teaford
514 91:1 5 3691

-

GoLF LESSONs Shoes gloves
etc::
Joh n
Teaford
~1 4 985 3961
serv•ces Offered

THE SHAKE SHOPPE
901 Second Avenue
Galhpohs, Oh1o

1

S:OO. Closed Sunday.

PAT HILL FORD

See Rockv Hupp Darrell Dodnll or Pat Htll,
General Manaaer. for a Good Deal on a New or
Used Vehtcle
992 2196
M idd le por t 0

- - ----

EXCAVATING .ozer backhoe
and dttcher Charles R Hot
f1eld
Back Hoe Serv1ce
R\Jtlond Oh1o Phone 742 2008

-- - -

1:\ATHROOM S AND K1tchen s
remodeled cerom•c t1le p1um
bmg carpentry and general
mo1ntenance 13 years eK
pe nence 992 3685
"'

-

---

- ~

- .... -

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Se nttce Phone 992 2478
AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been :
cancelled? la51 your operafo rs
l1 cense? Pho ne 992 2143
•

-

~

MOBILE HOME repo~rs Furnaces
elec tncol work pipes sowed •
pl umb1 ng 992 5858

WILL CARE lor two 1nvohd or
elde rly persons 1n my ho me
Twenty yea rs experience
Rea sonable rofes 992 6022 or
9915472

WALlPAPE~ING

-

- - --

AND po ln t.ng

Coll742 2328
HOWERY AI'IO MARTIN Ex
c.ovottng
sept1c systems
dozer backhoe Rt 1ld3 Phone :
I (614) 696 7331
~

-

-

•"

OHIO APPROVED SALE
CALF UNitS

Sale consisting of spnnger cows and cowcalf units (Beef and Beef Cross Breed On ly l. Expectmg 500 600 feeder calves each
sale Calves and yearlings will be state
graded into uniform lots

l·oo A1ovlt "'Sooner or...._., 3.15; Movie "The Ten

Commenclmtnll" 6,13, All In The Family 8.10;
F.Y.I. 22; Movie "The Dlon Brothers" 17
8 •311-()ne'Dey At A Time 1,10; MUIIC from WOU8 20.
t·DO--Allce 8.10; Mllterplece Thtetre 20,33
9:30-Just Frlendl 1,10.
10:110-WHk" 3,15; Mary Tyler Moore Hour 8.10.
Dr~~gnet 17; MUilc from WOUB 20, Firing Line 33

Cattle w•ll be received the day of the sale
unlll 3:00 P.M. and the Evenmg before
3:00P.M. ti118:00 P.M .

SPONSORED BY:
THE OHIO VAI.L£Y UVESTOCK FEEDER'CAlf
COMMITTEE

10:30-Rutf HOUle 17.
11:00 Newi3,8.10,1S, ep,n Up 17; Movlt "Belle of the
Nlnetlft" 20; Wall Street Week 33
11 :15-PMA PuiM 15.
11 :30 A\ovlt "fhl: Gly SltMn" 3; Movie "Trader
Horn"151l'IIOClubl; F.w The Nation 10.
'
12:00 Mlwle "All
Home" 10.
12:30 News 13

for More lnfonnation Phone:
Ohio Valley liwzblck Co. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

614 446 3941

I

SUNDAY1 MARCH 25, 1979
5:30-AG-USA 17; 6:0G-Amerlcan Problems &amp;
Challenge~ tO; Up CI- With Lillian Carter 17.
6·30-For You ... 81Kk Woman 8, Treehouse Club 10,
Thll Is The Lll9 13; Dl~a~YWy 17,
7:0G-Eddte S.Uncler1 6, Thlnklnt In Black 8; Urban
Lee;ue10; Nltwsmaker '7913, Jlininy Swaggart 17
7 30-Show My Peopl.6; Jerry Falw.ft 8, 10, Tfie Bible
Antwen 13; Chrltt For The World 17.
I oo-T.telhon Continue• 3, 15, Grace Cathedral 6,
Chrlllt For The World 13; Thrt1 Stoogu &amp; Friends
17; Sesame St 20.33
1.30--Celllbrd... of PraiM 6; Day of Discovery •·
Jamtl Robison Present• 10; Willard Wilcox 13
t·oo-Rex Humbard 6; Rev. Leonard Repass 8, Oral
Roberts 10; Rev. Jim Frlllklln 13, Lost In Space
17; M111w Rogen 20,33.
9·30-Whal Does The Bible Plainly Say 1. Elec. -co. 33;
It Is Wrlft.n 10; Dlrtetl... s13, Sesame St 20
10:110-Kids are People Too 6; Chrllltlan Center 8,
Movie "Villa Rldti'' 10, Jimmy Swaggart 13;
Hazel 17; Studlo SiN 33
10·30-Robert Sc:huller 8: Blue Ridge Quartet 13,
Movie "Air Force" 17; Zoom 20, Big Blue Marble
33.
llJIIO-'-Telethon Conttnun 3.1~; Rebop 20,33, Rev
~Mahan 13.
11.
nlmalo, Anlmels, Animals 6; Rev R A Wu
13, Elec: Co. 20; Turnabout 33.
12•GO-Iuuet&amp;Answers6,13; FceThe NationS, Music
From WOUB 20; Malterpl~ Theetre 33
12:30-Direc:tlons d, VIewpoint 8, Tht Issue 10.
Evangelistic Outreach 13.
•
!.lit-Communique 6; Bill Dance Outdoon 8,
C"-l!enge o !He
10; Wild Kingdom 13; Rat
Patrol 17; Wllhlnglon WHk In Rtvlew 33.
1 :30-Amtrlca'l 81Kk Forum 6; Flom 8; Midwest
Outdoor- 13; BIHbell 17, Another Voice 33
1::t5-NBA llalketbell 1.10, 2·oo-Telelhon Continues
3, 15; Boxing 13; Women's Tennis 6, Kanawha
County BOiird Of Education Meeting 33
3:»--Pro-AM Skiing 13; High School Baoketball 33.
4:0D-Pro-AM Skiing 6; Golf 1,10. Movie "Francis of
Aalll" 17.
•·30'-Widt World 01 $porls6,13, Au1ttn City Limits 20.
5:0G-Talethon Continues ~.15; High School Basketball
33.
3·30-MUIIc From WOUB 20.
6:0G-PUIM61 C... mplanshlp Fishing 8; News 10, ABC
l'tewt 13; Wrettllng 17.
6:30 , .....,.,, CBSNewsl,10; BaHfeofthePianets t3;
Hlah Sdlool llalke!Ull 33.
7:110-World ol 01~ 3, 15, Friends 6.13. 60 Minutes
1,10; Ster Trek 11.
7:30-Henk 20.

s.-

FEEDER CAlf &amp; CCM-CCM

61444~7222

1978 DfEV. IMPAlA 4 DR..... '6495
Custom '2 tone g r een 305 v 8 air cond P
d0
doorlocks P s t eermg &amp; brakes cru 1 s~ co~~~~ ~~t
wheel AM FM radio rea ll y loaded &amp; only a 500 miles
100 pet guaranree 90 days Never tttled Save a bundle

Th•s week s Spectal

SHElL TREASURE o d1omon d from
TAWNEY JEWHE~S for a
ld e t1m e
Wheth er 11 s an
engagement wedd•ng se t or
dnme • nng she II wear 11 w1 th
pnde f ro m $99 50 ru sh lo 424
Second Av enue 446 1615
W VA

HERE fOflO BRHOERS
ASSOCIAT ION Annual Sprmg
Show an d Sole 10 bull ! &gt;
14
lemole!l Saturday Ma rc h 31
Show 10 o m Sole I p m ot
Joclo.son s M1ll Wes ton WV
I or colo log wn te Mar to ne
O urs Rt 3 Box 310 Buckh.o n
non WV 76201

DICK NEAL, Sect.
Galpolis, Ohio
6143888287

Thew.-,

o•ncv

1.0D-£1n•
One 13; Movie "Seconds" 17
1 30-News 15; 2 DO-ABC Ne.ws 13
3 00 Movie "Killera Arw C... llengect'' 17
• 51F-Dregnet 17.

••

'

..
'

.

•I

MONDAY, MARCH 26,1979
5 20-World at Large 17, 5 45-Farm Report 13
5 50--PTL Club 13, 5 55--Sunrise Semester 10
6 OG-70 Club 6,8, PTL Club 15, 6 25--Publlc Affairs 10
6 30--Romper Room 17, 6 45--Mornlng Report 3.
6 50--Good Morning, West Virginia 13
6 55-Chuck While Reports 10. News 13
7 oo-Today 3, 15, Good Morning America 6, 13,
Schoolles 10, Monday Morning 8, Three Stooges
Little Rascals 17, 7 15-Weather 33
7 3()-Family Affair 10. Sesame Sf 33
8 ()()-Capt Kangaroo 8 10, Leave II To Beaver 17
8 30-Hazel 17
9 oo-Bob Braun 3, Phil Donahue 13,15, Emergency
One 6, Hogan's Heroes 8, Match Game 10. Lucy
Show 17
9 3()-Brady Bunch 8, Hogan's Heroes 10 Green Acres

17
10 00-Card Shar~s 3,15, Edge of Night 6 All In The
Family 8,10, Movie "Till We Meet Again" 17
10 3Q-AII Star Secrets 3,15, $20,1100 Pyramid 13, Andy
Griffith 6, Price Is Right 8,10
l1 oo-High Rollers 3,15, Elec Co 20
11 3()-Wheei of Fortune 3,15, Family Feud 6,13 Love
of Life 8,10, Sesame St 20,33
ll 55--CBS News 8 House Call 10, News 17
12 oo-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10, Young &amp; the Restless
8, Midday Magazine 13, Love American Style 17
12 3()-Ryan's Hope 6,13, Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
Not for Women Only 15, Elec Co 33, Movie " The
Hasty Hearl" 17
1 oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15, All My Children 6, 13,
Young &amp; the Restless 10
1 30-As The World Turns 8,10, 2 oo-Docfors 3,15,
One Life To Live 6, 13, 2 25--News 17
3 DO-General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
Speed Racer 17, Lowell Thomas Remembers 33
3 30--Mash 8, Joker' s Wild 10, Flintstones 17, Over
Easy 20. Footsteps 33
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Hollywood Squares 15, Merv
Griffin 6, Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8, Batman 10,
Sesame St 20,33, Dinah 13, Space Glonts l7
4 30--Bewltched 3, Gilligan's Is 8, Brady- Bunch 10.
Petticoat Junction 15, Gilligan's IS 11
5 oo-1 Dream of Jeannie 3, Beverly Hlllbllies 8,
Mister Rogers 20,33, Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Six
Million Dollar Man 13, Brady Bunch 15 , I Dream of
Jeannie 17
5 30-Carol Burnet! &amp; Friends 3, News 6, Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec Co 20, Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd
Couple 15, Lucy Show 17; Doctor Who 33
6 OG-News3,8,10,13,15, ABC News6. Andy Griffith 17.
On Nature's Trail 20
6 30-NBC News 3,15, ABC News 13. Carol Burnett &amp;
Frlo~ds6, CBS Nows8,10, My Three Sons 17, Over
Easy 20
7 0()-Cros Wlfs 3, Newlywed Game 6,13, Pop Goes
The Country 8, News 10, Love, American Style 15 ,
Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17, Dick Cavett20, Know
Your Schools 33
'
7 3()-That Nashville Music 3. Muppet Show 6, Price Is
Right 8, Wild Kingdom 10, $1 98 Beauty Show 13,
Nashville On T~e Road 15, Sanford &amp; Son 17,
MacNeil Lehrer I Report 20,33
8 OG-Little House On The Prairie 3, 15, Captain &amp;
Tennille 6,13, W,hlj e Shadow 8,10, ':1" Moyers'
Journal :10,33, L't's Go To The Races 17
8 3G-Chlldren of the Third World 17
9 oo-NCAA Basketball 3,15, All American Woman
6,13, Mash 8,10, Academy Leaders 33, Movie
"Serenade(' 17, Growing Years 20
!I 30--WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10
10·oo-Lou Grant 8,10, News 20, Up In Rosebud County
33
10 3()-Aimanac 20
1l oo-News 3,8,10,13,15, Crockett' s VIctory Garden
20, Ripping Yarns 33
ll 30-Johnny Corson 3,15, Pollee Story 6,13, Rockford
Flies 8, ABC News 33, Movie "Guns at Batasl" 10,
Movie "Paris Does Stange Things" l7
12 4()-McMillan &amp; Wife 8, lronolde 13
I oo-Tomorrow 3, 1 2~Movle "Stromboli ' l7
1 4()-Newo 13; 3 05--News 17, 3 25--0pen Up 17

•

'3795

ONLY

1978 MONTE CARLO LANDAU •••'6495
L•ght blue wtth wh vm y l top 231 V 6 engfne, full
power, me l w tndows &amp; door locks AM F M stereo
radto cr utse t1l t st wheel. radtal w stnpe ttr es atr
cond lots ot ot he r extr as Dealer Demo SAVE

1978 IMPAlA OOUPE ...........~395

'3695

Loca ll owner &amp; onl y 11 000 m1les AM FM rad10, poWer
w mdows &amp; D Locks cru 1se control t1lt st wheel, a 1r
coo d dogotal clock 305 V 6, P S P B, and sharp car
Sti ver w•th red v tn y l tap

1976
TRIUMPH T.R. 7

1977 PINTO 2 DR ••••••••••••• s2795

'4200

' speed, AM
Buyn'g Pr1ce

1976 MUSTANG II CPE. •••••••• s2795
4 cyl automatic good ttres blue ftni s h radto good
economy &amp; real s por ty

I

4 cyl , automatiC trans, good t1res good economy &amp; a

Rad10 color whtte

1975 GRANADA FORD 4 DR••••• '2895
6 cy l engme atr cond

au tom at c P s teen ng good

w w fires radto v1ny l roof , color green

1975 NOVA CUSTOM 4 DR•••••• '2595
Vinyl 1ntenor, BucksKm co lor 6 cy l
steenng good ftres loca l l owne r

LJutomaT1c

'3195

All the l ine features Ponloac ha slo
J lf e r tncludtng C B ra dio

tMa 6%%¥,~%'i*W%W"&lt;»&lt;.:'\%:l$@tiiW.tMma. ~fji
1973 Buick Estate Wagon ................. 11495
1973 Buick leSabre 4 dr ........... ......... 1895
1973 Buick Cenlu1J ...... ............ ...... 11495
1973 Ford Pinto Wagon ...... . ..... ........ '995
1972 Buick leSabre ............... .. ........ 1595
1973 Ford T-Bird. AClassic................ 12195
1973 Ford 4 dr......... .... ..... ... .... ..'1295
1973 Ford Galaxie 500 ................... 11095

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON •••••. s2295

p

SAVE.,MONEY, SAVE GAS, NEW
LUV 2 Wh. Dnve &amp; 4 Wh Dnve Pickups

Buy Your Ned Car from The Fnendly Deal er We care
about you Come m and see or call one of These
Fnendly Salesmen J D Story , Ray Douglas or Btll
Nelson

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Chevrolet
"Your Chevy Dealer"
992 2126

TELEPISION
VIEWING

EXCAVATING dote r loader o~d
backhoe work dump frucks
and Ia boys for h1re wtll haul
ftll dtrt to sod l1mestone a~d
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone 992 70S9 n1ght
pho ne 992 3525 or 992 5232

NOW HAULING l1mestone tn
M1ddl e port Pome roy area Call
lor free eshmate 367 7101

TOMMY JOE STEWART

1977
CHEVROLET IMPAlA 4 DR
'iT

500
Business Services •

WATER AND mt sc ha ul mg Call
9'12 S856

PAINTING AND Sondbla51!ng
free es hmates Coll949 2686

1978 DfEVY MONlA CPE •••••• SS495
Cabrtolct v m yt roof 305 v 8 engme automat 1c p s
P £ til t wheel c ru1 se cu stom custom spor t mtenor
rad .al wh t•rcs atr cond c on sole AM FM stereo
rold to 11 s loaded less than 9 800 mt les 100 pet
guarantee 90 days N('ver t•fled Pn ced to move

BUYlNGI All Un1t ed State s1I1Jer
co1ns Top pnccs h1g her pnces
for s1~ver dollars and early
co ns MTS Co1n Shop Coli
4A6 1847 o r 44fl 0690

f C ElECTRICAl Contractor serv ,
mg Ohto Volle y reg• on SiK ,
days a week 24 hours serv1ce' ~
Emergency call s Call 882 2952 ;
or 882 2305

WILL CARE lor the e lde rly m our
home Phone 992 73 14

BILL NELSON

The cars lo s ted are a selected group, local
cars , qualoty all th e way and woll g1ve great
gas m1leage .

local 1 owner ca r

37-1 mo. ( Pd l
Busmess Servtces

No Gimmicks-No Giveways
SIMPLY QUALITY CARS
AT GOOD FAIR PRICES

Local ow ner clean mtenor AM FM C B rad•o good
hres

$ 2 0 0 OFFI

'

lHURS., APRIL 26 STARTING 8:00 P.M.

10:30 AM

Cash

I
I·"

Now Ope11 on Weekends,
weather
permttttng .
Located tn Rto Grande on
Evans Farm.s.

lHURS., APRIL 12 STARTING 8:00P.M.

Saturday, March 31, 1979

Terms

SWEEPER and sewlflg moch111c
re pa1r ports and supplies P• c ~
up 01,d del1very Do Vts Vacut m
CloonPr , rn le up Georges
Creek Rd Ph oU 6 079A

WEU.S' RIDING
STABLES

(Cows without calves wil be preg. tested)

FARM SALE

~o.!Jo_Je-Hpn_i~ (or_ Sal!:

1955 Pro•ne Schooner 28 x 8

JEEP
APRIL lr7

~o

ANTIQ UES bought and so ld
Wh 1te s Ant1ques
Rt
3S
Rod ney Coll 245 5050

All types roofong, guHers
and downspouts. All types
home m••ntenance - new
and repa1r Storm doors
and w1ndows All -rk
years
20
guaranteed
Free
E!•pertence
Tom
eshmates , Ca II
Hoskms, 949 2160
3 7 1 mo

1191mo

WC' ICJvr rl

Nollces

651 Beech Street
Middleport. 0.
992-2356

-

J:.

Mid
Home Maintenance

.

---~

-

EXPLORER
TRUCK SPECIAL
•

•New Home
*Add · ons
•Remolding
992·60l&gt;l
2l11moPd

Ohio Valey Roofing

r'!ll('

01

Death III;'Ov(&gt;" n wn 11Hino 111f'to••
heal
lh('y live w1t h u ~ 111 m~mo riC"'
sttll
Not iUS I today but always wd l
Sodly m1 ssed by the lom•ly

Service

SIDING

H. L Wrff.esel
Roofing

FARM FOR sa le House 2 barn s
Iq76 F 250 Ford truck and 1100
trader Lorge po nd l 0 ocres or
For
Sale
boles m1xed hoy Ca ll 992 '1877
--....,
8'} acres 742 25M
olter 0 pm
COA L LIMESTONE sand grovel
Bf AUTY OPERATORS w th Oh 1o
coiCiu m chlo rid e ferti lize r dog ONE ACRE lots ne ar Longs\1'1ll e
I
971
CADILLAC
HDORADO
Ex
hcf'/l&lt;.f' Send rPstmw to Bnx
O h1 o Co ll7 47 7409
and oll types of soh Ex
food
ce lt en t cond 111 on
Phone
r;y K c o the Oo,/y Sf'&gt;ut1 (' I
cel5•or
Sa
lt
Works
Inc
E
Mom
qq'} 7462
~ , acre!!&gt; m Pomeroy Secluded
Pn nNoy Oh 1o
St Porne roy 992 3891
wooded area o n top of hdl
1977 CHEVROlET 4x4 s ho rt wheel
EVERYTHING S GOTTA GO
Overlook!!&gt; r1 ver Wol e r e lec
base Mos!ley Fe rgu son co rn
House ond lot
lurmtu re
lrtC available 992 3886
planter
corn
cui ii VOio r
doth cs cor all my hou sehold
_ Wante&lt;!_t~ (!u.y _
9Y2 701:14
REAL ESTATE loons Purchase a nd
•tems Drop by 7t:IJ l du re l Sl
re l•nonce 30 year ferms VA
CHIP WOOD
Pol es
max
M1
ddl
epor
t
No money down (el •g•ble
d•ometer 10 on la rgest end 1973 GRAN'TfPRlX s~ roof lope
power w mdaws
E11cellent GOOD MI Xl: O hoy fo r sole
veterans) fHA As low os 3
S12 per to n Bu ndled s lo b $10
shape t:oll992 50t:l3
843 :1432
per cent down ( non vete rens l
per ton De li ve red to Oh o
Ire la nd Mortgage Co 77 E
Pollet Co
HI 2 Po meroy
REDUCE SAf E on d lost w1th
lj&lt;,J 268Q
Stole Alhens 614 592 3051
Tab le ls and E Vop wat er
_ ~a_m_p!!!9. .E 9.!1 op J!ll!.n t Coi:IE&gt;se
p1lls Ne lson Drug
THR H
BEDROOM
ran c h
OLD FURNITURE 1c:e boxes brass
19b7 BANNER 19 Tra . . e l tra ile r
Carpeted
0 1r cond1t 1oned Pnc
beds rr on beds des ks etc:
w• th own1 ng
5 1350
Coli GOOD MIX EO hoy Sl bole Co li
ed very re a so nab ly
In
com plete households Wnte
oller 5 pm 992 7573
992 3574
M 0 M1ll e r Rt 4 Pomeroy or
Syracuse 992 5346
call 997 7760
1967 HOLIDAY 21 se lf cant omed fOR YOUR candy and coke sup MODERN THR~E bedroom house
pltes come to 0• s Spnng
w•th 18xl0 owmng SIBOO See
lull basement f1r e place tully
OLD COINS pocket watches
Vo lley Pla za Free Este r ~ an dy
at
Royal
Oak
Pork
Phone
carpeted central 01r enclosed
doss rrngs weddmg bonds
clossos
Col\
446
2134
Mor1etto 373 q844
s un porch loca ted on 6 1 a c r e~
d1omonds Gold or sil ver Coli
o n CR 28 approx 3 m•les from
Roger Wo ms le y 742 2331
Racme If 1nte res ted con tact
19
70
ST
ARCRAFT
FOLD
dow
n
WANT TO bu y old 45 ond 78
lo
rry Woll e 949 2836 weekends
Sleeps
8
$1800
PhanP
ca
mper
Mark Your Calendar!
phonog rap h r('cord s
Call
o nd after 5 8\l'en•ngs
Q9') 6121
'192 6370 or Contort Marlin Fur
Come Reg1ster at
mture
25 ACRES 2 be dr oo r(l house
-----,~
$50 000 Ches ter bl4 985 4371
For Rent
WANTED TO buy old 1ewel. y
O f 304 343 8789
Coli 992 5262 or wr1te Kay CO UNTRY MO!JtlE Home Pork
THRH BWROOM two s to ry older
Cecd 87 S 2nd M1ddlcport
Rout e 33 north of Pomeroy
100 PRIZES FIRST
homo w1th three lots Locate d
OH
Lorge lots Coi i 99'J 7479
PRIZE 4 WHEEL DRIVE
at 14 Hill Street Pome roy
CASH FOR 1unk cars 24 hour 3 AND 4 RM furniShed an d un
$.t 500
II mterested
call
wrecke r
serv 1ce
frye .,
lurn1sh e d
o pt s
Phone
843 2b26
Rutla nd OH 742 2081
991 5434
WANTI:D TObuy 5 loo t brush
hog Note Vonomon Rutla nd TWO BEDROOM mob1le home
~-~- G1Ve Away_ ~-k1tc he n furmshed
Pref e r
OhiO 742 2761
THR H Po rt Seagle pu pp•es 2
IS THE PlACE!
m1ddle aged cou ple o r elderly
mole I fe ma le 8 weeks old
FOUR BE DROOM rural home that
couple No pets 992 2749
lo ng ho ~r and short 985 4283
w1 ll meet FMHA stonrlords
Border Te r'n e r yo ung cute
JACK W. CARSEY,
SENIOR CITIZENS Apls
I
74') 3074
Poodl e
wh1te
m1mo tu re
be droom bedr If you are on SS
MGR.
fprnole young mrllled breed
or D•sob i11 ty SS re nt based on
PH . 992-2181
t1 ny 6 to 8 weeks o ld pupy
tncome 992 7772 between 9
Humane !oc1ety 992 5853
om a n~~pm

- - ---------

cl !

Auto &amp;

pullets bo th floo r o r cage
grown QIJO.Iable Poultry Hous
mg ond Autornot1an Modern
Poultry 39&lt;1 W Mom Pomeroy
Phone 992 2 164

.
HANDMADE ITHACA tropgun

S('VC'I C'

l n por t w1 th

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

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.

o.

H &amp; N Day old or started legho rn

ICJi"/

f:IAR HH~ needed 992 3ft60 bet
wf!en 8 30 anti 'I 30 o rn

•

TOOLS

•

'
lmpack wrenches, screwdnvers, a1r tools, electrlC

HYSEll
GARME

DUE to the death of my hu sband I
hove lor sole a 197tt Dodge 1
ton wrec ker re ln eve r wench
Dollies 250 It cable m1leoge
17 427 Askmg $8500 Con be
seen at 342 Beech St M1d
dleport OH 992 '1776

~-

'

~ER

IN lOVING II'C'mory of Vn~d R
M1l lt' ' whb ra ssrrl ~Jwo.,.- 1 nl"
) " Ots ago today
l•lllr d1d wr know whr 1 downrd
thnt mn rn ng
Tllf' '-OI row th a t d(ry would br 111~
li1r r&gt;nd was suOO('II the !&gt;hock

E

Mam

Pomeroy

Pomeroy,

0

992 2174

Open Evehmgs TIIB:OO p m

· -- - - - - NoiJces

ANNUAL INSPECTION
OF MORIAH COUNCIL
NO. 32
SAT., MAR. 31, 1979
AT5 PM
Royal Master Degree
Otnner at 6 30 P M
Wtth the ladtes 1nv1ted .
o.nner bV reservatton only .
I··Reservattons can be made
by callmg 446 2904 And
must be tn by March 28.

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIOOERS
Nottce 1S he r eby 911w'en that
sealed bi dS w•ll be rece,ved
by the Ctty Manager of th e
C1ty Of Gaii iPOits. OhiO at ht S
off•ce 1n the M unt c1 p al
Bud dmg for Publ 1c Works
Equ pm en t p un;hase
B1ds wdl be r eceived at the
above named off•ce until
12 00 Noon loca l t1m e o n
Wednesday Ma r ch 28, 1979
and publiCly opened and r ead
a l tha t hour and place B1d
forms may be oblamed 1n the
off iCe of th e c, ty Milnag er
518 Secon d Alw'enue C1t y o f
Galtt pOI IS OhiO
Equ•pment to be B1d
One (1) Onl y Pla t e Com
pact or
One (IJ Only Backhoe
Trencher
One ( 1) Onl y Shovel Shelf
One (1) On ly Ma ntenance
Kett le
One ( 1) Only Leaf Lo ader
Marc:h 18 75

POMEROY LANES
Tuesday Trtpltcate
March 20, 1979
Pts
Reuter Brogan Ins
76
Fn end!y Tave r n
64
Royal Oak Park
48
Royal Crown Cola
48
Doug's Man ne Sales
26
Robe r t Roboe Cons!
24
Hogh lnd Game
Bev
Hensley 210 He le n Phelps
204 De bbte Hawley 194
Ma x m e
H 1g h Senes Dugan 519 Bev He nsley 518
Oebb1e Hawley 5 17
Team H1gh Game Fnendly Tavern 525
Team H ig h Se ri es Re uter Bro~an Ins 1464

SWAIN

AUCTION BARN
We sell anythong for
anybody at our Aud1on
Barn or 1n your home. For
1ntormat1on and p1ckup
se•voce call 256· 1967
Sale Every Saturdoy
Noghtat7 p m .

\SWAIN

AUCTION SERVICE
Kenneth Swain , Auct
Corner Thord &amp; Olive

wanted to Buy

SLHP ING rooms lor rent Goll•o
Hote l
GOOD USE D FURNITURE no t Sl EEP ING ROOMS AND I ght
upholstered and app l•onccs
1 housekce p1 ng roo ms PARK
Ph 446 032'1
CE NTRA L HOTEL
LA RGE quan l•t •es of F~rewood TWO BDR MOBilE HOME Call
Phone 675 4426
446 0508
TIMBER AND LOGS Pomeroy For 45 ACRES flat land 9 m below
rest Produ cls Call 992 5965
Go ll po l1 5 on rve r 2500 lb
toba cco bose Coli 256 6038
OLD CO IN S DIAMO NDS go ld
olte r6pm - ~ _____ _
bonds pocket watches estate
1ewe lr y
et c
TAW NEY TWO BEDROOM mob•le home
JEWE LERS 422 Second Ave
!u rn shed $140 pe r month plu s
secunty depos1t Adul1s only
OLD BATT ER I~ S S7 00 Rod1ators
No pe ts On Raccoon Rd Coli
ond scro p 1ron Call 446 3560
446 1128
GARDE N SPACE Coli 446 2647
wanted to Rent
alte r 5 pm

-

~

~~

MI NISTER des1res 3 bdr home 1n SMALl TRAILER lnqu~re ot 121
Rt ver St Kanougo
VIC im fy o t Pomt Pleasant Coli
675 51:126
TWO BDR mob1l e home Parle r
area 10 mil es from Galltpol• s
HOUSE or two or three bed
Ca ll367 7101
h01l e r !urn or unlu r that wil l
a llow on mlon t ch.ld and oul SMAll FURNIS HE D Apartment 1
door pels Dogs will be tn me tol
or 2 odulls No pets Ref req
pen Prefer out of fawn Call
63 1 Fourt h A\l'enue
675 3336
APARTMENT unfurn ished Call
2.:15 5060
Pets for Sale
NICE TWO BOR TRAILER near
CE NTENARY WOODS PET
Shopp•ng Plaza
Ref
req
GROOM ING FACILITIES Pro
Adu lts o nl y No pels Sec dep
less anal Servtces off e red al l
446 249 1
breeds all styles Ph 446 0231
THREE BEDROOM HOUSE on Rt
HILLCREST KENNElS boordmg
IbO 3 miles from HMC Dep
Also AKC Reg Oobc rmon s red
req Call 446 1527
ond blocks Coll 446 7795

-

~

~

~

RISING STAR KE NNEL Boord mg
and groom ng All Breeds
3fl7 0292
BRIARPATCH KEN NElS Boo rdmg
groommg AKC Gordon Set
lers English Cocke r Spon• e.ls
Co ll446 .4 191
RISING STAR KE NN El Boordmg
ond gr~om 1 ng ~6Z..~2~2
DRAGONWYND CATTERY KEN
NH AKC Chow Chow dogs
CFA S1omese H•m oloy o n a nd
wh11e Pers 1on ca ts Htmolayon
and blue eyed wh1te Pers1on
k1tten ready to go Apn! IS
Co mpletely tra1ned
Ca ll
446 3B44 afte r 6 pm

- --

-

~ -,--

AKC REG DOBERMAN bla ck
mo le 12 w~s old $100 Call
44fl 0159
AKC REG GERMAN S H EPH~RO
pupp1es
Free obed1ence
lessons The large s1ze of these
dogs a lone may prov•de good
protec11on lor your home $85
Co lli 286 2939
---- -~

For Lease

- -- - -

Help Wanted

For Rent

JUNK ou to a nd scra p meta l Ph
388 8776

--.

- -------

SPA~~EASE

3,000 sq ft available tn a
bu1ld to su1t 6,000 strip
center
Loca1ed Rt 62
north wtthtn c1ty of P1
Pleasant Convenient Food
Marts has comm1tted to
3,000 sq ft Construction
begms i' ppr o• Apnl 1 In
te r~s tccJ-.partu~s .nqu.re PO
Box 788, Hunttngton, W.
Va . 25712 304-525· 5139

FOR RENT

NEWLY DECORATED
OFFICE SPACE
Close to Galha Co Court
Hou se &amp; C1fy Bu1ld1ng 2
rooms 320 sq It , a.r con dtfoned
Call In Pers on Only
At 512 2nd Ave
Gatllpolt s, Oh1o

LIVE IN COUNSELOR lor trc nm

t1 onol
fo • l•ty
f or 8
dev elopmentally di sa bl ed
odulls n Go ll 1 poh~ Confa [l
Joyce Mrlhken P 0 BoJ&lt; 900
Go lh pohs
Oh10
or coli
440 1b-41 ex t 332 Eq u a l Op
po rtu n1 f ~ Employer
NEEDED
h
BOOKKEEPER
per ence
re quned
Se ,n
resume to BQ)• No 135 co
Goll•pohs Dody Tnbune 875
Th1rd A&gt;Je Goll1pOits
WANTED
Handyman Roof• ngond s poutmg
roof carpenter Mu st bP e T
pene 1ced
G!ve expe n e nce
and expecte d stort•ng wa ge
Steady work Wnte to P 0 Box
150 PI Plea sant WV 25550
WANTED Someone tr l.)lo w o
garden w1th o rea1 t ..r rolo
t ile r Troy B1lt or ulhe r ty pe
Call 446 3885
PERSON to dean •n pn&gt;Jate home
I or 2 afternoons or even1ngs
per week Must hove love lor
on1mols ho'lfe references a nd
tron5por tot•on Coli 446 A416
alter 2 pm

--

--

--

~

--

MALE ORFEMALE Fuendly h01d
wor k ng
spor tsmmded
n
d1v dual Mu s l be abl e to work
hou rs of 9 om to Spm ond occo
s•a nol fr1 evenmgs 111 8 pm
Coll44b 241 1 lo r mterv.ew
SUP ERVISOR for d ry clean c enter
Apply m person at Scotch Cleon
Cen ter
SECURITY
Insure yourself agomsl layoff or
reduced
•nco me
Steady
e mployme nt 1n saleswo,.k lor
no t1onol monulocturer
$150
per week
p ot~ nt1ol
Call
675 6060 An Equa l Opportun1ty
Emp loyer

-

_

__.,___.

- --

~

BABYSITTER NEEDED m my home
Rt 588 near Bob McCorm•c k Rd
Call 4461783
10

Help Wanted
NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS for
afternoon and evemng work
Apply 1n person a t Barrs Super
marke t ~~V•n~S~Golll po l1 s
HH P WAN TED Apply m person at
Ho r Happemng S lver Bndge
Plo2a

PEOPLE NEEDED Pleasant
wor ktng
co nd1t1 on s
lo r
le lephone work Apply Room
I07 PI Pleasonl Inn See Mr
Shoemaker

LADIES Ecrn $75 to $100 port
t•me $200 $300 tuU ttrne per
week Cor necessary
Send
resu mes to Box 137
co
Ga lhpo 1s Do1ly Tr1bune 875
Th1rd Ave

FOOD SERVICE DIRECTOR
To Manage onstotutional
operation IR
J C.A H
l69 Bed regional
hospotal.
Bachelors degree in related foeld preferred
woth proor manager.al experience in a
hosp1tal food serv1ce department. Full
respons•b•loty for pat1ent and cafetena food
servoce. Competitive salary and benef•t
package

~end resume to Janet Ma1er, Director of
Personnel, Holzer Medical Center, P.O. Box
280, Gallo polls, Oh. 45631.
An aflormahve act1on/EEO Employer
.

�v&lt;&gt;- ""' i&gt;llnuay

OJ.I-The Sunday Tomes-&amp;nllnel

umes&amp;nttnel Sunday Mar 25 1979

For Best Results Use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Auto Sales
1975 CHEVROlET

IM~AlA 2 d
hardtop PS PB o c u se con
trol t nted gloss 350 V f! Png
only 40 000 m les
On k
netall c blue o c ow e l ko
new w th 5 new t es Reaso
for sole
boughl ow co
!3 000
Ask g p ce
Co I
44b4229
1978 BUCK SKYHAWK
P' e
Reduc ed
Mu 5
se
No
rt&gt;o5onobl e off er ref used b e
cond l oaded w h opt o m Ph
44b 73f1il

978 DODG~ ~Ol T Sto on
Wagon 28 m l ~ s per gal on
e xc cond Col 440 b5b6
977 MONTE CARlO lANDAU
350 V 8 au o t ans a
PS
PB cru se
n ed g ass AM
ste eop tope ew res 31 000
m les one owner e xc cond
$~995 Call Po ty Johnson ot
1Sb b432 or 446 04 8
'179 JE E ~ RENEGAOE •oo
les los of ex os Owne
must !&gt;el (all446 71 96

NEW
m

977 GMC 7
446 -41 85

T dump t uck Co I

973 OLOS 98 ol powe AM FM
ste eo rod o T es ond body n
good shape
$1 000
Co I
44b 3965 ahe 5 pm
973 DODGE CHARGER SE Co
b75 1770
978 FORO VAN
T o I foe o y
op t ons
custom zed
7 000
m les Co 675 4172
I DUSTER
on Wagon

M

1q74

M

367 04 ~2

"

1974
Co I

lq66MUSTANG wh te 189 outo
or mags F70 14 Se ous n
qu esonlycol614 2863607or
bB~ 6374
197b GRAN
TORINO Squ e
Wagon good cond Sell ng \le y
reasonable A so Horne te XL 2
chon sow 10 n bo
Col
379 :~

972 WHiTt: FRE IGHTUNI::R cob
ove 350 Cumm ns 13 !&gt;pd
n ubber Cal 675 3762

1977 CUTlASS SUPREME $4500
Co/1367 0478
972 NTERNA T ONAl SCOUT
4x4 Co 1388 9774 ofte 4 pm
FOR SALE OR TRADE 1973 Toyoto
land C user .II whl dr W I
cons der t adlng for pickup
Call446 OS 15 olte 5 pm
978 FORO P CK UP ou to t ons
~s

$4100 Coli 3677 B7

977 FOUR WHEEl DRI VE Toyo a
land C u ser FM tope spoke
wheels
Pr ce $4900
Coli
4.4b 3732

Wanted to Do

For Sale

YOUNG MAN hmd wn kN n 'd
£&gt;• PP C' r Pd fo J:1 g rlro
g a d ynrd wo k
Cal
44b IH~b

AIL TVPf S nl h u let g o r ol s
hlto k h ck sC'wr r rr w
cio wo;
I n tcfo;
I"
Cloud
W r"loloGndrOPinl"
745 5171 nfll' 5

~LOW ING

~NO

DISCING
Allen Wood 44b 4011:1

Cc/

Plumbon9 and Heatong

FROLIC TRAVEl TRAilER self con
a ned A I shape $:2350 Coli
~5b 1313
1968 BEELINE 24 It comp ng
o ler dual 0 11( e a r cond Self
canto ne.d good cond Coli
388 o8•o
OUTDOORSMAN 8 It compe top
fo p c ~up Col 1-45 5194

976 STARCRAFT 24 ft trave l
fro e self coni a ned sleeps b
Co lt 367 0~~8
TRAILER 18 f self con
to ned good cond S1200 Call
446 08~9

TRAVE~

UNUSUAl O~~ORTUNITY
FOR lOC Al PERSON IN TH E AREA
TO
SEl l
CUSTOMMADE
LUBRICANTSFOR A NATIONAl
LY KNOWN Oil COMeANY
PERMANENT
FUlL
TIM E
POU T ON OFFERS UNUSUAllY
H G H COMMISSION S 0~
PORTUNITY FOR ADVANCE
MENT KNOWlEDGE OF FARM
AND NDUSTR/Al MACHINERY
HElPFUL SPECIAl TRAINING IF
HIRED FOR ~ERSONAL INTER
VIEW MA l QUAliFICA liONS
NAME ADDRESS AND ~HONE
NUMBER TO llOYD HINES
DE~T JC9o7C P 0 BOX •7B•:l
OALLAX TEXAS 752.:17

MOB LE HOME
4&gt;65
Reosonob e CoiiJBf! 9774 after
4pn

972

1967 AIR STREAM t 011e/t o le 23
ft
cond Col 675 3098

For Sale
PENDlETON REBUilT BATTERY
$ 8 00 plus taw and excha nge
Guaranteed New ones $33 00
when n stock We epo ca se!&gt;
Coil 38B 859b

REFRI GERATOR stove
ste eo Coll446 7524

n cf

STARTING AT 1:00 P.M.
HOUSEHOLD AND MISCEUANEOUS ITEMS
Fr g1da re Ref Freezer In bottom frost free Hotpolnt
doub e oven elec range sta nless and coffee color
Upr ght Cold spot f reezer Kitchen appliances
Dar m eyer moxers bowls loaster utol ty cart k !chen
table cha1rs punch bowl cups glassware dtshes
kn c knacs Singer sew1ng machine G E B a,d W
portable T V Electnc sweeper cedar chest sew ing
materoa
rugs linens clothing pictures lamps
m irrors electnc heater writ ng des card table
rou nd Hassocks Swtvel rocker
wall and floor
cab nets
for k tchen and bath uhl ty cabmets
Hotpo nt 12 000 BTU a or condotloner 110 volt Joke new
3 p1ece bedroom su te plu$ many other items too
numerous to ment on
Nclhong shewn before Say Day Sale begons at 1 00
P M please rf91ster lor number w1th cash1er before
sale tome Not responsoble lor accodents or lost artocles
TERMS CASH- POS I D CHECK

MARGARET HARDIN, OWNER

GENE OESCH, AUCTIONEER
Home (614) 446 7440

.

STOKER AND HOUSE COAl Up
per R 11er Rd P'h 446 408

SEARS 8 HP
RIDING MOWER
Wtth 32 cut and electr c
start S250
Also 2 Pc Green L1Y1ng
R m Su1te good cond
CALL 245 5865
.

8 N FORD TRACTOR w th snow
ch ns b ft g oder blade 6 It
hay mower ott good cond
P ce S1595 Cat 386 8895 of er
430pm
977 SUZUKI GS 750 4 000 actual
m es exc cond Kustom K ng
and Queen seal Coli 446 2311
0 446 2608

1974 KAWASAKI 900 vory good
low m leage $1 000
cond
lo 367 7119
10 TABlE SAW ( foftsmon also
othe tools ( a I 446 933b
88 OLIVER TRACTOR 450 lnte no
t onol Tractpr 70 In er at ono
4 hottom plow 311 I tc no
I o of p dwp plovo
Co
18HH-183o l4ll 1&lt;17'1
of o ge TJb e
3888AtJ3o
41 1 14/2

oI

HOGG S EX Tt:M INAT NG CO
{f orme ly fa ne!&gt; &amp; 0 del J Col..
H I Oh Co I r oller! 440 75b9

liMESTONE grovel and sand All
s 1e s At R chords ond Son Up
per R ver Rd Gall pol s Oh o

and

OfNNFV AND CLASS Chon Ink
fence Fren es ma e s Co I
145 9 IJ l&lt;en So 9 S Gal pol s

~h

WATt:f.t

CALl

ddt) 77tl 3

o

TRI ST A H U~HOL STRY SHO~
1 b3 SPcond Ave Go I pols
44b 7833 0 446 833

8

0

OUGHlNO U H S

DH VERV

or

lnyout
o d
"\ olio on
o vo lobl e Col 36tJ 99b t

ROBERTS BROTHERS GARAGE ~·
h

J M S S DING ~NO CONSTRUe
liO N CO All types of s1d g
("ll'lO d C' I ng
o
c t(&gt; oof g
g fiN p u n h ng you Om€' t
f f"C' C!&gt; moles o local o eo
Coll44b 7b'l:J

w ecker serv ce

All types

ol re po1
Upper Rt 7 Ca ll
4Ab 2445 days and ~&lt;16 ~79"1
nights

yt nf'

ACROSS

TWO TWIN BEDSP'READS 1 p nk
and I Jellow Eoch w th mu I
shade ruffl es of the same col
or $15 each Col.l245 9132
lO ~N

PLANTER g

0\1

ty bed For

mo I M w th 3 pt hook up and

I ve power dua l wheels Coli
4•b 2724

1979 BOT 23 ft Glast on Carlson TOP SOILF or fed o yo d Wll
CV 23 w th 260 HP 35o cu n
del \le r For fur her defo Is coli
mercru ser n out dr \le B onze
&lt;46 ~107
metalflake w th Cut y Cob n
Spoked wheel
Share onder TWO RACING CANOES IU I 6 n
Co J 388 977 4 after 4 pm
tand em t a l er Cal Jef Ge ger
446 4569 ofer 5 pm
GRA VElY TRACTORS 4 ol
tachments Ports and serv ce
HOSPITAl BEO
$75 Contact
OUTDOOR EOU PMENT SAlES
Alf ed Arnold of Pork Central
Jet Rts 7 and 35 Gall pol s
Hote
call 446 3670 Open Mon Sot
USED FURN lURE
9 5
COlOR CONSOlE TV ~3 GlASS
full
AND CHROME 5 P ECE DINETTE 1978 HARlEY DAVIDSON
dresser $4000 Co ll44b 3395
SET l KE NEW RECliNER COR
BIN AND SNYDER FURN lURE TWO HORSES one r d ng horse
d46 1171
one unbroken Co I 440 7537

8 N FORD TRACTOR w lh 4 It
b ush hog and O\le rid ng
clu ch
$1500
FIRM
Coli
446 1340 after ~ pm

g spo I 9
:tO yro s nll'
ee eu not('&gt; lo ll
oof

CA RPET

~Mpert

NSTALLATION

ca rpet nsta llo on
carpet

Repo r

ew or used
wo k

0 ck

Metheney B II B oy les
388 9332 o r 388 9983

to

I

SEPTIC SYSTEM IN STALLE D New
leach be d sewer I nes Wont
f ee est moles? l censed n
s tat e r Co l Ru sse l s Plumb ng
446 4782

GAlLIA RE SIDENTIAl
MPROVEMENT
lnsu a ted 11 nyl s d ng alum num
gulte s and spouts storm doo s
and w ndows Free es t mates
Phone 367 0209 doy o n ght
l MESTONE DEliVERED Gc I pol s
Po nf P' eoson o eo 25 m le
rod us 367 7101
SWIMMING POOl INSTALLA
TION epa r open ng ond dos
ng poo s odd s des or any
pool equ pment We sel ol!
~ nds of pool equ pmen t ond
chem co s Pu ddle P' ools Inc
Albany 698 5765
·' ----:-------....;.....,...-.,

f"

0 &amp; F CONTRACTORS
All
types
home
1m
provements and room addi - t1ons
Also plumbm~,
heating &amp; electncal work
done
Free est1mates
446 3407 or 256 6652
4

RON S TV StRVICI:: Spec ol z ng
Zen h House ra l s Co I
I 304 57b 2398 o 44b 2454

DAVIS SEW VAC CENTER New
sew ng mach nes $79 95 and
up New sweepe s 564 95ond
up Sew ng mach ne fu rn tu e
po tab e cases motors and
po ts vacuum cleaner hose
mo o s bogs rug too ls carpet
shampoo and etc Repa on oil
mok es and models P ckup ond
de very One ha f n e up
Geo ges C eek Rood Coli
4&lt;6 0294
KACH All PORTABlE BlDG All
s zes 6 x 10 to 12 x 40 See at
173
Pine St 446 2783 or 3
ho sns be ow !:low ng AI ey on
Rt 'I 44b 17'19

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

eg
84 Layered
85 Mans name
86 Dregs
88- owl
89 South Afr ca
Dutchman
90 Norse gods
92 In sect
94 Public vote
98 Soak up
99 Male deer
100 Anglo Saxon
money
102 Aroma
103 Bushy clump
104 Storage com
partment
105 Planet
106 lmotatong
108 Youngster
109 Nole of scale
110 Hypothetical
force
111 Caullon
112 Jacket parts
114 Golf mound
116 Wodth Abbr
117 Cyllndrocal
119 Observes
120 Peruvoan In
doan
122 Kansas Coty
team
124 Person
125 Polaster
126 Washes
128 Recent
129 Army officer
Abbr
131 Woe word
132 Lettuce
133 Nops

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

'
--

Rea l Estate for Sale

free est motes Coll256 1921

ElECTRIC b own
celu ose insulot on
Ou rs
doesn t s~ k ond no offens \le
odor Phone446 2716

CUSTOM BACKHOE and dote
work l censed sep t c tonk n
s al er
Grode work
yard
work d vew oys and layout
Cell GAlLIPOliS DIVERSIFIED
CONSTRUCTION CO
446 4440

GAWPOUS
DIVERSIAED
CONSTRUCTION CO

Custom Dozer &amp; IIICkl.oe
work by hour or by lob
Trensot &amp; Lay.out work
General Contredl"'• 111
types
construction,
housong
commerC1al
Jndustroal
Walker- ParKersburg
Steel Building Deller
Phone 446-•440
Olfoce-1160'12 2nd
8 5 Moll Frl

•

11
tJ u
nrJDon iliH·:nu

[:)0"

MUlliNS HOME
S d ng v nyl
steel gut ers
roof ng w th
ton low cost
Co/1446 Ofl9
"

"

IM~RO V EM E NT S

alum num ond
doon w ndows
opt enol nsulo
Free est mates

. . ...

"

.,

"

.

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING
Backhoe and Dozer work
by the oob or hour

Call 388-8623

aJitHH :il
n1m11·~r.

uum:m :·JtJunn

135 The sun
138 Chemoc al
suffix
139 Undergar
ment
140 Make lace
141 Month
142 Behold
143 Football
pos loon
Abbr
144 Escape
145 Dorected
147 Sloroes
149 Cover
150 Troal sote
152 Ar stocrat
154 Coralosland
156 Straoner
158 Afrocan
gazelle
159 Conch
160 Consecrate
161 Attempts
DOWN
1 Walk
2 Prepared
3 Gram
4 Con1unctoon
5 Greek letter
6 Perta nong to
old age
7 Seesaws
8 Transgress
9 Three toed
sloth
10 Males
11 Mans name
12 Regoon
13 Set
14 State Abbr
15 Burnong
coals
16 Sk nny dip
17 Arttcle
18 State Abbr
19 European
country
20 Skons
27 Scold
29 Goddess of

d scord
Corded cloth
Pound doNn
Emanatoon
Paradose
Advantage
Let fall
Horse at
tendants
43 Dolt
44 Prohobots
46 Art cle
46 Span sh pot
49 Danosh
measure
50 Need
51 Precop taus
52 Flower part
53 Eastern salu
Ia !Jon
55 Sew
56 Retaon
57 Plague
58 Fonoshed
61 Sea bord
63 Soamese na
loves
64 Sompleton
JiB Deer s horns
70 G'uard
71 Enthusoasm
73 Cause
74 Nocholas
eg
75 Weather
word
77Car- PI
78 Fosh sauce
80 M ne en
trance
81 Stoll
83 Jump
84 Statoon
87 Sk11ng areas
89 Farm ma
chone
90 Monastery
head
91 Om t from
pronuncoa
I on
92 Farm buold
ong
31
36
37
39
40
41
42

93 Gre-at Lake

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NOI1010S

95
96
97
99
101

Whop
Sum
Redacts
Rabbot
Blacksmoths
blocks
105 Partner
106 Appellatoon
of Athena
107 Factor
111 Left
112 Deposots
113 Stroke
breaker
115 Vast ages
116 Ordonances
118 Lasso
119 G nger121 Beasts
123 Old pronoun
125 Foreogners
126 Rabbit enclo
sure
127 Bogs down
129 Cut up
130 Heavenly
beong
131 Beverage
132 Desert shop
134 Ogle
136 Trop cal fruot
137 M ne veons
139 Wonter veho
cle
140 Cash drawer
144 Merriment
145 Mans n ck
name
146 Small portoon
147 Pedal dogJt
148 Fast plane
Abbr
149 Hawa11an
wreath
151 Contonent
Abbr
153 Interject on
155 Thalloum
symbol
157 Negalove
prefox

m

216 E Socand Stroet
EXCELLENT

BUY

large block stucco house
With 4 bedrooms formal
donong equ pped k tchen
I

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL EST ATE AGENCY
CALL .46-3643

foreplace on the lov ng
basement
2 car

garage

and

2

room

storage

Also 2 room
busoness building All for
only $35 000
LIKE NEW - 3 bedroom

fri;tme
completely
overhauled 10s1de and out

Modern bath new furna ce
mce large kttchen uttltty
buoldlng and 1 ' acre lot
Ask ng only $23 000
BARGAIN - Old used 3
bedroom frame home but
has natural gas ctfy water
and
bath
Varn shed
woodwork and the floors
are sol1d Handyman s
spec al for ousl S12 000
INCOME - 5 apts n good
cond1t on w1th low ncome
Can be upgraded to a good
nvestment All utol t es are
paid by the renters WAnt
to see what you can do
5 BEDROOMS - All have
closets modern k !chen
wolh disposal dishwasher
large family room woth
pool table laundry room

ONCE IN A LIFETIME CHANCE Presenfl ng a rare opportun ty to own a bet
t er than new br ck showplac e pr ced we
below market va ue Over 3600 sq ft of
9 ra c ous I v ng ncludtng a wh te stone
fl replace
n sunken
lVI ng
room
4
bedroom s 2 baths format dtnmg bu tt 10
k tchen w th eat ng area full f n shed
base ment
ncludes fam l y room w
fireplace r ec room &amp; tastefully decorated
bar area Spec aI light ng ft xtu r cs centra
a r &amp; 2 car garage S1tuated on 2 acre n
C ty Schools

OWNER DESPERATE - Owner s n
F or dao.. &amp; wants h s f arm sold toda y 9
beaut fu acres of f at ground w th a 2200
lb tob acco base 12x30 barn smoke house
ce tar fru t trees and a large w ell kep t
older ho me 3 bedroom s fam l y room w
f r epl ace eat n k t chen ut 1 ty and bath
Great locat on a nd a grat buy n c ty
schools

sun deck 3 baths and 2 car
garage at $65 000
NEW LISTING- 75 acres
of woods some saw t1mber
w th dozens of beaut1ful
bulldmg s1tes Located m
Pomeroy
All utdtt1es
available
for
only
$25 000 00
NEW LISTING - 8 acres
plus 3 bedroom ranch
home bath full basement
tust out of M ddleport a
couple of moles Redwood
deck carpeting and lots of
pr vacy S32 000
WANT IT SOLD WITHOUT
AN UPSET IN YOUR
FAMILY
ROUTINE
CALL THE TEAFORDS
TO TURN TALK INTO
TRANSACTION
REALTOR ASSOCIATES
Gorden B Helen L and
Sue P Murphy

Housing
Headquarters·

TOMORROW MAY MEAN NEYER - See
t now Buy t today and be g ad forever
Attract ve 3 bedroom b leve l tn
Centenary Fam y room 2 baths ea t n
k chen huge dec k gas heat &amp; garage
Over 1700 sq ft of f am•IY v na em nearly
2 acre $40 s

OWNER WANTS SOLD NOW - A dandy 2
bedroom home tust outs de of town Large
format dm ng k1tchen n ce 1 v room
bath fu basement and garage Very n ce
yard w th lots of shrubbery &amp; trees
$29 000

r-~;.;;-;0-;~~-;---l

I
I
I~
I
I
)., :'.~~~~~o:_.__ ---~J
~

I

I

608 E
MAIN
POMEROY

BETTER BUY NOW
111
wooded
buotdon~
Jot
210 x172 x140 - Cotv Schools cotv
water &amp; sewage ava1lable S3 900
(2) a buoldong lois 60x140 &amp; 60xl74
C1tv Schools City wa1cr &amp; sewage
ava lable $2 500 each
(3) 3 acre lot tn Jay Dnve Ex
cellent place to bu ld your tlome No

0

NEW LISTINGS - Good
slreet In Middleport 2
stones
3
bedrooms
equipped kitchen formal
don ng noce llv ng R
garage
basement
remodeled
and
$16 500 00
CLOSE TO MINES lovely mob le located on 1
acre wtth creek through
all fenced loads of con
crete parking about 2
years old 516 SOD oo
WANT A FARM• 70
acres newer 3 bedr oom
home barn
corn crtb
stor age
located on the
rover A STEEL AT JUST
S3J 500 00
WANT ACREAGE 48
acres
mobtle
home
(almost new) 14x36 add
on large patio many
many features GOING AT
JUST S41 000 00 (proce of
ground)
MIDDLEPORT Needs
some work 2 story frame
good location 3 bedrooms
bath formal d nong nat
gas furnace INVEST NOW
JUST S2D 000 00
MIDDLEPORT 2 two
story
buold ngs
has
apartments
over
all
rented
VEry
nice
restaurant bus ness 1n one
old established busoness
$55 000 00
NEAR GRADE SCHOOL 1 slory frame 3 bedrooms
low healing bill 2 lots full
basement Ideal for lam ly
$27 300 00
YOUR HOUSE IS TOO
GOOD TO GIVE AWAY
CALL US NOW TO SELL
IT FOR YOU
REALTORS
Henry E Cleland Sr
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 2258
992 6191

+

ATTENTION BUILDERS - We have 42
acres of extra n ce deve opment and on
Rt 160 GoOd frontag e land Jay s good
Call for detaots
CHARMING DOLL HOUSE - Is clean as
a hounds tooth and overlooks the nver n
Th1s ranch home offer s 3
Addtson
bedrooms eat In kitchen beau t ful I v ng
room w corner f replace parquet floors &amp;
a nice v ew pretty: bath hardwood floor s
full basement 2 car g arage central a r
and very large ot Don t mi ss th s one """
$6 900 SPECIAL - 6~ x 100 tot w lh an older
3 bedroom m ob le home C ty water &amp;
sewage nat gas A r ea l barga n
JUST ABOUT PERFECT - Ever y hom e
has ts faults but th s h om e only has one It
has a steep drtveway { t s heated) but th e
house really m akes up for 11 A lovely
cedar ranch w th 3 spa c ous bedroom s
bu It n k tchen w eattng area form al d n
tng large ltv ng room rust c fa mtly room
w1th a stone ftrepla ce 2 baths overs zed 2
car garage and central a r Everythmg
you could want for under $60 000
BRANDNEW - GREENSCH DIST - A
spac ous new ma ntena nce free home on
over an acre tn a pretty country setting 3
bedrooms 2 a1tract vely decorated baths
k1tchen &amp; dtn ng area large I v1ng room
u1111ty central atr &amp; 2 car garage h m1le
off Rl 141
BEAT THE SPRING RUSH - Gel a good
tump on the other buyers and be the ftrst to
see th s lovely brick home 4 n ce s zed
bedrooms built n kitc hen formal d n ng
large 1vmg room full fm sheri basement
nc ludes a huge fam tv room There are 2
baths and an overs1zed 2 car garage Nat
gas cent air &amp; , ac re lot near H M C
Pr ced Josell faslaiS59 900

BUY IT TODAY - MOVE IN TOMOR
ROW - Owners have transferred out of
state and are desperate to sell thts under
pnced tn level In Green Grade Sc hool
area 4 bedrooms 2 bath s custom bu t n
kttchen formal dfn ng lea d ng onto a huge
deck Heaftlator f repl ace wood burner n
familY room rec room 2 car garage w
floored att c Inter com 1 3 acres and so
much more Well worth th e mon ey

RT NO 160 - NEW HOME
Over 1500
sq ft of attract ve I v ng space n t he br ck
and natura wood ranch 3 bedrooms fam
ly r oom w f r ep ace eat n k t chen b ath &amp;
garage S tuat ed on 3 :.~ acre yard near N G
H gh School M d $40 s

SUPER HOME - GREAT LOCATION
Love y 2 2 yr old br ck ran ch offer ng 1800
sq ft of perfe ct I v ng space 3 bedrooms
2 bath s fam ly room w f replace equ pped
ea t n k tchen d n ng room ut ty 2 car
garage
pat o and assumabl e
oan
S tu ated on a very pretty ot 6 m les fro m
town off US 35 $60 s
A LOT OF HOME FOR S41 000 - There s
l ots of space nth s ranch hom e nclud ng
an ea t n k tchen formal d n ng tam rm
w f replace 3 bedrooms 2 baths 2 ca r
garage and n ce s zed lot n Crow n C t y
Check th s one out you I be su r pr sed
(NEW LISTING) CUSTOM BUILT FOR
OWNER (Green Elem ) - Brand new 4
bedroom br ck decor ated to pl ease the
m ost d scr m nate buyers Th s ovely
hom e offer s a fa nt as t c bu It n k chen
for ma l d n ng huge f r ep ace n I v ng rm
prof ess onally nst a ed woodburner 2
baths 2 car ga r age central a r 2 arge
por ches p us much m or e Ca for deta Is
PRIMECOMMERCIALBU/LDJNG - 6 '
yr old bu ld ng n a great com mere a!
locaton on Rt 7 11000 sq ft fu ty n
sulated met at bu ld ng w th concrete f oo
lo ad ng
do ck
spr nkl er
sys t e m
throughout na t gas hea t and 4 acr es of
flat land Call ke for det a Is
COMMERCIAL BLDG WITH RENTAL Good l ocat on on Rt 160 ess t han 2m les
from town th s cou d be made nto ust
about any k n d of off ce bldg stor age or
r eta1 shop The apartment has 3 bedrooms
and prov des a good renta ncom e Upper
$40 s
THIS IS NOT FOR YOU -UNLESS
you
are t he rare fam ly that s absolutely
m et1cu 1ous about every last det.a 1 T h s
perf ect br ck ra nc h s located on a qu et
deadend str eet at th e edge of own 3
bedrooms f am y room w f1rep la ce for
m al entry equ pped ea t n k tchen 1 2
b ath ga r age pat o &amp; a lovely l andsca ped
yard Nat gas cent a r Upper SSO s
BEEF SHEEP HORSES
Ra se Jhem all
on thi s 63 acre farm n Add son Twp Most
ly rol ng land w t h a arge barn pond
good tobacco base sever a fr u t trees and
other outbu ld ngs Th e arg e older home
has J bedroom s f r epl ace n I v rm fam
ly room n ce equ pped k tc hen and free
gas for house $50 000
NEW LISTING -THURMAN - A wet
kept 2 story home w th 4 bedrooms I v
rm d n ng ea t n k 1tchen bath fu ll base
m ent ga rage w w orkshop 2 stor age
bu ld ngs and a very n ce landscaped yard
A real honey for $33 000
OWNER WANTS OFFER
A r ea l f arm
buy TH e owner s anx ous to se t th s 12
ac r e m n farm on L nco n P ke The house
s an older remodeled 2 stor y hom e w th
alum nu m s ding 4 or 5 bedroom s love l y
d n ng w stone f r ep ace I v r oom w
f replace eat n k t chen &amp; b ath Ther e s
also a good barn ar ge pond BOO lb tobac
cobase&amp;ce lar A ba r ga nat $36 500
EXCELLENT DECORATING - SUPER
LANDSCAPING - You ca n see where a
lot of love was g ven th1 s lovel y 3 bed r oom
b l eve l The Ins de s ust per fec t 8 u It n
k tchen form al d n ng 2 2 b at hs fam loy
room 2 car garage br ck pat o lots of n ce
shrubs &amp; tr ees Make an l'I PPO ntment to
see th s home n Spr n g Va ey today

Am®WISEMAN IS A HOUSE
Lost and Found
Lorge Wolk e Hounds
black saddle boc k I ght ton
heed REWARD $100 Coli
256 6467

WORD

Dan Evans ASSOCiate 3811 811 t: ve
Q 1 ~ .. ,.c:ton Assoc tate 446 4'240 Eve.
Noncy Smoth Assocoote 446 4910 Eve
GALLI POLl~

500SECONDI\VE

I

--

THE WISEMAN REAL
ESTATE AGENCY

Bill S MOBilt: HOME S a nd Home

E M Wiseman Broker 446 Jlf6 Ev.
f N Wiseman Broker 446 4500 Eve
Jim Cochran Associate •"' 7UI Evo

Anchori'11, Skirting,
Awnings,
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint, Set up
and Re-levehng Call

Bill'S
' 446-2642

1 Body of Dey
scouts
6 Vapor
11 Kong of bord s
16 Denude
21 Rases
22 We ord
23 Vosoon
24 Color
25 Done
26- ear
28 Staorpost
30 Kond of
cheese
32 Dophthong
33 Pad not ce
34 Rover osland
35 In let
36 Abound
37 Everyone
38 Change color
of
40 Eyed closely
42 Cotton43 Cavol
44 Purc hases
45 Parent Col
loq
47 Mostakes
49 Chanty
50 Armed con
II ct
51 Squanders
54 Poece lor one
55 Swoll
56 Sell defense
method
59 Number
60 Calendar
abbr
62 Conspored
64 Marshes
65 Pnnter s
measure
66 Laton con
)unct on
67 Meadow
69 With force
70 Bard
71 Mournful

72 Head part
74 Mountaon
lakes
76 Perc h
77 Support
78 Church part
79 Gratefully
82 Hard knocks

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are
Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel

lmpro11ement s Free est motes

~A SQ UAl E

1979

Co 1446 77tl5

SEPT C SYSTEM INSTALLED Com
Coli 446 2641
plete by qual f ed I cens ed n
hou ed stone RUS~ &amp; MAX ELLIOTT
sto ler f J d
g o\l e etc AAA Cant ac o s l e nno• Heat ng and o cond1t on
rol l 256 92
t;!9 Rapco foam lnsulotlon
4.46 BS s o r 446 0445 Call after
THE SS INSI,JLA liON lnsulmos er
430
loom nsulot on New homes
old homes comme c ol struc
tures Fo fr ee est motes coli
446 1971
PAINTING Res dent ol nter o
and e• le br bo n and mob e
home roofs Free est motes 15
vr exp Co I 367 7784 or
367 7l60

Mar 25

A A A CONTRACTORS Bockhoe
do1er dump truCk Work do ne
by the hour o r by the ob For

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Manufactured Fertah1er
s 10 10 SllJ Ton
12 12 12 IS 15 1S S 10 15 624 24 33'1• Pet Notrate
Also Pocneer Seed Cern.
PH 256 6474

THREE PIECE PROVINC Al I v ng
m su te w th end table and
5300
Up ght
f oo "-tamp
p ana SIOO Coll388 9665

ACH~ S

s d ng
rc ence F

( 0MPt£n: SUPl:kMAJU&lt;n
e sto ron t equipmE&gt;n l o

In Crown Coty

FOR SALE
2
Harley
Davoson
Electra Ghde
Motorcycles
One 4 000 males one 7 000
m les
256 ·1964 cr 256-9372

fA.

n cf

.

197U STARCRAFT BOAT 15 ft BO
HP Mereu y Ike new 15 20 hs
ope at on sk s &amp; accessor es
440 7230

ANTIQUE ~OCKET WATCH $30
new baby cor char $12 1 po r
mo orcycle co r ers S15 TV
game $10 ond new comp ele
se VW Bee tl e deluxe podded
seat covers $30 Coli 379 24b9

Ser ~ces Offered

.

7 sk 1ack ets 2 sk ropes Co
FOR THE BEST n forage ond gro n
~5b bB"
s orage and I vestock feed ng
equ pmenl call Clyde Wolker ONE WORK HORSE one mule
two gooC broke d ng ho ses
~· 5 S276
Colt 388 9303
ECHO CHAIN SAWS wood sp/1
REG POllED HEREFORD b ed
te s sow cho n and wood cut
cows he f e s cow coif po rs
1 ng suppl es Charles McKeon
some open he fers yeorl ng
446 944 2
bulls Don Cox Gall pols Oh o
CT 370 G an Drye 42 All ed
379 2071
hoy co n elevate 7 lnt roke
1971 OVERCAU C AM~ER 8
9 990 In MC 424 nt w th
1200 tb furn shed n ce cond
loade Oeutz 00 06 4 WD 7
! 000 Cotl446 909
row rotary hoe 4 row J D 494A
p ante
3b N GAS RANGE Coll44b 0516
Col 675 12U5
1975 KAWASAKI 500 exc cond
0
S900 Coli •4b 66B9
S~3 000
MORGAN SWOODLAND FARM
971 HONDA 350 Bes t ofer Coli
Pl NY
.446 1300

PH 446 7440 ANYTIME
Complete Modern Servoce
COMPLETE FARM DISPERSAL SALES
ESTATE SETTLEMENT SERVICE
HOUSEHOLD SALES
LIQUIDATION SALES
Anywhere To Serve You
BUD McGHEE REALTY
GENE OESCH ASSOCIATE

FERTIUZER

446 7044

PIANO Kohler and Compbell
Sp net 2 y s old $950 Coli
446 569

Go

Storm
W1ndows,
Storm
Doors,
Replacement
Wondows,
Pat1o
Covers,
Alum1num
S1d1ng
and
Accessories Ca II

ONE JOHN DEERE F 145H 3 / 4
2 BOATS USED 17 ft Cr stl ne
sem mount ed pl ow
Call
1:15 HP' Even ude mo or &amp; fro fer
256 6b81 even ngs no Sunday
$2700 19 It A umoc oft lOS HP
co Is
Ch ysfer mo or &amp;
ol e
19fl9 CH~YSLER 16ft boat 55 HP
$3 300
Z nn s lond ng
mal o I a ler 1 nedw pr sk s

Gene Oesch, Auctioneer

We

JAY MAHCUM

t ni l

Iilli 9U57

AMMOND HODY SHO ~
Io
Sf'R Al Sl 50
:! IS q U1 o 379 :J306

HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

w II del ver

CHUNK COAL Conve
n ent y pocked n 40 lb bowes
eody to go No mess No fuss
low ash no sulphu H gh BTU
SK DMORE FOSTER COAl CO
123 P {le ~t Co hpo s Oh o
Phone 446 2763

and bar

THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1979

i'

4?1

f'

bol e Co l

Located at 449 thord Avenue Gal/opolis Ohoo We woll
oHer the lollowong personal property to the hoghest
bodder

sn »:.Ill

s 0 ()(I()
pn

Servoces Offered

W VA

------------""1 .
PUBLIC AUCTION

Gallopolos Otuo

I OJ? SAl f OR TRAOf '} "'I
I
lit" \nod&lt;c rJ I C"
D oc nl
n kf' t c; l"' f' Cl l f"
I ri house o
I f"
g I n
l"('ns Hun Road Oh C\ e p t

1AN S A V AIL ABU I
n n y I
"""~ I

SHAFFER'S

Buoldmg Supplies

978 14 x65 Boy11 ew 6 mas old
512 000 Washer drye
Coli
245 58 4 or 440 2209

a

10

CHECK THE PRICES
AND
THEN CHECK WITH ME

SPliT F REWOOO
Col 367 7705

Co I

Call

nun coli 4:th

Bill'S
446-2642

Ente the g omo ous ewe ng
Wo ld of Fosh on Own o h ghly
prof able lad es Fosh on or
Jeon ond Cosuo wear shop
leolur ng 130 no ono fy known
b onds Eve yth ng p ov ded for
S17 900 00 Open you store n
o l ew weeks CALL TOLL FREE
1 800 674 1707

SPR NG SALE on used mob l e
homes
TRI STATE MOBILE
HOMES 446 7572

2B5 0

f HI

Servoces Offered

Servoces Offered

Loans

FXPERIENCE D
CARPENTFR
R"" node! g o ci cpa
Call
lAYNE S NEW AND USED FUR
4-lO 9537
NIT UR I::
NEW
&lt;ONCRETE 8 OCK
WORK
1:\oby beds $b5
solo cho
d v ewoy &lt;~
pot os
s e ps
ocke
ottoman 3 abies
wall'l!&gt; go ages hosPments
$500
Bed oom
su es Ht:G QUARTER MAR!: prev ou sly
uncit
p nn g
RPosonable
shown CKC 4 H horse Co I
$165 $250$300$500 Ear Am
f ree es t ma €! S Co li 367 0'195
sol o and cho r $300 modern
256 6750 after 5 pm
0 367 0'13 1
sofa cho r love!&gt;eot.. $175
GOUlD JET ~UMP 3 y olrl 51)
f!R~PlACI::: AND CH MNEYS c eon
eel Ae rs S100 and up Tabl es
30 avocado Mag c Chef slav('
ed and
epa ed
Smok ng
SbO each Maple or p ne !able
SSO q It wood go oge door a d
I eploce? Call TH f CHIMNCY
4 cho rs S225 Hutch $300 7
ho dwo e $70 Coli 446 Yb.t9
SWEEP
CHIMNEY S AND
pc d nette $109 5 pc d nett e
llqpm
TUL P'S 373 bOS7
w th sw vel cho s S:JOO Bunk
beds complete $150$225 $275 fO RO MODEL 10 16 :J botton lUSTOM COMPOST TilliNG
mort esses or box spr ngs I rm
plows exc cond $500 Ca ll
S no
or chord and t ee
$50 !60 $70 each
copl o n s
4.46 775
ante 1once Call CH IMNEYS
bed 5225 queen se s 5175 4
AND TUliPS 373 b057
d owe chest $42
SANOY AN D BEAVER lnsu once
GOOD USED
D esse s
ches t
n gh s and
Co ha s olfe ed se v Ce!&gt; fa I e
nsuronce coverag e n Go I o
D ye s onges coffee and end
tabl es beds tab es amps TV
County fo o most a century
F e home o d persona pro
elr gerotor othe
ems Call
pflrty covera ges ore O\IO table
44b 0372 Mo doy th u Fr day 9
to mec nd \1 du~ needs Con
to 8pm Saturday 9 to Spm 3
toe F n ey Oov s your ne ghbor
m ou t 1:\u ov I e Rd
ond ogenl
AI
&gt;ERTA ~ERF EC T SlEE~ER MAT
M &amp; T CONSTJWCTION 8 EX
TRE SSES AND FOUNDATIONS
CAVAl NG Bock hoe and doze
CORBIN AND SNYDER FUR
wo k by th e tob or by the hou
NITURE "6 I 71 9S5 SECOND
Co 1388 8013
AVE GAll ~liS OH

_Bu~n_l!ss _Q_epC?_rtuno_!o~s

COLliNS BUILD NG PRODUCTS
1515 Wcsh ngton B vd 1:\e p e
Oh o oilers o new !&gt;e 11 ce to
th e Goll po s oreo Ove b 000
bu d ng products del vered
each week to Belp e ond
ova loble to you eoc h wePk of
d scount p ces Co I Call ns
Su d ng P aducts o p ck up o
f Pt' Pease Catalog odoy
Sus ness hau s Mon h u F
!lam
to
5pm
Phone
b 4 4~J b!/81

M~

LE ON W VA

----

M XI::O HAY 90 pe
446 0322

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MHI60 Sem Mounted 6 bo tton
plow Mf570 2 d sc MF2 2
ow choppe
MF3q 2 row
pia t e s
ne ha n c ol
t onsploniE"r
SHINN 5 TRAC
TOR SALES
Pho e 458 l bJO

DEWITT S ~lUMBING
AND HEATING
Rou e I bOot Everg een
Pho e 44b 2735

TRUCK CAMP ER
e l g stove
s nk fu noce s eeps 4 Coli
446 4312of erSp m

Mf135 0 esl"l

NEW &amp; USt:D IMPll::Mf.NTS
MPI Bolf'
M~IO So f"
MF 110
Boi e
Matthews Ro a y S yll e

GENE ~lAN TS 8 SONS
PLUM81NC
Hea t ng
A r Con
d on ng 300 Fou h A11e Ph
44b 637

973 COMMUNITY ~ bd
15b 1467 ofte 5 pm

MF:IJO D c sd

M f )0 D r !&gt;&lt;'l
Mf 13 5 ll P!iOel
Hco N

STANDARD
P'lu nb ng Heo ng
LIS Th d A ~,o e 44b 371:17

Mobole Homes for Sale
I q7a FORD T 6500 m les 2 ft
1955 Pro qe Schooner 2B x B
facto y be d and ocks Coli
bd•
30&lt; 5762 173
1965 Genera bO x 12 2 bdr
1966 Mt Ve non Ox 50 2 dr
1973 BLAZER CHEYENNE au o
1969
Chomp on 12•60 2 b
~S PO Coli 367 048~
1969 PMC 12x50 2 br
1974 FOUR WHEEL DRIVE Toyota 1970 Skyl ne 12• 65 2 b
Lend C user 41 000 m es 1970Syl vo 60xl2 2bd
$3000 Co I "6 3732
1970Costle 6(h 17 7bdr
1978 GMC
T S erro Grand 25 1972 Elcona 12)1' 65 3 b
1973 Nob I ty 12x60 2 br
$5300 Co l 44b 121b ofte 5pm
1973 N dgewood 70 K 14 3 bd
8 &amp; S MOBilE HOME SAlES
PT ~lEA S ANT WV
b75 44:24
Cam pong Equopment

l SfO TRA CTOHS
MF I 5 0 Nc l
Mf OS 0

CARH:R S P'LUMI:UNG
AND HfAT NG
Co Fou til 8 P ne
Ph o l"' 446 3881:1 or ~40 4477 7

For Sale

Sunday

__ Lost and Found

CAl l US fo you photog oph c
E'Pds Po I o t comm e co
LOST female beagl e pets n
and wedd ng photog aphy
Georges Creek o eo Rewa d
Tawn ey ~ l url os &gt;124 Second
$10 Coli 44b 6567
AvP

PURE PLEASURE IN THE PINES
Your brude w II never want a vacat on from th s 4 BR
central a r b g 20 x40 poo 10 acres and a barn nc r e
g11rden spot ce ar dog pen BeQut ful v ew and
perf ec t sec lu s on are second nature to th s nea rly new
N276
hom e
DUALITY BUILT RANCH
MODERN HOUSE POOL
You ltust ove t h s modern
3300 sq ft overall 3 BR 2
3 bed r oom ranch w t h for
baths shower modern k t
ma entr y l arge formal v
c hen
larg e ant qu e
decor ated tam y room
ng room w th 10 bow w n
11 00 sq ft conc re te sw m
dow formal d n ng room
m oder n k tchen w th l ot s or
m ng pool 18 x35
very
cus om bu tt oak cab nets
m uch n use pen c ar ea
10 s of v ng St Rt 141
and ba r la rge fam y room
w fh wood burner ba h and
Ga ll po s School D stri c t
half doub l e car garage
Pr ced $53 900 Modern new
w th door opener concr ete
custom bu It home close to
dr ve n ce large ot s ots
property can be pur chased
Of shrubbery some trees &amp;
w th pro perty or sold
plan ts ga r den space E x
separa te y or moved Tot a
eel ent
ocat on
Porter
Packag e $76 000
11 212
brooke Subd C ty Sc hoo
D st G r een E l em entary
IMMEDIATE POSSES
Shown by appt
# 256
SOON
2
acre
ot
+
o
w e at
NEW LISTING
w e fe nce d for safely 11nd
ROCKING CHAIR PORCH
pr va cy Dr I ed well r ur a
S t ba ck and r el ax on the
Wdter
and r uns thro ugh ot
fro nt por ch ot th s attra c
E lecfr c hookup Al most
t vc 3 b edroom r anch
new sept c tank
Fru t
Large car port w th ch a n
t
ee
s
All
type
s
ot
berr
es
nk su rround ng the yard
Ver y produc t ve !eve and
Concr et e dr ve
Conve
Hurry out now
cion t be
Don t
n ent y loc at ed
d sappo nted by a so d
de ley S~9 000 oo
s gn $1 2 000
#2 S1
n 19
STOP
f you h ave been look ng for
a bar ga n
STOP
The
owner of th s recen y
r em od eled home says he
must sell
mmed ate y
L v ng r oom k tchen 2
bedrooms
bi! fh
ut t y
r oom New por:ches and
sept c tank A lso new w rng Shown by appo nt
menl
$ / 9 000 00 N ~35
TWO BEDROOM HOME
P ced low for mmed ate
sa e N ce ga rd en space
goad locat on c ty water
sewer ba sement Owner
w he p f nance qual f ed
buyer
H109
MUST SEE THIS ONE
Modern hou se s x room s
cmd bath 3 bedroom s ut
ty r oom enc ose I back
porch and front porch
n tur111 gas c t y wale
Just ou t of c t y I m ts
sma barn for stab es or
c C~t tl e .t 2 acr es of Qround
600 f roCl d fronta ge St Rf
1&lt;11 Must sell lm rn ed ate
possess on
# 239
LOVELY TWO STORY
Hom e th at has been tot a y
r em odeled Be th e f rst to
see th s very well kept
home New modern bUilt n
k tchen a ll app ances most have ma ntenance
warranty
L v ng room
d n ng room 3 bedrooms
bath ut I ty and pl ay room
comb ined wood burner low
hea t b s 2 car garage 2
sl orage buotd ngs garden
space All th s and much
more
surro und ed
by
several l arge shade trees
Lots of pnvacy but oyet
close to stores Reasonabl y
pr ced Show n by appt on
IV
# 260
NICE &amp; COMFORTABLE
N rc nn e r om to r ta b c s
s 7 stor y t omc Lo c ~ t c cl
n lh ~ Nor I Gil I n Sc hool
Thr ee
ar ge!
D st c
bN froo n s k tchen d n nd'
r oom 1 v nQ oom ba th
fue o fon :cd a fur n rJce
For that e x tr 'l spa cf&gt; ou of
doors 11 er e s a Inroe
c e~ r c en M rn and ch cken
hou s
Sl ow by appo nt
m cnt
h 246

NICE

COUNTRY SE T
TONG
NEW LI STIN G
T h s cozy country hom e s
s l uated on 01 n ac e of
g ound
n c fy sc hoo
d st r c
3 bed ooms w f e
approved k t chen w th
oad s of b r ch Ci'lb nets
I v ng
new d sh washe
r oom ma n bath new gas
furn ace &amp; centra a r Th s
hom e has been 1ota ly
r edecoril ted 2 ca r ga r ge
G~ t
r eady ror sum m c
Th s hor1'1 e has r~ n ce s v m
m ng pool Show n by pp t ff
2 74

SUPERB
CONSTRUCTION
Anyone wou ld adm r e th e
qual t y of the superb con
struct on of th s tas teful y
de s gned br ck hom e 3 000
sq ft
I v ng space 3
bedrooms spac ou s I v ng
room l arge fam y room
enchant ng k !chen form al
d n ng room pat o fu I
I n shed basement w h 2
att ac hed
garag e
c ar
s tu ated on a large level lot
n a qu et ne ghborhood If
you ar e ook ng for con
stru ct on q ual fy don t took
any further Pr ced to se I
rap dly on today s mark et
Shown by appo nment # 258

4- 1 ACRE LOTS
County water ava tabl e
Seller w II furn sh a survey
Call now
N259

2ACRES
M os t y wood l and county
water ava lab 1~
good
buld ng s te c t1 school
G r een Elemen
d str c t
ta ry Reasonab ly pr ced
H264
GOOD BUY
Help f ght today s nfl ated
prt ces w th fh1 S mob te
hom e and 1 acr e lot Thr ee
bedrooms 1 1 baths gas
for ced a r furna ce pat o
cem ent block ou t s de
bu ld ng Don I m ss th s
deflated bu y
#2S5
15 ac r es vacant land more
or
ess
new fenc ng
aro und 400
b
toba cco
base sm all pond &amp; some
mber water supp y Ex
cellen t buy tor $9 600 Ncar
Cr ow n c v
N 282
$16 000
AO acres of v a~cm t lcmd
more o ess Per y Twp
W ll ter
s on proc rty
M nera l r ght s
e r1 se d
Good Bu y Won t nsf long
N257
EXCELLENT
BUILDING LOTS
County water ava fab le..
Ro•d front"' ge 1 lot 175 fl

NEW LISTING
Just 1 sted w th n I m le of
c t y I mils four - ' acr e
ot s Bu ld to su I yourse f
$4 ooo per ot
# ~osa

LOTS FOR SALE
We have several cho ce ots
n Oh o Twp Some ar e
water fro nt lots campmg
lots some are scentc Lots
on higher eleva t ons Road
100 to 265 Rur a
fron'a ne
•
water available Also n ce
level lot on Rt 141 Easily
landscaped and panned
W nter weather now but
spring Will soon be here
Make your se lect ns ar
y1
He
261

°

SECLUDED BEAUTY
Everyth ng s spec a! abou t
th s truly d st net ve br ck
home s tt ng on 22 acr es
ove r took n g th e S l v er
Br dge Oh o R ver and th e
c ty of Gal pol s T h s
ho m e can t a ns the m an y
ex tra s you can th nk abou t
ever own ng Look Mom
Two and aha f ba l hs Tw o
shower s Thr ee bedrooms
A spark ng
v ng r oom
w fh arge stone f r epl ace
cathed a ce I ng ea t y an
eye ca cher A w ell p an n
ed Chandler k tc hen d n ng
r oom tw o ca r ga ra ge Th s
hom e s or the ve y spec aJ
pea e wh o en oy pr vac yand a ver y r e axe d I fe I
th s mee ts yhou needs we
r:ec ommend qu ck act on
1253
7 un t m ote &amp; restaurant
w th exce llent occupancy
r at o M ana ge bot h from
t he sa m e seat Supe or
fr aff c co uhf Owner recep
t ve to qua f ed buyer N236
MODERN BRICK HOME
On l y 2 ye ars o d
v ng
ro om for m al d n ng r oom
4 spac ou s bedroom s 1 1
ba th s modern bu It n k I
chen
t ash co n pnctor
arge fam ly room and r ec
rbom w th wood bu n ng
f r ep ace
all ve y we I
d e co r a t e I
and
m
m ~c u ate v kept
u I b C:~SC
m cnt 9x 10 ee l ar a ge 2 1
c11 r gar age hea ted also
has 9 ft doo s A l l th s s t
t ng on one acre nor c or
ess on hnrd op r oad /1267
NEW LI STING
DREAM S DO
COME TRUE
Le t us n ake your dr eam s
cam e tru e w th you own ng
one of Ga I a Coun ty so der
hom es
N ne
q ua ry
s p ac o u s
room s
4
bedroom s rorma entry
fam ly room I v ng room
modern k tchen baTh full
bC~se m c nl
ga r age and
p enly of stor age space
La ge yar d w th se vera l
t r ees Shown on y by ap
~ 277
po nt ment

$22 000
Th ee bedroom s baTh v
ng r oom bu II n k !chen
stokerm at c heater n ce
s ze garage Pretty countr'y
setf ng 2 acre tot a fenc
ed n Attr ac t ve wh te
board fence along road
Dug well plenty w ater A ll
th s and a stocked n ce s ze
pond for $2~ 000
"24 t

VACANT LAND

$18 000
For t he ou\tioorsman 30
acres of vacant land
Room to hunt f arm or
bu ld L ocated near No
1 and 2 m nes n Me gs
County
Pr ce d f or
S18 000 00
N 247

THINK SPRING
See th s del ghffut new
anch st y e home 3 B R
bath ea t n k tch en ail
bu It n full basem ent
dec k ng bu t on west s de
of hou se over l ook n g 2 1
acr es of wooded area Th s
s pr ced n our range to
day If th s meet s your
we r ecom mend
nee ds
qu ck r~ c t on
f/ 265
S32 soo
Seen c ar ea new double
w de 24 x52
B roorns ?
ba th s 2 shower s L R
F R
D R
3 bedroom s
de lu xe
k tch en
good
garden ar ea new tool shed
24 x28 Th s s what you
wa n t and can t usual y
I nd A ll new w h 10 ac r es
to use as you please
N219

GOODRENIAo..
PROPERTY
Or fUSt a good nves tmen t
Modern home I v ng oom
w th woodburner
eat 1"1
k tchen w th stove and
refr ge r ato r
bath
2
bedr ooms A so a K kwood
12x65 m ob l e hom e
3
bedrooms
1 1
bath s
modern K Tc hen Tr a er s
par t a! y furn shed Car
port w t h storage room
r ura wat er AI h s s t1 ng
on 180x 180 lot ~a I now for
an apt
#263

CENTURY 21

LAND INFLATED•
acre more or tess
Wa nut Twonsh p s I lOD
#273

Ju st I s t~d w th n 1 m le of c t y 1 m ts n ce 3 bedroom
r anch eu It n k t chen v ng room bath ut I ty r oom
ca rport stor age ~r ea P l us 2 bed room mob c hom e for
h at ex tra ncome S tu a ed on 1 2 acr e Don m ss
h s bar ga n tv on t be on th e ma r ket on g Shown on
y b y appo ntment P ced n t he '$20 s
h 285

u

MAJES rJC MANS ION
T h s sta el y 2 stor y Col
on a home w th ts p ll ary
posts and form al entry has
chara cter Grac ous lam l y
ro om w th p ank fl oor ng
has a warm coz y f eplace
Lar g e
k t c he n
w t
spa c ou s
k no1ty
p ne
cab nets
F or ma l I v n g
roan Powd er r oom off th e
mr~ n ent y Beaut fu w n
d ng open sf a r case ead ng
fa 3 bed ooms and ba t h
Cl ose t space
bou nd s
b r~ se m e nt for sto age T wo
enclosed por ches Ar st c
P a nt n gs
Of
sel ec t ed
st rub s and hu ge
r ees
fra m e th s home s tt g on
one acre of grou nd Add
on a and can be purchas
ed Subu rba n
v ng c t y
sc hools ye t o ly
m les
from c ty
II you e a
ser ous m nded buyer get
her e fas t
tt 243
RIVER VIEW HDME
You I ke th s &lt;1 bedroom
nnc h
s ty e
hone
Bed r ooms
shou l d
nr
com mod a fe queen or k ng
s ze bedr oom su es En oy
you r mea s look n a ttw
see n c Oh o R v er th ough
apc fur e w cow FJm y
r oom h s sl 'l i e f oor vood
pan e ed
bu
book
she ves A so h :ls 'l b " th s
show er sfa I modern k f
chen wo ca r ga ril ge Gus
for ced a he ~ t OQ sys e n
w fh zoned heat ng One of
he be ff er suburban homes
of G e~ po s A I stone co
pp o
stru ct on MNkf'
men
D vc down oclaY
and be ct .:.rmed
J! 252
BEST BU Y ON
MARKET I34 900
Ne v
st ng
Look lh s
mode n r anch ho ntJ over
because t won t '151 ong
F eatur es J v ng r oo ll
E ng I sh Tudor s y e d n nq
area m oder n k tchen v tl
seve r a
cab nf' l 5.
'I
bed r oom s an ~m:~ n bllth
S ng ~ car gar01ge On l y 2
yr s old Owners are leilv
ng the st 'l l e r~ncl need to
se I th s n ce hon c C ] f) or
appt

nn

New

see
~ e~t e

u

by 220ft A lots 100ft by 220
ft each T hey have allbeen
surveyed Spr ngf e d Twp
IJ 131

f nrl ncc a good qua l f ed
buy0r Ltm dcon rac tor se
cone mort age Ca ll t or
m or e del a Is
N 2~4

c '

sf o

h s ho

e ocrt fed off
Route 7 Ci1 1Ur ng

n ce

v ng
oo n
3
bed ooms d n n g oon 2
bil th s ee~ 1 n k chen oar
t Cl
basement
n c ty
school d s r c f w ou ld be an
exce l ent sta rl er to nc
1 283

NEW LISTING
A TRUL Y HOME
T ru y spn c ou s
tr u y
ho ncy and u y upd :jfcd n
a
smpy
ge a t
ne g h bo r hood
.t
nrge
bedrooms
I v ng roo n
d n ng r oom k tch en ba t h
basem ent closed n po cl
pus mor e Ga ra ge and n ce
gar den sp ot Exce lent con
d on $32 ooo
n8l

CE!'I;TURY 21
92 ACRE FARM
4 B R house bu ld ngs cat
ches warm sun dur ng day
and breeze at n ght Good
pastur e la nd obacco base
Can be pu chased as a
who e or 20 acr es and
bldgs or 60 ac es v ac ant
land f you want a farm or
ust ac r es don t pass th s
up A ttract v e sett ng Han
nan Tr ace school s Please
ca t for more deta Is 1/266
NEW LISTING
t you re oak ng for a
farm w e have 1ust I sted 91
acre s n Spr ngf e d Twp
Road fronta ge plen t y of
water plenty of pastu r e 2
arge barns p us oth er
sm all er bu ld ngs
Th s
and could also be used for
development purpose s So
stop look m g today and g ve
usaca
#270
BEEF FARM
11 8 acr es over 40 acres
eve l t I at e land the r est
s pastu re and wood and
Toba cc o base
6 room
house good barn othe r
outbu d ngs Se ng be ow
tod ay s market
11 106
FINANCING IS
NO PROBLEM
On th s fa rm house and
104 51 acres more or ess
of good crop la nd located n
Me gs county Sa lem Twp
Severa l acres of !eve road
frontage House has 1 11 ng
room
d n ng room
A
bedrooms k /chen A l so a
dou ble cr ba nd mach nery
shed
Owne
w II help

LOOK
st ng Be

FARMS
THIS IS SPECIAL
120 acre .::arm w th a
moder n hou se As for hou se
- al um num s d ng th cr
mapane w ndows copper
pl umb ng de uxe k tc hen
formal d n ng r oom two
baths
base m ent
r ur al
water etc L and appr ox
50 acres t li abl e heavy
th ck orch ard grass fescue
sod I dea for cattle Good
barn, oba cco ba se F e ds
are h gh and dr y Cattle
c0u ld pa sture mos t of
u n l es
s now
w nt e r
coverage Plenty wa ter
Th e
pond and strea m
sp o rt sm a n s s de
abounds w h deer squ r
wo o d
g r ouse
r et
Horseback r d ng lots of
tra Is and roa ds p ne trees
woods Or ve out tod ay and
be charmed Shown only b y
appo ntment St a e Route
141 775 ou t of Gal po s
1284

PRICE REDUCED StS 000
219 acr es - today s I st ng
pr ce S110 000 Approx so
acr s t ab le 160 pasture
141
lbs tobacco ba se
large barn ttos of good
road frontage
black t op
road rural water modern
4 BR house w th fu 1 base
ment Let s deal now spr
ng WI soon be her e 1/ 199

•

••

•I

l•

539 You
52 acre farm 6 room house
3 bedrooms storm w n
dow s
rur a l
water
Gall opo l s School D sir ct
3 2 m les f r om R 0 Grande
Good
n e ghborhod
Shou dn t last long
11144

Each office IS Independently owned and operated
CEMTURY 21" Homebuyer s Kot • at part c patong oNoces
..-:::_ _
EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ~

© 1978 CENTURY 2 1 REAL ESTATE CORPORATIO N PRINTED N U SA
..,_ 1(1

N

1'1

'If VII.... )f c:t'N fl

~ 1\

,_ E O!lPOI!A 0t&lt;

I

.
l

�D-11-TheSundayTimes.Sentmel, Sunday, Mar. 25.1979

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

- --__Real Estate for SiJ !e__

__l!_!!_a~_~state for Sale_

· - - - - t -:t--:f - Sale-

Real Estate for Sale

ANY HOUR .

..t: •
.

Ev.t,nings
446-4611

••'
•• •
&gt;)•
·~·

''.•

RUSSELL
WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

.,.••
••

"

"'I •

~

.....
~·

~=
t•
{l

"....
......••

Ron Canaday, ReaHor, 446·3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446·3636
lou Lutton, ReaHor Assoc., Eve. 446-3005

PR 1
This lovely bnck ranch
ts ready for vot.~r growing family with over 1900 sq ft.
of llvmg area plu s a two car garage. The family rm . 1S
14 )(_27 with a WB ltreplace. The kitch en IS complete
with r ang e, d is hwas her &amp; disp. Other features are 3
large BR •s, 112 bath s, large LR &amp; dining area, heat
pump, central vacuum, qual1ty carpet, elec . garage
door &amp; a large flat lot at Rodney . STROUT REALTY,
446 0008.

251!2 Locust St.

Brick and ceda r ra nch has cer amic tile foye r~ m i r rored walls, ry1ass1Ve ston e fireplace covers one_ l i vi~g
rm . wall. plush carpeting, formal dining , eat 1n k1.t ·
che n, 3 lg BR , 2 full baths. 20' deck plu s concrete patto
wi th brick grill for outdoor entertaining, 2 car garage.
Over 112 acre velvety lawn. I rresistabl e inside and out!

Galllpoll•, Ohio

$62,000
Here's old fashioned cha rm
wi th th e convenie nce of to·
day Fully equi pped kit-.
chen has tabl e nook with
bay window , beam ed ceil tng, pa ntry. F ormal dining
ro om has c hair r ail ,
wa llp aper and bu i lt-in
china cabinet . Private livCoz y den .
Ing room
Gracious foy er W1 th ppen
stair way lea ds to second
floor w tth 3 sp acious
bedr ooms. Full basement 1
has r ecr eat 1on room plu s
lots ot stor age. Nice picnic
area 1n back yard Located
downtown Ga llipolis. A
house th at says " home".
Ju st Its ted

~

.."

•
'·'
··:..

TONEY REALTY (0

'.,

..

44~7900

OFFICE

T

~

BOB LANE
BRANCH MANAGER
SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLI POLIS, OH 10
NEW LISTING · In Gallipolis, 5 r oo m home. Third Ave.
Buy tor $11,000.00.

. -· -·...BRICK HOMES.

•.
"•'

-"'-

,.

IT'S SPRING 1 Enjoy tf fully sur rounded by beaut1f ul

pines, oak and birth trees. T her e's a very pri va te rear
pat io tor morning coffee or evening coo kouts. Spac ious
bedrooms, f 1replace 1n both the living and tam1ly
rooms, full basemen t, carport. N ewly decorated inside
an d out so
can bypass Spring c lea nin g and just en ·
lOY 1 N ear CentE&gt;na r y.

$59,900

ATTENTION SELLERS : LISTINGS NEEDED $2 0,000 TO $50,000 RANGE . LIST WfTH THE PROS AT
THE GALLERY. WE ADVERTISE NA-TIONALLY ON
TELEVISION, IN MAGAZINES, ETC . WE OFFER A
FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE TO OUR POTENTIAL
SELLERS AND WE JIELONG TO ONE OF THE
LARGE ST SALES AND LISTINGS REFERRAL
ORGANIZATIONS IN THE WORLD CALL TODAY
FORMOREDETAILS .

E)(ceptional features r arely found tn the 50's.
Outstanding family room
w1th firepl ace and warm
brow n toned ca rpet . For mal li vi ng and dinmg
room . Super deluxe kitchen
w1 th snack bar , r an ge,
dishwas her and d1nmg
area. 3 bedrooms, 11!2
baths. A tta c hed fini shed
E l ec tri c hea t
ga r age
pump,
cen.
air.
No
ma1tenance br1ck exte rior .
One of t he area's most at ·
tractive neig hborhoods.

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:S ituated on Lake Dr ive In Rio Gr ande.·
want to see thi s uniqu e, new, br•ck. 4 bed room
home. Family room with patented heat•n_g_ ~yst e m
which heats both th e home and hot water utd• z•ng the
open fireplace , 2 baths' 2 half baths . Vill age wa!er

and sewer. 2 car garage, nice home for f am •!Y Pn ce

$45,900

POMPEII - Eeauti ful French design home with the
look ot lu x ury and el egance 4 bedr oom s With master
Br teaturing a private bath and huge walk 1n c losets 2
f ull ba th s, ki tche n, breakf as t room , family room with
trpl , full tw asem en t &amp; a 2 c ar garage. On a scenic 2
ac r es.

$55,500

t

ENJOY

THE " COMFO

overlooking the beautiful Ohio

~~~~~r. ·.

'
'

Silver Memorial Bridge from your

v1ng room , d1ne in
the comfort of your formal d ining room, and sw•m in

•
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your own heated pool. 2 woodt,Jurning firepla ces, one in
the family room and one .n the l i ving room . 4
bedrooms, 3 on the m ain floor A quality home just
waiting for you to occupy . Call for more information .

- -.

E NGINEER PLATTED AND READY TO GO - 14
butd 1ng lot s, sewer line 1nsta l le d. Euy one or all - Con
v en iently loca ted

LOOKING FOR LAND? - 54.32 ac r es of prime
deve lop ment land , loc ated off Rout e 35 Tobacco b ase.

NEW liSTING : compact 3 bedroom home situated
along Sand Hol low Rd. L iving rm., dining r m . and kit ·
chen . One bath w -shower . Fencec;l-i n lot. Pri ce
$20,000.00.

HIGH QUALITY - Large home w1th .4 levels and a lot
of ex tr as . .4 brs Master br and sepa rat e bath and
dress 1ng rm .. 3 ba lhs i n all. Family rm with_ b_eaut1tu l
stone wb. fp , com let e buj ilt 1n k1t., form al d 1nt~ Q rm ,
foyer, l ar ge li v rm . and a tt ached garage eu11t w1th
yo u tn m1nd . Setting on 1 acre of land .

NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom bri ck home, l oca ted
w ith i n 3 m iles f ro m hospital on Knst1 Dr, 11'' baths,
dining or fam ly room, corner lot , w.b. firepl ace Buy
now for $59,900 00
NEED Fl NANCING? Check with us, we have access to
VA &amp; FHA loans, also, conventional loans for hom es or
commerc ial purposes
COMMERCIAL BUILDING: Loca t ed 1n Vm ton,
spaceous bu i lding can either be used for business or
meetmg room . Pnce onl y $11,000 00

NEW LISTING : ApprO)( 4 acres, level land , ideal for
development , adjacent to v i llage of Rodney, several
hundred ft frontage on St. Rt . 588, r ura l water
available. Price only $37 ,500 DO.

rtEW LISTING : Comfortable 3 bedroom carpe ted
brick home located on . Fairfield-Centenary Rd ..
situated on 2 acre tract of land , beau ttful coun try side,
w .b . f ireplace , full basem ent (fin ished), 1'12 bath s, _
rural water, 2 car garage. Price $75,000.00.
NEW LISTING : Commercial bUilding , Court Street ,
Gallipolis, approx. • 1500 sq. It , arranged tor
restaurant. Two apartments upst ai r s, storage building
In rear . Call for more informa tion .

W1lh wate r tap -

ot c leared land for building stte w1th wa ter
tap _..: $4,500.00 .

$16,500

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

$4,700
PR I CED R I GH T FOR FAST SELL. Seve n acres of
wooded hill land 10 Morgan Tw p. 15 miles from ci ty .

1

AT HOME
BECKY LANE
VICKIE HAULDREN
SUE ROUSH
BOB LANE
WALT LANE

WANT TO SELL? CALL 446 3636 WE NEED LISTINGS!

lNG-CHlLDS

446.0458
446·4042
446·9753
446 -1049
446 -0458

INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
Over 100 years of serving Meigs County .
Surround yourself wilh success. Deal
with us.

FOR SALE OR TRADE -

kitchen &amp; dining rm ., with built·in appliances, 14x44
family , rm . with ws fireplace, rec. rm., laundry,
sundeck, patio, 2 car garage &amp; over I acre of land.
Located 3 mi. from town in the Green Grade School &amp;
Gallia Academy High School Disl. STROUT REALTY,
44&amp;-0008.

Big beautiful bri ck older hom e on a la r ge ~ouble lot
in Middlepor t One of the finest. well bu•lt homes
you will find. 4 bedroom , 2 1/:~ bath, eat -in kitchen,
formal dm ing room , full basement, g8rage. Owner
r elocating. To build this house _today would cost
ove r three times the market prtce $49,900 .
Call us - We have more

IF YOU'RE 1 !liNKING ABOUT SELLING , GIVE US
A CALL AND WE'LL BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS OUR
LISTING CONTRACT WfTH YOU. WE HAVE1
BUYERS BUT WE NEED LISTINGS!! LET US SELL
V:OUR ~iOME WHEN YOU ' RE R"!ADY

LAND

QUIET AND PEACEFUL older
home with l ive rooms and bath
with cella r and 1" , acres of
ground. Approx. 7 mtles fr om
Gall ipoli s in country. Price.
515 ,000. Coll446·3932 .

()wners will finance 1heSe:
78.8 acres on Sf . Rl . 124 - $15 ,750.
18 acres 10 Pomeroy - $22,000.
1 acre Corner Lot In Pomeroy - $35,000 .
3.5 acres in Pomerov &amp; $6,000
9 Acr e Corner Lot in M iddleport - $75,000.
Acre Building Lot Site on 143 -$1 0,000.

io

REA L ESTATE LOANS
10 ACRES OF LAND Cent9rpomf
Rd Ncar R1o Gt nde Rurol SPECIALI ZING IN F H.A . AND
V A. iNSURED MORTGAGES
wo l er Call6 14 - 2ft'l · 5~lb
M I LLION S
TO
LE ND
SIX ACRES for s ol~ by owner in
FAVORABLE INTEREST RATE,
Vin ton oreo on W1U HortsooM
LOW OR "NO DOWN PAYMENT
Rd Apply in pcr!.on ot M1ke
FOR VETE ~ANS ". LONG·TERM
Marcum's Wdl Hartsook Rd
FINANCING AND NO PR!:PAY ·
$5000
MENT PENA LTIE S THIS IS THE
WAY TO DO IT, IF YOU CAN
FOR SALE BY OWNER d 1' 1 acre
QUALIFY RHINANCI"-..G ALSO
fa rm , 6 rm . fr ame h ou~ e bar
AVAILABLE . CALL TODAY FOR
1200 lb tohorco bo se 18 ocr os
MORE DETAILS LINDA LAN E
tillable A' J mi. on Rl 718 Coli
.:146 1517
756 6479 ofer 5 r m

FINANCING AVAILABLE

-5 yr. old ranch offers 3 BR's, 3 baths, 22ft. LR, 31ft.

HOMES

NEW LISTING : 306 ac r e f arm, nea r Waterloo. 100 acr e
bottom land, som e timber, 2 barns, shed, pond Buy for
$160,000.00.

NEAL REALTY

444 Second Ave .
'
446· 1694
HAVE you ever wanted to
live in the country but st i ll
have the conveniences of
the city nearby? Now's
your chance. See this 3 BR
(could be 4) on Spruce Sf.
Ext. Large spacious liv in gdining room with cathedral
ceiling and fireplace with
"Free Heat Mttchine ".
.Also 21ft baths and a lar.ge
.built·in kitchen. Sit on your
own wood deck or eat in the
28'X12' screened-in porch ,
All this and more situated
on a .11 acre lot in the City
School D_ist. Must be seen
to be appreciated . Call to.;
day for your appointment .
Priced at StO, OOO.
.
EVENINGS
J , MICHAEL NEA L
44&amp;·1 503
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M~GHEE
"R~

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446-0552

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OPEN DAILY , EXCEPT SUl&gt;l. 9-5
MON . &amp; FRI. TIL B P .M .
OTHER HRS. BY APPOINTMENT

~

ACRES with some BE YOUR OWN BOSS,
.=: bui ldings and tob acco base . family type r estSJur ant , by
equipment and fix tures
'tnEMR 110
L ease available. EMR 125
~DUPLEX , pr esently oc
o cupied, good 1nvestm en1 UNDER CONSTRUCTION
1n Crown City Two ·new
II. property. BMR 111
homes Eac h w1 th 3 Br 's
11
0 COMBINATION bU Siness and l 2 baths EMR 126
&gt;and liv ing quarters 1n
.:r: Ga ll 1a county Coa l Coun E UREKA, 3 BR home witll
basemen t. River fr ont age,
:; try EMR 112
FHA VA. EMR 127
I- CONVENIENT
LOCA ·
~ TION , sw 1mming poo l and
:: m or e than an acr e of land .
&gt;3 ER house w basemen t fenC: cu ydrO. t:MR 128
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ADDISON , 3 BR r anch w1th
;, GR~I=tJ
1 yr. full d i VIded basemen !
., old
1o1 FHA VA BMR 129
111 VA,, , ,,.., t&gt;M t&lt;! l12A

O'lso

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STROUT ..,
REALTY,
INC.
EXTRA
NfCE
2
bedroom I floor plan house.
beautiful bath w1th shower ,
all built-in kitchen, dining
area, liv 1ng room. 35x25,
alum . siding, 3/.- basement,
forced
a 1r
oil
heat .
insulated, ni ce c oncrete
patto , exce lle nt co untr y
view. city water and sep ti c
tank , 18)( 18 shed , beautiful
location. 1 mile f rom
Chester, Ohio, 25 acres o f
nic e land, 23 acre fenced,
very nice woodland Only
$55,600. Call
Shelia J . Whaley
992-&amp;189 or
8111 Stewart
J74·731l

Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has anyth1ng to

give owoy and does not offer or
otlempt to offe r any o1her thing
lor sole may place on od m th 1s
col um n There wil l be no
_:_h__?rge ~~o~~~r~s~.. ~ .
KITTENS 7 mo5 old Lo ... eoble, 1.1
l er tr01n ed . Call446 -9479

ONE ACRE· home site Rural
water. Gallipolis School Oi st. 7
miles from town. $&lt;4950 . terms.
Coll256· 1216

Phone 992-2342
992-2449

FIVE ACRES and new home , some
frontage on Raccoon Creek .
Gallipolis School Oisl Pnced tn
low $40's or bes t offer. Finane·
.~ !.n~-~~~~~Coll25~1!!~:- _
LOT FOR SALE. PorterbrooM Sub·
dl ... islon. Coll446-8626 .

DOW.NING..CHILDS
Rodney, Broker, Bill, Br , Mgr.
Middleport, Ohio

53 ACRES, 7 room hou se. barn, 2
ou,.tbuildings . 30 x 42 shop, 858
lb tobocco bo se, 12 mi from
G~ll!po lts. C oll ~~~1_444_
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Gen·eMc-Kee tct:ttlty, 1nc .
No. 229
A REAL OPPORTUNITY
If you want a pre com
situated on an acre of
ground. well insulated, new
carpet, stove, washer and
dryer, refrigerator . Priced
at iusl $37,. 500 , Atso
available to buver of home,
an e)Ctra acre lot across the
road for just S6,000. A river ·
lo1 .
OFFICE 886 ·8888
Hazel Finch 88&amp;-6528

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SAlE PENDING

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New brick home, 3 bdr., large family room,
fireplace . l 'h bath, heal pump with central
air. Fully carpeted, large kitchen with
- plenty of cabinets. Elec . range, dishwasher,
disposal, util. room , elec . garage d!lor.
Ready lo move into, located on Krisli Dr., 3
mi . from Hospital. Can help finance . Call '
446·1171, a Iter 5, 446-2573.

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BAIRD &amp; FULLER
REALTY

1218 EASTERN AVE. • GALLIPOliS, OHIO
"We Sell Better Living"

l~-0
-=~-:._FF::....::_ICE 446-7013
,,

Bernice Bede Osol

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~'Your

a;

~ 'Birthday

...

II.

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LOVELY Rl
has 4 bed rooms, formal dining room, k itchen wi th
bUtlt ms, libr ary or fami l y r oom, 5 f i r eplaces, 2 1/~
baths, la rg e 2 ca r garage, beautiful lot with frontage on
l st &amp; 2nd Ave nu es, call tod ay for an appo tnfment q
0775
.

MEMBER Of;

March 25, 1979
Tie up loose ends o n pend tng
projec ts thi S commg year be·
tor e ln'JC.Ivl nQ yourself m new
ones Thtng s you ... e already
started w 1l l produce a good
~,qEALTOR
retur n 1! you co mplete th em
properly
ARIES (March 21·April 19)
L. (Bud) McGhee, Broke)
Rather than fend1ng lor your· &gt;
. _ 446 005~J_Anvtime_
self today you are li kely to 'look
.,
Tom Whtle, Salesm~ ... 44A·9557 t=ve
10 otllers to handle your bur·
,dens of respon s1btl1t y Your ~
~;ene Oescil, salesman, 446·7440 . Eve .
~
tactics won ' t be apprec iated
Le arn mo re ab out yourself by .~Thank You For Listing with ' Bud ' McGhee Really
sending for yo ur copy of Astra·
Graph Letter Mail $1 for each
10 Aslro-Graph. P 0 · Box 469.
Radio Cily Slal1on. N Y 10019
Be sure to specify birth sign
TAURUS (Aprii20·May 20) II yo u
have ulten or motives In de al"
tn gs w1th fri ends today. they'll
I
oe readil y discern ed . Keep
everything above board so you
won 'I ha11e to apologize later
GEMINI (May zf.June 20) You
may la ck the dr l11e today to
achieve diff icult goal s Be
patient Proceed a step at a
t1 me with 1n your capab1 l1 ttes .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) II
may be a trifle difficult for you
MACE DONI A RD . - Harrtson Twp , 2.4 acres, pasture
today to harmonious ly co p e
and woods, sm all amount tillabl e, good tob acco barn,
with co-wOrkers You'll be look·
112 ,000
mg for the1r faults InStead of
the ir virtues
CORA RODNEY ROAD - Perry Twp , very nice 12x70
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Be ex·
mobile home with 3 B R &amp; 1112 baths, 25x30 garage could
tremely carefu l in your financ ia l
be used for body shop, gar age, etc . Askmg $24,000
m11olvements today You could
be drawn Into a situation where
OHIO RIVER LOT - Loca ted in Eureka, Ga llipoli s Ci
you' ll pay the tab fOr som eone
t y School Dist ., co. water ava tlable. idea l tor buil ding
who outmaneuvers you .
or mobile home s1 te $11 ,000.
VfRGO (Aug . 23·Sepl. 22)
Shou ld you fin d others unwJIIGOOD FOR NOTHING except huntmg and ca mpmg
182 acres of wilderness woods , h1ll s, brush, c ltffs
mg to cooperate tOday , it could
Located within th e boundan es of the Wayne N ation al
be due to your ins istence upo n
Forest between Ga l lipOliS and Oak HI ll $225 per ac r e.
having th ings ·your way. This
won't oc cur If you compromise
LIBRA (Sept . 23·0Ct. 231 Take 1 HARRISON TOWNSHIP - Littl!l! Bullskin Rd. 96 A
w ooded hill around good 1972 12 x60 2 BR mobile ho me,
care today tha t ybu don 't per·
spr1ngwater
$'29,500.
mit your ove rac tive im aginati o n
to make mounta ins from
RIO GRANDE AREA - 4. 1 acr es on the Rio Center
mole hills. This could lead you
point Rd Like new 1976 12x60 mobile ho me completely
to bel ieve your tasks are mo re
furnish ed, extra mobi le home pad, could be r ented for
difficult than they truly are
extra incom e, ci ty schools. Asl&lt;.mg $22, 400
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) Be
HUNTINGTON TOWNSHIP ----; 13 acres Raccoon Creek
nice to people for the right
bottom land, approx . 1200 ft. creek frontage, old barn,
reaso ns tod ay If yo u try to
well, approx. 112 mi. off Route 160 $13,000 .
butter up a person because
you want something . It may
HARRISON TOWNSHIP - 69 A most ly hills &amp; woods,
turn out opposlle o f what you
old house &amp; ce llar in poor condition, poss ibility of coal.
hoped for
129,500.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec .
PERRY TWP . - 130 acres, hay, pastur e &amp; tobacco
21) Try not to let your emotions
farm , m ost ly rollin g gr ou nd, ex t ra nice remod eled 2
be overly Influenced by outside
story home, 2 barns, oth er building s, Nebo Road .
factors tod ay 11 coul d make
you a rather unpleasant pe rso n
RESTRICTED BUILDING LOT - Corner lot in Spr mg
to be around .
Valley Estates, 166ft. fr ontage on Maple. one of Ga llta
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. 19)
Co.'s nicest subdivisons. All ut11it1es ava ilable $6,000
Reading more Into what others
say than they Intended could
RING IN THE PROFITS - Small gro cer y and garage,
cause you undue frustrations
good M om and Pop operation , equipment and mven
today Look at lhe world llghlly .
tory inc lud ed, excellent gi-oss $55, 000
Above all , laugh at you rself
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
POCKET THE RENTAL PROFITS -- Three sl or y
So meon e who 1s a poor risk,
building downtown corner tot 1n Pomero y H as fi rst .
could place yo u In a awkward
floor shop and off ice plus two large apartm ents, all oc
position today by asking you
cupi ed. $.40,000.
lor a loan Let prac ucality tern ' per your judgm en1
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Fur.ctloning as Independently 1
as you like today may not be an
easy matter. Be prepared for
others to make demands on
your time and services

!1.\.

World's largest, the leader
since 1900 in serving the
nation's buyers and sellers,

514 2nd Ave.

(i+tWSPA PER ENTE RPRI SE ASSN

II

1

Ph. 446-0008

$42,900.00
VA ll&lt;PPROVEO
8 room new home.
2 A
just fin ished .4 B R f r ame
home wi th bnck fr ont Ca r ·
port , ni ce b ui lt-tn cab ine ts
tn kt l chen
Rural wa ter
system, 12'x 16 ' stor age
buildi ng, large gard en
spo t W1thtn 2 1h miles fr om
Holzer Hosp 2 A of land ·
scaped yard . Lots of shade
trees
CONVENIENT AND
COMFORTABLE
E x t ra n1ce nome wi th 3
s R , 2 lull baths Fam il y
r oom with Frankl1n wood
bu r ner A ll on St a te Rt 160
CALL - make your ap
po1ntment to see fh ts well
pn ced home in th e JO's

U:B

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LOVELY BRICK ANO
5.73 ACRES
When we say lovely, we mean love l y P1 c
tures ca n ' t descr1be this home and
bea utiful leve l acreage. 3 BR, 2 bath s, for
mal d1n1ng room and formal ll vjng room
Large equ1pped · kitchen w1 lh br eakfast
nook and utility area. Full ba sem ent w1th
outside en tran ce 10 summer kttchen Ca ll
us now for your appo1ntment to see th is
beauty .
MODERN RANCH
BROOM HOME
In co un1ry . Over 1200 sq. If
of ltving space Larg e 11 v ·
in g r oom , 16' x 18 ', famtly
room 17' x 12' w1 th wood
burning f ireplace. Rural
water, cen t ral a tr, .1pprox
112 A. of clea n land La r ge
conc r ete pat io, carport. 3
mulberry trees A beautiful
modern country hOme You
must see th is hom e to ap ·
prec 1.1te 1ts beauty PRIC E D IN T H E 3D's

:E

ASTRO•GRAPH

·OFFICE_ 446-7699

We Need·
Your Home
or Farm
To Sell

llEM10~

g

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1'4illis l Leadingham, Realtor
Ph. Home 446·9539

m

t"'

~
VINTON , 2 stor y, could be TWO STORY, built at turn ::
~ s BR's, good cond1t i on, of the centu ry . Syperb con · -t
owner wi II constder VA or dition ins1de and ou t BMR
&lt;Tl FH A. BMR 120
94
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Cl:
FOUR BR , br1ck ra nch COMMERCIAL PROP . in -(
~ w ith full basement si tu ated Ga llipol is Gr eat fo r r etail , o
w holesa le or offi ce space. C
.e ~n 2 3 acr es. EMR 121
BMR 97
~
u MINI
FARM
n ea r
Ga llipOl iS, nice home, barn .64 OF AN ACRE , hig h and ~
t, a nd outbuildings . 13 11z dry Exce ll ent spot lor your - ·
new home BM R 101
;,
:;, acres BMR 122
Ill
J BJJ HOME on 11h acre s APARTMENT COMPLEX, 1C
12 unit s al l occup 1ed Ca ll ~
f: w ith 2nd hou se that could for
detail s BMR 102
'j be remod eled · Near Ew ·
::r
1ng ton . EMR 123
50 ACRES of rollin g land
c:
GOOD OPPORTUNITY for nea r Ga ll 1polis. EMR 107
Q.
living
qu a rt ers
and
..J bus 1 nE~ss
loca tion
pl u s CENTENARY 3 BR home •
hookup for mob1le home wit h basem ent Excellent
rnndi t1on. BMR 108
0 M eigs mines EMR 124

._:

Agency

~~~eE ~~;: Jaunddo~~"~,'t~~~ee ~

&gt;

Realtor
Associate.
.
Ph. Home 446·2230

Gallia County's

H. eal Estate

-t
::r
~

71:'

Doug
Enoch
,
Realtor Associall!
Home 446·2745
Fastest Growing

'l}

Sunday March 25

Real Estate for Sale

c:

&lt;well EMR 11 3
'
J BR FRAME RANCH al !:'.
'1:1
~
Sl6,SOO 2 BR hou se Wtth l heedgeol town BMR 74
CC basem ent near Ga llipolt s
OLDER
BRICK ,
2 ,;
:;, BM R 115
t1r epla ces, l o t s more ~
· ~ 33 ACRES w1th partia ll y Owner anxious to sell - ·
;
0'1 remodel ed 2 sl or y home, BMR 87
c fir ep lace BMR 116
LOT 188x150, owner Wtll CD
c:
. '!!CHESHIRE, 1112 st or y hel p fin ance
c.
.J home w ith 3 vi llage lots
2 AC RES near Ga ll tpOIIS ~
'- BMR 117
0
Ca ll now. eMR 91
n
G't
U. EUREKA, 32 acres of hill
gl a nd
w1 th
r ecen t ly
r emodeled home. EMR 118
EMR 92A
;Q
~ CROWN CITY, remodeled
&lt;Tl
ru home wit h 2,000 sq ft of COUNTRY atmospher e, Q.l
lik
e
new
home,
on
ly
live
~:::;
.S::. 1tv1ng space on large fl a1
miles out BMR 93
&lt;.,
lot BMR 119

=

Real Estate for Sale

0

1. 40
ACRE S,
pri me 'T1
c
dr illed bui lding sit e BMR 62

C!) 80 ACRES, 2 houses, barn

~ a nd outbuildings,

Real Estate for-Sale
- --

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~~~SALE PENDING:ng~ ~

T,..,.........

All Across America

~

FOR SALE BY OWNER

-STROuT REAL T ·..

SPACIOUS - Over 1300 sq fl . living area plus 22'X24 '
concrete block 2 car gara ge . 3 bedrooms with walk ·ln
closets, 2 FULL baths, bay window in living and formal
dining room. FamilY room has sliding patio doors
opening onto large rear porch. Kitchen has snac_k bar,
range and refr ig. Fully carpeted . Color coordtnated ,
drapes. Central air cond Double lot. V i llage of
Centenary. Call for appoinment .

Rea.-1:-:E:--s-:1a-cl:e-'7for SaI e-

Real Estate for Sale
Real Estate for Sale
'Thank You For Listin~v.lith 'Bud' McGhee Really'

-..

OUTSTANDING BR.IC~ - Beautiful. ne~ hom e Wi!ll
no upkeep 3 BR, l arge fam ily rm . w 1t~ f 1repl ace, 1 h
bath, ki t . com plete with elec ran ge, dl5hwa~~er and
d'sposa
l There is new carpet t hroughout . Utlltty rm
1
p 1us ga r.a ge w tth elec door Priced a1 $62,000 DO

NEW LISTING : Newl y remodel ed, ~ - bedroom home,
along Rt 7, Lower River Rd, 150'x 100', rur a l water.
new aerator t ank. Price $25,000.00.

JUST LISTED &amp; A REAL BEAUTY - 3 BR , 2'h baths,
den with ftreplace, dining rm ., foyer, beautiful HW
floors, glaued in rea!iifporch, patio, 2 car garage with
electri c opener plus a detached 22x24 garage. Lots of
with a wooded hillside beltind &amp; a beauttful
Ohio
in front. Shown by appointment
44&amp;-0001.

Year round fun! Fir ep lace
tor now and a pool for 'hot
su mmer days. 3 E R coun ·
try home on nearly an acre.
Family size kitchen with
range and re f riger a tor .
F ullv carpeted except kif
c hen. Att ac hed finished
ga r age smites from c i ty.

Th1s one is a r ea l money maker ! Grocery , se rvi ce sta tiOn , o 2 li cense beer and wm e c ary out . Concrete block
buil di ng houses store, garage for auto repatr plus very
ni ce 3 bedroom ap t . upsta ir s. Large lot with pl enty
parkmg space. Frontage on Rt. 7 and Oh1o River In com e f tgures ava il ab le to senous buyer

$4,000.00

~a~~ RES _

$49,900 .

READY A N 0 WAITIN G tor you and your famil y. 3 BR ,
2 full baths, lg lt v mg room w ith ru st1c beam cell1ng
Kitc hen h as r ange, r efr1g ., lots of cabmets, l4' x70'
mob ile hom e complete with wooden deck ste ps, utili ty
build1ng and underpmntng On r ened lot tn Quail Creek
Mobile Home Park

BUILDING LOTS ~· ~ lots apprO)( 120'x 19Q' loca ted on
Rout el4 1
BULAVILLE RD -- 14 bu ild i ng lots - lf2 ac. eac h,
county wat er and sewage.
2_ 2 ACRE TRI'&lt;CTS -

COLONIAL
ST YL IN G·
From the stunn1 ng porti co
porch you enter the middle
level foy er. Go down to the
daylight baseme nt with
family room , utility room
a nd f1ni shed garage or up
to th e living level. Spacious
formalltving room and din ·
ing ar ea. K ichen has snack
bar, dar k wood cabinets,
r ange and dishwasher . 3
large bedroom s
Plush
ca rpet, cen . air. Wood
deck Great location .

$11,900

NEW QUALITY BUll THOME under construcf 1o n Ee
the fi r st to l1ve 1n tht s beauty! It w ill have a f ami ly
room w1 th frp l. , 2 ba ths, k1tche n to mc lude dw , or
and dtsposa\, cen tral ai r and 2 car garage S1_
t uat ed on
over an acre of land i'lnd wi th an a ff ordable pr 1ce .
NEW LISTING : 3 bedroom , c arpeted , bri ck dwelling;
situated in Country Aire Subdivision, 1lf2lots, 2 baths, 1
shower, nat . g as F .A. furnace . A oua11ty home

$62,500

At thi s low price this 3 ER
ra nch h as to be the best buy
on the market today! Full y
carpeted exce pt kitchen,
Jl /2 baths, electr ic hea t
pump and ce ntral air cond. •
Larg e 12 ')(21' living rm .,
ea t -in kitchen wjth tot s of
cabinets and range Att ached garage . Lev e l
135'107' lawn .

$65,000 ... SEVENTY ·SIX ACRES --()ve r
,.-~ l r~ l 1700' road front age, excell ent butld1ng
s1 tes 3 eR modernized farm home, good
AO'x60' barn, 111 5 lb . toba cc o base.
---!l it--·{ Beautiful hilt and roll 1ng fenced pa sture,
appro x. 24 acres tillable~ some t 1111be r .
Seve r al streams. Green Twp , Cit y
Schoo ls.

NICE INVESTMENT - Small older home in very good
cond ition. This' home has 2 bedrooms, la r ge l1v1ng
roo m , n1ce b1g cheer y k1 f chcn w1th lots of cabine ts, 1
ba th , screened back porc h and 1 car atta c h ~(;! garage.
On a n1ce size lot N atura l gas hea t and located 1n the
ci t y schoOl d1stn c t $18,500 00.

THE
ENTERTAINER
16')(32' pool with immense
fenced patio is but one of
the pleasures to be experienced here. Others
billiard room, enormous
family room with ftreplace.
fully equ ipp ed professio nally
designed
(Chand ler's )
kit c hen .
El ega nt formal d1 ning
r oom, massive white brick
f ireglace 1n liVIng room. 3
bedroom s, 3 baths, mas ter
suite open s onto private
pat10 and pool area has
dressing r oom and batn
A nderso n Therma Pane
doors and windows, brick
ex t eri or. Genutne nospital t
ty. Over 5100,000.

$40,000

Ga!lia County's most scenic drive bn ngs you to this
beF~utifullike new br ic k ranch . 3 ER, l 1/2 baths. Kitchen
full y eqUipped wit~ r ange and r etng Utility room wtth
was her and dryer . 2 ca r fini shed garage Car pet ltke
lawn Concrel e drive.

•

OLDE ENGLISH styling in
th 1S
L · sh a ped
Tudor.
Whether y ou enter through
the service door of th e attached 2 car garage or the
doubl e doo r fro nt entry,
you ' lllove the conven1 ence
of this fl oor plan The
centPr entry directs traff ic
to the for ma l livin g area or
family room or ki tchen din ·
ing area
Th e bedr oom
wi ng otters co ml e t e
privacy. 2 full baths, plush
carpet1 ng,
family room
w it h firep lace and Sl1d1ng
glass door s to pat1o Fully
equipped kitchen. Electric
heat pump, cen air. Low
maintenance bri ck , cedar
and stu cco ex terior $60's.

DON ' T WAI T ! Good homes
under $50,000 are hard to
find . Thi s well cared for 3
ER bn c k and frame has lg,
ample
stor ager
plus
cabine ts in laundry rm .
Also back yard ut i lity bldg .
e·ack ya rd has conc rete
patio and fenced area for
the littl e ones. Near Holz er
Hospital. FH A VA .

F AM ILY d1nner is a breeze in th1s beaut1f ul n ~w k1t
che n complete w1th range,· dishwasher and dtsposal
plu s a ll th e w ork space you'll need. The liVing room has
a beaut tful stone fire pl ace 3 ERs, 11' ] baths, 2 car at ·
tac hed garage Brand new. City Schools.

•

Real Estate for Sate
Ii

446-3636

REALTOR"'

,

Real Estate for Sale

CANADAY REALTY

[B

•:~
••....
·~
••

R 1 Estate for Sale

- ~-R:~~a~~~E~_s~~~a~-e:-~o~r~~::~~;e:a~~~~-~·=~:..::~:;::~~;:;:~;;;;..;;;;~~~~~~~~,

JUST LISTED - Ni ce brick r anch w ith 4 bedr ooms ,
ltv tng room w1th w b f1r ep1ace, hardwood floor s, base·
ment w 1t h shower sta ll , 1 car ga r age, loca ted on 3 ac r es
in Hannan Tr aceS D. h 0579

./

II
(

PLANTS SUBDIVISION Ntce ranch w ith 3
bedroom s, bath with showe r , wif e approved k1tchen,
carpet ed, tull basem ent with 1 car garage. Located
c lose to town in city school d 1stnct. $42,.500.
CLOSE TO TOWN - Bea ut 1f ul new ra nc h, 3 bedr oom s,
central ai r , f ami ly r oom w i th firepl ace, large 2 car
gar age Let us show you 1hts lovely home today It 1579
NEW LISTING - A ttention Boater s, 1ust tn t1me for
sunimer , nt ce 3 bedroom home, kitc hen w ith ran~e and
dishwasher , red wood deck overlOOking Raccoon
Cr eek, loca ted on a Ia rge lot off Rt 7 . # 03.45
NEW LISTING - Ntce 12)(55 mobile home in quiet
country atmosph ere. Large th acr e lot w1th garden
space Prtc ed very reasonable w ith lots of extr as II
0125
BRICK RANCH - A lovely 3 bedroom hom e w ith
woodb urn1ng fi re pl ace. central a1r, large bedrooms,
fenced in lot, large ca rport, excellent loca tion close to
Spr i ng Va ll ey Plaza, cal! tor apointmenl .lf 0058
CHESHIRE - Large fr ame home , needs some repairs,
3 bedropms, bath, natura l gas, let 's hear an offer.
#0 175
RT . 588 - Good 2 bedroom home w1th bat h, full base ment , good buy for S14,000 If 1014
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Good 2 bedroom home
wi th bath , dfnmg room , full b asemen t, attached
garage, located on Ch tll icothe Rd Pr1ce rect uced
#0145
GOOD GROWING BUSINESS - Beer and Wtne Car ryout with Cl and C2 l icense. All equipment and inve n·
tor y Included in sa le pri ce. h 00 12
MOBILE HOME - 1972 Freedom 12x50, 2 bedr oom ,
nice lot, storage building, H 11 25

JUST BUILT
This home deli ver s th e kind
of l iv ing demanded bY to·
day 's t as tes in a ver y hand
som e design . La rg e l ove l y
kitch en has all the modern
conveni ences a w1fe wou ld
want plu s a large d1n1ng
area, ea t at ·bar, family
room , 3 large B R . &amp; 2 f u ll
baths . Very ta stef ul lY
decorated . - 7 ACRES NicE b ~OO N ,
HOME
W1t hin 4 miles of Gatlipolt s
on a St ate H ighway . Green
Township Gall tpOitS C1fy
Sc hoo l Sys tem 3 or 4 B R •
fron t &amp; back porches, nice
modern large kttchcn w1th
lots at btr ch c ab tnets Par tial ba sement F uel oi l F A .
furnace, 2 car garage, 2
st orage bu1ldmgs
one
15')(2&lt;1' paneled, other 8'x8'
Has good fences. Has cher ·
rie s, plum , apple trees
Grape
h arbor
JUST
LISTE D BE T H E FIR ST
TOSE ETHI SONE .

WOODED
AREA -4
MILES
FROM GALLIPOLIS
Her e is w hat you have been
looki ng for Approx im ate ly
4 A of scatter ed trees. Pick
Your own budding sites,
develop as you des 1re Anx IOUS to se ll now.
LOT 1N EWfNGTON
Lo t No 44 B. east half of Lot
No. 45. Close to Post Off1 ce . ·
Drill ed we ll wit h electnc
pump Meter on pole for
mobile hom e Septic t ank,
concr~te
dr 1veway w tth
wood f&gt; ldg. al i ts end . Con
crete p1ers to set m ob1le
homP"'n
4 LO'TSLots No . 31, 32. 33 S. 34 in
Patriot.
Rural
water
available Will sell 1n pairs
or all. CAL.L TODAY .

OWNERWI LL H
FIN
LOO K OF LU XURY
Excel lent des!gn 1n a hom e 111al could b e
yours Sty le plu s comfort a ll comb1 ned
Luxunous m as ter B R, w i t h pr1v at(' b a th &amp;
walk in c loser E qu1pped ru st1c style k i t
chen wi th breakfast nooK L M ge rec rea
t.on and famil y room w 1th open ston e
fir eplace plu s formal d1ning room &amp; l1v1ng
room Walk out o f ent ranc e toyer lo an ex
ceptional court yard T he r e's tust too much
Ia say , you must see th ts eleg an ce, style &amp;
com fort combined 1n lhi s hea ut1fU ihome

CHOICE PROPERTY
10 acres of leve l land on
Rou te 160 Make lovely
budding s1tes
Call for
moredet a1l s WON ' T LAST
LONGl
WISHING WELL
Ye s, lh1S proporty h as one
1 2 A. more or less of level
land loc ated in the m1dst of
one of th e area ' s most
va luabl e sect1ons of l and
E legan t 7 room bnck hom e
w1th 3 B .R , formal d1n1 ng
r oom , most modern kit
ch en Th ts home can on ly
as 1m
be de sc r 1bed
mr~ c ulat c . Nat . ga s for ced
CJir furnace . central atr C1
tv w at er , c1t y sewer L ots
of shad e trees 1n y&lt;H d 8.
nearly mnn1 c urcd

s 15,000 .00
2 acres of land plus 2 BR
co ttag e. E)(fra ni ce ro ll1ng
land on blacktop road ap
prox I m il e tram Ho l zer
Hospital
9ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
5 B R N ice fr ont porc h, n1 c e
k1t c h en ' w1th
bU1It 1n
c abtnet s, doubl e s-s s 1n~
Balh wtth show er , lot5 of
shclde trees &amp; fr u1t tree s
N1ce garden spot Th1 s,
home ha s b lown 1n 1nsul a
ttOn . LOUII ed beSide St
H1ghway 160 84 iKre ol
land More can be purc ha s
ed with lh 1s hom e 2 mobile
hom es th at now m e br
tng1ng 1n a rental of S175 00
per month pl us a tota l o f
3 84 acres of land All
l ocated
bes 1d e
St a t e
H1g l1way 160 CALL FOR
ALL DETAILS
COZY AMO
COMFORTABLE
Ntce large shade tree sets
off thts love-ly home tn
Kyger
Cr eek
Sc hool
Distr ict Need a home lor
yoursell or as a r en tal 1n
v estment YOU CA N BUY
THI S NEAT HOME FOR
$14,000.

COMMERC IAL L A Nu
BUS IN ESS
BUILD£:R S
We now h ave approx . 14 A .
availabl e. 1ust ott Rt 35
Weo::, t, wil h a c lose access to
ctt y sewer &amp; WBi e r, &amp; nea r
thr 1v1ng bU S1 n ess co m
rnundy
PRICED
TO
SE L L. Cdn se l l 1n 7 A plot

••
7SACRES
VACANT LAND
Lot s ot road frontag e on
M organ Lan e Some good
line fencing Som e whit e
oak t 1mber Approx 15 A .
till able
All c ould b e
pastured A LL FOR ONLY
S22.500 00 .
1 LOT
Nice Lot 58 in· Patriot. A I!&gt;
leve l.
Rural ' water
available. Nice lot, on I ~
$3,7~0.00.

LEVEL LANO &amp; HOME
6 r oom home w1th 3 BR ~
ba th F.A furn ace 8. rural
wat er A pprox 4:1 &lt;~ A. of ex ·
trn n1ce lev el la nd Could
be buil d1n g lo ts or used fori
fa rm 1n g . Call for morE'
de t,~ II S

QUAINT
3 BR bn c k &amp; fr am e hom e
Cozy &amp; co rn l ort ale fa mily

r oom w 1lh Franklin wood
bu rn er Spa c1ous k1t chen,
lot 3 ol bull 1n cabinets &amp;
larg e d1n lllg ar ea You
must see th 1s house to
belteVe hOW Ch ar mtng If IS
CAL L FOR YOUR AP ·
PO INTMENT TODAY
OWNER WILL
HELP F INANCE
BEAUTIFUL
RIVERFRONT HOME
Bea utifu l 7 room home W1th
a pahoram1 c v1ew of t he
nver :n :. A . Full basement
wdh
woodb urning
fi repla ce, 23 It x·ll H room
With k1 f c h e n~te, P.xce ll ent
tor enterta1ntng or dant::
1ng . N1ce modern k1ttt1en
1n c l ud1nq
d 1shwas her ,
range &amp; -refrigerator, f or ·
ma l d1n1ng room , fa mil)'
room, formallivmg room &amp;
3 BR and 2 full baths &amp;
shower s Fuel all F A. fur
n- ee. Excell ent l ocat1on for
ft ~ h,n g, ngh t out your back
door C1ty sc hool dtst Most
see to apprec iate 11s \ ai ue .

110·-CRES
NIC E:: FAR M
Bea uhful ro ll 1ng g .. een
pa s turelan d or farm1ng
land loc ated on a sta te
h!.Qhway I arge 2 stor y"
fram e fc.rm home Rural
w a t er sy ; tern, 2 Chicken
hou.,es, corn cnb , mil~
house or tool house, large
3 0 ' x~O ' barn with 1'2'X40 ' sn ed , m ci ol ro ot Good l1ne
fen c .-~ s
'3ood farm, good
loc a t1on .
Rei'lsonab l e
Price . CALL N OW
LANO, LAND, LAND
$560.00 per acre
A lways dr:eam ed of hav1ng
a far m or lookmg for in ·
vestment property? We
have '197 acres of the pre t
t1 est l and around Lovely
c lean level to ro lling land .
65 acres tillabl e &amp; the re
ma1nder 1n n1 ce c lea n
pasture Larg e dairy barn
&amp; other farm build ings .
c ET US SHOW YO U TO
DAY .
EXTRA INCOME
PROPERTY CL OSE TO

HOSPITAL
5 room~, re m ode led home
w1th bil t h, 1 05 acres of
l and Rur al wa ter , I O' x 12'
stor.-lQC bld g
2 r en tal
l 'J'x60 homes f u lly furn1 sh
ed, ren t1ng for SI SO 00 ea .
per m onth . Se v er al yo ung
appl e tr ees. ,..-icc modern
hom e to 11ve tn p l us extra
r enters money

NICE LOT - Good bulld1ng site located 1n Rio Grande,
gas, sewer &amp; wat er ava i table. # 0056
12 ACRES ~ N tce remodeled hom e, 4 bedrooms, 2
fireplaces, smal l barn and tobacc o base , bet ter hurr y
tor IJ6,500 # 0563
HOMES &amp; FARMS NEEDED : WE 'tiAVE PROSP~~·­
TfVE BUYERS FOR YOUR PROPERTY . CALL
TODAY FOR FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE WHEN J
LISTING YOUR PROPERTY.

Evenings CaU
DaiYin Bloomer,
. Assoc. 675-6627
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
JOhn Fuller, Realtllr 446-4327

FHA 8 VA HOME LOA NS MclEN DON MORTGAGE COMPA NY
loon Represenlalive, V1olc t
.

HOUSE FOR SALE
INVESTMENT HOME
In Rio Grande
3 APARTMENTS
Live in M e, rent th e oth er 2
or rent all J. '
CALl. 682 ·705&amp;

"Cook ie" V1ers. 4&amp;3 Second '25 ACRE FARM . 2 bdr house . ·
SSO 000 Che s1er 614 985-4371 '
Ave Second floor Go llipol,s.
01 Jn.i -::l.tJ-87 89
'
Ohlo.t'i.i.,31 , Coll446-7172

r - - - - - - -......
FOR SALE
Small 2 Bdrm hou se, 2
mtlcs fro m Galltpolis on
Rt 7, overl ooktng th e river .
Sl2,SOO, Will se ll or land .
contract
Ph. Jack N cal,\t46 0157

3 LOTS FOR SALE
96xl77 Beautifu l building
si1es, concre1e s treet s,
rural water. located in .
Sunki st Village . Priced
right to sell. Call 446-\171
after 5 p.rfl. 446 -2573.

•

�Trf!aty terms reached, signing slated today

'

D-12-The Sunday Timt'"'~''" ' i11!'l. Su11t1ay , Mar. 25, 1070

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , ?#',..,,

Chorale performs for Shriner s

The Changing Face of GSI
The Growth of Activity -

ITS PURPOSE AND GO fiLS
BY JOHNNIE RUSSELL
flclivill' Therapy Adm.
UnitD
GALLIPOLIS - Thi• ar·
Saturday, March 24

·BRIDGE .
_ _O
_ s_wald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A super safety play wins
After this .though, Pete
played the ace of spades
from dwruny. Now he could

NORTH
4' A J

¥AK 6:1

count at least four clubs

• J 54

unless West held all four of

'+ 6543

WEST
• l0 8ii32
• Q9 8 7
• Q8 6

..

the missing ones plus two

EAST

spades, two hearts and a

• K 7
.. J I O

diamond .

leisure trips

Then he saw that if East
held all four clubs he could
get in trouble unless he
made the sort of safety play
that he . .Pete. was famous

and

picnics.

The y were mainly con-.centrating on activities for
fun .
SOUTH
• Q94
The Occupational Therapy
for .
• 54 2
Department concentrated on
At trick two he led a club
• A IO
from dummy and· carefully fl rts and Crafts. Items were
+ fiKJ8 2
covered East 's seven with made for fun and profit. Such
Vulnerable: Both ·
the eight. West showed out activ ities as weaving ,
Dealer: South
and Pete 's pessimism was painting, woodworking and
well-rewarded . He wound up various form s of crafts weft.e
West North Eas t South
making a n overtr ick on a included. Items were on sale
I+
hand that would have been to the publi c and were
Pass I•
Pass
l NT
Pass 3 NT Pass Pass
set without the super-safety presented at flea markets
Pass
play.
and festivals throughout the
state.
Opening lead : + 3
ASk lbt EXDti'IS The main concen trat ion
was set on a leisure activity
wor king with their hands.
A Wisconsin reader asks if The Phy sica l Education
we ever pass as dealer with Department had programs
By Oswald Jacoby
14 h1gh-card po~n ts.
.
designed toward developing·
The answer as a decaded
.
.
and Alan Sontag
"no" . When we have the our cll ents physica lly equiva lent of one ace more programs Included: basket·
Pe'ssimistic Pete looked
over the dwnmy happily. than an average hand, there baU, track and field, and
The hour was late. It was the is too much chance that a other areas related to Special
Olympics. These activities
last rubber of the evening pass will cost us a game .
t K 9/32
• Q IO 9 i

and Pete expected to win it

and go home.
"Can anything bad happen
to me?" he asked himself.
"Give East the king of
spades and five diamonds to
an honor . He can get in and
lead a diamond from five to
an honor. Then, if I have to
lose a club I can wind up tw·o

tricks-down ."

e
:
•
•

.
•

•
e

per

an

outlet for energy and help
d l
h . ll
. II
eve op P ys1ca y, socta y,
and mentally.
Purpose and Goals

lndMdual ques tions will

be answered rf accomoanfea
0)'
stamped. selr-addressed
.envelooes The mosr in terestrn g question s Will be used In
rh1s ·colu mn ana will feceive
copies ol JACOBY MODERN 1

Client With

Today we are one. All our
staff are now working toward
· ·
·
: ..
giV t.ng OUf ClientS BctiVItleS
designed fo r " nonnal" living.

The ma jor purpose of
Activity Therapy in our unit
• • • • • • • " • • • • • • • • • • is to develop socially ac~al
ceptable leisure activity
skills and knowledge.
We are achieving our goals
~
through activities that are
~ designed for .small groups.
( \,.; These ·groups require
minimal supervision and are
dope in the least restrict ive
•
: manner possible.
By
•
In the past our activities
Willis T. Leadingham • were planned around large
Rea ltor
• groupS and due to transportation problems we were
e forced
to use larger vehicles,

Todav •

e

e

PRIC.ING FOR BEST PROFIT

•
•

Without .1ny cl oubt, th e
most important el emen t of'
se lling a home" i s placi ng
• the righ t value on it . Wh en
• you ge t r ight down to i l. i t's
• th e pri ce , mor e lhc"!n
anything else, wh1 c h will
• dicta te how fnst {or slow) ;
how profitabl y (or un
• profi tably ) i t wil l sell .
•
W ha t is the best sell ing
• pr ice? N at ional exper ience
• has proven con clus ively
e th at if y our property is
• price d a t tncep ti on within
•
so-t,
above f ai r mark et
value range, th e t hancc of .
• maki ng a cl ea n, top . do llar·e sa le during th e earl y stages
• is TEN TIME S grc il l cr

e

• fha nofherwise

•
•
•

~
tDo you have a question for
th e experts " wme ·Ask rtle
Exoerrs . · care of tn 1s newspa -

provide the

. sta .. ·:·

e

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:-.:E WSPAPEH ENTERPRISE ASSN '

•:.

•

e

&lt;

Buyer s buy by com
pari son . Properti es not
co mpeting favOr ably do not

e

e
e

or

drop

in

at

LEADING H AM
REAL •
ESTATE , 512 Second Ave ., •
G,1 11ipoli s. Phone 446-7699. •
We' r e h er e t o help.
•

• • • • • • .-• • • • • • • • • e • • • • • • • • •:

e

The

Grande Chorale rrom th e Hio

Grande· Coll ege performed
before the Pat Wilson Shrine
Club hiday ni~ht at the
Moose Hall.
The Grande Chorale is a
singing grour made up of 16
st udents. The Chorale
rehearses a minimum of ~wo ,

(USPS 145-960)

The group does its own set
· desig ning an d building,
choreography , costume
design and an occasional
musical arrangement.
The Chorale has toured in
Ohio, Kentu cky, West

MARLENE BAKER

Southwestern
student named
vice-president
PATRIOT Marlene
Baker, a junior at South·
western High School, was
recently elected State Vice
President of Beta Club for the
state of Ohio. Marlene, along
with fourteen Southwestern
Beta Club members and th eir
sponsor Ms. Maxine Wells,
attended the Beta Club State
Convention at the downtown
Sheraton Hot el in Columbus.
Miss Baker gave a
prepared speech and was
given enthusiastic support by
her fellow Highlanders'
campaign skit and demon·
stration.
In addition to Beta Club,
her other activities include
FHA , volleyball team, soft ball team, Pep Club, Band,
Cora Campers 4-H, and a 1979
Gallia County Junior Fair
Queen Candidate. Marlene is
the. daughter of Marlin and
Janet Baker, Route 2,
Patriot.
pcrience in working, living,
and communicating with our
clients .
All of our activities are
planned around the clients
school and vocational
assignments. The trips are
vacations and each client
uses their own funds to pay
for these trips.
The client also helps in
plaMing these trips. They
choose activities and places
they want to see and we assist

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 240

Virginia, Tennessee, and

Florida, including Walt
Disney World. This group has
been a part of Rio Grande
Coll ege and Co mmunity
College fo r several years,
first under the name of the
Ensemble and since Merlyn
Ross has been director, The
Grande Chorale.
The primary purpose of
Chorale is to promote the
good will of the college at
civic function s, churches. and
schools. However, in the
heart of the Grande Chorale,
the purpose is to share the joy
of music with the audiences
for which it performs.
And that's just what the
grou~ did as they entertained
around 100 people, who at-.
tended the "ladies' night "
dinner meeting .
The Club would like to
thank the Grande Corale for
its fine performance.

fl Polish pharmacist at·
tempting to distill vodka from
oil seeping from the ground
produced kerosene, not liquor.. Ignacy Lukasiewicz
then went on .in 1852 to
develop a lamp to burn the
clea n, low-smoke fuel.

RECEIVING CHECK - Merlyn Ross, director-advisor of the Grande
Cborale from Rio Grande College is receiving a check from John Nibert,
president of the Pat Wilson Shrine Club. The money will be used by the Grande ,
Chorale to pay for necessities th~t the group may need.

Court News
GfiLI.IPOLJS - Two cases
were continued in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
Charged with criminal
damag ing , J ames Teddy
Lawson, entered a plea of not
gu'ilty. Bond was set at $1,000.
Clarence
Johnson,
Gallipolis, e nt ered a plea of
not guilty to a charge of nonsupport. Case continued.
Ni ne other cases were
terminated in Judge James
fl. Bennett's Court Friday·.
Thomas G. Coo k, 19,
Vinton , was found not guilty
w a charge of operating a
motor vehicle without a
license.

them.
fill activities are charted
and eva luated by the A. T.
Staff upon completion so each
discipline can gain a better
understanding. of our individual clients.
Things have changed and
we hope they are for the
better.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Arab foes of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty set off two
bombs outside the U.S.
Embassy in Damascus as
Arab governments opposed to
the pact prepared to
implem en t economic
sanctions and a political
quarantine against Egypt .
The bombs Sunday night
shattered windows at the embassy but there were no casu-·
alties or serious damage and
no one claimed responsibility
for ·the attack .
Syrian witnesses said one
bomb was hurled into the embassy garden from a passing
car and the other went off
near the rear of the building .
One witness said someilne in
the car shouted: "To hell with
the traitorous .agreement!"
The State Department al- ·

1

Waiving 122 on a charge of
operating a vehicle without
an exhaust system was
Tarpmy Potts, 18, Vinton.
Patricia fl. Lee, 48, Pl .
Pleasant , waived $22 on a
charge of assured clear
distance.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of

excessive sp eed

were James L. Niday, 22,

Ohio expects winter-like weathe1
By The Associated Press
today with hi~s from the
Winter weather returned to upper 20s to the mid 30s.
Ohio Saturday and today
It was cloudy and windy
according to the . National Friday night across Ohio with
Weather Service.
occasional rain accumulating
(\ stron~ low pressure . less than one tenth of an inch
syst~m was over southwest
in scattered parts of the state.
lower Michigan Saturday Early Saturday morning
morning and moving north· temperatures ranged from 54
east. Fairly strong winds degrees in Cleveland to 49 in
associated with the storm Dayton and Mansfield.
were causing much colder air
to be swept in behind it.
This system produced rain
SEARCH OFF
which was forecast to change
.
MERRITT
ISLAND, Fla.
to snow late Saturday with a
(
AP)
Florida
Civil Air
couple of inches of snow
Patrol
Capt.
Chet
Brogan
possible by morning and
says
a
statewide
search
for a
overnight lows from the mid
60-year-old
Ohioan
has
been
20s to the lower 30s.
called
off.
Snow flurries will continue
John Hlggley, a Toledo and
Archbold businessman, took
off in a twin-engine plane
Gallipolis, $25; Forrest w; from Boca Raton, Fla.,
Stephens, 19 , Leon, $25; March 7 and never returned,
Russell G. Mea ns , 52, Brogan said. Authorities
Columbus, $25; Charles D. have no leads in the disapCoen, 31, Dunbar, $20; David pearance.
C. Wright , 18, Ewington, $42; . Brogan said the search was
and Judith R. Love, 37, stopped until the patrol obtains additional information.
Gallipolis, $25.

Kim Hayman, 21, Ri.cine,
al'rested Friday morning by a
Meigs County sheriff 's
deputy while driving a truck
taken from a Pomeroy
; parking lot earlier that
:__.l]lorning, appeared before
Judge John C. Bacon
Saturday on a Bill of Information.
Hayman entered a guilty
plea to a charge of
unauthorized usc of a motor
vehicle. Judge Bacon accepted the plea, but postponed sentencing until
·Saturday, March 31.

other activities that provide
community ex posure. Our
trips and activities now take
us throughout our loca l

worshippers witness murder

'.

,I

~VELAND (AP)- Cleveland police said Renee

Cottingham, 22, was dragged from an East Side church .
by a man and fatally shot as worshipers and members
of her family watched in horror Sunday . .
Witnesses told police that the man kept them at
bay with hts gun while he dragged Mrs. Cottingham
about 50 feet from the church and then shot her. Police
were seeking a 2!&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld man who had dated Mrs
Cottingham before her marriage for questioning i~
connection with the shooting.

C~ims forces shelling again

)

ti

Hayman, recently released
from a state penal instit ution
where he was serving his
sent ence for the 1977
aggravated robbery of the
Five Points Grille, has also
been charged with parole
violation . He pleaded guilty
to that charge also . Sen·
tencing on that charge will
also be next Saturday.
As sistant
Prosecuting
Attorney Carson Crow
represented the State of Ohio.
Judge Bacon ordered
Ha yman to be remanded to
the custody of the Sheriff
pending sentencing .

· ··~Nationwise·-

Value paeked buys in
famotls,Kroehler Relaxers!
r.

ready had alerted U.S .
missions in the Middle East
to the posSibility Qf terrorist
attacks as the signing of the
U .S.-sponsored treaty
approached. Israe l and
Egypt also have taken
massive
security
precautions.
Almost every Arab government has scorned the pact
Egyptian President Anwar
Sad at and Israeli Prime
Minister ,Menachem Begin
will sign today on the White
House lawn. The other Arabs
are opposed to the treaty
because Sadat did not obtain
a state for the Palestinians,
the return of East Jerusalem
to the Arabs and the return of
the Golan Heights to Syria.
Iran's Moslem patriarch,
Ayatollah
Ruhollah
Khomeini, denounced the

Guilty pleas entered

1

than 5 and use more normal
means of transportation such
as station wagons and vans.
Our activities include
bowling , movies , theatre,
com munit y concerts,
shopping, gospel sings,
shopping trips, camping, and

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Hanoi claimed
Sunday that Chinese forces shelled Vietnamese
territor~ and took up new positions as deep as 12 miles
InSide Vtetnam. Tbe Soviet Union charged that China
also was escalating "provocations" against Laos.
The official Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper Nhan Dan said Chinese leaders "are bebaving
contrary to their promises."

'

community and state. We
also travel to neighboring
stat es and communities .
Through these efforts our
clients become familiar with

Bread contains wood fiber

the community and th e
communit y will gain ex-

WASHINGTON (AP) - A popular bread that ha s
been marketed for its nutritional qualities must tell
c_onsumers in advertising that they are eating wood
fiber, a consent agreement with the government said
Sunday.
The bread is "Fresh Horizons," which has been
promoted by a part of the giant International
Telephone and Telegraph Corp, as having 30 percent
fewer calories than white bread and 400 percent more
fiber than whole wheat bread.

Arraignment slated today
UNIONTOWN, Ohio (AP) - Arraignment was
scheduled today for Leonard Moder on charges of.
felonious assault, resisting arrest and aggravated
menacing .
·. The charges stem from an incident Saturday night
when Moder allegedly barricaded himself in his home
with two handguns and three rifles and threatened to
shoot 10 police officers who were outside.

Elvis left $7.6 mUlion
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Elvis Presley's 11&gt;-yearold daughter, Lisa Marie, will inherit her late father's
estate, disclosed to be worth $7.6 million. The amount
of the estate became publlc Friday when Judge Joseph
Evans of Probate Court approved an accounting of the
singer's holdings. Presley died Aug. 16, 1977, at the age
of 42.
__
Presley left his estate to his daughter, his father,
Vernon, and his grandmother, Minnie Mae. The elder
' Presley is execuwr of the estate but Lisa wiU inherit
her father 's entire fortune when she turns 24 or after
: Vernon Presley and her great-grandmother die.

:·Teamsters authorb:e strike
,

CINCINNATI (AP) - Members of Teamsters
Local 100 Sunday authorized a strike if a contract

RICHLAND
AVE.-ATHENS, ·oHIO
.,
NO "-DMI S!i lo ("" C II A NGI: • SJ'ONSORED HY TH J: p AV ID WIUCERSON C Rl,IS ADB COMMI TTE..:

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1979

. !

*Furniture Department · 3rd Floor •Many, Many Styles Fabrics Colors
*Use Our Sensible Credit Service to Purchase Your Furnitu~e Free'oelivery

*

settlement between the union and the trucking industry
is not reached by midnight Saturday.
,
Some 1,090 of the 1,272 Teamsters who cast secret
ballots Sunday at the union hall voted in favor of the
lllrlke,·sald Joe C~~rlotta , vice president of !.oral 100.
LorallOO Teamsters were eligible to vote.
• About 61800
-

..

treaty Sunday, saying it was
"against the interests pf the
flrab world" and increased
" the dangers that have
always been posed by Israel
in the region ."
Khomeini, who engineered
th e Islamic rebellion that toppled Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi last month, severed
the shah's ties with Israe l, cut
off direct Iranian oil exports
ro the Jewish state·and a llied
Iran with Yasser ·Ararat's
Pa Jestine
Liberation
Organization.
Thousands of Irani a ns
massed outside the Egyptian
Embassy in Tehran Sunday
ro protest the pact, and today
scores of persons calling
themselves "Arab students"
too k over the embassy,
hoisted Palestinian flags on
the roof and put up poster
photos of Arafat· and ·
Khomeini throughout th e
building. Iran is not an Arab
country .
Four Egyptian members of
the embassy staff were held
hostage in the building . The
ambassador, Ali Samir
Savfat, reported by telephone
that a group of armed men
came to his suburban
residence at 4 a.m. and told
him they were putting him
Wlder &lt;~protectiv e custody"
beca\lse his life might be in
danger.
Within 24 hours of the
treaty signing, leaders of the
other Arab nations wiil meet
in Baghdad Tuesday to
implement a series of secret
resolutions censuring the
Sadat government. They
range from hardliners, including Syria, Jraq and the
.J&gt;LO,-whlch want Sadat overthrown and are threatening a
new war on Israel 's eastern

flank,
to
moderates,
including c-onservative Saudi
Arabia and Jordan, which
appear to favor economic and
political action .

fls a result, the text of the on April 2 to repay Sadat's
tr eaty was not to be made historic viSit to Jerusalem in
public unt il after Sadat
November 1977. fill U1ree
Regin and President Carte~ versions of the treaty would
met HI the White House and he signed at the White House.
sat down af a table purchased
The spokesmen would not
by Ulysses S. Gra nt to sign di.sciose what the two sa id
three version s m English
ab out t he oH iss ue, but
Hebrew and A;abic.
' Begin 's spokesman , Dan
Th ey planned to celebrate . Pattir, said the issue was still

NEW EAGLE SCOUT - Brent Bolin became an Eagle Scout in ceremonies held Sundav
at the Rutland Church of CP.risl. fllarge crowd of friends, family, scouts and scout lead er's
were on hand for the bestowing of the highest rank in Boy Scout work. Brent. a •enior at
Meigs High School, is pictured with his parents, Mr . and Mrs. Joe Bolin of Rutland . Mr. anti
Mrs. Bolin hosted a reception following the ceremomes. Brentis a member of '11·oo p 249. Se c
Page 6 for another photo.

OPEC members divided
GENEVA, Switzerland
( AP) - The members of the
Organization of Petroleum

market situation justi fi es an

Ex porting Countries were

increa se

reported divided roday on the
question of price increases as

ATHENS, Ohio (AP)
Teachers in the Alexander
Local school district in
Athens County went on strike
this morning to protest the
dismissal of two elementary
school teachers.
Members of the Alexander
Local Teachers Association
voted to walk out Sunday
night.
The Alexander school
board voted last Tuesday not
to re new the contracts of
teach ers Bonnie Wolfe and
Randy l.avendar and did not
~ive any reasons for the vote.
Teach ers asociation
President Richard Lindsey ·
saJtl tile union's 95 members
will remain off the job until
the sc hool board either
renews the two teachers' contracts or provides written explana tions for the dismissa l.

Two injured
in accident
Two persons were injured
during a one-vehicle accident
Sunday in Meigs County on
Eagle Ridge Rd ., eight-tenths
of a mile east of SR 7, at 7:35
p.m.
The Gallia -Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports a
west bound auto operated by
Mark Casto, 17, Pomeroy,
swerved to avoid a deer on
the roadway , passed over a
cu lv ert and struck a
telephone line case.
Casto and a passenger,
Bruce Halley, 25, Pomeroy,
v dl splay~d visible signs of
injury. and were transported
by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad to Vetera ns Memorial
Hospital.
Both Casto and Halley were
admitted for treatment and
arc listed in sn t iofactory
condition.
Th ere was
moderate
damage to the vehicle.

"I thirik many delegations,
including our own, believe the
in the pr ice of

market crude," said Nordine
AitL aou ss sine,
vice
chairman of Sonatrach, the

their oil ministers gathered
for a special meetin g. But Algerian
some informed sources said company.
U1ey did not expect a general
price increa se.

Sa udi flrabia ,. Kuwait , Iraq
amd Qatar seemed to fa vor
sticking to the schedule of
price increases adopted at
the December OPEC meeting
lettin g individua l
and
countries add surcharges as

th ey have been doing since a

Alexander
teachers
on strike

Negotiations
weren't easy ·
WASHINGTON l AP ! - Egyptian President
Anwa r Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin prepared to sign a trea ty today
to e nd :w years of war between their countries
and . they hoped . lay the cornerstone of peace in
the 1\1 iddle East.
. The t re11 ty they planned to sign did not come
eas il y. The bargaining lasted until late Sunday
evening as th e two ancient enemies haggied over
the final details of their new and fragile peace.

Treaty opponents set
off l'wo bombs Sunday

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

such as the school bus, . and
using the "herd effect.'' Now
we try to limit groups. to less

APRIL 5 &amp; 6 - 7:30 P.M.
O.U. COVOCATION CENTER

enttne

hours, three times a week.

•

s_c ll , Overprici ng J1 ince p- •
t1on c.::~uscs propcrt1 es to e
be co m e. s hopworn ;
valu abl e lime il nd ~uyers •
M e lost forcve~ . Ult 1mate
ly , _all propert1es se ll for •
th e 1_r true va lue. bY com •
pC~_r~ son - or leSS ifrxposcd •
1n1.11 c1 ll y a t nn 1nf_lated e
pr1 cc. How doyouarnve nt •
th is "5~o plus " key ':'a l ue_? •
Drop 1nl? ~ur Office. 1f •
'( Ou 're th1nKtn g of . se lling
your home o1nd we II show •
you .
•
_
.
......
If th er e t S ol'OYih tng wr
cnn do to hel p you i n th e"· a
fi eld ot reill cstntc plei'lse •
phone

I'T. l'I.EASANT -

These were : Recreation,

Occupational Therapy, and
!'hysical Education. These
departments were made up of
Activity Therapists and
teachers.
Although the department
had different titles th ey were
working toward . the same
goals.
Th e Recreation Department was responsible for the
leisure activities of our
clients. They included:
bowling. skating, movies, and

•

By Cindie Rlankcnship

tick follow~ a series on the dl•pcutmcnts on our Unit .
J.et me begin by giving you
operation and ;tructurp of
Un it D. In this it rticlr WL' will a history of Altivity Therapy
find wh&lt;tt the Activity at tho Gallipolis State lnThcr&lt;tpy Dept. is doing and ;titute.
Prior t'o unitization there
how it interacts with other
were three 131 areas that
made up the Activity Dept.

reduction in Iranian exports

created a shortage of crude
oil.
fllgeria , Nigeria and Libya
were the leaders of th e price
hawks, with fllg eria urging a
25 percent increase in the
current base price of $13.34 a
barrel of Arabian light crude
oil, Nigeria urging 15 percent
and Libya advoca tin g
diversion of oil from the longterm contract market to the
higher-pr iced spot market.

nati onal

oil

,:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::;:;.

TICKETS UN SALE
Curtain time on the two
4'\'C Oing presentation of

" Th e So und of Mu si('"
t' riday and Saturday
ni ghts at the Meigs High
School "iii br i:30 p.m.
Advance tickets ln i.i}' be
pu n hast: d at Sw is hcr-

Lohse Drug Store and th e
New York Uothing House
in l'om crn y a nd th e Dutton
Uru g Stort• in Middl r port.
Advanct· tickets entitle

th r pun ·hascrs to sit in a
spt•dal block of chairs at

the front of th e auditorium
for thr mu sil'a l whkh is
ht'ing

gi\' cn

by

mu sic

dcpartV"\ent stud ents.
:::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:·

Announce increase
in subscription rates
The com bincd home stantial in creases that have
delivery price of the Daily been incurred in the cost of
Sentinel and Sunday Times- produ ction and newsprint as
Sentinel will be increased, well as the need to increase
eff ective beginning April I, to compensation to motur route
90 cents per week for drivers and youth carriers.
customers served by youth The carriers will receive a
carriers and to $3.90 per substantial portion of this
month for subscribers on in crease.
motor routes.
The single copy newsstand
price for weekdays will
remain at 15 cents, but the
newsstand charge for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel will
increase from 25 to 35 cents.
This rate adjustment is
necess it ated by the sub-

Sheik flhmed Zak i Yamani
the Saudi oil minister, said h~
woyld

not press for a price in-

crease but he felt prices
would rise anyway .

OPEC in December agreed
on a four-stage schedule of in·
creases totaling 14.5 percent
by Oct. I. The second
increa se, to $13 .84 , is
scheduled for next Sundav
and the October base price~~
scheduled to be $14.55.
The two-month stoppage in
exports by fr an, on ce OPEC's
second-l argest producer, and
the
new
Ir anian
government 's plans to ke ep

future exports at half what
they were pushed prices in
the spot oil market to record
hi ghs. Some OPEC membe rs
increased prices by adding
surcharges to the OPEC base
price. They also accused the
international oil companies of

making huge "windfall profits' ' by buying at the base
price and selling on the spot
market.
There is speculation that
th e meeting m ay consider

changing the type of oii used
for the benchmark price on
whi ch the prices of other
types of oil are based.
Arabian light crude, which
is used for gasoline, has been
th e standard . But it is
becoming sca rcer, and U1ere
IS

i&lt;&gt; lk of switching to a

heavier, more

abundant

crude such as the type used
for hea ting oi l.
This would all ow the price
of li ght crude to ri se more

fr eel y. Demand For the
he avier crudes i ~ more sta ble
and th e suppl y is more
abundant.

the occasion with a stc1te

open.

dinner this evening wiU1 1,300
guests under a red and yellow
tent on the South Lawn of the
White House. "This is the day
we hoped for. Let us rejoice,"
said Begin .
But until late Sunday eve-

fl short time lat er ,
Secretary of State Cyrus
Va nce arriveu at the hotel to
confer with Begin, repeating
a visit he had paid in New
York on Saturday night.
When Vance emerged, he

ning, there see med some

and · Dayan were smiling.

chance ton1ght 's ce lebration
mi ght not be held.
On Sund ay morning, J.raeli
For eig n Minister Moshe
Dayan said in a te levision
interview that the exact
timetable
for
Isra eli
withdrawal from the Sinai
oilfields had not been settled
·and that he did not think
Israel should sign the treaty
until t hat qu estion was
resolved.
·
Re gin arrived at Andrews

There would be a treatysigning, Vance said. flsked if
the oilfields problem had
bee n
settled,
Van ce
responded. "I believe it has."
Then Vance wen t to the
White House to report ro Carter , who had spent Sunday in
Texas and Oklahoma. He said
at a news conference in
Dalias that 50 or 100 years
from now , history may call
the achievement of peace
between F:gypt and Israel

Air Force Ba se outs ide " th e
m ost
signifi cant
Washin gton a few hours later occurence during my own
in a light rain and added a term of office as president."
ew more iss ues to the
But Carter added that the
agend a.
trea t y IS
· on 1y one step in a
He •aid he wanted to ta lk to long process that must
Sada t about a thr ee-part conlinue during the nex t
signin g ceremony in which he year ,
address ing
the
and Sadat wo uld leav e em otiona l and intra ctab le
Wa shi ngton to ..s ign the qu es ti ons surrounding the
Arabic and Hebrew verswns fate of the Pal estinian Arabs.
of the treaty in Cairo and
Carter broke an impasse
Jerusalem. He said Sadat and between the two countries
Carter had agreed ro this last Septembe r at Ca mp
idea.
David. where he persuaded
Begin also sai~ he wanted Begin and Sadat ro agree to a
w open the borders between compromise under which the
Egypt and Israel ·w mon ths lwo countries would make
afte r ratifica tion of the peace.
treaties so Egyptians might
Egypt would regain the
visit Israel and Israelis might Sinai and Israel also agreed
gaze at the Pyramids, " in · to begin negotiations on an
which their fore fat hers autonomy plan for the West
invested some labor."
Ba nk and Gaza Strip U1at
Shortly after 6 p.m., Begin would require the end of
arrived at the Egyptian Em- Israeli military governn1ent
bassy, where Sadat was stay- and the withdrawa l of Israeli
in g. The two leader s troops to specified areas.
conferred until 7:35, when
Negotiators
met
in
Begin, his expression grim, Washington to conclude the ·
got into hi s car and drove trea ty and in Nove mber
back to his hotel.
announced that they had
During the conversation, rea ched
a
te ntative
Begin apparently gave up on agreement. .
his plan to get Sadat to visit
But in the interim, the rest
Jerusa lem. Isra eli and of the Arab world condemned
f: g ypti a n spokesmen Sadat for making peace with
announced that Begin would Isra el wit hout gettin g a
make a one .&lt;fay visit to Ca iro
IContinued on pa ge 10 .1

Boat traffic nonnal
Boat traffi c on the Ohio River returned to normal
Sunday when two barges blocking a gate at the
Gallipolis locks and dam were removed.
The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers had been
unable to close the gate and had feared the wa ter level
along a 43~nile section of the Ohio River and a 31-mile
section of the Kanawha River , which feeds into the
Oh10 north of Gallipoli s, would fa ll seriously low.
The two barges sarik March 10. One was shaken loose
late Friday by a river salvage company, and the
second was flushed from the gate area Sunday
morning.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows
between 25 and 30. Fair
Tuesday. Highs from th e
upper 40s to the lower 50•.
The chance of precipitation is
10 per cent toni ght and
Tuesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wed nesd ay throu gh
t"rlday: Partly cloudy with
a warming trend through
the period and showers
possible each day. Hi ghs
from the upper 40s to the
50s Wednesday and from .
the 60s to the lower 70s
Thursday and Friday .
Lows from th~ 20s to the
mid 30s Wcd,ut·:r,day and

frnm the 40s to the lower
50s Thursday and Friday.
:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

NURSING CENTER - This is the front of the new
100-bed sk illed-intermediate care facility being
constructed by flmericar e Corp. of Columbus, scheduled
wopen this July. The new nursing care center is located
on 'Oid Sl . Rt. 33, approximately two miles north of th '

"

county fairgrounds, in Pomeroy. Information for patient
pre-admission forms and employment applications may
he obta ined from Mrs. I,.eafy Chasteen, director of the
Senior Citizens Information and Referral Service, Main
Street , or by calling 992-7oll.

I.

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