<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15761" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15761?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T07:34:54+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48883">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/9648608b4588473704965a48f54d1466.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e817747918744017feb2a78c00450424</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50491">
                  <text>..

'

.'

.. . .

.'

.'

·.

..

.

•.

.

.

·. ·.

. .

-·-- _,.__. ________ _

.,
10- The D~ily Sentih&lt;'i, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fri~y. Apr. 6, J!m

.------------------------.
MAll\' \ '. HIGGS
Mar)' V. Higgs. 5U. Ht. :!.
Pomeroy: died 11JUrsday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Higgs was preceded in

MAl; !\lA HEllMAN
Magna Robson Redmond.
91 , diedln San Diego, Calif.
Mrs. Redmond was born in
Norway on Aug. 7, 1887,_a
daughter of the late Johan
and Kathrinne Jahlin Jver·
sen. She was a L•o preceded in
death by her first husband,
James Robson, and her
second husband, J. J. Red·
mond, and a niece, Mrs. Billy
Bolst.a d, whom she reared .
Also surviving are a sister in
Norway and two sisters-in·
law, Mrs. Beatrice Robson, ·
Middleport, and Mrs. Gladys
Robson, Mjnersville, , and a
niece, Mrs. Zanny KaUcher of
Pasadena, Calif., whom she
also reared and several other
-nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Redmond was a
dressmaker by trade and
operated a dress shop.
Graveside services will be
held at 10 a.m. Saturday at
the Gilmore Cemetery with
the Rev. Harvey Koch officiating. The Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangements.

death by her mother. Carrie
~: bcrsbach Neutzling and her
fir st h usba nd . !toy Tracy.
Sl:u· was n memQcr of the

Trinit ) tburch and an em·

ployc of the Fannt·rs Bank
and &amp;av ings Co.
Mrs . Higg:) is

~urvivct.l

lJy

her husband. Hay Higgs. her
h1th &lt;.~ r .

Uen Ncut zling ,
' l'omcroy, three diJughtt.!r:s,
Maralynn a nd Cartlly nn

Tracy of Arlington, Va .. and
t.scnuth Hester. Ocala. l'la ..
one son. Larry Tracy. New
York . two gra ndchildren .

Heidi and Jill Hester. Ocala.
one

sister, Lo is· llurt.
l ,om cro~·. and several nieces
.. and nephews .
lira\lcsidc servh:cs will !Jc

held Saturday at 9 a. m. at
Meigs Memory Gardens with
the He\·. l 'hnrlcs Norris o(·

flci ating .

ADC FUNDS
State t.uditor Thomas E.
Ferguson 's offi ce ioday
announced the t.pril, IU79,
distribution of $3~.963 , 868 in
t.id to Depend ent L'hildren to

,

Nationwise

1
~
I

Area Deaths

1
I

.

'

(Continued from page I)
r·., area alooe, the action will save taxpayers $35
million to $40 million a year, eliminate mote than
100,000 miles of vehicle travel each day, and save 5,000
to 6,000 gallons of gasoline daily.

---

.•

--.. '

ROMULUS, Mich. (A P) - A TWA airliner carrying 87 persons survived a harrowing barrel roll and
apparently exceeded the speed of so Wid in a nose dive
befoce being brought Wider control by a freak
maneuver, federal inspectors sai~ Thursday. .
~ They called It a "miracle" that the plane surVIved
· and no one was killed . " ! can 't thil!k of any other
incident where a cQIIIIIIercial, passenger:c&amp;rrying
plane has done a complete 36tklegree rollover and
survived," said Langhorne Bond, head of the Federal
Aviation Administrati011.

,,

'

,,'"'

'

:vaL I4

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio has 25 men on
death row at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility at
Lucasville, but their sentences will be commuted to life
imprisonment once their appeals are heard, officials
·say.
Urillke Alabama , Where Joon Louis Evans lli had
been scheduled to die in the electric chair today at one
minute past midnight, becoming the first 1JU~n to be
executed in the United States in more than two years,
Ohio has been without an operative capital punishment
law th~ past nine months.

·-.

NO 10

,.
tmes

Cl~VELANO

lAP; -

;Ohio lottery: blue 930.
white 50. gold"4, wlnathou.

WE

:16683 .

Livestock Report

MAKE
MONEY
GROW

OhiO Vat!eV l.ivestock .co.

Our bus iness is to help
you get on easy street
through insured savings and attractive
interest rates . Stop in .

steady·. Cows steady to $1.50
higher . Veal calves steady to
$5 lower .

Total Head : 512
Feeder Steers I Good and
Choice) 250 lo 300 lbs. 90 to
106; 300 to4001bs. 87.l0to 106;
400 to 500 Ibs. 85 .to 99; 500 to
600 lbs. 84 to 95.59; 600 to 700
lbs. 68.50 to 80 ; 700 to 800 lbs.
67 .50 to

ao : BOO

65 to 78.

lbs . and over

Feeder Heifers (Good and

LIBRARY HELPERS- Riverview Grade Sehoul Librari~n, Melody'Biack, (far right 1
is shown with, left to right, Virginia Newlun, Margaret Cauthorn, and Marlene Puumin who
are volunteer workers in the school library under the direction of Miss Black for this year .
During the Right to Read program these four ladies held a book fair to raise money for new
books roc the Library.

4-H News

Cho ice 1 250 to 300 lbs. 90 to 99;
300 to 400 lbs . 85 to 92.50; 400
The Hillbillies 4-H Club met
to 500 lbs . 80 to 90 ; 500 to 600 March 5 at th_e Maxine Dyer
lbs . 75.50 to 87 ; 600 to 700 lbs.
70 io 82.50; 700 to 800 lbs. 60 to residence with 10 members
, Receive a FREE METER STICK
7'1; BOO lbs . and over 55.50 tb and· two advisors in at·
67 .
tendance. Items of business
with a ~100.00 deposit to a new or ex·
Feeder Bulls {Good and were seiection of projects,
isting savings account.
Choice ) 250 to 300 lbs. to 105 :
300 to 400 lbs., to 102 ; 400 to dues, skating party on March
500 lbs., to 99.50; 500 to 600 16, and election of officers.
lbs. to 98; 600 to 700 lbs ., to 76 ;
PLUS ....
Officers eleo/.ed were:
700 to 800 lbs ., to 72.50; BOO Carla Rife, pres1dent; Robin
lbs . and over 55.50 to 70.
Bulls (1,000 lbs . and over) Myers,. vice president; Mary
10,000 BONUS
Colwell, secretary; Patty '
58 to 62.50.
Slaughters Cows: Utilities. Oyer , treasurer ; Richard
POINTS
48 to 57 .50 ; Canners and Basham, news reporteri
Cutters 42 to ·so ;
for your favorite club for each
Spr in ger Cows (by the Becky Rife and Billy Dyer,
SIOO deposit to a savings account
recreation leaders; Kenneth
head l 250 . 425.
- DOUBLE bonus pOints lor your
Cows · Calves {by the head) Barnet!, health chalnnan;
first deposit to a new aC:count.
375 . 645.
• Dawn Bing, safety chairman;
Veal Calves 90 . 102.
Cheryl Riffle,. historian;
Baby Ca lves 45 -120.
Hogs
~
Mark McGuire, trip com·
Top Hogs (210 to 230 lbs.) 43 mlttee ; Cindy Riffle and
to 44-.50.
Dean Col well , program
r
Boa rs 34.50 to 36.50
committee
; and, Billy
Pigs {by the head) 20 to
pomeroy
' Holcomb and Kevin Napier,
47.50.
rutland
refreshment committee.
·tuppers plains
MEETING
SCHEDULED
.
The club also met March 13
-~
An ·organizatiOrlal meeting "Bt the Dyer residence with 14
'
for the establishment of 8 members and two advisors in
the bank of
county-wide jWlior garden attendance.ltems of business
the century
club will be held at 7:ll Mon· included a report on the
established 1872
day evening at the home of Junior Fair Board meeting
Mrs. Bunny Kuhl, county .by Mary Colwell; Opel Qyer
road 26 west of Five Points. ' read a.Jetter from the County.
All youth between the ages of Extension Office thanking the
seven and 17 are invited. • club for .tbelr donatron to
Anyone having questions Canter's cave; Maxine Dyer
may call Mrs. Kuhl at 992- read the program. of ac·
7537 or Mrs. Margaret Parker tlvltles f?r the y~ar.
at 992-2264
Demonstrations were giVen
·
by
Billy
Dyer .on
~~-----------.. Photography, Gardening and
Soils; Patty Dyer, on how to
make a buttonhole ; and
Roblil Myers on how to
decorate a cake.
IN
SpeciaJ plans for the next

Measure Your Savings With Us!

pomeroy
nationa
bank ·

FDIC

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

AT THE BRIGHT PICTURE AND
COMPARE FEATURES THAT SET IT
APART FROM ALL OTHER TV1.

WE'RE RUNNING A.SPECIAL VALUE
SALE ON THIS EXCITING ADMIRAL
CONSOLE THAT YOU'll WANT TO
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF. SO TAKE A
PTTLE SOUND ADVISE-COME IN
FOR SPECIAL S~IVINGSI

Admiral
\

· Super Solarcolor
When you compare the features and benefits oi an Ad, m iral TV to all the rest, you'll
·c hoose Adm ira! because it's
best! Why? Because Admiral
, engineers were teamed with
Rockwell international aero·
·space scientists and .top furniture desig~ers you get the
latest technology for bringc
. ing the finest quality picture,
color and sound into your
living room .

Special Price ·

Only

EXTEI\lOEO OUTLOOK
Sunday through
Tuesday : Mild with rain
possible each day. Highs In
the mid 541s lo upper 60s.
Overnight lows In the 30s
early, Sunday and mid 30s
to mid 40s early Tuesday.

'57

VETERANS HOSPITAL
Admitted-Ada Keesee, ·
Pomeroy; ,-\nna D!Iffy,
Syracuse; Enunett Rawson,
Middleport; Reta Roush,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Archie R,ife,
Martin Bailey,

WINS SCHOLARSHIP- Patty Dyer, a senior at Meigs High School,
is pictur8d with Oirl.! Clover, symbolic o( 4-H work, Miaa Dyer ls one of
five winners of a $50Dscholarship awarded by McDonald's . .

r---~~lXrMPtaW(iD:o~~-, Freighter on
•
OPTOMETRIST
I.
.
I
f~J
way to .asslst crew
OFFICE HOIJRS:T:""30 i2 ; 2ro 5 ICL.QSE
I ' AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT

'

t.SfiTABULA, Ohio (APJ
- The Coast Guard said the
lakes _freighter Canadian
Mariner was on the way to
assist the Crew of the ore
freigher labradoc,, caught in
a wintry storm 18 miles
northwest of Ashtabula in
Lake Erie today .
A Canadian Coast Guard
fixed-wing
plane
was
reported at .the scene to .drop
life raft.-; for 20 persons
aboard the 315-foot Labradoc.
Meanwhile, the U.s . .coast
Guard said a 44-foot boat
from the Coast Guard station
at Ashtabula got only two;
meeting include demonstrations on welding, rockets,
breads, and You and Your
Money. The next meeting wUI
be March 27; · 6 .-p.m. at the
Dyer residence. - Richard
Basham, reporter.
· The Country Chicks J,&gt;lus 4·
H Club Diet March r, at the
Rock Springs Church with 14
members and two advisors in
attendance. Officers were
elected:
Dixie
Eblin,
·president; Paula Swindell,
vice prjjSldent; Kim Eblin,
treasurer; Mary Ann Moore,
secretary; Brenda Chap·
plear, news reporter; Bar·
bara Chappelear, safety;
Beverly Kaufl, health;
~arbara
witlatch,

thirds of the way to the
Labradoc before being forced
to turn back.
J.
The four men aboard the
rescue boat were reported
suffering from exposure in
the icy winds. The Coast ·
Guard called an ambulance
to pic;k them up to take them
to
Ashtabula
General
Hospital.

L!!::..~~!ROY.'~-

---------..... ~.J.

,...,"
Sometl!ing IVMw AI Our Drive-Thru .Window

.

:--:
:

'

BOARD MEETING
Applicants for the position
Animal House
of superintendent will be inNEW YO,RK (tiP )
terviewed when the Eastern Dolores Novel has lost a
Local School District Board Housing Court appeal · and
of Education meets in special
must leave the Beacon Hotel,
session at 10 a.m. Saturday. f.Bking her pets with hl!r.
No other business will be
'City public health oft_icials
transacted.
who in ~pected the woman 's
room there .in September
discove~ed •1one live turkey,
LEGAL NO TICE
two ducks, apprO'II:imately 17
The Public' Utilities Commis·
caw
~nd maybe , more, one
sion ol OHio has set tor pub·
rabbit, four live turtles in a
lk heating Case No. 78•629·
bathtub and one animal
EL·FAC Soblile A. to review
resembling
a dog.or fox ."
lhe' iuel procurement prac·
The
inspection
was ordered
!ices and policies ol The Ohio
after neighbors complained
Power Company the 0pera·
of unusual odors.
lion ol tts Fuel Cost Ad1ust·
ment Clause. and related
matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begm at 2:00
There's a Limit
p.m·. on Aprtl9 . 1979. al lhe
FORT RILEY, Kan. '(AP)
City Coontil Ollice. 218
- Speed limit signs are
Cleveland Ave. S.W .. Can·
designed to be noticeable, but
ton. Ohio 44702. An evemng
the ones on this central
session will be conducted
K!IDsas military post attract
trom 5:30 to 7:00 p.m.
,
even more attention !han
All tnterested ·panies will oe •
given an opportunity to be
usual -- just as planned.
heard.. Further information
In· areas where the limit
may be obtained by cortact·
decreases from 45 to 35 mph ,
ing the Commission.
it decreases. very slowly ,
THE PU BLIC UTILITIES '
Signs put.up this week, about
COMMISSION OF OHI O
so · yards apart, reduc.e the
By: Richard L. Smith
speed tirnit from 45 to 43, lu
Secretary
•II , !o 39, to :11 and, fin~lly, to

, I

'

"POMEROY
Patty Dyer,
dilugl)ter of Mrs. Maxine Oyer, Route I
Bidwell, Ia ooe of fl~e Ohioans out of' 312
44"h•u .to be awu:clecf a $500

•. , &lt;LI!Iven ltr MoQm•h"1.
Alllllliii;t MelgsHJcb S¢1QGI, Mils

DYer plana to attend Ohio University
fall. ijer selection for the
s!iholanhip was based on academic
ability, participation In school and
yOuth group activities and lllfe aiM had
to. "be an active 4-H club member
· e\)l'olleil in 4-H during the year of
annUcation.

11\iJ!

. r,~

Miss Oyer has been active In' the
Hillblllles't-H Club for 11 yeare. She Ji! a
member of the• Melli &lt;;ounty Junior ·
t'afr. Buitrd,. the county ' 4'11 ·advlaory
'PM'itt 1 . . tlw
Ohlltr
. Junior Leadenhlp .Club.
Mlas Dyer has attended ~H camp
severlll tlmM and has abto served as a
camp counselor.. She has . reeelved
.IWQIII'!I.. awards for h!!r 4-H projects.
Ml8l Oyer Ia abto a member of grange
and the Future Fanners of America
· having also received several district ·
awards In the latter ocgahlzatlon.

.

..

OUr Roast Baef ind Baked Hall! Sandwlches-stort with
speciattv selectee! USDA inspected mut•· Thll mut to .
sticecf thin and STACKED HIGH on 1 sesame INd bun.
There Is plenty of tean mut nutrition lllat the entlrt
t•mily needs dalty .

Pomeroy, Ohio

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 ·
'

'

Kenya declared It was "certain" that
Amin 's regime "Is on the verge of total
~ollapse" in tile face of an invasion for·
ce of Tanzanian iroops and anti-Amln
Ugandan rebels.
,
• Diplomats reached by telephone
saturday lllOming in Kampala, tbe
Ugandan. capital, said the Ubyans,
previously estlmilted to number 2,flm,
were being flown out from an air base
jjj tiM! northem city of Nakasoogola,
presumably back to J.Jbya.
Diplomats In Kampala said Amln had
established a nell' secret headquarters
sOmewhere between the capital and
Jlhja, 50 miles to the east. They said he
1¥\d arrived by · ~IIcopter at, Radio
Uganda studios in Kampala Friday af.
temoon for a Uve radio and. televlllion
a'ddress in which be pledged never to
abandoo his capital.
.
Just before al\ telephone and telex
conununlcatlons with Uganda ceued
at. I p.m. Saturday, .residents n:ported

Crow's Family Restaurant

.

•APRIL SALE DAYS
Sale prices this weekend on r:nen's 14 ounce basic Wrangler Jeans-men's ~estern shirts'· me~'s dre~s slackS- G. E. light bulbs. girls'
. I?P5 : htde· a ·beds · women s dayttme dresses - women's and junior
s1ze Jeans .

IIHANES O
UNDERWEAR SALE
$1.00 a package off on Hanes Men's ·Red Label Briefs, T-Shirts· •
Athletic Shirts- regular and gripper boxers- plus Big Man Sizes.

•30% OFF CUSTOM DRAPERIES
Save ' til April 21sl on our Decorator Industries and Cortley custom
m~de ~raperies- Big selection of fabrics. colors. Excellent quality. ·
Brmg m your measurements and see how much you'll save now.
·

ELBER·FELDS IN POMEROY

........

WAllHINGTON - .N! a crippled auto
industry braces lor new disruptions, a
nationwide trucking shutdown beaded
Into its second week today with the
'trucking industry and striking Teamsters refusing to compr&lt;mlse to· end
their contract dispute.
Divided largely over PreSident Carter 's anti-inflation wage guideline, of·
flcials representing about 500 major
trucking Jlnns and 235,000 Teamsters
say they won't budge from hargaming
positions that prompted the work stoppage last Sunday.
Teamsters Presidert Frank Fitzsimmons Sl!id the union • had not .
·altered its posiUm "one iota" on a key
· demand for more frequ~nt m'&lt;(.Af.

llvingra~,

The Labor Department, which Is
But the industry remained just as
monitoring the impact of the shutdown,
finn in rejecting t.he demand. "Fitz ls
estimates more than :m,ooo auto
used to getting his way," an Industry ofworkers + a fourth of the hourly .work
ficial said Saturday. "WeU, this time
force + will be laid off by this ·week.
he's not," he added, asking not to be
Elsewhere, the Impact has been
named.
minimal.
No new talks have been scheduled
However, the govenunent fears an
sint'e two ~ys of futile negotiatiOns · economic crisis could begin to develop
broke off Friday. But federal mediators
by the end of this week. In that event,
indicated they would likely reswne
tbe administration is prepared to seek a
bargaining early this weelt, possibly
court order under the Taft-Hartley Act
Monday.
to end the work stoppage for up to Ill
The auto industry already is hecomng
days.
increasingly paralyzed by tbe shutdown
The.dispute emerged as a crucial test
because vital shipment.-; of parts to · of Carter's voluntary anti-inflation
assembly plant.-; hRvP iw&gt;f&gt;n chokP&lt;l nff.
pro~am .

" e.
nil

'

the capital was quiet. The Invasion force has been tWorted on the city's
soutbern and w~m ouwkirts since
early last ·week.
Radio Uganda rernalned''on the air
~tunlay evening, suggesting the
studios were sWJ In the hrmd8 ~ proAmln .Ugandans.. But it gave no hew In·
formation aboutAmln or the lighting.
In Dar M Salaam, Tanzania, the
Uganda· National UberaUon Front +
the exile coalltlm ready to take over +
. anticipated victory with an an• ·
· nouncernent ria llfi fund for the relief
and reconstruction of Uganda upon lu .
"total Uberaticit from fascist Jdl
Amln .'!
'
There was no .explanatim why the In·
vaders had held otf taldng central Kampa~. but the l!NJF; in a statement
F'riday, Bald, "We would like to ldve as
much chance as we can for Innocent
c:lvllllilla and forelgpen to leave Kampala safely and peaCefully."
'
Diplomats lilso suggested the TanzanianS may have held back to give
Amln's froopl and, Ubyans time to
withdraw lo pmrent damage.
The JJbya~ sent b)i I Jbyan leader

Egg hunt
planned
·Iim&gt;Di.EPORT - Plans for the an·
nual Easter Egg hunt were dlscussed w11en the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
• met Friday night at tbe Middleport
Heath United Methodist Church.
·.
• The hWlt will be beld Sunday, ·April
· 10, at 2 p.m.at the Middleport Park.
. Rotarians are to be at the park at1 :30.
. p.m. Pat Hill is chairman of the event.
Jack Robson and John Werner, who
1
were in charge of the program,
' discussed their recent trip to the ,Rotary
convention held at Marietta.
It wBI a~ that there will be a .
· Joint meeting of the GalllpoUa ROtary
. ClQb on April 20 at the Holhday Inn,
Gqllipolls, at which tim~ they will meet
With a touring Rotary group from
Australia.
·
"Don Rice, president, pre$1ded and
ea~ ~hr led the group slriglng. Din- .
ner was prepared and serv.ed by the .
··l~es of the 'furch.

• \1

.

,

•

,'

I

.

.

l

'

j

'

I' I

'

tl1ith1fla"qae-· ·

.
BY LARR'f EWING
Conlllci-, and the VIetnam War.
·GALUrous - 'Ceremonies were
With approzlmately 10 rellltlvM and
held F(lday in the Qallia Co,unty Court ' friends In attendance, muter of
House ID d~Ie a commemorative ceremony Warren F, Sheela opened the
plaque honoring GaiUa County's war
dedication by stating that the purpose
dead of World War II, ' the Korean
of the plaque Ia to "honor thole who
gave their last fuU measure for the
county, state and nation ,"
Rev. Charles Luaher of the Calvary
Baptist &lt;;burch, wbo prelll!llted t1ie
dedicatory addre&amp;lt, said that thooe who
worked for the placement of the pt.qu,e
Col. Moammar Khadafy to aid Arnln,
did
"" becall!e they, "want patrlotlstn
l'l!portedly foond themselves fll!hting
to
be
more thana date or a rwnor."
the brunt ri the defense effort, getting
"The
names are placed boldly,"
little help fnrn despondent Uganda
Lusher said, "so that future
·..,ldlerl!.
generations will not forget."
· JJbya·never admitted to having more
YeUow roses were presenled to the
than a group of advisers and teachers In
.
Gold
star Mothws . and Widows in
Uganda, but diplomats disputed that.
attendance.
Uganda Invaded northern Tanzania
During the ceremony, Elmer
last October bUt Tanzania chased out ·
former
Gallipolis
the invailers, and began an invasion of Caldwell,
Its own, driving slowly toward Kam- postmaster, was recognlieil·as a man,
who had "worked wry •hard and very
pala .
loog for a mernocla1 pllque in the Gallls

GOLP STAR Widnw Mae Thlvener, len, and Gnld st~r Mt~her Mr.i. Elmer
Nidav remnved • hla~k velvet Hllrtlltd tn unveil a ct~tnmemoratlve plaque
hnnnrini!Galll• r...tnty's W!lrdead nfWnrld War JJ, the Knrean Connk1, and
the Vit•lnam War durin!( dedkatitll t't'l't'll1nnles held Friday In the Gallla
rnuntv rnurt HtWIRe. Warren F. Rhrcts, pictured far right , served as mastt'f

nr rtir~Jn(lny .

Musgrave
to run again
.
'

'

unanimous approval Fnaay C&gt; . -1ing to
POINT PLEASANT
Point.
seek
~e-eledlon as mayor here.
Plfasant Mayor John C.· Musgrave
The
adloncame during the GOP City · _
ri'Celved the Republkan Party's
Qmvention to pick candidates to run for
~k't! In the upcomlng May 19eledlon.
0
The convention, lasting approximately 45 minutes, witnessed all
Food stamps l!&amp;id
)l'ogram
of Its candidates ·nominated . by
held In the Common Pleas Court Rooo!, ,, 0
1manimoWT approval.
.
.the plaque,- which 1a located 1n the ma1n .
stolen from vehicle
Laura
Gaskins
wa
s
nominated
to
IDbby of 1M Court House, was unveiled.
seek
elet1fon
to
the
city
clerk's
position.
Gold Star Widow Mile Thivener and
Pomeroy - A Revocation of
fnt1 imbent Councilman Jack Fowler
GALLJFUIJS - The theft ri food Gold Star Mlllher Mrs. Elmer Niday
Probation HearinC was held on Friday
was nominated to seek re-election 8s an
llampa, valued at fl08, was reported . J'SIIIVed a black velvet slroud to unveil
in Melga County Common Pleas Court
at-large councilman. Joining him as
stolen from a private vehicle Friday to 1M IJrooze plaque which . bears the
to
hear
a
complaint
fUed
by
PhU
candidate at-large, seeking the second
the GaUia · County Sheriff's De- names ofl33 Gallia Countlana who lost
McKinley of the Mult Parole Alllorlty
poll!, is nr. J. Stephen Lovell .
.
their Uvu wring the three military ' chargingDwlghtS. Haley Jr. wlth three
parlrllent.
.
Olher
Incumbent'
councilmen,
·
.
.
According to a np&lt;rt flied by Uncia aetlona.
counts ri probation violation.
" nominated to seek re-eledion. were
·
Prosram
mualc
waa
supplled
by the
Jollnal,_Galllpolla, the lllam)ll were
Haley's original probation stemmed ' Le9nard (Buller) Rlflle, 11econd ward;
removed from the auto between Gallls Academy High School Braa
frOm hiS pleading guilty to the March
11 Hoi! d fifth
d dH
18, 1978 breaking and enlsring of the
RIL'I.'!e
an •
war an arry '
Chair, UDder the direction of RodneY
Monday and· Weclnelday.
Grace Gardnw reald...._.
Rhndes, seventh ward. Riffle Is curren1'0111ver.
~~
tly serving tis an at-larget'OWlcilrnan.
Haley was found to be In violation of .
others nominated are John Tilllbet,
probation by not making regular · first ward ; Sandra Nichols, third Wllrd ;
paymenta to the MeJca C4!un!Y Bureau · KeJI Morris, fourth ward : Charles .
of Child Support, poaseulon of- Garland , sixth ward and Charlie
marlbar.Juana, aild emrtng a Pomeroy · · Brown, eighth ward. ·
Fourth District Senator Michael
Judie Joon C. Bacon impoHd the Shaw, a Point Pleasant Resident;
wlglnal sentence of six montbJ to tive
nominated Mus~ave for re-eledlon. In
years.
his speech he compllmen!etl the mayor
:::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::~::, nn seven years of act'ompllstunents he
-.- . -JACKSON, ··Miu. (~P) - A
has brought to till! dly and pointed out ·
Ieder~~ I court decide• Meaday
thul he is well-respected throughout the
wbetb~ te ltay tile eaecatloll ef
stale.
-vlcted killer awJn SJiv.ter
An opposing party iicket has nol yet
Bell who, llllllke u.tller eoadeamed
been t•hos&lt;m.
·
Ia ALabala, wull llllla'II)WI
Ia do everYtbla&amp; ,..1111- le uve hll

~~ ~~catory

Probation·
k d
IS revo e

life.

. HIGH \VTND8 'l'hurlday nf6hl leveled this liarn located
at the Gallia County O.i!fren's Home. An undetermined

I

The wage guideline technically puts a
7 percent celllng on annual wage and
fringe benefit Increases, but It has been
loosened to. acommodate a larger
Teamsters settlement.
The Wlion ltruck 73 major firms last
Sunday, when the old contract expired,
and the industry responded by locking
out workers.
Industry bargainers say their last of.
fer would boost wages and benefits 30
pcrtent over three years and still Just
fall within carter's loosened guideline.
The unloo's demand for more
frequent cost-&lt;&gt;1-llving raises would put
total contract Increases 2 percent over
'the guideline. tbe lndm.trv eon'"" ""~

GIJllia 's ·war
dead horiored,

:ldi Amin's eight-year rule .ended
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - The last
IJbyan troops abandoned · Kampala
Sllturday and commWllcaUons with
Uganda were severed, presaging the
. end of President Idl Amln 's eight-year

Tty Our Drive-Thru lnit.nt Serviee.

1

.

ROAST BEEF OR BAK-ED ·HAM
·SANDWICH~S,

recreation; and, 4Jura Van

Meter, sergeant-Qf·anns.Kim Eblin, reporter.

Meigs High Senior
•
wms ~cholarshjp

,I
I

.
MARKET REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) Direct hogs (Fed-State) :
Barrows and gilts steady,
demand ·good. U.S. 1·2, 200.
· 230 lbs. country points, 45.00.
45.25, few at 45.50, plants,
45.50-46.00. u.s. l.J, 23().250
lbs. country points, 44.2545 00, plants, 44.75-45.75.
Receipts Thursday:
Actuals
7400,
loday's
estimates 9500.
Cattle , from Columbus
Producers Livestock Co·'
oporative Association, 1.00.
2.50 higher. Slaughter steers
and yearlings, choice 69.00.
75.90, good 65.00.71.00. Bulls
market 1.80-2.50higher. Cows
market steady.
Sheep and lambs 3 00
higher, old sheep 32:00 a·nd
down.

THIRTY-FIVE CENTS

Nobody budging In
trucking shutdown

Gallipolis, Cill o 45631 .

31 '
TRENDS: Feeder cattle

MIODLEPORT-POMEROY

•

Sale every Saturday at 1
p .m.. 52 Vinton Street.
Prices taken from the
auction of Saturday, 'March

Witte

SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1979

..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A low..wst, liquid·
heating solar. collector intended for use with a heat
pump foc home heating has been developed by
researchers at Battelle's. Colwnbus Laboratories.
The collector &amp;Jso·has plltentiill for use in home and
industrial water heating, ·direct space heating and
agricultural applications, according to Battelle's D.
Karl Landstrom. And, it may be commercially
available within the next few years, at a cost about onethird that of conventional solar systems, he said.

. llrrl' a rr the numbers
dfaw n Thursday in th_c

Daffodils Days success• ••
Page B-2 -

•

GAI.t.IPOUS-POINT PLEASANT

to area. , •

Page B-1

'

.

Low cost unit ·developed
462,713 recipient s. Meigs
Count) received $85,617 for
1.1 94 recipients.

A rea Deaths.. ... , . .. . .. ... A·7
Classified Ads .... ...... 0+9
Lifestyle .. ... ~ ........ 8+10
Locai ........ , ...•..... A-2·8
State, national. ...• ,., .... D-1
Sports ......... ....... • . C· H
TV Guide ............ ... • D-5·

unha

·--

Ohio has 25 on death row

Sehool. The event featured bands from Gallia Academy,
Bloom Carroll and Athens.

Seven Days at Three Mile. • . •
Page D-1

•

Spt~g ~mes

~

•

Plane roll 'a miracle'

CONCERT HELD - The Meigs high school jazz band
under the directiOI\ of Alan Hunt is shown preparing for
last night's in vitational jazz band concert at Meigs High

I

. StOne sculpting. • ;
Page B-1 ,

•

amount of damage resulted as the ltructure colllpied
onto a car, a tractor and bui!IJing materials stored Inside.
'
'
. ~

.

•, •• "I ulll to Uve 110111 tllne," the
ZZ.,eaMid BeD ulolla •Jatentew.'
"At 1eut wbea yeu'n aUwt, you've
101 a ebliace."
.
...•111e Mlalulppl !lllpl-.e Ceurt
rejected effortt J'rlday • bloq the '
execution, oebeduled ·-to occur
· Wedaeoday.
, .' .. Ualeu a lila)' II puled, BeU
wUl be tbe first pen. te die Ia
Mlnlulppl'o IU ebamller 1lace lJM
ad the oeeoad 1o be e~ee~~llll Ia tile
Ualted Slalel In the put 12 years .

EXTENDED JI'ORECA$1'· · : .
.MODday ~ Wed-.ily:
Sbowen poulble Moaday :aad
'l'llelda)'. Jl'llr Wedllelday, lf.l&amp;lio'
1111'011111 llle period fnllll tile apper
Ill Ill tile 111111 ... Lon ID the ....
early MoadaJ, .fiiJUaa' a. tbe ·a by:
early
diiJ o

"*'

I

'

,

'

-

·1,

~:::~:::.~:x:::::::::::~::::::~~~~!:l::!-::;::::::lt.::;::::~·

DEPVTIES TO MEET ·

GALLIPOIJS · - Gallia County
Special Deplitl• will meet &lt;II Tutlday,
April 10, starttrw at 7 p.m. In the Gallla
.'¥
. ;;::::::~::::::::::::~~~::~::-;;:::::::1!:::::::::~::~:::~:~::::::~~:::::::~:::::::~::: cOunty sheriff'&amp; ~Ice.
..
·
i
i

..

�.
·-- · ·-A-2-

·--

,.--- ~ --

'

- _____ ....... -:----···.:.--- -

. . ---·- 4----· - -

...

--· ----..------

Today's Topic

'

OOLUMRUS IAPl - F:xJ•'fls ""'
buildinl( stn.,~•r PIPctnmk lent''' in
an erfnr1 to makP t'&lt;llllputer system•
more'se&lt;,lrt' from ~r1mlnal technni"'I'.
"Gains are bein~ maflto '"' all Iron·
ts," Sllid r&gt;onn B. Parker, who eonduded a two d.y brirfin~ on ,,lmputer
crlme this past week at Ohio stair
University's Fawt-etl Center for
Tomorrow, in a prol(ram spniiS(&gt;ri-d by
the OSU Division of Continuing
F:ducation.
.
Parker, assol'ialed with SRI In·
temational at Stanford University. has
spent the last 9 years inveslil(alin~
computer crime. · •
Computer criminals are fleecing
· business and government by billions of
of dollars annually, lie indirated.
"The problem is growing very
significantly. We don1 know how lllliCh
there really is; l have almost 680 cases
in our research files that represents a
lower bound of our CO!lCI!m + and these
don't include the larger rases," Parker
said.
.
In addition to develnping
techniques lo separate one a&lt;'livily
from another, efforts are underway lo
safeguard data by encryption + or
secret coding.
' 'We are also increasing the control
of people to the data files stored in computers. And we are improvin~ the
method of veryifying the identity of
people having access lo computers,"
Parker,explained.
The increasing use of computer
technology is making conswners much
safer in their various kinds of financial
transact.lons, Parker said. One of the
ways this ill being dooe ill by reducing
the nwnber of people in positions d
trust who have access to the system•.

"AI lhr ',;.me lim¥. howl'Ver. W&lt;'
NI"P irwn•nsinl! our vulnt-rabillty to vt•ry
""Phisli&lt;'"'""· tna"-•iv• HIUI~k.• on our
finant'ial - institutiun.s that an•
automalin~ v•ry4-Hpi&lt;Dy, ""Jll''ially
thnmgh the F:let1n&gt;nir Fwlll• Tr-•n.'lfer
livslrm," he added.
• Parker has previously be-en quot.-!
as Sllying •·nlle~e~ and univpr.;itil'll
were bet'nming brerdln~ grounds f(Jf"
t~•mputer crimt•s because stndenl•
were beln~ Cll{'OUnt~rd In outsmart lhr
system,•.
"! haV&lt;' n&lt;~ked a signifi~anl
chan'ge in attitude in the university
community Iowan! students making
unaulhorlzed art&gt;ess to ' the St-hool's
computers," he said.
More universities appear to be
taking legal al'lioo against these
student criminals who comprorni!le
campus computer systems, he noted.
Although the reaction in the
business community is mixed, Parker
said, he is satisfied with the sente..,;,.
being slapped on computer criminals. ·
"Some student. who have committed more seriotL• types of crimes
like selling or changing grades and
destroying student and lacultf C&lt;Jillputer programs and dllta are rerelving
prison senteJK-es," he. SHid. 14111ey're
not being given just pl"()baUon."
Parker also sees general support
for legislation introdll&lt;'ed in the U.S..
. Senate which would impose harsh
p!!nalties, surh as fines up to $50,000 and
prison sentent-es as long as 15 years.
· "!think we're starting to see an In·
teres( in teaching ethical rules to
students about treating computers as
very lmportanl and very powerful
tools," he explained.

Firing
s·qUJJd executes
•
fornler Iranian official
lnm

lnr.

'fF.HRAN.
lAP)-· Fnmwr
Iranian Prlmr Minl~lrr Amir Ahha~
Hnvrida wa• t'Xrrlll&lt;-d by a lir1nl( squud
Saturdav,

!iitah·-nwnt'fl

radln

H•· w&lt;·nt nn trial in Tt•hran's Qa'f
Pri•nn nn Marrh 15, hut lh&lt;•
pnw&lt;'&lt;'fllnf!• w~n· '"'JM'ndrd wiM•n.
pn"·l•lnnal Pr11111• Mlnistrr . Mt•h•il
&amp;7ar~tan t'flftlplllfJM~ to n•,·ftlufiunan
· h•ad1•r AYJih~lah Ruhollah Khnm••inl '
thai trlal• "'''"' IM•in~ rnndlwh-d In
\'lnlallnn nf &lt;•Htahll•h..t lri(IIIR&lt;'""'·
A ,..,.. "'"'""' .,.,,,..,. l111&lt;t Thu,.,.day
pr"'·ld&lt;•d .a lrj!al ha•t. fnt lhr
n•vnlutinnary trial• to'"'''"""'· and •fill
p&lt;•nnlttrd "'"'"'' pn..,....ti•K• and
rx&lt;'&lt;'nlinn lmmrdiah•ly · aftrr !CI'n·
l&lt;•nrln~. '
F,arll••r !latunlay, flrlnf! "'''"'d'

nn·

nnltnM-d: ·
TIM- radio hniHdra.i, q11&lt;•tin~ an nf·
firial nf tht•,n•v..hoHnmry gnwmm&lt;•nt.
•aid an l•lami•· r&lt;•trf In Tt•hran f••md
th&lt;• 57-yrar..-.ld Hm•••kbl f!ltOiy nl all

.

f"har)(4•!1il uf bl•ing "a ''"rnpt t•lt•mrnt ''"

F.arth, rt'•pnn&lt;ihlr · fnr •rn•adinj!
rnm1ptinn and tn•mmn tn Iran."
Hnwida, priiiM' mlni•h·r und&lt;•r
Shah Mohammad RI'7JI PRhlll\1 fnr ll
yt•ars, was rhafll&lt;-d o&lt;ilh •pyinK f•&gt;r liM•
llnlt\-d Stair&lt;. ''7.innl•m." smu,00111j!

t"Xt"rutt"d Abr........., ..t ttw RNh'P~ fnrml"f'

~.rnln. all~wln~ Mq&gt;lloltat•WI nl Iran'•

nah1ral rt•f.irtur&lt;'l'!lil nncl ntht•r rrimtop; fnr
whlrh th•· prn••·n•tur had ••krd th••
rh•ath fliit•ntt•nrt•.
Hnl'l'idu wa• lh&lt;- hii!h_.l·rankin)! ·
nffiriul nf tiM• nld rrj!imr &lt;'X""""' lhn•

'wrurJty

mrn.

R.f'vnlutlnnAry
mililiallll'n rnundttl up a r. ..t nf rww
· ""'~""''"· blrluclillj( a •l•t•·r nf lh&lt;• i•xih-d
llllmarrh, PriiiN''" Fab•mt'h Pahlo\1,

4t.

Receive ribbons for weight loss
MIDDLEPORT--Naomi
Foreman received.a 35 pound
ribbon, and Betty Van Maire
a 211 pound ribbon for weight
loss at the TUesday ineeting
of the Sllnderella Diet Class
held at the He&amp;Ul Church in
Middleport.
In the class Bessie Floccari
lost the most weekly weight
and there was a tie for

A Tut .Titzy
'abounds

,.

Experts trying to make computer
systems more secure from crooks

, COLUMaUS, Ohio tAP)
There was ' 16.9 percent
· Increase In the number Qf
newly unemploy~ persons
filing initial elalma for
unm~ploymcnt benefits for
the week endlni March 31,
according · to the ad·
minlstrator of the Bureau of
Employment Services.
Albert Giles said the boost
to 13,151, compared to the
previous week, was primarily
becauae of layoffs In the auto
industry. He said more than
1,400 oi the clalma we~e from
the auto Industry.
More lban 1,100 claims
were from per110na separated
from jobs in the houaehold
appliance Industry, Giles

said.

A llltal of 599 Initial claims
were filed 1ut week under aU
other pregroma, accounting
for an overall Initial claims
total of 13,750, up 16 percent
over the prevlo111 week.

o~ID:kci:::S o~f :::::

control
Tom Pain Exterminating

liRMilt
•d PEST CONTROL
ROACHES· MOTHS- SILVERFISH

WATER •uGS-SPIOERS-ANTS- FLEAS
FHAindYA'INSPECTION &amp; CERTIFICATION
Ucensoct by Tho Ollio Stolt Dept. of Agriculture
Terms Av•It•bto . Fully Insured
Prompt Servli:o Throughout 0.111• &amp; Meigs
Counttu Slnce1f51
Inspection
MAIN OFFICE
Without Obligation

GALUPOUS

446-7569

No-till corn needs

careful management

weeks were estimated at

By Stephen D. Hlblncer
128,850 laat week. lbal's a
Dlllri.d CoDiervaUoaisl
drop of 5.6 percent from the
Son COJ!I. Service
prevlo111 week, Giles said.
GAIJJPOUS -Two no-till
The number of _jobless corn planters are available ,
Ohioans . fllin&amp; clallils lut fOI' rental use to local farweek !llider aD programs, . men now. Gallia Roller Mills
federal and state, was and Production Credit
elltlmaled at 142,1100, a 3.9 Association have both purJ)erceot decline from the chased tW()of()W planters.
previous week.
Their rental tenns are

lnfor1nation on
·area happenings
ATHENS - The Athens that 100,000 daffodils and
International Film Felllval 35,000 early tulips ate to be in
takes place April ·1).29 at the bloom in the mansion's
Athena Cinema in downtown gardens. The hours of the
Athena. 'lbla film featival is showcase are 10 a.m. to 5
one of the top eJPI in tbe p.m. dally. Admilsldn is P
country and over 300 films for adulla and 50 cents for
are to be shown during the . students. stan Hywet Hall ill
leatival. There will be work· located at 714 Portage Path.
shops anctr film screenings For further information call
devoted to special effect · (216) 83S-5533.
techniques.
Afternoon
screenings becin at I p.m.
ASQJ.,AND, Ky. - The Ohio
and admlsllon Ia P; evenlllg . CivU War Relic and Collecscreenings at7 p.m. cost $3; tors Show wW bebeld.AprU 28
and the mlclnillht·screening Ia and 211 at the Ohio National
U.50. The hours of tlie Guard Atmory In , Al/lland.
leatival are 9 a.m. to 11:30 Over 60 exhibitors will
p.m. weekdays and 9 a.m. to 2 display materials from the
a.m. weekends. For more Revolutionary War period to
Information call (614) 594- • the Indian Wars of 1884.
1118.
Flreanns, swords, bayonets,
.- unlfonns and leather goods
AKRO'lf , St=y . ~ ,a, few, of the items that
Sho*caM, one of the
ts will be for sale or trade. Show
largeat ·needlework showa, hoW'I are 9 a.m: to 6 p.m.
will feature over 300 exhlbils Saturday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
.Apr1127-29atstan Hywet Hall Sunday. Admission ill Sl. 'J'!!e
in Akron. Special exhibits and BI"!Jlory Is Jocated on Ea~
demonstrations In crewel, Main Street in downtown
lrapunlo and needlepoint can Ashland. For more in·
be seen. II Ia also espeeted foo:mation call (419) 269-31211.

.Former resident
weds·
was

perronned by the Rev.
BIDWELL Debor&lt;
William
Wilson 11 the
. Caywell, daughter of Mr. and
Possum
Road
Church Of God.
Mrs. Dana Laywell of Spring·
The
custom
of
open 'churtb
field, .fonner residents of .
wedding
was
observed.
Bidwell, was tbe bride of Rick.
•
Debora
Is
the
grandFerguson on February 28,
1979. Rick is the son of Mrs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eloise Ferguson and the late Gilbert L. Plants of.' BublMarvin Ferguson of Spring· Morton Road, Gallipollii,' and
Mrs. Dorothy Morris of
field.
·
' The double-ring ceremony Bidwell.
~;,;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;... . . . . .,.;,..,. . . . . .,

similar. If you are interested
in trying this new fanning
·technique, l suggest you call
eitherof the iwo companies.
When deciding whether or
not to try the machines, consider the recommended
management steps:
I. Soils and Field Selection
- Select productive, well
drained soU that has a
medium topsoU texture fOI'
best results.
2. Fertility - Add the
- proper nutrlent levels aa.
reconunended by soil tests.
This Includes lime lo balance
soil acidity.
3. Pesticides - Other than ,
- lmp~oper · planter adjustment, poor pest control
takes the highest ton in no-till ·
production. The Agronomy
!}uide and County Agent are
your main sources of help in
this area. Both weeds and insects are severe proiJiems
without proper control.
4. Planting - Seed drop
should be in alignment with
the fluted couHers. The ker·
nel should be droppetl at one
and one-half to two inches
depth. Fertili2er should be
placed below and to .the side
of the seed, and pack wheels
should Insure good· seed · to
soli contact.
For more detailed infr·
mation, check for the Extension Service bulletin Utied
"Ched&lt;-Ust For NG-TIU Com
Production."
NG-tlll com production
requirt'• top in&lt;tnagemenl,
but It suits Gallia County.
Most local fanners who have
tried It like It Follow-up ar. licles will · feature various
,loca.l fanners' candid com·
ments on their experiences.
1

"

..
"

...
'"

...

'"'"

FAMILY BIRTHSTONE RING~
for Mothe1'8
Grandmother&amp; Eac-h brllllantand ,, 1
colorful •tone repreeenW' a loved. one. Bel in
.
aloamlna 1-IK or. IOK aold, they eymboUze a lovlntf' • ·
family, al.wa)l• qether. StanN a~ 8)'JUheUo- and

prlcca atart aa low u 8000.
I

""

CLARK'S JEWELRY. STORE':~

. ...:.

Galipolis, ()hi; .

Gift Wrapping
,

Bathtub Whi!lpool
D Bathtub/Shower Benches
0 Moist Heat Pads (3 sizes) O _fAIInn(ode Safety Rais

C PCHtJIJie nmoclles;
0 Portable Oxnen s;;~~iJI
C
.
ol

1\

.::..w~h Shoulder Bag ·~.~7-:.~iM
Cool Mist Vaporims
D Vibratin&amp; Back Resb.
Paraffin Baths
D Back
{4
·
Shower/Tub. Grab Bars (3 sizes)

iests

MON•.fRI.
9-1
SAT.
.

I

Spr.ing

V•ll•v Pl•z•
.

•·"*· .., ·

,..,.

R , al set

...

at Syracuse . ·

""
, , ;..

-····
"' "
',

....

-- "

....,...

O.lllpolls, Ohio

·CHARGE
ASTU
VISA

GOI.Df:N

Phone 446-2206

BUCIEYE.
I

.

'

Goes along wherever you go! 1..,1 fqr
travel or outdoor use. 3-woy power
opercillon. Batteries, AC adopter and
cor adopter Included. Con)poct design.

~i'O 19~ 4

•

AM/FM
Digital Clock Radio
Wake to music or alarm. 24hour set alarm: Lighled time
display. Wood-look cabinetry,

SAVE'4

SLIMLINE DESIGN
. LCD CALtULATOR

11aa

Does basic moth,' perc..;..ts, square roots. 4-

Misses' Or Women's
Seersucker Pant Suits
Cool 'n' stylish 2-pc. su ils of polyester
knil. Short sleeve, button front lops.

key memory. 8-digil display. Aulomatic shutoff. Jl9«eries and wallet-type case included.
MOoEL Tl;1030

Elostic. waist pants. The preHiest of

poslal colors! Sizes IQ-16. 141'2-24112.

REGULAR 112.97 or 'U.97

9

FROC,TOR· Sl •x•
"BEVERAGE BREWER"

84
EACH

Drip Coffee Maker
Make up la· i'll cl&gt;ps. Mlni-slz~
basket for 2-3 cupo. Automatlc.olly switch~\~ Ia
warm.
Wllh carafe, disposqb • filters . .

SAVE NOW ON SANDALS!

keer.

REGULAR '19oM

15' '.

88

SOIN~

IIJG, ......

M00EL .A
· :

12~

Seal-A-Meal®

.y •-'ZBY 0

,·

7

·Kids' Timex® Watche!;

7!'!R•12,46

With Peanuts Characters
Snoopy" or lucy"' style. Full-numeral
dial, sweep second hand, vinyl sJrop.

Moltn alr11Qht MOis ·on Oozey ·
bolloble cookJng pouche~. Cloaes
. most t)ouset'\Oid wraps tool

•1952, 19$1, 1965 IJnl'-d

REGULAR

WOMEN'S AND TEENS'

•••97

Casual Sandal

544

Cool, stylish vinyl uppers
in clcssic white Or tan.

'*!'"'.. S;,nd~eote. Inc,

MOOEL1SAM 1 .

COOL CHOICE
FOR SPRING!

•.

•.

.,~

ORDER EARLY

t

FOR

-..•.

t

ANOTHER

Passbook Savings

The

~.dW

dream.

Saving money theae daya lan'l eeq.
But lt'a aWl po..lble ••• and ap are the
Important goala for which you nve.
HaYing a bank that's ready to help with a
wide range of savings plans can help you
reach those goals. Young people, for
lll!!tance, trying to set aside a few dollars
each week for that first home.
. Ohio Valley has several savings pions
_that will help. Our passbook account Is a
good place to begin saving. Then, ·once
you've saved that first thousand dollafll.
you can step up to one of our many .
savings certificates. Th~ Interest adds up
faster, and because we offer a wide range
of plans, you can gear the length of·
maturity to your special needs:
Have some Important ~avlngs goals
In mind? Then come to the bank that has
a savings plan for all kinds of savers.

·5.00%
5.5()%

5.61 "'o

1 (or)2·Year Certificate

6.00'¥.

6.27%

3-Year Certificate

6.50'Yo

t

76~'!'.

6·Year Certificate

7.50'¥.

790%

7.75%

kt·
'··,"

8.17%

of lovely solid colors or

.,.~

ombres. 3V2 or 4 ouf'!ce
skeins . Machine woJh ..
•oupono r.M • Ouponl TM

,·

.

e

Skein

·'~"· .
,'
t
''

• ALL PLANS COMP.OUNDED DAILY
• Passbook minimum depOsit of $5.00.
o Cerlificate "'lnlmum deposit of $1,000.00.
' ofnteoesl must remal,n on deposit a full year
to earn annual yield.
o On lima deposita, regulations require that
an lntereat penalty If the
Ia withdrawn before

~

'

~

't

!

r

~

,, i., '

Expect more from

ValleyBank· _, ~~

Supermax® ~ ·
-1000
WattDryer
.
'

SEND
ONE...TAKE ONE HOME
.,

OURFI'D

BASKET.

14

r.Asn:JtJS ~APRIL 15.
·SMELTZER'S
GARDEN .CENTER
·
AND
, .
FLOWER SHOP ·.
PIKE

I

98

Jl!! 44
.

Fire
Extinguisher

.

. SAVE 'J

3

'

97

SAVE

'3

Dry chemical extinguisher.

Push buHon release. Wail
bnxket. Non-refillable.
CUSf GUAID APPIOVlDI

WOMEN'S AND TEt:NS'

REGULAR

Fashion Sandals '12.97
Attractive T·strop uppers
In black or Jan urethane.
High-rise sole and IJMI.

''•

.

gas:

GAWPOUS, OHIO

·

'

·I

(

5!G~•r.n

•,

SAVE •s

" Olympian" 8V2x 11 Yi rug Is
..
100% olefin f'Oiypropylene
fiber. DuPont Typer non-skid backing. Rubber
cooled for long wear. Big seleclian o{.tolorll .

· GI.i.LETTE®

~-:

I

Pour locationato Mr¥11 JOU better.
~~~e-. I"DDC:
'
'

.· yarn in a Iorge selection

Indoor/Outdoor
. Room Size Rug

Our Low Prlc•

I

'•

7.25%

Supple urelhane upper
with sling bock, Smart
colors . Cork wedge .

Wintuk* ·
Knitting Yarn
4-ply Orion ~ acrylic ·fiber

... . .

6.81

4· Year ~rllficate .

8-Year Certificate

......
.+,
.•...,
··••

5.t2%

9Q-Oay Certificate

OFFERED BY

T~'""'

Comfortable
Woven Vamp Sandal

FID

•"•

•

Womt!n'll A.nd

EASTER

••
••••

yv~e

0

·0
0
0

•.

••
i...

D Bathtu~ Slflty RaiiJ (3 siJies)
0 Hand and Foot Whirlpool ·D Elevated Toilet Seals (3

7" ·Diagonal Measure
~amous Name Brand
Black and White TV ..

wu

available. ·

EU&lt;RIDGE, Md. (AP) William Green saya bis
Bonheur Memorial Park Is
the first commercial pet·
human cemetery In the '
country.
Green Ia lakin&amp; orders for
joint gravellles after lbe
Howard County Board of
Appeals ruled that humans
could be burled with lbelr
pets, sayJni, "There are no
' other memorial parks In
Howard County providing
this service ol Interment of
bUJIUIIUI and pets together."

0Exercise Equipment

SU ITS!

i:

buried together

THAT SHOWS YOU CARE--GIVE AGIFT OF HEALTH AND SAFEIY--

. D Hot and Cold Paclls

; •.N

A MOIHEltS DAY
she'll remember:

GJVEA GIFT•••

0 Sunlamps ·
0 Nasal Sauna .

By JACK SCHREIBMAN
CyrU Magnln, the city's chlf'l
and
of protocol; and Walter
NAbiNE JOSEPH
Newman, president of the
A11oclated ~Writers
f'ine Arts Musewn's board of ·
?.!f~== SAN FRANCISCO (AP) trustees.
'' i
When San Franclaco ·was
Magnin, who said be paid
added as the seventh arid $10,000 of hlsown money to go
~~= final American city to exhibit along on the Tul·hunting
1 :·t ~:: King Tutankhamun's golden expedition, Insisted the
It was heralded as Egyptians "got a million(in
~ coup.
it was, but at a pledged profits) from every
b~avy price..
city, not just us."
Tbe city, negotiating on its . But Daniel Herrick of New 1
w~ and won the York's Metropolitan
~j.~;:~r~~ government, and Museum, which was in
1
e~bit, with:
chargeoftheTuttour, denied
"\ t-.:;,::,~:,.:An up-front cllib ad- that any of tbe other six
"'
Of $100,000.
; , . ' •muaeuinl bad made a
•"' .. - The teturn pf •'! . commitment or JII'OIIIIIe to
. ""~Egy.ptlan %6th dynasty '.pve Egypt a specific swn of
lim~ relief the ~y's ·. money. · ' . •
mua.eum had bought for · He ~·tl!"ated the total
t:IO.OOO from a Paris dealer; profits earned by the six
..
Only to discover It bad been museums and to be turned
"'to1en 1rom· E£Ypt.
over to Egypt would amount
~· &gt;
;;_ An Informal plqe of at to S5 mDjloll. Thus. far, $3.7
: ,;:; ;Jeut $1 · million in profits mUIIon.. ba,l been sent to
1
... ',;.::lrvm the exhibit, whleh none . Egypt, Herrick said.
, of th~ Other cltlts 1111de.
, The. orlclnal offer to send
: "~"': NOw, two month.! before' ·rut to the Unlted'States ·was
· .,,, the exhibit Is scheduled to announced by · Egyptian
: )::~ opep, a city official has President Anwar S;adat In
: .~ ,:Charged mismanagement by , 1974. The host museums
· · • •the city's museum, saying chosen by Egl'Jll with help
San Franciscans win pay from the U. S. State
•• . higher admission prl~es and Department, were the
;f · get fewer .tickets than ·rut Washington's National
~· -1ans in other American cities. Gallery, Chicago's Field
~;
• "Pr1ces are too hiP ... Museum, New Orleans'
i· Dased on the fact that the Museum of Art, the Loa
{
director of the museum Angeles County Art Musewn
•
wasn't interested in the and the Seattle AJt Museum.
1· exhibit orlglnany," said city · Tbose museums fonned &amp;
:::
Supervisor Quentin ~Pp· · . consort!~ lo work out trans-·
~:
Both polnta were cone'eded portatlon .•l!d , financing
·t· by !an White; director of San J)robii!IJIS, qreedlng to tum
i
Fr,nclsco's Fine Arts · overto ·EgyptaUproflts from
{'
Museums, which Include the tickets, gift shops and the
~:
-M. H. De Young where the rental .of tape recorded
f exhibit wiU appear..
guideS! _
1·
White said he did nOI go
They received a total of
I. .after the Tut exhibit because about · '533,000 for trans·
~:
the city was scheduled to portation and orgaqizing
t· have the famed Dresde11 · · coats .from corpoi'aliona like
exhibit of Geni.an lrt. Alao, E:um and organizations like
;: be said, E8YJ11 was atW Irked ,tbe National Endowment for·
t· beca~~~ethe c:!ty had canceled · the Humanities, Herrick said.
~.;
an eurller E~ exhibit
"We were excluded from
::; and
"prediapoaed" · to the conaortlwn. for what
:•? pick Los ~eles Instead.
re~sons I'm . not exactly
{;
White slold ·u. waa · only . II,JII'e," said Tom Seligman,
~ pressure from City HaD and assistant dlrecto,r of San
-:: the city's art patronllbat 1ot Francisco's museum.
:~ · him goJni after the exhlbiL
According to Seligman, San
~
Kopp bas asked' . for a , Francisco Is paying to move
;.; manallin8 audit of the Fine !he show from New York, as
~ Aita Museums. .
well as for. air conditioning
·"
He said tbe tUO Jdml!!klrl and capital improvements to
~ prf£e to Tul Is more than the museum. That call8ed
~ double tbet.pUIIn lilY Giber part of the hi8h ticket ptljce,
"'· e~ry: B.. White said the bilh orficiala aay.
"·
\: prk:e risuled because San
The city was given a alx·
·~ F1UC1aco bad negoUated on figure donation by the Em" ;llr own lcir the exhibit and porlum department ato!'ta for
l illd .not been part of the the exhibit, but no one will ·
~ on,tnal Ills-city consortium. reveal !he wet amount.
~ , ~opp also criticized a
White. said officials · ~
·;..: detialj)n to tllm over 41,000 considering aeUing m.o~e
!0 · the city's Ciln· ,tlc~ets lri San Francisco, and
venti&lt;ll an4 ·VIIItors Bureau, · lengthening hours. Current
which Is ..._rlbutlng them to p.lans call for the exhibit to be
tour operators who ··bring in open · Tuesday through
tourists from aU over the Sunday, including three
country. · Some ·40,000 are . nights a week.
going to a Los Angeles firm.
"The decision was that the
eVIV
bureau ' should alloeate the ·
·
·
t.o tiekets to develop tourist
bllflness lor the ·city," said ·
.
•
Revival
Cbet Rhodes, director of ; . Syracuse J1i&amp;rketing lor.the bureau.
services w1U be held at the.
. But, ~omplained Kopp: SyracuseFintOiurchofGod
"NOne o( it was done openly, · beginning Monday, Arrll 9,
publicly, and that was the thro~gh April 14. Services are
Pr blfiJI,
at 7.30 p.m. nightly.
~e ~ity worked out _c. P. Conley of Gallipolis
arrangements for the exhibit wiU be the guest speaker.
dlll'lnlla-,977 goodwill trip to ThllfSday, AprU •f• there will
EIIJPI by White; millionaire be communion and church
deJI!arlment atore magnate ordinance.

WITH APPROXIMATELY 80 in attendance,
ceremonies were held Friday in the Gallia County Courthouse to dedicate a cmunemoralive plaque which bears

. takenintl!laweek.
At Point Pleasant Lenora
runner-up between Judy . Weaver loit the most weight,
McGuire and Dixie Sayre. At and Allee Hoochar wits the
the Middleport morning runner-up . Four new
class, two· nri- membel)l members were taken In at the
were welcomed and ·Peggy evening class with Velva
Hill and Euvette Bechtle Pierson and !Jnda Wamsley
were the ones losing the most being the ones with the
weight. Carolyn and Doris greatest weight loas.
Gillispie were the big l011ers
In the Mason Class where Pets, humans
seven new members were

BOGGS . ' j o~:~;-;~~!t
.
IEXTERMINAnNG 00

.'

• A-3-The Sunday Times-&amp;nt~net, :;ufiuay, Apr. 8, 19'19

'!'he Su!ljlay Times-Sentinel, SUnday, Apr . 8, 1979
f.

·--'

:

•

•

'

�.
"

A-4- The Sunday Times,&lt;;.,ntinel, Sunday: Apr 8. 1979

.

1-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sundav. Anr. 8. 1!119

•~

.

Three spring solar conferences schedul~dfor . Q~ioj

COLUMBUS - Ever since
"Let there be Hght," people
have been arguing over
pcoperty rights, according to ·
J . Nonnan Stark, Cleveland ·
attorney, architect, and
appraiser.
"Although the right to the
sun has been with us since
ancient times, we're still
. struggling to agree on codes
anq laws, stU! arguing about
solar energy," says Stark,. in
advance of three solar conferences In Ohio. "Local and
federal governents, trade
associations, and
professionals have to agree
on finding useful alternatives
to wasteful fuels. Because
right now we're trying to
inven! the solar wheel ; and
it's going to take a great deal
of time, effort, and
cooperation to get the spokes
in order and make a solar
wb.eel that really roUs.
"Ever since our biblical or
scientific beginnings, the
right to the sun and its energy .
was unimpeded except for
trees. But we have never
pcoperly used or harnessed
solar egergy. It's here, it's
plentiful, and It's cheap. So
we can and must use it," says
Stark;
The three conferences:
AprU 24 at the CoHsewn
Holiday· Inn, Brecksville
Road, Cleveland; ApcU 26 at
the HUton East, 170 and
Hanillton Road, Columbus,
and May I at the t:;arrousel
Inn, Reading Road, Cin·
clnnatl, are sponsored jointly
by !he Solar Office of the
Ohio Department of Energy
and the National Solar
.Heating .and Cooling In· ,
formation . Center. The
meetings are part of a series 1.

II
I

which the National Center is
running to infonn building
'professionals about the
basics of residential solar
applications. Architects,
build ers , developers,
engineers. appraisers; eode
officials, plumbers. and

District
Library
GALL,IPOUS - The Dr.
samuel L. Bossard Memorial . ··
Library announces the
following new books are
avaUable aa of AprU 5:
Fiction
I, Monty, Marcus Bach; ·
The Last Romantic, Dorothea
Buske; Uvla or Burled Alive,
Lawrence DurreD; Paddy,
Kelly P. Gut: Daneclere,

j
I

Pamela Hill; Maggie, Leoa
Kennedy; A Stranger At My
Door, Mary Kl.stler; Light·
struck, WiUace Knight; The
Tree House Confessions;
James McConkey; wn~
Mountain
Thyme,
Rosamunde Pilcher; T~e
Bastard Kloi. Jean Plaidy;
The Doctors Were Brolbers,
Elizabeth Seifert; The
Claubera Rigger, Jolin
Tarrant; Salllrday City, Jan
Webster; Mills of the Gods,
Daoma Winston; My Brother,
The Wind, G. Wisler.
Noa-Fietloa
Dear Deede : The Diaries of
Dorl Schaffer, Anne Sella!·
fer; How to Make Money in
the antiques and Collectibles
Business, Elyse Sommer;
Mer~ant Shipe and Shippins. R. Munro·S!Jllth;
Weather Lauguage, · Julius
Fast; The Complete Book of
Vllamins, Charles Gerras;
How to Flatten Your
Stomach, Jim Everroad;
Cooking Wlt)l Michael Field,
Joan Scobey; Furniture In 24
Hours, Splros Zakas; Chapter
Two, Nell Simon;· You Don't
Have to Be In Wlw's Who to
Know What's .What, SaiD
Levenson; Vienna, David
Pryce· Jones; Children of the,
Holocaust, Helen . .Epstein;
Naples '44, Norman Lewis;
Barbara Jordan: A Self ,
Portrait, Barbara Jordan; •
The Klpgdom Within, Jesse
Stuart; Time and Chance,
Peter Townsend.

others have bene invited to
the 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. meeting.
Among the other speakers
will be Neil Guda, of Nell
Guda and
Associates,
L1eveland architects; Duane
Rost, Ph.D., of Solar Energy
F:nPin~rrinQ' . Pnlnnrl~

Kawecki, a solar designer
from Columbus ; Ray Baker.
a
Cincinnati
builder ;
Miroslav Uroschevich, of
Alpha Solarco, Inc., Cin·
· dnnali; and Ed Rosendahl, a
professional engineer from
Wort.himrfon.

.Jne

mcnt In coopcration .with the
U.S . Department of Energy . .
The Cen ter collects and
disseminates complete in·
formation about solar
heatlngs and cooling, sharing
its findings with professionals
and consumers in 50 stales.

Hegistration, which costs
$30 , inclu'des Information
packets. lunch. and coff..,
breaks. The public is invited.
NSHCIC is operated by the
Franklin Research, Center for
the u. ~· Department of
HousinR and Urban D~velop-

ATHENS - An optimistic
air, clouljed a bit by school
funding
uncertainties,
marked the annual spring
meettnc of Southeastern Ohio
superintendents from the tencounty area served by the
Southeastern Ohio Voluntary
Education Cooperative

PhD. ot Oan Miller at the •
Ohio Solar Office, (614) f66.. :
7915 .

.:

Future solar conferences '.:
will be held In May In Nortlt •
Dakota, Delaware, Idaho; :
and Maine; and in June· 1ft .:
Utah and Iowa.
:

..-.•
.
.....•
.· ."

'

'

iSEOVECl April 4 and ~ at tcildents and Authorized
Burr Oak l&lt;&gt;dgc.
~tepresentatlves from the 27
" We ought to spend more . school districts. nine cuunly
lime talking about the ·good offices and four joint
things going on in education vocational schools par·
in Ohio, rather than the ticipaling In SEOVEC. "For
negative," State ·Board of example,
our
special
Education member Wally · education program leads the
Blake told the superin· · nation, there ·Is no . question

about it ,, and we also hav~
cxcc llcnl
vocational
education and teacher
education programs. and our
colkgc _board scores arc
going up ."
Earlier in the day, Sam
Bonham, director of the Ohio
Department of Education's

Division
of
Special
Ed••cation, said in a lunch&lt;'O n
address th•t "it has been .a
good yea r i.n special
education." Noting that there
a re 178,000 pandlcapped
children in public school
programs in .the state,
Bonham added, "Ohio has

made substantial progress in
meeting' mandates for the
ed ucation of the han·
dicappcd ." .
Bonham said the Division is
r equesting 1,200 special
education classroom and
supervisory units from the
stale legislature for school

districts for the next two
years~ but added the
legislat ure is !COnsidering
dropping stale support of 'the
units from lOll percent to~ or
80 percent, with the districts
havfrig to fuqd' the rest.
." Next year could be a good
year, too," Bonham added,

l'but it depends on whether
Congress and the General
Assembly can find the money
to carry out its mandates so
we can finish the job that
needs to be done."
.
In an evening address,
Walter Turner. associate
director of the American
Association of Sehool Administrators, updated the
educators on the status of
• education legislation in
Con~i'ess.

·Tuniet said the bill to create
a separate Department of
Education Is currently before
Congress and predicted it will
,pass the Senate, but added,
"It Is our thinking that it
probably won't be approved"
by the House of Represen·
talives.
Turner also warned that
the new Social Security bill
passed by Congress "could
cost you quite a bit of
money," explained ttiat cuta
amounting to $288 million
dollars in President Carter's
Fiscal Year 1980 education
budget come ' mainly from
Tille I programs and said
· appropriations from last
year's energy bUI signed by
the President, from which
schools could apply for
variolls energy-related
grants, have · not been
releaaed and added, "unless
money Is .freed this Y.ear,
the amount avaUable may get
'cut in haU."
In the business seaalons of
the two-day meetlllg, the
Authorized . ~epresentatlves
unanlmoualy voted to con·
tinue contributing 65 cents
per pupil toward the
operation of the SEOVEC
cooperative for the next
· ilchool year an(! delayed ~
decision ·On whether to con·
tribute ,an additional 42 cents
per pupil' for additional
1
services for the dlstrlct,..untU
It Is detennined · whether
funding coming to the
districts through the federal
law "The Education For All
Handicapped Clilldren Act"
could be used for this purpose.
Other speakers and guests
at the meeting Included Dr.
· John Parsons, executive .
director of the Office of
School Management, and Don
Davis, director of the Ohio
Department of Economic ahd
Communllf Development.

•

G1'_,.c;tadt

.NlBI.lTS

eorn
'

.,1'";.

'

..

RRAILS EFFECTIVE THRQ SAT., ~IL 14, 1979
. . . _ . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , ,. . .

11

.·.
,.,...

HOLSUM

Brown fJ Serve· •

RoUs •• •'z.a.IO.Oz.PIIJ• . , "" ·

$

..

·

MfAU..,c.

MANDARIN OUNGES

-.
..........

I ICELAND RICE • • • • • . 16. ...
•

41c
.. 25c
SP.GHml ••••• • • 1us....
SALAD CHERRIES ·. • • •• •:;·. 58c
\

.

MUSIIROOMSaiCIDOIIW.U. , 1!;'·
.... ~ '":::,...

...__.....

.... '

·'ARMOUR 187'7. PUU."' c:ocifKID

1'11811MII

.

...

'

PURITAN OIL ••••••
~~maJc..

CAKE MIXES UAIIIIliS

... 68c

•a.s....

•••

t.hi.No

AIM TOOTHPA$TE

--·

I

I '•

•••••
•

oi... 'C.

•

5L68 ·
........

5J ~~
Y~ASIC SPEARSuv1~· •• ~·· 78
COFFEE RICH • • • • • • a.. 32c
IA¥127' • • '

.

...,..

HOTDOGS
•
.

GRILL DOGS.I

IIW-

COFFEE ... 011 Dill'
ICE CREAM .

ARMOUR

I

IIH•••eriAIII

STAR

,... SJS9

..........
.

,~

""\ •••••••

5129. PORK SAUSAGE •
..... ,.._

. . . . . . . . . . . . ..51

.
BIG ONESI

:t:r:·=~~~ ~.'

WID-0-LA•ES

SID
•·•••••••••••• ••·....

s139 ·

SLIC::ED COOKED SALAMI
or OLD FA$HIO~UO.AF • , ••••••• • ·.,. It«..... .

59

\'a-Gil.
• , C!ll.

110 eMIIC. -IIIW 11 POUIII

TENDERFR~H

C

SPRING

Aspara1as•~

IICI'I• .....

MIIMII•..._

...

-YTDII"f 11 P'PM.I'all

REYNOLI)'S WRAP ,....,.

....

,SIIlt~LIMA BEANS

••••

• 1.....

..

BABY'SWISS CHEESE~.

,
...
...

........

~

~- -

i%l~:iON iiBi'ttAMs •. s1 ~
a;;Pot•toes. • • • • •• • • • • J ""· ···~B::n J.ettuee .....·.... Z ... 69!
2

GOLDEN SWEET
SOUTHERN

c·

ams.

34c

4c

·

IIAUTIPUL.IlOOMINO PLOWW , _ IIIOtfr
L'OIIIAI10 Oln 01V..

• LILIES .
• CALADIUMS
• HYDUNGW ·

lb.

•

.....

• MUMS ..
• HYACNIHS·
• TULIPS · ·.

*

2.•29
3.39
3.89

~~~~

I

~

~

VAN DE UMP'S ..~
5
·Fish Fillets. • • • •
1..... fkt. 1.M
5
Fish Kabobs. • •
11.... .... 1.M

•••

I

- -........... ···-!'!..·
WRCII'SSIIAWBil JAM ••• .•• ·......
-··~~--- .... ....... ~ -·.
~

~

•

. ...... .,.• •

••. 51.13

•

Dutch frye Chicken .............. 52.M
~ . ................ 52.M

1.n
1•.99
,..... 99..

Easter Kulbassy .... llyll. • • 0 I ••. 5
•. ..... 5
'
Kulbasy Unks...... • •• •••
. $ 1~

S...Oked:Sausage

I

.

GOlD UAf • 5 to 6-11. A•l•

~·LIPOIINia

Roasting Qickens ••.

SJ
Turkey Breasts·~~·.. ·
SJ
K.ulbassi .. ·~.......... •·-

:

GOlD wo • MIAn

•

AISUIAliUIID

@9£dS'nR@

~68

THf

•

SESAME STR EFT
LIBRARY

..

ATHENS - Students from
Southeast Ohio schooll will be
on the Ohio University
campus saturday, AprU 21,
for the History Day '79
District Eleven Competition.
The competition is 1
statewide event devoted to
displaying and. judging
student
papers,
performances and presentations
on the theme "Migration In
History."

· '

In each of the II District
oont~s. five awards will be
given In the junior division
(grades 6-9) and five In the
senior division (grades I~
12). Ffrst, second and third
place winners will receive
trophies and participants will
receive certificates.
District Eleven winners·
will advance · to the llate
-test in Columbus; and the
state winners will&amp;o on to the
Iowa, ... Illlnoll, · Indiana,
Kentucky and Ohio Reglmal
contest In ClnclnDitlln May.
Site of the competition will
.be 237 Morton Hall, with
judging of entries beginning
at II a.m.
·
. Contestants will be en·
tertained by the Jazz En·
semble of the School of Mi)alc ...._
and the foren~icneam from
the School of lnterpenonal
Communications.
Preaentation of awal'!la wUI
be made by IVayne Kurllnlkl,
vice president for univenlty
relations,, at a ceremony
beginning at I:30 p.m.
AI the regional level,
History Day '79 fWidillg bail .
come from the National
Endowment
·for
the
Humanfllea, with Ohio
University providing ad·
ditional support for the
District Eleven Coritellt.
Dr. Roy RaWJChenbera,
' associate · professor of
history. Is the local cllairman .
for the event.

ou

' VOLUME 11

e•

·; rA~ai·.W...s...............:.- ........
UICiMINE ••••• • .......~ .... 71'
Him .. ! sr · · I sr : t ·•rr
......... ............. . .
..-.
..·.:

'

~

•

Students·note
- --- -history day

.

w

,,

•

l"GIIII
. '

PIIS •..,....
._,
IUDY TO SPIEAD FAOSUNGS ••••••••• "i::"W w • .
•I!IMII • • • • • • • • • • •. ....
.
.
e •
.
HAM.GIUI
...................
·
••
·..._,..
- - - . . . . . . . . . • · • • • • • • .•• ~ • • ~-Milt.
.
'

·

•

WEAVER'S

'
''
•
'

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

•

•••••

I&lt;OL ...

-

I

•

.

·fMPIISS ,..,...~ ........... ·••••• • • ~

,

SelfoiMI Platt• ....................... 11.19

i-.~~1 .Oran1a ~ .5 ~99' ~=!~~:...

'"

....,., .,..,..,. ......... ....s.,,..........,,...
~

1 • • • • •• ..

-

'f ASI.eOO$•A .

latter Dill Rill Sticks .......... , •• , ; , ..~, M•
Raw Sele"Portlona ................................

RED RADISHES ••
:J9' ltr•~':"rla
GREEN
ONIONS • : •• :J - 59'
.
.
HORSERADISH •
--49' IWin&amp;JUICY

LG
Potato
Chips

Martin, a senior at GaUia
Academy ~ School, has
lJeen , accepted at Marietta
· CoUege, according · to Dan
Jones, director cif . ad· ·
missions. Dille plans to begill • _.JE
her college career with the
fall 1978 tern\.
Her acceptance to tM .
. college wu based on her high
school scholastic record,
performance on national
college entrance · exinil·
!nations, and recommen·
datlons from counselors
and teacbers.
Active In llchool, ~e II a
member · of the ~atlonal
Honor Soclety~the Thespian ·
L1ub, ,on the staff of the •
scttOal's paper and yWbooit, ·
and' a IQI!IIIbe!' of'lbe marcbing and~ band. Sbe ·
Is the daugbllt ol Mn. JeJD
H. Martin, 11211 Second Ave., ·
· Gallipolia, . and GranvUie 1

'

99

$

- :~l

...
~...
. u. 89'
Cantaloupe
.... •••
.

"'

.

._,

TURlEY LOAF. • • • • • • • • •• 5
5
t'll. fkt.
TUIIJ'EY
ROAST.
•
•
•
•
••
..,.
TURKEY ROAST. • .• •••• ........ 5

----EAStER FLOWERS--.--..;
' -P.

1...

WHIPPED TOPPING

.

... ,..... 79~·-

WHOlE
10t.l4-lll.
Awt •
'

I~

!f

Boneless Rams

~

DIXIE MARTIN
MARIETTA, 0. -Dixie L.

lu,Gftln

So·lar information can be
requested from the Center by
caUing loU-free (800) 523-2929
or by writing Solar Heating,
Department M, PO Box 1607,
Rockville, MD 20850.
Additional iniormation is
avaUable from Leon Winget,

.Southeastern Ohio superintendents meet

,I

'

....

•

•

••

....

•

•.

t

DAV.TOMEET

MI.ATUII MARSHMALLOWS • ; .,,: • ............ ~~
IHI•~·•r• ..... ·
DISII DI1IIGEIIJ • • • • • • • • ... • • •· • • • .............
U.S. SUGAI ••a•um r ._ • • 1 • ,.• • • • • ta. ...

ac

•

•

._..

•

,

J

/:

'

'

,

II

American Veter-. wiD
meet Wedneaday, MIIJ 11, II
. 7:30 p.IJl.ln the GalUa Cwnfy

Me
'

•

GALUPOUS - Chapter 5,
Gallipolis Poet, Dlaabled

.

·Mental H.ealth Center'·• ··
multipurpose roam. Offlcen
•ci the 19'19-80 fUJCal year Will
be elected.
'

r

�...

..

'

-~··--

)

A-&lt;;- The Sunday Times,'l••nlinel, Swnlay, Apr. 8, l!l79

w

...
··~··
-.' '

--·.
· •r·~

•,

'·~,&lt;

Lc~.

"•
'·· .
... .
~ ot.1

~~

... . .

a

· ·~.

. . ..

·m
! .· , ·

• '!"'"- .

·~

."

JOAN WOOD (c). presents a check to ~I Neff ( r) for the Hoi.,~
Pediatric Television Fund for the month of April, 1979, while Fred IICIIIIII' ( ~..lloll 011
approvingly.
'
.
,
:t'
1·,1 •

=·.

Funth donated for·projecta ,!·~
..'
'
'

.
·,'
....
....
'

''

"

'

'

'' ''

Poet's. corner·

''
''

''

"

ro MR. &amp; MRS. OSCAR BABCOCK

I am sending Best of Wishes
For your Golden Wedding Day,
· May you both we wen and .happy, ·
And your spirits bright and gay;
. May the day he full ci surWiine,
, H it is God's precious will, ,
: : . But should it .be dark and gloomy ,
May His love keep Shil]!ng still.

answered four calls Friday
night.
At 7:211 p.m., the squad
went to Btltter:tut Ave. for
Katrine Milliltan who was
taken to Veterans Memorial ,
Hospital where she: was ·
admitted . AI 8:37p.m., the
unit went to MtnersvWe for
Thomas Weston who was ill. ·
He was taken to Veterans
Memortai H01pital where he
wu admitted. At 9:40 p.m.,
the IQU8d went to the River
Front Diner for Cloyd
· Brookover who had
back
problem. He was admitted at
/~iJC 1'6,' il'tllld Veterans Memorial Hoepltal
.
llt.lille ' · Where he was taken by the
·;: f
squad .
at 10:11' p.m.,
·
_. ~admen were stllllqiOiled to
and repl8a
·.• large tt.la
. , the Landmark Sl!rvtce
' Playroom,
' ;a- llit- ' Station for a Ktrl who had
chase toys,
;-..llltob fallen.
She · ·r,fused
for the t'llll:lt.lltt .. 1111t 11ft treatment.
confined to·

==

::
;:

i

a

Oil reserves can't relieve crunch
By Tom Tiede
BATON ROUGE , La .
(NEA) • Five years ago,
foUowing the Middle East oil
embargo, u,. United States
leadership vuwed to make
_the nail on "energY
Independent. " A major part
of the promise was to create
a Strategic OU Reserve, a
hoard of crude from which
Americans would draw In
event of emergency,
Ah, it was a grand idea .
And in December of 1975
Congress ordered the De, partment of Energy to hegin
atuhlng the first of one
btwon barrels of petroleum
In the hollows of salt fonnattona here on ttu. Gulf Coast.
T

·

COLO\'
.
. ,,,..,,,,·
' :··
/

One billion. At present use, it
would replace ail U.S. im·
ports for four months.
Now the country is. again
faced with an oil shortage.
This time civil disruptionS
have cut the fiow from Iran.
But will the crunch be relleved by the heralded Strategic Oil Reserve? It wUI
not. The DOE has not yet
,stockpil&lt;!d enough oil to last
the nation a week; the reservoir program has been
delayed.
·
According to the I97S
schedule, 250 million barrels
. of petroleum should have
been stored .and ready py
now. As It is, O';'IY one-fo~rth
of.the amount 1s In place. 74
nuUion. Officials say the 250
miDion barrels won 'I he buried until 1980; as for · the
billion-barrel total, it may
never he collected.
·congressional critics are

Items~

·in
' of

ADMIISION iDuLTI '2.00
OUI.DIIIN UN. . 12 .. CAll

Willi PAIINT . . .
lltlllll --iiloo 17

•

MUll K

(

ilmt A ~-

"
I'' •

'

.

Rehabilitation and
Patient Aids.

..

•

..

Has oynchro-botarJC&gt;C&lt;I t t hone enaine. disc bntkcs, 12.....,h elcctricals)'tem, 4 speeds.

Has power to handle mowing and also ground-enpgjng tools. Work-saving
this mQ!Iei. (~I) Set-up and de~"'ry extm.
·Regularty$999.95
•
at~ a..tiable for

meet. with many. loved one$
".'' . OnAs you
your, Golden Wedding Day,

' . Think about the joy and blessings

·: ; You have shared aloog life's way
: : -'l:hink about our loving Saviour, .
~ • And His love for you and me,
'
And the Home He is preparing
: , There beside the Crystal Sea.
-CornJlOO;ed Feb. 22, 1979, by Mro. Riley Pigott, Long
.. Bottom, Ohio 45743.

·'•: .
•, ,
'• '

..
::.,
'•

11_1 ......... . '

' .,-· : +

h .rnf4,. m{"'*'. ,

Spring Valley Plaza
·
Phone 446-2206
·
Gallipolis, Ohio

thru.,.,on. Sat.
9 1 .111.-I; .... ·Frl.

.

Closed~

.,

Ito.

\-l}.

;.

f

""

'
1'

•

,.,

. A Gi elt ~ .To Find

Tlui Ldc ·n.ar l• You
' ill.....

· IDarTiw
·IDSCOW-LEIIIIRAD

'.
,
,
..
. . . . · lLERS
.'

~

'

$'

........

.

TiTILJHI
GIST....I
'

.

•a1·a••

'GAUJPOUS

'

•.

.
'

'

'

..
-; ..
J~~~~~~5~~~e~$~~~
-

., .

..

...

.. '
'

..

.,

"

-

'

TA013"

•Large F11h Tall

'

'

·~.

'

'

'

,,
il

·,,

I

'spr.cattoi.~. 'ka.J HP&amp;ri,j.uu~m.;..,., _,

• da:k, 7-lnch ~Is. (2Ul01) Set-up lllld deiMry aua, ..
. Unutod supply. . ,.
· &gt;-

.

'•

.'

'

'

•

.

.POMEROY LANDMARK
.., -\

0

GALLIPOLIS Four
cases were continued in
GaUipolls Municipal Court
Friday.
Cbtr&amp;ed with !holt, the
case aaainlt George Dray,
Ga111polls, was -(onttnued·.
!lond wu set at $1,600.
Bobble H. Csrter, Crown
City, pleaded not guilty to a
.charge of ·non-support. Bond
_was set at $1,~.
Charged with lbe sale of a
controlled substance, the
cue against Terry Carter, ·
Gallipolis, was continued.
John Clonih •. 18, GaWpolis,
pleaded guilty to a charae of
operating a vehicle without a
license. The case was contlnued for oentenc.lng.
Twelve · other cases were
terminated lil Judge James
A. Bennett's Court Friday.
Charged with physical
harm to property and passing
a blld check, the ~ases
against Jay Jacers, no sd·
dress listed, were dismissed
at the request of the
prosecution . Jagers pleaded
guilty to a charge of dlsor·
derly conduct and was lined

ATTEND OUR TRAVEL 'SHOW
Holiday Inn of GalliP!IIiS
Wednesday, April25, 7:30P.M.

SPECIAL

. '

.

iD auto accident

GALLIPOLIS
One
peraon wu Injured during a
one-vehicle aceldent ,ln.
vesttcated Friday by t)le
PLEASMIT VALLEY
GaUla • Melp Post, lfl8hway
D~GES - 'lbomu · Patrol.
Called to the scene at II: 30
Buckley, Pomeroy, Ohio;
Charlea Hurlow, ·Leon; John . a.m., officers report th~t a
Swlaher, Cheshire, Ohio; l!atly soulll bound vehicle ~»Jl'rated
Long, Gallipolla . Ferry; by Charla Evans, 33,
Evelyn Hauer, Albai!y, Ohio; GaWpolla, awervod lo avoid a
Wayne Bennett, Gallipolis, dog on Addison • Bulaville
Ohio;
Patricia
Holly, Rd., five-tenths of a mUe
north of SR 7. ·
Gallipolis; Harold Fry, New
Evans wu triiDIJIOrled by
Haven; Charles Skeens,
private vehicle to Holler
Gallipolis; Holly Planls,
Medical Center, where she
Pliny; Mn. Hsrvey •IIGWna, wu treated and releuad.
Leon; Mrs. Lewis McCombl,
The veblcle Incurred
Gallipolis; Helen Gheen, moderate damace wben It
Mason; Blanche Tucker, went out .of control, puled off
Mason; Melba Goodnite, the rl&amp;ht Bide of tbe roadway
Letart; . Allen Lewis, Lelalt; ·a nd struck an embankment.
Angela Dew-. Leon; Helen
Bowers, Grlmlnl Landing;
Lewis Molllns, Tuppers
Plaln.l, Oblo; Odie Dewitt and
Local Bowling
Joseph Neal, both of Point
Tuos~~ay Morning
Aprl 3,197P
Pleasant.
Standings
Peoples Bank
•~ 12
Holiday Inn
70 ~ 150.
Larry's Wayside
59 · 37
Thompson's Appl. - .
&amp; Rep.
53 .:!
City let &amp; Fuel
52 44
Evelyn's Beauty Shop 50 · 46
; Cltliens, 200·50~ J .
Moooe Hearts
4 41 Swisher
Moon~y (sub.) ; Gillingham ,
Jaymars
« · 52 150,
0. Mack and F, Rowland,
Cltt'zens Nat . Bank
39 57
Gillingham Drug
37 S9 384. F , Rowland; Chortles
Chartres Angles
34 62 ·Anger• , 155-.139 R. Stump .
Spills: T. Allen, 0 . Cuto.
Individual: Peopltl. 201 -539
W. Scarberry : Holiday. 207· W. Jorvl1, R. Jarvis, 0 .
565 G. McDaniel; Larry's, Mack, J . Greathouse, S-7; 0 .
· 188-&lt;tt! 0. Hern ; Thompoon'o, 1 casto; M. Nibert (31. P.
170·"-11 R. Wallace, City tee.&amp; Ferguson 3-10; C. Roush, ~- 7 ·
Fuel, 178-.US S. A. Speers; 9; Mary WIJJ'd. M, Browning,
Evelyn•o, 170-oiS9 S. Wright; w. Scarberry, 4-! ; 0 . Nlberl.
Moose. 246-589 M. Brownlna 2-7; M . Browning 4-7; F. ·
1sub.l1 Jaymars, li!0-145 ~- Rowland 5,10: C. ~loving H .

DINNER -

e' Air tran_1portation Hun•

Four eases continued

One person hurt

FISH

. , 11-18

tin9f0n/N- York/Huntington
• All· International olr Iran·
oportoti,on and flights betV.iHn
all clllft listed
l
• Transfers by private motorcooch between airporto and hotels ·
·
·
• Baggag• handling ·
e All meala In lh• USSR
e Caniinentol breokfaot In Copenhag.n ·
• An lntourt.l Guide who accomponlin you
•
throuQhout the·USSR
. • Slghts. .lng in each city In USSR. with loccil .
Engflsh.apeaklng guides
• -Entrance fHI to museums, exhibits, etc. (in· ·
eluded where sc~uled}
e T- theater performances In USSR.

died Thursday morning at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
following a lengthy illness.
He was born March Z9,
1910, at Gallipolis Ferry, to
the late H. G. and Cora
Simons Likens . He was
empioyed with the former
Marietta Manufacturing Co.,
the American Ca. and
Foundry, a dairy Iarmer and
a member of the Mason
County School Board.
Survivors include: wife,
Mrs. Cecil Irene Clonch
Likens, Hel)derson; five
daughters, Mrs. Douglas
llletty) Mitchell, Henderson;
Mrs. Charles !Agnes) Conway , St. Al~n&amp;; Mrsc Walter
1Loretta l ·Cook, Henderson;
Mrs. Charles" iEdnaJ Y.
Leonard ,' Columbus; and
Mrs .
Lewis
!Sharon)
Witliamson, Hcndersoni four
sons. Charles and RusseU

Likens, both of Delaware,
Ohio: Leo Likens, GaWpolis,
and Ricky l.ikens, Hen·.
deraon: two sisters, Mrs.
1'heima Albany , Pittsburgh;
and Mrs . Nancy Blain,
Henderson; a brother, Jess
Likens, GaWpolls t' erry; 26
grandchildren and eight
gretl11!1'andchildren.
. .
He wu j)receded In death
by two alaten, Mary Jcrren
and Laura Crawford,
The funeral wtn he held.
SWlday at 1:_30 p.m. at the
Wilcoxen Jo'UIIIlral Home with
Rev. Jack Finnicum and Rev .
Andrew -Parsons officiating.
llurlal wW 'follow In the
cemetery
of
Rogers
GaUipolts Fcrr~.

r

James D. Shriver, 37, Kerr, '
waived $129.40 one char{e of
operating an overweighted
•
vehicle.
Eni,w~n&amp; a pin of &amp;ullty·lo
a charge of driving while
under court suapenston, .
Claren.c e Frye, 24, Addlo111,
was fined ~plus a sb:: month
suspended sentence.
liortnle P . Jones, 2%,
Carrollton, Ga., waived $85
on a charge of operating a ·
yehicle with unauthorized
plates. ·
·
•
Waiving $311 on a charge of
operating ali unsafe vehicle
was Ralph N. sands, 18,
GallipoUs.
Clifford Maynard , Pt.
Pleasant, waived 53b on a
charge of · fall\u'e' to obey a
traffic control device.
Fined or forfeUing bond on
charges of excessive speed
were Willard -G. Cox, 36,
Vinton , $30; Stephen J .
Rocchi, 19, GiUipolla, ~;
Richard B. Roberts, 40,
Gallipolis, $27; and, Hsrold
L. Porter, 37, Gallipolla. $211.

Let it be a Keepsake a1atnonu or
Art -carved Wedding Band, from
Tawney's
reflecting
the
perfection of your love in lis
brillian ce and beauty .

"'rices start at
'

'

$150

TAWNEY'S
JEWELERS
. 424 Second Ave .
Gaflipolis

Sunday thru Saturday
April 8th thru April, 14th

'

' 3 ~ OIIJN.DRNE

COPEII- ·

.

ule. The cost of reburying ' ' '
the oil here has more than ·· ·
doubled since 1975 - from . · ·
$1 .50 to $;1.50 a barrel. Program officers now say that
b
1
storing one billion arre s .
wiU cost at least $2li billion.
Critics thus believe the
reserve has become a strateglc and fiscal disaster. Tlie
White .House wants the
ted
project abbrevta ' perhaps cuttfng back as much
as 500 million barrels. Even
many project admlnlatra-~
tors are frWitrated, and are
suggesting the · entire pr&lt;&gt;-)
gram be turned over to prl·
vale lnduatry.
.
Me811tlme, ·while the CQJI·
fWIIon rages, there Ia yet
anoth~r irony auoclated
with the present status of tbe
oU reserve. We qan 't even
get .what's in there now , 1f
forced, the crews here could
withdraw a puny 250,000 barrels a day in six weeks; .
otherwise . the d~awdown
equiment will not he ready
until next winter"

SPECIAL

.'

--;;~ '

'

stockpile so much In so Utile tow, a fragile jug now filled
lime, and aa a result, "We with oil inay have to bl!
have had more than our -. drained.
· · · · · ·" · "'
1hare of problem.,"
Parker says trial and er·
· Parker saya the brine jugs
ror have been part of the
have caused the most prob- P..oJect
from the start, hence
lema. For one thin&amp;, the the delays should have_ been
brine has to , he removed
'from !he hollowo before oil expected : ·~HeU, we only got
can he Injected.- Slnee brine the pipelines in last Novem·
is " t&lt;Wc, it can't juat be· ber. Before then we brought
the oU in by barge, and then
fluahed In the rivers .
moved lito the wella 'in little
Some brbie Ia sold to
chemical firllla; the rest lula trucks ; you can't gel energy
to have holes of Ita own for Independent that way."
Internment.
·
On the other hand, Parker
insists
the muddling phase
Besides this, .many of the of the stockpiling
activity Is.
brine Jugs have proven to be paal. " I'm not hanging my
too ileUcate to hold petrole- head: We've done as well as
um. · And engin•r• have we could, and will coptlnue
found It out the hard way. to
do so. ·I can have 248 '
The juga have been certlmiWon
in the ground
lred, then condemned, and by Maybarrels
of 1980, and I can
replacements have had to be have 1 blUlon by 1985 ~
found. In one case at Choc- that's the orltlinat sched·
ule."
And yet it's not altogether
clear whether the government is any longer Inter·
· ested in the orltllnal schedJACKSON
.. .. The and .explained the · Keogh
S.o utheastern Board of Retirement Plan whlch was
Realtors meeting was held at of Interest to thcise in atthe Colonial Inn in Jackson.
tendance.
,
President Willis LeadingA brief boal'!l meeting \YIIS
ham presided. After the held after l!egular Dinner
business was cpnducted, Meeting. Attending were :
Hsnk Cleland rl Cleland Cleland Really :' Hank
Realty, Pomeroy, led a brief , Cleland, Kathy Cleland ci
discussion on the Code of Pomeroy ; Baird and Fuller
Ethics from the National Fealty : John · Fuller ;
Realtors Association, which ' Leadingham Real Estate:
will be continued at next Willis Leadingham, Marie
monlh'smeeling.
. l.eadinghamfromGallipolis;
Maxin~ Robbins and Debra Jl!ckson Really: Harry
S. Evans of GleiUl Price Naugle ; Shaffer Realty : !)on
Realty of Jackson wu ac· Shaffer, Mike Gillum; Jan
cepled as new members to . Gettles•. Realty: Jan Getties,
. the Southeastern Board of Jim Gettles, Jinvnie Dicken
Realtors.
and Conrad Fulton with,
' Guest speakers of the Brenda Dicken and Barbara
evening were Ray and Dottle Fulton as gueots; Centucy 21:
Cool!, represenlatives of the Winnie · Blair, Elsie Perry;
H: and R. Block office in Glenn Price Realty : Maxine
Jackson .
Robbins, Debra Evans ; Mar·
Cook di51'ussed Information Pick Realty: Esther Lewla,
valuable to realtors, such as Brende Goller from Jackson ;
depreciation;
expenses, guest SJI'akers: Dottie and
profits on real estate. He also Ray Cook .
spoke about the I.R.A. Plan,

SEO realtors hold session

April19

'•

l,

the earth's crust. Bayou
Choctaw , for lnltance, covers an area of37&amp; acres, and
links 830 feet Into the
ground. The domes contain
brine hoUows, caUed ''lUllS"~
In wblch the oil Ia clepoalted.
.There Ia nothing funda·
mentaUy exceptional about
the use of the mines for
·storage. Nations have been
hoarding stocks undergrolllld for decades,
· The U .S . keeps vast
amounts of heUum In the
pore&amp; of rocks, for example;
In Europe, some aovemmenta have aqulrreled away
up to six-month supplies of
Crude oil .
But the ICOJI' of the U.S.
· so Is
intention Ia heroic~
the speed with w
it was
ed to be c
ed out.
deput
rector
of the reserve project, says
no one haa ever tried to

~rker,

G; Likens, 69, Henderson,

•

,.

.

JASPER LIKENS

,\l

,•

STRATEGIC OIL .RESERVES

•PT. PLEASANT - · Jasper

.EA8TI!;Jl PIAy
GALIJPOUS - 'An Easter
play will ~ preoented at
Trledstone Baptist Church on
Frldl!y, Aprill3, beginning at
1 p.m. The play ili titled,
"Walk to Thunder."

are

Bayou Cboetaw,la located In
the maJ'8!lel south of Baton
~e. Another, WNt Hack·
berry, Ia near Lake Charln.
The third b BryaA Mound,
on the Texaa Gulf; One more
site, Loulalana'a Week'
Island, Ia beinJ prepared .,
an addiUon to the aylltem.
~ three silas in use are
ancient and lllUIIve salt
domu, bubblea of IIOdium
chloride thal .have risen to

·'ronighllhru
Thursday

a

!liidllfit:lC

howli:ig over lJle matter . A
Houseaubcominltteelsbold·
in.g hearings on the delayl.
And the While .House Is reconsidering full-tenn fundIng for -the repository. But
nothing speeds up the fiUing
of the reserve; at prasromt,
only about 300,0000 barrela a
day are added to the stock· pile.
The stockpile Is actually
three stockpllea. One, caUed

1.:

But thru faith, you built another,
And s\Ul others, later m,
Now, your home is finn and lovely,
And the mem'ries linger on.
You have cared for many chUdren,
Giving them good times and love,
And you'll surely be rewarded
With rich blessings from •!ifv.e.

:;
;:
,.
;:

. But Joe O'CoMell, manager
of the Bash· Speed Shop In
Phlllidelpbja, said Pennsylva,
· n i a' • 1 jlolice Cl!rl were
hopelessly outclaued.
He said a 1968 eam.ro, wltb
a lillie belp from.;i-:lai lilul-.
foldl and a f~ ~'
tor, could bit 10 qll ' jll ••
aeoonda. And 111 top. ....- Ia il·
blurrlpa140~
., . . • , .J
"I ®n•t underltand it. You
. cjon't .end cope QUi with .22
caliber piltola,'' be . .

--·--~

A-7- The Sunttay 11mes-&amp;ntincl, Sundn)', Arr . 8. 197~

1'-

'

:,
::
.·

"We'll be looking at a fourcylinder police car by 1985, and
then a lot fl' violators wiU be

doe."

Po"~~:R~;;ergency Sq~~

'.1 ·

Fifty years you've lived together,
Since your happy Wedding Day,
Fifty years of joy and sorrow,
And true love hu 'lj!d ihe way.
You have lived thru stormy weather,
And a flood in f&lt;nner years
, Almost took your lovely dwelling,
Causing you much pain and tears.

'·

'

r,*"'

years.

gettirig away," said Warran
Woodfield, an aruityst for the Internatiooal Chiefs of Police Associattori.
Woodfield said the association
.JNBS urging Congress to exempt
police cars from laws that say
garages may not chsnge elfllS..
sion cootrols or lnstaU four-barrei carburetors, special itlnltion
syStems, dual ewusts and other hlgb-performance devices.
But any sell-styled mechanic
can drastically increase horsei&gt;ower by equipping engines
with turbochargers, while police can't.
.
' ' "An Individual citizen can do
it. They can sell you t!le stuff
and you install it. ' But it's ·
i agalrlst the Jaw for a' prage to . •
do It, lncludin&amp; munlclpal or
ponce garaae," Woodfield said. '
Actully, the trend In recent
·years has been to dlacourage
h1giHpeed chases and to .-ely
iria_tead . on radios, radar· and

Four squad ~----~----~------------~~~
·runs made

...._~
the children who are fund
..
hospitalized.
tlilevilloQ ·
...
Making the Jll'esentation of )Vho IR ,
' Ia the
a check for . the April 'Pedtatrlf ~.... JIG&amp;a,er
Television Fund were Joan durjn&amp; the ~the:Of.._,
and Fred Wood of the Waugh·
~ ~.t.-t.d
Hall ey- Wood Funeral fo~ tJit ~fl::Aprt .. . t!le
Directors, Inc., located at 810 Jeriklns' ~ ~
Second Avenue In GalUpolis.
Compallf ~·s
Their Annual i\prU gift to the Easle,li A~
.
The I'1IW
,
d
0 . Graham,
• the
arri!NJem-.,_fllf ll*' tliid
'l'ay
annual . . . .
Fund. J .....' , . '!nl
"f on·
one : oi ' tJHi

GALLIPOLIS
The
contributions fol' the month ot'
April to the Holzer Medical
Center Pediatric Television
and Pediatric Toy Funds are
donations from continuing
and dedicated supporters of
both of these worthwhile
Hospital projects on behalf of

""

uked to demonstrate the perfO!'IIIBnce of his new Ford
~. one of obout 200 ·new
Fords purchased last year.
Tbey are considerably slower
than the larger-engined Fords
and Plymouths used in the
put.
"Here, I'll Show you the acceleration," he ll!lid, jamming
the gas pedal to the floor.
About 13 seconds later, the
Ford's engine ·screeching in
protest, tl)e car hit 80 mph.
"That's it . .. You want to
get out and puSh?" Parker
said. The Jl'rformance of new
cars can.be improved only with
changes In federal laws, which
wW be ·setting even more stri1111111t on emllslons and mileage
ttandarda ' ...., the nezt few

8y P"UL CARPENTER
A11oclatod Prell Writer
HARRISSURG, Pa. (AP ) The bi&amp;JHpeed pollee c~ .
dramatlied in movies and TV
oop showa, is wh«~ now be·
caUJO anti-pollution devices and
a fecllral pub for belt. mile-ee have bogged down new patrol cars.
Many older can or Qlpe&lt;Hip
newer ones in the private HC·
tor can outperform police Cl!rs.
And state troopers .nd other
law enforcement officWI, tir~
at being left. In the d111t, want
Congress to help reverse the
tl'end.
·
''This is an unfortunate situ·
atlon. The 1tate pollee in PI!Jinsylvania is not alone in .this . . .
'nlla il common problem power," said Francia Wollt,
head of the Pennsytlonlv~-~~te
Pollee transports
dlv.......
Trooper Tom Parter ol the
Pennsylvania State ~ce wu

~,,·

'\\

Federal laws slow police cars

I-

-&lt;::r")--:

...

aircraft. The Pe~~~~~ylvanta ·
State Pollee ACI!demy. for ez.
atnple gives c..at. more trainIna 111 'bineback riding than It
does In pursuit driving.
In that sen.te, one Harrilburg
~p owner aald even the
driver of a hot Cl!r would be
stupid to 111 to run from a JIO'
lice cruller.
·
" My money's on the state JIO'
lice. They outnumber you 1111 to
1, and you can't outrun ~
radios,'' said John Manen fl
Maxwell Ractng Enterprises.
"State pollee can are no
pooches. They dellnitely are not

.

-- -··~-·--- - -----·- ·---·---·

-·-

'JACK W. CARSEY: MGR.
Orili I Utile and Save Alot - .free' D6ery Within 75 .Miles - .,.. Wt
. SeNce At Your LQcal Hotpoint Dealer•.
-.. HouiS: 8:30 to 5:30'.:.. Ml Qallll_it'S:OO P.M.- S.*'&amp; •• I
I

'

II&amp;

........

·•

.

•Cholc• of Potatoes
.COle Slaw

Calor film 'Ill lf711Lidy IGOIO bt ShoWII.

99

'

PAaLOI.

WEST 35

'

Escort: Chuck t,;tark

-·-:-SMOKEY MTNS.
MAY 2l·25 .

Replll

'2.55.

E5corl: Lebn Ramey

SHOPp~ .
POPULAI.
I&amp;TII.I ·

FOOTERS

Clftcl'.REDS WEEKEND
MAY 5-6

PHONE 446 1611

...,

SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY
APRIL I THRU MARCH 14

•

••

INDY 500
MAY 26-27

NOW SERVING SHRIMP &amp; ClAMS

Escort: Leon Ramey

f ,. Brochures and Further Information

CALL 4460699
,'

..., .... .
_ 0Ppi

f&amp;ILOI

~.~.

IAtl*l

2Jt1D AVE. &amp; 01.1~ ·ST. GALLIPOLIS, .OHIO

�-·- "'·-·--·-- h- ·-

-- -------~- --·------~--

. . . _______. . . . .____ _
..~.....

f

R· l --Tht&gt; Sllnday 'flmcs ..~l'nlinc l , Sumlo)', Apr . 8, 197!1

HOMES FOR AMERICANS

THE

E
By ANDY LANG

,:520; you will need to put up
. $11,400 as a down payment and
you can afford a houae between
154,000 and $80L000' All this is
besed on llie--general average
of a down payment of 25 percent of the purchase price, a
mortgage loan of 30 years ·and
the fact that most lenders advllie spending not more than 25
percent of your monthly gross
tnCome on mortgage payments
including principal, interest:
property taxes and insurance.
But, as I have been contending In - print for many
years, the most important factors in determining how_much
you '~can afford to spend for a
hOuse are the state of your fi·
nances - entirely aside from
your Income - and the number
and ~ges of your family members.
Let's ~oppose.

AP Newlealllrea

About once a fear, something
aets me off on the subject of
determining how much a family caw afford · to spend on a

houae.
'1'11e trigger this time is a new
chart seid to pinpoint more accurately the coit range. of
homes you might realistically
consid!!l' huy!ng. It doesn't faD
into that old trap that you can
afford a houae two and a-half
times yo~r aMual gross . Income. Instead, ·tt bases its estimates mostly on your income,
the amount of the monthly payments you should be able to
handle and the size.of the generally required down payment.
All an example; the chart
says that if your family income
is f25,000, you should be able to
handle monthly payments of

II AITill

..........._.

ND ROOII

LIVINQIS'o20'

HONORED BY EMPLOYEES - Douglaa (Gene)
Spurlock, right, accepll gift from former fellow co-worker
Kenny cremeena on behaU of PeMyFare employees.
~lock. a 28 yell' veteran of the supermarket inGJstry,
reslened as IIWIIlger of PennyFare Supermarket In
Gallipolis last week. He began his grocery ca..- In
Huntington, W. Va. at Eva111 Supermarket in 1951. He
came to Gallipolis in 1M2••Spurlock is currenUy owneroperator of a floral shop, French City Florist, fonilerly
known aa FloWI!I'll by Gecrge, at 28 Cedar St. During the
recent cerenllllly; Spurloclt waa alao ~ted a plaque
by IU former co-Worlrers in "appreciation of his
dedication and leadership."

•
' '
' '

· Powell is lwnored for

TWO CAll QAIIADI

21

1

I

22-

'
.'' '.'

.
"

'• ''
"'

Women have long

..·'
:I

hi$tory in military

'

'

..' '
''
'

GAUJPOUS- The issue
of women Ia mllliary care«~
has recently drawn a lot of
attentlorl. Few realise IbM
women have be4ll lllpptll'llnc
the U. S. Army liDee the daya
of the Revolutioa.
During the American
Revolutkla, Deborab SatnpIOn Gamett enli•ed in the
Continental Army drilled as

"

''
"

'

!I .
••'

.

a man ualag !lie name Robert

Shurtleff._She was wvllllded
at Tar:rytown, New York but
continued to ~e ber
dutiea U " 1 101&lt;11• until a
pbyaiclaD diicovered her
secnt. 'Sbe .... rllacharsed
from the Army Ill West Point
and later pven a military

''
'

"'

peDIIion.
Doctor Mary Walker, an '
11rf••Dt Army auqeon, was
given.the Medal of Honor for

':..!~ ~ ;~~;!

wu the only woman to
receive the country~s bighest
'military hoaor.
From
a
document
deelaalfled in 1961, we
leUned oi World War ll's
Battery x. Battery X wu an.
aU·wom• )ltlit beinc trained
In anti-aln:raft fire to test the
use of women in a combat .
situtlon. The changing
patterns of the war ended the
~~
In today's Army, women

)

'

Il
l1
•

play a more direct role.
Women receive the same
lralninc, educational, travel
and ·promotion opportunities.
~__!hetheir male ~untbanedrpaedrts.th

S up,;e

A#II070A

FLOOR PLAII

, ArmyWII

:&gt;ll, 1!178.

AN OPEN FEELING predominates in tbe entertaining a reo.
of tbla 2.092-oquare-foot coutemporary ranch home. The
entertaining.- ia highlJahtad by a step-down conversation .
pit and fireplaee. All major roomll, including the master
bedroom, face onto a ~ap-around rear deck with access from
the eat-in kitchen, living and dining rooms. For more information write-enclosing a stamped, self-addressed
envelope-to architect Jerold L. Axelrod, 276 Broad Hollow
Road, MelviUe, N.Y., 11746.

e

Women s Army Corps last
year, women bave been fuUy

.
'

-

Air Pacific, the Fijian
government : controlled
airline, says _itmade a record
profit of $626,747 !Fijian)for
the 1977-78 business year, the
first profit after five years of
losses totaling f3 million.

'

Tlurin~

this period, the
out•tanding profes•innal
ski 11, leadership, and
&lt;"easeless efforts ut Sgt.
Powell resulted in majnr &lt;"ontributions to the effectlvene:;,s
and.sucress of Air For&lt;"e and
Tlefense Communications
Agency Programs. The

SEE WHY
RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE
•
COMMUNITY

1

~ingulrtrly dfstiildive a(·-

. &lt;"&lt;&gt;mplishmenl• of St. Powell
ren ..·t great &lt;'redil upon

'

t~~r:!~lnlo.:~er= Cross-cultural communication conference fet ~\~~:,:.1 the Unital SUites

always played 8 role Ill Army
lilstol'y, today, women are an
inlearal part of the Army.

RIO GRANDE - . All
commwilty area persons are

than 50,800
Anny women,
There
are currently
more
approximately 7. per cent of
the active force.

the
. Cross-cultural
invited
to attend .any or comaU of
munlcalion conference
events to be held at Rio
Grande College • Community
College on Friday and
Saturday, April 20 and 21,
morning, afternoon and
evening, both days. Over a
dozen pre~~e~~tations will be
given by guest scbolars and
RGCCC facult¥ members on
VE'l'EilANSIIOIPiTAL
aspects of cro~s-cultaral
Mm\tted-Madelille
Olaffin, Pomeroy; Frances .communication. Each
Wilcoxen, Racine; Belva sesalon will last approalmately an hour and
.Groce, Loilg Bottom; Katrine
fifteen
allowing for
Milliltan, Pomeroy; Rict.rd dlsc. .minutes
on. One hoilr cou1111e
Lyons, Jr., Racine; Thomaa
Wo!slou, Minersville; Cloyd . ·credit Is offered to students,
areateachersandolbers who
~=~~
may enroll and attend entire
Searls Aaron Zahl Joyce two-day program. Each
Johnaton, Melvin 'Foster' session is open to an persons
Venedla knight James who wish to sit 111. The con·
no.u-~-r Lena Neuelroad
terence aims to deepen
~--·
' participants' understanding
Don Rea, Roy TryaU.
of both our own and other

i

~ _.

cultures.
.
Guest speakers and their

n.ooo

'

.•

.,

CinerrioiOgraphy.

' '

'

'

'

'

'
'

..

·'

'·

'

,

f'.alifom:··~·-::::::::::J~::::::::m~e:n:I:A:v:a:iJ:a:b:le:::;:=!

WE NEED .USED CARS

Pontiac

lOP CASH PAID FOR Cl£AN lATE ·MODEL

.

~

Oldsmobile. Loaded with AM·FM·
· tape, tilt &amp; telescopic wheel , power

tomaltereservatloDl, andthe
COlt per penon la $5. A $1

contribution Is requested hut
\not req!lired of those who ·
a~.W ~ nwnber of the
conference preseniatlons but
who are ' not mrolled for
credit. For further In·
formation on schedule,
reglstratfbn, etc., contact
EIBrbaraTb(onas,Conference
Co-coordinator,
Davli
Ubrary, Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio 4~674,
phone 24S-S353 1extension 206
'or.2331.

•

'"8 Actress and Jason Robards Best Supporting Actor.

Of ~rse, to recei\'l' HBO, yoU mus~ be a ca!;)le.TV subscnbtr. So if you a~. don't miss your
free preview! Today is the perfect da,)'
to see what you'.w been mii5i~t

seats

(passenger

too,,

locks, -u ... t and lrt'-band electric

rear

!1ntenna. AM.FMstereo with factory

......

1916.DODGE CHAiGER

•
.

'

~&amp;JWWJ111tr)l§W-%rui-@1E0%iiWi0Mi!%liiiii!Wf-Thl%iiii-iilliii!iiWliiii_%_lllml!lilhllit!%ii1!1ll1WiliWMW,,

1When spring comes to Gallia-Meigs ·Counties . . t

'

•

POMEROY
T-e
Ja~Uoil CoUiy Hereford
lfreeden' Aaocllllln wiD
lleid . Its •lltll aaaaal
auclloa llale of pelted aDd
bol'lled reclstered Herefonl
~•ltle AjlrillJ, 7:• p.m. at
lbe ~aaat.y llveateek
market, Falrplala, ·W. Va.
·A .ieledloa al bulls.
heHers, """' aid ~alva
will be offeftd let 11le. AU
caltl~ •'IU be groomed aad
ready for abow by Z p.m.

Sliver tneta1uc with matching

&lt;toor'
locks, AM-FM-tape, landau lop,
bucket seats. Sharp.

Cruise contrOl. P. windowS;

landau top. Equipped with IW.-FM-

Tape,

cr.uise

control. , power
windows, western cast aluminum
road wheels and rear ct.froster.

4395

1

.Priced Right.

l

--••a••
PolntYiew Caltle TY
11111111

6754HI or 992·2505

'.

This car Is on£. Df the ·cleanest, best
cared for autos on the market. Four
door sedan , air, AM·FM, ·new
premium fires . One local owner. Ex·

A Real Clean lltlle car - But needs
1

If you're looking for an except!Q, ., I ~
ly clean late model car consider
locaL. one owner. 22,985 low m , w..~
AM · FM, cruise control, and factory
air . Won'1staylongat.. ..

................~!!~!.l

1976 PONnAC GRAN PRIX,
L J.

SP£CIAL EDmON

MODEL

engine work. Test your mechanical
ability here. As Is Special
W.as SU95.00

Finished In 90id 'metalllc paint with
a dark brown vinyl lop. TM Interior
Is exceptionally clean, fully equipped Including AM·FM and factory'
air. Local ~r. New' LeSabre'

trade.

'2695
1974 OPB. TUDOR
•

Exceptionally nice, 49,000 miles, 4
. speed. landau top. Check lhls today.

peel quality.

)

-

•

;

'700

1974 GRAN lORING WTE

'2295 ·

•1695

BUICK
PONTIAC
DAFFOTliLS spring up in splendor ...

"i
l :

POMEROY - "No matter .look like when the last the art witb equal venom in
how you slice it, it's still hammer and chisel have . spite of the dirt and dust.
Cleanup which must be done
struck.
salami."
' after euCh · duss isn't easy
During
the
six
weeks
That's the way the old
saying goes, but It's not period, Slavin will be con· either. Safety .glasses are
always accurate, at least at stantly advising students in required to be worn while
the Meigs High School where the techniques. Occasionally, students chip away at the
big, ugly pieces of sandstone however, a student becomes sandstone.
rock are becoming pieces of over zealous and a stone . Actually, Slavin had
being carved, breaks. Some planned that during the six
art .
of
the broken stones can be weeks students could move
Students In the Art II class
repaired
or the student can outside during art classes to
. of Jack Slavin are "slicing''
sculpturing .
revise
his
plans on the do their
and chipping away in their
However,
the
weather has
finished
creation.
Then,
there
sculpturing class to tum out
been
eold
and
rainy
and SO
are
times
when
there's
artistic creations from the
far,
students
have
been
able
nothing
to
do
but
start
again
native stone.
to
work
out
of
doors
only
on
from
scratch.
· Rarely is stone sculpturing
one
day.
The
advanced
students
offered in high school art
The sandstone creations classes since it. is a field spend seven periods a week
undoubtedly will last a
.which
on
their
sculpturing
and
it
generally · reserved for
lifetime
and then some ~
Isn't
clean
work.
While
the
college level training .
make
.
excellent
outdoor and
However, Slnvin decided to native sandstone is a soft
porch
ornaments
and some of
stone
and
tends
to
design
include stone sculpturing In
the
smaller
items
blend in
easily,
it
also
is
inclined
to
the course of study for the
well
with
indoor
decor.
A
throw
off
a
great
deal
of
dust
advanced students for the
wood
carving
course
was
and
dirt;
however,
it
is
excurrent six weeks period. ·
completed
juat before
Bdore lludenta tackle a cellent for the students who student s mov ed Into tlie
don't
seem
to
mind
the
dust
piece of sandstone, which
sculpturing ,segment.
they secure locally from an as they get ·tnto stone
To the observer, it appears
sculpturing.
old buDding foundation or
that the sculpturing classes
Slavin
says
he
Is
more
than
, wall, they are given in·
might be two-fold . Not only
structlon by Slavin on the use pleaSed with the creations can students hammer away
made
so
far
during
the
six
of tools. They are also
to create a work of art, but
required to make a clay weeks. There are some what a wonderful way to get
unusual
pieees
and
the
boys
model of what the stone is to
and girls, aUke, are tackling rid of frustr ations'

defroster. · power anlenna. and
Installed Citizens Band Radio. New
heavily padded landaU lop. G'laoCietr ~· Bu ick Trade. ,
~~b~l~ue~.~o~n:e~l~~·~'ow::n:e~r·. .~~~~~~PT:I:c~~~·!~~k~l~l
~~~!.~~

1974 MAZDA SMAU. ECONOMY 1974 DODGE MONACO CUSTOM

CHANNEl

"PYRAMID POWER"- Keith Krautter, right, may
beccme a believer in the new "pryamld power" when he
finishes his sandstone pyramid in his art class at Meigs
High School. On the left, Craig Nicinsky is turning out an
island native head.

School Art II students are having an opportunity to try
their hand at the art this six weeks.

FCTION _

roof and black velour 60-40 seats.
Full ·power Includes windows, door

luxury automobi 1t! manufactured by

to attend Banquet are asked

,

W/\Tl.H Ci\fllf

stone

ns

.JilGOAM "Julia." \\.nessa Redgrow wt&gt;n ~;lest ~upP.,r­

·,

'

PARTICIPANTS- Billy O'Brien, working on a bird; Barb t;'eyton, working on an owl,
and Kevin King, working on a double-faced sculpture, Ito r, are ~mong the Art II students
taking part in the current :"'"lpturlng class.
.
. .

y~u

·'tiRGEST

I rOO PM 'The Turning Point." Romantic story marked the'
ICr.ftn debut of Mikh1il Baryshnikov. 8 Oscar nominations
llCiei'M.:'House c.JIJ." Stan Glenda Jackson and Wai .. r ·
Mltthau, both of whom have previously recek-ed Oscar
nomin.~tions.
'
·
J.OO PM "Upclose-Academy Awards." Samplings of the
best of '78 and interviews with Nick Nolte, Jane Fonda,
and Warren Beatty.
11101'1! ''The Goodbye Girl ." Richard Dreyfu&gt;s won Bes1
Actor tn thas Neil S1mon comedy. 5 ()s(ar nominations .
10:01PM "Coma." Terrifying science-liction tale o1 a lime
when demand fOr organ transplants h•s outstripped fhe

supply.

.

. CARS &amp; TRUCKS

*SOUTHERN «&lt;fiO'S

'

SCUU'T!NG IN STONE- While stone sculpturing is
generally reserved for college level work, Meigs .High

Corner Sy~amore &amp; Second, Gallipolis, o.
618 East Main, Pomeroy, o.
Open 9a.m.to6 p.m., Weekdays
·
9tii5Sat.
Pof11eroy, Ph. 992-3795
Gallipolis
Ph. 446-0303

~ MON1H.ANANCING .

a sampUrtg of what Homo Box Office iullabout. (Arid
moVJn-uncut a~ ~nintemapted-a~ just part of it.
There are fantutit mghtdub specials and txdusiw sport~
p~ams} ~)Here's what you can 8ft for free today: .
1100 PM "lt:l'nd• in the Stream." Brilliant performance
by Osur WIRM'r G~rge C. Scott. Nominated for Best

GNING TIPS - Jack Slavin, instructor, center, gives constant lips as siudents hammer and chisei'away during
their stone Sculpturing class at Meigs High School.
·

We are income tax specialists. We ask the
right questions. We dig for every honest
deduction and credit because we want to
be sure you pay the smallest legitimate tax.
That's another reason why we should do
your taxes ... whichever form you use short
or long.

Judd
ILinguistics
Dept.,Elliot
Ohio Air Force Rase in
presentations
include:
University) on "Cultural
Pluralism and the American
School System"; Joe PUotta
(Communication Dept., Ohio
State University) · on "The
Communication of Justice" ;
Johri Berthrong (Philosophy,
San Diego State) on East·
Wut · communication ·
G.eorge Wecknian
o-by, OUj on ''Crou ·~
Cultural' Coiilusions
Regarding Death"; Elaine
McCoy , (Interpersonal
Doc Says: Your clean U18d Car may be worth
Communications, OU) on
"The Einerjence of Symbol
more than
think when traded on a New
in Appalacbian Magic,
Witchery and !Utual." Rio ·
Grande f~ulty presenters
Buick or Pontiac.
Include
Linda
Bauer
(Professional Education
Dept.) on "Muiti-Cult~ral
SEE 808 BRICKLES, GENE JOHNSON, GREG SMITH, HARlAND
Teaching - A Human
Relations Model" and
(WOODY) WOOD,·AT THE SIGN OF QUALITY NEW AND USED
· RiChard Bibbee !Sociology on
"National Distinctions: Mass
and Prestige Editorials in
1978 .CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR
American and BrUtsh News1978 OlDS CUTlASS SUPREME 1978 BUICI
papers." The Keynote Speech
4 DR •. DE!:1o · s ,'ECIAL
This stunning intermediate has it'
Real gas sa~er, sniall V-6 engine,
all. Beautiful Saffron exterior with a
will be given by Algis
This is lntermedlale sedan, NavitruS
factory alr. rear window defroster.
buckskin landau lop and mal&lt;hlng
blue outside with contrasting blue
Mlckunas IPhUosophy Dept.,
Dark metallic blue. Less than 20,000
60-40 seating. Equipped with air con·
60·40 interior .. Loaded with full
OU) on "World and
ditloning, · power windows, power
m!les. Exceptionally nice.
power like seats, door locks, win·
Dialogue" following a
door locks, Jilt wheel. cruise control.
dows plus tilt wheel 1 cruise control
AM· FM cassette stereo system, and .
and · c::hrome styled -wheels. Only
Banquet Saturday evening in
ch~ome styled wheels.
- ,
~i.PS f!l_
iles ._ .
_ .
tbe college cateteria.
6295
'4695
·lletilllisl $1068 SALE "6697
Saturday's International
Night program wiU continue
with music, dance · and
1976 CHEVROLET MONTE
1977 PONniiC GRAND PRIX
exhibits from our regional
culture · and RGC's in·
Another clean lOcal one owner. Here
The ·G .M . sUccess car. Finished#In
te rnational students'
you'll find cruise control, tilt wheel,
platinum with black 60 ·40 vinyi in ·
AM stereo, 8·track, factory illlr, and
terlor and a matching padded ian ·
cultures: Nigeria, Iran,
power ~door locks. Low miles, drives
dau .top . Air conditioned , tn1 Wheel,
Japan.
super. White.
·.
radio, and Rallye I I wheels. See it
Those persoDB wishln8 to
nOw.
SFI
enroll fat coUege credit may
14295
1.$495
pre-register or register
Friday.. morning of the con·
·
ference at a c0st or
ttn·
1977 0LDS
1977 OLDs 98 REGENCY 4 1)1 1976 DODGE ROYAL MONACO ·
eludes Banquet). Those
BROUGHAM
.
You'll find hcr~.. 1hc finest personal
·Platinum finish with matching vinyl ·
perSOIISnot -·oUed who wish
ThiS car is brand new on the inside,

Buick

i~

'

*

A whole d11y of gn&gt;11t movies- for fret! It indudl'S many
of last yea(s most ~morable Oscar winnei'!J and it's just

Meigs high schoolers ·sculpt

counts.
·
.
Family B is a couple in their
early 50s. Both of their children
are married, Uvlng away . and
doing well. The prospective
house purchasers have $80,000
in assets, not including their
present home, on which they
have a very small mortgage
and which wiU bring them f40.·
000 in cash when sold. Their
two cars are paid for and they
N!ve only two or three very
smaU debts .
,Can theSe two couples afford
-houses costing equaramounts?

INCOtE TAll PEQPLE

toU.EGE
IS THE
'BEST

S~&gt;t. Pnwell has been in IIll'
Air Fnrce for 21 vea"' and is
now statiuned at Vundenlll'rg

B

"We can
help save
.. you money
on taxes." -

eff~•rtsl

He Is the son of Mrs; Wanda
Powell, ·Racine, ami is married In the fonnrr f'.an~lvn
Cleland.
·
· ·

VANDF.NBF:RG AFB,
f'.alifnmia - Senior Master
Sar~eant Ivan C. Powell
distinguished himself in the
:.:::;....&amp;..-1· performance of outswnding
!Wrvit'e to the U. S. as a nnnrnmmi~sioned officer in
!"barge of F.leetri&lt;'al Power
Prodnrtion, Oeta&lt;'lunent ·TI'
2187th Communication
Group, Martino-~ Franca, Jta.
• -·
ly, frnm .Jail. 14, 1977 to .July

'

I

that $25,000 Income example in
the chart, that family A: COR•
sisla of a couple between 30 and
40 years of age, with three chil·
dren aged 13, 15 and 17, the.lat. ter on the verge of entering college. The family has about f2,·
000 in_the bank. The down payment of fll,400 will come from
the cash they will receive from
the sale of their present home .
They still have
re!IUiiqing on an automobile loan and
thev have several hundred dol- ·
Iars to pay on credit card ac-

DOGWOODS bl0&lt;1111 in delight..,
'

AND gardens begin their growing.

�-

'
.J:I-2- TheSunday 'l'imes,&lt;;entiriel. Sund;&lt;y, Apr. 8,1979

Welsh .Gymanfo Ganu annou_nced

l
I

By llluT~y Berry
In lbe early ilawn ol the morning
HoW beauWul the-candles tliat'blirn; · ··
When we a!U!nd lilt Sunrise Ser.vice
And our hearts for loved ones yearn. ·
Had it not been for the Reaurrectioo
When our Savior I'Oit frOUI the lomb,
. '!bat we learned the IIIOSt favorile verse In the Bible,
"lam with you always!" - il!'every room.

Something
_from . ·
· Sally

''

'il' '

Tiley were &lt;rue! ID Him u lbey placed

~ Jfla '*'Ia avwn ollborna; ·
Jult .rClimlber that He Uved '011 earth
ln ,the 'midll of alalul men.
.. a., ... rldi"fiecl and lauched.lll

. .

.''"....

'&lt;In lila lllllile heaft.lnaklng way.
Thai we 10bo flcbt for Justice
Apd lire ridiculed iOday. .

'

''

And waa e._ cruclliad
For He wu 1ruly "0110 Ill Us" He Uwd 011 urill, and died.

.._ '·
I",

Now,

,.....•

-...... .
...
~-·.

""f. ,·

4-' ~l_:

':

..
....
.
·.

.

-

~

-""·'

t

'

,. t •

I

I

MushroomLWhylft Jlk&amp;
-.valklng on alt.·
'

G_
INA

CoME' In ond tokE' rlie Mushroom Wolk.·You'll
be aniozE'd ! The revolutionary Moleeulolr'"
Sole has millions of Hny air bubbles trapped
lrlllde so they adjusr naturally ro rhe ccinrours
of your leer AND any surface you wOik an.
They're guaranreed r---r--,
to be rhe mast
canifanoble
shoes you've
ever worn.
. Comesee
· far yourself I

.

......._..
·

11

Shoe Cafe_. T.
' · 300SeeoridAve. ·

t,olayeUo Mall .
GoiUpollo, 0.

f

•'

~

:
•
:'

.

·._..

'

•

•

'1:.

I)

EAS'It.R MENAGERIE - Pretty Cynlbla Melanie Niday llands bealde her collectioo
Ill Easter lte1111 which are now on dlaplay allbe Dr. Samuel L. s-rd Melll«'ial Ubrary
Galllpolla. Cfnlhla, wbo Ia the daughter of Mary and Victor Niday, Galllpolls, had ~oolledion' 8farte&lt;1 for her before her blrlh by her parenta.
..

!
'

••'
'•'

Library to

f

host programs

j

'

•f

'

-··.Ia ··· ·

•'
l

l.

•,

'.
'
•'
I•

;.

'

&amp;nquet planned

l

.._,'

·Rev. C:onlnn . Powell. Mr• .
Lennie Haplnn•taff prr•idjlll
at thr merlin~ during which
lime M... Fayo• Waflar•e
rrpo&gt;rtrd on llli' ovriOPa• pn~
je&lt;•l lo India. M... .Wall""'
af•o gave llli' yearhook of
prctyttr, .ffnd the prof!ram WHH
a film on ·F.gypt shnwn hy
Mr.. KHI hlrrn 0Hvi,;.

'

I
'

I ·.

.

\

r .

I·i•

...

CONNIE

Rlt~

I'll

. .
. . .
\ -.
.
Our.z stqe~Jgth fOR tdooN. '-.
OrJ~
tlop'e
·
.
.
- . foR .'tomC:}r.zRoW.
.
.

.

.

.

' .-

l''

unmilu~obly

.

•

conn1e·

. 1,~,

-.lew,£:

OlrMW
In ihe
ctty hOIIO In
.
ll'iele cltlfted, IUIItlled ~eel
~ lhev'" be 0 'WOf'ldellul .
'occ:ent 10 otlyQKIIdlfiOI

UUES - MUMS,.:.. Alii Fl~ '
' CORSAGES.
-. :arr ·RJMO··. · ·
.

SPECIAL GUEST.

Fredd".e ~oman
Y, MAY 2, 8

..

ARRAHGEMOOS
PER,.ENT MEMORIAL .fl.OWERS
!

hou5e
.

t •

I

eroy. F~ower Shop·· .:_

N. 2nd Ave. ,
Middleport ,,p.
.

·~"

.

OF SHOES

P.M.

·

!'IIC'"I 992-20~9. ..

.

Open Frida
Til8 P.M.

''

BAKING
POT~'IOES-

ff2-5l2J •
'
•ccept all
.

. we

I~:P'\.....

Mrs. Mi.lllf'd VanN~tter ·
__

mator

, ··
. • 106l""'"'tll "'t.·
I
'
flbmerey ·o. '

''
cnd_
l t cards and:

w. Wire
,..-.
'
i

. '.

•
: · :R~ JOhnson rnlirtalnrd
: ." rei,!ntly with a party In
1 · celi!bi'atiun of the eighth bir: 'thd8)' .o~ · their daught!•r,
:.- · ·n&amp;WriMlchelle.
AHnrly Hobbie theme ""
can'H!d out and cake, irr
: crei!m. chips and punrh we,.
• ser.vjd to Mrs. Jl:thel.lohn.'IOII,
:: Mr.·and Mrs. Aaron Rllyre,
: • lltephani• and Jessica, Mr.
• ilnd'-&lt;Mrs. Geoi'J(e C&lt;Wl[ler,
: . C'~e and Chrlllllrlll, Mr,

:~ Hnd.Mr.;. Roger

9-12-$13.99

Sl7.99

...
..

.

33~

STOKELY

CATSUP
14

.RC.OR
1)11T RITE

Full Sizes

oz. BTL

'

•...

GRADE A WG£

.• .1--0Z..
btl.

Only

poNte- .

EGGS -

. '1klia en.

·

Skirtina the

Issue for
Spring with

I

Fashion
'Basics

~bble

81/a to 12
$19.99
. '

17 oz.

tan

OOCKTAIL
'

l&amp;oz.

..

VAWYIEU
PRIMIUM

ICE CREAM

• ,, Mlt-hael B..,o, C:r~~ Wl!d!lfe,

,

Store Hours~
Mon. &amp;.Fri. 1111

.BEANS ·

Clll

2FOR gge
. Instead of getting your kids two (or even
three I) pairs of ordinary sandals this year, got
them one pair of $trlde Rite sandals ... tho
son.U.ls that outlosl summer.

nEJIOismt'
CGREEI ' .

FRUIT

APPI.I

SAUCf.'

; Rna F.arry and Armlo•!Wllet'll.
.j

5-lB. BAG

1-i.B. BAG

BROtJGH10N

•

Toriya, . MI:'IHt~lWS,

t

CARROTS ORANGES

Swagger

· ; •; RDUBii, Reeky Roush, Be"lty
~vans,

CELERY

BY PIECE ONLY

Ollld's

f&gt;t&gt;em ;mel
·- : '"-:: TerSa, -·-~cla . and Sht•ri&gt;

:

67

STALl

10:;
$ 49

SlAB
BACON

5-8-51U9

'

:, Jlvet'!!ll!hl _J(lle!ll" nf tlw
'' holllllft'd Kuesl .wo•rp Bft·k,v
ROIJI!" ll_nd llel'ky F.VHM.
I,

CUT UP
FRYERS

GAUON PWnC

.·
~F,ROV-M~. and Mrs.
'

.

fRYERS

HAMS

MILK

T:urns eight
,.

~

T-strap In fruit wood brown.
Quarter-strap In color bone
or fr ui!Wood brown. .

heritage

'

'

pon!J wheiMr theV .. IUits
or ieporalel. So )Qin ua
. ·
In IOm!l ~ acphlilledtk)n:

IN'MROL'ND

.

wtD.E

Strawberry

look ...

' WEDNESDAY
' . WELCOME WAGON, Get·
· : . a&lt;:qllalnted coffee, 10 a.m.,
I ·.Mary Howell's, 446-4479 ..
I ' THURsDAY
: · GALJ.,IA ··· Co.
Ladies
: · 'AUwary, VFW Post 4464,
: wlU meet 7 p.m. ill the ball.
' ..

U6 ,,.,

WHOLE·

2%

~-

. '

•
t ·..

FRYER PARTS

742-lOOO, 742-2643 or 742-3018.
munlty al'lllllid · a topic ol • Proceeds Will be used by the
mutual lntereit. This series PTO.
loolal aBbe valbel rellected
In_~'I boolts aad c..,.
silts o1 ulllllonl prt~e~~ted •. BOOS'fERSTOMUr
in dlffereat Cclallnuni!Jeri In
RAciNE - The Raclno
the OVAL lfea, '1'he second !land Boost.er• will meet at
ol the leriel will be held in 7::W p.m. Monday at the high ·
CIIIJUcothe 011 ~y I and the .sdlool.

the
knowing .

II 1'1

-TAVERN
BONELESS

MIXm

'·

CITY
LIFE!

:.,:
.
f..

;

donallilns arc a.sked /Jl eall

andalsthat
yoilr mind and
kids' toes!

PtiO~·

PRICES EfFEcTIVE WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8TH lliRU SATUR~Y. APRIL
'We.Resene the Ri&amp;bt to Limit Quantity"

Misses
13 to 3

TO.

..

'

Ramsburg, Middleport, and
WIJ!iam S. Thomtoo, son ol
Mr. and Mrs. William Thora- ,
too, Oliver Sprlfll(ll, Tenn.

APPROACH

·} .
I' ..' '

and unlvenllles to lnleracl
with .--,. In- the l'OIII'

OUR
' NEW

.'

.

Y..E ITIUT; OAWPOUI, OHIO

An auctioo wW be beld in
Oldo. Tile procram provides . conjlUlCtlon · with the ClU'
an opportunity I« librarians, . nival.
' .
and periOIII frum coi'OC1!8
·Those who wish to make ·

, . April 14 at 2 ~.m. at the
: - · PoRJar Ridge Freewill Rapllil Church.
&gt;Pr e-nuptial music will
begin at I :45 p.m. The Rev.
Miles Trout will perfnnn the
ceremony. A r«.-eptloo will
· fcillow in the church building
Immediately following \he
ceremony.
·

TRY

MINI-MUSICAL SET
POMEROY - The youth of
the Christ. United Methodist
Church, Marietta, will
present a mini-musical,
"Celebrate Lile'' at the
J\lfrecl United Meth_odist
Chureh on Wednesday, April
u , at 7:30p.m. The pubUc is
Invited to attend.

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

1 · Will be an ewnt !'f Saturdi'Y,

·-

.'

cbildNn. There wW be a wide thin! in Lapn on May 9.
varielf rl. pielure bo¥.9 Three pnograms will follow In
available- tor eumlnatioo 'the Fall to be held In Athens,
and perioda rt Informal Circleville and Portsmouth.
dlacusalan ol the books Further information Is
· clwinC lbe pr,aenlatlon.
available at ,the P~ .
"IUllllralklna rJ.. ~alue in Middleport I Jbtarles or from·
'I1Iilmlll- and lion)elhing the Ohio · Valley Area
·More" Ia cine rJ. a aeries of Libraries rtflce In Wellstoo.
JII'II8I'IIINI for adlilto sponsored by Chill Valley Area
Librariea, ol which the
Pomeroy ' Mlddl"JJIrl LlSPRING CAI\NIV AL
brariea are memebers, with . HARRISONVIlLE - · Tile
a grantfnm the National En- Harrisonville PTO will bold a
. dowment For lbe Humanilles spring carnival 011 AprU 'l/ .

S.lll . .II!

I

II ·

Lee Glenn, 18,

tluWib '1'he State Library ol

JACKSON - The Jaduoo
City Ubrary will host first
of a series of Jl"Ograms 011
children's boolts to be held in
this area rt auo during lbe
spring and fait "lllWIIi'atlonl
. rt Value in 'l'hlmielva, and
Something .' More" II lbe
theme to be .aplored ill the
seaslllli held in lbe library 011
Aprilll at 7:~p.m: by Susan
Hepler, Graduale A'IOdale
In FArly and )Udelle Qild.
hood EducaU011 EdualtiGn It
Ohio State University.
Teachers, pannts, aitills
and aU adultl 10bo are In·
teretted In children's boo.ls
and the role they Cllll play in
a chUd'a development are invited to the JII'Oil'IU1I.
Ms. Hepler will locus
on
new
ways
of
lookini at chjldrcn's books,
polatl_n_fl_ out the enjoymen! to be found In lbe
UluslraUons and W11f1 ,u l
sharing thete boolts with

'-====-'

.~~. ~~H~
.
IJiat -~ori· .,..,
·
"-,"~ '=',
•· · .

Pnmo•rny

MAKKIAGt; I.ICENSE
POMI::HOY -' Marriage
licenses · were iss ued to
Willlifm l.ce M~Kinncy , 22,
Middlcpor1. and Myra Gail
Hayes, 21. Middleport;
&lt;.'harlcs Rliymond M•nuel
Jr., 23, Hi. I, Raciloc, •nd
Hrc~da

,

~-

Jnt,.rnatirm8l.

Hacmc.

IIIII' 'Falbror up Ia Heaven
Ia 111 very IIIUdl aware
Of ow faUure~lnd lhGr'lcom1n&amp;a
ADd 1M burdenllbat We bear.
But, If we are~ol thlnga In .the put,
ADd IU1'II thal' lluist I'Oit from the tomb
On thatflnt Eaater MGralng -and that He tuUve,
'lbell-lhla baa made pa)'IDIIDL -for aU of Oil' sins.
Happy Easler 1o all!

~

..,.

Thlll".'«l(ly clinnt•r lll(~&gt;finJ! 11r
ttw Wumt•n AJ.'Ivw. Fc•llu\Wihip

'

po•rlt•nooe arxl nf her b11pllsm
nf llli' Holy Spirit. She will
s!&gt;Hrl' ht•r t&lt;'fo1imony ahlmt llli'
work ol C:oxl in her lift•.

1bat Ola' Savior baa not bad•
Aid; In lha ead,,He wu betrayed

~

"'' "

rhHplt•r, In ht• hf•l&lt;l HI fi ,:IO 8 t
tlw 1\.fo•il!" Inn.'
Rt·~·nratinn... fc'tr thl• 1li.mwr
' att• ft, ht• r~ck- inurM"flittlt•lv
HI !J92,17J8, !J92,'1!l2!1, 1l7~:m:i •.
or !\4!1-~. The ....... will
dpo•ri at fi ::IO p.m., the dlnnc•r
will lx• SI'I'V"I ·at 7 and lhr
mo~·tin~ will hegin Ht 8 p.m.
Wifo• oF Ril•hHrd I.Hnb , an
I'X&lt;'I'Uiivo• with llli' No•w•rk
Sll~·l r.n., Mrs. l.anb 'i• the
mnllwr n( lhr&lt;&gt;e -l('(•nal(rr&gt;,
'"''' n( whom is deal. Mf'.
r"''''· reare&lt;l In . a llllluno•h
Roman Catholtt'hllflle, will
1&lt;'11 nl hrr bc•rn al(ain !'X·

.'lberi.la no IOiTowfuJ aperienlle'

't. ':..

:

POMF.IlOV-,\nilit I "nil of
No•wM~ willlx• 'fli'Hkor ullhl•

w•

..

..J)

nita Lantz to speak here

.• He ...... femjllfd - He was hwJ,ry;
He
Jootly -He was aad; _

::.., :..

M!I)J)J ,F.PORT-Tht&gt; Hn·
"'"'I m•~ lli'r-&lt;l•n¢htor hHn·
qurl wris •rt lnr MHv ~ at thr
Thur~dtty niJtht nWt-ting of
tht Wnmen'~ A~f\(l('iation o(
lhP Middl"f"&gt;r1 Firi&lt;1 Unitt'&lt;!
Pro••hytrrian Olun·h.
Mr.. Mildml illtiley ~8Vt'
devntinn~ u~in~ tho• tnpi 0•,
"Living tJnrlt•r Pf\'!-t~nrt~ In
lhr rhrislian W~tr" · by Uw

EAS~ AND SVNRISE

.

15 oL CM

.3rot 99'· 3~
r-----

1
I

KING SIZI

I

I NEW IOLD '
8402.

:OM $129 .

.BOX
Mid.

.T.... Wed.-S.t. lll I
Tllur141ey Ill I~

'

)

: .:.
•

' ,I

$2.39 .

.,

.

.

4-14-79
'•

. .. '
'

�.~

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

.... -

i

B-67 The Sllt\day l'uneskntlnel, Sunday, Apr. 8, 19'19

B-4- The Sunday Times~~c ntinel , Sunday ; Apr. B. 1979

Juniors attend auxiliury,m6et

·''

FAC photography exhibit judging announCed

.,

Back From Convention

. J'

•'

•..
,.
'

j.

'

'

Saturday .n.-, MaY 5;
For tboae lltlllllla to have
' them picked up a&amp; lbllt'thne.
monllon wW be. . . fi'IJI1!

lfonors In Hand

•

inlillliera
'

aMii 5 p.nl. • 4il ~
lollowln&amp; day. SaodaJi May
.

.

.'

~·

'

Iliary, Rad nt• Pn~1 602. ·

Thl1 girls

with Mrs.
i~ on the
•t11ff of Girls' Statt• and rA&lt;'h
nne ~pnkt• on why ~ht• would
ltkt•to afl•nd. The S&lt;~ ertion of
a d•·l cgate and an altematt•
will h• mad• later.
Mrs. Leora Vnung, vk•· ,
pr&lt;•Hident "ad &lt;'harg&lt;• nf liM•
mel'Ung with Mrs. Fran"'"
. Rnherts, •·hoplldn , giving the

:c
•'

'

TillS ur;TITLED single tinted blOISOJil won Marc

BETI'Y McGINNESS's "Winter DaWII" won first
place in the Scenic Dlvillon. The picture features muted
tones as the central focus .of .the compositiOI).

Ellcessor a blue ribbon in the color Nature Division. ·

1'

I

'

.

.

~-

.

•

•••
•
~

-~

•••
..•
•

..

q

...,'"

•~

•..~•
"'(

the Huntlilgton Galleries.
Particularly outstanding
from the entries and the
black and Wblh photos that
occupy tbe Entry . Hall at
Rlverby . These Include a
collection of journalistic
pbotoa by Cblp Gamertsfelder, ·an Athena RICh School
senior, for which he received
honorable mention. Marc
EUee110r's artlsllc telents ·
and expertise are obvious in
his ilnli&amp;led compositions
which earned bim a blue
ribbon for a fascinating
at.tract and an hoaoralile
mention lot tbe lovely stark
sbnpllclty of ID IIIMd llllot
with perfect l'ellectiona. Carl
Irvin of Pt. Pleaaant plaeed

'

;~·

.

~

•'

'

I

CONR!SED?
CMS WIU. UNRAVEL
YOUR TRAVEL
446-9640
'(

..

.·

·.

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Haner

.Celebrate ·anniversa,ry.

att.llnd.

'

held a( the Meigs Inn, the Year of the Rose".
Mrs. Aida Cullen, Marietta ,
Pomeroy, on Aprll21 .
At the morning session, an OAGC accredited judge
Mrs. Doris Shuster, Van· and the regiOI!al flower show
dalla, will talk on the rare of s chool chairman, will
mlnillure roses in COI!junc· demonstrate modem arrangtton ~th the theme, "'79 Is ing at the afternoon session.
The coffee hour will be
from 9 to 10 a.m. Buslnews
Business of the meeting ·will
Include the election of a new
regional director, and annUli!
reports from regional
chairmen. Members will also
vote on raising the dues from
25 to 50 cents with
onemember from each club
being eligible to vole.
There will be 50 ·cent
registration fee for the
meeting. Luncheon reserva ·
liOI!s at $5.5(1'are to he nillde
by Aprill4 .

one

TUESDAY
VINTON BAP'l'IST Church ·
l.oyal Workers Class will
meet at the church I n.m:
MONDAY.. '
..
VINTO.N ,LI ttl!!.· League,
meeting to reorganize, 7
p.m;, In Vinkin' Elementary
gym. AU interested parties

. :' '
•;

domlilant
feature; · ~ 'a vtewed tbe • illow throucb
technically, SupePb, ~nd , 'different eyes, bacqroUDd
striking pfcture of two and training.
may ~tt.a
children playing In a . ·t!&gt;mposltlon while anothl!l',
monaat'e ry corridor .easily . mood or color. MattiJII and
took flnt place for Arnold framing can CiomPiete or
Sattler.
A
vigorous, destroy a pictlft'e. Vlaltors to
silhouetted water ~kler the Galleries may feel . that
earned Donald Ba~n of some remarkably good
Reedsville · a red ribbon. ·Pictures were overlooked and
Honorable mention went to R. that some awards were un·
Tom Morgan for his misty Justified. Each viewer 11 free
morning surfer and also to to mentallY make his own
Stan Nuzum of Ravenswood awards, wblch, after .all Ia
for what lbe judges con· aeeopdary to the enjo-t
sidered a "perfect com· af eilllbllq 111111 vlewinl
position" of a woman In a
Al't'anglllg fQf tbiB APru
field of Jl()ldenrod.
Exhi bit at 'Riverby were
The Judges' . "reasons Susan Clarke ·and Gabrielle' ·.
why" were informative and Sattler. The llhow wW extend
as interesting as the show throughout the month of
Itself. They rarely agreed one Apcil. Exhibitors are asked to
hundred percent, Iince each pick . u~ their photos 'on

Mrs. john Reese
.hosts garden club

•:
I·· •

. · WIJr;:
Jlhirbritbi.·
46'STAT£ SJ. '&lt;.
"
GAWPOUS, 0. !·
'

' ·.
wo·.r:
..
.

Gallipolis, Ohio

30Q2nd

'

.._.,

''

Company,,

'
I
•
l

,
I

'

St&gt;u l~ .

DAR TO MEf..'T
POMEROY - · Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will meet Friday,
April 20 at 1:30 p.m. at the
Meigs Inn.
In charge of the pro£ram
will be the Rev. Wilbur
Perrin. There wW be an
electton of the nominating
committee. llosleases will be
Mrs. Edison Hobstetter, Mrs.
George Morris, 1\frs. Thorne
Cottrill, Mrs. •Dwight MUI· '
hqan and daughter.
·

·•
··.·
:' . .

''
.''
' ,

collection Of contem·

· porary ~ndants
fOr him in sterling ·
silver and vermeil.
. .
pendant on
an
20" serpentine
chain. Beautifully gift boxed.

·I

,, 'I'

I'

'

.Shop .· ··.

.

,
I.

,·,
;

118 East Main

Bunni.- : .And

)

1

.

i

Pomeroy,
0,·
,,

''

Eggs

'

end W,onderful fhlngs
fol: Y!'Ur Basket.

.

.. ~1.21

·;· ·P~ddler's. Pa~tr4
:;;;.L
. '

'

.,'

'

.'

'

;

•
I

,'

up

'

·• _ _ _ _ Gallipolis, 0.
S1lle &amp; lhid

••

be established In both Middleport and Pomeroy.
A demonstration on candy
niaklng was given, by Mrs.
Qtueser, Mrs. Iris Payne,
Mrs. Carolyn ~rfield, and
Mrs. Cbarlotte . Hanning. ·
Refreshments were served
by Roberts Maidens and
Janel Peavley.

SAVE · • MISSES'
......YESTIIKIIY
SMICK lOPS

I

~~

SOLID
COLORS
SS.91

RENTAl-S

• WHEB. CHAIR$.

•BEDs ·

• SERVICE
'''

.'

..,,
••
'.
•
•
"

'

·•,' .

'

'

...

'

~

DERIFIELD JEWELRY ,

'

' 417

'
' .

~~-

Second Ave: ·
· · ··,,~'·Gallipolis. ohio
. '' Acros~ from I he t~teater" ·

,,.

PRINTED
&gt;U9
10·42 ·44-46

Sl .99
"

..'

KINDERGARTEN
REGIIlrRATION
RACINE - · Kindergarten .
registration ,lor the Souihem .
Local School District wW be
held on Friday, April :1JI, from
9 a.m.to 12 noon and from 1 to
3 p.m. In the kindergarten
room next to the Southern
Junior High School .building .
Parents are to take a
record of the child's im·
mlinizatlon, proof of a skin
test within the last six months
·and the child'S birth cer·
tllicate. The child mlllll be ·
flve 1years old by Sept. 30 for
entrance Into kindergarten or
six years old by Sept. 30 for
entrance into the first grade.
As requireQ. by ,the com·
pulsory linmunization law,
section 3301,07 of the Ohio
Revised Code, a child en·
, terlng the public school must
have the OPT aeries, and
. booSter; the polio series anll·
booster; measles and fUbella
!German measles) vaccine
and a recent s1tln teat.
There wUI be no regular
kindergarten clru;ses on the
day of registration.

From a very special collection
· at ,a very special low price. Two
beautiful in-step strap sandals,
with your cho~ of stacked heel
' heights. A smart addition to
yout Spring wardrobe.

Navy
Bon&amp;

White

REGULARLY ~..95

SPECIAL19 ~

Black

Tan

Bone

Whi te

',

Open til 8 p.m. friday

We taka the gueaworK our or
bridal glftti by advising your
family and frlanda of the
pattern preferencet1 you have
daelgnatld In our Bridal
Reglatry. Duplication and
mis-matching are avoided,
and the glfta you·recelve add
to the fllf'Vicae yo.u have
.ch0181l for your new home,

'

Lang presents ,a mini·

.. .

~

~ e r v rll

•"'

. Dress
'• ·
'

• P~TIENT LIFTERS
.• BED51DE COMMODES ·
•wALKERS ,
• TRACTION
• SUCTION PUMPS
• BENNETT IPPB
EQUIPMENT
• EXERCISING EQUIPMENT
. ill OXYGEN MFGUNITS ·
, • AIR PURIFYING .EQUIPMENT

'

OUR 'BRIDAL .AEGIS I AY •
i'fforms otiiii'S qf' the.china, .·:·.•
crystal aPIO flatware pattmis •· ·
you haie cl,osen. · ·

'

SALES ·• ·

'

VnunM

rpfr•shm&lt;•nts to the 13 ""ninr
and on&lt;' junior member of till'
unit attending.
AI an earlier meeting till'
unit vnted tn ~nd mnnt&gt;v to
Mrs: Hazel Grant for a &lt;~tm­
munlty s•rvi&lt;'&lt;' party at (Ill'
Athens Mt•nlBI Health r.enter.
They also made '"''trlb&lt;rtion.'
to r.ARF. lor Rolivia, till'
Radnr Fire J'Jermrtmrnt on a
tanker, till' Heart Fund, the
r""''"' Fund, and .tor T. R.

· HO·ME·CAR-E.SUPPLIEs·

·'

ohs.• rv~ nt 'L'

,L ..

WEDNESDAY ·
·•·IPAHElN"I'S Without Partners,
NORTHUP - Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Thiel Hardy (!leva) , 7 p.m., fainlly potluck dinner,
Lester Haner wW celebrate Pataskala; Mrs. Manford Mental Health Center,
their 50th wedding an- Jeffers (Norma), GalliPolis; P.W.I'. provide meat, bring
niverssry, Easter Sunday. Marlyn 'Haner, G&amp;Wplolls. vegetable, salad or desert,
The couple were lll&amp;rried at
They have H. grand· donation $1. HoS!esses, Tootle
HuntingtOii, W. Va. April 17, childr"ll.
.Eicessor and Ronrue Hardin.
1929.
The day wW be spent at GALLIA Co. Extension
They are lbe parents of four !heir hollle with the family . Homemakers' Council, 10:30
children : Mrs. Hennan Friends may call froin two · p.m., at the Columbus &amp;
Powell (Relha) , Northup; lour .p.m:
Southern ' Ohio Electric
meeting room: Bettie . Clark
will be teaching a lesson on
"
available for patrons ai- "list
• enmg
' to Hear." I p.m., '
tJl)
jl
tending Sunday School. '
!Jon Donaway , from Social
Security office, potluck at
;::7/.f?ltfJ~-? . MONDAY
MERCERVILLE Gran~e .
regular ·mectiJig at 1:30 p,m.
C~ Y PTO, 7:30 p.m. School
board m!!mberS wW attend;
SUNDAY
klndergarteners wl!l ha"e .
PARENTS Withoul"'Partnei-s, program. At Clay school.
family swim, Lyne Center, ·· GAHS Band Booster~. 7:30
Hio Grande College, 2 p.m., p.. m. In GAHS bandroom. '
adulls $1 .50, children (under ' OAPl!E meeting at Kyger
'
18) $1.
Creek High School, 7:30 p.m.
' ·'
BUI.AVILLE
1'UESOAY. _
lb.urch now has
nurserv ltiVERSIDE Study Cl~b .
• home of JclliiY 'Elliott, I p.m.

•

mmJ Pnrpy Oay
wt•rt• nrclt•rt'&lt;1.

IT''

.

..

H11spitnl. Poppi&lt;:s ror th&lt;• 1111·

pri••

.::.·

second with a charming Ellcessor the ~eciplent of of greeutng rye · .vied for
another blue ribbon. Kingaley honorable mentloil with' Red
summer scenic.
In the color department, Meyer's lively depletion of a Suiter's rare phoio of a'duo of
Nature Dlvilion, a single yellow br~asted clial placed · ·young doves.
expolslte delicately tinted him secbnd In that category
That
" big"
do~sn'l
blossom
made · Marc while his sun, drenched stand nece818rlly ma~e for "best"
was indicated In Betty
McG'inness ' s ·" Winter
Dawn." Lovely muted tones
in her 'picture helped win ber
a first in tbe Scenic Division.
A while ribbon was awarded
"· to another airbost • miniature
view of "Ponte Vecchlo" In
sun and shadow by Paula
Cochran. Dorothy Suiter
received hOI!orable mention
for a restful view of a luah,
green, abiioot unlnbablted
shore of Nova Scotia.
· In that 'category where
people are an integral part
btit not necessarily the

;mnlt~·r

A memorial servi&lt;'e was

..

GALUPOLIS - ''Amateur
Photography '79" Is the title·
af the April elhibit (n the
Galleries at River by, home of
the French Art Colony in
Gallipolis. TbLs Is a most
lntereatinl show featuring
lbe work of area amateur
photographers, following the
judging of over 100 entries by
three oulltaoding photographe!'S.
The judging was done on
Saturday, March 31, by BW
Wolf of Oblo University,
Barbara Murdock from
Chesapeake,. . 0., coruiected
witb
the
Huntington
Galleries, and Ric Mac·
Dowell from Lincoln County,
W. Va., also associated with

m•h'fl fhHt

h&lt;•ld lor Mrs. Marv Roush
· nnd (h&lt;' eharter wa; dr-dped .
F.uni•• Rrinker prlivldl'd th•
whirh was
trav&lt;•llng
wnn hy Mrs. Thelm:t Walton.

"llr .I!AUL; Corlnthla," a pk:lafe of two clildRa pl8y~JW In a molllllltery co..,idor; took ,
Drat place for i\m!Jid Sattler .in ,IIJe jjateaory where, p,eople are an integnd part, but not
necessat~~y ~ dmllnant fealul'e of ll)e Compolitloit. ·
•
' '

'

'

'

Wft!"

prayt&gt;r .

Mrs .

;-

talk&lt;~!

J..11tt i~ Stt•wart who

;''
''
',.'

Jl

'"" or tnw••l llil•&lt; luul ln·n
.&lt;t•n l In (h&lt;• r hlll ii•nl h&lt;·

t1

lt•nrfPd t-t M'f'&lt;'n_t ml"'•tir11! nf
lht• A.mt•rkan f .t•J!inn Aux-

[

FQRMM.S:
'
·
'.
'
'

Sta hl,

work•hup In &lt;i&lt;'in&lt;WI"d&lt;'YIn hl•
h&lt;•lrf at rnpitallJniVI'rsitv, al-

· The Gallerlu at Rlver!JY
are oll*d lo .the Jlllbll,c: 0!1 '
Saturdays 111111 lluDillyli-fi'CIIll
1 p.m, iul&amp;ll II p.m. ..d alt ·
Tuesday,• ~1\d . '!'h;lil'lda~
from 10 a.m. wd 3 il~· · ,

.SPRJ'rtei.

f1i rl~'

Rtwkt•yt•

NlW HAVEN
of

;

I p.n:~,

6

'

RM' JNF.,--'I'hiw juniors jll
Soul h&lt;·rn Hi ~ h S.•h,.ll. all inh•n•s l&lt;•&lt;i in a tt &lt;•n&lt;ll n~

A'ITEND ME1rnNG

POMF.ROY- Mrs. Charles
Kuhl, Region II director for
the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, all(! Ml'!l. Joe' ·
Bolin apenl Tue.dlly- and
Wednel!day 'In Granville at·
' tending an OAGC Roard
meeting. Mnt ll&lt;llln is nn 'llw
eXe&lt;'Utlv• r.nmmiUI't' and
Mrs. Kuhl i.&lt;on thrlX&gt;Hr&lt;l.

•4.44

•2.97

Ja cquards and So lid colors In
pol yester double

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

.

IIUIS
IPICIALI

l1111m
1011

10

5

$3J/.·

,.

'

�B-6- TheSunday 'l'imeh'lentinel. Sunday, Apr. 8, 1979

Program .heard·by· Letart UMW
WJ~ket'llham. MMI. Mllrlene
Mi ss 'Kathrvn Phll•nn
· Fillher wa.• at tlw piano for i&gt;rt'S&lt;mt"t "" nrtide"' 1!1'~'" 1
. IIJ'OUP sin~~ o1 "In the . l"'l&lt;-ems cleBlin!( with thl' inC'.ardton " nl " fk&gt; ·IJves. •• fant rnnnula ahuse In rorelkn
Ml'll. Focie Holyman had the
coun.lries. Taking' her
prayer.
•
rNAterial . from · .. ReHpOn."'e "
Mrs.I•'Y Donalhu&lt;•ptetiid- Miss Phi.lson &lt;'lllled ·for the
eel at the lilt!eUnl( with Mm. membel'll w join In the
·Haymaaldving a l"'llldinn( on boycott aginst Ne.,1le proF.uler, Olfken reports were duels.
liivea and II' communll'ation
Mrs. Roush, 'm!sslcllls
· Mrs. Julia lqaeU, Mn. waa read l'MCel'l'llnl( senciini! chairman, .read about the
Eileen , Roush, Mra. Doris chiJdnon to RIIIIV'fll!r ramp. Southside MiSsion noting thst
Adam,. . tmtt M- _,....,.
the f;odllty hss ro)Jerl..,t

F..AST lETART-A prol(l'am ' "' F.IISicr by Mni.
Mlthel Sllield.• ~ the
rl'&lt;'t'lll •llft'llnlc w IJwo F.jllii
J.elllrl UNiled Methodillt
Women lloldatthe&lt;'hurrlt..
•" Resurreellon, the
Mesaage ol I Jle" wat1 the
.topic with .scriptun! . f1001
l.ilkP, Mark and John. Taking
part.were Mrs. F.lleeD Butt,

Homemakers'
Circle

green stamps with which to
purchase a bwo and are now
&lt;W&lt;'I' hslf-way to rea~ the
!(oal.
A runvnage sale waa set ror
Fridl!y, May 4, 9 a.m. to ·•
p.m. In the · mmmunily
building. A picture depiding
F,aster made b)' Mr!L Belva
Fisher Will displayed. Mrs.
Doris Adams and Mn. Nora
Pierson ·were the hostesses.
Alao . at~ wail · Mn.

. BY IIETI'IE CIAIIIt "

l!ll:t

Margareta~. ,

EGG COW RING FUN

•

HERO WINNERS - Front row: Lorrie Jenldna,
Shawna Dyson, Allen Boyce, Skip Gobel. Back row : Chris

I

Mitchell, Sherry Marcum, Lorrie Green, Joyce Boggess,
·
Tel'esa Mitchell.

HE;RO Banquet held in March ·

Shelia lAnier

.Engagement announced
RIO GRANDE - Mrs.
Glenn D. Lanier of Rio
Grande is proud to anilounce
1 the eogagement and approaching marriage of her
· -daughter, Sheila Louise, to
David Dwlgbl Bevan, soo of
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight B.
Bevan of Route!, Crown City.
The bride-elect Is the
daughter of the late Glenn D.
Lanier.
Miss Lanier is a 1977
graduate o( Gallia Academy
·High School aitll. is currently
enrolled at Rio Grande
College
majoring
in

RIO GRANDE - · Buckeye
• Hills· Career Center "Hero"
Banquet was held March 21,
'· at 7 p.m. in the cafeteria . The .
food for the banquet was
prepared by the Hero club.
The theme was "Towards
New Horizons.' ' This was the
first employer - employee
reoognition banquet given by
, the Hero Club.
The welcome was given by
Miss Joyce Boggess. Before
'the dinner began Mr. Allen
Boyce gave. the Invocation.
Recognition of parents and
guests was given by Miss Bev
Bennett . The guest speaker
was' Miss Dottie Welch,
guidance counselor fo r the
home economics department.
· Among th e guests were

ARIDDLE
.
FORTODAY
The Mel&amp;a Hiltory Book
free story del!dJlae Ia DOW
past. Weare truly -n' If you
did not let )'Gill' ~tory Ill.
Yellerday'a ~ . - 1813.
'' .

-'

.

Clarenc e Thompson. senior students in Careers In
Superintendent; · Ponney Horne Economics and Food
Cisco, Director; and Larry Service. They are as follows :
Best attendance, Teresa
lliarr. Supervisor.
Awards were given to the Mitchell, Kyger Creek; Kim
employers by their co-op . Vickers, Weliston; Sherry
students. The employers are Marcum, North Gallia. Best
as follows: Banquet Foods, academic in lab and related
Bob Evans Steak House, work: Bonnie Murphy,
Buckeye Hills Career Center, VInton Co wily; Chris MitBurger Chef, Gallipolis State chell, VInton County. Beb'l
Institute, Herbert Wescoat overall academic: Resa
Memorial Library, Holzer McWhorter, Gailia
Medical 'Center, Huston's Academy; Sherry Marcum,
Nursing Home, Jackson Care North Gali!a. Best atCenter. McDonald's, Rio tendance on the job: Janet
Grande Cafeteria, Robbins Caldwell, Hannan Trace;
and Myers. Shake ' and Lorrie Jenkins, Jackson.
Burger. Wendy's, and Most likely \o succeed as .
voted by class : Sherry
Western Pancake House.
other awards were given Marcum, North Gallla.
by Mrs. Ann RJeser to · her
Mrs. Anita Sigmon gave
awards to her Food Service

juniors as follows : Most
conscientious In lab and
related, Pepper Staten,
Wellston·: Improved Hero
Image, Allen Boyce, Southwestern . and ~kip Gobel ,
Jackson; Most Improved,
Lorrie Green, Wellston; Best
attendance, Joyce Boggess,
GaD!a Academy.
Mrs. Catherine Smalley
gave awards to her CHE
juniors
as
follows :
Scholarship, Shawnli Dyson,
Wellston ; Most improved,
Marlene McCoy, Gallia
Academy; Best attendance,
Linda Hubbard , Jackson;
Outstanding junior as voted
by class, Unda Hubbard,
Jackson.
. The closing ceremony was
given by Skip Goble.

'•

•''
'

As law ••

Slll Sq)vo~.
New
Arrilinf . . .

''
•'

c..,

MAIN sT.

C),

UAWPQUS - Aaivlties
at lbe Senior CWzeos Center,
MEIGS- Plans for the anDO Jllebon Pike, for this ntversary dlmer party to be
week
as ll!ted:
held on May 7 at the Meigs
made
~
Monday, ••'""''9 "'----- Inn tiwere
""'"htduring
1:16-3 p.m . . ,
mee ng of the ...,.
and F orTuesday, . April 10 - · ty, Meigs. County Salon 710, .
S.T.O.P., · 18:30 a.m.; · Monday.nigblat the home ol
i'llyllcal Fitness. 11: I~ a.m. ; Mrs. Julia HyseU. .
llfld-Eillt Dlllldnc, 1-2 p.m. . Sev!!ral deportemental olWedilelday, April 11 __ ficers alm,lll with members of
· Card Games, 1-3 p.m ·.; severalsalomwerelnvile!lto
attend the dinner lind a
l:.iterature Clasa 1 p m
1buraday; AprO 12 ·_: Knit meetinc to finalize the plans
Glasa, 1-3 p.m.; Btble .Study, was set lor April 22 at ~
1-2. ,
home of Mrs. Veds DaviS.
, Friday, April 13 - · Good Also at that meeting annual
Friday Service, 12:30 p.m.; reportswllibecmnpletedand
, Art CJasa, 1-3; Puffy-Owl a ml"'lorial s~rvice for
. Clau, 1:30-3; Social· Hour, 7 ~·rdased members will be

•re:

.,..u - . ....,. ..,

GI~LS .SIZES
'0-14

0- 16

Pe41che~
l-ove :

Don moor
Tom Sawyer
Lo- Bel
' Health- Tex
Jack-Tar

'N

Cream

RUH Girl
lltya~·s

,
Polly Flinders
Adorable
Carter's
Cinderella

Billy-the-Kid

'

~ACINE,

'

••
f

••

0.

l

tonight.

arid COinliuttee

Officers

ehalrmen were iaaiuded
that reports must be ready b)'

,.

May I. A special,fund ral8ing
project na held for the
scholarship lund Df •whldl
Mrs. Pearl knapp Is chalrman. Mrs.IJI!a Hamplm will
prepare the bqok ol prayera
for tile Salm.
. Jtefreslunents were served
• by Mrs. Hy~ell and · Mrs.
'Eileen SWieil duilng the
concludtnc social hour. '

'

'

'

•'

'

LILLIES ·TULIPS- HYACINTH .
BEGQ~IA~· BASKETS &amp; MANY OTHE~S

.

... Q~~~tlit:frome•
. ' flrot. '

.

' .

..

.

••,,

,,

•

Old.!at ,.....,,..,..., in

.,.
r

. owlled and Otietetld by
GERALDINE CLELAND

'•
;

''

'•
.~
',
'

•j
~

.IIC8lloPed

. _ · by

potat.oet. nllla, butter, applesaiic:e w1111 Jllilll[lll, milk.
· Wednesday - Hot turkey
aandwlch , . lfltb sravy,
wJiJ~petl polatoef, b1JIIered
llu&amp;r, c:bll1ed fnilt,

,

.~ ' .

.

.

'

·.
.
-

.

auditions.
WADe lN U.S " ·

,

...,.,.,If,

Tliursday - · Shepherd's
whipped JN&gt;tatoes, greea
beaM, braid, buller, fresll
fruit, mUk.
t'ridaf - Baked fish 011,
bun. ireen pels, aaorted
lnlt aalad wllb ;arnlsh,
butter, c.wk'4 dlollie of cake,

pie,

POSTER COMPETITION - Awardees In a poster
competition conducted for Meigs County 4-H young people
are pictw-ed with Chris Clover, a new member ol the 4-H
family in Ohio. The posters will be used for recruitment
and will he placed in windows Df .bt!siness houses. The
WATER CUTOFF
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP)
- Some 35,000 residents of
Portsmouth, West Port smouth and New Boston were
without water Friday night
after a state Transportation
Depart men t crew accident ally broke a main

water line.
Repair crews were working
through the night and hoped
to have the problem
corrected by morning.
The accident occurred
while a highway crew was
Installing a guard rail at New
Boxton.
.

PTO makes plans
. to sponsor show

ATIIENS- MoD!e Hunter,
Scottish author Df books for
children and young people,
will ~ak on :April 17 at 8.
p.m. at Marton Hall on the
campus Df Ohio University.
The event Is sponsored by Phi
Kappa Phi Honor Sudety
with the cooperation of Ohio
winners from the left, all in the 11-12· yesr age category,
Valley Area Ubrartes and
include: Joey Par~er, fourth; Terrie Starcher, second;
Harper and Row, Miss HunAngie Spencer, flnl, and Brenda Bentz, third. Pqsters
ter's, publisher In the United
were jUdged b)' Mr•· Greta Suttle, a school supervisor
States. The public Is Invited
with the' Melga County Board of Education.
lo the lecture and to meet
MoUie Hunter at reception
afterwards.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH ·
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Shaner,
Recipient &lt;i the prestigious
GAWPOUS - Mr. and Ouk Hill. Paternal grandCarnegie Medal for her book
Mrs. Leslie Young of parents are Mr. and Mrs.
The Stronghold, Hunter Is the
GaWpolla are announcing the otis Young, Jr. o!Galllpolls.
blrth Df their first child, a Great-grandparents are Mr. author Df more ttJan a dozen
novels . for young people
son, Ryan Paul, March 12 at and Mrs. Ernest La)umer.
eharacterlud b)' brllUant use .
Holzer Medical Center. The Oak Hill, Ohio and Mrs. Cora
ball)' weighed nine poWids Young of Pl. Pleasant, W. · of language 'and strong
vigorous plots: Her writing
Ya. ·,.
and eight ounces.
falls Into two categories Maternal grandparerils are
history and folklore and
· magic. A collection of her
· eiiiiYI on wrlllng h8B also
been publilhed Wider the title
Talent Is Not Enough.
"I write for children
because r Hke them "'
people; becauae I am an en-

a

. Laurel Cliff

' See the fresh, new·, exdting line.oup
of styles by AUditions. They're de·
signed especially for todliy's more
feminine fashiOns. To look your.best'. ·
this Eester end efter choose ~4dl­

·pean.a buller cookies, mllli:.

'
·

fashloiled Easter lately,
coloring and dy eing your own
Easter eggs - this just could
be yow- year to enjoy some of
the traditional Easter activities. Decorating real eggs
for Easter is certainly
traditional. Let the ch!ldren
help with the decorating and
Jet the whole f!lllllly enjoy the
hunting theni after they're
colored. 1Taking turns hiding
the eggs gives everyone a
chance. to enjoy the surprises
· and ·excitement of the hunt. )
If you plan to eat the eggs
when the hunt is over, you'll
want to use care when
cooking them . For best
results, put the eggs in a pan
anll cover with enough water
to -come at least one Inch
. above eggs. Cover; bring
rapidly just to boDing. Turn
·off heat; if necessary,
remove pan from burner lo
prevent further bo!llng. Let
· stand In the hot water 15-20
minutes for large eggs adjust time up or down by
approximately 3 minutes .for
each size larger or sniaUer.
Cool Immediately and
thoroughly ·in cold water _
shells arc easier to remove
and It is less likely you will
have a dark surface on yolks.
To remove shell : Crackle. it
by tapping gently all over.
Roll egg between hands to
loosen shell ; then peel,
starting at Jarge end. Hold
egg under running cold water
or dip 1n bowl of water.
If you are Interested In
coloring eggs the way great
Gramma did, then you need
only look into , your
relrigerawr. Many foods give
off beautiful natural dyes
when cooked, so use that dye
to produce aom~ beautifully
colored Easter Eggs. It's so
simple and 8 great .family
project
Foo&amp; used 1n obtaining
dyes can he nwnerous. Here
are some examples that
produce beautiful dyes.
Walnut shells - · subtle buff or
adobe; Red cabbage leaves
- beautiful robin blue .
Orange peels ,- ·. 8 J!Aht

'Author of
children s
books
to speak.
.

•

Easter Flowers

'l'he Senior ·Nutrition Mr8. Iva Powell, Chapeau,
Procram wUI aerve the · presided at·the meeting dur· ·
foDowlnc mmus:
.
mg which time· the spring
.Monday - C'hl1l COD carne pouvlor was, announced for
cottqe cheese and pea; May 3 and 4. at Imperial ,
ll!llad, orange juice, crackers, House North m Columbus.
batter, rice pnc!d(ng wttll Arral)gemenls were made for
ralslfta, m111t
·
several members w go to
. Tuesday .:.. Baked ham Wilkesville f&lt;r a dinner

z~ ~quaib,

·

•'·
'•

e .

p.lll·.

BOYS SIZES

.•'•

Annivers(!ry party plannetf.r--.~
. --. ---.::-..::..---·-.
Q.ELAftD GREENHOUSE
bv
J Eiu.ht and For..t11
'J here

'

yellow ; Carrot tops - smoky
yellow~green ; Fresh cranberries - dark green ; Onion
skins - handsome orange;
Spinach - light gold.
Experiment with any
number of materials and mix
the dye liquid to come up with
interesting color combinations. Fresh herbs,
leaves of flowers: dandelions, .
beets and vegetables ·of all ,
kinds can also he used. It's
easiest to have hard-cooked '
eggs
chilled In
the
r efrig erator before you ·
begin.
And now for the how to's:
Take a small amount of a
foodstuff and place It In a
pan, filled with 2 cups cold
water. Bring the water
rapidly to a boll, allow to
simmer 10 minutes, tum off
heat ; cover, and steep dye for
30 minutes. Remove food
stuff and place dye into
containers and refrigerate.
Whet dye is cold, place
hard cooked eggs Into dye.
Leaving the eggs In the dye
overnight . will give the
deepest colors. Experiment
to see what tints and shades
are best.
, Remove from the dye and
dry on a metal cake rack.
Place eggs Into the
refrigerator )romptJy after
dyemg. R,efrlgerated hard-.
cooked eggs can be kept up to
8-10 day~.Dyes can 'be kept In
the relngeralor for an extended period of time. If you
color enough eggs for both
eating and to use In ceoterpleces and decorations
around the house, be sure to
refrigerate those you plan to
eat: those you eat should not .
be allowed to stand at room
temperature for much more
than a couple of hours. The
.colored eggs do make a basis
for love,ly decorations b~t
shouldn I be eaten after
sitting around the house· for
several days. If you feel
guilty about throwing them
away, try thinking of them In
, the same. way you do yo~
floral decorations - · we don t
expect to ea~ our old cut
flowers, do we. Feed them to
the birds!!

If you haven't spent an old-

,,.

CaJendar

. . Aa•l,

a.eJCtnsmiee

Go'tden Anniversa,.y

Sr... Citizens

Prices Good thru
We~n es day, April 11., 1979

News Notes

RIVERVIEW - · Plans arc
being made to sponaor a
variety show by the Riverview Elementary PTO and
Long Bottom Community
Club.
The show wUl he Staged
~' rlday, May II at the ·
Riverview School at 7:30p.m.
A bake sale will be held In
conjunction wlih the event.
All local talent Is encouraged to participate .
Those who are Interested ,In
performing are asked to
contact one of the following : ·
F'rancls Andrew at 985-3593 ;'
Teresa Collins at 985-4239 ;
Sue Hayman at 985-3509 or
Geraldine Holsinger at 3786253.

tertalner, a teUer Df tales,"
comments Mollie Hunter.
She Is ai.O an entertaining
speaker, presenily In the
. United S.taies and Canada
lecturing at conferences and ·
speaking to adults and young
people. Her appearance In
Athens cOincides witb the observance of The International year Df the CJald
caUlng attention lo the International aspect of
children's literature.

tl.ons footwear. And you know If It~
Auditions It hes tp be comfortable.·
See them todeyl

15th
'

hespital surgicalilsufance.
.

of the EaJi!sn LOcal School

.)

CR~CENf.
,

.. "
·,,

. JJiltrtct wDI not attend school·

. GALLIPOLIS, O~'aiid

DOZEN
CARTON

VALLEY BELL
-~-

1%

MILK
'

'

· GAL PLASTIC JUG

CRISP
HEAD

LETTUCE

R.C. or
DIET RITE

OOlA

.8 ~6 Oz. BTLS.

Expires ·wttllllldiJ

..

See me for State Farm

,'~•h'ISW,._ YeN,~"

EGGS

~::Tgg~
~llH '
·
COUPOI

Aprii

•

)ACK&amp; )ILL'S

LARGE

WHIP

Easter
II

Choice of beveiap'served
with em. meal. ' .
·•servtces rendered on a
IIOIHIU!m'lmlnatory basis."

oa Monday, 4prU 161,due to
panlll-teach&lt;T confrrcn~es.
. l'armts should .be In !oUch
wltb IIJelr reltx.'t'tlve ild.ool
. Jti!».l, to. Mt 'fP "I'PI!IN~ lor ltletr canrma&lt;.......

FULLY COOKED
READY TO EAT

.SALAD DRESSING

milt.

SCHOOL CLOSED
EAST MEIGS - , l!ludents · .

TAVERN
HAM

,·

.

.

Stot• '•~· "'•il&gt;l ol..tortoc.,.. .,.,, , .:• ('!)"' 1..,. ,
t........;"'";;.' 'HI-e- fioo,.. ."CC:...- - ~.. , • .,

(

.

'· ·MAROUIRITE'S
·sH·
o
es·
.ttl
.

102 ·E. Main Sr.

.,
'

&gt;.

Oltllnw'.

J

,,
'

(

\

�r:-----Co~-- ....

II

---:--l Senior citize.ns journey ;to Nashville

mmUDI1y I

II\' AUc•: WAMSJ.•:v
Senior Cillzc11
Stuff Member
NASHVIJ.J.E. Tenn. Last ·
w&lt;·ckc-nd 40 senior citizens
a 0 d stuff members journeyed
By Charlene Hoeflich
to Nashville on .thc.flrst over·
1
I night trip planned by the
Meigs &lt;:ounty &lt;:ouncil on
r. .. ing ln•·ollo•gt• omli,.king t'flrt• nf a family ttw• •·an1 hP an Aging HSVP. In sPite of some
''"')' &lt;'hnrr, bniiJK&gt;rt' ami m&lt;K&gt;• w••m•n art• finding il '"'" ht• rainy weather, a good time
•lnm•. ""fll'l'ially if tht'ir hnsllllntls Hrt• ' "Pfl"r1 1vt• .
wa s enjoyed by all.
1be-tour was planned and
· r 11 k1· r:m·ni)" Ti·ipp. rumlyn '"" tht• "'"' .'&lt;'V&lt;'I'U I );&lt;·lir. h;"
:iii&lt;'&lt;Hit•tl th•• flurkt•rslmrg r:..mm11nil y rollt·J~•·. storm1im1·s 011 t?nducted by Huth Kohl,
u purl:limt• lu&lt;'i,, lml n"w i&lt; ••nmlh•d fnll·l imt• "' Ohio Tlnlvt•r, bsc9rt, of Park Transit, Inc.,
'ity wh&lt;'l'&lt;' &lt;ht• L&lt; II juniHr in tho• Hnni•r' f'nllt·~··· Sh&lt;•slarl.-1 Ht Parkersburg, W. Va.
Ol llasl fllll 1md-will t'Hnlinm•&lt;u·xt v&lt;•Hr.
After· !raveling 10 haurs on
And lht• hig news lor ht·r Ibi s 'wt•t•k was lht• m·&lt;'ipt nf " Friday, 20 of the group were
di slin~uish"l pr"f""''"'''' ,.·boiAr-ship. 1l1HI will mwr ull of energetic enough to go to
her Inil inn fnr her st•nior VI'Hr. rnnolvn &lt;h•st·riht•' lh&lt;• Honm·s l'rinter's .Allcy In downtown
r"ll"~'' "' "" innm•Hiivr prn,~rHm, hi,ihly lntlivitln•lilt&lt;l with" . Nashvllle to take in the night
•· 1 hi
1
1
1
•·
r·
1
spots. Part of the group at·
'"' ~ rill'&lt; l'llll"'' ' 1"' )'. In nnr &lt;' as.&lt; lo.• '"' ,art• I\'!' .&lt;tiK t•nt&lt; tended the show at Boot•

I

Corner·

I

t

·

·I

whitt• ~mnt&gt; nf lwr prngram!' ami ccltfr~Ps an• nn a um•-tn-orw

,

. . .

Handolph's cluu and the.rcst
\\'f'nt tn l'o" urn Jloll•·r r,.,.
some country music- and
dunclng,
Saturday morning at 8
a.m., C\'L'I'YODC bourdl'll the .
bus for • tour of do11nto"n ·
Nashville, wht:rc we suw th•
stale C::apltal, the old Ryman
Auditorium, many of the new
buildings, the Parthenon and
:hc beatuedtlful pork In which it ·
s 1oca , then outside the
citY to view . the .homes •of
man)' country music stars
and the Governor's Mansion.
t'ollowlng the tour of Nash·
vOle, we arrived at Opryland
lor an afternoon of sigbt·
seeing. ·taking In the shows,
andeat!"g. Afew of the group
saw Gordon McRae appeering In a lfroadway
.

hasi.&lt;. Sht• i.&lt; IRking 2!l h&lt;111" nt~v h11t i~ in Alht•n• only Hn Mon.
Hcvuc, and many Sjlw two or
0
day ('Vt•ning can&lt;l Wt'&lt;ln(&gt;~Jay morning. AJI nr lht• n.·~t nf h(•r '
work Sht• dt~'' Ill hHin!' llnfllhi, &lt;''f1HilliVwork' IVI'Ii With ho•r
fHmily.
·
Patriot Merry Makers Dwayne, lltcve and Dianne
r.r,.lyn i' mHjnring in F:ngli,h ilnd h&lt;·r &lt;•hjPt'lil'l' i• I" I•·" met March 24 at salem Forgey, Sandra, Bobbie .and
h•11dwr. Sl•• WllduHird from Pmm•rny High f:ch!N&gt;I and Is lh&lt;• church. Sand'y
Lakin · Robbie Halley, Kent Walker,
· d~~u~hli•r nl Mr. uml Mrs. Ryrne VHughHn, Pnm ..·oy.
presided. Kay Smith led Dana Jeffers, and Brian
devotions. Ruth Wood had · Hammon . Guests present
Thl• rp'~ no t•nd tn tht• nmhitinn nf ~(1m•• fll.'nrlt• .
charge ol the program. Fred were . Mr. and Mrs. Bob
t k -:' '
'
Pri1!ny Runny Kuhl nnd .Trmt•l Kohh•ntz spmt lht• dC~y lmtka Deel and Jackie Graham Hamilton, Jim Burleson and
I
,L: , '":&amp;',
inJ..! ft(l Wond fiiW•r flnr;tl «'nt'SHJ..!t'."i for lh1• Jr:mk•n c')llh tnt 1 1ni"M•r~ were speakers. Fred Deel ·other interested •viaitors. - ·
Sherri Murphy MitT// .
whn will ht• Hll t&gt;nctin~! tht• Rt•gion 1J rt'M 'I'Iing in Pnmt•n1y bth•r showed slides on Stepa In 4·H Reporter Joy Burleson.
thi !'l rnnnth .
Program Planning. Jackie
Rio t 'ricndshlp 4-H club met
Graham Installed the of·
THlt'nh'fl Atllly DcHn will ht• sharing snmt• of twr t':'{pt•rlisP in fleers . A potluck dinner was Mary 15 at the IA&gt;uden home.
fl{lWt:'f arrcmging at fln orx•n mrrting nr ttw GallipoiJs rrarflf•n
held for members and lbeir Kevin Withee presided.
f.luh Thursday t&gt;venin~ ,
Advisor · Bev IA&gt;uden had
families.
WICHiTA F:AUS, Kansas Bethany Nazarene College;
The mreling \\ill hP held 111 the Ment11l H••allh f't•niPr , B&lt;'rt'""
charge
of tile program. Dr.
Advisors
are
Ruth
Wood
:.. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. her hu sband is assistant
frt&gt;m lht• Hol,er Mt'llirHI renter, al 8 p.m. and sin&lt;'&lt;' il i• 11n and J art&lt;!l Hutchins. Mem· Fisher, the Rio Grande
MurphJ, Wichita Falls, manager of a Tac'U Bell in orwn mt•et ing, Wt' a~~.:ume that mPan~ Hnyom• ('an &lt;'nmt'.
bers preSent we•e Sandy veterinarian, was speaker.
Texas, arc announcing the Oklahoma Cily. He also at·
RPtty is Hn nulstamtin~ HITang-Pr, .anll ttn t•vt•ning with ht•r j,!ol
Lakin,
Mary Barker, ileth He explained and answered
marriage or their daughter. tends Bethany College.
1-ltlrt• to ht&gt; intl'rPsting Hnct rdm·a1ionHl. Stw rt'Hlly k;npwr-; how tu Salisbury, Usa Green, Kay our questions about our pets
llherri, to Lonnie Mirrll of
The new Mrs. Mirll is the do it ~
Smith, Sandra Patrick, and animal projects. ~evln
Brownsficld, Texas on Feb. granddaughter of Lillie
Rebecca McCartney. Guests Withee demonstrated some of
23.
Holly , Gallipolis, an(l Luella
At·&lt;·kv a nd rJIOnv Tvn't· (If(' ntlW both rnr'cdlt•d HI tht• Hll('k- present were Fred · DJel, the tools used to care for a
Mrs .. Mirll is a senior at Murph). Point Pleasant.
ing T't•(·hnkal roilt·g·,. in thl' ('nrfPdh\ns prnj.,'T':tm. lanny Jackie Graham, Bernice dog and we learned the
~fHrh'fl H I'OUJllt• nr qu~rit'f!o: rtj.!U, ltnff (his t11Uirf{'f \\'(lS jnim'ff
Wood, Allee Salisbury, Bee responsibilities involved. The
r·--~·----------~--, hv hi}: wift• whu ~l!'!u ha!'! ;m ;wid inlt&gt;n•!-1 in IHw t•nfnrc't•rm•nl , lfarkcr, Rosalie and Jill next meeting will be April 19
Tiwir infHnl ~on, ' 'Spank(', is in fht• }';IJ'W"lh)t• hnnfl~ nf hi!'
Lakin, !.,ida Green, Mary al the IA&gt;uden borne. Advisors
grHmlrnnlht&gt;r. V1•l!' iH Rnnsh.
are. Mrs. IA&gt;uden and Mrs.
Patrick, Mrs. McCartney.
Centerville Young Far· Garber. Ml!mbers present
mcrs 4-H Club met March 23 were Kevin Withee, Ivan
SUNDAY
members arc urged to attend
at Brian Hamilton's home. : Hurt, Tina Merry, Mike
WEDNESDAY ' ·
THURSDAY
MEN'S DAY program at to
disc uss
important
Ja)'
Burleson presided. Merry, Mark Oliver, Brian
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, GALLIA COUNTY Human
Paint Creek Baptist Church business. Hclreshments.
· HAM Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m. Service Council, 12 noon, , Dwa)'ne Forgey and Sandra ' Oliver, Janet Wetherbolt,
2:30 p.m. Dinner wUI b.
ORGANIZATIONAL meet· Hos.,.otth Council 46, R&amp;SM C::otnmunlty Mentul Health HaUey led devo\ions. Mr. Will IA&gt;uden, Amy IA&gt;uden,
served. Rev. Walter Taylor, ing lor establishment of
'· at 8:15.
Center , speaker, Jack Forgey and Jay Burleson had Uiane Garber, Aildyolloward,
Ironton , guest speaker.
junior garden club in,J\Ieigs
Hodcrus,
Housing Authority · charge of the program. Kevin. Hager. -:· Reporter
SYHJ\CUSE • MINERS·
C::ountl' at 7:30 p:tn. Monday
MONDAY
VILLE Baseball Association Director, . lunch $2, for &lt;:ommltlees were elected for Kevin Hager.
REVIVAL now in progress at the home of Mrs. Bunny Wednesday at Syracuse rc$crvations call Phylli~ tM sale that Is tO be held at
the fairgrounds April 21.
at Hobson Church of Chrlsl in Kuhl, county road 26, .,.est of M.unicipal Building at i p.m. Mason , 446-5500.
They are the Meat and •
Christian Union with Keith Five Points. Youth between All coaches arc urged to
Eblin, pastor as evangelist. sevo a and 17 invited. Those attend.
Buns conunlltee, also the
Services 7:30 p.m, nightly. with questions arc to ~[]!
Snacks
and Pie committee
MHIDLEPORT Amateur
ACCEPTING CAU..S
Special singing by Country Mrs. Kuhl at !192·7537 or Gardenen, 8 p.m. Wedneo·
and last of aUthe 'Drlnks and .
POMEROY - Henry Hens- Utensils committee. In·
· H)llllnllmers. Pu.blic invited. Margaret Parker at 992·2264. day In the Riverboat Room of
ley will accept all coDect calls staDallon of officers was also
SOUTHERN
Junior
High
·
TWIN CITY Shrine Club
the Meigs Office of the Alllona
pertalnlni! to Olive ToWriShlp performed. Advisor Is Hank
Monday 7:30 p.m , All Athletic Boosters Monday CoontY Savlup a.J Laml Co. roada
or busineu. Hensley Is ·.Forger. Members present
) ; 30 p.m . in tbe t!Ym. All
Mn. Grace Pratt . - Mn.
were J•y and Joy Burleson,
parents whose children will Veda Davis wiD be hooteaaes. a new town!bip ·trustee.
be attending junior high are
invited.
&lt;.:HUHC::H SERVICES at
t 'irst &lt;.burch of God Monday
through April 14, nightly at
7:30 p.m. The Rev. C. .P.
· . &lt;:onley, Gallipolis, will be the
speaker. On Thursday, . April
12. communion and ordinaoccs of the church.
POMEROY Elementary
School PTA, 7:30 Monday
night at the school. Safety
patrol to be recognized, new
officers to he elected. Cub
Seoul 249 to have pledge with
first grade parents to he
hostesses. A nursery will be
provided.
TIJESDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club,' home of &gt;Mrs. Pat
Thoma, 7:30 p.m. Tuesduy..
For roll call members are
asked \o display a picture of
favorite plant. The pr?' ,
NIT UVING ROOM their
gram will be on Arbor Dey.
The arrangement of the
AND HALL
Offer Includes
month is to be abstract.
and hall only up to
SYRACUSE PT0 meeting,
ft . .
1:30 p.m. Tuesday at school
ONLY
with installation of officers
and a student art display to
be featured .
Gallia; M~lgs, Vinton Co.
I{AC::INE LODGE 461,
~
'
I '
t' &amp;AM Tuesday 7:30 p.tn. All
. master masons invited.
614 446,.4208

Gall1a 4•H
. .Cln b News

th . 0 f th
h
. . Music Museum. At the '
• . Dl cr mu;'•~al , Museum, a-e saw how· 1!1·
rcc
shows at the park. The ~t' struments are IIUide many
h~~ry . ;;:;Joya ue old time musical In·
a ~ 5
":~ r . Jltruments. entertainer's
ba~kn~0 ~mfiou!~ 1..:':"0 , rlollles, Elvis's gold Cadillac,
fi't c
.
e
how a recording Is made, and
clot~c~ up an:.~~ somff ~ the bronze plaques of lhe
the lat~;, ~o..:.a ~ ~
members of the Count.,.
G.
. r
n
Music HaD of- Fame, along
st~~ 01~ ~[~\.;"'es:"w
with other Items pertaining to
0
M . t ~ · ~I
ne~
' country music.
fe:~~r:d . 2 ~ 00~~=~:alnae~s
After vl8ltlrig several of the(
Including &lt;.bet Atkin Porter . souvenir ·shopa, we loaded up ·
Waggoner Roy AcJr Hal!k . and started for home. Even
Snow Gr~ndpa J ~8 Del . !hough II rained most of lbe
W l Jea c Prul~n charlie trip home the lpirlts of the·
w::"~ J~ ShepArd and travelers were not dam·
Lonzo ~nd ~ar to n~e a pened. With two ·meal breaks
f ·
'
. along the way, some napping,
e;.
.
a sing-a-long, ilnd much
tho~~·;.•~!;~ ~b; : : . chatter as we neared home,
"'' .
g
.
we arrlued back 1n Pomeroy
the Opry until after I p.m., we ·
llttl, It
10 S d
were aU located on the bus
a_
e a er
un ay
and ready to vlslt the Countiy-, evening, tired out but happy.

::oo:lt:··°
11

·

J. ·,

J:e

,.

FRESH LIKE VEGETABLES
French Style Green Beans, Small Whole
Beets, Sweet Peas, Cre.m Style or Whole
.KerneJ CorN , Mi Ked llegetablt.

,.

3~~~:· 99'

64

CUT YAMS

....
~.

..•·.••••

u.s. No.1

Dewey Fresh

••
•

..

~

large
Heads Each

49~

49

'2lb.
Bag .

·

*•

,.!(

,,

e

Fresh-Pascal '

10lb.

Bag '

'

•

1

'

CELERY
· large
stalks ;
Each

$129

120Z. PKG.

···~···························

-

d

39e

·''

89$

''l''

.

-------rVERYDAY LOW PRICE SPECIALS----~-

•I;
"

•

AMY'S STYLE CENTER

""

'

Gllpolls, Ohio

340 Second

DEPARTMENT STORE

...."•
'"'

"'•r.,
,.

.

SILVER BRIDGE PUlA

•••..,

-

"'

.~

"'.
.&lt;,,'.
.,'
...

"'
"',"'..
~·.,

..

''

, r'urr N

l

COUPON

MAXWELL H.OUSE

.....
~·

....'

"

~

.,,
••
"'"'

'

,,

WIC

Limit one please wn n mis coupon
Coupon Expires A)lril1'4, 1979
'
CITYGA·TEWAY

NO. 105
18 OZ. BOX

49t

,

.
W/C

limit one please w·ilh this coupon
Coupon Expires
14, 1979
' TWIN CITY
WAY

J

BETTY CROCKER

FROSTING .

ggt wic

NO. 125
16 OZ. CAN

COUPON

1

BETTY. CROCKIR
'

CAKE MIXES

' $3~

ND. 805
2 LB. CAN

COLJPO~

BETTY CROCKER

COFFEE

limit one ple'!se with this coupon
Coupon Expires April14, 1979'
NC
GATEWAY

BROWNIE .MIX

99¢

(10013700)
NO. 12S
23 OZ. BOX.

'N !C

'·

limit one please Wllh rn&lt; s cou1Jun
coupon 'E xpires April14, 1979
TIAH"CITYGATEWAY

~

SUPER
SELECTION

...,

1

..."',..,

AT

(10013700)

~

••'
'

:;.0.125
14 OZ. BOX

...
~.

..

"'

I,

g· g~
.

.·'wtc

.SCOT T()WELS

,.
,.
"

.

JUMBO RDU .:

.. , ·

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

I

l
~

GOLDEN ISLE

$10~00

limit one please with this cou~on
C0u1p~n E~Pi!'&lt;~.s April14, 1979
GATEWAY .

l;mil one please
Cou
E~pires
ITY

(~m~·l ~:h

pun:hase)

ggt

W/C

QUART JAR

ggt

,W/C

~o·

49~ W/C

OZ. CAN

ALL

'

DISHWASHER DETERGENT
NO. 155

NO. 255

24 OZ. BTL

35 OZ. BOX

LB; BOWL

99

~·
W/t;

LUCKY WHIP

DESSERT :TOPPING.

c.

limit one please w1th this coupon
Coupon Expires April 14, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'

Limit one please with 1m s coupon
Coupon Expires Aprill4, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

MARGARINE

'

:11/P(JN

(Sliced, Crll$hed, Chunk)

BLUE BONNET

88

r

DOLE PINEAPPLE

PURE CANE SUGAR

. (10013700)
NO. 205
,5 LB. BAG

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF lHESE SLACKS
'

CCJUP(IN

SALAD DRESSING

'

' .59t
.

....'
..'

,

' limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires
·14, 197'
TWI C:ITY

•

.
·.-·

cntJI'fJN

J.UCKY CHARMS CEREAL

..•

•
,~..

fANCIES .

of Spcjrt ..d Dress
lDlllo ••

~

·s .
FRANKIE WIN.E.R
SUPERIOR

••
.,'

n.95 NOW S1A5

U.S. No.1

YELLOW
IDAHO
COOKING ONIONS BAKING POTATOES

CRISP
HEAD I.ET1\JCE

SOLIDS
&amp;

a..nu AW.dnlbe

CHICKEN WINGS ,_

PRODUCE BUYS

~·

••

·'

u

8-16 OL
Bottles

•

SUPER
SAVINGS

Sizls 31 to

.$149

DR.

89'

. uoz.Jar

•• . .

'

'

Btl.

16 oz. Pkg.

SWEET BUrrER STIX PICKLES "

~ ,

MEN'S

•

OZ ,

.

8

SUNDAY ONLY

Replar s20 &amp; s22

·.

'·

CHEESE SINGLES

40 oz .
Can

•• •

'

CHI'CKEN BREASTS;,. ·, ·. ·.

Princella

"'

I

25Ft. Roll

ORANGE or GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
$ 29

APPLESAIJ..CE

••
~·.

I

3 CANS 99 , ·

"OIGE!n Isle

.,

I · Social Cal'endar I
a

79'
··EGGS................... .

~

'v

, , natural

FOR EASTER COLORING
OR EATER BREAKFAST
GRADE A LARGE .
.
.
. DOZ.

..,..
....

smooth &amp;

Marriage announced

I

this Week's Grocery Specials

•"
"

~-

.

..

•

69

NO•.75

W/C

9 oz.

.

69~ . ~~c.~ :.
·.

~

'

Limil one please with' lnis coul:. iln,::·· .::''..
Coupon l!'xpiresAprii14&lt;197V:; ·' · ·
TWI.N TY GATEWAY

lim i 1one p!e,1Se wil I! lhiuoupon
coupon Expires April14, 1979 '
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•"

�•

B·IO- The Sunday Timt'''~t'ntincl. SwldaV. Aor. 8. 1979

Cr! - TheSundayTimes-Sentinel, Sunday, Apr. B, 1979

Send a ·mouse to college for cancer
GALilPQLIS - The recent
in the . four
Gallipoli$. City Elomcnta·ry
Schools and the two Christian
c~ mpaign

Schools netted. the Gallia
·Count)' Unit of the American
Cancer Society iACSl a total
of $436.7!1, which ~·ill scnu 1156
6

"Mice to &lt;.:ollcgc" for cancer
rrs&lt;•urch.
Spt•arhcauinM the cainpaign were the members of

the Alpha Mu Beta Sorority of
Hio Grmlllc COllege us u part
of their ·community in·
,·olvcmcnt activities . Th e

.C

sorQrlty members dbtributctl
lht· &lt;'nn:lopcs to the four

't

•

Gallipolis t'ity ·elementary

Bell &amp; Boone

schools, Cluy, l;n:cn, Rto

· .
. A MOUSE- Denise Radcliff (1), President of the Alpha Mu Beta Sorority of Rio
. GrandeC?Il!'ge, assists Pat Marlin (r).• an advisor ro the Sorority with Judy Warehime lcl ,
Vtce Prestdent of theGallia CoW!ty Umt of ll)e Amertcan Cancer Society, looking on, as they
.
.
. that will send 1156mtce to college.
\

SPRINGTIME
AT

0

l!OO~cl}lf@~
\JJj)

lt

46 STATE ST.
GALUPOUS, OHIO

·

'ft.

SHORTS/TOPS
PANTS/ JEANS
DRESSES/SKIRTS
HUNDREDS OF ITEMS
TO SELECT FROM

Grande and Wa~hingt o n ,
alang with the Ohio Valley
Christian School and the
Ga llia C:hri stian School.
Students in aU siK schools
responded positively to the
campaign.
President of the lliplw ~!u
Beta Sorority is Denise
Radcliff. Coordina ting th e
' program for the 39 members
oft he Alpha Mu Bela Sorority
was their advisor, J~ne
Sofranko. Pat Martin, al.., an
adviSor for the !;Orority, was
involved in the review of the
exciting res ults of the
ca mpaign , counting the
money from the response by
the . local
elementary
students.
Vice president lor the
Gallia CoUnty Unit of ACS,
Judy Warehime, saiu, "We
a~e most appreciative of the
time and interest shown by
the Alpha Mu Beta Sorority
members, who took their
personal time to visit the six
schools. deliver the "Send a
Mouse to College" envelopes
that were distributed to the
children, and then return to
pick them up following the
one week lfiid·March cam·
paign. We also. ·oit behalf of·
the local Unit, want to thank
the childr,en and their parents
who supported this project,
making it possible to double
last year's response with our
local 1\CS Unit able to send
865 mice to .college." She
added, "Thousands of mice
are needed by scientists to do
their research. We .a re
delighted that our com·
munity's elementary schools .
can be counted on to do an
importance part In cancer
research." It costs 51 cents to
send a mouse to college.
Mrs. Warchl)ne expressed
her gratitude to the administrative staffs of the lour
elementary schools in the
Gallipolis City School System
and the two tbristian Schools
lor their enthusiastic
cooperation and support of
this project.
·

APRIL 8

MURRAY ..'·
.,

2 ONLY

HP
LAWN
MOWER

Hea vy duty const ruction,
heavy diecast gear case, 14"
specia l alloy heavy duty tines .
Tilling w ;dl., 13" to 76" .
Brigas &amp; Stra tton engine . Se lf ·
sharPening tines.
.

0

'**

• 22" .C4lll'rlti
;.• JIUf,f". . . Uii

~

·.. tlo:Jjls
w. ........
·· .

Heck's Reg.

111ft'

•"-* lltlaftt''~

$199.99

•. r-wf~Mk

0

r

Hardware Dept.
least 6 per store

I PIICI CAR AND HOIII

POLISHING-CLEANING .SET

By Murray Oldl'Mil8n
· LAKE PI .ACID, N.Y. fNF.Al- The north wood• •-piril of
8 piect Bucket contalna
mitt, polllhlntl cloth, wM•

e 3 SnLES TO CHOOSE FROM

wallt torubbltr, apona• . ·
and Tun .. WIJI wuh. .

Heck's Reg.

'5.99 ea.

TOY DEPT.

AfiFOIIIflrll

Zebco® 700
"HOSS"®

S.wlnrs Certifie~l.
8-year maturity
$1,000 minimum

7%%

S.nnp Certifie~te

4·year maturity
SI,OOC1 minimum

6 QTS

gears.

SHELL 10W40
FIRE &amp; ICE MOTOR OIL

•1099

Heck's Reg.

7.'1 qt.

SPOIF$ ""·

62 '

QT.
AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

HOO. K·IT~
'I

RUG. KITS
WITH FREE LATCH HOOK
• 2 ..'•27"SIZI

$599
KIT
Haclc's Rag. $9.99

Shlnp · Certlflcatt

6-year maturity.

.......

'.

• Har dened steel center•
shaft and crankshaH .

'6%%
7Y2%
Slwinp !:ertlfictte

$1,000 mlnlm,um

UMrT

• Designed l or heavy
fishing.
• P~ecision , seiHubn cat1ng

ISIO,OOO.OO Minimum)
issued at a rate equal
to average yield on
SIx Month · Treasury
· Bills In latest weekly
auction.*

. 8%

this remote Adirondacks villa~e is on his ruddy Irish fat•e.
Gray is be~lnning In fle&lt;•k his black hair - alter all, he is 57
y.l'ars old now. And the teeth in thai broad •mile·are all &lt;"apped.
Art Devlin feels e&lt;mfortable enou~h on the boulevards of
Paris or.New York nr in the bier•1ube of Kitzbuehl. And m~
.unrecognlze&lt;l Pither bet•ause he Is a television pernonality ami
one.., was amon~ the lx•st, mMI darin~ ski jwnpers in -the
world .
·· But this is home , where be was born on the verv site of whnt
i; no,w his own m«"~dt"rn 50-tmil motel, and ht&gt; rema"ins a
"woodchuck"- a local yokel, who's brinftin~ the rest of the
w,orld to him.
:Art Devlin was one of the insinimenlal forre!&lt; in brin~inU the
XIIIIh Winter Olympiad to Lake Placid neXt February -he's
the vit-e president of the Or~ani r.ing C-ommittee.
~ . The Olympic appetite was whetted in him when he was a
nine-year-old kid and the winter' Games first C'dllle to this
~ature redoubt in 1932. He sneaked through the woods and
climbed a tall spru&lt;•e tree pntciirally SIDIII'k in the middle of
the skt.jumpi ng plalfonn eret'led jtl'l outside of town.
· From the branclws, he watched Rir~er Rnnd of.Ncirway &lt;oar
to an Olympit•_gold medal while lllc&gt;nSIInds lx•low gupecl allhl&gt;
.~ew spa·tade, for Americans, of ski jumpin~ .
"I'd been playing armmd on little bumps," re&lt;'alls Art . He
used to make a homt•·made jtiJ!lp out of his father's t't'&lt;lar oor·rels and ~ot his rear end wanned for tampering wiih Ihem.
{''There was nothin~ lik(' thHt J'M1me brew during Prohibition,''
he smile• in re&lt;•olledion. "I wish I'd kept the ionnula."l
"Well," he continues, "I saw lt\1! fr01&lt;ling on the •·ake the day
that Norwegian won the Olymp!cs. The &lt;'hee rin~;the crowd,
the medals. Rirger Ruud bt.'came mv Rabe Ruth."
F:very day alter s&lt;·h&lt;M&gt;i, he lll&lt;l.'li'io ntn the two and a hall
-miles to the jwnping area, earrying the &lt;'UITlbOrsome 252·
centimeter skis on his shouldeni. Then he'd hawtolamp clown
·tbe landing area with those skis, side-stepping teclioll11ly up the
hill. And in the waning witiler lighi, he wa~ hll-ky if he got in
twojumps.
·
'" By the lime he was 17, before his lather even knew he had
ever jwnped ,competitively, Art had gnne mrt to St. Paul,
~inn ., and wnli .the national rhampinnships.
. Ski jumping be&lt;'ame his obse&amp;•ion and his &lt;"dnoer. Rul Wnrlcl
Wor I~ interc-eded. He heeame a born her pilot in the J;th Air
Force' flying overF:urope. After lhe war, he gol$15 a week and
' his meals as the summer sports dire&lt;inr at the posh l.ake
Placid Chtb so he ••ould he free io jump in ihe winter.
· He was the be&gt;'l In North !unl'rira, and he c·umpete&lt;l lnr the
: u.s. team in the Winter Olympic'S of 1948, '52 and '56. Rul the
::.OOst he could ever do was un eighth pia"' finish at Cnrtina in
• 1956. Scandinavians dominated the sport.
He qualified again fur.the American team at Squaw Vail&lt;•y in
1960, but that was just In !4how he cnuld do it. Ski jumping isn 't
r&lt;&gt;r 38-year~•ld !(uys with shaky reflexes, even a' natural dart'
ilevillike Devlin.
: Tex Schrnmm, nnw lamed as the an·hile&lt;1 of th&lt;' NFI. nallas
r;nwboys, was then duing a stint in televisinn with CBS, whi&lt;•h
-was j(Oing to leie&lt;•ast the Squaw Valley Games. Tex, h.,king
for expertise, called Devlin.
.
·
·' Art has bt•en H winter sports rnrrunenta1nr Him•e, on ARr's
·Wide World in r&lt;'&lt;·enl yea rs.
. ·· lte retired from ~kt ·jumplng with a plalr in his right knee, II
.broken anns and a brnken wti&gt;i as \"ementnes. Heal"' had
' fhe memory of havi n~ jumpl'l 431\ feet onre, at Ohershlorf,
·Germany, for what was ·then it world re&lt;'nrtl. (The wnrld
record now is 588 fet'Ll
,.,. " If sports writers undrr.-;lnod ski jtunpin~." ~Y!-: Art, "tht•y
'would ponh pooh the violem•e nf fc&lt;&gt;lball. Nn mrnj&gt;ltri""'--flul
jUmping is not as dan~ei"mi~· Hs downhill skiin~. w~re ynu'rt•
l,'l&gt;in~ 811 miles an hnur."
~Art hasn't poised himself al the lop of a ski jwnp sine~' a lrw
pral1it.., leaps In 19116, and he doesn 't intend to i&gt;reak thai str·
. · tng. :
o'
··• For the 1980 Gam&lt;'S, two breath-lakin~ new platforms haw
•been built, OOl' fnr the 71J.meter hill . !Jnnllll" for the 00-mt•ll•r
hill. lin ski jumping, the figures don't dcnntethe hei~ht nf tlx·
jump. Rather, thry measure the lenl(lh of the &lt;'Urve nf hill
before it straightens out and clrsc•ends in tlx• flat area .\
•• From the !10-meler platlnrm, whil'h rim•s like a ~rain silo
against the sky, C.anada is alm&lt;111i vislbl~ in the dMalll"P nn a
dear day. An elevator lifL' the !'Ompetltors In a gia:&lt;Se&lt;i-in war·
ming rt•&gt;m behind the i.akenfl point - it l'Hn gel as
OS 46
de~rees below zero here.
Art Oevlln goes up there quite often, hut not for n.&lt;&gt;&lt;lalgk

ONT,V,

Why? Because buy.
lng . certificates. of
depostts are the
greatest way to
receive the highest interest oil ycnir savings
dollar. Come in and
talk It over with us,
Wl!'ll show you how
your sa vfngs can
q'lean more lor· you.
At Point Pleasant
Federal ' Savings &amp;
Loan Assn.
Monay Market Cer·
tificate - 6 Months

,.

1980 Olympics:

Art Devlin brings
it all home

•

.it's a·smart
decision

I

"BUDDY BELL, Te:uR third ba~e..,.n, lo the .0. af Gu
Bell, who played In the National Leape lor 1&amp; oeaooao.
':I'he young BeD and Philadelphia'• Bob Boone refute.
the adaae thai baoebaU oftoprlq doa'l play "" well ••
their lathen.

Heck's
Hardware

ASSORTED BUNNIES

COSMETIC DEPT.

HICK'S RIG.

.R.teiA.

COSMIFIC llfl1.

2YJ.year. maturity

$1,000 minimum
0

6Y2%
.5%%
Sivinp Certificate
SIW,!IJS

!-year maturity
Sl,QOO ·minimum

J

M.os.

PILLOW KIIS

CertlflctUI ·

Passbook Al:aJunt

Maturity

Interest paid Day-In

$1,000 minimum

to

tf11'11 PIB LATCII HOOK

•

• n•a13" SIZE

$2·.88\

out

Point

KIT

"'Jd

Hecllo, Reg .
. $4:99:Kit

Federal

0

' .. '· ..

..

. Black and While Pepper
, BU1ck and white ·!l&lt;'pper
come from lhc same red
berry that grows In dusters
H·pet:ennialelimbing ViOl'.
I l'or blaCk pepper, the berry is .
picked befo!'f it is fully ripe.

• •

on

d Street
._

..... ..
~

.,

,.

I'

'

"You'll find me here after tlwflames," he stniJes. "I wnnt tCl
tum this into a cnektaiJ h,,unl!r.''.
·

,. .

:iiz

0

reasons.

Jlrlfl.lf ••, .

t·

father lnro a career in profeaaional baseball was stiU a
phenomenon.
There was BIUy Sullivan,
Jr., whoae dad had been a
prominent major league
calch.r lust after the tum of
the century, Billy, Jr., hung
on as a bl1 league catcher
for a decade in the 1930s and
into the 1940s.
He was a rarity for his
time .
But the species is more
prevalent now. Early exposure to the game dldn 't turn
off such current performers
as Dale (son of Yogi) Berra,
llll Infielder with the Pitts·
burgh Pirates; or Tom
Heintzelman, an · infielder
with the San Francisco

wa8 a fine pitcher before and
after World War II. Detroit
pitcher Joe Coleman is an·
other of fhe current baseball
kida.
Such offspring as Mike
Hogan, Earl Averill, and Hal
· Lanier managed to stick
around the big leagues for
several years.
There has been one con·
sptcuous common factor
among all those mentioned
above. None of them could
play baseball like his old

clnn!lti, where Buddy grew
upandflrstwenttoMiamiof
Ohio (later xavier Unlversl·
ty) on a basketball scholarship.
But they never lalk baseball unleaa Buddy brings the .
subject up. Wben Gus was
playing outfteld for the
Reda, Buddy . would tag
along and be In the clul&gt;house, a pint-8ized blond
moppet In a miniature unl- .
fonn, the pet of such as Ted
Kluszewskl and Frank Rol&gt;-

LAS CROABAS, Puerto
Rico (NEA) • A generation
aao, fhe son who followed his

3~

31h 'HP
GARDEN TILLER

seven seasons with the
Cleveland Indians before
being traded to Texas ior the
fortl&gt;coming campaig!l,
signed a contract with his
new employers that wiD pay
him $2.2 mWion over fhe
next six years.
He Is one of the fine third
baseman In the game - Jim
Palmer of BaiUmore calls
him the best glove man at
his position - but he has 110t
been an overpowering
hitler.
·
His father, Gus Bell,
played . in .the National
!.!&gt;ague for 15 oeaaons, the
major part of them with the
Cincinnati Reds, and was In
four AU.Slar games.
"He batted In over 100
runs four different times,"
aays Buddy proudly. " The
highest aalary he ever made
was $27,000."
The Bells are cloae. They

By Murray Oldermaa
'

~

• •

C.D.'s

FinaJly baseball sons measure up

,'

'•

•

The resulting dried btorry ''
the familiar little blac•k pepJ1l'rt'Om , whkh is hla&lt;·k cnti·
sid&lt;' und whit&lt;• inside. 'While•
f)l•pp&lt;•r is the malum! IM•rrv
·with it' mtler husk r'"lll\Vt'fl.'

Avila," Says Bob, handsom~
,and dark-haired like his dad
(Buddy and Gus Bell also
bear a striking phyalcal
resemblance) .
"But my father didn't
push me lrito baseball,
though he Is sliD a scout for
the Boston Red Sox. I didn't
need any stimulation. I
could play when I started
and was the best of all the

kids around."

He was bom anrl

~r~tw

fAther,~

like son"

he's ever given me iS tlnt
when I'm in a hilling slump,
I should try to push the ball
through fhe· middle.
''When we're · together
you'd never know that I'm ~
baseball player. Around
him, I'm always 'Bush.' But
when I'm not there and
!omebody else mentions m e.
"ell, he's proud. "
And that's the way i
ahoutd be.

Giants ·defeat
Reds again
4-2
.

inson.
It's one of the thrills· of

didn't apply (with the possl; Buddy's career that he later
ble exception of Coleman, played with and for Frank ·
who did win 23 games one Robinson when the latter
season).
managed fhe Indians. He
But a couple of ljjlndsome also played against Vada
dudes belting golf balls at Pinson and Leo Csrdenas,
the American Airlines Ce· who were his father's learn·
lebrlly Golf Classic here re- mates.
cently refuted the Idea fhat
Bob Boone, a fine catcher
baseball's sons don't mea· for the Philadelphia Phillies
sure up lo fhelr fathers.
who played for the National
Buddy Bell of the Te:us League In the AII.Siar game
Rangers and Bob Bomie ol last summer, has the same
the PhUadelphla PhiUiea kind of memories.
wereenjoylngthepl'lHIPrinll His father, Ray Boone,
· training exercises and, In • who also started out as a ·
relaxed mOod, tellin8 what It catcher ln\1 .played m~ of
was like lo grow up lmowinll bla 13 yeara In the majors as
fhat your father Ia a m•jor • a shortstop and third base-' ~
league star, And then to man; used to bring young
make more. money playing Bob to the clubhouse too In
baseball than old dad ever Cleveland and Detroit. '.
dreamed of.
"I remem)ler Luke EastBuddy Bell, w~o spent er, Larry .Doble and Bobby

1

Ues since 1973. is not the
hitting fhreal his dad was Ray Boone led the American
League In runs balled In,
with 116 for the Deiroil
Tigers in 1955 - but he Is a
competent batter- and an
excellent receiver. ·
"I'm . also," he says-,
"more · bwlin:essllke and a
better netiotlator than my
lather. ·
"About the only advice

up

Giants, whose fathei-, Ken, Uve near e~tch 'other in Ctn..

rnan.
"Uke

in San Diego, his father's
home town and where Ray
Boone still makes his home.
. The elder Boone touted
other baseball scouts off
young Bob.
" He told them I was going
to school/' recalls Bob. ' 1
was forced Into gelling my
degree, and now I wouldn't
do it any differently."
Bob, who has been the
regular t'e«'iv... of the Phil·

STAR PITCHER Joaa
JOJ!'f! wartlll ap fer a DOW
sea1011 of proleooloaa110ft.
~- J.,ce II chcllled with
Uoo la-1 arm In the
women'• pro ooflball
lequo,, wblcb abe 1-ded
lbree yearo a1o wltb tea1!11 player BWie Joaa Kina
ud aoUer Jaae Blalock.

CINCINNATI (AP )
Terry Whitfield's tiebreaking single In the eighth
Inning helped San Francisco
beat Cincinnati 4-2 Sabtrday,
the Giants' third stralght
victory over the Reds.
.
WIBle McCovey bounced a .
,double high off the center
field waD and Larry Herndon,
fW!nlng lor McCovey, scored
on WhlWeld's base hit. The .
·Giants added a nm In the
ninUt on Jack Clark's double
and Roger Metzger's alngle. l
Mike !vie's lw&lt;H'IUI homer '
into the second.Jevel seats
behind left field gave San
Francisco a Z.1lead In the top
of the sevenUt Inning. But
Ray Knight led of the Reds'
half of the Inning with a 'alngle
and Dave Clllllns, T1llllllni lor
Knight, scored from flral on a
double by Ken Qrlffey ro tie It
Z.2.
Cincinnati opened the
scoring In the second inning

on Dan Drtessen 's single.
Reds' starter Bill Bonham
save up just two base hits In
the first six innings, boUt to
Bill North. Then, with two out
In lhe seventh, Darrell Ewns
walked and ,Ivle blasted his
second homer of the -son.
Am11teur umpire Rolo{er•
C.room.~o~ was involved in a
dispull• at home plate thai
Cinc•innati manal:!;f"r .John Mt··
Namara said could have ·
&lt;'hHn~l'&lt;l the oull:otlll' of the
f{arntl' .

.fohnny Remil was &lt;·alled
nul ai the plate irying lu smre
from Re&lt;'nnd. base nn HRinJ.!h•
hy Kni~ht.
Ren&lt;'h argued thnt San
Frant•iRt:•o t~atrh&lt;•r Mare Hill
had not ronde !he Ia~.

"When I went out to the
pl;tte, he fGrmnn."l said Hill ,
hmt ta g~ecl him fRen&lt;•hl on ·
tht• hrmd," Mt'Namara t')(plain&lt;~ d . "From wht•rc 1 ~~w
I he pluy, I saw &lt;mylight."
The ironv was that if Bench
had nut trft&gt;d to !-i.&lt;'&lt;lrt~ uri the1t
piety, h~ l'nuhl hHve'Scote&lt;J on
:1 lung Oy bill! by Ronhmn ancl
k&lt;'pl the rally alive.
San Fram··iRt'n right tieldt•r
.la&lt;'k Clark snid Rcneh may
hHve bt:~en waved hurm•
because hi ~ thi-owing Him
was suspect.
"I'm sure they ~nt r,cporys
saying my ann was sore,"
Clark said. "Bpi! gut a pretty
good jwnp on the ba)l and I
knew l was J.(oinM to ma~e :.tn
attempt on it."
·

Hoofs and·paws·

BY MARION C. CRAWFORD
Meiga Couaty Mumane Society
.
MIDDLEPORT- The month of March 19'/llls now a thing of
Local Bowling
'the past but foc the Humane Society. it was a memorable
month, Indeed ... with 31 animals being dealt with and happily
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
COMRADES
Morning Glories
no euthanlzatlons of healthy animals necessary,· . · . ·
Morch JD, 1979
REMEMBERED
. Breaking this figure down, It means we placed-six cats;
T.. m
Pis.
PffiLADEIJ&gt;ffiA· CAP)
one
rabbit, and 24 dogs. That's a good track recorjl, folks, but
G. &amp; J . Auto Parts
127 . At onelbne the members of a
we know that aome Meigs CoWlly anilnals did die bedt~Se not
Sears
j18
Karr &amp; Van Zaodt
15 World War I society sipped all creaiW'es that are unwanted are lucky enough ro f•ll into
Newell Sunoco
114 wine from li sllver loving cup the ha,nda of Humane Society·membera. Some are diopped in
gli~bsnd
·
In memory of their deceased , strange areas and fall prey to other animals ,. spe!!&lt;li~ dlrs,.
High Ind. game - Vicky comrades. ,
·
and cruel, sadistic people.
· .
. ·
Gi llilan 205; ~ry Porter 179.
But the honored dead of Ute
. Others are picked up by lhe dog warden or dropped in 'the
High Ind. 3-games - Vicky Society of the Last Mau of
Gillilan 494 ; ~ry Porter 487. · Forty Veterans are too many chute at the pounda. When you find a stray, If you can't or
won't take care of ita few days while ndvertlsipg {!I.'s free) in
High team game - Newell now the su.,ivors roo few
Sunoco 801·
'
' .your local peperfor a good home , then call us. ·
. ·
High team 3-games
Now the sipo are simulated.
The only time the Dog Warden should be coni4cted is lor
Newell Sunoco 2244.·
But for lwo hours it was vicious animals, animals that are killing farm stock, and·lh·ose
alm.ost 1917 again. Four of the
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) · American title jn five years
six surviving members got UtaI ar' obvioualy dlaeased {such as with bad .cases of
Friday Night Ladles
.
- Jack Renner who has led on the PGA Tour.
together for their '47th mange)
March
JO,
1979
The
Meigs County Dog Warden, Charles Hysell, l!'ieS hig. ·
or shared the 'lead aU the
"Now it comes down ro
reunion on Friday, the 62nd best roseetoit that some animals getlnto good hollies, but it Is
St•ndings
way, managed a 2-under.par trying ro ,wi'\ the golf Team
Pis. anniversary of· American
70 and retained a 1-6troke U&gt;urnament, he satd. He
Kenny 's Angels
58 entry into World War I. Two impossible lor this man U&gt; do more than that - there are just
roo many animals involved each month.
48
lead Sjlturday 1n Ute Utird needs a victory ro join his Mine No.3
Bill's Quality Body Shop 41 members, Cbarles W. MWer,
So, pleaae spread the word aboot trying ro find a home lor
round of lhe $250 000 Greater older brother in lhe Parker's
81, of Tomah, Wla., and straya rather than calllnC on the county ro pick them up. II you
A. I. Service
37
Greensboro Open Golf invitational field at Augusta, Honaker C. B.
33 Clarence Evans, . 81, of Sl.
L!umy, the only two-time Don's Upholstering
Toornamenl.
23 Petersburs, -Fla., were aee an animal at the poW!d thalia yours or just one that you
would like ro give a good home ro, please call fhe County
Individual hlah aame
Renner, a slender, intense winner on the tour this
unable to attend.
Commiasloners Office in either Gallia Of Meigs County lor the ·
22-yearoOld who · scored the ,eason, shot a 73 Uta! wok . Donna Powell 178; Betty
• 174; Etta may
telephone Dllll)ber of the Dog Warden.
highest finish of his brief him out of title cont,enlion at Whltlalch
Norton 170.
Neither cotuity has facUlties for cals or kittens, Meigs
career as a nmner-up in th.is 219.
. Ind ividual high series ...
/
Humane
Society will respond ro any calls on them or there Is a
eventayearago,putrogether
Gary Playe r, the little Belty Whitlatch 481; Et •
tamay
Norton
473;
Pauline
c'
Shelter
in Athens where they will be accepted.
.
Cat
a 54-hole total of 2o9. He was 7 South African who Is tuning Fields 431.
,
' NEGoTIATONS
Meantime, If you want any type of animal, do give us a cail
shots under par .On the 6 9114- up lor Ute defense of his
Team high game
BREAK OFF
and if we don'( have what you want at the time, you can bet
yard Forest Oaks Co~try Masters title, birdied the Parker's A. I. Service 447; nhASHINGTON CAP) _
your bottom,.!lollar we will get it ohortly - and wiD call you a.t
Club course.
final hole lor a 71that put him Bill's Quality Body Shop 456 ;
· ., 'Teamsters union and the that time.
Bobby Wadkins who's in third place and . In a Kenny's Angels .«7.
Team high series - Bill's \ 'trucklnglnduatr'y are back at
We've had a lot !If calls In the pest week from folks wbo
trying U&gt; join older' brotHer strongly challenging IJO!lilion ~~aht_v
Body Shop 1368; squareonelntheirstruggleto wanted ro belp us one way or ·another - several wanting U&gt;
Lanny on a trip ro Augusta
at 212.
,
nny_s Angelo 1324 ' Mine agree on contr,•ct Ierma
make contributions, one offering ro keep animals lor .us that
Ga., and the Masters
George BW'Tl8 ilnd Tom No. 3 1297.
rndlng a week-long ahutdown ctop uP on the far side of the county, some offering clothes and
week, shot !he best round of Purtzer were next at 213.
. of m~jor trucking !Inns.
furniture for the Thrift Shoppe in Middleport. Others gave us
the tournament a :&gt;-under· Burns shot a 69 and Purlzer
COUNTIES
)
· Negotiations between the c!og houses (we can use more), and one great Pomeroy couple .
per 67, in the .;.mY, breezy matcbed par 72. Jim Thorpe
REIMBURSED
fWO sides broke off Friday
gave us a '- fool chain llltk fence . and gate. SevOlral +-weather. He moved into !Uld Vance Heafner wer,e '!I
and the federal contributiopa were made by people we'd helped with animalS
second ' at ,210.
214. Heafner shot a 70, ThOrpe ·. COLUM BUS, Oljle (At' ) - 1.1 afternoon,
\n~aror Wa)'ne L . Hoi'vllz
"It's the first time all year 71.
state Auditor Thomas E. I laid afterwards the union and - and by the way, those of you who got animals Irani us
recently or thai we helped with strays, don't forget that we get
I've putted decent at all "
Seve Ballesteros, tlie yourig Ferguson's office reported
said Wadkins, who won the .Spaniard who won this event Friday a total of $l 7a,o5:1 has . Industry were "no closer to along strictly with financial help from you (P.O. Box 682,
prestigious European Open a year ago, struggled to a 74 been reimbursed to 49 itgeement titan we were at Pomeroy, 0. 45?69).
counties lor -sts .
ed ~he time the strike started
'lbere Is another way folka can help lis and that Is by
last fall but has yel to take an ·and 220.
., ~
mcurr
jllst Saturday night."
eontrlbutlng
to and purchasing from the aruiual Easter Bazaar
Wider Ohto s public defender
The decision to break off
that will be ROlng on the 13th and t41h at our Thrift Shoppe,
program.
:
fAe talks made it cortaln the C9"1er of Walnut and Second In Mlddleporl (acr08B the street
Under the program, the \ thutdown would str{.tch Into a ·from Dr. Conde's or VlUage Pharmacy). There wlll be lots of
!';te must pay half the f1econd week, thl\'!atenlng good home-baked goods, candy, crafts, etc. and you won 'I be
ense and operatl~nal costs , : !COnomlc disruption~ beyond aorry if you shop there thOile two days. Members: Anything
of indigent Ohioans who' : he aiready hard-hit auto you would like ro contribute will really be appreciated ... by the
appear In court. The . ndustry
working members and lhe animals .
· r.emalning hallls born by the
·
I' Now, let's iry ro help people who have Iost'their pets·during ·
counties.
" the pest couple of weeks . Anyone knowing the whereabOuts of ·
The state's share In this \' •
\
any of th~ animals pleaae call me '' 992-7680. ·
payment . was $46,237 for ·
Husky -, Gold brown, W-blaek ITlOUI, medium size
.SIX MORE EXECUTED
court-approved legal counsel
,female, mlsil.ng for two weeks, ma'y be sick, lost in ¥icinlty
CLEVELAND {AP)
singled ro center and stole and$131,616toward operating . TEHRAN, Iran (AP) New Ljma Road.
•Left-bander Rick Waits second. ·Torrez walked Andy costs,
~ 'ring squads executed six
Collie-Terrier type, blonde, male medium size, lost in
. ore of the ohal)'s security ·
checked I!Gston on just one Thornton Intentionally and, ~-vicinity
of Old Route 33, he.,limpa a llltle ai a result of recent hit
·
en
ea{ly
Saturday,
bringing
hil - Jerry Rerny's leadoff one out later, Wayne_ &lt;;age
by
car
and
doctoring by H. s. .
·
t!
nine
the
number
shot
after
single In the sixth Inning walked, loading Ute ~~··
Beagle
..:..
female,
brown
with
black
back, whi~ feet and
and Mike Torrez walked In Torn;z. lhen walked Hora,ce
~ brief pause br' Islamic spot on chest, lost near Beech st., Middleport,
Sociabl• N&lt;•wogathering
~ ·( volutlonary justice and
anawers ro ·
the winning nm cia Cleveland Speed on a 3-1 pitch to SCOI-e
The. fl rs .· newsp• per,.- f lin
lati
f
name
',
Hoogle."
,
1
stopped the Red Sox 3-0 the first run,
·woman wa ~ Madame J)ou~~el
8 speeD on onner
In closing, pleue, folks, now that the hot weather is about
Saturday iQ the Indians '
Duane Cuiper then greeted d&lt;• Person fl677·1'1'11l a P !me Mlnist~ Amlr Abbas ·
·
to
hit
us, when you go shopplns or visiting - don't take ·tbe
· p
. ,..,
veida migbt be nut.
home opener.
reliever Tom Bur8Jlleler with . . wt&lt;· 1ow or
1e•1t
arts
w
••
,
never
be
statt
radio
oaid
tha
famUy
pets with you. That car of )'OII's·lo just a short time can
, Torrez, wbo gave up foW' a tWIH'Iln double down the
her apartment ·for 40 years Ia '• batdt
~e
a furnace and snuff out the Ufe ofyour !rusting pet ...
hlts in· '/2.3 innings, also . left field line,
.
'WU exeeuted in
·but held partie• dally al ·
leliw It at horne, It's much better elf. Also !TIIIke sure your
pitched ilo-.\11 iJa11 tlrough
Boston got a runner as far whirh ••~h guesi was .r•· .,T .r an •t I a.m . . after 15
the first five Innings. The as third only · once In the quin.•l to ~oive h&lt;•r ;: 1i&lt;!bil nl ~ :s
court procee,dlngs. ·· animals have shelter from the sun and lola of freoh .wale• lllld
good food dally. They rely on you to do what's right - don't
Indians threatened several game, hut Waits got out of the . n&lt;'\""· ~h&lt;' !lll'n pr"""'"rl " ·
oadcast said verses
1
misuse Utat lo:ving trust that lhey put in you.
times af!ter that before jam when Dwight Evans was hanclorilil'll newsfll'p&lt;'r _ ro \ the Koran, the Moslem
Thanka 10 much for the many "lhan.k you's." for bringing
finally scoring all their runs caught in a rundown between &lt;'a c·h i:&lt;Sue ,~ whkh waR whit•· ho book, were read at Ute
back
!tools and Paws. You are entirely welcome. 1 enjoy il,
lh an eighth-Inning raDy.
third and home.
II' &lt;'ir&lt;'nlaledror m1•nlhs
be8 '!'log and end ~f the
almost as much "'' I lovt anlnials.
·
·
pro \"ding~.
Willi one out, Bobby Bonds
~
' .

:g

Renner retains

lead iri tourney

next

Cleveland
tops ·Bosox

1

dr

o

•

0

1

6

'"

;r

0

•

'•

�· - ----·-----· ---.. ~-· .. -·

•.

--~· ""'·r-·-----~-- ·-~

- - -·---~---..

C-3-The SundHy Times-Sentinel . ~nndav. Apr. 8. 1979

•

Race going down to the wzre

C'-2-Tho SundHy Times-Sentinel. SundHy, Apr. 8, 1979

•

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE
LYNE CENTER - WEE)( OF APRILB, 1979
DATE -- GYM NASIUM
NATATORIUM

Twins edge Oakland ·5-3 in opening tilt
By Herschel Nlsseosoo
Adams' double dur•ng a
AP Sports Writer
three-run sixth-Inning rally
Minnesota's first baseman that gave the Twins a :&gt;-3
went 2·for-4 and delivered a victory over the Oakland A's
key single.
in .the opening game lor botllt
No. it wasn't Rod Carew, teams.
the ex-Twin and pereMiai
In the only other AL game,
American League batting the Baltinlore Orioles downed
king. Carew went 3-for-5 the Chicago White Sox. Teus
rriday night and drove in two and Detroit were postpoJied
runs, but it didri't help his lor the -.nd day in a row by
new team, the California · inclement weather.
Angels. who were drUbbed by
"Rod Carew Is Rod Carew
the homer-happy Seattle and I'm Ron Jackson and I
Mariners It~.
try not to worry about It,"
But Ron Jackson, who Jackson aald. "I play a dlf.
came over from California in ler151t type ol game than Rod
the Carew deal and has taken Carew. Rod Carew is a seven'
over the first bsse job Carew tbne batting cluunpiim and I
vacated, tied the hre with a haven't won a battlns
single and scored on Glenn champlonJhlp yet, so I jllllt

try and do the best I can.
"I can just feel the pressure
on me. though. I'm batting
cleanup and I'm going to be
the big guy in the lineup that
everyone is going to be
looking for to do good. I felt
Uke I was the one who had to
get the team going. Tonight, I
drove in · the lint run and
after that we broke It open.

~~~;~s:..rt~a~·~:y:

Dave Goltz pitched 8 1-3
Innings for 'the Twin&amp; and
Mike ManhaD retired the
Jast two batters.
MadDen lt, Aqell a
Ruppert Jones hit two

ONLY '20

a Per hr.

Regular S2S

.

workout

$2 per wlilk~in VISit .

Offer Good April 1st thru April 14th

THE FITNESS CENTER
411 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

.r

36' x 54' Equipment
Storage Building

.. .

c~a··

(B
''

renee · evo

)

I:'
.L'

ranczs

*7.600
'

Stron!l&gt;anel• colored stl!ei siding and roofing, fo~r whit!! skylights;
on" steel mandoor, on" 18' x 13' and on" 18' x 12' sliding door. Builders
risk insurance provided. Length of Equipment Storage· Building may
. be increased by 18_
' sections, also at sale prices.
·
Other slzesaveiiabie
OIJ!!r exp.i res May 31, 1979
Ta. nol lnduded, to 1M built •• conttructlon tcntd~o~lt permlb, on ltvel alt. 111llhln 30 mll11 ol (Jmbl• Sek1
Otfl«.. Twrn.: 20'111. down, 40"' on delivery of rTIII•rW., bla.,_ on comp.. uon.
·

EXCELLENT WARRANTIES On Strongpanel•colored steel
siding and roofing, materials and workmanship. structural
strength,arid treated poles.

--Call 9r Write ·r or more lnformatlon--

.UMBAU.GH POLE BLDG· CO., INC.
fl. 0. Box 702

.
MARIETTA, OHI045750, (614) 373-0130

Doy or night message center TOLL FREE 1:800·821-7700 ext. 806

JPU'I Umbaugh Pole Building

doublf!~eader:

·~

Women's Tralck vs. O.U . &amp;
Denison 1 p.m.

'""

'1 p .m .. doubleheader.

greatest player--Sands

' ;•.:.·. ~·.

the 1950s with the Cleveland
Pipers who were AAU
champs. The next year the
Pipers ( who also had former
Kenwcky great Jojmny Cox)
joined the ABL, the brainchild of Abe Saperstein of the
Trotters. Bevo and his teammates won the only ABL title
e~er awarded as the league
folded in its second _year.
Berger, in his book, asked
t'rancis if he thought that he
could have played in the NBA
- "I think I would have done
aD . right. Me and Pettit
played a good bit the same shooting and everything."

Manning

will

miss two games

Sports shorts. •

Dan· Driessen homered for
tile Reds in the iiflll before
EVIlns· Rill single in the sixth
bOOsted San Francisco into a
3-1 lead.

'" "
"'-'""'

GREENSBORO, N.C.- -Jack
Lopez birdied the ninth
Renner shot a 1-nnder-par 71 through 12th holes !Jt.moving
to take a !-shot lead in the to a 8-under-par 131 for the
$250,0()0 Greater Greensboro tournament.
Defenlling
Open Golf Tournament.
champion Post also h8d a
Barney Thmpson .moved second-round 70 to go with an
into second with a 71-140. opening 68. Higuchi rl Japan
Gary Player rallied from a . had matching 6911 to share the
· pa(r of bogeys on par-6 holes lead.
One stroke bact of the
for a 71, leaving him two
strokes off the lead at 141 . He leaders was joAnne~.
shared third with Tom Purl- who shot 70 to go wilh'•her
zer,whoalsoshot71.
first round 69.
· _. .
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif.
TRACKANDFIELIJ~
- Nancy Lopez rattled off
ATHENS, Greece ·- ••
four consecutive birdies en .Turkey's veteran ~r•
route to a 70 and a share of VeW BaUi, won the annuaJ.:I6·
the second-round lead in the mile Marathon to Alli!Rs
$305,000 Dinah Shore Winners Marathon race in 21louJ1;"28
· Clrele golf .tournament with minutes, 4.4 seconds. ~
Sandra Post and Chako was Anatoiy Arlukov rl" the
Higuchi.
Soviet Union in 2:28:04.8.

." l"'"

F.~"
S
T
ANDINGS
.
+:
~· · ·..

~':

clillli , J ~lliiiiiiUIIUII!

~ ,.
BaSketball Association
·r ·-~~ ,,..
· At A Glance
~· •.. &gt;By The Auoci•ttd Preos

fi ll

I

;,&lt;I IIIIIIIIIIIIUI I,~ ,,

' 1!~1 1 ~lllUIUIIIUilll •,l
Jllllf
·"' I
1111 I'. JIIIUIIIIIUU"
II IJHllJIIUlliJ ';!II I
Ul!i ' ·.I IIIIIIIIIIILtiJI ·IIil

How to make
. you~ money
make · more ·money.
11/!1,' :lf JUUIIIIIUlii!'U il
'lilU. • UlllllJIIIInllitll
'1m1'1 ,,flntlllllllm l UJ
;lilt• I• iltlllllllll!lr..l.!; tl ll

I IIIIUIJIII!Ifli ~·J I
11111 ~ ' 'nlllllllfiiii~JI IttJ •

irll'll'

IIIII ' II 'l lliln!IIIIUI!II II U
1111 lt• MIIJIUIIIIIIIIIII:illl:

'1111 II ,,IOIIIJIIIUI!II II:lll

ll tt r: ~l lfliUIUIIIII It:r:! l

Plan.
Passbook
3 Month.
1 Year
2~ Years
· 1 4 Years
a·Ye.ars
8 Years

Interest

..

Annual
Yield

SY.o%

5.12%
5.73%

6%

6.27%

6%%

6.81% '•

5%'

. 714%

Minimum

$1.000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

(liP)
Cleveland Indians centerfielder Rick Manning will
miss at least two gsmes
because .of a strep throat.
Manning, who was held out
of the season opener
Thursday at Boston, was one
of four Indians players who
visited Lutberan M'edicai
Center · · Friday
for
exa'ininationS. He w3s
ordered to go home and stay
in bed at least through
Sunday .
Pitcher David Clyde,
currently on the 21-day
disabled list, was admitted to
the hospital for further tests.
l,yde has been suflering
· from a gastritis condition
that has caused him
considerable pain and
discomfort.
1\elief pitchers Sid Monge
and Dan Spillner both
underwent examinations . for
sore throat.9 , but were given
permission to dress for
today 's home opener against
the Red Sox.
BOWLING

WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn.-·
Earl Anthony, who suffered a
heart attack just 10 montm
ago, amassed a 578-pin lead
in the $125,000 BPAA Open as
he soUght his second straight
title.

'""

"Bolenl'pat ft.
.... au together til
tills RIIXL." ~:-:.
Dale

·

·~A1fanta

7.90%

il4%

8.17%

Federal Regulations require substantial ·interest penalty for,early withdrawal' on
savings certificates.
·
·

C&amp;S Bank

City
·. - Indiana
. Milw .
·. pcago ·

: w..

•

,
.

•

Member FDIC

•

con·

.

manager .

Griggs, wide receiver, and
Henry Bradfey, defensive

tackle.

COLLEGE
MANHATTANVILLE COL·
L'EGE - Named Rolph
Tedesco head basketball
.

SUSQUEHANNA - Named
Harnum ' ethll'tlc

VIRGINIA
STATE
COLLEGE -- Named W.
Floyd Le isure head basket"

ball

c~ach .

28
Vancouver

.580
.46'1

-IS 35 .563 61n

:: ·• ·"til-t land
San Diego
Golden SJ .
1

x-Boston
Bullalo
Toronto
Minn.

·

. 556 7
42 39 .519 10
37 44 .457 15

..

x -

·,

Denver 107, Boston 101
Atlanta 112, Detroit 96

~ansts

~

'

City · 117,

Jersey 114, ot

. 51
Pitts . 35
Los Ang . 33
Wash. 23
Detroit 22

•

New Jersey at Boston

,

Kansas City

(

•,

key start • Single 'pedal hydrostatic
control • quiet performance o quick
respanse steering o 42" mower with
height adjustment from seat o comfortable seat adfusts without tools o
Tiller. snowthrower, blade and wide
range of othei attachments available.

......

. OFF

16 11 113
JO 13 83
34 12 . 78
40 15 61
40 16 60

327
27S
285
265
248

200
271
285
326
291

~ ~
, • _.

$333
. , SHEET .

21ameu wal panetrng.

,..~~~"rt11!n\irl~~~ biDw our regular
lOW

~rite

lilt MilL

. ..

• •• 1

•

II

.

•

5/32 BLUE MIST ·

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pd. GB
W. L. Pet, GB
• Montreal
1 0 1.1100
Baltimore
1 0 1.1100
1 0 1.1100 .
'· New York
1 0 1.000
Boston
I
0
1.1100
~t •.Louis
MJ!w.
1 0 1.0011
~ - Chicago
0 I .1100 1
0 0 .000
I, :.~
Detroit
0
1
.1100
1
;:!!i!•·
Cleve.
Ot .IIOOl
0 1 .1100 1
Ofll++s.
New York
0 1 .1100 1
WEST
Toronto
0 1 .1100 1
San Fran.
2 0 1.000
WEST
Hou$tQn
1 0 1.000 '' "
2 0 1.1100
~osAng .
1 1 .500 1 . Seattle
Kan
.
City
1 0 1.000 '•'
!lan Diego
1 1 .500 1
Minn .
1 0 1.000 111
Altllnta
., 0 ·· 1 _. 000 Pt:.~ Texas
0
.000 1
Cine.
o 2 .1100 2 Chlc.-go • 0 01 .000
1'12
Frldiy's Games
Oakland
0 1 .000 1ln
Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 2, 10 Calit .
o 2 .000 2
innings
San Francisco 7, Cincinnati

.

Houston 2, Atlanta 1
St. Louis e, Philadelphia. 1

Los Angeles 10, San Diego 1
Only games schedu led
Sundoy's Game•
Montreal at Pittsburgh
New York at C~lcago

...
·

.....

.Phil-lphla at St. Louis
Atlanta at Houston
San Diego at Los Angeles
Mondly's Games

_h\gntreal at New York
Clnclimati at Atlanta (n)
Pittsburgnan&gt;l\lladelphla, .
(n)

..

-...f..
_.:.,

1'1U81 11-.1 orl mnm..- 100 boM n.lcl.

"8uddt'"

5/32

'9.79

'8.79

WESTERN CEllAR

1*111) tmry form 111UII btl ~18d wilt! 1 tM.OO
..,,IY I •
IMm. An~ ~unctt Df '-t w~l bt m.t:t.
en, 01'1 ,.mtt~~n rlfQiilft ~~.cl no lit• ttw&gt; Ap~l

'*

21, IIIJI. All rlfurlds IUblect to 20'1111 ~dllne thltge,.

'11.89

'10.19

5/32

WILDERNESS PINE

'11.89

'10.19

CHESTER COUNTY PINE

1

11.89

'10.19

DEER LDOGE PINE

'11.89

'10.19

1/4

TAHOE

114

NUIMEG

Minnesota 5, Dakland 3
Seattle 14, California 6
Only games scheduled

'9.99

'8.49

'11.49

'9.99

4*-70U or write:

' 1/4 IIISIOL BIRCH

Chicago at Balfimore
Milwaukee at New York

5132 MAPl£ STRIP

TOf' onto at Kanoas City
Mlnnesoto at Qak(and
Callforhia at .Seattle

5/32 CROSS OVER OM

Boston at Cleveland

(' ) .

Los Angeles at Houston, n

-··---.=

VtG BROWN (VINYL

'10.99

RED ..ICK·

'15.75

POTMUNT
HOUSE PlANT SEEDS
NOW IN STOCK

• One Coat Coverag e
• Blister B. Peel Resistant
• No Chalk..Washdown • Non· Yellowing

DRYWALL
3/ 81418
1121418
GALVANIZED 21"160"

l/214112

'3ll SHEET

SN-£
SAl£
SALE

133t
1349

14"

ELECTRIC
WIRE
12·2 WITH GRf)UND
250FT. ROll

FIBERGLASS·
Foil Facltf
IS" I 4"

MESA STOllE

:::;

BLUE (a.DSE OUT)

50 SQ. FT.

ROLL

ss99
SPECIAl

112x8.· FJ. FURRING ..........;.. ,............ 35'.

....,..
'

. 2x4x8 ft. ECOIIOM\'.......................11.119

.......:
•
.....,;;,.

-

~

.

• Nludcal
fumltul'l
1 loetfne .,.,_

No. 300 PANa ADHESIVE SALE lUBE 'fr

..,..

30 SQ. FT.

ROLL
.S..ICIAL . SALE

'5" ROll
SPECIAL

2 IN STOCK

"':t:;

·=~
-.·

-STORE HOURS

ZINN's·~··iANDING.1? ·
Boats and Acc•sorle•
Rou1e 7, G'illipolis, Ohio
Open 7 days (614) 446·7044

lilxl ft. FURRING.............. ;.......... : 65'

:-:

·

• Bomber·
• Hyi:lra~ttort
INI11 bo•ts
ba" boat.
• Terry
~ • I•J•

PROOIJCTS

-

The A,... ~s Newe•t, Mo•t CDmplete Marine f..turlng:
• FINrform boata ·

ON ALL
PAINT
AND

ETOil£ (VINYL COVERED)

Monday's Games

Detroit al Kansas City, (n)
Oakland at Seattle, (nl

'!Nil _,. tiM Gllll!xllll Pool of .._ OWo .....
~ bW lt!e Zh\'•LMdng 1r1uncn ,_,., ~·
L.ndlnt. c.- ot ~· IOdly, ~. ~

LAARY WILT
cio Zinn'• Lsndina
431 Plh StrNt
Gttl!ipotil, on~ -46831

• Mercury outbo1rd
motora

SAV£$5

w.tfftl

Come to Zlrtn'l LAndinO to pick up compl.te rulellnd tntr, ,forms
calll81~1

20% OFF

HAND
TOOLS
20% OFF

CYPRESS

Sunday's Games
Texas at Detroit

Zlnn'1

0EAOLikeltS...TUftOA.Y, A.,.,.IL21.

for)

MINNESOTA PAINTS

Baltimore 5, Chicago 3.

p.m. 81"'11 1:00 p.m. ~ACTICI DAY, lA~&gt;(.
Af"!IILZIOI ~·:OOt.m. tndliODUt1.~
· . ~~
M~T OAV, SUNDAY, N"fiiL 3M IN &amp;wo• " ·
INner. tlmP. Rout• 7, G.11po11a, ONo. T 1

,

'

•NOTICE ..
.SWI~ING POOL PAINT HEADOUAmRS

'8.79

5/32 W11AND PECAN

'Te•as at Detroit. ppd .. rain

'8.79 .

5132 CRANBRINK OAK

5/32

Friday's Games

'9.79

bctt ~ 111\MI,.,... In liMOn

lllhkl9 IWtl

~Wid ont Doltt, bofl fleh8rmtn hoking
~llthtng ac..- IIWJbalh ~Ill_,. of 8{ttor
~ · A Pl"~eomplt!8d IIICf ~ lbvbotfi!Mitld·

OALLON

•

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

.,..
. ..

WAS S9.!19

.

BUNGAlOW HICKORY
MEDIUM IAUAN

\ I

; BASEBAll SCOREBOARD
'

'~•.•

REG.

W-4$ S13.99

~!~~~~!~~~~~~!.~CEILING PAINT $799

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT

•

•••

ACRYLIC LATEX SEMI,GLOSS ENAMEL

Covtnag9 • H1d0!1 Hull!s , C riit:~! ,
lmPt)riCCIIOI"IS
,
•

B&amp;D
COMBINAnON

WAS $1J.9i

J• flloo

• Warran1ed Scrutlbable • One Coal Slain
&amp; Falle A0$15\anl • 3Q Popular Colon• .

BLADE

~1''

durin&amp; this bic

4'11' DESCRIPnON

~__,..~

7%" SAW

Gilit any room i1 your nom1e •
a late lift •. •w~h rich~

I

1

SS@!N

••••• •• •••

;

262 3rd Ave .

Pennmil SeiVice'
1010 FilS! Ave.
Gallipolis, Obio

G=~ ACRYLIC LAT~ ~!~~~~PAINT

BLACK

STARTS

York Rangers , (n)
End Regular Se.son.

Cleveland

i.

•

20%

New York Islander&amp; at New

I

·-

98 310 267
87 273 252
79 258 244
61 2$6 282

(n)

l~dlana

Denver al Phil adolph Ia
at San Antonio

':

....

.14
15
13
12

. 5undly's Games
Washlnaton
St. Louis a! Chicago
Tor onto at Boston•. ( n)
Colorado at Buffalo, (n)
Montreal at Detroit, (nl
Allant~· at· Phlladelphl~.

Chicago at Oo!troll .

•t

DAVIS'

SAVE UP TO s3oo GALLON

SALE

Pittsburqh at

Sunday's Games

•1

Under .New
Management

TRIMMER .................. ..

PRIZE - -CORDLESS

lie

'• ":eattle 113, Los Angeleo 93

o 11 hp Briggs &amp; Stratton Engine with

276

x -· clinched di-vision
"
FridaY's Games
' '
Atlanta 9, New York
New
•
1 Ra~ers 2 ·
New · Mtnnesota 2, Vancouver 2,

~lden State 91, PQrtland

::

NOW OPEN

•

DAYS

287

Norris Divisl"n

Milwaukee UO ,
:: CEreans 131 ·
' ~uston 112, Eleveland 110
: ·'"'Phoenix 118, San Diego 117
. ::

is the fath er of Lew is'
daughter, l.aHonda.
·
The Jawsuit says Lewis
lived with the Tiger outfielder
from Septem ber 1973 to
September 1977.
But Le Flore's attorney,
Jepth a Sc hur~ma n said :
"Things have come to our
attention that cast doubt on
that the contention that the
child was fath ered by.
.,
LeFlore ."

VALUE

210
237

Chicago 128, Washington

114

out its season with a 38-44
record while New Orleans
finished at 26·!i6, the wo•·st
record in the NBA .
· Hawks t2Z, Pistons 96
John Drew scored 22 points
and six Atlanta teammates
aiS. scored ip double figures
as the Hawks beat the Pistons ·
and stayed one·hnlf game
behind Houston in their race
lor the homc-eourt advantage
in the flrst·round of the
playoffs.

.A

35· 15 71 240 271

42 13
36 27
33 32
28 39

x-Montr.eal

cllnthed division
Friday's Ga~es

Indiana " 136, Philadelphia

.•

DETROIT : lAP) - An
attorney for Detroit Tiger
Ron Le~'iore, defending the
baseball star in a paternity
suit, says there is some doubt
that Leflore is the father of a
2-year..,ld child.
Wayn e County ·Circuit
Judge William J . Giovan is
hearing the suit, filed earlier
this year by Deborah Lewis, a
. 30-year..,ld nurse 's aide. The
lawsuit claims that LeFlore

ii

Marque" Johnson c:f'orf'li J&lt;t
pcunts as Milwaukee closed

APRIL
9-10.11-12-13
&amp; 14TH

Wales Conference

45 36

118

SPRING

Adams Division

11;:.~

30 .625

l,at'crs 135, 76crs 118

Guard lUcky Sol&gt;cr. hit 12
of 17 shots fro m teh field and
scored 30 points as Indian a
snapped Philadelphia's fivegame winning streak.
Bulls 1Z8,llullets Ill
Guards Wilbur Hoiland ·and
John Mengelt scored 20 points
each and Heggie Theus added
i8 as ,..the Bulls beat the
Bullets.
Buckcts140, Jazz 131

There's some doubt about

. · x.

25 42 13 63 211 291
St . Louis 17 49 12 46 243 344
Colora~o 15 53 11 41 205 326

9

.463 91,,
.370 17

52 29 .642

·so

. ·- Phoenil'IO
·. -~ Ang.

·•

f'8rtk:lpt!lon " 0Mn 10 In\'

director.

Bank

. x.Chicago

Pac:ific Division

: '"x--seattle

'•

hwa

FOOTBALL
Notlonol Foolboll Luguo .
NEW
ENGLAND
PATR lOTS - Named Ron
Erhardt head coach ind
Frank
Kilroy general

· Don

47 34
38 43
38 44
30 St

games while the Spurs lose
their last two.

6 BIG

.....
-··
TOURNAMENT DAY- Sunday, Aprll29,1979 :::::;:~
ENTRY DEADLINE·- Saturday, Aprll21. .1979 :C:
bltwollijlic-':

American Ltague

coa(:h .

Sniv•he Division

Western Conference

•~
Midwest Division
~ uLJenver
.. 47. 34 .580

::

''"''

0

Conodlan ·
Foolboll League
WINNIPEG BLUE
BOMBERS - Signed Perry

Annual yield applies if intlirest is lett on deposit for a full year.

30 51 .370 17h
26 S6 .317 22

'"W~w Orleans

..
'•·.

18t Prize - A new Bomber be• boat complete '
with 40 H.P. Mercury outboard end trailer!
2nd Prlze ·- t7110.00 .
· --------....
3rd Prize - t500.00
"
4th Prize - doo.oo
5th Prize - t11i0.00
8th PHze - t100.00
7th Prize
.....,. 10th Prize - t&amp;&amp;.OO
BIG BASS - t11i0.00

BOSTON REO SOX
Signed Dennis Eckersley,

tract extensiOf'!. ·

45 36 .556 21,:.~
JO 51 .370 17'/:;~

..:tT.e-ve .
''"'"Detroit

'

Robertson

112 3,j.4
Ph il o. 39 24 15 93 275
NY Rangers
40 28 11 91 314
Atlanta 42 30 8 90 325

45 35 .543 2

.;etOuston

....,"

x-NY Islanders
11'1 15 14

47 33 .588

.·~~hAnt.

AI A Glan&lt;e

Patrick Division
w 1 t pts gl go,

Central Division

CASH AND fRillS TOTAUftiJ tWP1 M•llf•

Sports Trans111ctions
By The Assacloted Press
. BASEBALL ··
flve- :~ear

31 51 .378 24
28 52 .350 26

~ ~n,

cu;v~:LAND

.

36 44 . 450 18

New York
Boston

Pro Hockey

By The Associated Press
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference

8 1, :.~

San Francisco at Cincinnati

Transactions

pitcher, to a

54 26 .675
46 35 .568

'"'f»Hila .
NeW Jersey

;

. '1St An.n ual
open bass tournament

Friday's

7.62%

7%%

''· .

W. L. Pd. GB

• • ..,...

...

best in the hi s1ory of the
franchi se . Alvan Ad ams
scored 23 points,· including
the winning basket on a dunk
with 2D seconds left.
· Rockets 112, Cavaliers 1.10
Moses • Malone scored 30
points. including two free
throws with 10 seconds left ,
as Houston beat Cleveland
and remained in the rwming
for the Central Division title.
The Rockets can tic ~an
Antonio for firS\ place if
. Hom:tnn ' w;ns it 1"i la st two

'

Atlantic Division

•.- x-wash .

Gcargc Johnson just before
(he huilor. Birdsong and Phil
Ford scored four pointse ach
in the five-minute overtime
period for Kansas City, which
never trailed in the extra
session.
Sonits 113, Laker&gt; 93
Seattle clinched the Paci!ic
Division title and a firstround bye through the
·playoffs by beating the
!.akers as· guard s Gus
. Williams and Dennis Johnson
scored 31 and · 20 points,
respectively . The Sonics
jumped 111 front 14-4 and were
never caught.
Warriors 91, Blazers 87
Robert Parish had 22 points
.and 13 rebounds as Golden
·s tate beat Portland despite
scoring only nine points in the
last period; t he lowest total
by any team in one quarter
this season.
·
Suus 118, ~Uppers 117
.Phoenix erased an '18-point
· third-quarter deficit to beat
San Diego. It was the Suns'
eighth straight vlctory . and
raised their· record to 50-30,

Phoenix at LOs Angeles. (n)
End Regular Season .

Eastern Conference

~-~ ·

ZINN'S lANDING

GYMNASTICS
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)
Seven men and women who
represented the United Slates
in the 1978 world champlonshipa in France will compete
in the United States Gym·
nastlcs Federation championsh~ in Dayton May 1719.
About !Omen and 52 women
already have qqalified for the
three-day event at the
University of Dayton Arena
through a series of. competitions.

' National

\.. 11 ......

2
lft 1U11 .. 1UIIIIIIIIIIUII! 'J f

,

Mter ·· Madlock singled
honie the Giants' first run in
the lourth,.Evans capped the
rally with a run-scoring
. double.

..

Women's Softball vs . Akron U.

7•2

'(V o

... - u

~

Apr. 14 Baseball IJS. Cedarville-I ·p.m ..

•

I I

)~: ~INCINNATI (API- Bill
· :·-Madlock drove in thr&lt;;e runs
and smred three and Darrell
Evans drove in two more as
the San Francisco Giants
beat (..'incinnaU 7-2 Friday
night for their second straight
VICtory over the Reds.

• .....

l'istons1.
BY JAMES SANDS
The rest of ihe Whirlwinds'
GALUPOUS - Recently
some sportswriters have team l!lcluded !in 1005) : Ted
declared Lsrry Bird as the Annstrong, a 6-9 center from
ueatest coDege bssketbsD Michigan State (played one
player of aU times. Who year with the Philadelphia
·Warriors); BID Ripperger, a
reaDy was the greatest?
"No, it wasn't Oscar 6-0. guard from Rio Gran de
Robertao,~, 11 Dr. J,'.' ''Pistol" and Chase College; AI
Pete Marovich, nor anyone Schreiber, a S-10 guard from
from a nationally ranked Rio Grande and UU; Bill
collqe, but Clarence 11 Bevo" McCuDmn, a &amp;-a center from
Francis who holds the l.oulsville; Harvey Babetch,
following Nt.:AA records: a 6-3 -forward from Bradley;
most points In a game-113 in C&amp;i Christiansen, a &amp;.6 for·
I~ !lit set and broke his own ward from Toledo; and Jim
record three tbnes in the Gerber. a &amp;.6 guard from
same season); most field Bowling Green.
Cal Christiansen had
goals, one .pme-37 (11164);
most free throWll made, one played live years in the NBA,
&amp;.ame-37 (I~; most games mostly with the Rochester
over 50 points, one season~ . Royals and had Scored over
(1953-64); most games over 1,500 points. Rochester (later
50 points, career-14; and Cincinnati and now Kansas
highest one-season average City Kings) had the best
!1953-M)-46.5 per game." · backcourt combination in the
The above is taken from the NBA - Bobby Wanzer and
book. "The Best, Worst and Bob Davies along with some
Most Unuaual in Sports" by future NBA coaches - Alex
stan and Shirley ·Fischler Hannwn, Jack McMahon and
pubilahe.J in. um by CBS Red Holzman. Former Ohio
Publications. Francis Is also Stater Arnie Risen wa's also
mentioned in another on the team.
recently pubilahed book from
In 1955 the Whirlwinds
.CBS - "Where Are They played at Washington Sehool
Now?" by Phil Berger.
in GallipoliS against a group
' The Berger book points out of local aU-stars that insome additional statistics ori cluded: Gene James, Jerry
lUo Grande's most famous Glilen, Tom Neal, Don
athlete. In Bevo's first year Johnson, Jim Rollyson, Bill
at Rio he scored 116 points Carrithers (the GAHS
against Ashland Junior coach), Bill Johnson, t&lt;;en
College and averaged lila! Curry, Wayne Evans, Brock
year 50 per game. The NCAA Borden, Frank'Capehart, Bill
·refused to recognize these Capehart and Hindu Henstats, however. In Bevo'a derson. 1::o local all-stars
Sffilnd and final. year at Rio, also had a former NBA
the Redm151 'played such player - Gene James. The
teama at Buller, Providence, Goose as be was njcknamed
Creighton and Wake Forest. is the father of Ironton's
The team played in three of current Dickie James and
was also in the 1950s coach at
the ueat arenas of the day Madison Square Garden • Ironton High. James played
BostOI! · Gardens, and the three years with the New
York Knickerboclters when
Philadelphia Pllestra.
In 1954 . Franda left lUo NY had DICk McGuire, AI
. along with eoach Newt Oliver McGuire, Vince lloryia, and
to join the vapbond .pro team Sweetwater Clifton.
The Whirlwinds won the
- Boston Whirlwinds. In 1951
the Whirlwinds had (Uyed exhibition game in Gallipolis
before the largest crowd e\ler by the liCOre of 10945. Francis
to watch basketbaD (in Berlin had 30 and Annstrong 27;
Stadium before 75,000). The while Jerry Gillen of
opponents .were the Harlem Chesapeake led the loeals
Globetrotters. The Whirl- with II - James had seven,.
winds were I of 3 teams that ·
After the 1956 season Bevd
Francis was drafted by the ·
traveled with the Trotters the other t.... being the Philadelphia Warclors ·who
College AU-Btars and the were then World Champions.
Washington Generals Eddie Gottlieb offered ·
coached by Red Klotz. The Francis $10,000 to sign. Bevo,
who was making $15,000 with
Trotters in 1954 featured
Gooae Tatum, Marques
Boston, asked for more from
Haines and Walter Dukes Gottlieb; but was turned
! who later J)lllyed with the down. Francis played later in

MEMBERSHIP

n

...

get them. ' '

ONE MONTH

fT/leds,

8-10p.m .-CollegeSwlm
B· IOp .m .- Open Swim
Closed
8-10 p.m .- Open Swim

By The Assoelated Pl'uss
lltazcrs 91-H7. the Phocni~
The Denver Nuggcts are Suns edged the San l)icgo
streaking. the Kansas City Clippers 118-117 , th e Houston
Kings ace struggling, and the Hoc ket s trimmed . the
race in th e National Clevela nd Cavaliers 112·110.
Basketball Association 's the Chicago BuDs beat the
Midwest Division is going Washington· Bullets 128-114,
The Heds st·ured their final down to the wire.
the Indiana Pacers topped
I'Wl in lht&gt; buttom of the sixU1
Denver, getting ·:J:J points the Philadelphia 76ers 136·
un (;eorge 1-'os ter 's HBI . fli,om
David Thompson,
118, the Milwaukee !lucks
clouble. ·
.
·posted its loth vlt1ory in the outsCored the New Orleans
'111e (ihmt.s put the game
last 11 starts by beating the 'Jazz 140-131 and the Atlanta
mVay- with a four~run ninU1
Boston Celtics 101-101 Friday Hawks defeated the Detroit
highlighted by .Madlock's night while Kansas City,
Pistons 112-96.'
lwo-run triple, helping .John getting 3:l points from Otis
Nuggets 107, Ccltlcs 101
Montelusco win his first start Birdsong, slipped paS! .the
BtYston fought bsck from an
or 1he season. The loser was . New Jersey Nets 117-114 in
early 17-point'deficit to draw
Ton"'-Hume.
overtime for its second
even midway through the
The _game was pl~yed straight overtbne victory.
third period before -guards
before a sparse crowd of
The Nuggets and Kings are
ThOmpson and Robert Smith
t .r-J. ~-l:l . in
near-freezing
helped the Nuggests pull
tied for the Midwest Division
weather and was officiated lead with 47-34 records . away once again. .
by a four~man crew of
- Kings 117, Nets 114·
Denver closes its season at
amat.eur umpires because of Philadelphia Sunday while
The Kings led by as many
the slrike by major league Kansas City winds up its
as 20 points in the first half
wnpires .
schedule at Indiana.
before the l"ets' drew even in
In
other
NBA
games
third p~riod. Eddie
the
.
Jordan's jwnper for the Nets '
Friday night, the Seattle
tied the score at tOS-105 with
SuperSonics beat the .Los
22 seconds ielt, and Kansas
Angeles Lakers 113-93,. the
City's Darnell Hillman had a
Golden State Warriors
Seattle at Golden ~tate
' shot blocked by New Jersey's
Houston ·at Washington. (nl defeated the Portland Trail

I!

0 0 I

2-4 p.m .. Qpen SWirri

6-8 p .m .-Open Swim

home runs as Seattle • Califor-nia starter Nolan lnnlng and Jim Palmer
collected a club record 17 hits 1\yan. Seattle sent 14 batters hurled a three·hitter as
7· 9 p.m.- Fam ll y '.light
and 14 rWJS for Its second to the plate against three Orioles Manager Earl Apr 13 7 9 p.n&gt;.· Fdm ll y Night
. 111 Closed - lntramurals
Closed
straight victory over the California pitchen In Weaver ' notcbed the .l,oooth Apr
Apr 15 Closi~d - lntramurals
.Ciowed '
Angels. The expansion pounding out seven hits, still victory of his major league
"'"
Mariners. in their third another team record.
·career. Weaver is the 31st
HOME ATHLETIC EVENTS
season of existence, set
Orioles 5, WHite Sox 3
manager to reach that Apr . 10 Women' s Track vs. M.,'rietta
and Ma rshall 2 p.m.
JUch Dauer's two-run plateau and it ruined (he "
another club mark by
Women's Softball vs. Wright State
·eruiJting for nine runs in the single keyed a three-run managerial
deliut
of
2 p.m. - doubleheader
" '"I
.Apr . 1J Beseball vs. Urbana 1 p.m . -·
second Inning as they chased BaltbnnrP rnllv in the secand Chicago's· Don Kessinger.
"i
· doubleheader
·
,. · · · · ' · "'

As long as you get two hits

EASTER .
SPECIAL

APr. 8 2·&lt;1 p m . Open Recreation
6 a p .m .-Open Recreation
Apr . 98 IOp.m. ·Coflege Recreation
J\pr .. lO 8 10 p.m .- Open Recr eation ..1
Apr 11 Closed - lnt r~murals
·
Apr 1'1 8 10 p.~n.- Open Recreation

WE'VE
GOT 'EMJ ·
· PRiaD

--·

......
.:·... .
··--·
'

~-

~

. "; RIGHTI

' ""'"i. .

.

Mon . Fri . 7:30a.m .' to Sp.m .

Saturday 7:30a.m . tO J p.m .

.

AND EVANS INC.

87 OliVE ST.

Phone 44,·4464

GALLIPOLIS, lltiO

CASH &amp;

PlfJNE 446 4464:'

CARRY

''FR(£E PARKING "

~ "ol•{;

·'
.I

·. '

....

I

•'

'

..

�-~

- -- ---- -·

-~~--

...

--· -·-- - --- -":-~ ~---·- · -·---~-·-·

·'

-~·-----------··-· - ·

- P·- -·' ,,_.._ __

.• , . ·-f'o--- -

~----·- -----

'

-----~·------------ ~ ·-

-.

~-- '-·~··

C~The Sunday Times,'icntinel. SunclH}·, Apr . 8~ 1979

Expos nip · fu.m hling

.
will remrun
•
.T anyan

·',.
·'•'

- --·- •

•

· C-1-The Sunday Times,'&gt;t•ntirwl. Snnc ~cl' . Ar&gt;r . 8. J!T/9

••'

..

.

Marshall searching for
new athletic director··

'

~

••
•

''

· Pittsburgh · n~e 3-2

.

.

olympic participant

'

.s.
.
.•
..

!.

.•
•

•

.••
.'

By GEOFFREY MilLER
AP Sports ·Writer
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay
(AP) - The International
Olympic Committee today
took China intn membership,
maintained recognition of
Taiwan and left it tn the two
Chinas to work out details of
competing together.
After two days of debate,
including meetings with
delegatioos from both Peking
and Taipei, LDrd Klllanin,
president of the roc, !IBid :
"Remarkable progress has
heen made in. the last few
days. I think the doors are
open for what I have always
had 8{1 my aims.
"U the door is slammed by
either side, it will not he my,
fault."
Klllanln said China which
a pplled
for
olympic
reco!lllition but insisted that
the IOC disown Taiwan, had
now changed its ground.
"The Peking peq&gt;le told us
lirey would agree In the direct
reco!lllition of an Olympic
Committee In Taiwan, "
KillS~~in said.
Until two days ago, Peking
was ipsisting that Taiwan be
treated as a part of China.
The executive board of the
IOC worked until the early
hours of Saturday framing a
.fe!Oiution to try to bring the
two Chinaa. lntn the Olympic

Games.
The IOC debated it for lour
hours and made some small
am"endements
before
adopting the resolution. it
read :
"lfaving heard the repOrts
of the International Olympic
Committee's Commission of
Investigation io the tw() areas
of China, the Blst JOC session
meeting in Montevideo
received the delegations from
Peking and Taipei with the
aim of
enabling all Chinese youth to
participate in the Olympic
Games.
" As a result of the above, in
the Olympic spirit and In
a.ccocdance with the Olympic ·
charter, The JOC resolves:
"1. To recognize the
Chinese Olympic Conuniltee
located in Peking.
"2. To maintain recognition
of the Chinese Olympic
Committee located in Taipei.
"All matters pertaining In
names, anthems, flags and
constitutions will be the
subject of studies and ·
agreements which will have
to be completed 811 soon as
possible.''
Killanin said he had given
the two Chinas no deadline. If
they reached agreement he
expected to submi~ it to· a
· postal vote by the JOC.

=

PRESENTED CHECK -Dan Brisker, !'AHS athletic director, $ecood from right,
acce~ts check from Bernard F. Niehm, left, president of the Blue Angels. Boosters Club
Looking ~n are Merle Howard, second from left, club tteasurer and Mickey Johnson right:
vice_ pres1dent of the .women's boosters. . .
.
, ·
'

· ENRQUMENT.
HU. RRY I

Blue Angel Boosters
W!ed toward the purchase of a·
new Hi Jump Pit equipment .
. for Gallia Academy. · The
purchase of this equipment is
a joint venture of the Gallia
Academy Blue Angels
Booster and Blue Devils
Booster Clubs of Gallla
Academy.

If your home is less
than 7 years qld,
you may save with
State f'ann. find

out how much.

Call me tocl,ay.
Like a 1ood nelllhbor,
Stale Farm lcr there.

C. K. SNOWDEN
417 5.cond Ave.
O..lllpolis. 0 .
Phone 446-4290
Horne Office-: Bloom ingtOn , Illinois
p 78808

·,

ATLANTA (APf - The;e
were tears and butterflies but
Atlanta Flames center Guy
Chouinard had hfs dream.
The dream was a 50i!oal
season· and the 22•yeaNrld
Chouinard made It Friday
night in the next·t.,..last game
of the regular National
Hockey League season ,
helping the Flames to a 9-2
rout of the New York
Rangers.
·
In the only other action in .
the league, the Vancouver
Canucks tied the Minnesota ·
. North Stars 2-2.
" I bad tears in my eyes and
I was shaking ," said
Chouinard recalling the
moment. alter he scored N.o.
50 to become the first Atlanta
player to accompllsll the feat .
" l .had a couple of chances .
in the first period and missec;l.
But now that it's done, I have
to say my dream has come

true, ;, he said.
"I'm real excited. I was '
nervous before the gaine. I

h11d it in rriy mind· to score
50," said Chouinard who
scored alter 8: 16 of the
second period. ·
His goal gave the Flames a
!HI lead and chased New York
goalie John Davidson.
Three Atlanta players
scar~ two goals apiece, Eric
Vail, Darcy 'Rota and Ken
Houst9n. Vall has 35 while
Rota and Houston ea ch have
21, giving the Flames nine
playe_rs with 20 or more goals,
topa rn the league ..
Atlanta's other goal scorers
Wefe Bobby LaLonde and
Bobby MacMillan. Don
Maloney had both New York
goals.
The victory lifted Atlanta to
within one point of the
Rangers in the battle for third
place in the Patrick Division.
Each has one game
remaining.

R

on

L

Spring &amp;

'

Canucks 2, North Stars 2
. Larry Goodenough scored
his fourth goal of the season
with 3:20 to play to give the
Canucks their tie in Van·
couver's final regular-seasor\
game.
.
Goodenough's goal came ·
just 19 seconda alter Steve
Pay,ne had put Minnesota
ahead 2·1. Ron Sedlbauer's
40th goal gave Vancouver a
first-period lead but the
North Stars tied it early in the
final period with a goal by AI
MacAdam.
Rookie Bob Smith had
dumped the puck into the Southern fete
Canucks' end,· and a bad
r ebound off' the boards
skipped over goalie ·Gary slated April 14
Bromley's
stick
to
MacAdam, who rammed
RACINE - Th~ Southern '
home his 24th goal of the
High Athletic Boosters will
season.
host the aMual banquet for '
the footbaU and. ,basketbaU
·teams on April 14, at 6 p.m.
Potluck refreshments will be
served·.
IO·roun·d bout at the
Those wishing to attend the.
Coliseum.
dinner
may contact the
Lyle, who weighed In at 222
·school
during
school-hours at
pounds, used superior reach
949·2600
no
later
than Wedto k\!fp the 237·pound boxer
nesday,
April
II,
· for in·
from
Tonga . at bay
formation
of
what
to
bring.
throughout the fight, which
drew 3,002 spectators. ·

SEWELL 4 PIECE
SUITS
•,

•.

'
r

'

•

~astern

cage tourney·

Aberdeen
who has had nff I felt, hr was interested in
sever.al wel!.publicized · a com pr ~h c n s iv c sports
runins with McMullen-· said, program."
Starling, meanwhile, also
"No man caq help feel em·
pathy for another at a dH· ·. served as acting athletic
ficult time like this ... We did director following the crash
not always see ey~ to eye, but of a plane carrying the
our conDicts were nuiihly due Mar5haU I.Jnlversity footbaU
to a basic difference in team In November 1970. Thai
craSh wiped out most of
philosophy."
BasebaU Coach Jack Cook Marshall's loothall team, its
said,. "Joe was always lair coaching staff and the
'!'ith me. I was a good athletic school's athletic staff.
"The office will go' on as
director. He knew the rules."
Swimming Coach Bob usual," said Starling, "I'll be
Saunders said, "I was really doing things I usuaUy 'do 'arid
disappointed . He's ~lways ' I'll be looking for ways to
been fair. He's never put me close out the year Sf!ici6thly."

Monday Nile Late
March 26, 1979
SalemSt . Mkt.
Roach's Gun Shop

VVL

28
44 28

U

Frye' s Pennzoll

36 36

Powell's Mkt.
34 38.
Helners Bakery
·31 •t
Meigs Co. AdTaker
27 oiS
Team·High Ser·les- Frye's
Pennzoll 2252, ·Powell's Mkl.
2249, Heiner's Bakery 2155.
Team High Game- Frye's
Pennzoll 777, Powell's 767,
Heiner's 749 .
Men's

will begin on Monday

High

Series

Women s High Series -

•'

'

,.___;..,..i;;....;;;..;-._____.;.,_____________•

EARN THE . HIGHEST
INTEREST
ALLOWED
BY
.
•
·'
LA Will
.

........

MM. III!'II

b lht ta ~ .)(R5. fou'·strch .,a ~ad';:
Ride the super ~xu, D)'namll!' on fOid or fOUI1t
'!Wr Din: 0¥ h!~ Mid test ride
site nWstec:l bHlW: COI'I'I! on CIOYJJ'I- Of
rJve us a ci!ll. W!111111YQU in on .all tnt ctet.a~s.

ttllf

•

All NEW 1" ' MODELS NOW ON DISPLAY

THIS WEEI&lt;'S RATE

BEll HONDA SALES
I'IIIIIIE-

9.496%

-

CAN BE WORN UP TO 10 lliFFERENT
WAYS.
' .

~

TEXTURIZED POLY~STER SUIT WITH

SIZES 38 tn .46

407 Pearl Street

~

SUN.

'

CANS

+- .

LADIII-IIDD
GODIN GLOYD

25%
3 cu. ft.
WHEEL BORROW

GAS

OPEIITOIIIGHT TIL 8 PM

* IN'R!REST PAID ON MATURITY
.,.

Supplies
Last

5 Gal
•

OFF ) '
ON AI!
LAotES
GARDEN·

·,

'19.99

GLovES~
I

'

•

Gibbs Grocery ·
Royal Crown
Melgs .lnn . ·
Team High Sel-les - 3
One 2180.
Team High Gome - 3
One 767.
Men ' s ·High Series

56
40
34
26
In

·,

,.

Substantial Interest Penalty lor' Early Withdrawal.

ll

SAVINGS EARN
01_ · . , INTEREST FROM

14 /0 DATE OF DEPOSIT 10

'

' •
&gt;

..

DATE OF WllHDRAWAL
'.

' ·,

Meig/J Branch -

.•

,.

'

In
- ·

. Darrell Ougan 587, Jeff
Wilson and Ed Voss 558.

Women's High Series Marlene Wilson 539 , .. Betty
Sm lth SOB.
High Game, Men - Darrell
Dugan 231. Jeff Wilson 211.
Women's High Game -

Marlene Wilson 200, Betty
Smith 191.
'

TUESDAYTRIPLICATE
Aprll3, 1979
pts .

Reuter Brogan Ins .
Friendly Tavern
Royal Oa~ Park
Royal Crown Cola

90
78

60
so .

Doug's Marine Sales
Robert Robie Cqnst .

30
28

High Ind . Game - Annette
Phalln 208, Helen P~elps 187."

Mel

•• •

Athens Cotmty Savings ·&amp; Loan
''Larte enouQh to itrve ~ou. ret .Jm•ll enough
. kno"' you"

t~

Savings &amp; Loan lnsuu1nc1 .

...' ..
\

1979 MERaJRY 4 DR.
GRAN MARQUIS
351 eng ., power steering &amp; brakes

1979 MERCURY
BROUGHAM 4 DR.

Pow:

auto . tre~n s., tilt steer . wheel,
seat, elec . r ear defroster , am -fm
stereo, radio with tape, visibility
li ght group, speec;t control, conven.
group, left , &amp; righ t recliners, air
cond., prot. group, lock group , Stk.

Vinyl flight bench ·seats, conv . spare·
tire, tilt steer. wheel ~ power seats,
front &amp; rear bumper guards ~ am ,fm
stereo radiO, tinted glass, FR78xl.4
wsw tires . convenience group, .speed
cont., front &amp; rear bumper stripe, ·
air cond ., prot : Qroup . Stk . No. S4l

Was

No. 537

High SerieS -

Pat CarsOn

532, Maxine Ougan 523 , Helen

Phelps 517.
Team High

1979 MERCURY COUGAR

1979. MERCURYWUUI

'
metallic

XR7 silver
roof, 302 eng ,; ·
pow . steering &amp; br:akes, automatic

XR7 white with red, half vinyl roof ,

302 eng., tutone paint, wsw rad ial

Game

trans ., air cond., speed control, tilt
whe el, twin comfort seats, etec .
defroster, am·fm radio with tape,
XR7 decor group, wire wheel covers.

tires, speed ~ont ., eler:. rear
det.:oster , XR7 decor group, traction
lock, rear axle, tilt steer: . wheel,
pow. seats, · twin air cond .• tinted
glass . Stk. No. 555 ,

Reuter.Brogan Ins. 545 .
Team High Ser ies
Reuter ~ Brogi;ln In s. 1483 .

was
11256

W"rll represent

Stk. No. 59~
was
$8438

NOW

provide Shorter's services to
the Hilton Hotels Corp. for
commercials, advertising
and other promotional
ventures in exchange for a
$25,000 sponsorship lee .
Shorter, who won the
Olympic gold medal in 1972,
will receive· no direct
, remuneration for his services, but is under contract to
HUlon as a consultant for an
executive physical fitness
program he will help develop ,
as a imember of the hotel's
. marketing staff.
" It took a new rule for
track and field athletes from
the International Amateur
. Athletic Federation to permit
this arrangement to be.
· made," said Shorter. "This
' breakthrough is going to
make things a lot easier lor
America's
amateur

'

NOW•7330

'

,f

,.

brakes, auto. trans., air cond ., speed
controL elec . rear defroster, prOt.
group, p. side windOW&amp;, wire whHis
covers, tilt wheel. twin comfort
seats, air cond., X R7 decor group.

No. 374

S1k. No. 594

was

WIS

$8982

'7982

NOW

~TD

1979 FORD

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR. .

2 DR

302 engine, power steering, power
brakes, automatjc tran s., air condi ·
Honer, split seats with recli ner s,
speed control. tilt wheel, front
bumper guards, rear bumper
gu ards, e)'(terior accent group,
tinted glass. Stk. No. 334

jo2 engine, po~er, steering an~
brake s, automntlc trans., air cor'ld•·
tioner, tilt wheeL speed control, AM·
FM stereo, radio, tinted glass, front
and rear bumper guards, . rear
del ros ter , exter ior accent group.
Stk. No. 401
'

Was
$7601

was
S7775

.

'

NOW

NOW

"033

1979 FORD Lm 4 DR
302 engine, power 'steering· and
brakeS, front and rear bumper
guards, air conditioner, AM radio,
tinted glass, dual remote, mirrors,
conventional spare tire, FR7b1~
WSW tires. Stk . No. SOD .

Was
$7305

NOW

NOW

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

1979 FORD Lm WAGON

1979 FORD LTD 4 DR

engine , power steering and
brakes, automatic tr ans., speed eon·
trol, front and rellr bumoer auards.
air con dit ioner, e-.:terior accent.
' tinted glass, complete dual remote
mirrors: Stk . No. 471
·

302 engine, power steering, power
brakes, automatic trans ., air condi ·
ti oner , speed control, 9 passenger,
deluxe luggage rack, power seat,
AM·FM radio, exteror accent group,
protection group, tinted glass , dual
ite mo~e mirrors. Stk . No. 451

302 eng ine, power steering and
brakes, automatic trans., air condl ·
tloner, speed control, front and rear
bumper guards, electrl~ rear
defroster, protection group, tinted
glass, dual remote mirrors. Stk. No.

302

was

·was

385

.

.Was
7
.i~~.......:N~O~W~~~~!.I-!$8=2~17~. . . . . .~· ~N~O=W~~~!!!.I-!$~77~5~2. . . . . . . .:N~O:W~~~~~~ "
1979 FORD LTD 4 DR
1979 fORD LTD 2 DR · 3021979
FORD LT0.4 DRand
engine, pOwer $te

NOW

,

302 engine , power steering and
brStkes, automatic trans ., air condl ·
·tloner, speed control , front and rear
bumper guards, rea r. defroster,
tinted glass, dual r emote mirrors.

302 engine , powe'r steeri ng and
brakes, air conditioner, speed con·
trot front and rear burpper guards,
l ext~r iOr ' accent, tinted glass, dual
.. remote mirrors. Stk . No. 430

Stk . No. 314

brakes, automfitlc trans.
. .mdl ·
1ioner, conv . group, elec. clock, front
and rear bumper ·guards, bumper
rub str ips, elec . rear window
defroster, AM·FM radio ste:reo, e)( ·
terlor accent. tinted glau. Stk . No.-

441

'6690
1979 roR0 LTD 4 DR

;tWaS

'6651

'71

'

XRI 2 dr .. while with red, hcrlf vlnvl
roof. 351 eng ,, pow .. steering a.

...

'1979 FORD LTD 2 DR

lbc winnco .puid $4.110, $4.20
· and· $3., I:.C,l. H'cilo PlaCed,
rctuming$4 and $:1.ind Fuzzy
·. Birect · was third, paying ·
$.UO.
,
,
~ lbe 3·b doublo,. of ihdc ~n4
Twilla Knight" paid $ii5.20 'and
th&lt; · crowd of 2,335 · bet
$216,577.
.

'7570

$8479

X~7 2 dr ., black, 341 eng., pow.
steer. 8. brakes, auto . trans., air
coni .• tilt steer .• speed control, p.
. seats. twtn comfort lug. compt., trim
rear defroster, am -fm stereo w·tape,
XR7 decor group, tint. glass. Stir.

NOW

S7696

THISTLEDOWN·
· CANCELED
CJ.EVE(4ND iAP) - · A
351 engine, poWer stcer.lng and
frozen track forced Thistlebrllkes, autom ati c trans., ai r condi down to cancel its Friday
tionin g, AM·FM stereo 8 track tape,
protection group, dU&lt;'Il remote mir · •
night thoroughbred racing
ror s, front and rear bumper guards,
schedule.
linger tip speed control, corivenHowever, Walter Johns,
tion al spare. Stk. No. 312
track publicity director; said
Thistled own's , racing
Was .
program tonight Is cxpected ·
181~5
NOW
to go on as scheduled.
..111!!!~~!!!1!!!!
LEBANON
l.EI!ANON, Ohio lAP)
Welfare Dirc&lt;tor, in his fifth
victory in JO starts, captured
the Sl.:iOO featured mile pace
t'riday ~igbl in the ninth race
at Lebanon by a length in 2:0i

XR7 light med . blue, dark blue roof,
302 eng., pow. steer. &amp; brakes, auto.
trllns., air cond ., traction lock, speed
cont ., tilt steer . wheel, elec. rear
defroster, XR7 decor group, tint.
glass, p. side wlndoW5, light group,
lock group, wire wheel covers. Stk . .

No. 592

,

trans., air cond ., twin comfort seats,
tilt steer. wheel ; speed cont. elec :
rear defroster , am ·fm stereo w·tape,
wire wheel covers . Stk. NO. 591

was
$8120

1979 MERQJRY

1979 MERCURY COUGAR

X R7 dark red , White half vinyl roOf.
302 eng., pow. steer, &amp; brakes, auto.

NEW YORK (AP) Marathoner Frank Shorter
will be tbe first American
athlete· to lend his name to a
corporation and maintain his
amateur standJI!B under a
new sponsorshlJ&gt; program
announced by the Amateur
Athletic
,Union
TheAAU
said. Friday it will

Nov•

was .

1979 MERCURY

Hilton Hotels

JROUGHAM Z DR.

$9341

NOW

~

351 eng., pow. steering &amp; brakes,
auto. trans .• air ·cond., Vinyl ltlf
trln,, tutone Paint, conventional
sput tire, cOrnering tamps, tnt. ·
steer. wheel,·~ cont., pow. seat,
driver side rear defroster, im-fm
stereo tape, prot. group. Stlc. No. 362

was ·

NOW

Barnett and Ma xi ne

Dugan 185.

J..~ .

'RICHARD E. JONES, MANAGER
.
216 W. Main St.
992-6655
Pomeroy, 0 .
All deposits insured to soo,ooo by Tilt Fodor'!

•

· .~Generous sticker discount
·Bonus trade allowance
·Custom financing terms

S7S91

Prices .In Eff8ct W~lte ·

I Gal.
2Gal

60

Jack's Dairy Bar

Was

•.

NOOM TO

, GAS CAN

Pis
72

' .

HOURS:"9-6 MON. thru SAT. .

' .

3ln0ne ·
Tom's Carry Out

•

· Tele.a.992-3662
1 "Ace is the place with .
the Helpful Hardware Man"TM .

Early Sund1y Mi•ed
March 25, 1979

athletes.:•

'

I

Middleport, Ohio

HARDWARE

FOR THAT WEEKEND BUSINESS

TRIP.

* 182 DAY aRTIFICA1'E

•

I

REVERSIBLE CONTRASTING ·VEST · .
AND MATCHING
.
. SLACKS; .

New!--'.'Money Market" Certificates

•'

•

,,

-

Raymond Roach 479 ; Bob
· Hensley 476, Bill Smith 448.
Men's High Game' - Bob
Hensley 185, Raymond 'Roach
179, Larry l:ltndrlcks 172.

Whitlatch 555, Anne
the winner of tbe Baum's Betty
Hattleld 512, Naomi Floyd
Lumber· Forma Scientific in 469.
the second game of the night.
Women's High Game Two games per night will Anne Hatfield 199, · Betty
be played
Wednesday Whitlatch 188, Naomi Floyd
through Saturday with tbe 186. .
first
game
scheduled
Eorly Wodnesdoy ·
beginning at 6:30. There will
Ml•od Leaguo
illso be a consolation contest
March 21, 1979
Saturday night prior to the
..Pts
1
chaionship game. ·The Young's Market
511
· 54
championship contest will Headquarters ·
Smith-Nelson Motors
u
begili at 7:45.
No.3
.
42
Admission to the single Zlde's Sport Shop ·
34
elimination tournament will Longshots
28
Team High Series - Zlde's
be 50 cents for ailulls and 25
cents for rrtudents. Proceed&amp; Sport Shop 1992.
Team High Game - Zlde 's
will go towards Eastern , Sport
Shop 759.
Local Athletics. ·
J:ilgh Series - Bob Couch
Following Is a list of all 579, John Tyree 562.
Women's High Series teams entered.
Carolyn
Bachner 578, Debbie
Cutler, Ohio; Homer' s HawleY. 534.
Hammerers-Tuppers· Plains, · Men s ·High Game - Bob
Reedsville; . Neal's In· Couch 223. Kelt~ Phalln 216.
Women's High Game surance, Gallipolill: M. C.
Carolyn Bachner 199, Carolyn
Indys, Marietta; Young 's Bachner 195.
· ·
Carpet, Pomeroy; F.O.E.
637, Wellston; Jim's Gulf,
Pomeroy; Baum's Lumber,
Chester; Forma Scientific,
Marietta; ·Fruth · Phannacy,
Gallipolis, Pt. Pleasant; ·
When the bad ~~rys wore&gt;
Southern Methodist, Racine; . bla&lt;·k hats ancl thr w•Kf guys
Pennsboro, W. Va.: Hart's, white, It was ell"f to tell 'em
Racine and Jl9b's Quaker •1"'11. Now, they rhange
Sta\e, Gallipolis.
heads, &lt;'omplete wth t.ct•.

EAST MEIGS - The
Eastern
Boosters
Independent Cage Tourney gets
underway Monday night with
the finals ·to be played
.Saturday, Aprl114. This year
lhete are 14 teams entered in
the tournament.
· Monday at 6:30 Southern
Methodist of Racine plays
Pennsboro, W. Va . . The
second game pits Homer's
Jllimmerers of Tuppers
Plains - Reedaville against
Neal's
Insurance
of
Gallipolis, The final game of
the evening senda Hart's of
Racine againSt Bob's Quaker
State of GaJUpolill.
Tu~sday's games have
Baum,'s Lumber of Cheatet"
playing Fonna.scientiflc 'of
Marietta at 6:30, the second
came ahows F .O.E. 637 of
Wellaton against 'Jim's Gulf
of, Pomeroy, and the third
game lends M. ' C. Jndya of
Marietta asalnst Young's
Carpets of Pomeroy.
', TWilteamadrew·lirst round
byes. • Cutlet" 'plays Ita first
·game Wednesday at 6:30
agalnrrt tbe winnet" of the
HammerHs·Neal's InJlurance
game.
Fruth
Pbarmacy of GaJUpolls •
P,olnt Pleal!Bnt goes agalns

our

Local bowling··

.!

•'

'

,

-

HM'i yoLJf rMuCion to play Olrty -=on Us.

oucan
•
IC

~

j

Summer

GR~T

.·

446.· 4.367·

·
yle .scores TKO

SAN DIEGO (API Heavyweight boxer Ron Lyle
making a comeback. attempt
at age 37, scored a technical
knockout over Fili Moala at
I :51 of the eighth round
Friday night In a scheduled

Sest SUITED for

•

·,

BUSINESS
COllEGE

-Flames rout Rangers, 9-2

•.
lntiodu~ Stdte Emn ·
NetWr Home Dist'OIHit '.

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. active role in ihe athletic
(AP) - Marshall University department than he would
Prealdent l!obert Hayes has have liked.
begun searclrlng for a new
"We have a real responathletic director he bopes wt11 slbillty In be successful in ·
provide "an envlro11ment every part of our operation,"
which · Ia conducive to a he said. "I can't do U all. I
succeaaful P'"""•am."
•...,..
must ha~~ pellp1e running the
Ed Slarllns, . the · veteran . various departments who can
Marshall ·assistant athletic harmoniously malte day-todirector, -will serve as acting day decisions . The word
director until a new athletic 'harmoniously' Is quite im·
department b.las for ·the portant."
ThUildering Herd iS hired.
)teactions to McMull~n ; s
Joe McMullen, the strong- !llsmissal have ranged from
willed former football coach enthusiastic to dlsappcilnted .
who had been Marshall's
It "will be good for Mar·
athletic director since 1970, shall University and the
wae -fired Thursday by athletic program," said
Hayes.
former football coach Frank
McMullen was fired alter Ellwood, wbo was fired In
,he paued up an oppo~"tunity Detembet alter his final
·to realflll. ·
Marshall team won just one
Hayes ~aid Friday he was of II games.'
Joe Hunnicutt, president of
aware of rwnors that had
be.e n circulating in the the Big Gfeen ·Scholarship .
Huntington. area for months Foundation, said he was
that McMullen would be · "delighted. You can'i run an
ouoted.
•
organization with a divided
"'Ibla was not a recent house and that's what we've
'development,'' lfayes said. had In the MarShall athletic
Hllyes admitted 'he has department ...:
been forced to pJay a more . Basketball Coach Stu

HURRY I
GAUJPOlJS ·

According·· to Mr. Brisker
durability and adequate
safety features are in·
corporated into the design
and manufacture of this new
equipment. The boys and
girls of Gallia. Academy wijl
be able to benefit front11ils
e&lt;iuipment lor som( years to

&lt;)

..

HURRY 1

come.

MEIGS. M2-5554
JACKSON :t86 5554

.•'

SPRING

'

.-

FJNAL
.
WEEK

GALLiPOLis - The Blue
Angels
Booster
Club
Execuiive Committee
presented a- check In the
amount of $455 to Dan
Bri§ker, Athletic Director of
the Galllpolill City SchoolS.
The money is a gilt to the
Athletic Department to be

GALLIA 446 5554
•

By KEN RAI'POPPRT
Giants 7, Reds 2
Sutton scattet"ed six lilts for
AP Sporls Writer .
Bill Madlock drove in three his first victory of the seaiOD,
The Pittsburgh Pirates runs and scored three as San giving up only a first-imiln&amp;
have picked up right where •· ranciseo beat Cincinnati for run to the Padres.
· .
they left off last season. They the second straight night.
Fet"guson · hit his grllll!
can!t seem to pick up much at Alter Madlock singled home slam in the first lanlng"'Dff
•II·
.
..
the Giants' first run .In the loser Randy Jones aa ~
A team that led the iourth, Oarrell Evans capped Dodgers took a ~I lead,
National League with 167 the rally with a run·s~oring Smith homet"ed In the fourth
errors last season, the double. Dan Driessen off reliever Mark Lee as ~
Pirates took up their butter· homered for the Reds In the Angeles scored five DIQre
lingered habits again Friday, filth before Evans' RBI Umes.
·
making five miscues while singled In the. sixth boosted
Sutton ·struck out six and
dropping a 3-2, 10-inning San Francisco into a 3-llead. walked one In ·going Jhe
decision to the· Montreal The Giants put the game distance f&lt;!l" hJa 208tb cat111r
Expos.
· away with a four-run ninth · victory, three short of Qm
"That's what we didn't keyed by Madlock's two•run Drysdale's all-time lJodlir\'
want to do - play like we did triple.
. . ,
record for wlna.
;..'.
last year," Phil Gamer said.
Cardinals 8, Ph!Uieal
·- ·
Gamer was among the
Ken Reitz and Tony Scott
Pirate culprits fu their season each collected three hits and
opener, played in cold, gusty drove In three runs apiece, .
..
weather at Three Rivers leading St. Louis over
Stadium. Frank Taveras, Philadelphia behind John
Dave Parker, Willie Stargell Denny's five-hitter.
and Dale Berra also made
Reitz ' double · and two
errors as the temperature singles, and Scott's single,
THIS
•
plunged to 31 degrees.
double and triple highlighted .
Will BE THE "I hope it was the cold, the an IJ.hit St. Louis attack off
ANAL WEEK
wind, the. bad hops, Philadelphia lefl·hander
whatever / ' said Garner, who Steve Carlton and reliever
fOR
made .his error in the ninth Doug Bird ,as the Cardinals
Inning alter switching from won their opener for the
third base to shortstop.
fourth straight year,.
Pittsburgh Manager Chuck
Astros%,Bravesl
Tanner hoped his team
E;nos Cabell drove in two
wasn't reverting to last runs with a first·lnnlng single
season's character.
•
·off Atlanta's Phil Niekro and
"That's hard. That's not Houston made it stand up lor
good," he said. "But those a season-opening victory over
things happen and one game IJ&gt;e Braves.
does not make or break a
N1ekro walked leadoff
season."
batter Terry. Puhl and Jose
In other National League Cruz In 'the first Inning.
games, the San Francisco Cabell, the Astros•· Most
Giants whipped the C.in· Valuable· Player last season,
clnnati Reds 7-2; the St. Louis then drove them home with a
Cardina}s
route&lt;!
the line drive single to . right
· _
·
Philadelphia Phlllies 8-1; the center.
Houston Astros edged •he
Dodgers 10, Padres I
Atlanta Braves 2-1 and the
Joe Ferguson slngged a
LDs Angeles Dodgers routed grand·slatn homer and
--- - the San Diego Padres 10.1. Reggie Smith belted a threeP. 0 . Box 749·
Tenth-Inning errors by run homer to lead Los
Spring Valley Pl1u
Stargelland Berra resulted 1n Al)geles over San Diego. Los •-R•errig;,.iiNriio..i7rii5·rir02ii'rir04iir7rir2•;.rri:il
an unearned run that gave Angeles right-hander Don
the Expos .their viCtory over
the' Pirates. With the score
tied 2-2 In the l!)th, . Andre
Dawson was hit by a pitch
from reliever Kent Tekulve.
Dawson took second when
Tekulve's pickoff throw got
by Stargell at first base. He
advanced to third on a
'groundout and scored when
Ellis V,Ientlne's bouncer was
mUffed by Berra at third.
. "lthink our speed had a lot
to do with their miscues,"
said Expo Manager Dick
Williams. "Valentine was
running hard to first base, so
Berra tried to rush the play."
Reliever Elias Sosa held
Pittsburgh to one hit over the
last two Innings and got the
victory.

hel~ pay for ~qu'ipment

HAVE .APROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
CALL CRISIS LINE.

,.

engine, power steering ah·d
brakes , automatic trans,, finger tip
speed contr.ol, front and rear
bumper ·guards, air conditioning, ·
tinted glass, dual rem ote control'
IT'.irr,ors . Stk: No. 386

-~-

was
17116

WIS
S7S72

NOW

'6572

DO
'6at-

1979
2 DR SEDAN

·302

f

NOW

302 eng ilie, power Steering, power
brakes, automatic trans, air condl ·
tl'oning, speed control, front &amp; rear
bumper guards, exterior acciHlf
gro.up, t inted glass, duat remote mi ·
rors, wire wheel covers . Stk . No.

n•

Was
17430

Now'6430

.Thaler Ford Sales, Inc.
SALESPERSONS
Tom Sprague, Melvin Little, Deb . Hammack, Gary Rudolph,
Nancy Fowler; Rod Ferguson.
•
Sales Managers, Bob Ross and Jack Roush
. 24 Hr. Wrecker Service. Phone: 446-3575 DaY - 446·3650. Night

PH.446.4Q75

.

.

aminute ta get a
.

'

\

�-- -------·--·

-

•
C&lt;i- The Sund.ay Timrs-Scntinel. Sundoy, Apr. 8, 1979

• •l

..

., •,

•

~ ~

~

·

fhll'd to Hnl?&lt;·r Mrdical Cen-

·

week's vacation In Florida.

~=~~~~~~~~. ~~'~}" ·:l' ··=':l~:::~~~~:.'~;~~, iti~~cr:n ~=~:tes ~Wig~

the merchandise.
When · they. tlh N Md College, is spending th&lt;•
:duck?
"They l)ave to come in and yowg cfua.. 1 "' re.....S siring vacation here with lwr
: That's right. Six bucks can sign up and pay for the "':"~ Wa~' ''~'~ parents. Mr. and Mrs. Dorst•y
· get you a brace of mini- duckliQgs ahead of tim~, an~ _wr~rn 50
fll_~· , , _Jordan and sor\S.
· -mallards for stx weeks.
come back to get the btrds,
S8ld therunj'fa •
. The March meeting of the
. Every pair comes with he expla_ined. "l~'s not hke of raral ...,.,.. 1M81111 Temple Unit•d Methodist
·instructipns about care and the kiddtes spotting a baby ductling,for~on~ r.tttirch Women was held at
-housing, and a lease chickmastoreatEasterand acr~~· ~ ·,•.-.t.o the home of Mrs. Carl Crab.
""'"'n 5iJIII"i:'le ...~.
- tree. The pledge servil'c was
:agreement Utal requires you wanting one." .
, ·to rehtrn them to the Dayton
Desptte cruelly complatnts do_that wt 1 :n t.,.. ' : : gi~~~~ by Mrs: Rlly Prke and
:Museum of Natural History this year from area humane . bl:mg the illr~;Jd
:itfter six weeks. By !.hen the .so.cieties, K. oeslne~ said. ?f. the siJ:" ,
"-lit 11811. ' ·
; -tiny baD of down has become . teachmg nature rs the 'They aref .. .,
A.l'~
·. :aJully-feathered young duck, purpose of the pr.am that then and w.e
. at. ,
'I~-..,
··:ready to go out in. the world is now in Its fourth year. He are healtHy ~ "'-': .,.
·and fend for himself.
said the museum follows aU takl!
. n back ~J! -~ .
: Museum Director E. -J . laws and wildlife rules in
"One of ... ·- ~
,·Koestner says he has nearly trying to p~tecl the asjlectaofthla~ltdll
::1,000 paid customers for the ,ducklings.
extent,IOine lillilt4'1o,Cift .
By Mn. Chlis. Woode
: :1.500 day-old ducklings to be
Koestner boasts a 99 !~ . !hair -~,1ilt illld.
Suriday School atten&lt;!l!nce
..';delivered by an· Illrnots percent success record and- . People ~,., ;.., l.fl on April 1 w~~;~ 56. The o_f- ,
• .nursery Tuesday .sard the_ purpose of the leedinl dtlillli-.. . . . . . . • fering was $33.46.. WorshiP
By Thursday Koestner said program':' two-fold: wleach pools . an4 . ·~ "Mr services were held ioUowin&amp;
""-'·I! Wanta rent an Easter

mne.

.-=

•i•. (;1--ilJl JV0te8

+:

I

so~ethlng

are expected
w be put Hein , the
of
•i-:aJI
:temporary
fosler-bomes.
naturepubltc
and to mcrease the
~:Says he gets very few du~ popul~tion of southwest
~-cancellations and because of Olno. He satd aU eggs are at
~Ute nahtre of the program least third-ge110ration wUd
•
' •

&gt;

•
:.

outla!tdi*
Sunday School
at·
· He Aid lila . , '' .
'teDdsnce
of 30 with
withanRev.
What and ·haW
to ,
Rldtard Thomas speaking on
the . duddlnp ~ ~· "Are We Able'" from
Utey be . DP..' I a j l . r Matthew 20:17-28. Nina
111 Robinson and Thelma '
carQboard ~-~
least 121nr:hn
;a !i!D'I8 Henderson santl a special
fasten a DcliU ....... iM "AU Alone" dedicated to
numer~~ 11111J1P1 .. .~ member for her birthday.
bottom papi!IE '
.
Holy Week Services will be'
"We hsve llil!l pllpll Wllo ' held at the church here on ·
live !naper~~ .... Aptil II with the youth from
theymllllbe.,.¥1illaOIII
of Uteir ~.. .... ..... Marietta l'brisl Church ' to
"M081 ----'"'
· •., :i rd present a g\)Spel musical
.....,_ ·
"Celebrate Ufe."

Price and Leah Crab- ' Those frmn h&lt;·re attending
hw ,..,P&lt;•rted on tlw mc'etinl~ "surpri.«•birthday gathering
•held rt'&lt;'&lt;!ntly at the First , honoring .l1•ssi•• Jewell in
United Methodist Church in Columbus were Mr. am\ Mrs.
Athens. F.veryone was urgf,'&lt;l Rllymond Nelson and Mrs.
to write sponsors and stations StLsie Bonth and Rayma Sue.
lnobiecttoshowslhatare un- others present were Mr. and
desirable.
.
Mrs, Leland Mwre, C.anlon,
June Jones and grand- Mr . . and Mrs..John Starkey
daughter, Dawn, spent the and sons, l.aneaster, and trer
Wt'fkend ·.here with her snn and daughter-in-law, Mr.
hrother-in-ia'wandsister,Mr. .. ~nd Mrs. Cecil Jewell and
and Mrs. Victor. Perry and family members. ·columbus.
her daughter, Cindy Jones.
On Monday, Mr: and Mrs.
Kat)ly Jordan attell\led the , F:arl St;Jrkey, loeal, and Mr.
Rible School workshop at The . and Mrs. Roy Wiseman,
Plains United Methodist Harrisonville, also visited
Church 011 Tuesday evening. with Mrs: Jewell in honor of
Reverend - Cecil Cox, .her birthday
. AI~•. he,ld services at the !&gt;fr. and Mrs. Walter J?r.r.arpehter Baptist Church on &lt;ilin_and.sons, local, and MISs
Sunday during the absence of. Karen f.tlkey, The .f'la1ns,
Reverend 'F~land Norris,, called on th•ir grandfather,

By Mrs. Herbert ROush
seeing, and shqlping In
Mrs. Russell Roush en- Orlando and Leesburg, Fla:
tertained ·Thursday evening Mandy and Mike Russell
in honor of the birthdays of are slaying with their gnind·
her hiJsband Russell Roush parents, Mr. and Mrs'.
ahd children: Cindy Edward Russell Roush while their
and David. Ice cream, cake. "other, Mrs. Nancy RuilaeU
potato chips, Iced tea, cof- ~ hltd surgery Monday at
fee were served. Attending Holzer Medical Center.
were, Mr. and Mrs. Dana: Mrs. Joe Manuel,- Mrs. Sid
Lewis, Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Manuel visited Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald RusseU, Mike and RockyH~~ppandson,J.R.,at
Mandy, Mrs. Gladys Shields, the ho10e of Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
MNJ.. Edna Roush of Racine, · noldHuppSunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert RoUsh, CindY Rorish and Edw!ird
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Russell spent · Mon'day
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hupp' evening w:ith Mr. and Mrs ..
and Son, Jeremy, Mr. 8nd Roger Roush &amp;!'d daughter,
Mrs. Roger Roush - and Kimberly.·.·
daughter, Kimberly. The Mrs. Inez Roy of Racine .
guests of honor received and Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt
money and many nice
Ferguson ocilnt Pleasant·
Mr. and Mrs. Don
· visited · Mrs. Ett Warner on ,

·

IR~a:CI:-:
·~·~w:h:o~has=~bee=n~c:on:·_!!·;in;•·•:•l;n~R~u
~:se:l~la:I~W:o~lf~P:e;n·-.:R:ob~i~n~a;nd~Oonna~::la::.::~~==~---·····.......
·

o ur· N. ew
, car
·. y a I ues Are
,

.

I '

on "Good Hands"t"nsurance
for )UUl" DeW home.

W

For years, you've

•

::.::.i~·r&amp;i]~.?:li :. ~:~~~:~~~!·:! :~:ov~i~.
nature
,
·"

seen and heard .
advertising nbo~t

',

:lt;

large alllOUIIt If w.-.
"It's aU pad &lt;I· ~ _.
•

Allstate Homeowners insurance.
And now, it's available here, at our
agency. But, did you know that if
your house is 5 years old or less, you
may qualify for Allstate's "New
House 10 Percent Discount" on your
bqicpremium?
Allstate hao found it costs less

....1.

,,

',

breakfast to follow. The
;.,..•or ts In cltarge of the

6 - Ford LTD's In Stocl&lt;!

· ..-·
service. ...
The church and Sunday
School honored Helen Woode

to insure newer homes, and they're

the total number of cards was

35 .. Sbe thanks everyone for
the hicest birthday ever,
starting ·out wiUt a dinner at
the Follrod-Robinson home
ori Friday aitd ending on
Sunday evening with their
friends Geor~e and Rachel
Guthrie Join!ni them for i~e
cream and cake.'
WUlier arid Nellie Parker .
have · received word from
Oregon !hal their son, Eric,
has sulfered a serious ac·
cident as a lineman. He has
several broken bones. Mrs.
Parker's mother, Mrs.
Macaels is also very ill.

=~~-~'

IM)W AVAI~"'E TNROU.G N THIE

NICK JOHNSON'
ACCOUNTANT EXECUTIVE

·Chinese rug themes r,ival .Persian
.

.

Appalachian festival
takes place this month
.

'

.

·~

-

:

I

\

By ELAINE Q. BARROW
trend .
.
spiced by in Ortenlal. print
AP Newfeaiuret
·
Just as world news bas fo- hanging above a buffet holdlni
·
cused on U.S.-China relations; a a collection of ChineM plecea.
How Mrs. H9Usewife selects comparable reaction in furnish- Dashes of greenery and 1 cor·
floor coverings may surprise ings is seen by Trans-Ocean, a ner screen Cllntrlbula _Ill !be
101111! manufacturers.
major U. S. rug importer. Em· mood of !!ulel elepnce,
of Appalilchians. The Urban
, Although area rugs are "In," phasis, we're t!)!d, ·Is on pat· WaU-to-waU carpetlnlln NV· CINCINNATI - The Ap- and other crafts.
they share the sales volume terns featuring traditional de· eral manmade fibers cmtpcw palachlan ·Festival, the The Convention Center ts Appalachian Council has
- with waU-Io-wall carpeting, signs as well u new designs the mairl ~of a ~b- nation's largest gathering of located in downtown Cin· estimated there are 250,000
Persian-design rugs like Utose derived from centuries-old mo- llshed mallilacturer. A Mu- Appalachian crafUmen and elnnall with first claBs hotels, Appalachlai)S In the Greater
·cherished by Grandma are still tifs adapte'd from archae- land apoklllllan said lltr'leyl mliBiclans, takes place April cultural attractions, stores, Cincinnati area, more than .
· "big," but are yielding ground ologfcal findS In China. Some Indicated alm01t equal pop11- 18-22 at the Cincinnati Con· and sports facllUles less than one lifth of its population.
wrugs of Chinese patterns. are even considered an .In· larlly for solld&lt;olor pl!Jihu venilon Center.
a 10-mlnute walk away .
A- recorded
message
The prestige of wool is undls- vestment. .
and multicolored, cut and Joop VIsitors ·can stroH through Proceeds !tom the $2 door eontalning Information on the '
puled; but 8' out of 10 yards of · Says Ralph Shubnan, eilecu· carpet.
·
more than 90 boolha con· donation for adults and $1 for Appalachian Festival can be
c:aryetlng sold In Amertca Is tive vice president, "As lm· An o I he t American Une talnlnK Appalllchlan crafts children are distributed by heard by caUing (513) 321·
eylon.
ports of Persian· rugs decline, (World) offers a wall-to-irall such as wys, chairs, rugs, the Appalachian Conununlty 1848.
. In fact, It may be discovered more and m'!l'e collectors are number with an owrilll ..tlern pottery and many other Development Association
For more Information on
that there Is no such person as investing in Chinese rugs.
reaembllntla DIOIIac of atoau. Items. Lut year's festival through grants to foster Ohio travel activities, write ·
Mrs. Ho~~~ewife. There · are "Today's coUectlbles, they Oflevel·loopCGilllniettGqlney• was attended by 20 000 retention of the nation's Travel Ohio, P. 0. Box 1001,
Jane, Barbara, Gladys, Pat and will be wmorrow's heirlooms, lon, the carpel lendlal'lllltc or persons with ellhibttors f:.orn Appalachian heritage. The Columbus; Ohio 43216. Or caD
other Individuals - with an much as Chinese rugs were In outdoor air to • modem Mlllnl. seven otates.
festival ts open from 7 to 11:30 · toll-free h80D-282-1085 (In
equal number of personal pref- Ute era of otir anceswrs when a The manufacturer of the_cal). There will be demon· p A 1118 and 11 a m to Ohio) or l.-.e48-1300 (out of
erencea.
symbol of true status was the blelllone effect Mya tha~ In ad.
.m. pr
· ·
state) between 8 a.m. and 5
dillon to being calilfortable un- otratlons ol lye soap making, II :30 p.m. April 19-22.
· One homemaker paying scant Chinese rug"
·
beed w decoraling irends was He was referring to the more derfool, the carpet providn basketry, spinning, quilting,
Cinc~tl has one of the p.m. Monday through Friday.
· · fUI'DI'IIed when a visitor eipensive products In the acOUIIIcal and/ enero. .vlna rug making, wood carvrng• nnllon ' largest settlements
pralaed her arrangement of finn's line -'-ranging from $3,- lnaulatlon that no llsrMurface
-~----------------.....,
area ruga.
·
000 w$4,000 for a 9-by-12 rug. flooring co~ld match.
gifts.
Porter has been among the
"I didn't do II for acyl~," she Bot price§ vary as widely as ,
.
·
.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Marlyn . ailing suffering from ar- .
·
Mooney were recent guests of thrills.
aald. "I plllced th~ that way styles and shapes. Braided ruga
to~ do&amp; stalna.
csn be bought fOr under $100,
By RllbySewiden
hts mother, Mrs. MarybeUe
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
The recent winter floor-eov- going as hl~h u $250 to $10,000
Mr. and Mrs. Brady Sheets Mooney. Other recent guests Fellure have .moved to a
erlnD market In New York If they are .hand-knotted and
of Mrs. Mooney were Mr.
verllled the timeliness of area from the People's Republic of Mrs. Neva King had as spent several days with their Alva McGuire and daughter, house they recently pur· KITE-FLYING CONDrriONS were leoolhaa perfeclao
1'1111- by themselves on pol· China. _
.
~cent guest ' the Rev. John daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cline Linda. .
cltased near Yellow Town · WOllam Temple reeendy boloted blo "Cblneoe rlragoq ·
llhed wood floors nr placed on The !IIBhion Impact of an ori· esburg missionary from Thompson at Grove City.
Mrs. Laura McGuire, who coMrnmi••uruLo
'tyu. Amr ·willis has Dyer'' above the meltlnJ mounds of mow at Chleago'•
,.,....,, Comloky Park.. Tbe lr.lle expert_ wao cbeelr.ID(
top of carpeting, often to echo enlal rug was demonstrated by ranee, ;.ho was a visitor at Whlle there they attended the spent most of the wln!er In
tile lladi~UD'I air curreata In 'preparailon for a
colon In waD coverings and Donna Kaiser,, a des\«ller for the Carleton tlturch . Wed· graduation of Mrs. Thomp- California with her '"'"· Mr. enjoyed a week vacl!,tlon Memorial
Day lr.lto-RyiDg eoaleot aponoored by Chali,
paintings.
Utelmportlngftrm.Inacarpetd
"'"nWh
he told son's
son·in·law, Guy ·and Mrs. Otha McGuire, has from her studies ~~
JtiDg.
Aclmowledging Ute preva- ed, wood-paneled setting with a nes, ay eve,w.,. ere
~·orylhe, from Ohio State
Georgetown CoUegc.
lence of walJ..to-wall in· iireplace Ute rug :_ of lsfha- of his work in the mlutonary University In Columbus. He · returned home. She came by
Miss Melinda Spencer,
' wltlt salmon and f'10ld and showed sUdes of his received his lhasler's degree. 'plane to Columbus and her Ohio stale IJQiverslty, spenta Mooney·
1 Roger Chapman of ColumbuS
ataUationa, one manufacturer ban design
Mrs. Maxine Moore of had suffered a heart attaclt. ' \
-went so far as w· suggest an ruby accents- was placed on travels ,into many countries
Mrs . . LuciUe Thiviner of grandson, Hal Thompson, couple nights with her sister,
inlet; cutting out a spece in lbe the carpel before the hearth w where his work takes hlm. , Columbus and son were brought her on home. She Mr. and Mrs. Bob WUley' Rio Parkersburg and daughter, Mrs. t1tapman and son, !\\~Mrs. Kennison Saunders and and Mrs. Jimmie Chapman , .
carpel .lnto whleh the area rug become a dominant feature of Recent visrtors of Mr. and recent guests of her mother, enjoyed living irl California Grande.
children,
Jamie and Wesley, visited him at the hospital 111
,
would fit, with lla surface flush Ute room.
Mrs. John Dean were Mr. and Mrs. Orpha Wooten and very much.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mooney
wllb the surrounding carpet.
This wu belped by keeping Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Junior Roberts. They acMr. and Mrs. Robert HaUey . were recent guests of Mrs. called on Mr. anil Mrs. Craig Columbus on Sunday.
, ~'·I·· .
Bellville one day recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Queer1 •
Area ruga ean be as large ao Uie rug dear of fumlhtre. Ex- Racine, Mr. and Mrs. Garold companied them home to and children, LoucUa, San· Maryhclle Mooney.
Mrs. Eugene Cooper and were recent guests of he,!' .
1-by·ll fael and as amaH as 3- cepl for a smaU coffee table, Gilkey, Tammy,' Amber, · Columbus to spend a few dra, Bobby Jean and Robbie,
Mrs. Ethel Cooper and
by-4 feet. It's a personal cltolce furniture was arranged around Cindy and Rick, of Athens, da
. Centerville, were recent daughter, Barbara, and daughter' Barhara, and Lori brother. Mr. and Mrs. Lester , fl .
whether furniture Is placed on ,It
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rted, · ~·· M Inc Mo re of Sunday guests of her mother, friend, Miss Lori MUler of Miller, Enon, and Mrs. McGuire and her mother', , ''. ,
.
top of them or arranged around Ancient lore was depleted on Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. p ~·· bu~J. pent ~ few Mrs. Verdle Halley.
__
Enon. spent a few days with Marybelle Mooney were Mrs. Laura McGuire.
rceent
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Tim
Cooper
of
the ruga.
another area rug from China. Bruce Ried and Robert Jr. of ar er~ h
M
Inez Halley · and two Mrs. ~arybelle Mooney.
E:rtenalve selections of pat- Its central medallion and cor· Syracuse Hobart SmaUey Jr. da~a;:.,.. Sa~
e~,th rs. cltlldren. Jeremy and Eric,
Frances Pinkennan was a l1tarles Lambert and family. Springfield arc the parents &lt;if
terns inspired by Oriental ner designs contain birds sy~· and Date' of Wlerton, w. va., K"":ru. Nils er;,.: re;; were recent guests ol her recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. · Orpha Wooten and Junior a new son. This is their flrs,t
themes at lbe recent mar~et boUzing prosperity ~d happl· Mr. and Mrs. John Walter chU
•
•
e sn sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Hoberts were recent guests of child and has been named
~wlndleateanemergrng ness. A styUzed Inner border . Dean James and Jeremy. Wesley . Wh!le there she Laurence Patterson and . J:lomer Porter.
her daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Jason Eugene. Mr. and Mr~an\! corner characters denote M ' d M 01 Harri
assisted Mrs. Saunders with famUy.
Mrs. Margaret Johnson Paul
McMummon
o! Gene - Cooper are patel'n~l
'
serenity
and
long
life,
while
anand
r
1.:'~
F~ye
~att
w=::
her
spring
housecleaning.
Brian
Vinson
celebrated
his
was
a
Sunday
guest
-of
her.
Westerville.
·
grandparents. They have
· LEGAL NOTICE
o~er border of chariots reflects visitln · in Charl~ston
Mr. and Mrs. Homer P~rter seventh birthday rec"!!IIY- daughtlr, Mrs. Anna Ruth
Hev.
Monte
Sheets
will
be
several
relatives
in
thi~
The Public Ulil ilies CommisChrnese archaeological . di&amp;- recenll~.
were recent Sunday dinner His -father and mother, Pack and son, Roger. Mrs. · guest speaker at Victory community.
sion of Ohio has set tor pu b
coverres.
_
,
Recent
visitors
of
Mr.
and
guests
of Mr. and Mrs. James and Amy Vinson, and Pack took them all out to Baptist Church, Apri125 · 29.
Mrs .. 1\nna Ruth Pack
lie hearing Case No. 78-629Accordmg
to
some
designers,
M
Vi
.
Kin
d
M
and
Georae
Sheets
and daughter, b the Christopher and dinner at the Pancake House., Hev. Ted Ball, pastor, Invites called on her mother, Mr~.
1
EL-FAC Subtile A. to fCYiew
such as Betb Thomas, rugs are rs. rgt
g an
r.
Amber. Other Sunday dinner ro . r •
'
· . Cecil ·Rice, Crown City, the publiq io atte~d,
Margaret Johnson rcccnti~the · fuel procurement pracbeing used architecturally. Mrs. Webber Wood and Mr•. guests were Rev. and Mrs. sister, Ruth Elizabeth, helped .
.
f lgh
ith
0
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Craig
Belville
Mrs. Karen Knotts and
tices and policies of The Ohio
They delineate spaces ond em· Neva King were Mrs. Tom M ni Sb -'•
him celebrate. Birthday cake spent it couple n Is w
and Mrs. Ruby Saunders
,,- Power Company, the operaphaslze special pieces and McElroy and son. Thom.S
~=- M!;,.'"jean Betz was a and Ice cream was enjoyed ~~~:f't~~;,t~~:"~.!'~: were Saturday guests of Mr. children were recent guest$ "
tion of its Fuel Cosl Adjuslof Mrs. Verda Halley.
,
places.
Richard
from
Illinois
and
S
day dinner guest of Mr. and he received a new bicycle
Mr. and Mrs. Brent
d
ment Clause. and relaled
"A rug .is the catalyst for Miss Judy King of Kankakee, a:::: Mrs ·Harold Saunders of which he was very proud. Saunders and children, and Mrs. 'Harold Saun ers Stephen Saunders, son &lt;it
!flatters. Th is hearing is
faintly. .
M
H k "
change in anr interior," Ms. IlL
,
and famtiy
Several from GaUls County !.aura, Greta and Isaac, . and
Mike and Sherry Northup Mr · and
rs .
as e,,.'
scheduled to begm a1 2 00
Thomas says. "As carpeting Mrs. Elizabeth Murray
J
Rlet Is seriously attended the funeral of Mrs.
p.m. on April9. 1979. at the
and Amanda Plumely and &amp;aunders and Miss Darla
08
beco
_mesa basic floor covering, 'bad . as ~ecent _we,ekepd ill amln1 Huntingtocr0 •-·pt'tal Hamona Stout of PoweU, Parkersburg. W. Va., were David Bosler were recent Lltamhcrs. daughter of Mr. , \
Cily Counc11 Office. 2t8
the
the 0 bjel
,..,
Ohl0 Sh
ed in recent Saturday night guests
Cleveland Ave . s.w .. CanUan l1tambers and .Mrs,-~ . '
'
rug emerges as
visitorsMt. andMrs.WUUam whereheundcrwentsurgery
e was rear
of his brother, Mr. and Mrs.
guests of Mrs. Marybeile Margaret L1tamhcrs. were :!i' "
ton. Ohio 44702. An evemng
M
All
·
Gallia
County.
Among
those
~
d
d'art and mood maker. A Murray ahd son of Columbus Hi
· of rugs can ch ange a Mrs Karen Murray Creg'
s s1s1and
er,
rs. H ce attending ·the serv1ce ...
Kennison Saunders an
Mooney.
·
fi""" ~
session will be collduc led
change
were familJ'.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall united In marriage at the ,.,. "! :;
rrorn
5:30
to
7:00p.m
room)'
·
.
and
·
Tina
of
SandyvWe,
W.
·
Spraaue
son,
erman
Mrs.
Alice
Sprague,
who
was
1
Boggs of Washington Court . Presbyterian Church Frldar.-: :)
Ail eDDtple shOWI_t by Ms. Va . and Mrs. Mildred King Sprague, visited lllmder there. her aunt. and Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Melinda Spencer has House visited her mother, evening In an open rhurc~: ·:
All inleresled panles will oe
Thomas was a dining room
•
·
Kim Todd Saun s, who H
·s g
and returned to her studies at
· QIYen an opponunity to be
wiUi · traditional furnishings. and Matthew of New Haven, has been lo basic training daeurm~ St P:,:..:e
Ohio Staie aiter spending Mrs. Grover Smith the past wedding. A reception wa)i::: ., "
heard. Funber information
· held In the Sunday Sch"'!'t,· ..
may be obtained by contaclThe highlight of the room Is a IV. Va.
with lbe Navy at Orlando,
M~ Eth:l' Coo· r and spring .break with her week.
Heather Sprague has been ,rooms. Stephen Saunders;-~ ·'.
ing the Commlssion .sing· le oval rug with a hand· · Mrs, Maggie I Charles) na arrived home for a two ·
·
· pe
paren.ts, Mr, and Mrs. Robert
· pattern
'
· · . leave after which
·
graduated from Rio Grand~::- ~' ': ·.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
hooked floral
in a med· · A
. rno ld • after several weeks week
he · daulhter ' Batbara Cooper
Mill
Spllnceo, Joel and Jeremy. Ul with Ou.
COMMISSION OF OHIO
Mr. and Mrs. Harold College and has been •111·· ' : :· •' ·
ley of pinks and greens.
In University Hospital Bum will gb to Norfolk, Va. He is and· friend, t:!tss ~ Mer
Mrs. Janet WUcox and
0 ' an
By:., Richard L. Smir h
Patterns elsewhere are sub- Center, has returned w the the son of Mr. and Mrs. of Enon,
rs. daughters, Tanunle, Connie Saunders attended a concert ploycd at the Gavin Plsnt at: ; .
Secrelary
dued so as no.t wcompete with home of her daughter, Mr. Harold Saunders. Kim fiewto Mar~b.elle ':looney visited ·and -Aprlt, Flatrock. W. Va., at the Huntington Fi.td llteshire. Darla is cmploye~ .. at the GSL
· ;~
Uie , rug. And the AAitlng Is and Mrs. Junior I Mary J Colwribus wbere ·he was niet Mrs. Coopers brother, Mr. spent a few days with her
recently. Among the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert -:::
Coleman at Pomeroy where by his brother Eric
Noel l.ambert snd family.
moUier, Mrs. Verdie HaUey, House
performers were the Oak
.,
Spencer and two children, .. :
she is improving.
Mr.' and · .&amp;s. Ch~rles P.
Recent Sunday guests of and attended clturch with her Hidge Boys.
Denver Johnson and son, Joel and Jeremy. called on::.
Mr. arid Mrs. tbarlesKing Smith and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kennison at Bailey Chapel on•Sunday.
and Charles Jr. and Susan, Cuyahoga Falls visited his Saunders were his brother,
Miss Teresa. Kathy and Denver Lee, of Athalla,~Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Cleelaod Willis-:
visited her mother Mrs
oth
M Gro er Smith -Mr. and Mrs. Brent Saunders
t and Mrs. Darrell Johnson and and Matthew recently.
, :;:, .•
· m er, ra.
v
and three cltildren Mr and Bryan Rose were recen
Mrs.
Bonnie
White
and
Eric
Saunders
who
is::
· i
Haymon~ Smith at l1tauncey and other relatives and M J
M ' d. E ic guests of Mrs. Marybelle
reccniiJ .
friends
rs. ames oon; an r
·daughter, Angie, were recent cmploJ'ed at Willow Island,-!: : ,
KZlOOOLTD
Mr and Mrs John W
J 1 · nd J
s
Saunders, aU of Parkersburg,
guests of · Mrs. Margaret W.Va., spent a weekend with~ '
o 4-Stroke, DOHC 4-C~inder Engine • Incredible
Dean'
.
James
~d
Jeremy
.
~
~
d
ercm~lh
~~frMiss Cindy Preston ·of
·
his parents. Mr. and MrS:.~:
Styling · • Alloy Spoke
were. visitors Sunday of he; •r:n r:;n ~ wMrs .::,b Cheshire, Mr. and Mrs.
JoifrS:n.
Gypsy
Chapman
Harold
Saunders an~- = J
Wheels • All Drifled
mother,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Waller
~ill":y,
Rt~
Grande.
·
Harold
Saunders
and
Winston
,
received
word
that
her
son
•
.
daughter,
Erica
Nicole.
: :;: .
Discs • New Air·
·
Terrell
of
Pataskala.
M
V
dt
H
Uey
and
·Saunders.
and
,
Mrs.
Ruby
.Injection System
rs. er e a
. Saunders Mr and Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Yowg, Mrs. Karen Knolls · and Robe s '
· d chlldr ·
I Wesley and Yvette, we~ children spent a day recently
rt pe~ccr an
en,
'' ''
, visitors of Mr. and Mrs, with Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jei,."':~:' ~:~m L Euber .
1!jomer Batley and Mr. and WUcox and family, Flatrock, . f Ch h.l
·
t
Mrs. Wayne Bcal.
V
o
es re was gues
speaker at Elizabeth Chapel
W· a.
Mrs. Nellie Thivlner, Church on rridsy Saturday
IAlllgDislan"'
Th€• first known ~-ystl•m fflr Columbus, wasa recent guest and Sunday cv.,;lngs, The
of Mrs. Chauncy Thlviner and attendance was good and the
d(•livt•rin~ Wtdt•r tn C'itit•!o\ w~f'
messages much enjoyed by
hnilt hv thl' Ph&lt;M'nirian•. Thl' Thelma.
Mrs. Huby Saunders tho'se present.
fl.rrt&gt;k~ ('npiP&lt;I lhr ftymf*fn of
"Ocr:uprtUODl- Cook- Ollrll
diJ.!J!im! tunnrl!' · tn brin,! celebrated her birthday Mrs. Marybcllc Mooney;
chauffeur - barber Wednesday,
March
28.
She
local,
and
Mrs.
Ethel
Cooper
wHh•r tu lhl'ir rlliPs. arnt II••
748 E. Main St.
dleUtlln
- veterinarian received
phone
calls
from
and-daughter,
Barbara,
and
· RnmH ns tlewloprd it wllh
Pomeroy, 0.
ooelal
director
- accounllnt
moot
of
her
.
chUdren
and
··Miss
Lori
Miller.
Enoa,
II(JIIII&lt;ill&lt;'tS 5(\ (O f(IO ft'l't high
992-2184
""""l couDMJor - ..
some
grandchildren
and
her
visited
Mrs.
Rosie
Brumfield
lhMt hrnn~ht w:th!r tn R11rrw•
•'
from miore lhHn fiO rnih'S sister. She also received ' a! Holzer Medical Center
~tway .
several beautiful cards and receniJy. Mrs. Brumfield is
n g from pneumonia.
lll!! l l • • • • • • • • • • • • ! l l • • • • • • • • • • • • s u f l c r iDavid
Arthur, a mlsstonary
[.
Sure-fin• diet aid : Tt•Il Y••tr
apeaker, was guest speaker
'
'
hanker rKil to let ytiu gt•l ytmr
at Providence · Mlsatonary
(.burch on Teens Run Road · stnre-honghU&lt; &lt;Ktl of lh• t&lt;~tfe­
tleposit vmtlt till yuu pnove
Sunday.
.
''I
y(lii Vl' I1L'tl 50pnuncl~ Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Porter
~~
~&lt;
were recent guests of Mr. and
&lt;
Mrs. Homer Porter. Mrs.

BJUe··Lak
. e

:.ughl

1979
FORD
'&amp;;;i,iiiiiied"'Rii;i;ANiifM-.m;o.StiiCti~mt'Pri'::
Auto. PS,
PS, Air,LVinyl
Roof,
glaas,
stereo, Stock No. 171 u.t Price $7582.6625
1

·-

1979 FORD LTD L A N D A U - - - - - - - - - - N_ow"'1154

PS, PB, Air, t)nled glasa, crulae control, wire

Auto.

'

wheel covers Stock No. 201 List $11249.

..

7 - Mercury Marquis In Stocl&lt;!

l

1979 MERCURY MARQUIS

Auto. PS, PB, Air, Vinyl Rool,

tinted glasa, AM·FM stereo, wire wheel_covers.

1979 MERCURY MARQUIS

Now "6925
StOck No. ~ Lilt f/1124.'
Now."71·39

4-door Sedan, Auto, PS, PB, air, vinyl roof, convenience lock group, tinted glasl,
covers. Stock No. ~7 Lilt P2011.

"•

crotse ·control, ·wn-e wheel

6 - Mercury Cougars XR -7's In Stocl&lt;!

Still the ~ing!

'

,,

t

-

.

.

.., . •

Now •7300

-

I

•

,.

AJd,o, .PS, PB, Air, Power ~· -UI-FM Stereo, dual racing mirrors, wide body mokllnp, twtn c:omtoJt
lounae chairs that recline,.lt)'led-&gt;yheela, Slock No. 945. LUI $81111.
.·

1979 MERCURY COUGAR XR-7

Now "7375

AUio. PS, PB, Air, bumper group, power antenna, tinted glus, dual Tlldi)g.mlrrors, AM·FM stereo tape,
cru11e c.wdrol, wire wbeel covers, stock No. ~a. List $8199.

.3r

~.

'

1979 MERCURY COUGAR XR-7

' .76'

.

'

1

wiUt a card shower for her
7:ilh birtl)day ~ptil 1. Mrs.
Woode received %1 cards at
clturch and a &amp;1ft from her
Mystery Sisler. By m~il from
relatives and friends and the
Tuppers l'lrllns Church also,

·p888ing this savings on to you.
Give us a call and get in on the
savings!

C·7- The Sundm·
Timt•s . ."\cnlincLSunda v. Apr . R. Hl7!l
'

KingSbury.·

a

:Here in Gallia County
Allstate can save ')'OU 10%

.-

8 - Ford Thunderbirds In Stocl&lt;!

,.

J&amp;R
.. SPORT SHOP

t•

:, ~~

1

12"x
GRENOBLE
CEILING
TILE .

'

·oak tree planting is

'
'

1979- FORD
. THUNDIRBII

'

IOW. 1 7499

Auto, PS. PB, Air, vinyl roof, Unted glasa, AM·FM, 8 Track tape, crulle ccntrol, Wire wheel
'windows, atock No. 179. Lilt ~27.

.

I !INIJ Ca.
•nniV.n.ry
Special
•
..llliitll 4/14171

.

312 6th ·Street ·

I

Phone 675~1

Store Hours: ·Mond•r·FridiJ 8 1.m. • '
•

'

•

i

p.m.,

' ~ Point Plemnt .

AWl, PS, PB, Alr, vinyl roof, Interior decor group, lnstrumentaUon group, Dual mirror, power 11118nna, AMFM, I track, cru1re CCiittrol, tilt wlletl, wire wheel covera. stock No. 211. Ult $8&amp;01.
•

I

See Bill IOIC!!II 8011 or Bobby Roa•h

Two Rivers Ford, ln
,

itt. 62 North

. 675-1490

scheduled ·i n Oak 'HiJJ

coven. eleCtric

1979 FOlD THUNDIRBIID-------:-- low . '75~0 ·
'

\

Point

~·

•r

Pl~a~at

Starcraft makes boa Is for' people who
real~e that a boat Is more than just metal
or fiberglass. It's for people who kn,ow
that a boat Is the •lght of a summer •u~­
•et. Or the cool feel of spray on yow face.

Dl1co~er the npertenc4! o1 boatln1 •

It wao meant to be apertencecl.
Starc:raft• .,.,., lor II!• fun ollt.

OAK IDIL - An Oak tree
will be planted on the
property of the W•lsh·
American Heritage Museum
1n Oak Hill on Friday, May 25
at 4:30 p.m. Thta special
ceremony will be aymboUc of
one thai will be happening in
Wales on the same day,
· oommemoratlnc tha aaillng
of our forefathers from the
. sitores ol Wales from 1818
throulh 11149.
David E. Morgan of
Columbus will be with a wur
group In Wales for the
planting of an Oa~ tree from
VMk Hait ua ,u.wu ~Liul t.: Ul

Aberaeron. There will be
people frOm Oak Hill snd
·Jackson County there also.
The program for the tree
· planting ts jUBt in .the plan·
ning stages but will Include a
gaUiering of the relatives of
these early families, guest
dignitaries, special music,
reading~ and the dedication
of Ute tree .
AU Welshmen of the area
~re Invited· to attend this
event and·share In the linking
of hearts and minds with
friends and relatives In
Wales.

..

�•
'·

I

•

-

C~-The Sunday Times,'&gt;t'fllinel, Sunday. Apr. 8, lil79
.

rPt't.:nt Sumi&lt;tY diufl(:r guests
uf hi&lt; pan·nts. Mr. and Mrs.
Hodncy Spires..
,
' Visting u recent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Honial

.

Kyger

'urke)· with all the trurumnM• :when her daughter; Martha
of Mr . and Mrs. Ancll Prunty: evening with · Mrs. Muriel
and a large birthday cake, . 11\fr . and , Mrs. Carlo•
Mr : and Mrs. Lester Elkins Spires and Mrs. Irma Bales..
baked bY her daughter, Mrs. t:alllmore·1 ond children,
and soil, Westerville, were
Mr. and Mrs. Marion
iiV tilTh .1. 'A'HITI~
recmt visitors of Mr. and llamcll have returned home
BY K. KNOTI'S
Jean Audrey Smith. Her two llcverl)', Debbie and Carlos
Ht•t·cnt \'b itors of Mr. anti .Jh·iGcn we re Mrs. H.ay Mr. . Walter Jenkins and Mr. after an extended weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Ed
sislets, Mrs. Sybll Long, ll,.Mr.'anl\ Mr~. Lacy Hogan
Mrs.
Joe Strwmt w~re Mrs. .lividcn and Mr. an&lt;l Mr•. and Mrs. Uob Elkins ana \'isit with their son and wife,
and
son,
Shone,
came
with
Kemper viSited her molher,
Columbus, and Mrs. Grace
Hams~urg
and ilrnold Jj \i(lcn and Tunya. family .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Darnell,
Mrs. Gracie McCormick a
Norman, Nelsonville, her cake, Ice cream, Kool·Ald IJoris
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hart, High Point, N. C.
recent Sunday. .
daughter, Jean Audrey, and flowers, red roses. Her daught er . Elaine and ncar Addison.
Mrs . Mory Sisson has l'ickcrington . were recent Hccent visitors of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs: Jolm E.
husband, Don Smith, grand- daughter made the -cake for daughter. Tonya. A recent
the
party.
They
all
enjoyed
visitor
of
M
r.
Stewart
was
learned
that her son, Wade weekend guests of her Mrs. Bob Elkins and family
Denney visited their son, Mr;
daughter, Missy Smith aU
the evening and aU wished Ted Cremeans, Cooks Gap Hupe,l'rooksvillc. underwent parents. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne were Mr. and Mrs. Larry
. .----------------~
enjoyed
the deUcious
surgery rccentiy at llethesda Sisson.
·
Mrs. Marvella
Smith.dinner
Mrs... Bessie many more happy Hill.
.
'·Elkins and soh, Leslie and
Mrs.
Sally
Oxycr
and
girLs.
Hospital
in
zanesville.
He
is
birthdays
with
ber
husband;
Mr
.
.
and
Mrs.
George
Larry and K.im Reynolds.
MariePayncandmBllymore
.came to visit in the afternoon. Gordon - Smith nd her · Grove City, were Monday ""mcwhat improycd at this Markin and son. Jeremy,
visitors of Mrs. Lilly Mae writing.
Everyone enjoyed , them· children.
Mr.
and
.
Don
Denney~
OXY.lT
and family..
Mrs. Jca nneite Moss .
selves and wt~hed Nella
.
Mr
s.
Mildred
Stevens,
.visited
Mrs : limy Short
.
,
out
and
Mr.
and
if ~ ~~ u usually lake longer than '30 minutes to
many more bawJl birthdays. .
l!idwcll BoUtc, was a
rs.
Bill
McCully
were
in
g' · • sleeR come lo .a meeting on ·April9th ill
Mrs. Mildred George and
Saturday visitor of h er recently.
·
Hcccnt Monday visitors a!
nc Oh10 Universily, Athens, Room 235,
daughter, Vicki, and grand· Columbus visiting their
Mrs. Bonnie Rupe and
'A •r ' n n H·a u (Mathematics ·Building!
son, Toney, visited Mr. ahd coustit, Margeda Edwards at mother. Mrs. Cora Rupe.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard daughters. Mary . Lou and
Riverside Hospital, who has
Mrs.
Gllmer
Knotts
Thurs. ' ese.uch . project by Ohio University
bfen in and out of It since in lloush. Fairbanks, · Indiana, Lisa Ann were Mrs. Rhonda
O:&gt;c ' ·&gt;ral Student Chuck Rich. If possible
da~·rs. Bessie Smith January. Margeda Is were recent guests of Hortie Markin and Mrs. Genevie
·
,;,: ; Chuck belore hand at 592-5424 or 594celebrated her birthday last seriously Ul but seems to Housh . They were here. Jones.
Husscll Short, Circleville,
S9t7 .
week. She was surprised improve some. Frlenda may especially to attend the
' was a recent . Saturday
write her at Riverside funeral of Ed Spears.
Hecent Sunday guests of
·
Hospital, 'Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones overnight guest of his
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy were . Hobert Persons, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Owyer
K!!lllper and sons,, Jimmy,
Short and family.
Mrs. Amy ShOrt and
Jr., ,Tommy and Tod, visited l'hcstcr .. Mr. ond Mrs. Jolm
biB parents, Mr. 8lld Mrs. W. Johnson ll'hristine Persons) ,• l!~rbrar'a. and Mrs. Amy
North Carolins, and Howard Brewer visited M!'i. Ola
Ed Kemper.
·
Mrs. VIrginia Kemper has l'cck.
Mrs. 1brcsa Price and ' Chapman ..and daughter,
been lit Columbus vislting her
Rachel Knapp and .Delores
LIY!fi, Pep is a high-nitrogen.
· Stickler, Nine Mile, W. Va.,
daughter, Frances Scott and children, Becky and •' rankie,
.
slow-release
fertilizer that will help
S
da
I
were. recent un y ·v sttors recently.
·family.
lawn
green
up fast; yet feed it
J.lttle Miss Jamie Jooes,
'Mr. and Mrs. Gilmer of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
of time .. Can be
over
a
long
period
Knotts have been visiting · Junior Lemley, Bidwell · Gallipolis, is spending a few
applied
spring,
summer
and fall . is·
Route.
their ljaughtl'f, Mr. and Mrs.
Miss Ginny Weimam and . days wl!h her grandparents,
free,flowing
,
easy
to
us'
e
. One '
Noel Helllter and sdn, ottO.
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Jones
lloug
Halley
were
united
in
and
famlly
.
bag
covers
7$00
sq.
ft.
WhUe they, they were · in
Mr. and Mrs. Jim BradColumbus to att011d a sur- marriage Saturday ·evening,
March 24, at the Cl!esblre
prise birthday party for Mrs. United
Methodist ·church·, bury and children, J. D.,
WEED &amp;FeED IN&lt;&gt;NE PASS, with WEED VEX
Margaret Edwards l!lven bv llcv ..Bill Beegle officiated. A Michael and l!cth Am spent a
ON SELECTED VINYL.QMltD
Weed Vex .kills broadleaf weeds· and feeds your lawn at
her ne,phew, .Mr. and Mrs. reception followed at 'the . weekend in Washington, D.
the
same t1me. Controls dandelion, plantain .. chi,ckweed,
Wayne McCully and cblldrm, home of the bride's parents, C.. visiting his sisters, Naomi
·kn.otweed, buckhorn and other pests. One bag covers
WALL COVERINGS. OVER 35
Richard and girl friend, Mrs. Mr . and Mrs. Larry Mangum
7500 SQ . ft.
and
Mary
Judy
"I:aylor
and
son,
Dlon
.
·
,
llraczeale.
·
PATltRN BOOKS WITH SALE
PLANT PeP...DOES WHAT IT SAYS
and Laura, Mrs. Margaret · Wctma~~· 111e newlyweds
llccent SWlday visitors of
A &amp;12·6 a'rialysis, plus m·inor elements. ·use on. roses,
are
re•tdlnt!
m
Kyger.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bill
Darst
and
Edwards
and
grandson,
Jim
PRICES.
trees, shrubs. vegetables, strawberries flowers - pre·
Mrs. Louise Roush was a famil .
M
d 'M
Blazer, Mrs. Mary U.u Simon recent
plant or side-dress..
'
··
Sunday
caller
of
Mrs.
l
wer~ r .. an
rs.
HURRY - SALE ENDS. APRIL 25, 1979
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cora Hupe
l&gt;onald
Schllhng and
JUST COMPA~ OUR PRICES!
Noel Heister, son Otto, Mr.
Truman. Cantrell Hun· daughter. Leiso, Gallipolis,
No need to speM a small fortune on lawn care not witti
and Mrs. Gllmer Knotts. ·
,
·
'
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald earL"NOMAAK's
down·to·ea&lt;th prices. Compare ours before
Mr.
ncllus
C"'
shl
d
M
d
Margaret received roses lington. Yi . Va., called on
't
, . ...e re, an
r. an
you buy.
'
·
.
from Margeda and son, Jim, and M~s . J oseph Wh I e, a Mrs. Mark Darst.
Mrs . Clarice Callicoat,
and many nice gifts. During recent Sunday. Other. callers
were Mrs. Mary Hawley and Galllpol'15
t .
t
the dinner Margeda called childrm.
lbris
and
Mark,
.
•. spen
a
rccen
405 N. Second Ave.
.Middleport.o.
her mOther saying She was
evcmng With Mr. and Mrs.
Co1~m bus, and Mrs. Wihn a l'harlcs
Tate.
Phone 992-3748 or m-5020
.
sorry she couldn't attend ·
' '•
We1mam.
Convenient Free Parking
M
d M Mik M
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Tate,
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
, r. an . rs.
e c- &lt;.:olumbus. were recent
·s.rvlng Motgs, G. and MilOt\ Counties
Brtdc and chlldre.n, Rodney, weekend guests of his
Pllella9f2.2111
':'
visited recently wtth Mr. and parenIs , Mr. an d Mrs.
STORE
HOURS
·Mrs . .Ha~id WeIIs and son. · t:.barlcs Tate.
' Open • : 30.5 :30
Mill CloHSif 5 p;m .
iln evcmng of singing was
Mrs. Debbie White was a
en)o)·ed at tbe ~.orne of Mr. recent Wednesday visitor of
~nd Mrs. Bub hfe a recent Mrs. Bonnie Rupe and
Saturday evenmg. Guests m famll)'.
their home wer.e Jack,
John Wamsley called on
Delores and Pam Rtggs, N~w OwyerShort a rceent SWlday.
Haven , W. . Va., Mane,
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Maxine and Norma Keefer•. Prunty, Cl!arleston, w. va.
Letart, W. Va., Mrs.
·
Raymond Fife, Storys Run
. Hd., Elaine and Tonya Ramsb~rg, 1\utland, Bllly Thorn·
·..::..,,, .
ton, Gallipolis, Red and Tina
__ Justus , and. Harold and
.·
Phyllis Wells.
Recent Thursday supper
~guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Price and children were
Jeannie, Gary and Sally
:Si;nd' liirdwood frame .(Pred&lt;lmi·
SaWlders, lbesbire.
Mrs. Eva Mae Phillips and
,n.ut'if ooh. . Douli~'I!Owal8d;,
Kelly Ray, Syracuse, visited
flluild. •nd f;Crewed·in . .corner
recently with Mr. and . Mrs.
blocks. n.. ~nbid Flexmel
. l1arcnce Searls. Their recent
· iPring · is' · ·m.cte of tho .·finest'
Sunda)· guests were Mrs.
~IIPI'illii steel.-.t!tiii~Jng'-tiia
June Cook, Karen. Koith,
pilneiple of It&gt;• •rdl ·to provide
Kuii'ana Kelly.
~·
rb "lting cOmfort ·.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Jones
had as recent guests Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Malone and Mr. and
Mrs. William White, Hun·
tington.
Comfo11Jible "hip, Nliliericy"
Bortle Roosh telephoned
htiYV
density piJtyuretblrie loim ·
his sister, Mrs. Mildred
Swisher. Punta Gorda,
!let-..· layen .of thick downy·
Florida, to wish her a."Happy
. polyesler fjbef for · .IUKUriOUI
... .·, :
.
Birthday." Mr. Roush
leatlnii comfort.· ·
learned that Mr. · and Mrs.
Jack Hcrmam. Belpre, had
stopped to visit Mr. and Mrs.
.Filbulous ·"thou..nd-plus" Iabrie
Ura Swisher while in Florida
.
coilkiion - Mlecttd lor wory
recently.
. ·fllhion ,.i~d durabiljty. r..lost
llecenl Saturday visitors of
·..;;.:.~, ~. : prpt*cted,lfllinst soil and still~.
-Mr: and Mrs. Red Justus
.
.
were llon. Paula and Scott
... jJ:.a.
.... :
Justos, Elaine and Tonya
.
.
llamsburg and Billy Thorn·
ton .
·
Mr . and Mrs. Rodney
Spires, Jr., Missy, ,Summer
Cpmplete ' flr1ish.lng ot . , IVII1(
llawn and Starr Renee, were
· .:;.un.: inc:luding moichlnv . erm
ciwers and 10at ·cteci.s uphol·
fabries.
.Sbired' ln.·.matching
.,
.

K.e rr News

and Mrs. l,uck Denney 8lld
son, Heath. one evening. ·
Mr .· and Mrs. Elmore
.-Jowers have returned froin
Riverside , Florida . afler
spendintl the winter months.
Mrs. Nella McDaniel
celebrated her 75th birthday
Sunday in Porter at her
home. She enjoyed a roasted

fREE RELAXATION TRAINING
APRIL ·9th-7 p·.M.

r-------·-,;v;;;t-------..,

FASI

results?

DREAM HOMES COME TRUE

WITH BRIGHT, NEW

PEP!,

.Wall Coverings
-·

POMEROY lANDMARK
lila

Knows

&amp; Gardens!
..

..,.,__,......,.............

!

'

f). ]..,. The Sunda)' Timt•s,~Pntinel. Sunday.

Wl' rc rrccnt weekend guests l'hcshirc. visited a rccl'nt

•

..

•

Apr. 8. ,19'79·: ,:'~: •
. (:

.}

First there ·was .con :uszon, then
our lives but never see, or· called, re{er to the sudden Met Ed relieved pressure in
smell, or !eel, or hear it, and ~hutdown of fio;sjon as a the auxiliary building by
so tend not to Wlderstand. We scram .
venting radioactive stearil
know that too much is bad.
Turbine Shutdowns are not into the air.
After all , don't X-ray all that unconunoh. But the ·· Five hours later, an angry
technicians duck for cover aftermath of this one Scranton declared " the
after placing machine demonstrated for the world situation Is more complex
against tooth?
that a nuclear accident was · than the company first led us
A full generation intil the possible. ,
to believe. Metropolitan
In the coolant system, a Edison is giving you and us
nuclear age, it's still like
science fiction, this business valve closed, causing water conflicline information.".
of chain reactions, a formula pressure to build. A second Day Twocl'llursday Manh !9
dimly r~alled from high valve, designed to t;elieve
More explanations from the
school physics:
· ov e rpressure, opened . company. Tbe gist: "Don't
A chain reaction is set off properly but failed til close worry."
by neutrons, striking, almost when the pressure dropped
"We didp't injure anybody,
like bullets, the nucleus of below safe levels.
we didn 'I overexpose
other .Utanium-235 atoms ,
Inside the reactor, the anybody and we certainly
splitting them. Again and water level - precious didn't ·kill a single soul,"
again, neutron bullets, coolant - dropped, exposing Herbein said.
reproducing. This is "critical the urani11111 rods at least two
But low-level radiation was
mass " - unleashing the feet below the top. They measured 16mlles away. And
power of the atom.
overheated so badly that they the stubborn reactor,
This
occurs
in
a
reactor
expanded,
broke. through mysteriously, wouldn 't cool
lsllind.
Th.ere is a nuclear plant in pelllled inside a watet.filled their protective shields and down.
Protests were mounting
Hiroshima, witness to atilmic steel tank that sits at the sent the radioactive products
of
a
huge
building
with
of
fission
swirling
through
the
around
the world. And Dr.
center
energy at its worst; and near
four.fooHhick
concrete
and
4().foot
high
vessel.
Ernest
Sternglass,
a
Leningrad , Frankfurt,
walls.
An
operator
tried
to
close
radiology
professor
at
the
steel
Buenos Aires. There are 223
:
The reactilr's core contains the relief valve by remote University of Pittsburgh,
nuclear reactors at power
plants around the globe; two a shook of uranium rods, control. It wouldn't close. journeyed 200 . miles to
of them at Three Mile Island. bound closely together , Any human trying to go in to adddress a 'rally in
THE MEIGS UNITED METHODIST Ministry
Members of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program are : , ·
One of the Three Mile intensifylng the frenzy of the close the valve manuslly Harrisburg, the state capital.
recently initiated a food c(Hlp to serve the residents of
assisting in the co.op by sacking groceries. The cO-&lt;Jp,js '. ..
"What we're dealing with is
Island reactors WIIS shut neutron bullets. If it loses its would have been on a suicide
Meigs CoWlly. The food co-op is held every olher week
open to anyone in Meigs County. Fotmore information on ..' ·: :·,
covering
of
water
it
could
mission.
fallout,
plain old, bomb-type
with the delivery offresh prod"ce, bread, eggs and cheese
down for routine refueling on
lhe co-&lt;&gt;p., call the United Methodist Ministry office .· in .&gt;..' .'i::. ·I ·
to
incredible
Coolant spurted out of tbe fallout," he said. "People
March 28. The other, Unit 2, heat
to persons who have placed orders prior to delivery. The
Middleport, 99:1-7400, or the Retired Senior VolWlteer · . c ··." '\
was humming along quietly temperatures, devouring its valv,e, covering the floor with should stand up and scream.
coordina tilr of the e&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;p is the Rev. James Corbitt of the
Program at the senior citizens center, 992·7884. Pictured·, · ·,. :;·:.
until, at 3:53 a.m., terrible . own container and - if theory 80,000 gallons of highly It is not a disaster where · Enterprise-Rock Springs-Flatwoods United Methodist
with .the food to be sacked for pick-up are left to ·~ight;-' ·:·'.
people are going to fall down
Vernon Nease, Melvin Lovesea, senior volunteers, and the . . :,·. ·
events began with a whoosh. is correct - melt through tbe radioactive water.
Cl!urches. The pickup point for the CO-&lt;&gt;p is the Meigs
Three auxiliary pumps like flies. It's a creeping
Rev . Jim COrbitt, the Rev . Harvey Koch, and 'the·Re·;.,,: · ·:;·
The fail...afe system failed. bottom into the earth,
Senior Citizens Cenier on E. Main St. in Porn\!roy .
Robert Bumgarner, of the United Methodist Ministry.:· · ·. :_::
:,.
. Three valves on auxiliary spewing and spreading kicked in, but their valves thing."
had been turned off two
Still the situation seemed
pumps that should have been deadly radiation.
A runaway reactor, the weeks earlier during routine safe. · Said NRC inspectilr
open weren't. And the chain
of human error and stuff of 'fiction, the movie maintenance so the water Cl!arlesGallina, "The danger
is over for people off site."
. mechanical breakdown grew, "China Syndrome " come output was blocked
alive.
.
"It
would
have
been
an
Hell br..,ks loose. Officials
multiplied, and turned a
Harold
Denton
saw
tbe
film
entirely
different
outcome
if
detect
an "uncontrolled and
routine gUtch intil the worst
.
in
late
March;
he
told
his
wife
they
had
been
operational,"
unexpected
"
burp
of
nuclear accident in the 22
radiation that laata from 6:40' Vol. 14 NO. 10
SUNDAY, APRIL 8, 1979
PAGE tO
years since the nation began· be was Impressed by its Denton would say later.
teclmical accuracy and by
Not far away, in a control a.m. to 9, Gov. Dick - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - . .·,·
using nuclear power.
This time, nobody was just Jane Fonda. Aweek later, the room half the size of a tennis Thornb)Jrgh, in office only 2~
script was . reill. Denton court, a computer measured months, must decide whether
a spectator.
"Everybody knew there himself ·was in the drama , the temperature of the core, til evacuate up to 950,000
was danger," recalls one cast by Presid&lt;:nl Carter who the nuclear fuel, and found people, from a radius of
federal nuclear official. ~·An saw in Three Mile Island a nothing abnormal. The perhaps 20 miles.
A'I'HENS, Ohio (AP ) - A many as 10 personalities,
late Thurday, Milligan tC)ld ... ' '
It would be an exodus ot series of events at the Athens gained national attention ·last was not guilty by reason of
awful bash had · been given · possible unraveling of trust In operators apparently had no
insanity
.
a nurse he hM taken a
a power sour ce that h'\ inkling that the top of the core stupendous scope and Mental Health Center has led year when he was tried on
the plant." ·
Milligan, it was learned quantity of pills. But after .
indispensable
.
was
uncovered.
complexity,
and
lbe
governor
considers
But a confusion of voices,
authorities to transfer charges of rape, kldnspplng recently, has has little under goin g testing at an
Two of the 72 nuclear power
Another cooling system, decided such a drastic step . William Mllllgan from an and robbery .
contradicting,
reassuring,
supervision at the Athens Ath ens hospital, doctors
frightening, made it difficult reactors in the United States the emergency system, was not yet necessliry. But be open Wlil to a locked ward.
Franklin CoWlty Com(Don facility. He had aloo been determined Milligan had not · '
at first to learn just how bad are at Three Mile Island. automatically sent tona of urged prO«hoolchildren and
Milligan, whom Pleas Judge Jay Flowers permitted to leave the center taken an overdose.
Ninety-six others are under water in til the reactor. But an pregnant women living psychiatrists
• things were.
say has as ruled, Dec. 4, that Milligan til visit relatives. .
·' ..
There Was no radiation , construction. Thirty more are operator, getting false within five miles of the plant
leave . They
are
they said, though there was. on order. In 21 other readings from the computer, to
countries,
there
are
151
turned
the
system
off
after
particularly
vulnerable
to
Nobody was overdosed ,
plants
in
operation,
45
on
four
minutes
and
30
seconds.
radiation.
Denton, now on · the scene within five miles of the plant melt-down.
ll1ousands or residents though four wOrkers were.
estima.tes
ranged from 50,000 ' ' .
Now there was nothing til
Twenty-three schools in the for the president and to leave.
They
are
•There was no human error, order and 235 in the planning
Another complicaiwn':
.
hold down the temperature. area near the plant were obviously in charge of the particularly vulnerable to Oxygen was being produced all the way til 250,000 - lelt .
there was. There was no 'stage.
The seven days at Three
The emergency system was closed.
massive Nuclear Regulatory radiation.
..
radiation leak, there was.
by chemical wastes. ""' anyway.
Mile
Island
began
with'a
gush
the
last
line
of
defense.
Evacuation
centers
were
Commission
operation,
said,
Twenty.three
schools
in
tbe
In on e York County ·
The leak 'was totally
mixture of hydrogen and
of
steam,
a
sound
not
unlike
a
All
this
took
only
five
opened.
At
Hershey,
where
"This
is
easily
the
most
area
near
the
plant
were
town
s hip , o ffi c ials
controlled, It was not.
oxygen in the right
jet
engine
at
fuU
howl.
It
rrtinutes.
That
was
long
the
seductive
odor
of
serious
accident
in
the
closed.
distributed
flyers . "Be
" It was not that close to a
proportions could become
Evacuation centers were explosive and rip the lid off prepared to leave with one
catastrophe," an of(iclal awoke those within earshot, enough, however, for growing chocolate permeates the air, licensed ..reactor nrnarQ"" "
but it was not a cause for radiation and pressure to 188ReQplesleploncotssetup
A gas bubble
re- opened. At Hershey, where the reactilr or containment blanket
and
medical
said.
alarm. It had been heard send meters off their scale. in a cover~ ice rink.
actor. mostly hydrogen , the seductive odor of building. That would release supplies ," the handbill said.
Was it?
Shortly before noon, a siren · was described by NRC chocolate penneates the air, lethally radioactive vapor. "We hope with God's help this
A "meltdown" - synonym before, any time there w's a . It was 7 a.m., three hours
of
the
later
.
when
Metropolitan
wailed
in Harrisburg. II was officials as a major problem. t88 people slept on rots set U9
sudden
shutdown
for nuclear catastroPhe For the first time in this action Will not be necessary."
generator,
a
not
infrequent
Edison,
the
plant
operatilrs,
an
unauthorized
alarm
set
off
The
best
nuclear
minda
in
tbe
in
covered
lee
rink.
·
8
was indeed a ,possibility. For
country, an insurance · Atomic experts were
deClared a site emergency. by a. fire official and was coWllry and the world didn't
Shortly before noon, a siren company opened a field office riveted to their control
seven days, and seven nights, occWTence.
Day One·Wednesday March At 7:30 they called it a intended to warn people know what to make of tbe walled in Harrisburg. It was til COII'\pensate victims of an panels, frying til eliminate a
those within 20 miles of Three
··
general emergency and within 10 miles of the plant to dangerous build-up.
an unauthorized alarm set off atomic power plant accident. bubble
they
didn't
Mile Island lived With the 28
.
Between
3a.m.
and
4
notified
federal,
.
stale
and
stay
indoors.
Its
effect
was
to
Nowhere
in
the
three
:1by a fire official and was
spt\cter of onknown power out
CUrfews were Imposed. " It Wlderstand. They made slow
fuel the fright.
inch-thick
binders
of intended to warn people looks like a ghost town now," headway but didn't know
of control. How close was the a.m., maintenance work was local officials.
done
on
Unit
2's
feedpump
"
It
doesn't
look
like
a
vei'y
The
governor's
decision
emergency
procedures
for
within IOmilesofthe plant to said Ken Myers, mayor of why.
'caU'!
President .and Mrs. Carter
Even among those who live · system. Whether that had ·serious accident at this notwithstanding, ·the exodus Three .Mile Island Is there a stay in&lt;joors. Its effect was to · Goldsboro.• less than half a
·
Dew
from Washington by
in Its shadow, few understand anything to do .with. what point," Met Ed vice president . began. There was no panic, suggestion for getting rid of a fuel the fright.
mile from the plant. Already,
· Jack Herhein told reporters, no urgency • but people bubble trapped in the reactor
The governor's decision 500 of his 600 townspeople had helicopter. They were driven
nuclear power, and how it is followed is not known.
At 3:53a.m. the condensate vanguard of p. news army to started leaving. Streets roof . "It's a new·twist," said notwithstanding, the exodus gone into self-imposed exile . onto Three Mile Island in a
harnessed to make the heat ·
and
feed pump failed , come.
.
jammed with cars, many Denton.
began. There was no panic,
that makts tbe steam that
1!1 Middletown, three miles schoolbus, fir st donning
shutting
down
the
steam
"There
is
absolutely
no
piled
with
what
people
grab
At
its
height,
the
bubble
no
urgency,
but
people
turns the turbines that make
from Three Mile Island, yellow hoots to protect thelt
in
a
building
behind
danger
of
a
melt-down,"
ll&amp;id
wben
they're
Deeing.
U.ng
grew
to
1,800
cubic
feet
,
started
leaving
.
Streets
turbine
from
poss ibly.'
electricity; the greatest force
Mayor Robert Reid ordered feet
known loman used til heat his the reactor container. In the Met Ed spokesman Dave distance phone calls, in and according to the NRC jammed with cars, many police to shoot iooters. For radioac tive dust. Carter ,
reactor, 69 control rods slid Kluscik, "We are not in a out, became difficult.
'estiinates, acknowledged til piled with what people gral) ~ ooce even the predators were train ed
in
nuclear
.teakettle.
President Carter told be approximate. The danger when they're Oeeing. Long scared . No looting was engineering, wa• briefed in
During the midnight shift smoothly into the hell.fire China Syndrome type
the plant's control room amid
officials "to err on '\he side of was that It could grow and distance phone calls, in and reported .
m Three Mile Island, on furnace, creating an atomic situation."
sponge
til
soak
up
the
neptron
U
.
Gov.
William
Scranton
caution
."
choke
off
tbe
core
from
Its
out,
became
difficult.
Wednesday, March 28, 1979,
One of the 83 small children the dazzling array of dials,
bullets.
Ill
held
a
briefing
to
assure
For
the
first
time,
the
NRC
coolant,
triggering
a
chain
of
.President
Carter
told
!bedded down in the Hershey gauges and li ghts . The
!he harness slipped. It loosed
A
scram.
people
"everything
is
under
said
a
melklown
the
events
that
might
lead
to
a
officials
"to
err
oo
the
side
of
the Wlknown, unseen threat
arena - slx-year..,ld Abby President nodded in grim
The
nukes,
as
people
who
control."
super-disaster
was
a
·melt-down.
caution."
Baumbach - told a reporter: understanding.
· of radiation.'
Alter a few minutes, Cartet ·. '
work
in
such
plants
are
At
exactly
the
same
time,
"remote
possibility."
·
Protests
were
mounting
For
the
firstlime,the.NRC
We live with radiation all of
"Something's wrong with the
around the world. And Dr. said a melt-down - the air. My mommy told me It was driven til the Middletown
Borough Hall, three miles
Ernest
Sternglass,
a super-J)lsaster - was a could kill me."
away.
Hundreds lined the .
r - - - - - - - - - - -- -------'.---------------------, radiology professor at the ''remole possibility."
.Thornburgh visited the
University of Pittsburgh,
Denton, now on the scene evacuatioo center to comfort route. "First president I ever
UJe nuclear refugees , "Keep . seen in this town,' ' said a mtin
journeyed
miles In
to for
the In
· president
_ _ _ th~--d
.a£
add
dress a200 rally
obviously
charge of· and
the your chin up. You'll be going of about 80.
.
,
Harrisburg, the state capital. massive Nuclear Regulatory home 80011," be said. But·that ' Standing in the free-throw
ci rcle of a black-tiled
CINCINNATI (AP J _
TheChillicothe,Ohlonative
"He's busier than a Ol)e· appearance . The court has
"Whatwe'redealingwl~ls Commission operation, said, wasn't true either.
lifetime
grew
up
in
an
active
armed
paperhanger"
In
the
not
required
his
presense
for
fallout,
plain
old,
bOmb-type
"This
1s
easUy
the
most
Capping
In Washington , Senate basketball floor in the town
8
dedicacted to causes he participation
in
the Hamilton· County Jail, said the last two hearings.
fallout," he said. "PeOPle serious accident In the Majority Leader Rabert Byrd hall , Carter tilid residents .to
follow thei r governor 's
believes Involved the Presbyterian Church in the attorney Allen Brown.
Judge Doan bas said should stand up and scream. Ilcensed reactilr pro~ram. " 'l'as puzzled.'
freedom of the human SRirit Monmouth,
Ill.
and MeCrackin has Immersed repeatedly that he would It is not a disaster where DayFour.S.turdayMarch31
"We have been assured instru ctions "calmly and
before they become popular, chiunpioned the cause of himself in the problems of consider · release
if people are gOing to fall down
Agas ~bble tn the reactor, time and
again by the exactly ." Any evacuation·
be
purely
the Rev. Maurice McCrackin, blacks in the 192lti and 1930s. pri'IIOners, those he Is now McCrackin pleads the Fifth li~e ~~es . It's a creeping mostly hydrogen, was Industry · and
federal would
73, Is in his third major He was a . pacifist during dedicated to help.
Amendment; in which he can · thmg. .
described by NRC offlclals·• s regulatory agencies that this precautionary , he said, not
standoff With law, and for the World War fl . He was jailed
·"He's really fulfilling hiS claim
the
ministers ' Still the situation . seemed ' a major problem, The best was something that was exacUy raising hopes that
third time _ In jail.
in 1952 for refilslng to pay emotional needa. He has. 8· perrogative not to violate · safe. Said NRC inspector nuclear minds ill the country Impossible, that It could n6t thlngs were getting better.
A Middletilwn woman said
·A prison reform advocate, income tax which would be clear hlstilry of tota!'ldenlity confidences.
Cl!arlesGallina, ''The danger and the world didn't know happen,'! he said.
her
mind was eased· by the
he was jailed Jan. 19 for used for war material. He with any underdOg group. His . ;•He won't go begging to tbe Is over for people off site." what to make of · the
Nu clear reactor experts
presidential
visit. ' 'If it had.
refusing to testify before 8 hasn't paid siqce.
empathy is 80 .intense, ·he court," said the frustrated llayThree•FrldayMarch30 dangtrous bulld-op.
from private industry and
been
dangerous
he would
grand jury about three prison · McCrackin . came to become ,one, whether its a · Brown. ·
Hell breaks loose. Officials
Nowhere in the three Z. from government poured into
have
sent
Vice
President·
escapeeswhokldnappedhlm. Cincinnati in 15 ~minister black , poor or · now, his
One of the three prisoners detect an "uncontrolled and inch-thick
binders
of Harrisburg. Babcock and
Mondale,"
she
said.
On Ftiday, Jadge Ruppert " who refused a draft disposition toward prisoners who allegedly kidnapped unexpected"
burp
of emergency . procedures for Wilcox, the firm that built
In churches, earlier in tbe .
Doan, Hamilton county deferment, to work for peace. Is so great, he needs to be one McCrackin Is dead.
radiation that lasts from 6:40 Three Mile Island is there a both units at Three Mile
day,
the prayers were said
Common Pleas Court, lie was· defrocked by the of them ," said Rrown. ·
The others are in prison. a.m. to 9. Gov. Dick suggesUonforgetUngrldofa Island, seny a contingent of
grimly.
refused to release him Presbyterian Cl!urch in 1956
McCrackin said said be Brown contends there is no Thornbur~h. in office only 212 bubble trapped in the reactor 46. Burns and Roe, the
"Those who are making the
although the prisoners are aU following his prison term for believes prisons do nothing need for , McCrackin's months, must decide whether root "It's a new twist," oald designer, sent 12. The NRC
decisions have awesome
back in jail.
income tax evasion.
but break the human spirit. testimony because the . til evacwite up to 950,oo0 · Denton.
.
dispatched more than 100.
Allen Brown, 8 .lawyer
He has since operated his He believe prison rioting Is a prisoners ar~ no longer a people, from a radius of
AI Its height, the bubble
President Carter, in responsibilities. I think God
appointed by the court, who own West End Conununity natural' defense of the human threat to soc ~ely ·
.
perbaps 20 miles.
grew to 1,1lltl cubic feet, Milwaukee for a Democratic has been very kind to let us go ,
McCrackin will accep! only Cl!urch of Christ.
spirit.
•·
Arthur Ney , asSistant · It would be an exodus . of accor,dlng to the NRC · Party fundralser, announced as far as we have in UJis
. ·as ..a friend, 'iml a legal
He was jailed in Heywood, . .He contends t!e has been prosecutor, argued the.. stupendous scope and esttrnlttes, acknowledged to he
would
come
to world. But I think he's now
representative, said that Tenn. for loitering while kidnapped · by tlie court prisoners were not n~l~ial complei&lt;lty, and the governor be aP!roxlinate. Tbe danger PeMSylvanla to assess · the saying, 'Be careful ," -'
)ireached th~ Rev. Richard
. would be the last attempt. wilrking for UJe cause . of ·system and refu~s to to McCrackin's case. "We're decided such a drastic step WI:" that it could grow and slluatioo for himself. ·
Deardorff in the Goldsboro
McCrackin Is expected to he black sharecroppers. 'He participaLe. He has ha~ to be heretose~whetheror not Mr. was not yet nec'eSSIIry. But he choke off the core from Its . Qay ••tvc-liuaday April I
Church
of God.
released ·May 2 when the conducted a 25-day hunger carried from the jail to the McCrackm wishes ~. purge urged pre-achool children and coolant, triggering a chain of
Evacuation . was not
!Continued
on page D-10)
. grand jury Is sent.home.
strike.
courtroom ·. for
each hnnself of contempt.
pregnant women living events that might lead to a ordered. But tens of
By BOB DVORCHAK
:
and
. HARRVF.ROSENTHAL
Associated Press W~iters
TIIREE MILE ISLAND;
Pa. (AP) - In the darkoess
before dawn, in the chill
miSts that rise from the
.Susquehanna River, the
atomic powerhouse on Three
Mile Island defied its human
keepers aqd threatened
catastrophe.
In the small neighboring
towns like Yocwntown and
York HaV.n, Goldsboro and
Pleasant Grove, there was
confusion, then fear.
"We
all
live
ij
Pennsylvania," chanteo
protesters in Germany.
Indeed, . the · whole world
had a stake in Three Mile

I

innb~ ~imts -. itntitttl•·• {

Transfer Milligan .to locked ward

··!.

I

-

McCra·ckin m· J·aaJill

trm·e

I

lime

••• the marketplace of millions of
smart buyers and sellers! ·.
W~ether

it's products, merchandise, s·ervices or employment,
you get the most for your money with a low-cost Classifi.ed Ad!
'

\
.

'

Suitday Time~Sentinel

,,, ... '

Wn c us for Ire~
b ' ·Ide ' s
showing,
,., • ..., ·nats io full

c .; r

w i! h sizes
fJ r'i ccs given.

&amp;

LOGAN
MONUMENT CO.
,p •'1cr uy, Ohio
. i.·.' l:. v .,uqhiln. Mqr

',.

Vt rl Hl tJ! H '•

\

•

J ,..,e s
I'

•

0 . Bu,h· 1-A11• .

"(

•&lt;

.

· Your ao...ronce qf qual.lty. From :
lfll!de, ~ :- only. the finest
........ mator\1111 are~.

FLEXSTEEC
FWE
FlJN1'\R
lJIHOLSTERB)
.

.

•II. II . .

•' .

'

t

'

•

'

,\

�.'·":'~\:,.~ -:·. "•
'·,~~

'

,1',:

·. 4~iculture department
~~Ys idea is premature
.:,.By DON itENUALL

director of USDA's new office
oommodilies.
of transportation, noted that
WIIS.HING.TON (AP ) To . protect their supply Congress directed the Carter
.Aitboi'811 ihe chairman of the lines aga~ abandonments administration last year lo
lnt -~i&lt;s'tale ·co mmerc e and severe !hortages of box study ways to move ~
Coni'riilssion endorses a cars, major grain buyers and more efficiently in tight of
l!le~ilre· ·to allow federal shippers have been building recent · car shortages and
'I
loaDt. .: to ·QJOperatives and .. centralized "subterminals" delays.
. othe~s: for. building gtain ' or collections of elevators on
The task Ioree to do t~at
ele\tator.s along · major . raU- main lines and leasing rail jlist started work March 14 '·
road ·,lines, the ·Agriculture cars.
and Its report isn't dlie untU
' DePattment says the idea is
That way, large unit trains Jan. 1, 'be said. UMDA:·
1 prerrtatute.
can be set up at one place and "strongly believes that this
. , «_ d~partment official said grain can be shipped more (the subterminal issue)
t!l~ · ~cept could duplicate efficiently and under lower should be considered within
. Farmers ·. · Home
Ad- rates than in combination the whole context," he said.
,
mlnlstratil&gt;n
and
Federal
trains that have to stop at
Authority already mots for
I
., ~ailw~Y.:; Administration smaller elevall&gt;rS to load a such grants and loans,
authQtity: ·.:
car or two.
Schrader said.
The bill would allow federal
Raliil!a~)Jave been trying
At the first meeting of the
to
aita.
i
idcirrilnprofitable
rural
loans
to
1Jf0ups
seeking
to
USDA
task Ioree last month,
I'
brandi':UOes In major cro!&gt;' build subterminal facilities Acriclilture , Secretary Bob
gro~" areas in their at- and underwrite most of the Bergland told It to come up
~ ,iii -~a_bilize business. cost of state and regional with fresh Ideas on bow to
· A .'':- ~enate' ~- Agriculture crop • transportation plan- Improve farm'-to-market
l&lt;ornil!ll:te~ : agricultural ning that would find the best tranaportalioo !llld tlilt be
cr!'lllfi J.ub-corhinlttee heard spots lor sellers, railways, wu tired of hel!rinc all the
teslli\!i)'fty · F'rlday on the trucks and. buyers allke.
old complaintS about boxcar
ICC Cbairm!lll ·A. Daniel -lbona&amp;ea.
J!I'O~~ ·l~glslation .
!:AI~VI~ -A semmental-Herefonl cow oirned by the Ben Bickers family, Rt. 1,
SetUG~rge ·McGovern, D- O'Neal said It wOUld help
Andrew T. Nebon of the
G:=~·~iJ~ School Rd.) recently gave birth to twin calves. Kim Bickers, the couples'
S: D&gt;;l;&amp;a11(the trend and the solve tbe rural shippers: Grain Terminal Aaoclatlon,
~
shown with the new additions; The Bickers family raises catile on their 113
tbr~lt(j;j ;_ ~lated elevators problema .and encourage a farmer -owned cooperative
!ann near Addavllle School. Mr. Bickers recently retired from the Southern Ohio Coal
aiul tfie-;to\&gt;nl. ·oojlendent on competition both 1111101111 rail- In Minnesota,, the .Daketas Company. They 'lave 34 head ofsemmentaland Hereford cattle.
.them.'jrtil · continue · even roads 8lld between railroads and Montana, told the Senate
lhO.Uil1.-niil shipment is "the and other frel8hl haulers.
panel of ways It Is using
But Ronald F.
':""li!5,"?st;llnd energy ' ef.
,. Sdtrader, private credit to develop such
..
'
facUlties and aolve other Union, said any new aid this year, private exporters
Production Included : 371 .3
tranaportalioo problema.
should locus on farmer co-ops have told the. AgricuUure ··m'inlori pounds for beef, down
"There Is no brief for ad- but the prbnary problem is Department.
13 percent from. the same
ditional financing by govern- transportation, not handling · Officials said .friday. the week last year; and 6.3
facilitl ...
ment," Nelson said.
grain had been reported as million pounds·· of call and
John Ingram, president of
J ens C. Jensen, an officer going to "unknown des- veal, down 33 percent.
I '
·: COMIINATION JOI
the Rock Island Railroad, a of the bankruptcy trastees for tinations " overseas - a
.Port output: at 275.7 million
major farin&gt;belt shipper, said the Milwaukee Road, said common practice by export pounds this week, was up 8
.School pluate, cal111 helpful
be welcomed the bill but it that railroad fully supports companies- but that It was percent from a year ago.
would not aolve the problems the bill's concept as an switched to the Soviet Union. Lamb and mutton production
/{;;o;:Shalllil hM pd t.dwritin&amp;IRd be
·unless railroads and their ansWer lor both elevators and
The latest saie raised to was 6.2 mi!Hon P.Ounds, up 9
unions follow through with raUways. ·
::"' _; ·"l""'' to
to people.
almost 5.3 million metric tons percent :
new approaches both to
A related report, although
tbe amount of corn the
1M ... orpiizld.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviets have bought for Mill preliminary, showed that
moving goods and to making
the tralna financlaUy secure. The Soviet Union has bought delivery ihrough Sept. 30. the department's aU-cut price
IINIFm
Ben H, Radcllffe, president an addllional 350,000. metric A.ddltlonally, they ha.ve for U. S. Cboice beef sold in
Blue Shield Cwatge
..J..
olthe.South Dakota Farmers . tons of lJ,S, com for delivery purchased abnost 2.3 mllllon retail stores averaged a
record of more than $2.21 a
metric tons of wheat.
:. ~ :•r• Ute lnsuiiiiCI
A
metric
ton·
is about 2,205 pound in March, 2.2 cents ·
Sharing Plail (if qllllify)
pounds and Is :equal to 3~ .4 more than USDA projected a
Uniforms ·
..
bUshels of
or 36.7 bushels week ago for the month.
That was up, frolt1 about
of wheat,
.
. (
$2.15 a pound In February and
PIJ
WASHINGTON tAP) - $2.05 a Jiound in January. In
Thts ·week's report by the March of last year, retail beef
Agriculture Department on was $i.67 a pound on the allmeat produCtion by federally cut average.
.
Inspected
pla.U
illUstrates
.
Dep~rtment
officials
·
J9l.l:
Elltem
Aw.
Ohio
''•
why prices are blgb.
earlier this. wee~ forecast
By Bryson R. &lt;Bud&gt; Carter
•
Estimated output this week that re\ail beef prices. will
'
· Gllillla Coaaty Extensieli Agent
.,.
wu 861! mlllloo· pounds, doWII rise an average of abOut 20
·- J·~'J "i ~ ,.
..~ pe~t from. ~.:; mWion percent this year, compared
G'ALUI!OUS - The GaWa Coum: .Eatenaloo Beef pounds a year ago, the with 1978.
•
Cmlinlt1ee plana to CGilduct another Club 'Calf Sale this !aU oh department said Friday.
October 13, 19'11 at the Gitllia County Jllillor Fairgrounds.
Tbla a8le will be open to beef jlrocltcera In Gallla and
surrounaing cOIIIltles who have calves ·lbat the Selection
. sATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1179
1:00 P.M •. C4mmlttee feel~! are of dub calf ,quality. The committee hopes
tobave50ormorecal•eliforthe·iale, ,
breeding will be accepted. The Screening Committee
"'~ ..·_; i· :. sETTLE THE ESTATE OF EVA JOHNSON
Are yw Interested lri plitttng SlliiiC calVCJ on the aale? We make 4eternlinaU0111.
' lOCATION : · Frem Gallipolis fallow Route 7 south 14
···miles aiid turn right On Hannan Trace ·Road and 90 l
are not asking for conSigrunenl3 iit this lime, but we would Uke
10. Calves must be., dropped after January 1 of the year of
·m•ll~s
to knOw If you think you mllht be putting oome ·calves on the the sale. Calves must weigh 350 to s:;o pounds at the weigh-in of
. , -The
' fqllowing will be offered :
sale and If so how many.
the aale. ·
·
. ·.
Cqu.ch . . 1 dressers. wooden half bed, l,_. iron . bed,
Plelile
let
Ullmow
by
May
·l~.
so
we
carl
proceed
Wlth
our
·
II
..
Calves
mlllll
.
be
"steered"
and_
completely
healed by
' heating! 'StOve. ·good coal a. Wood cook stove, electric:
sale plans.
.
sale date. No exceptions.
c~k' stOve. Qlass door cupbOard, 'kitcheh cabinet, small
Many farmers produce aome ·outstanding ·calves that
12. It Is recommended that. calves be vaccinated for blackrefrigefator, 6 din ing room chairs and table, stand
. table . J*ddle sewing machine,· 2 wooden rocking
would make excellent 4-H and FFA projecls, A ole Uke thi8 leg and shipping fever complex approximately three 'weeks
' thiiirs, other chairs, wringer washer. victrola, 4 gal.
!Jbould make you aome extra money, provide an opportunity before the sale,
·
C:h\Jrri. Pots &amp; pans. dishes, stone indian, one lot of case
for
yoUth
to purchase calves locally and wouldn't you be proud .
13.
it_
i
s.suggeated,
but
not
required,
that
calves
be
weaned
,;. po·cket ·kniyes, scrap iron . shoe cobbler's hammers.
to see a calf from yotlr farm win J!1e show,.. place In the lop 10. and started on feed.
,
~ ~ .. some :. ha'nd tools, a few collectors items and
GALLIACOUNTYCLUBCALFSALE
'
14. All calves JDUSt be fitted with a~" rope halter. The
· mist~IJaneous items,
. . TERMS : ~ASH
,
Sale Rlllea and Policies
halter goea with the calf when sold. Consigners are to furnish
.. .
E.O. JOHNSON , ADMINISTRATOR
1. Sa)e ..-der will be detennlned by drswin~ names,out of a own bay and Straw plua halter to go with the calf.
hat.
15. The Sale C&lt;rnmlttee reserves the right to reject any .
2. Consignment fee $10 and wliatever percentage is calf that doeS not', meet tbe requtr.ements as· ·to size, age,
nece!ISBI')' to cover sale .cost.
quality, late or Incomplete castration, diseases, etc.
;1. The Selection Committee wl1l work 91 an evening 8lld the
18. All calves are at the codsigner's risk.until sold, at which
Iarmer Is responsible for having ¢elves up at the farm, ready lime. the calves · ~e the property of the buyers. Any
Crown City , Ohio
for inlpectlon, The Extension Service will schedule an veterinary feea before the sale . will be charged to the
Phone lS6-6740
approximate time with the farmer for an OIHhe.farm consigner .'
.
·
~Uon by the Selectl• Ccanmlt1ee.
17. All calves will be sOld lo the highest bidder. T(le
4. Calves do not have to be halter lroken.
auctioneers' ·decialon will be final.
,
~' ~ Not _responsible for accidents or loss of Property.
5. Calves wiU beTeceived only on the day of the sale and
U you have any questloila, call me at 446-4612, extension 32.
only until noon.
'
8.
wili be
the head. by the· farmer and
7. Cal.ves'
All calves
willsold
be by
pr-1~
~~ectloil Committee at the farm prior 1o the sale.
Decision or
the Selection Committee will be final.
·
8. .Poly Steer Calves may be liOld.
I

.t

·~·Farm

I
I

ficient means·· to move £ann

Writer

l

•

William .. T. Bowers.' Gladys
llowrrs: 2.370 a&lt;;rcs. Chcbter.
Allen Edward lllll to Sybil
Ebersbach , Parcels, Cbt)Sier.
Sybil Ebersbacb to AUen
Edward !Jill. Sr., Phyllis M .
l:lcarbs, l'art'Cls, Chester..
,
G·
· Jack 1'. Gilkey, Donna J ..
Henry \\ . Jphnson,. race Gilkey to Larry R. Cai:r,
- ~· J9hnson to llamel P . Susan- K.-- 'Ca rr. I acre,
lalbott. l:larbara H. Talbott, Columbia. . _
1 a;rc . ':c~non . . . .
· Theodore A. Downie,
. ~~ lmo, t . S"!1th, V1rgmla D: Exec., Mlllhle v. Bengel, dec .
s,mllh ~o Columbia Gas . to James w. JobnSGft , Zo'rra
lrans. &lt;.:orp., Right of Way, F . Johnson, Parcel, Sa!isHcdfor~..
,
.
bury.
· ·
Mcrlm Mlt~he11 1 . Lmda
Hickey w. Snider, aec. to
Mitchell, 1" .Columbia Gas ,~;llar\es , R:- Snider, .Oretha
Trans. &lt;:drp., Right of Way, Snider, /Iff, for Tr,11ns. ,
Hut~and.
.
pomeroy.
II aUacc r. Hatfield, Donna
l'harles R. Snider, Oretba
J. llatfleld to John E. lllake, Snider l'harlcs R. - Snider
SylVia Jllakc, '6.3~ acres, Jr., Je~nilerSnider, Patrlci~
Salisbury. .
. · · A. Snider, Ma.rlon E. Snider,
Lottie Leonard to Riley B. l'harlotte R. Snider Willams,
Kmg, ~~~ch1c Kmg, 1-.655 Patrick Snider to Mahlon
acr.cs, Salisbury.
Eblen; Marlon Eblen, .98
,Charl es. Ma.thew Werry, acre. Pomeroy .
IJlhan Emestme Werry to
Charl es Mathew Werry,
Lillian Ernestine Werry, Lot
CITED BV POLICE
.37, Salisbury . _ .
.
GALLIPOUS ·~ Herbert
Hlchard E. Sayre, Juam!a
Sayre, Wilma J. Sayre to Farms, 69, Barberton, o.,
Hobert K. Sayre, Elaine- was cited Friday by
Gallipolis City Pollee on a
Sayre, 1.720 acres, Letart.
Allen Edward Dill to charge of disorderly conduct.

BID-LAB POOL SUPPLIES

CloD;

Agriculture ·andr

an;:•p:::dJ

-

ITH: BUICK-PONTIAC, INC.

.

.

•Chlprine
Compounds

•,;·

....:PUBLIC SALE

·will

'to

• Pool
Test Kits

e PH
Ailjuslers

• Sparkle -Up
Additives .

·• Mineral &amp;
Mel a I
Adj\(.sler

-·
..

• Pool Equipment
Available

I

I

•t

lI

TRI.COUNTY HOME MEDICAL
56 State St.

Ga lllpolis
Phone 446-3856
A Representative of" Pools &amp; Things"
Chi
Ohio

I

I
•
I

I

I
\

.

. ·J' .·

.

.

.

.

·;:, .t~ltle wili. be received the day of the sale '
·..-,;li.~-tir ·3:oo · P.M. and the evening b~fnre ~.
3:ao·P.M-. til8:00 P.M.
' ,...:-.,.

. SPONSORED BY:
·; ~~'- ooio VAuEY UVESTOCK FEEDER CALF
-''".:"... . . COMMITTEE

,) ;,
...

!· • .

"

Gallipolis, Ohio.
.614-388-8287
..'

•."- :~~.;~·~.

;., ..

t~ (,,~·.;.._ &lt; ::~ (" ~

\

.

----

-

.. . .

.

- I

-A CAMPING AND BACKPACK SHOP- ·

\

'

HOURS

7 DAYS A WEEK

10.5

MOEWS DEALER

.

'

·Raccoon Creek Canoe Uve~

_......,:place

FOR A TRIP INTO THE PAST, TRY

CANOEING · _..
Weekends April &amp; Ma'f a-s
En joy II All At

MEIGS EQU'IPMENT, CO.
.

u

Outfitter&amp; Shop
Open

ll.aY 1N

l.oc*ld on lilt t1n11 rJ ~
•~~Je...,

.-=

•

rl,.

er.-

~~

'I
''

:145-5304

'•

. •"

1•

4,

·~

. HURRY! REBATES EllD APRIL' 30, 1979
It

ETAI l

~

C .u S T 0 M E R

MaciJ1nt

SPECIALS

· Rlct. Balers
Round Ba ltrs

Mowen

RIMS
.
SP V1 ncii"'OIen

Shrtddll"' ·

Will discontinue my f•rmlnl! so will tell the following
items. Located on State Routt 124 betwttn Racine and
Syrilcuse, Ohio.
. ·
. ·
. ''TRACTORS''
110 .A.C., D., P.s., II~• P.T.o.; dual hVdr•,ullc;
Cockshun lO With side m .ounfe!l.mowtr;l2 H. P. SHrs.

,'

1•
••

.

. Flail .Choppen
'Far.ge B101iii s

·.

~'
""'l
...

"
NO REASOrfABL£·,
OFFER REFUSEbf

·'

.CARROLL
NORRIS DODGE
.
.
THIRD &amp; COillh'
.
.

I

'

•

RE8 AT E

Model

Apr11

435/445

241/2400
9911
lUO
720/831
1100/1300

35
4000/5000

'50/10

to

.

sa

'

'

••

Mve

$200

:
•

.•••
·~

'&lt;I

•..•

r·

_Buy Now At Regular Price
At 25!, Off .
.&amp;'Gel The Attachmats
..

50
50

DEUTJE
•

••

.

AIR-COOLED
'TRA~

Oeutz air-cooled die!$111 engines are the moat efficlent
In the world. Cleaner, more efficient combustion brings
lueiiiiYings up to 34% ol some water-cooled wnas.
Come by and let ua prove 11. Or ask a Oeutz owner:

FULlON-lllltPSON
•lRACrOR S' ES

....A.,.

SPRING Avt .
POMEROY, ll

·Tractors

..
,.•

~

wha1weseU.

.

50

300

3RD STREET
POIIEIOY, 0.

..·•

.•

100
200
100
300
50

M·EIGSf
.EQUIPMENT ,
COMPANY

.(

CaU or visit us fot
a test drive.And see
howaGravelymakes
short work of any
size laWn. We service

.SAVE ·

~~

reverse.

iilfden attachments.

~~~~~~~:&gt;~·~

75

•'

•

•

...

Cuts

. GREAT ·DEAL·

.

Forage Han.

'

'

OlliD.

~" Cond.
lbftl" Cond.

IH 56. 4 raw tarn planter: NH 351' Grlnder-mlxer, NH
845 Round Balerk, like new, N.H, 323, 1 row Corn
Picker I like new) 8 : : 10' AC transport Disks, A. C.
Rake. N.l. and J.D. Fertilizer Spreaders, 2 gravity
beds, 2 wagon gears, 3~5 AC Flat bod wagon, Case·
Manure Spi'eoder, Grain Drill 16x7•. SOl . l pt. Ford
M&lt;Jwer. 3 pt. AC &lt;x14 ptow, ~se 3xl6 · 3 pt . Plow, 12
and 18ft. Bale elevators 8 row 3 pt. Sprayer . -469 N.H.
Hayblne, 3 pl. Post Driver, 3 pt. Bale carrier, .J pt.
Seeder. 8ft. Co-op Culllpacker; 1 Row Plant Seller, Lift
, Pole, Potato ~)Ianter Walsh 8 raw Sprayer wit~
. fiberglass Tanks, J pt : · 2 row cultivator, N. l. · 42
Ele..,ator 'wlth boot and 16' alurnii:\U.m elevator.
"MtSGELLANEO\IS" ·
·.
Amerl&lt;an Meat Slicer, Toledo Meet Scale~, 100 gallon
WaterTank, &lt;wheel Lick Tank, 3 Unico Eleclf:lc Fence
Chafgers, Cattle Oiler, Cattle 'Treating Chute, Creep ·
-Feeder. Steei frame fr'on'l dOUble wide home .
OWNE R--' MACJAY· FARM, Qlis McClintock
0.: S-mith
J . Caf'naha~
L, Opnohue
.. 9-lOl)
.. 949-2708
'
-14%-3041
C• sti
Positive I. D.
Nat. r~sponsibl~ ior ac;cictenh· or ~~s of proe;rty

.

'14.25

APRIL 14, 1979.
1100 p)t\.

"MACHINlRY"

..

YOUR NEW

AUCTION

·

-·

area

·.Adamsville Outfitters

.

FARM EQUIPMENT

. :

Sale consiling of springer cows and cow-calf
urilts (Beef · and Beef Cross Breed Only) .
· E.~Pectlng 500-600 feeder calves each sale .
.· d!)ves and yearlings will be · ~tate graded
· ·i rif6 ·uniform lots.

. ···i)';--.

9. Calves lllust be sired by beef bulls; No vlalble dairy

........,.. ..... .,..... .......,..._..... .
.
_
-·
---· - -..,•• ........-.. ................._
--· . ... ...
..........
...... ....
....
_
---...........
............ _.. - ··

Lay of the Jan4

Comer

SEASON OPENING

w·H11.E H.AT.

-

.

County
agent's

:

~~---••••••••••••••••illllill••••lllit•••••lllil•iill•-1:: ·

....

a

IN 1HIS AREA IS

.

.

.'~&lt; OHIO APPROVED SALE
,:::. FEEDER CALF &amp; CCM - CCM
" •,. . CAlf UNITS
: :: : (~ w~ut •
will be prq. ·tested)
:ntURS.,
APRIL 12 STARTING 8:00 P.M.
. . . .
THURS., APRIL 26 STARTING 8:00 P.M

••

•

• ChemiCal·
.Specialties

• Algie ides

corn

out

Glffi.Gli1J]

~

• Tile.
Chrome,
Vinyl, Fiberglass
Cleaner

• Stabilizer

SERVICE MMSOR &amp; PMTS
MANASER

talk

~-..&lt;!o-...,~'i&gt;-.~;;&gt;..:y,"'-l!p.-;~&gt;?~,.~._..~~~ -

different stores, and this can since It prevents needless
' help you decide where to backtracking. It can· also
shop . . Remember, \hoU8h. prevcnt,bfoken eggs, crllih!ld
I that price akxte should not ._ked goods aod bniiaad ·.
BY:
I·
. determine where JGU &amp;bop. frull.
'
.. .
D{ANA .8. EBERTS
·
Other
things
~ such as the
One
last
word
about
llsta
NOW &gt;tlf KAS Th ·
COUNTY EXTENSiON AGENT quality of the prodw:ts the tbey sbould be fle•lble c
GIVE Hf R'\;ittte
HOME EcoNOMIC!
· : store sells, tha ocrvlceo ll Sometlmea ahoppera lind
MEIGS COUNTY
OF 1Hf CWfJ''
offers Its cllllomers, and Its unannounced specials or
location ~ shoUld also be · l"'rhaps the quality of an item
AOORESS~
on their Jist II disappointing,
considered.
It Is helpful to make out a Ill sucb sltllaliolta, it makes .
NOWKEALLY, HOWCAN I looks, reads, and 'listens!
grocery lilt accordlq to tbe sense to subetl!ue ·5011letblui
liAVE ON FOOD COSTS?
PLANNING
POMEROY :.. 'lbcre'sa lot
Thert is no aubstilute for Ia,yout o! the store In wb1cb else for an item 011 the
of· conversallon these days pillnnlng ~ and good plan- you shop. 'lbls .Is a Umesaver , ~ry Ust.
about the cost of fooil, . and ning means shopping from a
sw'pplng Ideas on stretdllng · well-thought out list based on
food jlollanj_la yery popular. · menu plans thai incl~de ·.
l
~es '~. qew11111pers snllcks, company meals,
are currently leaturtng ar- pa~ lllllcbes. and so on.
Uclesonthesubjectandthere Time ~ilitsuming to plan ,
are
many Olber ways to get menus? Yes, perhaps, but
The duties of the 4-H club president do not usually incl~de "State of the Club'; address.
ideaa
.for cuttlllg cOSta. Still, money savlilg, too.
A 4-H club president prepares agenda&amp; and presides at meetings, appoints committees and
the single must Important
Money savlng menus
works with advisors. Bein&amp;a·n officer in a 4-H Clubcives members experience in workintl with
factor In getting your generally Include the less · .
others and in developing leadership..
money's wortb wbm sboi&gt;' expensive forms or ·kinds of.
ping for food Is YOU - . the . foocL For example, dinner
A"
ffll. t o l ' consumer,
migbllnclude adcken rather
-.......,""~· "-;....,..,..o-. .. CGm~..,.,.,._--.
IN47 ......... ,.._JUI.,.JO ........... ~ .. ~· ........ .
.
off Sandhltl Road near
Wllat'• tbe FlnliStep! ·
than. a beef rlimp roast and
._.._..
~,.
IIWwfl
..,.
..
..__.
.....
1-ctart.ls plannln8 to i'epafr a 'lbe first (lll!d possibly tha carrots Instead of broccoli.
farm pond blllt llOIIIe 2$ most Important) step In Breakfa.st might incl~de
..,_
'
BY JOHN qlOPER
Hobert VIckers, Larry Sayre, yean or so 1110· The overflow getting the most mileage out frozen reconstituted orange
,
•
•
. SoiiCODB:Servlee
Lawrence Gray, Ed'FoWier, for the pond Is day tUc and of .your food dollars is quUe juice instead o! fresh
..
•••
a.uB PIG SALE
PT. PLEASANT·- · Several George Tboiopson, Leon over the course of the years basic ~ you must really want oran&amp;es.
water baa been working on to! It l.s aU too easy to COlliBy
Studying tbe newspaper
people are Plannlna. wiJdllfe 1bompson. Jake SomervUle
_,.
the
outside
of
tJie
tile
and
a
plain~ and not so easy to be food rads gives shoppers lnplailts
this
aprlnjj;
These
jnd
Hush
~'lnlcy
(Jimmie
Fallon Brothers
formation about what Items
pillnts have beca . ~rdered 1 ·nravely) un their land.
. Cil'il)' de~eloped, The ~ ir a "sm·•
.,, shopper." .
. liog Farm
Belni a smart shopper are Oil special or In good
through tbe Weatem Soil ' Walter Salamadia of SCS of this pcllld ''will lrivolve
_., ,.
· Fri., April20
,.
. CMI!NN ........
!:onscrvaUon District and visited tbe Leo Dallgberty removing the pr-.t tne mealls many things. It means supply. Such Items mean a
~
At 7 P.M.
incl~de Wblte Pine, ~OI'lfay farm on . Greer Road. Mr. ·overnow and . lus\alllog lulowlni what Is Important io ·• savings wben built into .
•
Spruce,
Chinese Chestnut, J.laughcrty. was intereated tn another overRow at a dlf· you and your family. It family meal plans.
•
G•lll• County
Blac~
W~lnut.
Scotch Pine, bulldlng a farm Pond in a fcrent location. The cavity, means understanding thava
Food ads can also~ used :
'
Jr. Fair Gro~nds
. Pitch Pine, Black Locust and pasture field. This pond hild formed by the I'CIIl9Val of the ,, good buy for one family may to compal'&lt;l prices m · the
•
Silky Dogwood. These were previously been surveyed by existing tUc will be fUJed with not necessarily be a good bey
Offerinll ovor too head of planted by: Randy Ulcbfield, Okey King of SCS. Following earth and pacltcd accurely so for yours. It means FI~ING
~u·~~~~REom~~~. " Joseph Martin, Dick R._tt, the discussion about the pond a 1 to prevent ·. continued the time to do the necessary
aecpage. He a1ao plans to . plaonlog.
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.;n:lcb:•:rd~W:a;re;·~P:att:y~Ain:·:oa.~· about
Mr. llaugberly
told Walter
build a wa&amp;er trough below
B~t most of aU. It me&amp;~~~~ '
a pasture .field
nca~ bll
'
fannstcad.'Some yearaa~ II another rarin Jllllld 10 as to understanding that even
wa&amp; a field without much have water avallitble lor thoU&amp;h, food shopping may
someluneo seem like a
COI'er and poor quaWy at livestock
0
•'
Ulfford
Kraft
of
SCS
helped
routine cbore, It Is In fact a ·
that. He said tbat be bad re'
•
Mr.
Hope
develop
a
.
conlarge
and very Important
established a iood cover on
'
the field by sccdill&amp; KeJilUclt)' servatiOa plan for his tann IDvestment - , In happiness,
31 fcscuc onllln early spring about three moalbs ago.
~":"'the~a'l:!i
Rt. 1 Lilngsville, Ollio 45741
when the exlstlni graaa was
Phone Evenings-669-5483
macaroni,
a
quart
ot
mllk
aDd
$hort and bare ground ,ex•
a
pound
of
hamburger
doem't
posed. He also limed and
MOEWS SEED COMPANY Is
add up to very mucb at one
h.l'ppy to •Mounce 1181' R.
fertilized the fleld.lilld added
lime, the colt of food ovec the
V•u9h•n h.ls btH soloctid ••
barnyard manure. Tbc fidd
· yDUr seNsmant As a MOEWS
lifetime of a family MP!O"n*'
Is now in an cxceUCIIlllate of
Dulor, lot ,..,._., • lull
to thousaDds ot doUars: In the
productkln and erookln Is
liM sud com-y tiwot Iota
long run, then, II really doeo .
controlled.
served .., ....,.,over SO Y•"·
pay to be a ''smart abopper."
Owen l'lanta of Greer Road
MOEW51s tilt _.Ill's '-al
, How to lletilme a
producor of WAXY-MAtZ
seeded a two-ucre or so bare
USIQart Sboppertt
liybrids, •nd • ludlag
area . This· land bad been.
producer of hilihor . yleldjtsg
It's not easy but It's cer,made bare by SOI!lli · aartb·
yellow deft! hyllrlcls, with a
taillly
well
worth
tbe
time
and
movlni and earth disturlar9e selocliOA odoplod to ~~
IIV JOHN c. RICE
efiGrt IDvolved to become a
bance. lie . seeded. several
•roo. He c•n otso llltltllr yeu ·
1111lta Ageat
WEx
good shopper. Supei'IIW~
wilh •lllill•, clo,.r M!f 1'111
"different kinds of graSs and
•ooct·, plus Grw...,9 rellst.•t
AgriatJIIIre
pr.llllllllly slock around ten
legumes on tbe
Ia- .
Milo- ·
10,000' FT.
Melp c-ty
thousand :llfferent 1\ems eluding orcbardaraoa;
POMEROY - 'I'll!' aniWal 10111e limllar to each other,
Kentucky 31 fe&amp;CIIe and
Roy soys, "I took OAIIII.a Deoltrshlp btc•uso of tho
scrlcea lcspedeza. FC!~Jowing Dairy Banquet will be held some convenient, some
vro•t. perlormOAca rt-d ol MOEWS - · •ad
GILT EDGE-GOLDEN BOW
O.k
Hill,
Olllo
' !lOWing of tbe seed be COVared Wednelday, AprtJ 11, at 7:JO nutritious, some not so
because of tile 1110- iAioFIIY of liM com,_, I ttledee
614-6ft-J~"
p.m. Thebanqlltwlllbeheld nutritious. This means a
lo do my boat to k - you inlor"'id ol WIYI ID ...
the area with a muldJ of hay
~"'' ytekls on yew larm. 111M uiiiAQ on rou lOOft."
that was of a quality that be a\ the St. f'lul'l lAIIhenn shopper will bave con10 BAl.£
a.urdlln
Pctmeroy.
The
dillsiderable
cbolce
about
what
did liot root ll to livc.stock :.ut
PRICE.
was well suited as a mulclt on ner will be potludt, and to buy - and to make a wise
By I he Wily, MOEWS Is pronounced MAIZE!
auyone lnleraled In at- cbolce a !hoPper needs to
the ground .
Howard Lee McCieiian 011 f.eoclbqf II . welcome. 'lbe ltnow Diany tblaaJ.
Ari lmJNiriau\ l\ai11DI
GunvWe JUdge aaied tbe tpi'PW will be Wdy BrideWestern Soli Conservallon ICIII, IIIPIUiitr wthe Cen1ral place II to understand ,~Gmt
District for psslsf"Mace on a Ohio Bnederl ,•asoc!aUoo. baaic nutrWon facta ao tha&amp;
plan and the devclopment ol Tbe MW lim Dairy Princellll you aril lillnl your family II
getting the foods tbey need. U
his farm for graaslllnd. He II wlll•be11111011111l1Ce.
COIIUL SOYA
The l'roductlol) . Credit you would like accurate,
interested In bulldiDg a pond
Muews Seed ComiNflY• Grilnvllle, Illinois 61116
and has two sprlnas whtcb be "•eoelatkat baa purcbued a rcUable, and eaally available
al
IIIC.,
'.
no-till
.
corn
p1M1er
to
be
nutrllilln
IDfomiatlon,
CODl.s considering to develop for
s ..... OliD
Iaaaed by Gallil end Kelp tact the Me.ip County EI·
livestock waiel'.
.
•
1'ravl&amp; llope.
If Cnmrtla The p1M1er will tcnslon oUlce at 992-3186 for
1eue for $25 per u,, flal · some of the malerials they
rate. U can only be leued for . bave on this IJII&gt;ject.
- day per Individual. The
In addition, a wile shopper '
SEE
Intent 11 to encourage tbe uae keepa ber.selllnformed about
of no-till corn, where such things u labels, unit
feulble and allow _ . pricing, open datln&amp;. and
..
.
.
.
.
· illdl~ to try the ntMIII any thine .elae. lhe tbinks
FORA
method. lniA!rested, p1eue Important. In abort, abe,
AGi-avely riding tractor
tough
Clllllltct PCA. Tbe EltenaiOD
weeds
or
manicures
your
lawn.
Service will provide . ~~elf In Jepmia !II a iP'IU lllllldOw
To do so many mowing jobs so
llllllllllfllll ~ no-till cata or I...- lllld tall gr._
..t!npand""""canlrolIn a blaegr- pullan. To Ina G~ is built tot.l2h.It has all-gear
·'
The Yelp ~ Soil and llll'e'. IIIICCeial ~ • no.\111
ON
direct
with no belts. And instant
Water CctaMrvation Dlatrict forage seeding, It II 1mforward and
baa jlllt received a ntMIII poriant to follow the tan ilepr
' '•
·HAY AND FOIAGE EQUIPMENT
tarq:e Meder for 111e tn outline In a III&gt;CIU lange
Plus an eight-speed trai!Smission
llelj) County. It will 1ea1e seeding . Contact Re1
with a choice of 10.12.16 or 18 hp.The
·. BUY NOW·AND TME ADVANTAGE Of
fw 1 mlnlnunlll per daj Sbenelleld et -..1 for ln~~ tractor powers over 20 lawn and
CASH REBATES BELOW
er
acre.
ex·· fOI'IIIItiGil (or. the SWCD IllCooperative Extension ·Service
The Ohio State Unlwtrslty

..••

.

,·: ,..,.' ;:~Jt:J;i. ' : .~·

0-3-The Snn~ ov "'""'soSentinei. Sunday, Apr. 8, 1979

•
M.eigs- ."
Prope.rty
· . {ers
Trans

..

0-2 .c.~ Sunday Time!i.S..ntinel. Sunday. Apr. 8, t979

..

OUTDOOR·
EQUIPMENT
SALES

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES
'&amp;SERVICE
tO·I C:mdor St.
992 ·2975

Pomeroy, 0 .

Junction Rts. 7 &amp; 35

Ga llipolls. o.

. Manning Roush •
OWner

...

446-3670
9-5 Mon.llvu Sat • .

..

;

"

'

•

'-

�.

'

•

•
I

•

•

J&gt;.O-'l'IIII:~YTimes~ntinel,Sundav , Apr 8,1979

D-'1- The

lEVER YOUR
JOB•••

WE'VE_GOT
TRUCK.·

$5195
$4095
PICKUP••.••.•••••••••••••••.•••..•••• :.:•••••••
•
1977 CHEV.
$4595
EL CAMINO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••
DAIIGER
V 8, 4 sp., overdrive. radio.
1978, FORD nnn
P S , tutone paint. local
LARIAT F-150 •••••••••••••.••••••••••• •~~~~~.!'..~ ................. ..
1977 CHEV. C.lO
V 8, auto. trans , radio,
local -ner. P S.

.·

•

v 8, tilt wheel.
local owner.

....

~ ~~~CKUP........................~:;t:~~~~. ~~-~~:. ~-~~. ·.$3095
.

voU've gone away, w• think-of·
you doy by ctay Our fove f1&gt;r

you , will ·neW!! 'Ia~! . ·fly
re~mberlnv All the · happy
.llmtll we s;:otl\t,\fllelether .

•t

.,.

'
'

IN

I

...

..

?

RE'DYTO

white -wall tires , floor mates , air

cond i tioner, AM B track, chrome
wheels "

SALE
PRIC!i .

'6375
.

COUPE

Plus Tax
and Totle

'

-

Tllllrillloy &amp;
S.turday til 5:00. Ctolld SIIIIAy. See

Open To I 6 P.M. txctpl

Rocky Hilpp, Darrell Dodrill er Pat
Hilt, ~a I Monager, for a Good Dolo I
on a New or Used Vt~lclt.

992·2196
M

o.

Sundlr, April I

.aRIDGE

ASTROeGIAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

day !ale and a trick short.
South won the heart lead
In dummy, so that If Eut
held exactly one heart, he
would be rufflnc a low heart
and not a beart honor.
AI Irick lwo, South led

NOR'l11
• Q84
• A73
• Q 102
+AK74

WEST

.,

.'

dummy'a queen of apoadea,
but he went up wlllr hla ae».
South wanted to play lwo
rounds of lrumpo, not j111t
one.
Welt won "the second
opade and led hi&amp; jack of
bearta. Elllll ooald uae Ida
last trump to ruff a heart
looer, nol a beart winner ••
111111 the ace al cUamonda

EAST

+K I

• 71t
.. Q311111
.. 8 •
t Al4
+176&amp;3
.10632
80U'l11

•a

+ AJIOII
•Ku

'

t KJ

._.me lbe Jblrd and Jut
Irick for the clef.....

+QII
Vulnerable: Nortb-Soutb
Dealer: North

..

Norllo

t•
s• 2+
' Pua Pau

You hold:
• ICi t 2

t-7-1

• 7 e0 4

• Q2

O!M!nlna l..d: •Q

+ AJI3
The deale' r

bids four
opadea and everyone paaseo.
A California reader aalll

By Otwald Jacoby

openlntl

lead we recommend. We would lead lbe
South applied lbe code queen of diamonds, but don't
II wUI be a
word ARCH. Analysla of the &amp;uarantee
winner. Pre-empla maM 1
lead and review of lbe bld- 1 c11n
bl
dlffl
dble Indicated that Wut had ea II pro emJI very
•
'"' led frcm a lona heart aull cult.
and thai he wullkely lo bold (NEWIPAPER I!:NftRPRlBI: Ala.)
aU the mlulns hlp carda.
/Do you hove 1 quolllon for
Count of loeers Indicated the t~&lt;pt~.U? Write "A'k tht
one lpAde looer (lbe ldnl),
E~ptrtl, '' """' of thlo newsr-one dillmond loser (the ace) 1 per.
lndllllduol que111ona wm
one poulble heart lOMr ana b1 lnlwtred If acc~nled
one poultlle ruff that would by Jtompect, aelf-addrttHd
score. lnatead of the heart env-'o~t. The moal lnlt,..tl·
~r. So, how can lbe halld /rlfl 1111111/ona will I» ua.d In
be made' Two heart ruffa IIIII COlumn •nd will r~i.,.
wW find South wlndln11 up a cop/ea ol JACOBY MODERN.)
whal

ud Alall Sola...

. ltfi.\I~ID~ fjiiTHATICR_LID_GAME

'.

~~~~e

byHonri-llldlabi..M

UnteriiiTible-lour J . - ,

one'- touch 11q111111,1D torm

SAVE YOU
MONEY
'

1978 MONTE CARU) l.AMDIUJ.•••'6495
Lighl blue with wh. vinyl top, 231 V-6 engine, lull
power, lncl windows &amp; door locks. AM FM stereo

radio, cruise. tilt st. wheel, radial w~strtpe ttres, air
cond , lots of other extras. De.oler Demo. SAVE

1978 IMPALA CouPE..~ •••••••••f6395

see II lhrough to complellon
Getting along wilh other signs
Ia one ol !he uctlona you ' ll
enjoy In your new Aetto-Graph
letter. Get.YGIIrl by mAiling S1
lor e..n 10 Altro-Grapll, P 0
Box 4811, Radio Clly Stollon,
N.Y 10011. Be eure to specify
birth sign.
'
TAURUS (April 20oMty 211)
"Stop lhe world and let me get
oH'' might be your mouo for
IQIIay You nted limo to be by
yourself to recharge your ener·

where your 1ntara1ts and resourcll ire concerned. You'll
reap what you lOW.
VIRGO tAag. li-8ept. 22) H

1•

:'

SALE
PRICE

~300

·u

A cy(, automatic. good tires, blue fll'!lsh, rad1o, Qood
economy &amp; real sporty

sALE

$6700

local 1 owner. car. Radio, color white

'

1975 G~ FORD 4 DR•••••'2895
I

----:;-:-~- -

Notices

jlUN ~HOOT.' EVERY FIUDAY 6 30
PM IIACINE GUN CLUB FAC·
TOllY CHQI(E GU~ ONLY
aAND .AT t~ Joowo' Bor Frldoy
ond saturday 9 !X) to 2 am 3

Plu• Tax
and Title

Automotlc. Was $1795.

1967 CHEV. %TON •••••••• ~~;:. S495
SA VI MONIY, SA VI GAS, NEW
LUV

2 Wh. Drive &amp;

4 Wh. Drive Pickups

and

other

famous

brand of ))ure fru1l 1uices Ser·
vice company established oc
co unt at better motels
l'l os pltols C'IC MlnlmUIT! Invest
menl !2700 !l«ured by inven
tory and equipment Wnte In
elude address telephone and

Plumbing and Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth end Pine

f'hone .u.\·3188 or 446·.,.7l

references to NUAGE, 2171
Montevallo Rd 5 W B•rm'
mghom Aloboma 3511 1 or coli
Mr Hoi I toll free-1 fiOO ~·~545 '

High Sales volume Details
by appointment only. Blue
Tartan, Inc., Middleport.

STANDARD
Plumbl~g ·Heallng

215 Third Ave .• &lt;146·37a2 •
,,

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

GENE PLANT$ AND SONS
PLUMBING Heating Air

conditioning 300 Fourth Ave

Ph . 446·1637

C~II992 ·5SSO

DEWITT'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at EverVreen
Phone &lt;1411 2735

"Your Chevy

Deci,.,..

Pets for Sale

992 ·2126 •
Pomeroy ,
Opl!n Evenings Til8:00 p.m .

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

_L~S! a_n~ f!O.fll!!i _ -··

ASJROe&amp;lAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

1ako second effort• to
accomplish your alrile loday.
Don't bl dlecoureglld It sometnlng lmporttnt doean'l come
oH on tho llrsl try.
LIBRA (Stpt. U.Ool. 23) The
, April I, tm
.,eekend might have lei lhe Look tor ule unusual tcrbe your

LOSt BEAGlf female . brown
with ~ad; boc:k,. ~Ue oh thesl
ond pc11~s Mluln~ sinc:e March
19
Beech $1 , Middleport
'191 Tb80

CENTENARY WOODS Pel '
Facilities

Grooming

Professional services of
fered 1\11 Breeds. all styles
Co,ll 446 0231

HILI. CREST
KENNELS
bOarding
Also AKC Reg

Dobermans, red and blacks.

Call446·7795.

RISING STAR KENNEL.

lOST MAN s b1IHold neortcrogtlr Boarding and grooming
Store Need po~n In Billfold , breeds. 367 0292.
Early Rou1h '117 7773

..,

.

All

BRIARPATCH KENNELS.
Botrdlno and . grooming.
AKC Gordon Settero, English
Cocker Spaniels. Call 416·
4191.

' .
Help Wanted
IMMEDIATE
OPENING
laboratory Technician, 3-11
shtft Expenenced Ml T (ASCP)
or equtvolent hcellent salary
ond fnnge benef•ts Shift d1l·
lerenfoil Co ntact Personnel
Office
Pleosont
Volley
Ho!lpltol Voli&amp;y Onve Po1nt
Pleo~ont . 'MI 25550
Phone
l0~ · 675- ~3.40
An Equal Op
portumty Employer
,

CARRIER WANTED FOR SYRACUSE
AREA ~HONE 991 2156
•,

BENTLEY PIG SALE, April
28 at epm at the Fayette
Fairgrounds at
1 Co~n!\'
Walhlngton CH, Ohio Selling
l
200 held Ourocs·Spots·hall
Oui"IICS ctliUbreds, Cheshire
~ Ouroo:s trosi and registered
1 lilts. ·. co·olgnect, Roger Ben·
i tley, 3112 Reed Rd., Sabina,
l Ohio .UI69. Co·llgners: Bl
lant Sisters end Ralph OOOk

TEMPORARY TElEPHONE sales\
position op&amp;n from our office
, Day
ond evening
shift
o~.~olloble Phone 985 .4384

ATTt!iiTION FARMERS.
Lootdllll !Ot'.a plac:e to sell
your prodllee this summer?
&lt;Why no! try Huntington CIVIc
Conttr,9 .
For more In·
formation,
Loretta

RMrences 1

must Coll.u.\·3169. •

SWEI!I"ER , end sewing
rnachllie repair, ports, ond.
lllllbllel.
Pick up and
•llvety, Davis VoGuum
Cleaner. .,.,, mile up .
· Oeor!IK Creek Rd. Cell .u.l·

BOY TO M,OW LAWN 1 t~q~~lp·
men! porvlded. Goad PlY,
city area. Call "'16·2&gt;157)
.

----~--------~(

CARPENTER · IIIIth

tta9•..

hand •

toots: Stlrtlno l(jilper hour.

ANTIQUES boug~t and sold
Willie's Antlqllel, Rt. 35, Rod·
ney. Call 2-is-!050.
' ·

APPLICATIONS ~- boll19
aceepled lor lronl desk Ptr·
sorlnel, bus,.......,. MCI per·
~·with homem&amp;Sklll •.
Will ttaln No
colts.
Holiday Inn, Gall POl , Ohio.

FOit THE III!ST buy •tn
cllamands, • 11!1 to Tawney
· .i4welen, 422 se&lt;;ond Avenue,
Galllpt)lls. Combare prices

SUPERVISOR lor drY dean

center. Apply in person 1t

Scotch Clean Center.

,'

WANTED
Body Shop Helper Trainer wllh experleace In
door
and
-•lndow
adjustment, ••• lata,
etc.
4 Apply In penon to
JohnSmllh

THALER FORO SAlES

t'

..•

DRY IT

.. ' Experienced

-- ---- -----..,---

.,

r

,.

.'t

..,,

'

tCUSTOCj .

r 0

. J1

"""tamwer~:
Y~y·o
~

LEASE

I

I ('

·"'•V

"'"""
tht - ·- u IIJII·
10
form
tht IIMpriu
geotod by tht llbove cortoon

ax I II XX I )
~Monday)

~ AWAIIO IVENT GLOBAL HEAVEN
from Gtnoa, dNr?"-

I

·

•:W...."ORAHGIADI" ,

,

I

_

RIO GRANDE COt EGEICOMMU~IlY

ri,

Pfl'-•·

-

··· -

I

mllllnl.,..._.

-

·- - · - ··- --

FA£

of-=

. - - --- -

.·

ru
.. ,
OOOti PASTURI. • Homer
Bokor, .u.\·0736.
•
·
SMAI..L TWO ROoM COT·
TAGil, ,\arllally !urn .. Ideal
lor &amp;lctetly man Call oW6 est•
~CRI FO~

011rd*f'llna. : Good

•
'
'•

,,

-------

..' '

.

"'"r R-t

lfter "'m.

"

1

'
=
ONE

HELP
WANT£0
•

;£
..
~=

..

- .-

FARMA~L M TR•ACTOR
Also 1966 GMC ' ' T truck and
drag typ~ disc Call388 8410
. ' . .
1915 SUZUKI GT 550, new

-·

tires, nl!w custom1zed prunt,

exc cond

StO(M)

Call JB8

8&lt;88
GARDEN 'TRACTOR wolh at
t achments.

A, 1 shape

Horner Baker, •o~o~ 0736

Adu lts

onlv

APT
IN M•drlleport
Newly
rede£ oroted
All ut d1 tiPs
available No p~ts prcferabty
no children 992 28M
IN SYRACUSE Olfle' be droom
tr01ler with h1de a bed Mo x 2
p&amp;ople or couple w1th l c-h•lfl ·
utilities and TV set furn No
pets Co11~1.3269
'
THREE BEQftOOM house ot logqn
Monument Company lot on W
Ma.n Street. Pome-roy Prefer
-fe t~red couple w1tt-l opportunity
to kelp w1th memorial
oustomers dunng ev@flm~s nor!
Sundays , hnt negotiable
Pho'np 992 1588

.

.

PIES

Part Collie and part

German Shepherd.
Mixed
colors. Very preHy. Call 379·

1977 15 FT. EBBTIDE. 1917
10 HP Evlnrude tilt trailer,
all acce ssories Call 446 9537
RAY'S USED FURNITURE.
Refr ldgerator , elect range,

china cabinet, auto washer.
breakfast . set, re,staurant
table, oak rocker. oak fern
stand, oak church.t pew, Oak
stand table, ~lecfi1C dryer
Call367 -0637

Ml XED HAY

Also 3 shelf
flower grow cart Call 367

1167

- · - ·-·-· - - - ·

TWO BOTTOM 121n. plows. 3
pt h1tch, e)(ceuent condition
Asking $275. Also a disc Call
•o~o~

1775 after Spm

NEW

AM · FM

STEREO,

Chrysler product, car radto
Wired for 4 speakers. not 1n
eluded
s.t5
Also Sears
Microwave oven, needs
repaired, $ol5. Call &gt;146 2791.

-·-- --- -' --HORSES FOR SALE Also a
2 horse, horse trailer Call
388 9303
•

· ··- - ·--- ---· ·

213• or 379·2252.

TWO 1968' 350 CB HONOA

BORDER

motorcycles • One in exc
riding cond, one needs mmor

COLLIE, .. male,

black and white, to a gOod

home. Call256·1997.

Was SSOO

is part collie and shepherd.
Fllther IS? Call 388 9030

Who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or aHempt to
offer any other 1hlng for sale
may place an ad in this
column The-re will be no
charge to fhe ildvertiser.

ANY

PERSON

AlASKIAN HUSKY pups to good
home 99'1 6057
lABRADOR MAlE blqrk with
wh 1te on che1t l Or'} years old
Gentle . good w1th ch1ldrer
992 7680 or ~1· 7853

-

repair Also 191n RCA Color
irac TV, 1 yr. old, like new

Sale
- · - - -For
----- -

FRIOGEAOAIRE frost free
relrldgerator, S150. Phllco
relrldg , SIOS. 19 cu It Unlco
chest freezer, S125 .
Westinghouse Frost Free
relrldg ., 185. Westinghouse
apllrtment size retrldg sss
Caloric 36 ln. ges range, $55.

Call367·7187.
HONDA 750 SS, saddlebags,
flaring, CB. other ac ·
cessorles. Call &lt;1411 0593

- -- . -

DOUBLE .OVEN smooth lop
range, V&lt;!ry good condition
Must be seen to be ap·
precloteG. Coll4441·3891 .

. -- -- -- . -- ._L._-

Will sacrlf1ce for

$175 Call416·0910
LIKE NEW BACKHOE W&lt;lh
enclosed cab Also 17 f1' Bass
boat wllh &lt;0 HP motor. Call
367 O.f17 after SJJrp.

. BUILOINGI I &lt;0 X 72 X U

ALL steel clear span building
ready for shipment Including

a 20 X 13 double slide door, 20
lb. live load, sell ~rllllng
fatteners for SS,4:Zl 00 Also
30 X 411 ~ 12 tor $3,171 00
F.O . B. Call 61094 44&lt;9

colrect9am to6pm.

ALL

TYPES of . building
n'Uiterlals, block, brick,
sewer pipes, W1ndow~. 11nte1s,
etc
Claude Winters, R 10
Grande, 0 Phone 24HI21af·
ter 5pm
USED TR.(&lt;CTORS MF1;15
Diesel MF230 Diesel MF ISO
Olesel MF235 Olesel MFI65
MF 285 Diesel ·
Diesel
MF1135 Olesel. cab, air and
neater NEW AND USEO IM
PLEMENTS
MF9baler ·
MF10 baler · MF120 baler ·

MF2 2 row chopper

RENT lor
level ,.nd,

.

·-- - - - ____

~-

_

YOUNG ANGUS BULL.
Weighs 600 or' 700 lbs . Call

.... .(!A.~

-- ·- -- -

-- - -

throe
mlnutts
from
~ -GaiiiPI&gt;III llintorested, call SMALL MARE PONY, SSO
4o46·7M.
,
· Call256 6315.
EFFICtEHi:Y APT.; 1 bdr ..
on c.illrel , ln 1110 Grande.
Colt M7-710•. ,

- --

Old .. ' TWO STORY
HOU&amp;I! In ~ntrY w11n DAtil.
190la 1";1D· wiiH referencoil

t!IIMI•

,

,

s""~"'E.;.;.I!,..,....i:-~.o..,.
.,. •-oot\ls
-r-fot
~·· ;~:r;

Oatlll

I.

,
-~

·

FUIIINISHID •UPST.AI!Iii
.i 1'1111. belli.
Adllnt dnty. filtf, Mid. see.

Al'~,,1

'*·rill. Call~-

FURNISHEb EFFICIBNCv.
SIJ$, , iJIIUIItl pd. Adulto.
Ctll4o46:441hlttr 6prTI

METAL TRAILER STEPS,
S-45.; 1973 Ford one half T.
pickup, SlOOO
1972 Olds
Torono~o. $750 : 1971 Olds
stotlon Wti!On. full power,
S800.
One Bon Franklin
flreplate, 1125. : boys panls,
sire 14·16, Sl.$0 per pair, mal·
chlng shirts, $1.5!) each. 2 bar
stools. 16. lor both. 25 ln .
:c ~:.~d whiiF TV, 185. Call

7
ll-~EL DUMP TRUCK BED.

15 and nail It , with air
operated sleet axl~
Nmounted on 1975 GMC, very
good cond. No Sunday calls.
Call 256 1.u.1

-

-FOR SALE OR TRADE. 1974
- . --·--

~

~

..

~

--T'-:c--·- ------ -- Marlin Jet Baat, ol5ol Olds
pil, • • aNI 12411..... dep •Call &gt;M6·ol078 tiler S·JOpm
AWIItblt May 15. Clll 4-46· • • - • - -- - - - - - - PI VI lllboM AP1' ., utfUIIn

GRAIIEL Y TlliiiCTORS ohd

Qf$2 ,

---":-·-:- _

:... ... - · _ • •

IN TDWN 1 belt tr•lter

eHachmf!ntl, Partt and ser
vlee

OUTDOOR EQUIP ·

;:-~~~
~~~~~t.~'ca~l~
· c fl • ::NJ
3670 Ofltn Mon Sat. 9em to
l'frlt

st." ,

'

Spm

St

f

l llf

Arf'r"' ?:'i m t lc

Mnt•\

/'n m rlf l\1' QCJ') !fJQI

FV t ~YT HIN G S
Hn u"f"

onrl

•GnH A

(;O

llf"tn ot.

I nur ol~t
~

lt! IOOT t\ASS h~t soh p MN
t'urot' *'n91 nf" Mtru'li-:l'}tn lroll •n n
motN rvmly lor} • ~ hmg , $?CJ(X)
14 ft l l'lnr o: 1o1 runnho ut wtth
tro 1IN nnd rrmvN tnhlf" lnp ,
~

CONDITIONFD HAY }or sole
Goocl qunhty , W1ll dv hver Call
991 720 1 nr 991 :.l3(_)q

HAMMOND

..

ARROWGLASS boss boot
w•th HS h J') fvmrude motor
qrn 121 A or qq'} 5.4/fl

1q77

AND CON
STRUCTION CO All types of

1978 FORD PICKUP supor cob V 8
with cornp,er top' Goo rt conrl•
S1dmg , remodel1ng, concrete,
t1on Good f!DS mdf&gt;Oge $5400
roofmg, gutter , pfurhbing ,
9.4q 1().42;,
_ you name tt Free es timates
to loc a l area. Call.446 7623
SEARS CUSTOM 1 r.dtng mower
GoCH'I conci1t1nn &lt;$475 Glenn
B•uell q49 71:l01
CONCRETE BLOCK WORK ,
'
dr.veways, pat1os , steps,
A S ~IN !i. VfRMfER Baler solf's a nd
walks, garages. basements,
s.erv1rP Bol er s •ll stork lor 1m
underp1nnmg
Re~sonable
meri•ot c ciel lvt'ry
Even1ngs
F r eeestim ates Call 367 0295
phone 742 '}fJ77 Do• ter
or 367. 0131 .
LIVING- ROOM SUitl' trod1ttona l
~~ be •~ t'olor tufferl bock 1 bl ue
velvet chotrs w1th coned bock
DOZER WORK CALL 446
I blue flow.r French Provlnnol d971
choir vety gooci roncl1t1on
347~ offer Spm o r SeP Jop
Struble
Mullwrr y He1ghts.
Pome-roy Ohio

PURFBREO SHORTHORN hul ls 1
mile e os.t nt Wilkeslllll c SR 174
'
Tel b6q 365~ HolliS Grote
ONE 5 piece bt-cirnom sUite If m

tere stM
·991 7866

call

5pm

afte r

FAWN CIGARHTE moch• ne 7 t
brand Coll991 m1
lq78 STARCHAFT lB tt boot
Inboard outboorrl w• th Me r
rrut~f!r 728 h fl complete w1 th
oil eJr trO!i. ond 197B Tro•l r croft
tro1ler Also mducfps oil o r
cesson e!l S ~ •s tor~ ~ ts e tr
Pnr P.rl
upon
ln !i. pe cl10n
991 382~

-

- --

_..... _- ,_. -- . -

SERTA
PERF.ECT
SLEEPER MATTRESSES
AND FOUNDAtiONS. COR
BIN AND SNYOER FUR
NITURE,
446·1171, 955
SECOND
AVE ,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO.
PENDLETON REI!UILT
BATTt;RY. $1800 plu• tax
lind exchange. Guaranteed.
New ones, SJJ,OO when In

TWO USE 0 BOATS 17 II.
Creslllner, as HP Evlnrude

motor with trailer, 12700.f 19

11 Albmocralt 105 · HP
Chrysler mbtor and troller,
$3300. Zlnn•s Landln!t, 4-16·
71).1...
'
~

p

'

--~

-- ··

~

·

-

-

~

-

FOR THE BEST In forage
and

grain

storage 1

and

, livestock feedlng ·equtpment,
call Clyde Walker, 2of5 S'l16

ECHO CHAIN SAWS, wood
splitters, sew chains, and
1 wood
c!Uttlng supplies
C~arles

M&lt;;Kean, 446·9&lt;•2.

OAVIS SEW·VAC CENTER .
New sewing machines S79 •s
and up. New s_
weepers 1M 95
and up Sewing machine fur
hlture, portable cases ,
ft\OfOrs end partt. vacuum
Cle11ner hose, motQrs, bAO$.
ruo tools, carpet shllmpot)
and etc Repair on all m&amp;k£15
i'lr')d mOdels .
Pickup 11nd

dellve:ry, One h1tlf m1111 up
Georgos Creek RO , Call 446 •
0794,

Call 256 1921
-~-·-

SEPTIC

qualified licensed rnstaller,
fill dirt hauled, stone, gravel ,

IN

Fr eeest •ma~es .

.

puliPts both floor or coge
grown ova1lable 1-'o~hry Hous
lng ond Automot10n Modern
Poultry 399 W Mo1n Pomero y

Services Offered
.
·. SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

We 1111 •nyt~lng for
anybody et our AucHon
larn or In your homo. For
Information and rlckup
ltrvlce ctll 2U·lf• .
Sale 6¥ory Saturday
Nlghht7p.m.

PAINTING

AUCTION SERVIC£ ·

KtM.nl 5wlln, Aucl.
Cor- Third &amp; Olive

FIREPLACE AND CHIM
NEY'S cleaned and repaired
Smoking fireplace? Call THE
CHIMNEY SWEEP CHIM
NEYS AND TULIPS, 373 6057
·' - --- ~

CUSTOM
COMPOST
TILLING Small orchard and
Call

CHIMNEYS AND TUL IPS,
373 6057

provements and room add f.&lt; ·

'

REESE
TRENatiNG &amp;

· · --- --- ---.-·-

DENNEY AND GLASS Cha in

link fence Free estim ates.
Call 245 9113, Ken ·SOles,
Gall•pOiis

--- - --·----- .......

Residenlial In

dane.

Pr&amp;e Estimates
44.-34.07 or 2SH652
CABINETS ,

vanity, picnic fftbles, lawn
chairs, quilting frarhes, or

' anything made ol wOod .

WOOd Shop, 101 Court st , 44lt-

2512 Open Bam to Apm, Mon
thru Fri.

LIMESTONE OELIVEREO

del ivery Coil ?s6mo

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; El&lt;CAVATINO
BMkhoe! a"d dMer work by
ttte ltiJ or hv thr hour Also

llctnsrft ~~::i"ptlc 14'nks in·
stalled Dump truck . Free '
tstlmfltes .

Call 311·8623 .

.GAL.U~S

I

'

RON ' S

TV

SERV ICE ,

Specializing In Zenith House

calls

Call 1·304 576 2398 or

•46 2•s•

Buoldlng
Contr•cting

Concrete Floors
Footers, OildiH
I" w 5' Deep
Septic Toni&lt;• &amp;
Leadllllld

I

DIVERSIAED
CONSTRUCTION CO.

I

housing, contmeretet.

Jndustrlal.
I

· Installed! •

Tel U7-7UO •

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

'

Cuotom Doatr &amp; ll•c•·work try hour or by lob.
(Transit I t..y-out work.
Gonerel Conlrtdlng, oil
ltypu
construction.

BACKHOE SERVIC£

Sportsmen 13: MY Par- the Gholt
6: . Greet Performance• 33; 'Sparls_.ld 15.
3:6--Auto Racing 1,10.
NO-Movie "The RaliWI'f Cllllchn" 3.
4: 30-Wide World of Sporte 6,13;
Golf 15;
Mystery M'urals of Bolo c.llfornla 33; Four Frosh·
mon In Concart 20.
,
5:110--Foolstepo 33; 5:30 - IIJI Petrol 11; 8nt of
Grouclio ltD; Oo\w Upon I CIIMIC 33.
6:110--News 3,10; Pulle '' ~· l'lllhii)O I;
Advocateo 33; ABC NtM 13; Wrftfllng 17; To Ia
Allllounced :zO.
•
6 ·30-NBC News3,15; News6; CBS HIWII,IOJ Baffle
of the Pl•neto 13.
7:110--World of D l - 1,15; F r l - 6.!31 .. Mlnutn
8,10; NHL Hacby 11; llrWin tnd thia Pllllliurgh
20; Chmleltwlltl Funt- !12.
,
7:30-Ralllbollr's End 33; I:Dci-Jtsut of Nuaretu.ur
8cd1181tar Golectlea 6,13; All In the Family 1.10;
!:OUitMIJ OtlyOMY 20,33. '
8:-.on. Day at a TIIM 1,10.
.
9:110 Movlo "ThUIIderlloll1111d !-lllhlfaOI" 6,13; Allee
1.101 MMterpleclt TliHirt U..
9:30-.1utt . Frllndll,1.; MINIOn: lflllllllllblt !7•
10.110--WMkend 3,U: Mary Tyler Moen Hour 1.10:
MOvie "Belle of the Nlnilltl" 20; Firing Line 33.
10 30-Ruff H - 17.
.
,
11 · DO-Newt3.1.10.U; 0t&gt;eo Up 17: wall Sir_, Week
33.
.
.
I I: 15 News 6,13; CBS N - I. iO; PMA Plllie 15.
11 .30 Mowle "Whlpl•h!' 3; ,._II "Mime" is) ABC
Ntlllrl•: 100 Clulll: Facelflt1Netloto10.
11 •s--Unknqwro war 61 PTL Club 13:

w-·•

tions . Also plumbing ,
('teatlnt
&amp; electrical work,

itnywhere SJ 75 per ton, p lus

Fames . and

.

3 · ~rnerlcen

0 &amp; F CONTRACTORS . '
·All
types home Im-

BARRY 'S TREE SERVICE .

(form erly

collect 446 7569

778• or 367 7160.

a:

JWAIN

Painting, roofing
Free
e'Stlmates C811612·70.4l

Call446 u.t2

O'dell ) Oak H&lt;i l, . OH Ca ll

terior and eMterior barn and
mObile hOme roofs Free
estimates 15 yr exp. Call 367

367 0209 day O&lt;hlght.

SUNDAY, APRIL I, 1979
S:JO-Church Servlco17; 6:DO-LDS World Conference
10; Between the Llneo 17.
6 JO-LDS World Conleronce 3;
For You.. Block
Woman 8; This Is !he life 13.
7.DO-Eddlo Saundero 6: Thlnl&lt;lnv In Block I; Urben
league 10; Newsmaker '7913; Jimmy Swaggart 17,
7:30-Silow My People6; Jerry Foi'NIIIIB,JO; The Bible
Ano'Nitro 13; Jimmy Swagger! 15; Chrlol lor the
World 11.
a oo-Grace Celhedrel 6: Cnrlsl l~r !he World 13;
Insight 15; Three Stoogos ~nd Friends 11; S.Mme
Street 20,33.
8:30-0ral Roberts 3; Celebration of Praise 6; Dey of
Discovery 8; James Robison Pr-nts 10; Willard
Wilcox 13; Open Bible 15.
'
9:DO-Gaspil Singing Jubilee 3: Rex Humbird 6; Rev .
Leonard Repass I ; Oral Roberts 10; Rev. Jl"'
Franklin 13; Ernest Anglty 15; Lost In Spac:t 11;
Mr. Rogers 20,33.
,
9 30-What c1qos the Bible Plainly S.y? I; Electric Co
33; It Is Written 10: This ts the Life 13; Sesame
Stret :zQ.
10:110-Chrlot Is the Answer 3; Polm Sunday Lllurgy
15; Kids are People Too ' ' Christian Conttr a; '
Movie "Up the Down SlalrCMO" 10; Jimmy
SwllJgart 13; Hanel 11; Studio Sft 33.
10 JO-Rox Humbard 3, Robert Schuller I; Blua Ridge
Quartet 13: Movie "Kisoof Death"' t1;Zoom 20; Big
Blue Marble 33.
11 :DO-Ernest Angley 8; Rox Humbird 15; Rev. Henry
Mahan 13; Que Pase, USA? 20; Rebop 33.
11 . »--utdoors with Julluo B - 31 Directions 6;
Rev. R . A West 13; Electric Co :Jill; Tur11111pouf 33.
12 :110--At lasue 3; Face the Nollon
Is 1111 Ice Age .
Coming? 13; This II the Lift 15; Nova 20;
Maoterpttce Theatre 33
12·30 Meet 1111 Preu 3,1,; losueo end Answers 6;
VIewpoint 8: T"- losuo 10: Evtngelllltlc Outrlldt
131 Movie "Damn Yankees" 17.
1 :DO-Tony Brown' s Journal 3; Cllmmunlque 61 Bill
Dance Outdoorel; Wnhlnti!On Week In Review 33;
Challqe of 1"- Sek81 10; WIMI Kingdon 13; PTL•
Club 15; Advocates 20.
'
1:30-GIIelle 3; America's. Blclck Forum 6; NIIA
13;
Baoketticlll 8,10; Mldwoet OutdoQromtn
Another Voice 33.
•
2:DO-Boxlllg 13; In Search of 6; Foots,._ 20; Thot
Great Amtrlcall Goopel Sound;33.
2:30-FBI 6; Hocking Vallay Bluagr- 20.
3:DO-Voyage to tile Bottom of the ... 3; Church
Slrvlce15, Bosebell 17; Me1hcldone: An Amerk:an
Way of Deollrlfl 20 .

Phoneqq'}. 716.4

KITCHEN

-

BOGGS EXTER"MlNATI NG
CO

sulma!.ter foam Insulation
New homes, old homes, com
merclal structures For free
estimates call446 1971.

.

Walktr-Pirtcersourg

Steel Building Dololer
Phone 446-44-40
Offlce-1110'1:1 2nd
1-5 Mon.·f'rl.. '.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

STEREO JVC receiver BIC turn
1oble 1 Bose ~ pea~ er s lrss
tha n a year old rf(n 7079
H &amp; N Ooy olci or started leghorn

maintenance.

•

Anchorlf'!l• · Skirting·;
Patio
Covers,
Carports,
Roof Paint. Set-up
and R•leveling. Gill

' Awnings,

'

I

1:-

.

Bill'S
446-2642

.

12 :DO-Moylo "Tho Delldly Hun.! " 10. 1 :GO-Movie
"Step Down to Terror." 17

Copperl on P
Frlg1dolrC'
r e frig erato r
frostle ss 1 ropp erto nl' Sr.ors
confmtou!l dean1ng ~ love I
g old Fugido1ut re fn gerCJ io•
2~ 7 10.41

tree

:0

Call alter • 30

THEISS INSULATION. In·

Insulated
vmyl 'sld.ng,
aluminum
gutters
and
spouts, storm doors and win ·
dows Free estimates Ph

.
NEW

LIKE

-

Lennox Heating and air con·
ditlonlng Rapco Foam In
sulatlon 446 851 5 or 4.46 0445

etc. AAA contractors call256·
1921

GALLI A RESIDENTIA L
IMPROVEMENT

Storm
Windows.
Storm
Doors,
Replaceml!nt
'
Windows,
Patio
Covers,
Aluminum '
Siding
a n d I
Accessories. Cell

.

·.

BILL'S MOBIL E HO/IoiES
and Home li'nprovements
RUSS AND MAX ELl iOTT

· -- ---·- '--

IMPROVEMENTS

....2642

stock We repair cases. Call

3881596.

SEPTIC SYSTEMS IN ·
STALL ED Complete by

CONTRACTORS

Backhoe, dozer., dump t r:uo k
Work done by lhe. ttour or by
1he tob For free es ttmates,

Fridoy Onyhme hours Roc 1ne
nr.-a q.119 7bb8

STALLED New leach bed,
sewer lin~s
Want free
estimates? Licensed In ·
s tatler. Call Russell 's Plum ·
btno, 446 4782

HOME

. Bill'S

Early amer ican

Bulavllle Rd.

A A A

m

SSOO.,

3 ml out

~

msn.a

ROBERTS
BROTHERS
GARAGE 24 hr wrecker S@r·
vice All types of repair. Up·
per Rt. 7 Call 446 204l days
and 446 4792 nights
SYSTEM

LIM ESTO NE. grave l and
s..,nd All StleS At R1ct1ar ds
itnd Son, Upper R iver Rd ,
GalliPOlis, Ohio, Ca ll 446 7785

WIU DO babys llllng Mo ndoy thru

·-·-- · ·· - -

J 1M'S 5 101 NG

bedroom suites. $165 ,5250

day 9am to Spm

pltf"s

tBJl

~

WILL PLOW a nd d1 sc ga r
d e ns Call446 1?88 after 5pm

POOL CH~MICALS Seoson pocks
FreP dehvery 0 BumRordne r
Soles Inc Fq~1pmont ond sup

TRI STATE UPHOLSTERY
SAOP 1163 Second Ave.
Gallipolis 446 7833 or 446

SHOP.

0 BUMGARDNER SALES .
IN C. 992 5724 In stock fOr
1mmed1ate del1very
Poo~
ktt s or le t us install

ho ur or S'JU o wr.t"k Acro~s the
slrne t fr om Mo.,.on Dnvf' In
go ld lrolif'r tnmmPd tn bloclo.

roofing ,

Call 388 9a57

anytime

beds. $6.5, sofa, chair, rocker,

tables.

BOOV

MARCUM

spoultng and siding 30 y~ars
u perience Free estimates.

COUGHENOUR'S WATER
DE LIV E RY CALL ..6 7283

LAYNE'S NEW ANO USED
FURNITURENEW baby
3

JAY

-~

lnn estone pr grave l, Call 446

741 3lb7 or 7~'2 1573
• b
Wilt Do "a ys1tt1ng 11 50 on

----

_..

~-

7948

PAINTING AND sondblo!i!lng
Fr ~l" r'&gt;ltmolr.s fn ll 9&lt;49 7696
TREE TRIMMING nnci rf'mov o l

IN

, Sand and Pa1nt SPECIAL
s 150 Ph ?.1,5 9371 or 379 2306.

Leon,WV

ottoman,

yt, aluminum and steel . gut
ter s, doors, windows, roofing ,
w1th opt1onal msulatlon. Low
cost Free estrmates Ca ll4~6

698 5265,

ElECTRIC GUITAR wi th rosr l1ke
new StrPI 9111tar w 1th r ose
~'17.453

MUL li NS HOME
IM
PROVEMENTS Soding ·vln

STALL.'ATION ,
r P. pal r ,
opening il nd rl osinQ pools,
add slides or i'lny poOl equip
mcnt We SP.II all k.nds of pool
equlpmE:.nt and chemi cals
P.uddlc ~ools, Inc, Albany,

tnnn hon l nll nlummum Int o: nl
~. tra s 50 h ~ 7!t mndf'l Mrr
rury fHl~ l l'lll" rn!'Jme !&gt;hll under
worrenly S4500 Wo uld con
!i.icier ror tnp 115h ln~ hoot o n
!rode ~Wil 701 :t ~ob ert H1ll
Hnctnr

HOod rond1ti on

POOL

hnll l•nn Co il

Will (' APf f or lwn •uvoi1d or
rlciNiy i"''~on'&gt; m my hornQ
Twll"nty yl'ars c • pNIPnCP
Rf'nsonahiP rni P!i. Q97 b(J')') or
CW1 5-171

1089

SWIMMING

?.4 ,, R;viNO(nt;!i.N ron

. ,.,, ~r

.

NOW HAWING lm &gt;f , fnnP Ill
Mti1rllr&gt;pnr l fl(t(' •nrny ~rroo ('oil
fru lr rt" r~ l tm ntr '!ll7 1101

layout Ca ll GALLIPOLIS
DIYERSIFIED
CON
STR UCTI O N CO
.446 4440

su ranr P Co has offered ser
ftre rnsun~ n cc
v ices for
cover(1~e in Ga ll Iii County fo r
almoM ~ ~e ntl.tf'y
Farm,
home and person(11 property
tover.:lges are i'IVa tl abiC' to
m eet md iv tdual nerds con
tact Don Pill mer , your ne1gh
bor nnd iiCJent '

l91 ,flnn•tu rr&gt;
my IW'III"f'hn lrl

ni l
()rnr hy '/Ml
M•rlrllrrnlf ,

d ,-.lhf' L 1

rrtd iUS, 367 7101

SA&gt;lOY li ND BEAVE R In

transplanter SHINN'S TRA
CTOR SALES PH oi8S 1630,

FORD 9 N ·TRACTOR with
front end loader, good tires,
runs good Caii367-D•93

Glide, S3600.
1979 Chevy
pickup, • whl dt. , OJlC! half
ton, S6800 Call
&lt;1411·3395.
'
• ---------- LAWN MOWERS. CAll 446
1316..

1 1"1&lt;.1(11 'nll Wn rlo ,

Pl e a s~ nt

P01nt

WAH H AND
QQ? SJl"ifl

CUSTOM BACKHOE and
doter work llcens(\d sept ic
tank in sti\ller. Gril de work,
ya rd work , dr1veways and

----

- Services
- Offered
Woul d ll ke to haul sand,

Services Offered

Servoccs Offered

I IMFSTONE OEI.IVEREO
Gr11J I(&gt;OII!t.

MF39 2

sofa and chair, $3(10., modern
sofa, chair, loveseat, S27S.,
recliners, SlOO and up
Tables, $60. each. Mapl~ or

1978 Harley Davidson Electra

q1 n v•·l

•nlfUitn ' hl nrulo' l• •••il11r 1 tlon
lnNi nou l oiiJYI'W" n t -.nh t,

row planters · mechanical

S300 ·S$00

septic tank. Block building 30
x 46, Addison Twp., S13.SOO.

COAL

Services Offere d

tom plow · MF2SO 12 in disc

15 AND A HALF FT steel
pump bod, air ~rated
cheaters, 52000. Caii256·1.U•

-- --~ - -- ----ONE ACRE OF LANO wltn

For Sale
IIMt o.; TONI • •m,J

~~~~~~m~':!t~Jnte5Jv:h~t-

ow-

: ......o.lo. 11Y c•rj;
1

ft , 80 HP MercurY . hke new
15 20 hrs opera11on, !i&gt;k1s and
accessories
St.ll under
Wi'rnmtv Call 446 7130

---

-

- --

pine toble, • chairs, $225 .. hut
ch, $300 , 1 pc dinette, S\09 , 5
REG ONE HALF ARABIAN
pc. dinette with swivel chairs,
FOAL, 2 geldings, 2 mares.
SJOO
, bunk beds complete,
Call 367-0493 afl~r 6pm
$150 S22S $275. mattresses or
- - - -- - - ·- ___ .
bdx springs, firm SSO S60
M~)"e.
TEN REG. BLACK ANGUS . $70. each; captain 's bed.
helltrs, a mo. to 12 mo. of age,
S225 , queen sets, S175.. •
S-400: to ~ per heaU. lm· drawer chest, SA2 GOOD
1'10\,!SI AND ROOtli PAIN·
TING. • jihilntltnlltn. 1=•11 ' • medlato sale re~ulred due to USED . Dressers, chest,
.._.1• . , · •·
'
death of
Call 61HJ2
nlghtstand, dryers, ranges,
coffee and end tables, beds,
• ~
• ' 1 5763.
tables ,
lamps,
TV ,
BU'i'iN 1 All United States
-- - - - - - - - - - - ·
cOitii. TOll prlctl, 16FT CHRIS CRAFT BOAT, refrldgerator., other items
bet) prk:os lor sliver ssoo. Call 446·217• alter Spm. .Call 446·0322 Monday thru
Friday, 9am to 8pm, Satur·

: ,...J!iit'lf;~·
..c'.:li=~.:!:
_,
· ao.

-Mechanic

lour ordiWy-

:

Reply to· P b. BilK •95,
Gallipolis, OhiO -15631

Professional Services
DRAGONWYNDCATTERY ·
relexatlon Is celled lor ao 1hel· Thote 11\lnge lhat come out of
D".
BUMGARDNER SALES, KENNEL, AKC Chow Chow
BUCKEYE COMMUNITY Servkft I•
you'll bt rolldy lor the new lh' blue Clln pey large dlv~
•
CFA Slomese,
INC . P~ . 992 ·5724. Pool dogs .
looking for a coorC:Iinotor f« ill
'
week
dends II you•ro rudy 10 take chemicals,
1
HlmalaY.an and white Per·
equipment, sup
Galli a Meigs Foster Care Net·'
SCORPIO tDot. 24-N.,.. 22) lldvantode of them
sian cats
Himalayan and
work to serve developmentoll.,
I
Gu.lt oreachlevtble today, but ARIEl (March Z1-Aprtl 11) In plleo. Free d!'llvery
blue eyed white Persian kit
I
disabled
cli.nts
Tt..
soJof)l
(Of
For
faflft
machlntry
&amp;
~
......
only II you are willing to exert dealings with ottoers today
tens, ready to go April 15.
th1s
position
Is,
SIO
400
yMr
small
"'tines.
l~nd
CAt.L
US
lor
your
yourself. It 'll take tenacity and ~on't prees too hlrd or toO
•
completely trained Call &lt;146·
Please sned resume to Buc~eye Hctceround •Hklflons
p11olo!Jrophl~ needs.
Por· 38.«
peraerverance tO ' be eucceaa- selfishly and you'll find that
after
6pm,
Commumty S.rv!ces. 680 E
and aalar,r 1111&amp;.:.- tt lOX'
ful. ,
they'll quickly come around to • traiT, commerelol and Wed· •
., Mo~n St . Jackson OH ~5640
'""~"
•
- - - - - - -PIT
- -··" -:-:-IAQITTAAIUI (N.,.. 8-0ec. dolhg !hlnJia your way. Send ding pllotogrophy Tawney ' AMER
liULL
' Buck•:r.eCommunltyServiCelll ~M~ c-o, Tile
,......
•:
1
11) The compatltldn might be lor your copy of Aatro-Graph S!vdiOS, 424 second Ave.
•
TERRIER PUPS: UK~ reg.
• on f!'q ol opport~nit~ emplo~r
Hhel, POIIIHey, 0.
....
• * " - - - - - _, _ j
1ouqh out there todoy, but Loner and lind out more about
$125.
Call
for
Information
and
L-'--:-'
.
..;..
_
_
_
...;'!""...J
,
~
you •• up to lhe challenge . yO\oraolf Mall 11 lor ItCh lo
1
1o reserve a pup Cafi614·66A· '
" •
Oor.-1 buc~le under 11 lhe tlrat Astro-Groph , P.O .. Box 410, R•
6555 anvtlm~ 1
r---;---~'-----;. -:_:-:-_...;..___:..;....;...,._-i ;:
-'1111 of I IIIUQII.le.
dlo C-y Station N Y 10019 Be
-~--CAI'RICOIIN tU.O. ZZ.J1111. 11) sure to apaolty bti1h alan
HILP WANtED • ~ ,
BEAUTIFUL AKC REG
Try to rela• your outlook Hove TAURUI CApri! H-Illey II) Be· --.- --- -~
~ ~
_
Wanlect
to
Ra~r
-PEKmGESE
puppies
Will
IA!th thai there It 1 oO!uljon lo tole poomlalng to do IO'!'IIhlng
be
ready
to
Q!IOoOn.
~II
'"'!IY probl- tlwl oonlronla "lo onothet moke cortoln you wouLo LIKE To
I
W1
hold. Call.u.l-o8.57
you. Ont'l ship coreea In on a can ~aaum8 the obltgatlon It lobacc• poundage lor' year will
_, ____ .......
Clllm seo.
•
WOuld be I bigger diiiPil,Oinl• 1979. Call 256·1206.
••••
•
I
AOUAIIIUI CJ•. - t b . 11) ment lor them It you have to lol •,-. - ---- - ==--=-- AKC
REG . COCKER
Is oeeklng I Mlnl1111 TecllnOIOtY c-JijRIIW•
You
111. . "10 !Me 1 llrm
lallr.
SPANIEL. Call446·4610.
Instructor. II ,_ttl facully contract Is
poetllon wllen dNIIng with otliPer• THREE BDR HOUSE In .. - - -- ~ - -- r- ___. ,
1, tm. Salary Witt be bosOd on q.,.ttflcat•
Gallipolis
Call
446
31.....
AI·
ora toclly, Orl~ey could walk til
lo win
M l - qualtfleat'- are a
AKC REG IIOXEit I-UPS.
ter
Spm
and
on
wetkends
call
over you Sllnd up lor your
11 ~our
Dtgrte and practical experience In
Calf 1 ~ -4346 or 30H9&amp; 3666.
Send Ieifer of -...tlctllon, dosolor, and fflrot ,_,.
rlllhla.
oro sin· •46 9328.
- -PISCES (feb. ti-MIIdl H)
won 'I be
relertnces before d...,llne· of JUilt 1, 1t7f to JEAN
lABRADOR
Your loyaHy mey be Olllllld
SINGLE INDIVIDUAL needs AK'C
COOPER, CO.ORDINATOR 01' l'llltSONNRI.. 'lOX
RETREIVERS, 7 w~! . old,
stylist!
smatl
apartmeht
or
upon today bY en aoaoclote.
969, ltiO G~ANDII COLLEGI!.C:OMMUNITV COL·
(June 21-Jutr 221
block. $75. Coll610116 3733 '
Weigh 1111 maHer oaralully. Do
LIOE, RIO GRANDI!, OHIO. Adoll_l._llllltt..
want to be frH to accept home to leawe or rent within s
what ' lo rtgllt, no maller how 1n UniMpected Invitation today, minute~ drlvlnO time of
mty Delllltalntd try telepllonlt111 ti"N code •I+M!I-110.
(
F'le•se call Mr AKC PEKINGESE PUPPY,
l!xl. 25-4.
dllfloun.
eo foce up 10 your roeponslblll· G•lllpolls
Jf'ckson at Chris Crltft Corp, 6 wks. old.
INEWIIPAPlft INTII9RIBE AI&amp;N )
He..rltly ' and •
ties and take care of them
"'6 -mo
beautiful C•ll256 6?30.
eoNy
lucky charm thla coming year.

HOME

'197-2598

• •
" · .._ _ - --- --·-

CcwllljpGII, liu-5990.

TEMPORARY light delivery .ope-n
Neat
appearance
Good
transportation necessary Pnly
thos~t • fomiUor w1th oreo nftd
~pply, P~ne 985-4385

MOBILE

l

BABYSITTER lor bllbysll·
ling and lllihl housekeeplnvln

,

S&lt;ltdten furni'-hed Pre fe r m •d
die aged cour.le ot: elderly C"OO
pie CJ1it1 174q
1

'

Help Wanted

our home.

FOUR bPdrt10m nrts ,
011oiloble far fmo1ly ol 5 to· H
' Callbetween9and6 9fnTI71

NFW

992-5208.

ONE MAlf Germon Scl'mauz&amp;r
with papers 4 years old Coil
after 5 pm 742 3117

PROFITABlE" DISTRIBUTORSHIP for
Welch's

16 16 1 pm. Athens Co Saving
Ond Loon Community Room
Sl 5 Myrlo!TI Rl.lhchlld JacobJ

'

. 992·2174·

WELL
ESTABLISHEO
TAVERN with D·S license

·POMEROY MOTOR 00•.

••!...-,.wv.•• .,. SIQ01o
. . Apdl
.
.t.STROIOGY

l

SMITH NELSON MOTORS INC.
-- - - -:---:----:
-' -- -Pets
- -for-Sale
- - -- -

'

mil~ ~Quth of Pomeroy Ma.ton

•

Buy your next car from The l;riendly Dealer. We care about you. Come in
and see or call one of these Friendly Salesmen: J. D. Story, Rlly Doug liS
or Bill Nelson.
.

'500 E. MAIN

'1917771

PUPPIES, all male. Mother

C~ASS.

p B.,

1973 CHEV. lh TON V8~ •••••••• '1395

--

GUN SHOOT, Racine VoluntHr
~ \Fire Dept. Every Saturday 6 30
pm ot their building 1n Bathorn.
Factory ctioke gunJ only

POMEROY, 0.

Klngswood, I owner. air rock, V-8, auto., P S,
market value S1095 Our Prlte

Young I

CKol. oil who offered proyen
vlslt.d, sent cards, flowers ,
remembrances and for the ex
celleht n.dlcol core during hrs
recent hotpltoiiJotion at 'lea·
sont Volley and during his con
volescen! perioc;l al kame

~

1972 CHEVROLET STA. WGN. ••••• '695

mlg~t

wind out of your salle Rest or

Hospital staff. Dr

,.

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON •••• ,. '2295
4 cyl~ . auiornatlc Iron• , good tires, good econOO.y &amp; a

sperdirally for whrPichmr po
tle-nts ~oil ~twPM q cmcl t1

Mark. McCIUf\9 ond Mory Ann
Giveaway
and the Middl•port F1rst 8opt1st
Church, Pleasant Volley · FIVE WEEK OLD PUP·

4 speed, .s• cuboc Inch. fronl stabilizer
bar, 321 rear axle ratio, heavy duty
eauloment, 9.50-16.5 tires, gauges.

1976 MUSTANG II CPE. •••••••• '2795

d~tgn.rd

w~ers. especially the R&amp;v.

Plus Tax
and Tille

Local owner, clean Interior, AM-FM CB radio, good
lire~ .

1-'hnnr

thankfulness to relativ•s
nelahbon. friends and co

1979
GMC% TON

~es

EMINI (Miy 21-June 20) II ,a
family problem comes up
todar, walt unlll everyone has
hlld a chance lo sleep on lhe
Issue belore trying lo roaolva
- · With lime comes 1he aolu·
lion.
CANCER ( J - Z1.Juty IZ) You
could be In • . .,loua frame of
mind lodty and may have a
diHicull lime treatlnv things
llg~lly Take cott lhat your
remarka aren't oauaUo or tMt·
lng.
LEO tJuly Za.Aug. llllt'a very
unlike you , but toctar you could
tend to bl 1 •"-de selfish

, ofyou. '
Wando Fondling
~DALE [J6ci&lt;) Walburn withes to
t
ekpreu
gratitude and

aualltv vou expect '" a Pontiac.

[JAm

steering, gooc1 tires. local1 ownPr

get rolling you'll

cub1c • inch, automatic, air, power
steering, power brakes, AM 8 track,

Grand

1977 PINTO 2 DR ••••••••••••• '2795

•

but cnca you

l

2 tone brown, cast alum. wheels, V-6 231

Vinyl Interior, euckskin color, 6 cyl , automatic, P.

"""' '· t 171
You will have 1 ch~nce to shOw

Mk• to thonk Or
" Ridgway and , Dr , Telle and oil
fhe nur... for tuch ROOd thot I
re~elv.d ~ wh1le being ol
Veterens M•morall Hospital
Al10 f~nks to the on•• with
helr prayert, visitations ond
he beautiful cords I rece1ved
GOd 81..,§ !K'ch and .very one

1979
PONTIAC
GRAND AM

WE -WANT TO

1975 NOVA CUSTOM 4 DR•••••• '2595
off your special . ol&lt;llla and
knowledge IIIIo comloig year
Take advantoge of the opportunltlet u they come olong . The
rewarda lor 1 job well done ate
extremely high.
Alllll (MitCh Z1·Aprll 11). If
something comes up that
oweda to be done today you
miiY be a bit of a slow 1tarter,

- ·

i

6 cyl engine, air cond • autom~tlc, P steenng, good
w w t•res, radio, vinyl roof, color green
r

Advantages of using ARCH

cartl of Thanks-

nph

For Sale
1978 STA RCR AF T BOAT, 15

- -

TWO BEDROOM mob,le hpmP

to¥~~ family,~

~t.

Local I owner &amp;only 11,000mlletl", AM-FMradlo, power
windows &amp; 0 Locks, cruise control, tilt st. wheel , air
cond., dlg1tal clock •.305 V 8, P.S., P B., and sharp car,
silver wlth red v1nyl top

WI'RE IE'DY TO

'.

Mrs
Mrs

1 WOULD

I '

v .a. standard trans.

LOVING memory of our
parents Howord Wilaon and
ttotle Wilton who poued owoy
on A.prll 12 )q35 and "pnl n

I,N LOVING memory of Mrs Faye
, Lotan. who paiS~ away 9
y.drs ogq today April8
To sam• you or• torgotton
To others jutt part of the past
· lut to"'· who low«~ and lost you
Your memory will alwoys Jo st

1979
REGAL

ANO ~ 8M furn1!i.hf'd nn.-1 un

furnuhrod

ONf BEDROOM oph

~~---- --

.

$1295
~-~:.~.~:.::~·.:~~~~
2695
1975 FORD F-100
$3095
'h TON PICKUP••••••••••••••••••••••••• .'••.•••••••••••••••••••••••• •
· 1974 CHEV.
·
$}295
SUBURBAN WAGON.;.................. ~.~:.~:~·:.:~:~·~· •••...••••

always

roottler, doer. Slldly mjiSed
by husband, doughter 'lind
family .

XLT 4i4 .••..•.••••....•.••...•...••••••;~~~-;.;,~·~:;;;~~:~•••~5295
.,

1972 GMC
V8. auto trans, air, PS.
lh roN PICKUP. .....................................................
1974 F-100
5
lh TON PICKUP ........................
..........

ua

:~

·

'lO ROlliNG ACRfS ol gnorl
,.ostui,. Pff'n1y nl wotN (ooltt
OCCt!rnr.tiftlf' 50
rtu!l t'Oitlll"
blA Nt7l3'8

Jal&lt;o (VInao) IH

"You'll Loke Our Qualoty"Way of Doing Bu•lnes•"
GMC Financing
•
992 5342
POMEROY
ill ,

with

COUNTJf'( MOBilf Hnmr l'lnrl&lt;
Ro utf' ·13 nnr th nl Pomrrny
lnrfJf' lnt!l fnJIQQ1 U7Q

ms...~ ,

1'71.

Karr &amp; ·V an Zandt
Op('n F'v@nu,gs Uf1hl• t.J

V a. P S' P. B.. air, dual'

YOU're

Mrs. Asa (Nora) Jordon
Dowld (Ada) Eost•rdoy

Red &amp; whlfe finish, vinyl roof, 2 door,
power steenog, power brakes, sport
mtrrors, V 6 231 cubic Inch, radial

For Rent

. In loving "'emory of Erdlce
lllola ROIIIh, who pasS&lt;&gt;&lt;!
lllrty Apr'll I, 191..e. AIIIIO&lt;Igll,.

J~ ore built for yuu!
See one of these courteous wlesmen : Pete Burris,
Marv•n Keebaugh or Georgi H1rris.

.

--

,,

:-

P S , air.

7

1976 f 150 RANGER

'

,

J•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••

...

· For Best ·R esults Use Sunday Tim.e s_-Sentinel Class~fieds

SAVE
ALOT •••
..
AS WE CLEAR ··
LOTI

AFFORDABLE
ECONOMICAL.
DRIVING

I

•

1 :ol.t-ABC News 13; 2:40-Movle "Star In the Dust"
17; 4:30-12 o'elock High 17.
MONDAYAPRIL9,1979
5:30-World at Lorge 17; 5:6--Farm Report 13
5:»--PTL Club 13; 5:5s--Sunrllt Semester 10
6:D0-700 Club 6,1; PTL Club 15
6:2s--Publle Allolrs 10; 6:,30-Romper Room 17.
6 : ~nlrlfl Report 3; ·6·~ MornlnQ, West
Vlrglnl• 13; 6·S~~ue' White Reports 10: News
13.
7:GO-Todly 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13;
Schoolln 101 Monday Mornlrlfl a, Three! Stooges.
Llfllo Raoeols 17.
7. 1s-w..111er 33.
7·30-Famlly Affair 10; SeMme St. 33,

"

a :l»-&lt;:apt. Kenvaroo 8,10; Loovo It To Beaver 17
8:30-Hiltl 11.
9:01)-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Emergency
One 6: Hogen's Heroes a: Match Game 10; lucy
Show 11.
9:30--Brady Buneh 8; Hogan's Heroes "· GrAer• 11.
10:0D-Ctrd Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 61 All In The
F-lly 8, iO; Dating G•m• 13; Movie " four
Daughms" 17.
10: LJO-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000 Flyramld 13;
Andy GrtHIIII 6; Price lo Right 1,10.
11 :GO-High Rollors3.15: Laverne a. Shirley 6, 13; Elec.

Co. 21.

11 :30-Willel of Fortuna 3, ts: Family Feud 6,13; Love
of Life 1,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
•
11 :U..CBS News a; Hou• Call 10; News 17.
12:110--Ntwaconter 31 Pon_.d 15; Younv 8 t,.
Rntlm il1 Midday Magulna 13; love Ame r ican

-~·t

.

.

12:30-Rytn's Hope 6,13; S..rch lot' Tomorrow a,10.
Elac. Co. 33; Not For Womt~ Only 15; Movie
"lllllltf then Life" 17,
1 :oo-Daysol Our Ll-151 All My Chlldron6, 13; News
I; Young &amp; the Rnt,lns 10.
1:30-Ao The World Turns 8,10; 2:DO-Docton 3.15;
One Life to live 6,13.
2:25 News 171 2·30-Another World 3,15; Guiding
Llgllt 1.10: I Love Lucy 17.
3:DO-Gtnarel Hospittl 6,13: Llllao Yoga &amp; You 20;
lanana Splits 17:.
3:30 Mull I; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnls,_. 11: Over
E•oy 20.
4:00--MIIIer Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; /Nwv
Griltln 6; Addams Family 1: Sesame St . 20.33;
1 Batmen 10; Mike Douglas 13; SPI!Ict Giants 17.
~:30--Btwllchlld3; ~llllgon'~ Is. 8,11; Brady Bunch 10;
Lucy Sllow U.
5:GO-I DI"Nm of J11nnoe "3; Beverly Hillbillies • :
Mlom R • • 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10: Six ,
Million Dollll' Man 13; Brady Buneh 15; I Dreamol
J11nnle 17.
5: 30-CIII'OI Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6: Senford &amp; ·
San II Elclc. C:o. 20; Mory Tyler "-"e 10; Odd
Coullfl 15; Lucy Show 11; Doctor Who 33.
. 6:111iHowo3,1,11!.13,15; ABC NewS6; Andy Griffith 17;
On Nat.,.•s 1rail 20.
. ,,
•:-NIIC Newt 3,15; ABC News13; Carol Burnott &amp;
Frl-6; CBS Newal,10; My Thru Sons17; O.or
7:

~20,

'

ro.WIIo 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Pop (foes
Thl Country I; News 10; love American Style 15; ,1
Carat Burnett &amp; Frlondl17; Dick Cavett 20; Know
Your lchoole 33.
'
7:JO-'.ThttN•IhvllltMusle3; MuppatS!Iow6: PriCe Is '
Right I; Wild Klrlfldom I01 1979 Osear Hopefuls
13: Nnhvllle On The Road IS; Sanford &amp; Son 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 10,33.
·
• 1-.l.tlfle Hause On The PrA!rlo 3,15; Perry Como
6,13; "-nutsl,10; 8111 Moyers' ~ournal20,33: Store·
Trtll 11.
,
1 :30-Whlfe S h - 1: 1971 Stnlor Olympics 10.
9:GO Mowle "Dtllverenct" 3, 15; Cheryl Ledd 6,13:
• li'rY l-133: Movie "A New Kind of Love"
171 Gnlwlng Yo•• 20.
'
1
9 : -WK~P In Cincinnati 1,10.
10:'10--CleCil' Awarcto 6,13; Lou Grant 1,10; News 20;
· Palelltlna 33.
•
10:30-Aimenac: 20.
11 :00 Newo 3,8,10,15: Gong Show 20.
11 :30-Jol!nny Carson 3,15; Rockford Flies 8; ABr
New133J ~,."Without R...,.vatlona" 10; Me ·!t•
"Funtral In Berlin" 11.
1Z:JO.C.,._ 6,13: 12:..-Mc:MIIIan &amp; Wife I .
1 :GO-T-row 3; Ironside 13; News 15.
1:3t-Molllt "Tho Unholy~.. 11; 2·DO-Ne ws 13.
' ·
, 3:»--fftews 11; 3:~ Up 11. ·

..

,.

�.

.. '

..,

•

..

..
W - TheSundayTimes-Sentmel . Sunday,Apr. 8. 1979

___

---- -

_.___.,.....

1978

CJ

7 JEEP.

quadratrac , PS. blu~ w 1th
wh ite hardtop 21.000 miles.
after 7pm .

1973 LINCOLN CON ·
TINENTIAL Mark IV. power

SFTS S39 95. U HAUl . RICE'S
NfW AND USFO FURNITURE .

fiS.tl 1ocf AVF , PH 446 9SZJ

everyth ing, all white with red
interior
Verv good con
ditlon Pr1ced to se ll. Call
': ..t46 7397

l Q77 GMC PICKUP
5900
7371&gt;

•m.

...

•·• 1972 VEGA, $300
8695

..

Call 388

Call 256·6472

. ..

cassette, CB

hovs l

~vs tem

1cp4 CHfVROLET
lrodP 747-2789

,j.:4

lor sole or

55 oob

1973 BUICK CENTURY
mi les
G9od
9!15 3857

DR .,

tires

SlfSO

drrve p•cj,.up Extra Iorge tool
hnlll white spokl'!' wheels long
w 1dr brei 4 speed $7500 Will

1976 F ORD 3 '• T truck , 360
eng auto . n ~w tire~ . exc
co ntl Mvsf se ll 13500. Call

deal , 9B5 3510

1978 JEEP CJSJ
9'1? 3750

446 1747.

MUST Sfl l
~'} 5786

1973 MUSTANG MACH I,
auto., 351 eng., new t1res,

b

cyl. S5000

w httP
mil es

1972 GRAN TORINO SPORT
Call256 6519 after 6pm.

1977 Malibu '1 door

sp~e

wheels, 11,000
hcellent
shape

9BS 3597

1973 BUICK GRAN Sport Good

radral

1951 DODGE 1 T. truck , 1967

l!res;

aut o

Lambrette motor stooter

9~5

RCA Quad tape player. Call
4-46·7736.
-

1975

P S

Rolly
A C

$1000

truck

Call

99? 5335

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

1978 FORD F·l50, 4 X 4, 3514
spd., PS, PB, I&lt;Kk-out hubs,
traction lock rear end . S6500
Call446 ·•179

-

- - - -------- ·

2 dr .• hardtop. PS. PB. air.

~a~mjinj ~q!fip~~ni

350 V-8 eng., only 40,000

Call446·7196.

-------- --1969 NOVA, 6 cy l , std., new

tires, extra snow f1res, good
mechanical cond.
Needs

body work .
GOOd gas
mileage . wautd make gOOd
work car. S37S. Call 446 4630

1976 BUICK SKYLARK . Lots
Good cond

Call

615· 1449

1958 CHEVY DUMP, new
8ft. bed. Also 1974 Ford
F 600 Dump, 10 fl. bed Call
24H286.
t~res.

-~--- -

1976 DODGE VAN, AM·FM
radio, alr, CB, 127 in. wheel
base, exc . cond. Call 446·3655
or see at lS7 Lower Garfield
after &lt;pm . S4700. W•lh CB or

S-4600 . Without. Fl RM.

- --------

1976 CUTLASS 442, like new.
Caii07S·5904.
1976 DODGE ASPEN , PS,
PB, 318 overdrive trans ., AM·
FM stereo. radial tires, 29,000
miles. Reasonable Call 245·

58.41.

I

1977 GMC T·RI AXLE dump
true~ '-" 11256·6667
~

WD, 3200
tape, AC,

auto, P!). PB, roll bar, all
terra1n tires, ' undercoated

Co•t $10.000. wilt take S8500
Call 4-46 ·0768.
•

f

-

-

-

-

--

: 1973 GMC &gt;o T. PICKUP, V·8,
, auto. , PS, PB . Call367·0493 .

.' 1976

phonograph -....C'tords .

78

Call

..
.•

Re,.lr

•

Phorie 992-5612

9191 6370 or Contort Mortin fur ·

.

WANT TO bu~ ; nld jewelry (all
m 5202 or write Kay C.ril 87
5. 1nd. Middleport. OH

FOR

CAMPER

· · *New

· J. '"'mo. pd.

OL'D COINS, DIAMONDS,
gold bands, pocket watches, .
"slat~
Jewolery, etc .
TAWNEY JEWELERS, a!
se&lt;:ond Ave.

CffEVROLET

VAN,

· white, V 8, PS, PB, air, AM

FM. CB. 8 track, luggage
, rack. bull! in toot chesl and
boK, formica paneling with 3

Also. auction e~ery Wednndo~
evening Jpm. Hartford Com·
munitv Cem.r, Hartford, WV . ~

73 Stared

DOWN

.

7~oot
.. a

'

FM stereo, A·l condition

... ~

..

"'

' 197J CADILLAC SEDAN
: DEVILLE , good cond. Gold
: Call256·6472 .

PLEASANT

VALLEY
Ownar will
lond contract -

........~,!'.."l:tl!:....-

ESTATES -

11-9-1 mo.

1m0.

--..-

IUILDING LOT - Nice
subdtvlson, city water &amp;

88 Inlets
87 Vehicles
88 Waa In debt
89 Time abbr.
90 Happen
~1 Signal
92 Attempt
93 Sell
94 Near
98 Short jackal
97 Wise person
100 Diphthong
102 Metal fall-

-------·- - -Business Services .
- -------

'tener

106 Cabbage
109 Develop
112l.and parcels
113 Oatentailon
knife

1

~··

·

_.~

~...

t

...

:r' ...,;...

·.:

•

' •- ·

Fc!tbrlc Shop,
Pomeroy .
Authorl:red S1nnar Soles and
--.Ser-vice. We lhorpenSCillors.
f)(CAV~TfNG,
IQOde'r. oud
bockhoe work · dump tru(ks
ond lo-boys for hire . will houl
1111 dirl . tot&gt; soil.
and

.1978
- - - - -- -- - - ·- GMC DIABLO, AT.AC,
PS, PB, tilt wheet, rad1als,
AM·FM, air shocks, burgan ·
dy with sport accent. good
gas mileage. very low

·mileage. 55600. F 1RM. Call
'4-46·4357

·---------- - --

Phone 992-2342

sop · ·

, ,

E-C ElECTRICAl Conkaclor ...-..
ing Ohio Volley region. Slw
doya a wnl&lt;. 24 houn Hrvlce
Emo•gency·colls . Coli 881-2'51
or882 :1-&lt;s..
. . . ... .
MO&amp;IlE' HOME •epolra. Furnocos
electrical work . pipet wwtd,
plumbing. 992-5851.
·
· · - · · · ·

WAUPAVERING AND pointing.

Coll7•1-1328.
HOWERY AND

MARTIN

septiC'

Ew-

systems.

B&amp;S MORIIf HOMF SAl FS
PT PI fSANT WV .
675· ~-17.4

1q1:1 FNff.DOM MOIIIIF
Apf'll l nnC'e ~

fin:-r lnrt•
~';?00

,...

-..

,,

..

• .... w_.,.

go, buy ·one or all.

$59,600
Bnck and ceda r ranch has ceramic tile foyer, mir·
rorcd walls . mass •ve stone fireplace covers one living
rm . wall, ptush carpeting, formal dining, eat·ln kit·
chen, 3 lg e R, 2 fu ll baths. 20' deck plus concrete patio
with brick grill for outdoor entertaining, 2 car garage
'Over 'l:l'acre velvety lawn lrresistabl~ inside and out I

.

'

,,

'

undP.rplnnlng,
nrfWJ 6ll8 .

OQ') 5~1;1

this
L ·shaped
Tudor
Whether you enter through
th~ service door of the at
tached 2 c11r g1uage or the
double door front entry,
you'll love the convenience
of this floor plan The
center entry di rects trnffic
to the formal living arei't or
filmily room or kitchen dtn
ing ~re" The bedroom
w 1ng offers c omlete
privacy. 2 full baths, plush
c,;.rpet ing, filmily room
with fir epla ce iind slid 1ng
gl&lt;"lSS doors to patio Fully
equipped kitchen . Electn c
hea t pump, cen a1r Low
mr~1ntenan cc br1ck , cedar
and stucco exterior $60's
Owner will help finetn ce

sss,soo
Gallif'
County'!. mo !'. t
scenic lir1Vf" hrlnn" you tn
th1" hNHit!fUI hkP ni"W
hrirk r~nrh 3 RR , "''
hl'lths. K 1tr11rn fully £' (1uir
pPd with rf'n or ~net r l"fnn
Utility rOflm w.th wrt-.hl"'r
anrl dry('r ? rrtr f1n 1shNf
Qi'lri'IOf' CMI')("f l1 kf' l,lWn
Conrr('tr driv('

This ont is a real mon ey
maker• Grocery, service
stat1on. C·2 license beer
and wtne cary out Con
crete block building houses
store
garage for i'luto
repal'r plus 'Very nic:e 3
bedroom apt
upstqtr s
Large tot w1th plenty park
ing space . Frontage on Rt
7 and Oh10 River . Incom e
figures available to serious
buyer .

OPPORTUNITY TtME
to live in a spi'lclous newly •
decorated home 4 bedrooms, formaJ dining room with
custom oe~k buffet, custom designed kitchen feettures
snack bar desk, oak cab mets, ri'lnge, hood i'tnd
dishwasher . Greetf room has bnck hearth tor wood bur
n r n~ stove Patio, beautifully rolli ng ll"!wn encl osed
with rusti c fenc e. JUST LISTEDi

$19,500 .
COLON I AL 2 story home needs re'pair Good floor plan ,
2 BR upstair s 1 BR plus kitchen , living room , dlr11n g
room and bath ort first floor Septic tank, ruri'll water
Lot fronts on Rt 7 and Old Rf 7 Cit Addispn. L~rge
enough to rtccomodate several m obi!e home 1n i'!ddlt!On
topresenthDme JUST LISTED.

$115,000
283 Acre farm, over 60 acres ttllahte billilnre wood And
rolltna pasture. 141Jih. tobacco has&lt;'. Minere~l rights to
bP. soid with farm ComfortabiP 'J story f r~rm home in
very picturesque settin(l &gt;surroundPd hy 9i c..nt trcC's 3
bC'Irns, other outbldg.

24'xU'IIving rm with fireplace . Nearly J ;. ac r e rolling
lawn surrounded by beaut tful wooded are e~ Near
Mercerville

NEW 1979 1. II. Wlilo mobile ·
homn completely furnllhld,
delivered lnd set up $1995.
Limited quantity. C1ll im·
mldlelely, ~ollnson•s Mobile
Homes, Inc. olold-U.7.

-·-·---·- - -

------ - - 1979 SCHUl,. TZ MOBILE
·-

-

-

IIEW LISTING - Cory 2
bedroom home with almost
2 ecres. Batft. furnace,

years

old#

I'm~

RHEI PAIDfA 12 w 48

. '
Very •

1100&lt;1 condition. 13500 747-3875

or 9.19. 26~3 afN&lt;r 4

of

Galllpoll•

#253
PURE PLEASURE
IN THE PINES
Your brude Will never want
Vc"lcatlon from thiS 4 BR
central air, big 20')1'40' pool,
10 e~cres and a barn, acre
ge~rden spot, cellar, dog
pen BeaU tiful v1ew and
perfect sec lusion are se
cor.l d nature to this ·near ly
new home
11 276
e~

A "TRULY" HOME
Tru l y spe~cious ,
trutv
homcv and truly upc1n1ed 1n
it
simply
gr e at
,neighbo rhoo d
4 large
bedrooms , liv 1ng room ,
dintng room, ki t chen, bill h.
bi'lsement, closed in porch
plu s more GMage i'lnd nice
garden spot. Excel lent con
ditton . S32 ,000
11211

SUPERB
CONSTRUCTION
Anyone would admire the
quality of the superb con
struction of this tastefully
designed brick home. 3,000
sq
ft
living space, 3
bedrooms, spac ious living
room, lerge fami ly room.
enchanting kitchen, formal
dm1ng room , pat io, full
finished basement with 2
car
attached
garage
Situated on a large levet lot
in a qui et neighborhood If
you are looking for con·
structton quality , don't look
any further. Priced to sell
rap idly on tOday•s market.
Shown by appoinment . IJ 258

reason

for

One acre, more or less,
Walnut Twonship. $1,100.

Located

,

in

Huntington

we have several cnoice lots

In Ohio Twp. Some are

w~ter

front lots, camping
lots. some are scenic lots
on higher elevations. Road

Winter weather now, but
spring will soon be here.
Make your selections ear ·

ty!

$11,900

$\1.500.

b•f';•in

or

wrlttoff,

o...... a.

s.. P. Murlllly
llutor AsiOCialtl
/{(ltJ•,IIJ!f
f-ft'./1 lifll.l/ fr'r '.

If you're

Mobile Home Park .

large

WANT TO
- - Yard Sales

-

~

~

T HI S IS NO·T a garage sa le, t HUG H VAPO SAH' April 9 H. 10
Th r('" fom•ly l n l ~ nf u~t'rl
but a !louse sa te
The~t's
dnlhnl{)
gla"''WOrl'
h.-_,r
right, even the house is for
' 'n, o; 1nls nf nf"w m,.rrhnnc1i•r
sale1 L ots of good Et1stcr
The blur l•nu'"'f" br-hinrl thro
clothing and plenty of mise
Mo~on Glo~~ (() , Motwr-~n
Mori l Apr. 9, from sam to
Moson nnrl HMtfqrrl \W Rntn
m· at 16 Chillicothe Road.
mn&lt; rl•
~~
'
.
_...._,
··-··
·~

bordered by i'l str eam and wooded hiiiStde Terrific
building sltr-. L1vc 1n thf" l4 '&gt;&lt;70', 3 BR , 1''1 hath mob1!e
home wh1tc you' r (' se~v in q for your Cr ea m home Seplte
tetnk , Galli~. County Rural water, blrt ckfop road .

plus

other

buildings.

ThiS

land could also be used for
dev~lopment purposes. So

slop looking today and give
us a call .
# 270 '

I,

5-5 ACRE TIC A\.
Va c i'lnf wood
land
overlooking the Ohio River .
Lovely
view . very !
reasonably priced I \ I 222

?CALL
- .
.
Yard
- . . Sale
. -.

barns

smaller

THREE BEAUTIFUL ACRES MOSTLY MEADOW

For Lcasr
FOR LEASF: - 60 ~crc&gt;!io
cropland ncar Con on Rae conn Creek
40 acrf'!s.
PilStl.tr(l
in
Morgan
Township on Luthrr Rnusrt

Rd STROUT
·446·000R

R~ALTY

,. -wanteil
to oo -- - - - - -· ~

YARD

WORK,
mow 1ng
spring c: te ~ nup 10
yrs. cxp , Ph 1146 9835
c te~nlng ,

INTERIOR OR F.XTSRIOR
WORK CAll ?566d95

delay . $29,000 00.

Nl79

'

CALL NOW

42 .acres,
S10,900

buldlng site •. city school
#.2(-1
GOOD BUY
Help fight today·~ Inflated

buy

! 255

5 ac res vrtcant fcmd, more
ur less., new fenci ng,
around .(OQ lb
tobacco
base. smalt pond &amp; some
timber, water supply . Ex
cellent buy for $9,600 . Near

untouched at
1212

!282

$l6,000
dO ncres of VilC"olnt 1.1nrt 1
more or lf' ~s. Pf'r r y Twp
W11t er IS on pr o(' r l 'f
M1n e r~1
rHmt s l eit~N1
Goort Buy' won ' t 111st ton g!
N257

EXCELLENo
BUILDING LOTS
County water available.,
Road frontage . 1 tot 175ft:
by 220 II A lots 100 II by 220
tt . ell!ch They hAve all been
sur'lleyed Spr ingfield Twp

N233

a

farm , we have IU$1 listed 91
ocres In Springfield Twp
Road frontage, plenty of
water, plenty of posture, 2

GREAT LOCATION, ? block~;, from citv prtrlc, etcros!'&gt;
- si" ~~ from super m~rket 1 BR cottage, glaSS enclosed
h perfect for indoor greenhouse . Large dining
~~ 'tor family ga1henngs. Gre-&lt;'t stArtef' or retire
mE"nf hom e

'

looking for

'J full baths, tg. lfving room with rvstic beam ceiling .
Kitchen hs range, refrig ,, tots Df cabinets, l.t'x70'

$29,000

2

N261
NEW LISTING

$16,500

yt\-&lt;IV ..

l1nk ~ ... ,ng the yard
Cone ..: •e drive
Conve
Don't
. n1ent1y lo cr~ ted .

Crown City .

LOTS FOR SALE

level tot on Rt. w . Easily
landscaped arrd planned . .

O.ly $17,5110.
NEW LISTING - Hero's e

tront porch of thl•.a.r- ac ·
l•ve 3 be"· .a..-,\"~ .h
Larg~ai ~
chain

~eflated

2~7

water available. Also nice

mobile home complete wl_th WOoden deck stepS, utility
bllding and underpinn ing. On rented lot In Quail Creek

S1t back and relax on th e

prices with this mobile
home and 1 acre lot . Three
bedrooms. 1111 baths, gas
fOr ced air furnace, patio,
cement block outside
building Don't miss th is

pointmenh No:, 227.

READY AND WAITING for youandyourlamily. 3 BR,

ROCKING CHAIR PORCH

district, Green ~ Eiemen ·
tary . Reasonably priced!

N259

for vourSftlf

piU$.
.
•
RIVER VIEW- Abollt all
fi!JO&lt;!s, beoulllul panorama
site. Has 3 !ltdrooms, bath,
nat . goUIIrnoce. city water
ond block !lllrage. Ontv

532, 5()0

Scenic area, new double
wide 24'x52', 8 rooms, 2
baths, 2 showers, L R ,
F R., O.R., J bedrooms,
detuxe kitchen,
good
garden area, new tool shed
24'x28' This is what you
want and c:an•t usu ally
find All new, wih 10 acres
to use as you please
N219

LAND INFLATED?

Call now

selling. W1nt to work Inside

porctt alld one wooded ocro

TWO BEDROOM HOME
Pnced tow tor 1mmediate
sate . N •ce garden space
good location, city water,
seweF, basement . Owner
will help fin ance qual 1f ied
buyer
NIOt

Mostly WOOdland, county
water avallabl~. goocf

frontage 100' to 265'. Rural

with dininO arel'. sunt\eck,
2 car garl'ge, _lllrge front.

NICE &amp; COMFORTABLE
N.c-f' ilnd rom lorret•J•I' tS
l h t ~ ') st or y hOm f' LOC o'! IN!
1n lhf' North Gil lli , Sc hool
T hrf'C'
I M QC
Dt s tr1 r t
twclr oom s, k•f r hf'n , d•n•ng
room , l• v •nq r oorn , bttth ,
iuf'l oil Inn l"d ,,,, furnil ce
Fnr I hilt f'x tr i'l ~prt(l"' out of
c l oor ~
th l"'rl'' t!:. cl 111((1('
,,,,rctcn, bMn ,1n rt rh 1ckf'n
nou ~f'
Shown hy ,, pnoint
lnl 'nt
II 'l.!IO

ZACRES

Twp. Sec. 29. Call for ap-

,

Or just a good investment.
Modern home, living room
with woodburner, ea t·ifl
kitchen w1th stove and
refrigerator,
bath,
2
bedrooms. Also a K lrkwood
12)(65 mobile home, 3
bedrooms,
1'12 baths ,
modern kitctnm. Trailer is
partially furnished . Car
port with storage room ,
rural water . All this S1t11ng
on 180x180 lot. Call now for
anaptt
N26J

VACANT lAND

40 ACRES,
MORE OR LESS

NICE AND QUIET ,- New,
3 bedroom '-"' wtlll 2.
boths, family room 'with
fireplace . Nice kll&lt;h.f tl '

'

GOOD RENTAL
PRbPERTY

County water available 1
Seller will fuf'nish a survey~.

$18,000.00.

DUPLEX ... Two apartments, both 3 rooms and bath
furnished, rent for S180 per month each . Also trailer
space rented for S50 00 per month. 1''2 acres. N ear
Cheshire.

17 unit motel &amp; restauran t
with excellent occupancy
rat1o. Manage both frpm
the same sellt . Superior
traffic count . Owner recep
five to Qualified buyrr 11736

This

$18,000

$34,000

only $17,00G.
YOUR, CHANCE- Here Is
• business for the price of
the fixtures and Inventory.

- - - · -

512.000 Phol\e742·:1826.

cily

home contain!. the many
extras you can think about
ever own1ng. Look Mom!
Two and a half baths! Two
showers I ThrEie be'drooms!
A sparkling living room
with large stone fireplace ,
ca thedral ceiling, really an
eye catchef'! A well plann
ed Chandler kitchen, dining
room, two car garage , This
home IS for the very speci.~l
peole who enioy privacy
and a very relaxed life. If
this. meets yhour needs , we
recommend qui ck act1on .

For the outdoorsman. 30
acres of v"cant land .
Room to hunt, farm or
build. Located near No.
I and 2 mln~s In Meigs
County .
PrI ced for

A visit to ano ther time, long e~go Times of e)(pans •ve
room s and patient constru ct ion. High ceilings, massive
woodwork, large foyer with open stairway 'Modernized
k1tchen wt th pnvate stairway from second floor, 4 BR,
2 bath s, full basem ent PLUS 3 rooms and b_,th, fur
n1 shed apartm ent rented for SlBO 00 per monttJ PLUS 2
trail er spaces r enting for $40.00 per month 1' '" acres
Near Chesh tre

ti~. E.. ~~-.
'
'

bedroom home on· tht bus
111,., In town. 1-1011 a bath for
only S7.500 . .
HOME, livid In 6 months, 2
br, turn, underpenned ¥fltt'l . NEW•·Lfi,TI"'G - 6.01
washer and dryer. Must sell.
acres;6.30acres, 7.12acrK
Call 446·0227 or 675·2279.
lor 20 attes nur Meigs Sr .
High. ,
•
-- ~ C"LL m-ms. WE'LL· DO
1967 TOTAl ftECTRIC mobllo
OUR BEST.
.
ho.,., furnished
3 bedr
HtlenL.
wadter bnri dryPr Air condl
#

th:• truly distinctive brick
home sitting on 22 acres.
overlooking the Sliver
Bridge, Ohio River and the

6273

$59,000

Retirement

SECLUDED BEAUTY
Everything's special about

4-1 ACRE LOTS

COUNTRY PLACE .. A-Frame, 3 BR , I' '' baths,

Needs a little finishing but

ATTENTION 1/ETERANSI
New 1979 •• ft. wide mobile
homes. If you qualify, no
· payment, 12 yean to
pay. Paymontsas IOWIS$105.
12 percent APR . Llmltld
quantity, coli Immediately,
John-·•
Inc. 446·35-17.MObile - ·

Six room house, bath, full basement A scenic lot
overlooking the Ohio River. Three miles from
Gallipolis Two ca r garage, rented apartment Good in
vestm~nt property Lot size 150 ' x220' If this m eets
your needs, we recom mend quick action•
fl 286

$27,500

Very n1 ce 3 BR ran ch great for a growmg fami lY. 3 BR.
?. FULL baths Family room wtth ftrela ce, fulty
carpeted . Full basement, cen. air cond, attached
garag e. Only 5 miles from city in Kyger Creek area.

ten

~

~~--

THIS IS SPECIAL

RIVERVIEW

CENTURY 21

Eve. 992-2449

around

----~

OLOE ENGLISH $ly ting in

$41,900

Mass1ve stone f1repl ace in liv1n~. r.oor; is just one of the
ex tra specia l features of th is brand new horne Custom
designed and every 1nch of space utilized 3 Bedrooms,
11 '1 baths. Family size kitchen has dishwasher. range
c; nd disposal , lots of cab inets plus p~ntry at rear entr~
Pl ush cr~ rp etin g throughout , 2 car hn1st1ed garage 1 1
m iles from c1 ty .

1955 Pr•lrle Schooner, 28 x 8,

675-"7~

----

Real Estate for Sale
-·----

-

Business Opportunity

At this tow price this J BR
ranch has to be the best buy
on the market tode~y! Fully
carpeted except kitchen,
1' ~ baths, electric heat
pump and centrAl air cond
Large 12 'x21' living rm ,
eat · ln kitchen with lots of
cabinets and range At
tach ed garage . Level
135 '107 ' 1awn .

$45,000

·1 br

11165 Generll, Mix 12, 2 br
1HO Mt. Vernon, 10 x 50, 2 br
1969 Champion. 12 x 60, 2 br
1N9 PMC, 17x 50, 2 br
1970 Skyline, 1:1 X65, 2 br
1970 Sylva, 60 x 12, 2br
1970Castle,60x12,2br
1972Eicone, )2x65,3br
1973 NObility, 12 X60,7 br
1973 Ricloewood, ~ox 14, Jbr
B and 5 Mobi 1&lt;1 HOIT,e Sates
Pl. Plenant, YIV

--

Estate for Sale
.Real-- -- · -

$52,000

· tlon•d . 1 lof 210ft fronlo~

~

Exceptional features rare
ly found in the SO's
Outstanding family room
with fireplace and warm
brown toned carpet For
m"l ltving and dlntng
room . Super deluxe k1tchen
with sntlck bar, range,
dishwasher and dtnin g
i'lreet. 3 bedrooms, 111
baths Attached finishe d
garage
E l ectric heat
pump,
cen
air
No
maitenance br•ck extenor'
One of th e area ·s most at
tra ciive neighborhoods

$40,000

cancelled? Lott your operators
licenao? Phone 992-114~--

1955 Pralrlt- Srliooner 78MB.
hdr ·
. I%5GenNol , tl0•1'1 'JMr
1%8Eicooo, 5'•17 2Mr
1%9 Buddy 60•1'1 ~ bdr
1'970Sylva . 60wl2 7bc:k
1970 Cp!ttla. 60Ml2. 7 bdr
1973 ArUngtnn , 6(hl12. '1 brlr .
JQ73Midgewood , 70•14 3hdr.
ICJ73 Kirkwood, 5(b;12 , 'J hdr.

•

u building ·Iota, ready to

Year round fun• Fireplace for now and a pQOI for hot
summer d ays 3 BR country home on nearlY an acre.
Fam il y size kitchen w•th rang e and refrigerator Fully
carpeted except k 1tc hen Attached finished garage, 5
,m 1tes fro m c ity JU ST LISTED

after~p.m.

•

54.32 ACREI Primo
land, IOQIId off of 35.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE boon

- --·- ----- - --

'

RIVERVIEW - Lovely
mobile
home
with
everything - overlooking
the river . Perfect for
boating purpooe~.

$59,900

$29,500

· 1971·1A • 70mobllehomt. 2 br,
1~ x 20 living rm, lawn bldg,
rectwood
Ueps,
un dorpennlng, nice cond.
- Moblle_l:f~rt]_e~ f_or_ Sal_! _ Alklntl 16.000. Call 318-8104

NOil010S

MOBILE HOME - 12'xlo0'
M.H . Soiling on 21/a acres of
l~vely land.

cail us for all your insur•nce or re•l estate
pr .&gt;blems. Eslablished 18lo8.

llolo ltlack Servko.
Rutlof1d, Ohio. P-7~2-:1008.
PULltNS EXCAVATING co;,;l•
S•rv:ce. Phono9'12-2•78 .

COLLINS
BUILDING
PRODUCTS,
1515
Washington Blvd., Belpre,
Ohio, offers e rww. service, to
the Galllpoltsarea . Over 6.000
building . prO&lt;tucls delivered
eacn week to Bolpre end
. avo liable to you each week at
discount prlc.. l C1ll Cotllns
Building Products or pick up
a frH Pea~~e Catalog loctay.
Business naurs: Mon lhnf
w-~:3-~i. to ,5 p.m . P...... .

~ Call2.45·58.41.

Her e's old fash1oned charm with the conven1ence of to·
day Fully equipped kitchen has table nook with bay
Window,, beai!Jed ceiling, pantry . Formal dining room
ha s cha1r ra il , wallpaper and built In china cabinet
Prtvate living room . Cozy den Grac1ous foyer with
open statrway leads tO second floor with 3 spacious
bedrooms . Full basement has recreation room plus lots
of storage, Nic e PICnic area in back yard. Located
downtown GalliPOlis . A house that says "home". Just
li sted
c

REAL ESTATE

r.avel. Call lob or "-&lt; Jofrs. doy phone 992-7089. night
.,Oone 992-35:15 or992- 513~.
EXCAVATII~G . d-..•• ; .bock..;,.

Building Sujlplle$

runs good, new t1res. Cheap

$62,000

NCE

,,_,tono

offer

' 1974 AUSTIN MARINA. 4 dr ,

4 LEVEL HOME . Everytblng yau could ....,t
In a home - Call tadly-

SUMMER H I DEAWAY or year round home fronting
on lake (Owner se~ys t he fish ing's great I) 2 BR, nice
m od er n kit chen with range and refrigerator Screened
fron t por ch w •th beauflful v1ew 2 large lots JUST

do,.,.,

992-5724 .

-

..

acre.

LI STEO'

and ditrher. Charles R. Hot·

132 Stared
133lean·lo
134 Revealed
130 Prayerl
138 Knoba
140 The sweet·
141 Miutcullne
142 Slippery
144 On the ocean
147 D
d
evoure
148 Headgear
149 Expire
151 Peter 153 State: Abbr.
156 While

on Roote 7 · ·
SEWING MACHINE Ropalro. ,..,.
vlco. oil rnokos . 992-22V&lt; ,The
·~·\(

123 Glrl'a nick·
nam8 ,. · !
125 PreciouS~ · ,. ' ·

lot. Priceq right!

an

AT HOME

ne• 1 to State Alghwoy Garog4!

~

anlenltles On over

SUE ROUSH
lOB LAN&amp;
IECICY LANE
VICKIE HAULDREN
IVALTLANE

omoll oppllonces. town moor.

1. •.,

NEW. QUALITY BUlL T
HOME Under construction with Iota of

RT. 141 - 2 building lOts. FRENCH DESIGN
Love Iy home with all the
BUILDING LOT -"- With extras you could want
septic tonk. $6,000.00.
(with 2 acres) .

Sweepors, toosters, lront, oU

116 Philippine

atone

----

or ..9.2000, Racine. Ohio. Crill
Brodlord
HWOOil lOWER&amp; REPAIR

apple

.
1.., Rail at
w
127 Chlneae P*·
~odaa .
128
131 Stlpupor

--.

BRADFOifD. Auctioneer, Com·
plele Service . Phone 949-2487

,

From the stunning portico
.., porch you enter the mtddle
level foyer . Go down to the
d~y/ight
basement with
f~mdy ropm, utility room
and fmis hed garftge or up
to the ltving level Sp.:.c ious
formal livtng room and diM
ing area K •chen has snack
bar, dark wood cab1nets,
range and dishwasher 3
large bedrooms. Plush
ca rp('t, cen
air
Wood
deck Great location

50's.

ONE
OF
GALLIA
COUNTY'S ' OLDER
KYGER CREEK DIS- HOMES - 10 rooms. 2
TRICT ;.. 2 story, 4 story, basement- Route 7.
'
bedroom home on 1.18 Price ~educed 1
acrK - $30.000.
.
COLONIAL LIV lNG - 5
home,
42 ACRES - With small bedroom brick
1
trailer - lots of timber - excellent IOQI ""
$10.000.
NEW LISTIN8
Han ·
LOWER RT. 7 - Around clyman special - Older 2
Eur.~&lt;a, 2 slteo with river story, ICC. District.
frontage .

PUIZ-2174

11 B Swine fat
120 To ,the aide
121 Tooihed In.lrume nt ,
122 ·T old on

BRICK . AND FRAME
HOME- Over an ecrt lot.
Love Iy homo with e frpl .. 2
full ~Moth•, 2 car a•r!IGe•
nice rodwood ~~- Low

sewage.

.....

1-

-

~

IT;S SPRING• Enjoy it full-y surrounded by beautiful
~pines, oak and b1rth trees There's a very private ~ear
patio tor mormng coffee or evening cookouts. Spac•ous
bedrooms, fireplace '" both the Irving and familv
rooms full br~sement , car port New ly dec orated inside
::~ nd ou't so you can bypii SS Sprin g c lcC'Ininq Clnd 1uSt l"n
1y 1 N eM Cf'nt ~ Mry

$62,500
CO LONIAL STYLING

ENGINEER PLATTEq-

Servl• .

114' LOV8

G•tupoll'- OhtA

.2Slfa LOC!IIf St.

1•. .

$11,501- o bedroom frame
home with gar~-

IN STOCK for lmm.diote delivery.
variou1 sl;res of pool htts. Do-lt
yourself or let U• Install fOf' you.
0
Bumgardner SOI.s, Inc.

-----

reason~tb le

...,.,-.o.

doror bockfwM, Rt. 143. Phone
1(614) 698-7331_ .

' 521100. FIRM Call 379·2102
' after 6pm weekdaY•

• cot or. Any

IN-TOWN CONVENIENCE- 7 year old tirlck
with full basement In a nice
nelflllborhood.

220 E. Ma.. ilroet,

ca.,atlng,

: 197~ OLDS
CUTLASS
j SUPREME, PS, PB, AC, AM·

..

Rd.
Lanpvllle, Ohio
614,..9-4245 Evenlllll$
2 Milos East of Wilkuwil,.
SUPER GOOSE STOCK
TRAILERS
NOW
AVAILABLE

.

.

NEW IRICK HOME- Rt.
:IS - lncludlnft frpl ., l'la
baths Md fern y room.

APPLIANCE If

~tgonoory

27320

•-5-lfc

75 Ceremony
T7 Solar dlak

OLDER BRICK HOME Second Avenue location $36,5110.

EWOIT

liAILER ~I FS

949-28{,2, 949-2160

miles up from Pom.roy Moton
~ndg•

APARTMENT. fOMPLEX
- 5 units - al occupied,
good lnYfllmonf.

•

New. repair,
gutlers and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cle.nlng
FrH Estimates

.

DAIRY FARM Rio
Grandt arH, home with
111$ acre~.

YOlK llelcfquarteis for
Annilrq Cll)lelin&amp;

Roofing

: ln. Insulation . $3800 Call675
' 4035.

I -

Elberlelds of Pomeroy
and Kimball Music C.nlor
of Athens
Phoaem-2511
Or992-2GI2
3-11-1 mo.

H. L Wtihnl

BATTEAIE$, $2.00 tach.
Scrap 1,..,, radlaton, ond 8
or tO 111. 1-belml. . Ca~ .._.

114 ACRE FARM - House
neodl 10m1 .wor!&lt;. tobacco
beae - S33,soo.-:.
~

lME
DUIEJ.S
---.siOclifeoY

Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2at.D. No Sunday
calls .
4-4-1 mo.

992-6011.

· rHE GALLf.RY. WE ADVERTISE NATIONALLY ON
TELEVISION, IN MAGAZINES, ETC, WE ~FF_ER_ A
FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE TO OUR POTENTIAL
SELLERS AND WE BELONG TO ONE OF THE
LARGEST SALES AND LISTINGS, REFERRAL
ORGANIZATIONS IN THE WORLD. CALL TODAY
FOR MORE DETAILS.

14 Yr. Experience
Aural Method

ca II for a

*Free Estimates

· symbol
133 Hominy ·
14ltadlng
.134 Flying mamplayer
mal
15 Small bird
78 Chemical ei136 011111 genua
18Aaaumed
e~t
137
Mend
names
80 Worn away
138 Hall!
17 Shooting alar
81 Capuchltl
1-10 Wicked king ' 18 Slaves
monkey
10 Paradise
82 Scorching
of 111..1
23 Stupefy
84 Give
141 Dull llnlah 25
Sow
88 VerM form
143 Volcanic
27 Choose
87 Type· of
emanation
28 Dlrl
school
145 ...:. Tae-tung
31 Reward: Ar89 Aratllan gar- 148 Buccanee,_
chaic
ment
148 Sang
33Wampum
92 f114111nue
1110 Aeply
38 Sicilian vol85 Appoint·
152 Gladdened
cano
menl8 .
38leak
98 Rlla with
153 Strong wind
· 40 Opening
wonder
184 Lamb'a pen
41 Metal
99 Gloaay paint
·name
43
MeiOdlea
101 Keep
1118 Splrltuallat'a
45
Turkish
de103 Brielle
Millon
104 Crtmaon
erMa
157 Takea out
48 Flower
105 Joint
158 Imitated
47 Bleaelng
108 Calcium
159 Tinta
symbol
48 Sty look
~1 Rowt
101 Yttrium aym- 1110 South
b9l
il2 Like aome
American
yarn
108 Projecting
mountain~
53 Threetooth
banded
110 Canine
J
armadillo
111 State: Abbt.
54 Gli'l's name
112 Cheryl. 1 Seif·reapect · 118 Mollified
113 Harbor
2 Girl's name
55 \::r~d
59 Condiment
57 Stale: Abbr. 116 Hebrew
3 Bearfl wh10 Prepoaitlon
58 Shade
month'
neaalo
81 Tolled
59 Anon
117 Female
4 Crevat
83 Hawked
80 Chaldean
119 Compaae pt.
5 Sea eaglet
116 Withered
5 Baseball
city
120 Glrl'a name
81 Pollm
82 Vigor
121 Perturbation
89 Greek letter
of
84 Slflches
124 Burden
10 Pompoua •
whales
72 lnatrumenta 66 Note of scale 128 Evaluate
88 Printer's
Oye plant
74 Artificial lanmeaaure
127 Heavy vOi·
D Unravel
guage .
10 Athelam '
89 Gaseous ale·
Wumeood 76
Note
ol Kale
128
ment
en
11 God of lOve
71 f!etllona
70 Watering .
hammer
12 Storege com-- 79 Compqa pt.
place
130 LtQfll otder
Darlment
83 Sum up
13 T.ntalum
71 Dlllaaed
132 Obtalna
86Calendlr

ACROSS
1 Overlay
6 Seaweed
IO.Amount
owed
14 Vapid
19 Retreat
21 Path
22 Silkworm
23 Fence IIepa:
Pi.
24 Plans
. 26 Delegation
28 Post
29 Female deer
30 Appear
32 Clayey earth
33 Flood
34 Chemical
suffix35 Gaelic
37 want
39 Legal deg
40 Channel
41 Egyptian
goddeae
42 Girl's name
44 Deduce
48 Ardor
47 Raised
48 Cut •
50 Leading
52 Courts
53 Man's nick·

I

TTENTION SaLLERS:· LISTINGS NEEDED -

PIANO
nJNING

SIDING CO.

Homt

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636
I.Ou-Lutton, Realtor Aswc., Eve. 446-3005-

'lALLI~~LIS, OHIO

3• 1
I Pd )
~--------~-~·-~m~o-~~-~

BISSEll

;iAdd-ons
;i Remoldings

JUNK .
Auto and scrap
metal. Call3118·1no.

~-

992-2356

V'IIIJI and Aluminum
Sidin&amp;

C.liMSH
.
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SUING

WANT TO buy. one cow or cow
aod coli Coll9'12·760-t or wnte
393.0 White Ooh fld.. Pomeroy
Ohio
.·
WANTED: POWfR woodworl.ing
t()()ts qq'} 7501
•

.,.,., 7101&gt;.

MiddlepOrt, 0.

-

~

ANY HOUR

. BOBLANJE
·BRANCH MANAGER
SPRJNG VAI.I..E;Y f&gt;LAZA.

651. Beech Street

-----~- -

---·--.---

Real
Estate
for Sale
..... . -

4463636

REALTOR®

&lt;t,OGt TO $50,00G RANGE. LIST WITH THIE I'ROS AT

.

of extras. Owner must selL

1979 • .) NCO
miles,
M·FM

~5 ond

SUNDAY PUZZLER,

Call-4-46 - ~223 .

' · NEW
1979
JEEP
RENEGADE, 400 miles, tots

.·

WANT TO huy: old

rn·

OfFicE 446 7900

Will Milke
Service C. lis

and windows. All -'&lt;
vuaraRte•d . 20 yurs '
e • peri • nc e ·
Fre1
••tomales, Call: Tom
Ho•klnl, 949-2160.
•
3-7 1 mo. ·

--Also Tr•nsmlssion

-

_Rea_! _I; state for Sa!e ..

CANADAY REALTY

TO~EY. REALTY (0.

11 Yean Exwleiice

ilnd rep~~i r . Storm doors

bjMir

AUCTION EVERY Sunday Ipm

cruise control, tinted glass,
miles. Dark metallic blue,
one owner. Like new with 5
new tires. Rea$on for sale
bOuGht new car _ Sl.OOO asking

Coli

-_ -_ ----·- - -· _ _ ~I!C~io_ns_ _

1975 11 FOOl truck camper. self
conta ined. oir C'ondllian. ••·
celleot condition 992 ~111

1975 CHEVROLET IMPALA,

Au9D&amp;Truck

whHis '

4776

CHEVY 4)14

~~ollv,.r

'

All IY!MS rooting. gulltrs
oncl downspouls. All I)'Pft
home maiAto,.nce ~ n•w

0.

tiMBER AND LOGS.
Pomeroy Forrost Products.
Caii99H965.

1978 JEEP J- 10 p1ckup New tires

good cond. Call367·7l47

--

·-_._

and

Ham• llaintenae

~milt

floet Wamsle~ . 7~'} '~l .

197 1 CHfVROLH ) , ton 4-whec&gt;l • RfFRIGERA TOR

PS, PB , 25,000 miles Asking
S-4800. Call256·6893.

of extras.

•

•

....

REYifOI.D'S .
ElECfRIC
SHOPM010it
.

Ohm VdrJ Roolin&amp;

ho• .... btoJ'

diamond• Gnld nr

nitur~ .
c

P S P. B. ai r shoc 5o. s in th..
rrar Rresr ha1ler hitc-h R
trade and CS rod ro 991 3500

Price S519.5

-·-

Real Estate
-tor Sale

.....,...

irnn hNk d""!1" f!ok
c-nmplf'lr ht"nt~rhokb Writf"
. M,O. MIIIN . Rt 4 PrMnroroy or
roll m nt:JJ.

197.4 GMC JIMMY 'l wh.;.PI dirlo'f'

1975 CAMARO, PS, PB , tilt
wheel, AM FM 8 track . S3400
Call446·3-lll5 or 4-46·2097

prtce.

'1'1~ '"""
hM~

Y92-50f\3
•

Ca lI 388·8488

1977 DODGE 4 WHL

______

1'

Ol 0 fURNITURF fr'r&gt;

-r. tcl

197:1 GRANO PRIX s un roof . topP
pow er Goocf t ire!l nPW P• ·

1976 CHEVY BLAZER 4 whl
dr., new t1res and wheels, AC,
PS, PB, auto., AM· FM stereo

'· .

b r yi
·

1975 CADillAC flcio rodn ·,s 000
mriN fu lly f'qu rprNi h: r('llrnt
c-or,d rtron QC/72171

color Any reasol'\illble offer

~- - - ·

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are
Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel

·Business ·Services

,,n,

CHIP .., WOOO
PC"If''
tftnn,ptrr 10' 011 lnrRr~l rn~
S J'f"' ton "'-••~I~ ~lob 51 C
P"' Inn f')rhvf'r~ tn Ohio
Pnllrt Co
Itt '
Ponworny

1973 INTFN"'ATIONAl SCOUT
71 COO miiM fully pquipjl(!d
o Jr wPr1rh r lt r•cellf'nl ron· OlD COINS. Porkf'l WOIC'hto9i
dlltM f19') 7121
, do!lor; ringt . Wf'tkting honct.

1973 CADILLAC SEDAN
DEVILLE . good cond . gold

' ·' •

NfW ') flC liVI NG ROOM SUITF

Call 256 6016

..

D-7- The Sunday Tlmes,~t·ntinel , SUilclay, Apr. 8. 1979

Buy

c"A5H rnP 11'1\" tnr• 1• h"'"
w• rdcPr
!.ton,. rr•
fry, ;•
Rutlortd OH ?•') ?t~\

SAW UP TO:l(l' STDfo'f WIDf

S 140 os NfW 5 PC DINFTTf
"F.TS $d9 QS . NEW S£Al Y MAT
T~FSS ' S TWIN Sllf INlfRSPR
lNG $45 NFW 3 P&lt;'END TABIF

258. 6 cyl . eng

-.

Want~ to

.

Auto Sales
l&gt;fCfM8fR Slllf

dUIO.

~-

.

For Best Results U~e Sunday Times-Se:r,.tinel Classifieds

_ ___::A::..::ulo }_aj~s

.' .

---

120 acre arm with a modern house. As for house aluminum S1dmg, ther'mopane Windows, coppe r plum
bing, delu)(e kitchen, formal dining room , two bath s,
basem ent, rural water , etc. Land, Approx 50 acres
till able, heavy th1ck orchard grass. fescue sod Ideal
for catt le. Good barn, tobacco base F1elds ['I r e high
and dry Cattle could pa stu re most of Winter untes
Sfl9W coverillge Plenty water, pond and stream The
sportsman's S1de - abounds with deer , squ 1rre l, wood
grouse. Hor seback ndmg, lots of trail s and r oads, pine
trees, woods Dr•v~ out tOd av anti be charmed Shown
· on ly by appointment. State Rout e 141 775 out of
Ga llt polis ·
N284

QUALITY BUILT RANCH

RIVER VIEW HOME

You 'll just love th1 S modern
J bedroom ranch with for ·
mal entry,large formal living room with 10' bow win ·
dow, formal dining room,
modern kitchen with lots of
custom built oak Cabinets
and ba r , large family room
with wood burner, bath and
hall, double car garage
with door opener. concrete
drive, n ice larg e lots, lots
of shrubbery, some trees &amp;
pl ants, garden space Ex
Ce /l ent locat•on, Porter
brook e Subd , City School
D1 sl , Green Elementary
Shown by appt .
If 256

You'll l 1ke thi s 4 bedroom
rilnch
s tyl e
hom e
Bedrooms
should
~1c ·
commodate queen or k ing
size bedroom suites Enj oy
your mea ls looki ng at th e
sceni c Ohio River throu gh
a pt cture window . Fam il y
room has stale floor , wood
pan e l ed, bui lt tn book
shel ves Al so has 71 7 bath s,
shower strt/1 , modern 1&lt; 1t
eVen , two car garage Gas
l otced a 1r heat1ng system
wlfh zoned hea1ing One of
the be tter suburban ho mes
of Gallipoli s All stone con ·
struct ton MAke app01nt
ment Onve down today
:-~ nd be chMmed .
I 252

MUST SEE THIS ONE'
Modprn house, six room s
M ri hi'llh, 3 bedroom s. ut li1
ty room. enc tosec1 bark
porch ilncl front porch,
nilture~t QiiS, city wt~le r; .
Just out of ci ty limits,
smf!ll bt~rn for ste~bles or
crt tll r 41 '? rtcr es of ground .
600 It roild lr onte~ne St Rt
loti M 'u st sell Immediate
poss css•on
t2J9_

$22.000
Three bedrooms. bath, l1v
,ing room. b Ut It 1n ktfchen,
stokermatic heater nice
s1ze garage Pretty country
setting , 2 acre lot . al 1 fenv 1
,ed in . Attractive wh1te1
board fence along road .
lilug well, p lenty water. All
this and a stocked nice slz~

pond for $22.000.

N241

MODERN BRICK HOME
Only 2 years old,

liV1ng
room , forma l dining room ,
4 spacious bedrooms, W1
baths, inodern bu!lt in ktf·
chen, trash comprtctor,
l ~ r ge famtiY r oom c1n c1 rec
room w1fh wood burntng
f• repletce, all very well
d ec ore~ted
and
lm
m~ c ulate l y kept , full base
m en t, 9x l0 cf'llrtr , lrtrge 21 1
ca r gare~ge, hea ted, e~lso
has 9 ft ctoor s. All th1 s sit
ti ng on one i'ICI'E.-, more or
IPSS, on htlrdtop road N267

NEW LISTING
DP.EAMS DO
COME TRUE

MODERN HOUSE -POOL
3,300 sq ft overall , 3 BR, 2
baths, shower, modern k1t
che n ,
large
antique
decora ted family room ~
·1100 sq . ft., concrete swim ·
ming pool lB'x3S', very
much In use pi cnic area,
lots of living St. Rt. 141,
Gallipolis School Distri ct
Priced $53.900. MOdern new
custom bu 11t home close to
property can be purchased
with property or sold
separately or moved Total

N212

S45,000 .
ATTENT ION
HOT
FARMERS. 25 acres of
highly, produ ctive tevet
crop land, 27 acres wood
land, 38 71 acr es in pa stur e,
hog barn with auto feeder .
Re e~ dy for business Many
more deta ilS Ca ll for them
1268
today ..

PRICE-REDUCED $15,000

INVESTMENT
PROPF.RTY
27 acres, rural water,
blac:kfo'p road, close to
Gallipolis One of its kind
left. Pricedrtght
t 103

36.69 ACRH
MORE OR LESS

TREMENDOUS
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
We have a local bus•ness
for sale, th at is 1n crea smg
yearly by thousands o f
dollars . If you are In
terestet:l In ownin g your
own business, details and
ftnanc la l anatyst s will be
made available only to
qualifi ed . and Interested
buyers.
11278

BEST BUY ON
MARKET 534,900
New li sting
Look this
modern ranch home over ,
becC'Iuse it won ' t last long
F eatures I1V1ng roo m,
Engti sh Tudor styl e dlnmg
area, m od ern kitchen With
seve r a l
cabinets ,
3
bedrooms and m ai n bath
Sin gte Ci'lr garage Only 21 '1
yrs old Owners are lea v
lng the state {1nd need to
sel t thi s n•ce hom e Call tor

"PPI

L et us make your dreams
come tru e w1th you owning
one of Gal!ta County' s older
qUality
hom es
Nfn e
spacious
r oo m"s,
4
bedrooms, formal ·entry,
famtly room. living room ,
modern kitchen, bath , fu lt
bas emen t, garage an d
plenty of storage spa ce
Large yard with se vere~l
trees Shown on l y by ap·
pointment
11277

Package S76,000

NEW LISTING
If you 'r e lookmg tor conve
nience, we have juSt listed
within minutes of town J' t1
acres
Ni ce hom e, 3
bedrooms. living room ,
modern bullt·1n k itchen ,
bath, ca rport plu s ex tra
storage a r e e~ . Plus, for add ·
ed Inco m e 2 bedr oom
mobi le hom e Priced to sett
SJS,OOO . Shown by nppoinl ·
mcnt.
.V2BS

219 acres - todaY'S !!sting
pn ce $110,000. Approx SO
acrs tillable, 160 p as ture, ~
1411 lbs
lobacc:o base,
J.uge barn, ltos - of good
road frontage, • blacktop
road , rural water, mOdern
.c BR h't)use w i th fult base·
ment . Let's deal now, spr·
1ngw ltlsoonbehere N 19~

N272

LOOK!

New liSt ing Be the fi rst to
se-c th is home l ocil ted off
S f e~t c Route 7 fcafU r 1ng
ni ce
ltv1ng
ro om ,
3
bedroom s, dinin g room , 2•
bnlhs, eit t in kitchen, per ·
tja l be~s e m e nt
ln o ty
sc hoo l distr ic t Would be An
excellent st11rter home.

Nl83
STOP I
11 you have been looking for
a bargain, STOP. Th e
owner of this r cc;enlly
remodeled home says he
must sell immedi ately
Living room , kitchen, 2
tledroom s, bath, ' utiiJty
room New porches and .
scptt c tank. Also new wlr
ing . Shown bY appoint

menl.

NICE

Sl9 ,000 00 I

COUNTRY
TING

235

SET·

Thi s cozy country home i s
situAted on e~n acre of
gr ound 1n c1ty sc hool
distri ct. 3 bedrooms. w1f c
approv ed k1tc hcn w1t h
loads of birch ca binets,
new dishwasher , l1vi ng
room, m ai n b e~t h , n ew· g ~ s
fur ntlce &amp; central air Thi s
home has been totaUy
re d ~ c ore~ted . 2 car garge
Get re ady for su mmer
ThiS horn e has i1 nice ~w im ·
m lng pool S h o~n by nppl 11
2 74

FINANCING "•
NO PROBLEM

539,900
52 acre farm, 6 room house. ,
3 bedrooms, storm win·
dows ,
rure t
water ,

On this farm house and
10-4.51 acres, more or less;
of good crop land located In
M eigs County, Salem Twp.
Several acres of level road
frontage House hes living
room, dlnlno. room, .t
bedrooms, l&lt;itchen . Also a

' fence with 0 0 Mc intyre

Gallipolis school· DIStrict,

double crib and machinery

Park District Dua well ,
som e timber , excellent
hunting or c!lmping MeA
Ten minute ctnv ~ from

31h miles from Rio Grande.
Good
neighbor-hod
Shouldn't last long .
K144

shed. OWner will help
fina11ce a good qualified
buyer Land contract or se cond mortage Call for

Located in Hunt in gton
Twp Sec. 18. Reasonably

Priced No 226.
~

'2l,SOO
37 acres, more or l es line
rl

GAllipoli s.

na7

more details .

Each oftlce Ia lndeDendently owned and operated.

·

U44

CENTURY 21• Horilobuyer's .Kit'" al parhc• paling off•ces
~
© 1978 CENTURY 21 REAL ESTATE CORPORATION · PRINT ED IN US A -EQUAL HOUSING OPPQRTUNITY ~
•

"" ' rf'~l'! TIU!Y loW\IC ~ CENII,JR"1 21 U0t £51~1( COfii'OAAl ~

�.

.. .

.'

'

•
. ·''
D-9- The Sunday Timcs,~&lt;·ntin el, Sunday,.Apr. B, 1979

.· 1

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in .t.he Sunday Times-Sentinel

Real Estate lor Sale

.

Real
·-- Estate for
- Sale
----

Reai'Estate lor Sale

-

..

- ~ ----

. -

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

for
-Real
- - Estate
..
- Sale
··--·~

BAI ~0 .&amp; FULL!R
REALTY

~

-~

"

-

---

.Real
- Estate
- ·-for
-·-Sale
~

~

Real Estate for Salt

Real Estate for Sale

.

.

'

'

Real Est_a te lor Sa te

R ~a l F s t ,11c f or

R ea l E~1 at e

Sa le

for Sa l e

Real

Es1a t e

fo r Sa l e

Rea l Estate lor Sa l e

R e al E s t a·l ~ !or Sv te

~TH.E .WISEMA.N :R.EAL

. ESTATE A.GENCY ·

[H

GALUA ~pONTY'S LARGF.ST
REAL EST ATE ' AGENCY

[B,

!II: A t TOll&gt;

1218 EASTERN ~VE. • GAI.UPOUS, OHIO
"We Sell Better Living"

Doug

CALL
446-3643
. .

Enoc:n

ITS BEST - 3 BR'S, 111, bilths,
diing rm ., toy er, famity rm . w ith stone

OFPICE

RUSSELL

.'

Your Best
.
.Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentin~r
--

IU- The Sunday Tilnes,'Wntint•l. Sunday, Apr. B. 1979

Eyer have a deal fall through because the prc~~pectlve
buyer got the shakes?

WOOD
REALTOR
446-1066

Realtor Assoc1a·te
Ph. Home 446-2230.

·Realtor IISSOCtate
Ph. Home 446-2745

firoeploc e, stove, refn g., washer , dryer , drapes, cur
, 1 ca r ~ il ritg e, 7.34 ac res ot land w1th h sh pond on
Route S88 Cit y school s. STROUT RE ALTY

Gallia County:~

Was the buyer unsure abOut extending his budget If

"Thank You Fo r Listing with ' Bud ' McGhee Realty

problems occurred after purchase~
Wail the buyer frightened by the age of some
elements of the horiie under consideration?

A HOME TO PLEASE THE EYE - A
cf\arming ranch home with a lovely nver
vi ew Th1 S i mmacul at e home offer s'3 good
s ized bedrooms, eat ·in ki tchen, v ery pretty
living room with a corner firepla ce and
p arquet floor s, f ull ba sem ent, 2 car
gara ge, cent. .atr and large lot Loca Ted 10 ·
K yger Ck .

OUR NEW AFFIUATION WITH CONSUMER PfK).
TECTioN stRVICES, INC., provtdeiJ the leverage you '

~

i~

~~w(

~

M~GKEE

~

~~

~

need to overcome homebuyerhesltancyl

Fastest Growing

Willis T. lea~ini:ham, Realtor

R eat Estate

Ph. Home 446-9539

OFFICE 446-7699

Agency

~

We Need
Your Home
or Farm

To Sell

~

446-0552

Here's how the plan wlllb.~.'

9-s

HOME MECHANICAL CERTIFICATION, es offered
by Consumer Protection ServiCes, Inc., protects
buyers from the high coat of repairing hidden defects
In a resale home. This Includes major systems of the
home such as electrical, plumbing, central heat and
alr·condltlonlng.,.and built-In appliances.

BUY OF THE YEAR - Nice
full basement With recreation room. bath with shower
and 1 car garage . Als.?, has 'J bCirns, all located on 1 112
ac res . Shown by appointment .
118530

SITUATEO
You'tl w ant
. home Fa

ORIVE i n Rio Grande.
see this unlowe. new bri c k 4 bedroom
room with patented heating sys tem

whi c h heats

h the home and hot water utilizing the

en

CLEL~ND

MAIN
. POMEROY,O,

FOR A GROWING FAMILY - Thi s bri ck
ran ch has 4 bedrooms and 'a full fini shed
basem ent, the perfect home for a l ar ge
family . Very attractive Qecori"J t ing i ns ide
including the large 11ving room, equ ipp ed
eat in kitchen, formi! l dming , family ro om ,
11' 2 baths, 2 ca r garage, nat. gas heat plu s
v, acre 10 an exce llent neighbor hood
Upper $59,900

ENERGY EFFICIENT. - This lovely new
maintenance free ranch has 3 bedrooms 2
~aths , 11 pR room with a beautiful
f1replace, .., _ ICE: ·•.-hen, dining roorp,
utility &amp; 2 car gao "J~t;Du
"' Situated in a
new development nea r ... . c~ '"reek &amp;
Ohio River Owner anx tou s ,.,.0 !II Low
$53,900.

REALTY

CALL TODAY - Very aHracfive briCk &amp; frame ranch
wtth 3 bedrooms, bath with shower , fUllY carpeted,
slidi ng glass door with patio, garage and a nice lo1.
Price d to sell now for $J7,500.

608

MAIN
POMEROY,O .

LOVELY RIVERVIEW HOME - This charming home

ha s 4 bedrooms, formal dining room, kitchen with
buil_t ins, library or family r~m, S fireplaces, 21 12
baths, large 2 car garage, beautiful lot 'fo'ifh frontage on

15t &amp; 2nd Avenues, call today for an appointment. 11 0ns

JUST LISTED - Nice brick ranch with 4 bedrooms
living room with w .b fireplace, hardwood floors, bae'
!'flent wlfh shower stall , 1c ar garaeg ; located on 3 acres

10 Hannan Trace S.D.

·

/1 0579

JUST LISTED - Ver y nice 1977 Norris 14' x70' mobile
home w 1th expando, la rge l iving room , screened in
back porc h, central a1r, large storager building.
11 1035
located on 5 tots plus l 11 acre at Evergreen.
PLANTS SUBOIVISON - Nice ranch with 3 bedrooms
bath with !.hower, wife approved kitc hen carpeted, fuli
basement with 1 car garage. Loci'tted cl ose to town In
city school disfr 1ct . $42,500.
NEW liSTING· - Attention Boat~rs, (ust in t ime for
summer , nice 3 bedroom home, kitchen with range and
dishwltsher, redwood deck overlooking Racc oon
creek , locatedonalargelotofiRt 7
·
#0045

REAL NICE RANCH - 3
bedroom s, equipped
kitchen .
carpet t ng .
carport nice y ard . good
neighborhood .
ONLY
!78.500.00.
FARM - 70 acres. 10 year
old.ranch type home (needs
repairs), large barn and .
other buildings. Cheap al
$33,500.00.
HU I UJ1NG SITE - 2 acres
of land in Wildwood
subidivisiCn,
beautiful
homes ite . $6,000.00.
rQUR OWN CAR WASH Good part time income end
a place to wash your own
car Call for details.

"

'·
•,,

....

H~NOYMAN'S

'

SPECIAL
Onlv S8,000, and a few
repairs will make you a
ni ce inexpenslv~ home.
Fully

et~ulpped

all furniture '
l2' liC60' , 1970 ciln rent rot 1

also . 58.500.00

i ;•.i half

·sMALL. FARM:
~
acres with a 3 bdr . moctern
home on paved road . blear
Crown Cltv, $32,500. Cafl 256·

60,j().

- - - -- - - -

NEW LISTING - Nice 12x55 mobile home in quiet
country atmosphere . Large 1!2 acre lot with garden
space Priced very r easonable with lots of extras. /I 0125

MOOERN THREE ~•oom house,
full basem&amp;nt, fireplace, ful{y

carpeted, central air, •nclosed
Sun pore~ . locoted on 6 14 ocres
on CR 28 approx . 3 mlle1 from
Racine. If interested contoct
Lorry Wolfe ~•9 · 2836 weekends
and aft.r 5 evenings.
!

.

-

--

··----

~

~·

· · - · · · - · · · - - '" -

~ARRI,SON TOWNSHIP - 69 A. mostlv hills &amp; wood
id house 1!. cellar In poor condition, possibility of
s,

CHESHIRE · SALt: p -" "ome, needs some repairs ,
3 bedrooms, bath, na ,• . .fiNDING. •aranoffer 10175

coal.

MACEDONIA RD. - Harrison Twp., 24 Kres, pas1ure
and wOOds, small amour&gt;! tillable gOOd 1obacco barn

RT. 588 - Good 2 bedroom home with bath, full basement, good buv for S1.1,ooo
~ 101~

Sl2,000.

·

'

'

IMMEOIATE POSSESSION - Good 7 bedroom home
with bath , dini ng room. tun basement, attached
gan:.ge, located on Chillicothe Rd. Pr ice reduced. Nous

bottom !afld, some ti m ber, 2 barn s, shed , pond. Buy for
l160,!)00.00.
fiiEW LISTING : Compact 3 bedroom home situated

GOOD GROWING BUSINESS - Beer and Wine Car ·
ryout With C I and C1 license All equipment and lnven ·
tory Included in sa te price, call today .
N0012

OHIO RIVER LOT _:·Located In Eureka, Gallipolis Cl:
tv School Dlst ., co. water available, ideal for bUildi ng
or mobile homesite . $11 ,000.

MOBILE HOME - 1972 Freedom 17x50, 2 bedroom ,
nice lot, stor age building, $12.500.
/1 1125

: ai009.. Saf1d·Hollow Rd. li vi ng r m , dini ng r m . and kit·
chen ~

.one

.·. ~29. 000. 00 . .

beth

W·!hower

Fenced·ln

lot

~ri c e

~

NEW .LISTING - 3. bedroom br 1c k hom e, loca ted
WithJ.n 3 rri l les from hospital on Kr ist ! Or ., 11/ 2 baths,
tHntng·.or tatntv r9om , cor ner lot , w .b . firep lace . Buy
: now.for $59,900.00

. · CoMMi:~:CI~L. '

CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Small farm with 3
bedroom h~me , new full basement, Iaroe barn, 30
acres of ro111ng ground, city school district.
!I 0380

·,_:.':_'H.'E.'w,. Cisri·N G.:

HOMES &amp; FARMS NEEDED : WE HAVE PAOSPI;C·
TIVE BUYERS FOR YOUR PROPERTY . CALL
TODAY FOR FREE APPRAISAL SERVICE WHEN
LISTING YOUR PROPERTY.

r:e:er..:cau

'·

INVESTMENT PROERTY - 7 nice lots with~ rental
mobile h,ome pads, all are rented, each pad has con·
crete r unners and patio, loc ated In Rodney.
N2155

B.UILO.I NG • Loca ted in V1 nfon
:.I' ~Pa!l'!ou:S · building· ·c an either be u sed fo r )Jusl ness 0 ;
· . meet..ng r~m . Pr1C'e onl y $11 .000 oo.
.Co;,mercial buildmg, c ourt s t reet,
• .G~IIIpolis, · · approx. 1500 sq. fl ., arranged for
-:.. re ~t.aur a n r. Two apartments upstairs, stor age b v itdlng
' ; iT!
for.,111ore information .

:fi~W LIS'fi NG :

Newly rem od eled, 2·bedroo m hom e
, aloi'lg' R~ . ·7 1 .L oWer River Rd. , 150' x100 ' , r ur al water'
ne'\Y'aerat9r,'tank . Pnce S:i%000 00 •
...

.

EW!IIIinp Cal
Darvin Bloom•1 Assoc. 675-6627'

FOR SALE

Now vou can

your own

busi ness.
small grocery
store with some equipment.
House with 3 bdr,· dln. rm .,
l!v. _r_rn,_t .. b.a!h,_ nice . gar:den
spot. L0&lt;111ed jus110 ml , s. of
Gallipolis on Rt. 7 $28,500.
Call 256·6873.
197• MODERN
RA'NCH
MODULAR , 7~ x 60 on 1 acre
Of ground , bullt · in ep ·
pliances, air cond ., car ·
petlng, tot al electric, 3 bdrs .•
Immediate occ ur.ancy. 1 mile
f rom M er ce r v il e. Call 256·
6453 alter 5pn1

'

BEAT THIS ON! FOR $42,000! 1348 sq. fl. of modern

. living plus a 2 car gar'age. 3 BR 's, 2 baths, 14~Cl4 L~
wlttl a woodburntng FP, low -:,nergy home,. highest
electric bfll $89. l oca ted nea r Cl ay School STRO UT
REA'I.. TY , 446-0008.

FREE GAS
100 acr es m ·l, vacant land near
BUiaville , approx .qJ acrs wooded, balance rolling _
pastureland , some timber reported, 7 mile! out,

$55 ,000.

.

__....__-- - -.
For Sale,
...RR.!lt_or T_rade
TWO BQR . TRAIL E R, gbod
cond. fn'quire fi t Sheppard
Sa l ~ s and SPrv ice. cor ner of
Fi r st and Oli ve

REAL ESTATE LOANS
SPECIALIZING IN F HA .
1\ND V .A INSURED MOR ·
TGAGES · Ml LLONS TO
LEND.
FAVORABLE IN ·
TEREST RATE, LOW OR
NO DDWN"PA YM E NT FOR 'VETERANS, LONG TERM
FINANCING AND NO
PREPAYMENT PENALTI
ES. THIS IS THE WAY TO.
DO IT . IF YOU CAN
QUALIFY . REFINANCING
ALSO AVAILABLE, CAL'L
TODAY
FOR
MORE
PETAl LS . LINDA LAN !;
446·1517.
~-

--

-·--·- ---

~OOM TO STRETCH OUT
this 15 A b~by fr~rm

__.,.._

MOBILE HOME AND lOT,
1972 12 x 65 Holle y Park with
E!'xpando, allelrd ric, central
r'li r. L bl oc,k s west of stoplight
i n Cheshi r e across the mad
from th E' Bi g Maple CArryout•
SI6, SOO . Ow ner tran sft:a r r ed.
· c. u 367 n 3&amp;

POCKET THE RENTAL
PROFITS - Three story
building downtown corner
tot In Pomeroy . Has first
"""" shop and (!!flee plus
, 1wo large apartments, ali
occupied. $.40,000.

on

FP,ltur es 4 RR; hemP, JOxJo
ll .un_.
se v e r~!
oth r. r
bu ll (llnQs, fencr.d with most
tlf lrl n(l 'in C!ri'l SS ~ nd only
~

"'scar Blinl, Realtur 44&amp; 4&amp;32
JOhn
. 446.4327

,

GOOD FOR NOTHING ext~p1 hunting and campin 1
HIT acres of wllder,ess woods, hills, brUsh, cliffs.'
Located within the bOundaries of th~ wayne National
Forest between Gallipolis and Oak Hill. s~ per acre. ·

NICE LOT ~ Gbod building slte loc ated In Rio Grande
gas, sewer &amp; water avalalble.
'
1100s6

" .90CI

LISTINGS NEEDED _
WE ADVERTISE NA ·
TIONALL Y -WE IUY _
' SEq. - TRADE .

RING 11'1 THE PROFITS Small grocery arid garage,
good Mom and Pop opero·
, tlon, equipment end lnven·
torv InclUded, excellent
gross. $55,000 .

·

WANTED TO buy: four bedroom
rural home that will meet
F'l'HA standards. 7.t2·307.C.

S29,500.

NEW liSTING : 306 acre farm , nea r Waterl oo, 100 acr e

dr il led

· CHARMING BRICK RANCHER of 3 BR's, 3 baths of fers 1710 ~q It of llvlrig area plus the 22xJO attached
l!!'r ~ge . QIV~III~g has kitchen with rang~, dlshwashet
&amp; drsp ., partly finished b esement, stone fireplace,
, carpeting, heat pump, county water dlnlng rm shade
tFre.~js o n the level plot with 107 ft . pavement frOntage
ewwm 1.1es 1otown .
,
, ·

·~

;:~~~'·"..':.~HOUSE YOU THOUGHT
FECT" - Our salespeo
about th is one
~!1Unbelievable" ,
how nice" !' I just
love It" are·sOme
comments 1 have
~n hearing. I see a lot of homes but not
many 3 bedroom bri cks 1hat are as well
ple(1ned, as. well built, or as well cared for
as this one. Include'S a f.;mily room w,
flrelace, formal' entrance~ 1112 baths and
gar:age. It's on a well landscaped lot ~t th e·
~ge of t~wn in a very nice neighborhOOd.
IT;$ sO PE.ACEiiU L - Experience th e
serebltY of thrs Wooded location in ·towri.
Loc::ated in bne of the city's best areas w •th
.all the quiet you could ask for on 'h acre.
'this large home offers ~ or 5 bedrooms, 2
fireplaces , 'rustle .famrty room, 3 baths,
fOrmal dining , wind lng stai r case to finish ·
ed basement, 2 car garage,, gt'ls heat plus
mucttmbre . 159.900 00.

___

,---~·

........_

_____

l-lKE NE:W - BUT NICER · Th i&lt;o. ic;, i rn
maculate and chee ry, multi -level home in
one of the area'$ be tter nei ghborhoods 3
bedrooms, equipped eat 1n k itchen 1 formal
dinm~ , famtly room , 11' '2 b'ath s, central air.
o vers 1zed 2 c ar garage and a lovely land
sca ped ya r,d . $56.500.

2 STORY 10 ROOMS - Large r em odeled
home in R10 Grande The home off et s vinyl
s iding, ~ or 5 bedrooms, .3 baths. family
room W·flr eplace, equipped k itchen , diing
room , (ull basem ent, redwood deck &amp;
fence, garag e &amp; w orkshop. Natural gas
heat &amp; large privote y ard . ~ossib l e loan
- assumption S50's.

FARMS·FARMS ' FARMS·FARMS
ACRES ~-Mo ~ t h r.&gt;c'l utiful spot in
Gaflla County, GOOd J bedroom
home with la,rge li¥ing room , fam i ly
room or din ing, gl asses in sun r oom , '
cl.osed pOrc h, barn and 2 other out·
buildings . Many beautiful building
sites .with most·ptea sa r1t v iew. This
farm iS 1 mile from H.M.C in a verf
· c;tesl rable locat ion . $80,000 Firm
price.

JRD AVE. RENTAL PROPERTY - 2
story ti otn e w v inyl Siding &amp; 2 ap artments
Eac h unit w ~ room s, and b ath , f ull base·
m ent &amp;. good ren trtl income. Priced to sell
at S37 ,500. ·

•2

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Owners
have moved and are an xious to sel l thi s 1112
yr. old rl'lnch on Rt. 218. This home is very
clean an ~ offer s 3 bedrooms, li v tng room
w -firela ce , fo r m al d ining, kitchen w·lots of
cabinets &amp; bath. Nearly :~ -;. acre y ar d. w·
storage buil ding •Priced to sell fast,
$32,900.

52 ACRES :._ Located on.U S 35 'near
Rio Grande, 20 25 ac . of 15o11om land,·
10 to 15 additional tillable acres, 2300
PoUnd tobacco base. The. old 2 story
house needs lot of work but Is well
worth spending the money on Near
ly new 4 bedroom modular hqme
with centra l air, 2 .b aths, fam JIY
room (excellent cond ition &gt;. Older
mObile home. Good barn, equipment
shed and 2 ot her outbuild ings.
$75,000.00. Look at It and make us an
offer .

.

'

.

148 ACRE - Here's a heck ot' a buv
for someone - · ~5 ac. tillabl e,
: balance in pasture and woods.
Here's the good part - E )l( fensive
drilling felf gas end oil all arou nd
thls property.

.

.

ARE YOU A STICKLER FOR QUALITY
- $44;900 buys this quality built 3 bedroom
brtcl&lt; home located In Rio Grande. YoU
won 't fin d anyth fng on t he market as nl te·
ly ca red fo r or that requ fres tess
m aintenance. T he ki tchen is nice &amp; the
t arpet IS like new (hardwood fl oorS under
th e carpet )

THINKING OF BUILDING?
Here Are Some Really Great Building
to Choose From

l ots

OWN YOU~ OWN CAMPSITE In fhe wilder ness of tho
Wi'lync National f or est . S to 8 acre tr act s- of woodland
now t~v ail a bl e , ~~~joining thousftnds of acr es of govern·
ment l ~ nd . Public hunting, fi ! hi ng 11nd campiOg pei·
miffed . Prfces sti'lrt ~ t S?.SOO w 1th fiM Artcing available .

'
PERRY JWP .

,\
IJO 'rt r r C'S, hay, pasture &amp; tobftcco

l &lt;'lr~m , mosf ty r ollinq1 qround, c'll: trA. nic:c r E!-mo&lt;1c led '2'
~ t ory h~mt&gt; , '!hu n ~ .

nthl' r

Nebo RORd

.",..
~

RIO GRANDE - 13",500 .- 'otder 2 ~tory

blllhs ·

JUST LISTeD &amp; A REAL BEAUTV _ BR 2 ,~
den will! flr..pi!ICe. dining rm ., loy@r, llfMotllul HW
floor•, glassed In rear porch, patio, 2 car garage with
electric opener pius a detached 22x24 garage Lots of
With a wooded hlll51dt behind &amp; a beau!lfUI ·
In front . Shown bv appointment

HA AND
VA HOME
, ~OANS : MCLENDON MOR ·
• TGAGE ' COMPANY . Loan
representative :
ViOl e t
(Cookiel VIers, 463 second
Ave ., second floor, Gall!poll s,
Ohi o 45631. Call ·~ ·,17-7 ,
-·-·- -- - - • · · · - ~ , ~
HOUS'E WITH FURNI T-URE,
b~ oWOM • '413 Filth Ave , in'
GaHipolls . C•ll•~·21 25 .

I

' •

BRICK ,
?
l o t s m or r
&lt;Jnx 1ou'o; to se ll

c

hl"'lp

...
Q

r-

ownf'r w ill "'

f i n r~ n r r

~

:;·
I.CI ·

7 ACRE S n('M Gall1 pO I1c;,

~ -

-·
~

.~

FIVE BR 's Tud or Wit h onP ...
ilUC Morf' 1,-m cl i'IVC'I ila hlf' ~
11MR 97A
a.
~

r ec e ntl y

~re mo de l ed hom e E: MR 118

COUNTRY il lm osphc&gt;r(' ,
LL
l!kP r]C'w h om ~ . onl y f1vfl
:~CROWN CITY, re moCieH:?a mi lfls out BM R9 3
::r
o home w 1t h 2. 000 sq ft . of
rt
11vi l1g sp ace on IM ge fl at T WO STORY', b uilt af turn . ~
· ~ l ot e M R 119
·of the cenfury Super b con ID
ru
·' dtt 1on i nside and out eM R AI
J: VINTON , 2 story , could be' 1M
·
:;.
1- 5
R 's, good conditi on,
~
:: owner will con sider VA or COMMERCtAL PROP . in ..
~ · F H A . BMR 120
Gi:l ll tpoli s, Gr eat tor r etail , -1"
wholesa le or oH1c e sp r~ c e .
i; FOUR BR , brick r i'lnch BMR 97
;
w w ith fu l l baS£:m ent situated
:I
tt:on2 3 acr es EM R 121
,64 0F AN ACRE , high and 7r
111
dr y E xcellent spo t for your
~MINI
FARM
nen rn ew hom e.B MR 101
C) G ~ lllp o ii S, nt cc hom e, bar n
,
\J and
ou t buildin gs
131 2
~ &lt;'~cres BMR 122
APARTMENT COMPLEX . ~
..
,
1? LJ il its all OC CUp ied Cn ll r
1' 3 BR HOME on p 1 acr es lor dcttl tl s BM R 10'1 •
~
~with ?nd house th at could
:':
.. be r l'."m odeled Nei'lr Ew
'
~
..
.c ington . E M R_ 123
so ACRES of r olling teind' f.Q
·~
_
, n e r~r Gi'llli po i1S BMR 107
:E

2,

&gt;

e

..

-&lt;

8

31 GOOD OPPORTUNITY for
C1i v1n9
qu a rt e r s a nd
.5 bu sines s loc il t i on p lu s
~ hook up for mobile home.
·.J- M el qs mi nes. BM R 124
._NEW LI STING : 3 Blh ome
on 4th Av e., this is one t hat
w ill pl ea se those looki ng
for qu al ity and the conv e·
ni ence ot being in tow n.
.¥ BMR 130
c NEW LISTING . F ive m iles
~o u t 3 BR hom e, l ike new
h 1
G
t- C i t y sc 0 0 s .
r e en
:: Elem entar y BMR 131

,,

{t,

S

&gt;

~

CENTENARY 3 E R home :I'
w 1th b asem ent. E xc ellent tij
cond 1ti on. EMR 108
c
:::.
MEIGS COUNTY ne"r ~
mines, situated on 'J ~c res n
of fi e! la nd . 3 BR hO me . Gl
F R , with ftreplacc , bUt if ~
1n k itchen BMR 131
~
Ill
BRICK AND FRAME bi .,"
level neM Clay School 3 _
B R' s( '1 c Ar g ~ r a ge , l r~ r ge _
fl at lot . Price d to se ll . Ca ll &lt;
now . BM R 133
:

.

M. L (Bud l McGhee; Brokel'

,.

-

.r-

446·0SS2 Anvti me
Tom White, Salesman, 446·955z.,fve..
Gene Oesch, Salesman, 446·'1440, ·eve .

:::0
~

,.

co
"
"Thank You For Listing with ·~ud ' McGhee Realii

,tsdio:l WORD

Dan Ev•ns, A:!i~ociat P, J88 -Bl 11 e vP .
a I Hl" 1'""fon, ASSO&lt;' Iatt-, 446·47•0. Ev
Nancy Smith, Associate, ~41-4,10, Eve.

. .'

FdR

SAL E - BY. OWNER , 3
bdr. home, 2 car ~ar a ge , one
half acre yar d. 10'x 1~ storage
bldg .• ' .al so 30 x 40 new st ee l
bldg, lJil&lt;'aled on Rt, ! In
Crown ,C1ty on 21o1s. Suitable
for bUSiness. Caii ~ 5111Ao!O

tt I·

1977 M OBIL E HQME and
lot lor atP.d i n C l ~ y
Twp. 2 bedrooms, all r~ p
pli antes. pM t JAIIY fl..l rn1 ~ he d .
C&gt;( C C'I !(~ nt
con dl tt on, n i ce
d Pck , under penn ing, stor age
bu ildi ng. All th is .;:~nd lots
(nor e Enjoy dl n pJensurr nf
boatino, f ishinq pnrt sw 1m
mi ng al l summer lonq. Co'tll
446·?885 i'l ft cr iijpm
h ~if r~c rc

FOR SALE BY OWNER

Nr&gt; 1" "' ''"'Y rlnwn (pllg1 hlr
Vf'\IN0 11!.) r HA Ao, lnW OS :3
p rot rr&gt;n~ rlnwr\ ( t~ nn vQ if'ron•.)
lrr&gt;lonrl M 11!1nnor" f n T1 f
'\ tol l"' 1'\.qtt•n., t~ i," '11JJ 3n'·'

nwrirP ': 1 11 1 ~1'~

')

fw.( l1 p n m

l•n mr !•r •l' '' f ,-,rr tlr .. t ,. · ~·'" '
I &lt;•l :f\,.

I

,,toUf) '/ ' fl\') 11

,,

·'

srv1 N
lol l

LOVE L Y) ROOM COTTAGI(
ON 22 ACR ES PL US
2 or 3 U R , fu ll brtserncnt, boJ th, Fr(1l,kl [n.
w oodbur ner H a ~ its nw n w il tr r ~ys t cm
1162 1b 1ob,lCC: O b a se, goocll lOC IN1(C!., Ap
p ro x l OA. tt l!abl r Ap pro&gt;o: lO'xll' 'c;, for &lt;igP.
bl ciQ Also l WxJS' mcti'l l bam . Lovc.ly m Cnl.
far m In th(' co untr y CA L i. N OW·
·
'

ON E

LOVELY BRICK
AND 5.73 ACRES
When w e Si'ly love ly,

Wf'

mc,l n l ov ely P1ctur cs crm ' t
nesc n bc fh1s home And
b e~ utiful level a c:T e fl C!r
3
B R, 2 bn ths , formc1 1 dtn lfl(l
room ~ n Q for mc1 t li vl nq
room L ar ge eq u ipp ed ki t'
chen Wlf h breflk fnst nook
i'lncl uttllt Y M C(l Full b,l 'lC'
me n! wi th oufsld e entr;m c:c
to sum mer k 1tcheri Call ~ s
now for your appoinl mPnl
to ~ e this beiluty
MOOERN RANCH
8ROOM HOME
In cou ntry Ov er 1200 sq. tf
of living spac e, Lar ge I PJ
1ng room , 16' x 18 ', fam ily
room 17 'x l 2' wdh wood ·
burning fi rep lace.' Rur t~ l
w a ter , central i'ir. appr o)t(
"' A of c lean ·l and . L arge
conc r ete. pati o, c ar por t .' 3
mulberry tree s. A beaut if u l
modern c oun tr~Y home. You
must see ttifs home to ap
prec i ate it s beauty. P RI C
ED I N TH E 30's
$42,900.00
VA APPROVEO
2 A · 8 r oom new home.
just fini shed 4 B.R. fram e
hQme with br ic k. front Car
port , nice bullt·in crtb me ts
1n kitchen
Rural w ater
system .. 12'x 16' stor age
building, ta r ge gard en
spot. W ithin 2 lf1 miles f ro m
Holzer Hosp 2 A. of land ·
scaped yard Lots at sha de
trees.
CONVENIENT ANO
COMFORTABLE
E x tr r~ ni ce hom e w it h 3
~ R., 2 full baths. Fa m i l y
r oom w 1t h Fran k 1m wo od
. A ll on State Rt. 160.
- m ake your a p ·
pol ntm ent to see th is well
priced home 1n the 30's

'

JUST BUlL T
This home del iv ers the kind
of living demanded by to
day's tastes fn a v ery hand
sOme desi gn. Large lovely
kitchen has all the m oder n
conveniences a w ife woul d
want Plus a 1ar ge d inin g
area, eat·ltt·bar , fam i l y
room, 3 la rge B.R &amp; 2 fu ll
ba ths . Very t as tefull y
decorated.
StO,OOO.OO
11.34 ACRES
MORE OR L E SS
Located just off Rt 160,
Dug welt &amp; r ur tt l wiltf&gt;r
avail ab le Som e ti mbN &amp;
rtll rn inP r al rig hts 9 0 w tth
propert y. w ould be good
buldl ng si tes or just a qoocl
In vestment .

L OT IN E WIN G ION
Lot N o . Ad &amp; e;1st ha ll of Lot
' No AS Clo se to Post Otft cc.
Dr iller! well w 1t h ctectn c
pum p Mei er on pole l or
mob il e hom e Sopt ic t.1nk,
concre te dr l vcwclY w1 111
wood IJid g i'lf i ts end . Con
cr ete pier s fo sci m obil e
home on.
'
4 LOTS ,
L OI S No. 311 32, 33 &amp; 34 i 11
Pa tr iot
Rur a l
wa te r ·
Will se l l 10 pairs
.!'JI L l.. TOD A 1
'

New brick home. 3.bdr., large lamily room,
fireplace , 1112 bath , heal pump with central
air . Fully carpeted. large kitchen. with
·plenty of cabinets. Elec. range; dishwasher.
disposal, ulil. room . elec. garage door.
Ready to move into, located on Kristi 0r :, 3
mi. from Hospital. Can help finance. Call
446· 1171, after 5, 446· 2573 ,
RfAI f STATf I f'!rm ~ l&gt;ur r ho sP o ntf
1r lmrm rf' 30 yNu IN m s. VA

7 ACRES
,
NICE BROOM I10ME
W1th in d mil es of Ga lli poli s on a State
Hi ghwi'ly Grer&gt;n Townsh1p Gtl l l1 poi1S Cil y
School Svstem 3 or 4 8 R . front &amp; b.=.r k
por c h(.'S, n1cc moctcrn l nr qe k1 tchen wi th
l ots of b1r ch Ci'lbme ts. P .1r tt o11 b&lt;'~ Se m cn t
Fu el oil F A fur nace , 7 e M oa raqc 2
st o r a~ r bud din" s onp 15'x2&lt;l ' p ;me l ~cl
other R'x B' Hns good fencrc, Ha s c h rq rl('s
plum s, ap ple trees Grilpr h.lrhor J IJ ST
L I STED B E T HE F I RS T f O SEE THI ',

WOOOED
A R EA - 4
MIL E S
FROM GALL I\0 0LI 5
Her e is w hat you have been
look ing for . Ap pro xlm i'l tel y
4 A . of sca tter ed trees. ~ i c k
own bu iJding sites,
l ileveiopas you desi re. Anx
sell now.

#

LOTS FOR SA L E , Por
terbr.obk Subdv $7500 C ~ll

··16'8679.

.

:_:j
"' E UREKA, 32 acr es ot hil l
w ith

,

OLO E R

C11 ll now AM R 91

l 11

stor y
a'lllo m c with 3 v i ll i19C lots
.5 ~ M R 117

MITC'HELL RD. II, ac wooded lot with
r ural Waler, c ity schools 200' frontage
$7,800.00.

ly room , ellt·ln kitchen, full basement,; gas UP TO 2 AC . - Lake f r ont lots w l1h trees
heat, 2 car garage plus eMtra lot -near the and city water $8,000 up
college. A bergain In anybbdy' s book
CLEARVIEW ESTATES - Beaulif"l new
subdivision lots on Raccon Ck , w ater and
sewer · subdivision planning a playground,
CROWN CITY - 1600 sq ft . of living space pool, private boat dock s, ball f iel ds . Eas y
in this 3 bedr:.obm home on Galli a SLFa!Tl l· access to Ohi o R iv er
ly room w ·flrepla ce, 2 baths, forln al din·
lng, eat in k_l tchen, 2 .car garage, rural SI, SOO - 3 to 4 acr es country atmosph'er e on
water and a good sized yard. lfty ou ' r e wan, st . rout e -- c it y schools. Lovely area near ·
\ling te live In Crown City m 1s Is a r ea l Rio G ra ncfr
b6fga} n at $41,000.
,

-..3tH,
&amp;: ·N. WIMmln, Broiler, 446-45Mi Eve.
JIM Cochran, Anoctlite, 446-71i1, ·E vt.

~

~CHESHIRE ,

-&lt;
Q

'

WISEM·AN IS AEve:
HOUSE
a.M.Wlsemln, lroar,
3

'
~

12 ACRES - Sm all l ake and pond wooded
· l and · rural water ava ilable. L and la ys
very good. Bea ut iful sites for 3 or 4 hom es .
N,ear R io Gr ande.

14 ACRES - Char otai s Hills Sub - The on
63 ACRES ...:. Priva te location In Ad·
dlson Twp . on Bulavllie ·Porter Rd . . 1 ty good tot left to buil d on . 1 mile from
H.M .C.
Uand lays rolling (excellent for cat·
tie &amp; horses) . Large barn, workshop,
$2,500.00 - Corner lot in Pl antz Subdlv l
outbildings, toba cco base &amp; fruit
si on.
trees. Th e older home has 3
bedrooms. family room, fireplace,
PARK LANE - The only lot left in sub .
pretty bullt·irl kitchen. utility room
Concrete street , city water , sewer and
&amp; bath . ·Free gas for hou~. ·
school s, '
$50,000.00.

home In gOOd condit ion. 3 bedrooms, feml ·

~ 33 ACRES wit h pa r t 1 r~ ll y
.. r emodeled '1 st or y home,
~ lir epl e~c e £M R 11 6 1

i(l nd

BUlAVILLE RD. - Sl9;SOO - Convenlent
to almost ever ythir)g th is ranch is located
less than 2 miles from town Ther e are 3
bedrooms, eq4ipped eat in k itchen , l iving ·
room, utility, bath &amp; garage. Gas heat,
at~m . siding and 111 atr:e yaid.
_
.•

SJ:C:OND,.VE.
HUtfT:t NGTON TOWNSHIP - 13 ~cres Rac coon Cr eek
bottom lend,. approx . 1100 ft. creek frontege, old barn,
well, approx. 'h ml . off Rou1e 160. $13,000.

&lt;"

tJ r r p l M·c~ .

,

TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame
house !n Mld~le~rf: 9?2 :~5:.
FARM FOR Sale House 2 barns
troller large pond 10 acres or
'82 acres, 742·2566

Ill
Ill

h11 i1 &lt;11 n Q ". 1f 0 BM R '6 ?

S16,SOO 1 BR house Wlfh Ownf' r
=:basem ent n e ~ r Gall tPOIIS AMR R7
, BM R 11 5
LOT 188x 150,

~

WE
HAVE
BUYERS,
FINANCING &amp; A NEW
HOME
WARRANTY
PROGRAM. WE NEED
LI&gt;TINGS NOW!
. REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992 22~9
992-6009

~

38R.SQ\D

and outbuildi ngs,
~ we l t EMR 11 3

I!EAUTIFUL,
BRICK
RANCH - Country living
In a truly nice home. 8
years old, 4 bedrooms, l 1J.2
baths. famllv room , rec .
room,
woodburnlng
fireplace,
and
other
lea tur es . ,$60,000.00.

TRAILER

(j)
Ill

G.~

CLOSE TO TOWN - Beautiful new ranch, 3 bedroom~,

*t579

~
n

LOCA ·
, c TtON, swi mming pool and
ra more than an ac r e of l&lt;'l nd
~ 3 ER house w basem ent
ADDISON , 3 BR r ,1nr h wi th
: BM R 112 B
full cl i y idc&gt;ri ba!'.cmcnt
'&gt;.GREEN,.,..... .. HIP, 3 yr FH A VI\ BM R 1?9
::: old
n fl t!l lot
1 40
A CR E S,
p r 1mr
ra VA, FHA , WrVU( 11 2A

ce

garage . Owner will consider offers or help finance .

Q.

0::: 80 ACRES, 2 h ouses, ba r n

f!lrepface. 2 baths'"- 1 h alf baths. Village waler
car garage, nice home tor fa mily Price

ce ntral air, fam•IY r oom w ith fireplace , large 2 car

c

&gt;
.¥ CONVENIENT

..

·Henry E. Cleland, Sr. &amp; Henry E., Cleland, Jr., Realtors
992· 2259 or 992·6191

•

ci

.=:SO A CRES Wtttl som e BE YOUR OWN BOSS ,
":n bu ildings rm d tobacco bas e f;:1 m1l y type r cst aura n.t by
equi pm ent and fi x tu res
J BMR 110
LCil &lt;;C avf! il llbl c EMR 125
COMBINATION business
11. an d 11vin g qu arters 111. EUREKA , 3 BR hom e w 1th
:I Galli a Count y Coal Coun
h&lt;! Sf' mc nl RiVe r fr rmh'I OC,
o t r y eMR 112
FH A VA . BMR 1?7

S

WMT MOR~ IN,RMATION? CNJ. OR STOP IN TODAY!
601

OPEN DAILY, EXCEPT SUN.
MON . &amp; FRI. TIL 8 P.M .
OTH E R HR S. BY APPOINTMENT

IN COM E PROD UC ING
P ROPE RT Y
H 1 oo m~ .1 B R home .1
room s do wnstEHI o; p l u siJM~
re nts for SIGH 00 mo 4
roo m s plus bath ups1.1 1rs
re nt$ for $11 A 00 m o. L1 vo 1n
on !'! , r en t the ot her L nrar
yt~rcl ,
qur cfl' n
sp Ac·e
stora aP hl (l o . wr'l stl r oom
cMpor t Fron t &amp; rear por
Ch f'S SEE THI S O N E .

11S,OOO 00
2 nc r es of land p lu s 1 BR
cott age. Ex t r a n 1cc ro !l mq
l&lt;t nd on b lack fop r oad ~ P
pro)( 1 m tlt• fr orn Holl er
Hosp1ta t

9ROOM
COUNT RY HOM E
5 BR N lcl ' f ront por ch, nit; I"'
k d c tw n
w i th
b ui l l 1n
caiJ in L&gt;I s, doub le s s s1 nk
B,cl th w i ltl :;llOWCr , l o t ~ Of
sh.l ct c tr ('L'S &amp; fr wd t•ecs
Nirc IJtl rciPII spo t 1 h1~
h orn P h fiS blown 111 ill'ill l.l '
1tOn lToc.:1 lf'rj bC'5 1dt' Sf
li l {l h w ~w 100
B4 ilCI £1 ot
l.m(t, Mort• c,111 tH' p t n r.- l ,~ s
eel w tth 1111!. ll om c 'J mohil c
h om es t11al now .1rr br
inq tn CI in i'I U~ n l ,l l of $ 175 00
per mon lll piUS o1 IOi ii l Of
J !J ii &lt;1 cr cs o t l ilntl All
IOCili N I
IJP..,trh •
Sl oi i P
H1 qhVJ.-1y 1(1('1 CALL FO R
AL L D E T,j i LS
COZY AM O
COMF ORT A BL E
Ntce l.vge shmlro tr ee &gt;;(' f '·
otf lh ts lovc: l y home 111
K yg e r
Cr ee k
Sr: hoc• l
Dist r ict N f'cd N hom e 101
yourse lf or ns tl r enta l 1n
vestmen t YO U CA N BUY
T H IS N E/\1 HOM E FO R
$14.000.

(l) f ii ME: ~C I AL

L A ND

BUSI NE SS
BU ILO ij R S
We now 11~w r' il porox 1&lt;1/\
•tVrlil r"l l) lr, iUS! n il Rl ).)
\\'t f:. l V.J1 111ol C: IOSP ,l CCC'it.IO
( ll y Sf'WC'r &amp; w ,1 1er , &amp; n f"rH
tl 1r 1VIIHI llu'c,nlL'SS f fiJ'I1
IIIUI1 ily
P I&lt;1 (5 D
10
SE L L C~m se11 111 7 A })lUI.

7SAC R E S
. VACAN T LI\ N O
I ntc of ro ,ld l r n n f .-lflf' 011
Morg An Lnnr ~ o tn r&gt; qoo cl
litH' t c n r l!l q, Som f' Wllttr
o(l k l l tll l)cr i1pprox 15 A
l tiL11Ji c
/\ 11 r ou lcl b r
P&lt;ISIUr('d ALL ~OR ONL Y
$?1 500 00.

OWN ER WI L L H ELP
F INA NCE
LOO K OF LU X UR Y
Ex cel lent des ign m il liomf'
lh&lt;'l l cou ld be your s Sfylt•
plus com for t all com bmc- d
Lux u r ious masfN BR . w1 t h
on v atP hath &amp; w,l lk m
close t
Equippl'd , n 1st ic
st y l e
kii ChPn
w !lll
h r c Akf i l SI
nook
L ~ r n C&gt;
recr l',1 11on An d f-n m i'tv
room WJIIi open stonl.'
IJrCp lti Cf' plus for m r1 1 tli n
1nq r oom &amp; l1v inq room
Wi'l l k m il of enf rM1 l'~ foy f' r
to ntl e)(ccpl iOOill cour
ty,-,rd
Th('r r 's. iust too
much to soy , vou m ust' seC'
Ill is eiCICJrl nrr, sty le &amp; cOm
for t cornbi nccl in tlli "'l
bc nu tiful hp mf'

L EV E L L A ND &amp; .H O M ~
6 r(JOIIl l tO!l'W Wl tll J n/·1 &amp;
l&gt;&lt;l l tl F. !\ l urn,•tc' &amp;·nrr'll f
v~,H cr /\pp rrh'. t '1 ,i A: ~;\ t q·~
tr" 111 (. 1" lrlvpl l,'l llr! (QIJI(~·
b t bui lcl inq 11rh (l, ti &lt;:;&lt;d tOt'.'
l drmll\ll ,

( &lt;~II

l ot.

Jn)tO ·,

Cl(' l i1 11 5

I LV I
Nice Lo t 58 in Pulriol Atf
leve l
Ru r a l
w, d t.· q
ava il able Nice lot, 1nly
$3,750 00

Q UI\ IN f
3 BR IJrJ C'k &amp; lrM)ll' 11{'IIW'
Coz y &amp; corPtorl i'll t..: r ,1 1n1r 'I
room wJih ~- r(IJ•k l ln ,'JtJt1•1
hurne&gt; r 'J rMc ioll S l-id ! ht· ,

lOIS of bH II ltl f'c'li'J lll! I ) /?~
c1111i nq 1\rcn Yr u
m ur,t sr -. Th i s ll t,ll' t' 10
br&gt;ll!,.•vf' liow d1&lt;1t m rnq I! t'S
CI\L L FOil YOU I~· AI '
P O IN f Mf'IH TO D AY
l .~r ~w

OWN k R WILL
HE'L P F I NA NCE
B EA UTI F Ul.
RI V ER FR ON T I&lt;OM ~
Beaut if ul 7 r oom ho111c w th
fl panor&lt;ll'n ic view (Jf llir·,
rtv er . 2' J A F t;l l h ~!i , • rn l n !
W1 fh

wou rttJurn inq

ll rc p liiCC, ?3 fl. xll1 fl . nJ (l!T)
With ki t ~;: hcn e lt l', ")(O'II' 111
l or enl er tcJi ni rlu or ri.~w·.
1nq N1Ce m odern klt C ~lrcn
1nc l u d1n g . d1 ~ h w a s ll cr.
r ange &amp; re tn gc r &lt;~tor , for ·
ma l d 1ni nq r oom, l in nll y
, OOil'l fo rmrd li V1 1'1q roorq &amp;
:1 BR ~ n « ? f ull hflfh &lt;.. ~
5l mw c r s F'Ui&gt;l Oil F It , l ur
n4CC. EXC !' !I!!n i iOCr'l ll()n tor
fi Sh m g, ri Qtll ou t your l)i'! Ck
door City sct1001Qis f . M\l'l f
see to uppreci ntc it s\ &lt;~ill !"'

1

11 0 HCR £: !.o
N I Ct FAR M
Beauti fu l ro l l 1 n ~ 1 w rl'n
Prl Sfurcl and Qr fonnlnq
lanct loca fed on , 1 Sl d lf'
li if!ll way
I ar gc ') &lt;;l or y
f r ~ m e f r r rn ~lOiile. Ru rn:
W 11\C'r S y ) t L' Hl , 2 Ch iCkCI\
tl ou:,es, corn cn b, tHi lk
house or tool ~IO U !'.(' liit-ctt•
30'xll0 bar n W1l ll 1 1''~40 ' ., 11
cc.J , m e l 6 ! roof. Gooct i m••
f c n c•~s. J ooct tr1 n n , lliJ\I Ct
l oc a t 1o n
R e f!S onJI 11 •
,?n ee CA LL NOV/'

LA ND, LA N D , L A N D
S5 60 .00 per a cr e
A twn ys clr eamed ol IMvi1 111
t1 I Mrn or t ookt1 1&lt;1 for'1n
ve stm ent prope rt y" Wr
IMve 197 cl UCS Of 1he PI nl
tt CS J l and MO Uil d Lovc;ol y
clean leve l to roll in g l ~ n d
65 ac res til lable &amp; th e r c
m ~ i n der
1n nice c lenn
p.lsturc . L ar ge cliu r y bMn
&amp; other f arm buil cl ir'lqs ,
LET U S SHOW YOU TO
DA Y .

HOM E &amp; IN COME
PR OD U CI NG P RO P~ R TY
6 r oom s, 1 B R . homP
IOCil! P d on Olrt R l 160 in
Port er w 11H 197·1 ll 'll'/2
m obiiP h OPH' 'I I} , P . Wil li
co mp lcfr kll( tl t'n t 1 lt'c ir 1t.
stove &amp; rf'tri u F ./\ fur
n,1cc, centr.11 a1r Horne
has ., stok er cod l 51ovt·
L ive 1n One, rr n l ttw other
G(J IIiil Rur &lt;~ l W,l t('r Sy&lt;,l
Jll·l lot A ll for onl y $?Q)J00
CII LL NOI'J

'

P n0~A t, C'll • ~&lt;' 'l' , nr 1os
·t;H~
l 1TII h• n h n vf' d o rn

,

-;n :11:1:1
IN

VII t /\~'", 1

l h n•, ll:"t
d
ol 1o f h ro rl
(!OfO!Jr "11 1011·\ll t ili ly 1'&gt;111ld tnp;
l rtn l ,... l .,, ,.. hl"lrr 1 ''H i f nf

h Nir f'n nr

nf

hnrnv

(''$ ~·1"'

: •• • ,. .1] f •o~ -11&lt; , • • 1' '. '
1.1 0 ,,, , 1, •: nn 1 1 • 1., ,. "I ~· :
1 ! •'i H 1 ' I

1'1J

1-

l ,l 41&gt;',

'1 1

,

'

TtHH' J' RrD Pf"rf")M m "rl.-rn ho m ..
H n r 11•-; · m ile n u l co f Pn• l11 r' nn
llo l-

C'i.t('&gt;V(

. f.('/ 11,r•J it&lt; 1f

Jftf l'rtf

P \Of l" ; f'J
rl" ll 114U ','i!f\5

HVF R&lt;)OM hnu"f&gt; (111rl jl(llh \"J tl h
g&lt;lrti !=Jf', Ou thullrlm!J Pf'ol f\1Ct'1
nmclr• 11 srnl ! o{ n !Pcl 01 I Ollfl
Hollon• () l11 p 4fl5 .t';n /

3 1 1 OU('S

ir1 I'OIT]f.'I ClV ~ h l u(l~C1
wood rtd tlli'CI 011 IOf • nl hll
W(l l f'l
QQ')JHf1h

Ovt-d r'lOk !t ! I\IO r

11rr (l vailnhlr&gt;

P IC'(

�j

r

,I&gt;-10-The Sund•v Times-Sentinel, Sw1day, Apr. 8,1!179

:of the Bend
....

By Bob Hoeflich
. POMEROY - Agreat surprise party was planned for Mrs.
Joann Williams and was to be held Saturday night in tribute to
her 2a years of employment at The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.
Joann's daughter, Terri Lynn; was to have been flown in
' from the University of Eastern Kentucky where she at(ends
school and JoaM's two brothers were to have been on hand
along'with their wives as a part of the surprise. As a highlight,
the group was also going to present Joann with a grand·
mother 's clock.
However, the death of Mrs. Mary Riggs, an employe of the
bank who was on leave of absence, brooght about a temporary
cancellation of the party and Joann was told of the planned
tribute which will lie held later. Joann and Mary were close
friends over the years so a party just wouldn't have been in
order at this particular lime.
CRAFT MAKING - Parents, teachers, and students
It's too bad that the beauty and sparkle of Mrs. Riggs have
of the Rio Grande Elementary School are busy making
gone. I, too, was one of the many people "smitten" by Mrs.
crafts to be sold,ln the craft boOth at the Spring Fling to be
Riggs . Many years ago, I oame to admire ber when she got
held April 21. Shown are students in Mrs. Vallborn 's 5throgether now and again with friends in Middleport for "jam
6th grade class working on a latch hock !11R. Tickets are
sessions" which were really a blast. Mary played a great
also on sale now at _the school for the spaghetti supper
piano:&gt;Probably few people knew that Mary had a treinendous . scheduled
f&lt;r the Spring Fling from f&gt;-7, $2.50 for adults,
· distaste for noisy fireworks. She accompanied a Big Bend • •1.50 for children 12 years and under.
Minstrel production at the Meigs County Fair some years ago
·an.d .the minute the show was o~er Mary took of[ in a dead run
.. io gel ali! of the fairgrounds before the fireworks which
..anrjually fo,lQwed the show were set off. Mary, it seems, had a
true. pitch ear and ·as a result fireworks drove her up the waD.
NELSONVILLE - An or even what is available ~re.
. · ' Mid&lt;lleport HighSchool alumni cim look forward to some evening open bouse designed a few of th&lt; uncertainties
real: treats ·at the alumni reunion this year . Mick Childs is especially lor women of facing the woman who has
. ·. h&lt;iaam&amp; the event and ·has it aU mapped aut. His program ·Southeastern Ohio has been been away from the
. · . plaris are .different from the traditional and alumni should scheduled at Hocking educational system for a
·· enjoy.. Mick will ·be unveilin.g. his plans as the reunion date Technical College April 30. number of years," said Ellen
Women who have not been Gerl, program coordinator.
· ·&lt;!raws. closer:
The April 30 program has
employed or ln school for a
Margaret Parker, who has taken such an active role in while are particularly invited been arranged to demon·. ·gettipg the Meigs County History promoted, reslorls that there to the evening session called strate that women of all ages
· . ni~. I* ,1,000' family histories in her hands now for the "Options for Women : An and backgrounds have had
·. .P!JQlicatiiln although she hasn't had time since the Thursday Orientation to Technical the same questions, that
solutions have been found and
.·deadline to dq an .exact count. The history should be a great Careers."
Included in the program that support is available, she
, ~eren.cebook.
'.
will be a panel of several said.
Discussion wlll also focus
· · .· · Joe McCloud of Middleport, who was the right hand man of Hocking Tech students
on some of the opportunities
:Mrs. Janies flarley as long as she was able to remain at her discussing how they felt and
and . directioos women may
~me in Middlepor-t, was in Springfield last weekend to visit problems they encountered
take. Participants will have a
. · Mrs ..'Jiarley. Joe says Mrs. Harley misses her many friends when they returned to school .
"Not
knowing
what
chance to talk with students
and exterids best wishes ro thOrn. Cards may be sent ro her at
and staff about the college's
· ·the Ohio Masonic Home, 2655 West National Road, Springfield, questions to ask, wbom to ask
· Ohio 4~ .

&gt;

.. LARRY COLEMAN, Village Marshall of Rio Grande,
visited recently with th&lt; first grade classes and the
visually impaired class at Rio Grande Elementary. The
children enjoyed his informal informative talk and being
able to see and sit in the police cruiS\!r. Mr. Coleman
· entertained, singing : many familiar "and fun songs,
accompanying himself on the guitar. Teachers are Mrs.
Sue Brandeberry, Miss Pam Mead, Miss .Ann Packer and
student teacher,' Miss Virginia Tirpak.

Open house scheduled at Nelsonville

It was " Panicville" lor Gene and Sherry Goodwin one day
recently when their 16-month-&lt;&gt;ld son, Nicholas, became
· .extremely ill running a high temperature and goin~ into
· convulsions. The Middleport Emergency Sq 0ad took the child
to Veterans.Memorial Hospital and later Nicholas was moved
ro Holzer Medical Center. The Goodwins jlre extremely
grateful to the emergency unit and the stalls of the two
hospitals for the care and consideration shown. Nicholas
remains hospitalized but is improving.
.
·
'
'
Louis DeLuz is conducling a one man battle against high
prices and although he admits being "past65" is conducting a
door-to-door campaign with a petition.
DeLuz says that he encounters too many people on fixed
incomes who cannot meet ihe high costs of fond, medicine,
utilities and other necessities. He plans to present the petitions
ro government officials -including President Carter. DeLuz
has 200 signatures now and invites anyone to help him secure
more names through the circulation of petitions. His address is
Portlalll,land he'dlike to hear from anyone willing to help,

Pleasant Eileen Clark gets involved every year in making
many candy Easter eggs which are delicious . Eileen starts
early, puts tbem in the freezer and has it aU together way
befQre Easter. Nothing like being prepared, is there? I mean,
you never know when that Easter Bunny might not function .
.
You can get about anyihing you want on credit these days.
However, those "easy payments" sometimes do get difficult
don't they . WeD- keep smiling anyway.
~

Cheryl Hudson honored
NELSONVILLE - Cheryl
Hudson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George B. Hudson, 37896
· State Rt. 124. Pomeroy, was
one of 64 sccond·year nursing
•st udcnts honored recently in
cermonies

,at

Hocking

Technical College.
The stud ents received
bands signifying the begin·
ning of their seventh and final
quarter in . the college's
nursing program.
The students will receive
associate degrees in appl;ed
science when they complete
their training n June and will
be eligible to take the Ohio

•

.
:•

Some types of commercial
bottl ed water
include
drinking waters that come
from a well or spring,
specially prepared water.
with .minerals added, and
fluoridated water used to
prevent toot~ decay. ·

~ -

~-

Willis T, LNdlnglllm

•

Re•ltor

VACAnON HOME AND TAxES

If you bulld or b~y a 1n11estment : depreciation,
utilities ,
• vdcatlon horhe, you can let mainte nance.
e i t help your annual tax bill insurance, etc . tn' order to
,. anQ Sti 1 enjoy it for your take these deductions the
... fa m 11y • s pI e a _s u r e · tota l cannot e~&lt;ceed the
However , with the 1976 tax amount of rental Income
• reform bill , (effective 1-1· {less ta xes and interest)
• 17)
there have been and the home cannot be
e changes r:estricting some occupied by the owner for
e of · the deductions under more than two weeks or 10

e certain conditions.

•
•
•
•

e
e
e
•
•

.

Todav :-

•

~

•
•

••

•ar.e

•

•

•
•

e

e
•

deductions that also may
jUst as you
woUld If . you owned ~ an
apartment house for an ·

l EADINGHAM
REALe
F.:sTATE , 517 !'ccond Avc . , •
G~lli,n li s . .Pt'lnn r &lt;1 46 76Y(J . e
We're her e ffl h£1lp.
e

.............................
•

e
e

be taken -

Day Seven·"fuesday AprU 3
The bubble had vanished.
But the reactor still had to be
brought ro a cold shutdown.
Tensions eased. .People
started trickling back home.
But there was sliD danger
that radiation could leak
during the shutdown process.
So Thornburgh advised the
children and pregnant
women to stay away. Met Ed
said its pregnant employes
'could stay away If they llkrd,
but without pay. The utility is
reported to have two
pregnant women on its local
payroll.
'
Speculation grew that the
reactor may never he fired up
again, that it might be fUied
with concrete and junked; a
monument to the !ail-safe
system that failed.
"It might be more
expensive ro clean up the
plant than it was to build it,''
said Sen. Gary Hart, O.COlo.

Dol'

1979
Snzith 's "NEW"

e301 V ·8 Engine •

e.Automatic
Trans.
ePower
Steering
• Power Brakes
• Tinted Glass
eBody Side

Molding

Conditioning
Whitewall
~.adials

Sport Mirrors
Deluxe Wheel
Covers
Radio Accom.
Pkg.

fumes over rural northwest

e

15 CENTS

.
Okaloosa County Civ il
having "the worst record of
any rallrD!'d in the country" Defense director Tom
in handling hazardous Nichols estimated 5,000
materials. Sixteen people ·. people had fl ed homes or
died last year when a campsites in the 00-squareLouisville &amp; Nashville train mile evacuation area. which
derailed in Wavery, Tenn. included several villages
of
and
about
half
Blackwater River State
Forest.
The Air Force sent a fire
control team from nearby
Eglin Air Force Base, and it
was not until they were able
to get their equipment
through the thick forest that
the fire was put out. The
railroad called In hazardcontrol , crews
from'·
Jacksonville and Mobile,
Ala.
"It's a rural area and
houses are ·scattered aU
through it," said ~tay
Belcher, a supervisor for the
Florida Highway Patrol.
"It's about half woods, baH
complete the offlclal analysis fanns .11
necessary to determine the The evacuees were placed
mutual benefits to the con- in schools, fire halls, a
sumers of each cooperative. National Guard armory and
· "Any merger must have as other public buildings for
its foundation, a stipulation of the night.
benefit to the membership of
both cooperatives. After the
analysis Is completed, the
scope of those benefits will be
announced to both mem-

Florida , . ·
. .
One injury was reported. A
fisherman trekking through
the woods near the wreck
inhaled some of the fumes
and was hospitalized for
observation.

The accident involved a
·Louisville &amp; Nashville
Railroad freight train . The
Federal
Railroad
Administration in February
described the railroad, a
subsidiary of Seaboard
Coastline Railroad, as

.Boards sign agreement

Final decision on
merger up to members
Boards of both South
Central Power Company
of Lancaster and Buck·
eye Rural Electric Co·
ooperatlve of Gallip.iollS,.
have formally signed an
agreement to ,merge the two

cooperatives, according to an
announcement by R. Dane
Swinehart, General Manager
of South Central.
"Thls does not mean a

Military plane gunned down

'

said Swinehart. "It simply
means •that a document ,
stated in legal language, has
been signed to · set the
machinery in motion to

merger has been effected,"

Nationwise-

BONANZA
' 6 1· 97Price
Includes
!lie Following
Equipment

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 250

.

CRES'IVIEW, Fla. (AP)Tank cars carrying acetone
exploded and burned .when a
train loilded with hazardous
chemicals derailed here
Sunday. and thousands were
evacuated as the wind
spread thick yellow sulfur

.-

~-~--

•

ousands evacuated Sunday

M,ANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -Anti-government
guerrillas shot down a heavily armed Nicaraguan
'mill,tary C-47 airplane early SUnday in a fierce ba tile
near the small town of Condega, 90 miles north of
Managua, reliable sources reported
.
The national guard, Nicaragua's armed forces,
declined to comment on the report. · No firm
. information was available on casualties in Sunday's
fighting, But one source, who asked not to ·be
identified, told The Associated Press, "It seeins that
guardsme~ ~ere kllled in the lighllng."

. Attorney seeks death stay
Ji\CKso~ . Miss. (AP)- Charles Sylvester Bell's
attorney. goes to U. s. District Court in Greenville
today in hopes of staying Bell's scheduled exe~:Ution
Wednesday in the Mississippi gas chamber.
sell, 22, was convicted in 1977 of decapitating .
Hattiesburg service station attendant Danny Hadev
with a blast from a sholg\ln. The Mississippi Supreme
Court oo Friday refused to· stop !be scheduled
execution in the gas chamber, which was last used in
1964.

65 percent went to military
I WASIDNGTON ( AP) - Some 65 percent of the
federal income taxes thai the average American
family paid in the 1960s and through much of the 1970s
went for military - related expenditures, a Michigan
research group says.
The siu&lt;ly released Sunday by Employment
Research Associates of Lansing, Mich., also shows,
however, that the percentage has been declinil)g
ateadily, from 68 percent during the Vietnam War
years to SO percent in 1976, tbe last year analyzed.

MBD;datory celibacy upheld
VATICAN CITY ( AP) - Pope John Paul IT upheld
mandatory celibacy for Roinan Catholic priests today.
He said the priesthood carihot be renounced because of
the difficulties and sacrifices asked.
In a strong reaffirmation of the 1,500-year-old ban
on marriage for priests, the pontiff rejected attempts

Thousands celebrated
JERUSALEM (AP) - Thousands of Christian
pilgrims, waving olive branches and palm fronds,
followed the winding path down the Mount of Olives on
Palm Sunday, celebrating Ch_rist's triumphant entry
into Jersualem,
Only hours before the procession, police found a
Katyusha rocket launcher on the outskirts of the city
overlooking the procession route.
'

·Committee formed Saturday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An independent
citizens' .commission to investigate and make
recommendations regarding the. use of nuclear energy
in Ohio was formed Saturday at a statewide antinuclear meeting sponsored by Ohioans lor Utility
Reform.
Members of the group, to be called the Citizens'
Commission on Nuclear Power in1&gt;hio, will be selected
within the next two weeks by the Columbus chapter of
the utility reform group from nominations received
from consumer groupe across the state.

e·

percent of the rental use. • :

olhe&lt;

slowly, very slowly, diffusing
hydrogen with coolant, then
releasing It like champagne
bubbles in another building.

engineering, health, public
ser vice
and
natural
resources.
Tours of the college
departments will be held on
the fol!owing thre~ Monday
evenings for women who wfsh
BOOKMOBILE
to see college facilities and
SCHEDULE ·
la bs: May 7, Natural
April 9 - Wolf Pen, 2:30-3
Resources and Public Service p.m.; Carpenter, 3: 15·3:45;
departments; May 14, Hea lth Dexter, 4·4:30; Langsville,
Ca reers; and May 21, 4:45·5: 15: Hutland ·Pomeroy
En~ineering and Business
Nat ional Bank. 5:30·6:15 ;
programs.
Hutland · Depot Street. 6:30·
The program will begin •t 7 7: 15.
p.m . in the auditorium. There .
April 10 - Long Bottom, 3is no ,fee or pre-registration 3:30 p.l)1.: Reedsville-Reed's
necessary for the April 30 Store, 4·5; Tuppers Plains .
program or tours.

VOL NO. XXIX

e

For starters - whether However , ren ts are not •
you use it for yourself or · taxable if the house Is
'n ot, there are always the re'nted less than lS days. •
usual
deducf!ons
for
·- e
mortgage interest a~d
_
e
proper't y taxes. The tn - • il 'thl'n' i s f'nythi1Hj w-t e
terest deduct ion ~an be cr~n do to h&lt;'IP y(lu in thfi e
considerable. duru1g the fi t!ld of rri'! l f;'Stiltf' _plr.;tsr •
early years of the loan .
·phone or drop in · iit ·

There

1Continued

career oriented programs

in the areas of business,

CANTON, Ohio (AP ) _ teachers. Malecek said 234 of
Police omcers came down the group's members are
with the "blue flu" Saturday honqring tjle work stoppage. ·
in an apparent pcotest over
.The Rev. John F. Murphy,
co ntrac t negotiations schools superintendent, said
between the pollee and tbe Friday the. strike was Ulegal
cfty .
and violates the contract the
Officers started caUing in association has with tire
sick just after midnight. By 6 Catholic Board of EduCation.
a.m., the entire day shift of 14 , Although the B1180Clatlon
officers reported they would has requested negotiations
not be in£o work. Supervisory resume, Father Murphy said
personnel assumed tbe duties . the diocese won't agree to
of the o!fieers who elected to meet until strlkingi teachers
stay off the job.
return -to work. ,
YO.UNGSTO.WN, .1. 10 (AP)
Bargaining sessions have
been underway since the
l./11
contract between the palice - Despite a decision by tbe
and the city expirrd Feb. 1, ·, Carter administration to
The
Canton
Police reject a plan by the Ma)lonlng
Patrolmen's Association, Valley Ewmenlcal Coalition
formed earlier this · year, to restore liOIJie of the Jobs at
presente!l new proposals ail · area steel plant, the
during the session which coalition wants to stay active.
included Mayor Stanley · Thecoalltlonwasfonned 15
Kmich. The mayor said tbe months ago when 5,000 .
meeting lasted about five persoi13 !oat their Jobs after
hours.
Youngatown Sheet &amp; Tube Co.
Another negotiat[ng session '~closed ·Its Campbell Worka.
was scheduled for . 1 p.m.
The Rev, John Sharlck, coTuesday.
'
chairman ot the · coaUtlon,
said !he organization would
CLEVELAND ( AP) - The receive, conunent · oo and
week long sirike by members -publicize the reasons why the
of the Cleveland HighSchool employment plan was turned
and Academy Lay Teachers down.
"We feel the need ... to
Association wiD apparenUy
continue indefinitely., report to our community, and
according to Robert P. to the nation, ho!f we
Malecek, association respo'nde&lt;l to our problem and
how and why are ef!orta
president.
·
failed,''
said the Rev. Mr.
The 10 high schools in ihe
. .
Cleveland Catholic Diocese Sharick.
The coalition raised I!Dd
einploy a rota! of 315 lay
spent nearly $350,000 to
Arbaugh Housing, 5:30.j):30; advertise and promote the
The
group's
Chester · Methodist Church, project.
"
o
!Iicers
admit
it
executive
6:45·7:45; Baum Addition, 8·
)Vould
be
almost
impossible
8:30.
April 12 - Head Start, to sustain such a financial
Racine, 2-2:30; Portland • level without.&amp;specific issue.
At the same lime, however,
Post O[flce, 3·3:30; Racine "'
Home National Bank, 4-5; . the Rev. Charles Rawlings,
Racine· Wagner's Hardware, coalition treasurer, sald he
5-9; Syracuse • Swinuqjpg believed an annual budget of
$50,000 was realistic as long
Pool, 6:15-8: 15.
as a
purpoee '' was

to "secularize" the priesthood.

~1 :
C£state~

:

•
,e,

from page D-1 J
He received nightly
briefings from Denton, with
charts and graphs turning his
office into something like a
war room. This night be
heard encouraging news . The
bubble was shrinking.
·
Day St.-Monday April%
Progress, sweet progress.
George Troffer, a spokesman
for Met Ed, broke a day-old
&lt;rder from the White HoE
that ita voice Willi the only one
to be heard. He told a
reporter, in so rnany words,
the danger had passed, at
least so far as the bubble was
concerned.
Not much later, at a news
cooference in Middletown,
Denton confirmed engineers
had achieved a "dramatic
decrease" in the bubble's
size. They still didn't know
why. "I am certail!ll Is cause
for optimism,'' said Denton .
Core temperatures fell and
radiation was being confined.
A hydrogen recombiner,
encased In lead bricks to
guard against leakage, was
fired up to siphon off more of
the troublesome hydrogen.

•••••••••••••••••

.

,.

State Board of Nursing
examination . to become a
registered nurse.
Ms. Hudson ls a !U74
graduate . of Meigs high
Schocl

First there was
•••
And the regular system was

~

at y . . . . enttne

e

Buckeye ·briefs •/

..

•

•

More drilling expected
CLEVELAND ( AP) - Oil P\'Ospector Ronald W.
Manus sars Ohio has -the potential to produce 18
percent of the fuel used in the state.
The former Kent State·University educatnr said he
~lleves the deregulation of crude oil prices wllllea·d to
more gas and oll drilling ln Ohio. Manus said 2,600 oil .
and gas weDs were drUled in Ohio in 1978. He said 83
. percent of those were drilled in tile Clinton area in
northeast Ohio. The Cllnron area Is particularly rich in
on because sand beaches of more than 300 million
years ago lie urider most of the area, Manus said.

Weather
Cloudy tonight with a low in
the lower 30s. Partly Cloudy
Tuesday with a high in the
lower 50s. The chance of rain
is 20 percent tonight and
Tuesday .

berships."

In the interim, progress of
the studies undertaken and
discussion of the general
areas covered in order to
determine the amount of
'-t&gt;enefit available in the form
of reduced .operating costs
wlll'be made available to both
memberships.
" It is important to

D
rtsmout
: h
.ro

·teachers
may strike

r e member, 11

Swinehart

stated, "that the two boards
of directors and the
management staff of each
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) cooperative, cannot complete
- Portsmouth teachers a merger. The final decision
scheduled a · late alternoon will be made by both memmeeting today to consider bershlpe, after the completed
calling a strike.
analysts
is
formally
J.lo!l9ie_V)l:ginla...m;!!.§ldent presented..to them. They will
01 ilie Portsmouth Education then vote for or against the
Association , ·said merger, based on the facts
representatives ·from the determined by the study. "
association and school
administration pave been
meeting for some time to
SQUAD CALLED
work aut a new contract.
The Pomeroy Emergency
But association members,
Squad was called to 130 State
,who are · seeking salary St., at 8:29p.m. Saturday for
increases, say they aren't
Kenneth White who was
satisfied with the talks taken to Veterans Memorial
progress.
Hospit~l where he was
Portsmouth voters have not admitted. Earlier Saturday,
approved additional taxes for the squad went ro Powell's
schocl. support since 1967, Parking lot for Charles Burt
narrowly defeating the latest of near Middleport. He was
levy last February.
taken to Holzer Medical
School officials say they'll Center.
try again for a 6.4 mUI levy In
,June.

ACTIONS FILED
. In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Mary Roberts, ;
Middleport, filed .suit In the
amount of $780 against
Earnest I..ee Welch, execuror
of the estate of Fletcher R.
Weleh , deceased, Romulus,
Mich.
The suit is lor services
rendered to the deceased
prior to his death.
Julie Richmond, Pomeroy
filed suit for divorce against
Larry Richmond, Columbus.
Granted divorces were
Deva Ann Cornwell from
Paul E. Cornwell; Mary E.
WAtson from Nelson Watson.

SQU.,_D RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
three calls on tbe weekend
. At5:5!p.m .Saturday,the
squad wel)t to 6591&gt; BrowneD
Ave., for one year old
Christopher Chapman who
was ill. He W.s laken to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 1:46 a.m. Sunday, tbe
unit went to Route 1·,
Cheshire, for Doris Fife who
had fallen. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
·where she was admitted.
At II :36 a.m. Sunday the
squad went to Middleport Hlll
for John Wllt who ·was taken
to the Holzer Medical Center.

Jeputies .p robe
•
mznor reports
'

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department checked two
wi'eeks over the weekend
Involving
deer .
Both
acci!(ents occurred on
Saturday. There were no
personal injuries,
A deer was kiUed when
struck at 7:20 p.m. when It
ran into the path of truck
driven by Randall M. Boston,
19, Rt. I, Reedsville. Tbe
incident occurred on SR 681. ·
There was· slight property
damage.
At 8 p.m. on U. S. 33 a deer
was struck when it ran inro
the path of an auto driven by
Stefanic Arnott, · Syracuse.
The deer could not be found
following the incident. Ther.e.
'was moderate property
damage. ·
Deputies are lnvesli~a tiug

the theft of a battery from a
vehicle owned by Karen
Markin&amp;, Rt . 4; Pomeroy.
Markins'car had run out of
gas and she had parked It on
the side of the highway, near
her residence. When she
returned Sunday she found
that the battery had been
taken.The incident is under
investlgution.
Sheriff Proffitt reported tbe
arrest of Gregg R.Boesch, 19,
Hudson, . Ohio. Boesch was
cited to Meigs County Court
on charges of reckless
operation of a IJ)otor vehicle
on property other than streets
and highways following an
incident In Bedford Township .
Saturctay .afternoon when he .
lost control of his lour wheel
drive and went Into a creek.

GROUP AVAILABLE - The M-G-M Chapter of Thal-coozya, Lodge 457, Order of the
Arrow, is pictured in action doing one of the Indian dances performed by the group which ls
available to appear at any scouting function. The group is under the direction of Frank
Casto.

Columbia Gas of Ohio to get
additional supply from ·Canada

Substantial supplies of
Canadian natural gas being
developed by another unit of
the Columbia Gas System
will increase Columbia Gas of
Ohio's ability to serve new
·customers, Columbia's
GaUia-Meigs area man~ger,
J , M. Koebel said today .
Koebel referred to an
application filed Friday by
Columbia Gas Development
of Canada Ud. to seek per·
mission from tire National
Energy Board of Canada to
export :!Jl4 billion cubic feet of
gas over a 15-year period to
the United States. ·
The Canadian gas would
increase flowing gas supply
to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., an Interstate
pipeline company which is
tlie primary-pipeline supplier
for Columbia of Ohio and 74
other afflllated and non·
affiliated gas dlstrjbution
companies. All the Columbia
companies are units of the
Columbia Gas System.
"As we look to adding new
customers this summer, the
availablllty of this gas

portant :" Koebel said. " It is
further evidence of a five·
year, $1 billion investment of
the Columbia Gas ·system
which has led us to the point
where we can again offer our
clean, efflcient fuel to homes,"
offices, and factories."
Columbia o( Ohlo has ·application to resume gas sales
pending before the Public
Utilities Commission.
The Canadian . gas wlll
come from the Kotaneelee
gas field in .the Yukon
'T~rritai'y :"~ 'l'he Kotaneelee
field is operated by Columbia
Gas Development for itself
and six co-owners, Including
Dome Petroleum Limited,
Amoco Canada Petroleum
Go. Ud., Esso Res~urces
Canada Ud., Abninex Ltd.,
Canada SoUthern Petroleum
Ltd. and Magellan Petroleum
Corp.
Columbia Gas Trans·
mission, which wlU need a
permit from the Economic
Regulatory Administration pf
the U. S. Department of
Energy to import the gas,
would buy the new supply
becomes even more im- from Columbia Development

of Canada at Huntington, B.
C., on the U.S .-Canadian
border.
The gas would be . ex·
changed with other trans-'
.mission companies for an
equivalent volume to ~e
delivered to a Columbia
.pipeline in the Southweb1.
Und er present plans,
deliveries
from
the
Kotaneelee fleld would bogln
in 1980. It is expected that
further reserves wlll become
available far export as the
Kotaneelee field Is completed. Government permits
to export additional volumes
will be sought at that time.
Production from the
Kotaneelee f•ield began
earlier this year. Gas from
the field currently is being
sold on a short-term basis to
Westcoast Transmission Co.
Ud .
Koebel
noted
the
Kotaneelee field is among
many Columbia supply
development programs, the
effects of which are just now
sta rtlng to be seen.
"B ut we're not stopping
th er e,"

he

.said .

" The

Two persons injured in
four weekend wrecks
Two pt!rson:-; were injured
during " four weekend ar·
cidents Investigated by the
C:allia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Officers were ralll•l to the
S&lt;'ene ttf ll one-veh!f'!P. BC'·
cident Friday on SR 5118, one·
tenth of a nnile west of
milepost~.aiiOp .m . '

The patrol reports a we'1
bound auto-operated by r.ene
F. . ·Hall, 29, Thurman, In·
Curred severe damaJ.!e wht:&gt;n

It passed off the left side of
the roadway and struck a f&lt;'n·
r.e.
Hall displayed visible signs
of Injury; and was transported by a passing motorist
to Hnlur Mrdical Cr:ntt'r.
Offirers invr~tlgaled an
autn-funtorcyele at·cld ent
Sunday in Meil(s County on
CR ~ . thrt•e •nd flve4 enths of
a milt• wesl ~~ SR 7, at 1:35
p.m.
At•t•nrding to the (&gt;&lt;ltrol ,- an
'past bnund auto driven by
Paul Kellt~r, 67, ,;.tiddlepnrt,
Hnd a weh1.bound molur l'Yt'le

opt•rated by Ronald Harrison,
20, Middlport , mllltletl at •
narrow sedlon of the r011tl ·
way at a railroad uncl.orpas.•.
Hnrrlson tllsplayrd visible
!-lig-ns nf injury 1 but was nnt

immedialt'ly treated.
There

dftmage

wa s

mntlt•rHit•

tn the Harrir-mn

t•yclr, slight da1Tlllge to the
Kt•ller auto.
Ail antn npt"ratt&gt;d by r&gt;ana
W. Ortni1•l ~, 19. GullipHii!-~ 1 incnrn•(l sevt•rt•rll-lmagt•lhu-ing
t-t S;~t urday H('f'icl1•nt nn . SR
Jf10, ,1-:t'VIm-f tinfh~ II( H

A mling nf ~uid dlo has been
established by r.allia Ct~1nty
Coroner 11nnalcl R. Warehime
in the Sunllcty morning dE"ctth
of Larry F.. Wilt, !16, Rt•lncy.
Callrd to the ~&lt;eene at I :45
a.m., the . r.alli11 CAmnty
Sheriff's fl&lt;,parlmt•nt rep&lt;Jrt.'
!hat Wilt ap(&gt;&lt;lrently lnck••d
himself in " rMin n....
bedroom, rested th" hut! of
.24~ callibre rtne on th•• n.m,
anti shnl hlrn•elf ln thP right
upper chl'lll.
Sheriff .Tames M. Mnn·
lgomery . Spe•·i~t) In ·
Vt•~tigl-tfnr

r.ur] J..ttngfnrd,
PrnSei'UiinJ.! Attclm£'Y .Jn.c.:eph
L . C:ain, an•l r.nrorlt&gt;r

Warehime investlK"ted the
•i&lt;"t•lh at the ,1\('l:'fW .
Th1•

~on

of KPmlf'lll a nd

nnris r.ramle1 ·Will , I « rry
Wilt , who

WH~ pmplnyPtl
LatJ&lt;Iin ~!
a~

by
a
~Hk:" rmm . was ·hom Aug . 7,
1941.. j: 1l "tm·l. O.

ment :
" These new sources won't
be cheap," he noted. ~&lt; As we
. i:ontlnueto go to more remote
locations and drill deeper into
the earl~ 'to flnd· gas, the cost
is naturally going to rise.
"The costs of Jll forms of
energy are increasing,
however, and we feel confldent natural.gas will remain
one of the best energy
bargains available, com·
pared to the price of other
fuel s. for years to come,'' he ;
said.

Six die
on Ohio
highways
By The Associated Press
Six people died ln traffic
accidents on ,Ohio roads
Sunday, according to the
Highway Patrol, bringing
·the weekend traffic death
roll in the state to 11.
The patrol counts traffic
deaths each Wt!!'kend from 6
p.m. Frldsy to midnighi
5unday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CINCINNATI - Mary
Eberson, 44, of Cincinnati, in
a

one -car

crash

on

Interstate
75
near
Cincinnati.
AKRON - Charles Wertz
Jr., 39, of Massillon, in a
two-car aeeldenl on an
Akron street.
COSHOCTON - DOrothy
Adams, 36, of Lafayette, in a
one-car crash on Ohio . 16
east of Coshocton.
EATON - Mary A. Decker,
36, and Janet S. Larson, 19,
both of Eaton, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 127 in
Preble County.
AKRON - Dan Cull, 39, of
Aurora , in a one-car
He mHni etl Rnhy r.annen, accident on Ohio 82 In
r.all[p&lt;iliS, on Tlet•. 24, )962. SWnmit County.
SATURDAY
.
Mrs. Wilt nnd twn Mmc,
Rryan . 1~ . anrl Rrt•U , 10, sur- PAINESVILLE - Paul F.
vive .
Wilcox, 22, of Painesville,
Wilt is als" survived by when his motorcycle
three sl/olters, Mr~t JHme[{ · crashed on a Painesville
([)nttil'l Pierce, Rutland ; street.
•
Mrs . F:mt•st IKathyl Rurk• .
UPPER SANDUSKY Navada, 0 .: and, Mrs. Dlln • Terry L. )llorris, 18, of
I Lind a l Hubbard, Syrac~C•e,
Marion , in a oneaear
and twn brothers. Rkk 1 Nnrth accident on a Wyandot
J.awr~n&lt;'t.' , 0 ., ancl Kenny,
County road.
Mincr~villt• .
FRIDAY NIGHT
· Funeral Sl•rvices will be TOLEDO - Gene Cril!t, 6t,
t•nnduded I p.m. Wednesday of Toledo, a pedestrian
at tht&gt; Mcroy·Welherholt- struck by a car on a Toledo
M('&lt;'rc Fu nera J Hom e, city street.
r.allipt•lis, with lht• Rev. 'ASHTABULA - Daniel R.
.Jnst•ph (;()(twin nftlcialinJ,! . Yonkers, 27, of Ashtabula, ui
Ruri:-tl will follow .in t1ravel a one-car accident on U.S. 20
Hill C:emelt•ry .
irt Ashtabula County.
Friends may t•a ll al tht•, ST. c·LAIRSVILLE rum'ruJ hnme, on Ttit~HtiRYI .Terry L. Secrest, 22, of
, (rnrn ~ tn 5 p.m. Hnd 7 to 9 Bethesda, · In a three-car
p.m.
accident on Ohlo 149 · inBelmont County .

SUicide ruled
in man's death

nlfh• 7inn' l-i

MIIJ'Ih of Uw C1ullipnli .~ r.~r­
Llm il ~. l' •f IO :f-.Op ,m .

rnnl li(lJl

The patrnl reports lmnicls' ninc-h~nths nf a milt' north nt
north bound cwtn swerved ln SR li54.
ayold an unidenlified on·
The patrol rerort.s that a
t'flming vehide traveling h•ft north hound rltl to operalt.'&lt;l by
of Pt&gt;nter.
.ft•ffrey I,, M~~ore , 17,
Thr J)anirls' aut.n r~-tsse(l rh..shi re. slid into the path of
off the righl side of I he r nad· u ,~.;oulh bnund tnwk driven bv
way Into H tlikh and nipped Danny J.. .Jrrikinli, 30, Miri.
over, &lt;'oming tu rest .. ril-!hf dlepnrt.
sicfe up.
Roth Vt•hkh•::; in('llfrNf
Officer.~ inVestigah~d a twti- mrlflerul.t• dafnagl'. Moo~
vehidc &lt;·~•llision Saturdriy HI wa!-1 dted on· l:l chnfl{e of ex·
5:40p.m. nn Paulins Hill Rd., Cl'lisivt• speed for t•onditi•m~ .

•
'
Columbia System has
pledged another $3 billion
over the next 10 years to
continu e supply develop·

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="815">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11464">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50493">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50492">
              <text>April 8, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1669">
      <name>likens</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
