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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., ~'riday , Aug. 24, 1979
PROBATE COURT
OF
(Continued frompagel )
Sec t i on 7 : ~h a ta c opyof necessary
for the im· MEIGSCOUNTY,
OHIO
Revised Code
th•s Resolut•on and Or- mediate preservation ot ESTATE OF RIC
D
NOW THEREFOR E . di nance No . SOl be certified Ihe public peace health
HAR H.
'shte vniage of Pomeroy;
~~ethgesBCooaurndtyof EOihecot iolnnsoorf ~ntd safffetyt a,ndthit'.sthall go ~~UTZLING, DECEASE - ate

ot

resolves :

Oh io

•

· ~~

herer.

o.t Y

•

. , . • ,

or

sufficient funds to make

sub

Village of Pomeroy· has in·

le.v y to the el ec tors of f!'e !'lecessa.rv street repairs.•
V•llage o.f Pomeroy" 0~ 1 0, •mprov1ng the water .
as r equ tred by ~ec~10n system and to pay in-

of the Oh10 Rev1sed debtedness due for fire
c;ooe, at the general. ele~ · equipment and servi ces.
t1on to be held •nsa•d
Vil lage on the 6th day of Passed : 8-20'79
November 1979 ·
Section 3: Thcit the ballot
Clarence Andrews
to be presented to sa id
Mayor
voters shaH be in the
H . D. Brown
following form , to ·wi t ·
Presi dent of Council
718 .01

AN ORDINANCE OF 1.1 PERCENT INCOME TAX
FOR THE YEAR 1980 AND A· I PERCENT INCOME
TAX COMMENCING JANUARY 1, 1981, AND
THEREAFTER FOR GENER.O,L OPERATING EX PENSES
ShaH the ord inance No. 507 providing for a 1. 1 percent income tax tor the year 1980f and a 1 percent in·
come tax commencing January 1, 1981 to be used for
g e n~ra l
municipa_l opera tions, maintenance, new
equ1pment , extens1on q~d enlargement of the Village
of Pomeroy, State of Oh1o, services and facilities · and
to provide addi tiona l funds for street repair,' im·
provement of the water system and to pay in·
d~btedness due tor fire equipment and services for the
VIllage be passed? (A majority vote is necessary tor
pa ssage )
For the income tax levy
Against the tax levy
Atteot :
Jane Walton
Section 4 : This ordi nance Clerk. of council
is hereby declared to be an
emergency
meas ur e (8)23, 30,2tc

Roger M. Davidson, independent
candid ate for mayor of Pomeroy in
November,
today
voiced
disapproval of an income tax for
Pomeroy Villa ge and ur ged
residents to vote aga in st the
measure .
Pomeroy Village Cmmcil Monday
night under emergency measures
voted to place the income lax before
voters in the fall .
Davidson charges the income tax
is basically unfair in that only voters
of Pomeroy Village will cast ballots
on the measure while people li ving
outside the town will be paving the
tax because they are employed
within the village l~its. Davidson
also pointed out pensioner s of
various types who live in the village
will be voting on whether or not the
,tax will go into effect and yet they
will be exampl from paying th e tax .
Davidson also pointed out the
firms involved will 'be engulfed in
even more bookkeeping and record
keeping than th ey already have now
in order to collect the tax and
maintain records on the payment of
the tax.
Th e mayor ca ndidate a lso
commented that administering the
tax will also be a n additional
expense to the village and that he
,has been unable to ascertain any
definite figure on how much money
would be brought into the village
treasury through the tax .
" I might even feel in favor of the
tax if I were sure that the taxpayer
would get his money's worth from

the additional tax. Howev.er, I
cannot feel sure of this from the past
administration ", Davidson said in
urging all voters of the community
to vote against the propsed tax when
th ey go to the polls in November.'

I'
.u .
"'\ ""''"-;r~
~....._~

in separate wrecks
Two persons were injured in accidents investigated by the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway Patrof
Thursday.
The patrol said Douglas A. Rosenbawn , 22, Middleport, was driving
west on Meigs County Road 26 in
Chester around 7 p.m. when he lost
control of his car, hit an embankment and overturned.
Rosenbawn had visible signs of injury and was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital, where he is
reported in satisfactory condition.
The patrol also investigated
another accident in Gallia County.
At I :03 p.m. Susan L. Weisend, 22,
Bidwell, was driving east on U.S. 35
and turned to go north on SR 160
when she was struck by a westbound
vehicle driven by Terry Y. Ward, 21,
Vinton . Ward hit Weisend's car in
the side and went into a ditch.
Ward was injured in the mishap,
but was not treated. Weisend was
cited for failure to yield.

POMEROY AREA

RIVER .CRUISE
SAILING FROM POMEROY FERRYLANDING

TUE ., SEPT. 18-lst Time in POMEROY ...
MAKE RESV.'S NOW FOR THESE TWO MAIDEN
CRU{SES ABOARD THE 400 PASSENGER STERNWHEEL

*

2

'tc GATEWAY RIVER BELLE
CAPT.'S DINNER DANCE

HO~~a:~}~~;~A~RUISE
• SaiiiO A to Noon

- Cruise Fe tures*2 Hour Cruise on the Historic
Ohio •Snack Bar Available.
• Only S2.2S per person

Board 6:30PM

e Sail7 PM to II .PM

- Cruise Features• Capt's Buffet dinner •Music
*Dancing H Hour Cruise
•Only $12.9S per person

~' &gt;

OF FIDUCIARY
on August 1.4 1979 ·nth
Meigs CountY p'r~bat:
court case No 22 681
Dorotha L Neutiling ' 496
Lincoln Hill Pome·ray
Oh io was ' appo. inted'
E
· of
Rxehcutrdu&lt;
the estat~ of
1c ar
H . Neutzl .ng,
decea~ed, late of 496 Lin·
coi n Hil l, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck
Probate Judgec
Clerk
(8) 17, 24, 31 , 3tc
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF THOMAS A.
CLARK, DECEASED
Case No. 22744 ·
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August 1 1979, In the
Me igs Coun 1y Probate
court, Case No . 22144,
James E . Clark., 5228 Zion
Road , Cleves, Oh io was ap·
pointed Executor of the
estate of Thomas A. Clark,
de ceased~ late of Syracuse,
Ohio.
Robert E . Buck,
Judge
By Carolyn G. Thomas
Deputy Clerk
(61 10, 17, 24, Jtc

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORiAL
Admitted~Phyllis Knopp, Mason ;
Gladys Dillon, Ra cine; Avis
Jackson, Long Bottom; .· Mary
Pickens , Racine ; Mary Diehl,
Rutland; Douglas Rosenbaum ,
Middleport; Shawn O'Brien, Letart
Falls; Benjamin Moore, Bidwell.
Discharged--Edward Martin,
Hobart Day, Mary Huddleston,
Darla Kelly, Pamela Parsons ,
Shirley Powell, Judith Van Meter,
Clyde Sayre, Kimberly Petrie,
Marvin Darst, Harry Sovel and
Helen George.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES AUGUST Z4
Mrs. Craig Arthur and son, Carin
Bailey, David Ball, Tina Barnes,
Traci Bartels, Eleanore Bennett,
Cheryl Calark, John Craig, Lester
Evans, John Freeland, Hazel
Harmon , Jerold Keyes, Frank
Little, Rachel Lund, Jason MAssie,
Jr. , Gloria McGhee, Froud Mercer,
John Morgan, Mary NiChols, Paul
Ours, Arlen Owens, Sr., Mrs. Larry
Owry and daughter, Mrs. William
Perkins and daughter, Michale
Ross, Virgil Ro!Wl, Miles Sturgill,
Robert Taylor , Garry Thackedr ,
Jerome Thomas, Bryan Weaver ,
Lora Wills.
BIRTI!S AUGUST Z4
Mr .
a nd
Mrs .
Jame s
Dovenbarger, son, Gallipolis.

Tran,sit walkout
CLEVELAND (AP) - Dissident
bus drivers staged a wildcat walkout
today against the Greater Cleveland
Regional Transit Authority, shu~ting
down the city's four garages and
disrupting Cllmmuter service to ten s
of thousands of rush-hour riders.
An RTA dispatcher said the
strikers were preventing other
drivers from taking buses on the
road. It was not known how many
drivers were involved in the strike.
More than 125,000 riders use the
RTA bus-commuter train system to
get to work.
But the walkout had not spread to
Cleveland's rapid transit commuter
trains and did not affect independent
bus service from Cleveland 's
suburbs to the city.

Order Tickets by Mail or Phone (412 ) 391 -2382Mail Orders : Send CheckPayable to Gateway Clipper Fleet and enclose
a stamped self-addressed envelope.
Please Specify Cruise Send To :

COLO\'
·
,
•
rl••·a/r ,.

GATEWAY CLIPPE.R FLEET
I Wood Street- Pittsburgh, Pa. I5222

ONE WEEK
Friday thru
Thursday, Aug, 30
Walt Disney

.

1

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Two persons hurt

GATEWAY £IJPPER FLEET ·

..
1

h . The Case No. 22 ,,81

m •tt ing the question Of such

for

Davidson opposes
•
•
Income tax Issue

_i'.J~

Wt

reason tor
the
s~id
emergency is that the

arrang ement s

Section 1. That the c oun
ell of the Vil l ~ge Of
Pomeroy dec lares that it is
nec~ss~ry to levy an in
ct ome tax pursuant to Sec
1on 716.01 of the Ohio
Revised Code for the pur
PDSes Of oeneral mun icipa l
operations, ma intenance
new equipment, extensior1
and enlargement of the
Vllloge _of PQmeroy , State
of Ohro. services and
facilities ; and to provide
addit ional funds tor street
repair, improvement of the
wd ater system and to pay in ·
ePtedness due for fire
equipment services for
said Village, and that it is
necessary for Cou ncil to
Pass an· ord inance. at ·
tached hereto and made a
part hereof , imposing a 1.1
PErcent tax for the year
commencing January 1st.
19hllQ, and a 1 percent tax lor
t e year commen c ing
J anuary 1, 198 1, and
thereafter for an indefinite
periOd of tim e of the ear ·
nlngs of person s and cor ·
porations who are residen·
Is of th e Vi llage of
Pomeroy, Ohio, and per
sons and corporations who
a~e not res1dents of the
V11iage of Pomeroy, Ohi o
~ut are engaged in busi nesS
'"the Vill age of Pomeroy
Ohio.
'

. '"o e ec

der th at sa rd Board may
ma ke
th e necessarv

TRY OUR

Middleport fire department
seeking additional funding
The Middleport Fire Department
with a little over half of its gQl!l
reached in a current fund drive for a
new heavy duty rescue van is still
seeking public contributions.
The van has been deUvered to
Pomeroy and will be painted before
being put into service.
Some $6,900 has been collected for
the vehicle, but an approximately
$6,100 is still needed.
Residents wishing to contribute
may contact firemen, John Metzger
or Kenneth Imboden, or Mrs. Grace
Pratt who headed a door-t&lt;Hioor
drive for the department.
Among the latest contributors to
the drive are Marshall McMillen,
Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Qatworthy, Margaret
Clatworthy, Robert McElhinney,
Robert Glass, Grace Glaze, Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Rowe, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Priddy, Mrs. Nellie Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. John Robinson, Teresa and
Mark Davis, Bert and Helen

IZORAKUHN
Izera Kulm, 75, Essex, Md., died
Wednesday at her residence. She
was born June I7, 1904 at Coshocton
to the late Albert Ames and Elmora
Ames.
·
She married Clarence W. Kulm
who preceded her in January 1975.
Survivors include two sons and
two daughters, Chaplain Robert E .
Kulm, Gallipolis State Institute and
former pastor in the Meigs County
area ; Edward E. Kulm, Glen Burie,
Md., Mrs. Norma Hundley of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mary Ellen
Miller, Liverpool, N. Y. There are
also seven grand and four greatgrandchildren, a brother, Harold
Ames, Canton, three sisters, Mrs.
Blanche Bird, Cantoo, Mrs. Myrtle
Cooper, New Philadelphia, and Mrs.
Celice Thomas of Fresno, Ohio.
Funeral services will be held at
the Arnold-Lynch Funeral Home at
Massillon. Burial will be in Forest
Hills Cemetery, Canton, 0.

Sohio up again
CLEVELAND (AP ) - The
standard Oil OJ . (Ohio ) has raised
its prices for the fourth time since
\~iy 28, increasing the cost of all
grades of gasoline b) 11 cents per
gallon during that period .
The latest increase, announced
Thursday, raised the prices on all
grades of gasoline by four cents a
gallon at Cllmpany operated Sohio
stations in Ohio a nd at Boron
stations in Michigan, Indiana and
Kentucky.

THE APPLE DUMPLING
GANG RIDES AGAIN

BAR-B-QUE
It's ,
Delicious
.•

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
POMEROY, 0.

SUMMER SCHOOL
TEACHERS
PLUS

RUBY
sunday thru
Thursday , Aug. 30

HI RIDERS
PLUS

SWAP MEET

TV .••.•• • •. , ••••.•••••. . ......... . .....•

FDIC

Spjecial sale prices on men's and boys coats and winter vestschildren's coats - And many other items for grade school • high
school and college wear .
~

You'll like our new selec!tions of jeans · tops ·shorts ·socks •
dresses - sportswear. Stop in, look around, buy what you need now.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

o

Page B-1

C·S

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

•.•

·Tax ruled unconstitutional

,,Area newsi!.
• brief , .
:Buckeye Power -to zn

·refund $650,000
GALUPOLIS - Officials of
Buckeye Power, Inc. have announced plans to return in excaa of
• •000 which WBII collected through
the Ohio Coal Conaumption Tax to its
member-flyslemll.
The money Is being refunded as ·
the result of the recent ruling by ·
Ohio's Supreme Court which
declared the Coal Conswnption Tax
unconstituUooal. Bucjleye Power,
Inc. plam to return all monies
collected to date in conjunctloo with
this tax Ill ill 2S memjler-eyslemll
over a six-month period beginning
September 1, 1879.
The Ohio Coal Conawnptloo Tu
I'!Quired all electric utilltles to be
taxed oo the sulfur ccintent of the
coal which they burned at their
generating faciUiles. Coal which
cunlained the leut amount of sulfur
and other poUUtanll '11'811 taxed at the
highest rate under the tax structure.
In decl•rlng the tax unCOIIIItitullOMI, the court ruled that
electric companies should not be
penalized for purchasing low sulfur
coal which would enable them to

meet EnVirorunental

Proiectlori
Agency standards.
C. M. Ramsay· of Buckeye Rural
Electric Cocperative said the
cooperative's portion which it bad
paid Buckeye toward this tax will be
refunded to member~wners
over the ne~ six months. "This
refWJd Is not a re,1uction in rates,"
he explained. " It IE merely a refund
of that money whid1 the members
we~ required to pa~ in their electric
bllJs to cover the COlli of the tax."
,\ccording to Ramsay, niemberconswners will receive credit on
their electric bill for this tax refund
over approllimately a sill-month
period.
The refWJd will reault m the reduction ol the wholesale power adjustml!flt clause by the aniOIUit
credited to the whol-le power bill
in each ol the sill months that credit
Is given, starting with the bill sent
out about October I, 1!179.
Tile average credit for each conswner will be about SO centa per
month for the six month period.

GAUJPOLIS - A spokesman for ·
the Wagner Broadcasting Co.,
Gallpolla, said . Saturday its AM
radio statim, WJEH, would be t.ck
on the alr by Wednesday pending
construction of a new transmitting
tower.
Although the company expected
four to sill weeks to pass before a
new fabricated tower could be or·
dered and built, the stallon has
received guarantees a new tower
would be delivered to the studios off
Portsmouth Road by Monday
evening.
The 29 year-old tower collapsed
Thursday morning, knocking WJEH
elf the alr. No euct cause has been
given for the mishap, although it is
believed the tower was weakened by
recent heavy stonn activity.
Its sister statim, WYPC-FM, was
unaffected by the tower collapse and
has attempted to carry some ol
WJEH 's advertising in the interim.
Weather pennitting, the station
expects to be broadcasting again by
Wedne»&amp;y .
POMEROY - The inununizatioo
clinic ol the Meigs County Health
Departr:!Jent whlcb was originally
scheduled lor 'I'IIelday, August 28,
has been pcl8tponed until the
following day. Hours of the clinic are
from 9 to 11 a.m. and from I to 3 _p.m.

ROBERf Caz(!J, righ\, presents $5,000 check for
Boy Scout Total Develq&gt;ment fund to Edward Maddox,

HAPPY EXPRESSIONS adorn.the faces of Bill and Debbie Beegle,
who B!lllsted the Richard Cloaks in chairing the 1979 Cancer Crusade for
the GaUU. County Unit of the American cancer Society. With a total of
f4,140.17 to date from the Neighborhood Crusade, rio wonder the Beegles
are smiling.
·

Threatening clouds appear
on Ohio's economic horizon
OJLUMBUS; Ohio (AP) - State
officials say they won't know until
about Oct. 1lf Ohio's economy Is on
the skids although threatening
clouds are on the ecoo001lc horizon .
lnditators include recent drops in
revenues from the state sales,
personal, and corporate lricome
taxes, from the amounts state
budget planners had expected.
La~ figures available are for
July, when montes coming into the
state General Revenue Fund were
S25 mlllton below previous
estimates.
Sales tax revenues totaling about
Sl26 million also were about $242,000
less - or .18 of I percent - than July
1978.
This was a matter of 'concern for
some officials about a revenue
source which has shown almost
constant and substantial growth the
past several years.
Sales tax collections In July were
$11 million less than the $137 mUllon
: projected by the Ohio Office of
· . Budget and Management (OBM)
.when it put figures tOgether for the
:ltate's newly enacted, twO:.year
budget.

assistant to the manager ol Ashland Works of Annco
and member of the Tri.State Area Council Executive
Board.
~ ·

'·

!ri·state_ho,y_ -· ~cout~ .

Galllll County

get $5,000 donation

ble Co. Is working in Gallia County
at this time, re11ppralaing property
for tax purposes. '
Several members cl the company
•~ worlting the 81'1!11· and will be
visiting hmnes to reappraise property. Tiley will have propel' identificallon. U any qauestions arise as
to their ldenllty, Mootgomery urges
realdents 10 call the sbertff's department at 446-1221. They have the
names of the employees and wUI
verify identification.

pomeroy
national
bank
the bank of
the century
established 1872

•

SUNDAY, AUGUST 26, 1979

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

ASK ABOUT
OUR NEWHIGH
RATES ON
PASSBOOK
SAVING$ AND
CERTIFICATES

pomeroy
rutland
,t uppers plains

o

tttfittt

GAl.LIPOLm -

SPECIAL VALUES
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

Tonight &amp; Saturday

Sports ...................... :_: . • •.••........• C-1-B

unba
NO. 30

fare

Lifestyle • •••••• .• , ...•........ - . .. ....... . B-1-12
State and natlo!lal .••.•.....••. , • , •..•• . ... [)-1-12

Sheriff James M. Mootgcmery said
Saturday the Cole Layer and Trum-

to

KFC

CHICKEN

and:

ELBERFELD$

CARTOON

LoCal news .••.•.....••... . •....... . .... . . . A-1-8

Page D-1

VOL. 13

furniture

Classified ads ..•.....•...... - ...... . • ... .. D-6-11
Farm news ... . •..•..•••• • . •.. • . . ......•.. D-2-4-5

retires

I

Weather

Flair for

postmaster

Bodimer, Hennan Kloes, Mike
Dallas, Josephine Blevins, Eva
Buskirk, UUie Dyke, Eileen Justis,
Struble, Wyllis Davis, Don Erwin,
Raymond Justis, Raymond Stewart,
Kenneth and Lois MCElhinney,
George Hayes, Alan Nelson, Magic
Roger Carson, Russell Canton,
Nelson, Mrs. James Sears, Paula
Kathy Perrine, J . K. Mournilf8,
and Frances Kauff, Becky and Gary
Francis Biron, Francis Anderson,
Drenner, Dwight Haley, Eugene
Mrs. Paul Smart, George Skinner, ·
Morrison, Lula Mae Quivey, ·Mr. and
JohnKauff.
Mrs. Tom Riley, William Guthrie,
Harold Kauff, Margaret McKay King, Buck Newell, Helen Mills, Daniel, David Baker, Mrs . Dorothy
Charles W. Edwards, William Ken- Pierce, Frances Roush, Mlck Mlller,
nedy, Gary Stone, Mabel Walburn, • Denver Rice, Roger Morgan, Ken
Lester Bailey, Carl Gardner, Clay
and Susan Frash, Mrs. A. E. Erwin,
Burns, Elden Walburn.
Mike Williams, Jack Walburn, Mrs.
Orin Smith, Isabel Winebrenner,
Jean Moore, Celesta Bush, Marie
T. E. Jasper, C. L. Smith, Mamie Stjliner, Mrs. Edna Walker, Zinda
Hendricks, Rhoda Hall, Robert Haley, Ike and Mona Neal, Brad
Parker, Pat Mullen, All'!tln Russell, Hudson, Debbie Taylor, Myrtle
Katherine Werner, Alice Euler, Quillen, Lawrence Manley, Jr., Mrs.
Bessi Athey, Doris Smith, Greg Woodrow Call, Sr., Mildred Fowler,
Hayes, F. Summers, Margaret Debbie Cundiff, Midge Abbott,
LaUance , Freda Wyatt, John Blake, Leonard Weimann, Myrtle
Willis Anthony, Gladys L. Walburn, Harrison, Guy ' Harper, Burdell .
Anna Mae Ellis, Gail Miller, Harry McKinney, Margaret Martin, Mrs.
L. Eblin , Juanita Bachtel, Kitty Clyde Bayles, Pat Johrison, O'Dell
Manley, John J:Iarrison, Bill Fink,
Terry Johnson, Margaret Bennett
and Larry.Hudnall.
Charles Pullins, Rene Stone, Buddy Thomas, Mike Gerlach, Terry
Kennedy, Leona Kohl, Freddie
· Houdashelt, Carla Nottingham,
Frank Gheen, Chuck Legar, Clifford
WALTER ROBINSON
Walter Robinson, 75, Larkin St.,
Demoskey, Charles and Helen Byer, ·
Rutland,died Thursday at Veterans
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewtngtoo,
Memorial Hospital.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannan, Nina B.
Mr . Robinson was born Aug. 21,
Russell, Mary H. Davis, Rose Me.
1904, a son of the late Charles and
Dade, Harry and Jane Stover,.
Anna Robinson, Colwnbus.
Dorothy McCloud, Eugene UnHe is survived by two nephews,
derwood, Randolph Fraley, Mabel
Lero y Miles, Cardington, and
Hysell, John Hood, Willard Fry,
Charles Miles, Mt . Gilead; a niece,
Ronald Young, George Stewart,
Mrs . John '(Ruby)
Moore,
Ronnie Smith, Lashia B. Mitchell,
Frederickstown.
Richard Rathburn, Paul Smith, Rick
Funeral services wUI be held at
McKnight, Wayne Jarvis, Debbie
3:30 p.m . Sunday at the Walker
Carter, Jim Broome, Paul R..
Funeral Home in Rutland with the
Swisher, Emmett Rawson, Don
Rev . Amos Tillis officiating. Burial
Lowery, Patty Steen, Robert Bar-~
will be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Don Stivers
Friends may call at the funeral
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fisher.
'
home anytime after 2 p.m. Saturday
until time of services.
HIGHWAY CLOSED
Due to bridge repairs, SR 7 will be
closed, just south of the Kyger Creek
Partly cloudy Saturday, High in Plant beginning Monday at 7 a.m.
"the lower Ills. Probability of rain is The road is expected to be closed for
· 20 percent Saturday.
two-to.three days.

Area Deaths
CLESSON DENNEY
Graveside services for Clesson
(Mike) Denney, 91, Route I,
Ewingtlln, who died Wednesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, will be
held at 11 a.m . Saturday at the
Salem Center Cemetery. /'.
Mr . Denney was born Aug. 25, 1887
in Salem Center, a son of the late Z.
A. and Matilda Tuttle Deimey. He
was married Jan . 10, 1914 to Goldie
Hugg Denney who survives along
with a daughter, Mrs. Bruce
1,
(Donna ) Morris , Route
Langsville; three grandchildren,
Mrs. John Uoyd, Tampa, Fla. ; Mrs.
Ron Wright, Dublin, Va., and Larry
Morris, Langsville, and four greatgrandchildren, David and Chris
Lloyd and Daniel and Debbie
Wright. .
Mr. Denney, a retired carpenter,
was a member of the Wilkesville
United Methodist Church.
Officiating over services will be ·
the Rev. John Lewis. Friends may
ca ll at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland after 3 p.m. today. The
family will receive friends there
from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.

Veteran

GALUPOLIS - The Tri.State
Area Council, Boy Scouts of
AmeriCl\, has received a $5,000 contributlon to its Total Oevelq&gt;ment
FWJd from Standard Slag &lt;;olllpllny
ol Ashland, Kentucky.
Tile gift raised the dollars committed to date to $572,000 towards a
total goal of $1167,4«1. Funda received

will be used for a number of local
projects primarily_ at Cainp
Arrowhead, located at Ona, West
Virginia.
Campaign Chairman Harold
Kelley of Ashland praised Standard Slag Company for their continued·
support of the local Council nd reported tha~· their support will go far in

For storm, flood damage

carrying out the much needed
projects which are part of the Total
·
Development Program.
The Tri-Sta~ Area Council is a
member agency of the Boyd COIUitY
Community Chest, the Cabell-·
Wayne Unilec! Way, and the United
Way of Lawrence County, Ohio. Tile
Council serves large portions of
West Virginia, Kentucky, and Ohio.

Emergency aid available
to Gallia County farme~s

RIO GRANDE - Local history
buffs will have an opportunity to do
research this fall with the possibility
at publication thanks to a seminar
olfe'red by Rio Grande CoUege and
Conununlty College.
Tile ''L!x:ai Hlatory Seminar" will
begin September 5 and participants
may pursue any legitimate history
.research ; however, research on
local history will be encolll'lllled.
Ivan Tribe, assistant professoc r:J
history for Rio Grande College and
Community College, will Instruct the
class. Tribe has corullderable
research and publishing eJperience.
The seminar group will meet Man·
day and Wednesday ev~ 6-7;50
p.m. in Anniversary Hall, room 224.
Arrangements are being made
with the Gallia County Historical
Society and the Taylor Publishing
Company to publish a two-volume
work on Gallia County History.
Students' projects from this seminar
will be considered for incorporation
in the published work .

AdJustments wUJ have to be made
later this year in disbursements of
funds in the budget, to deal with an
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
upcoming cash flow problem, OBM Sheriff James M. Montgomery said
says.
Saturday due to heavy rains and
Without doubt, the drop in sales . fioods in the area on Aug. 19, the
taxes can be attributed in part to
department's telephone service was
declines In new auto amd appliance
out of order for several hours, from 3
sales. They provide a major portion
a.m. to 9:30a.m.
of money produced from the four·
Montgomery said he hopes anyone
cent:Hltl-the-&lt;lollar tax.
who attempted to reach the departJuly showed revenue from the . ment ·by phone wlll understand the
personal incane tax about $5.3 situation wu created by clrmillion below estimates, and the
ewnstance_s beyond their controL
corporate franchise-income tax
brought in 3.2 millioo less. The
remainder of the $25 mllllon
shortfall is attributed to late -arrival
of some federal matching funds.
William D. Keip, director of OBM,
Showers and thunderstorms likely
said last week he is not yet
in the low 608. Highs
today.
concerned about the possible onset
today in the mid to ' upper 70s.
in Ohio of a natiooal receB8lon ,
Probability of rain ia 70 percent
which many economists have been
'
today .
predicting.
Ohio is among a handful of
industrial states which usually are
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
the first to feel a national recession,
Mooday lhrobgh Wedoesday: ·
because of their reliance on the auto,
Cb•oce of sbowen • or lhua•
denbowen each uy. IIJ&amp;Iu Ia the .
appliance, and other big consume•
IDI tllld lows Ia the Jll(d 5111 to low lOs.
industries, ,economista say.

WASHINGTON, D. C.
Agriculture officialll have informed
Representative Clarence Miller that
Gallia County farmers suffering
crop losses from heavy SUmmer
rains are eligible for emergency
loans from the Farmers Home Administration (FHA).

recover losses caused by the heavy
rains. Applications for emergency
loans should be filed ,n Farmers
Home Administration (FHA) Coun,
ty Offices. Applications for physical.
losses will be accepted for nine months and for production losses for 12
months from August 20, 1979.

FHA officials told Miller that
Gallia County fanners may apply
for emergency loan as.s; ~\a nee to

tu qualifying damages and-or losses

FHA emergency loans are made

to crops, property, machinery and

equipment, caused by natural
disasters. Loans for the fanner's
total!~ are made at five 'percent
interest.
.
According to FHA, amounts in excess of the loss needed to restore
production or to make major' adjustments in fanning operations are
available at 9 percent interest for
real estate and 9'&gt;!! percent interest
for annual operating and chattel
purposes.
'

Weather
Low

,

~
.~

•

·I

PLANS ARE .UNDERWAY for the establlalunent
of an emergency squad in the Tuppers Plains area of
Meigs County. Seventeen residents Friday night wrapped up a 78 hour emel'l!ency victim care i:ourse Wider
the Instruction of Mrs. Janet Bolin,.RuUand. The group
will now undergo a 10 hour hospital training course
which will be given at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Bolin said the Tuppers Plains group tlld well in
the 78-hour coui'se scoring ail average of 90. Pictured at
the fire station in Tuppers Plains Friday night are

l

those who took the course including front, I to r, Cria
Watson, Patty Life, Mary Longenette, Helen Dol'llt '
Darlene C&amp;B88dy; second row,! tor, Karen Mlyubiro,
Lois Deem, Helen Newland, Joe · Bailey, Charles
Weber; back, I tor, Robert Tripp, Rick Gllmore, Tim
Spencer, Michael Yoke and Roger Willford. Not
praent were Mary Ryan, Richilrd Spencer of the Tlippers Plaina area, and Brian Mullen, Middleport, lllld
Kevin Sheppard, Racine, who did complete the coune.
.

•I

�'

.,

·[==;~;~;;~;~;,;;;;~;-Sunday, Aug. ~.1979
...... ._. ...,.. .. .~~~ •• ., ••,.... ....o••·..

,M,,..,.,,.,

.................. !*biN·ah ll t H. ,. ,., ,.,
__.. • ill IR- • ..-1.,.0'11 1~ 11,.., ,.....,ld 1\r

'"'

tl'q .... •l

1~ l • ~od lol •!r ,

~~~~~;;;:_&amp;
Others work too

Mr. Editor:
In regards to letter that was in
Tuesday, Aug. 21,1979,
I believe most people are in·
terested In the sports at Eastern, but
the 81lllle people do not do all the
work all the time, As our sons and
daughters get into sports it ill out
place to help out I believe this has
happened at Eastern.
i cannot remember the name
signed, helping put lights on football
field, building press box, baseball
dugouts or sanding and refinishing
gym floor, sure it was hard worl&lt;,
but we did It
If a person wants to blow hill own
hom, O.K., but we all have done our
work also. Thank you.- Michael rutchie, RD, Pomeroy, Ohio.

~TEXAS INSTRUMENT~ ~

LE.D. WATCHES•
.•

missing.

The Incident ill still under investigation,
The department is also investigating a hitskip incident which
occurred Thursday. At 6 p.m.
William S. Posey, 64, Reedsville,
was dr.iving west on SR 681 when an
eastbound vehicle came left of cen- ·
ter and sideswiped hill car. The eastbound vehicle continued. The incident is still under investigation,

•MONlli

Save s3

'\l"''\\

White TV.

~~c:~~~~TE $109
.TELEVISION '

~{'· TnAs"l'~"~~..~- ~ - ~ ENrs Calculator ~----~--------'--T---:;:;.~---...;...---1

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

• 11"1111' 110LL er
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=~·68~
388

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3 S}··
FOR

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COFFEE

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86C
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160UNCES

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.,

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OLIVEWOOD
COLOR
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Misses' Short Sleeved Top
Assorted bunon front styles in
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prints. Polyester
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Sizes 32 to.3R

644
. Reg. *7.97

• White or colora

DI~~UNT $}17
PRICE

'

SAVE $7.88

..
..

$24

00

REG. 11.7S

7!~

.
$1
3
FOR

BRUSHES
FOR ADULTS

Scope ®

Skin Creme.

Mouthwash

Jl7

)48 J37

6 Ounces

24 Ount:e

Moisturizes!

LIMIT 2 •• NO

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Pkg. Of 6
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Nice colors,

seconds. Has cool
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non-stick wand 120/ 240
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The Dry Guy'" by Clairol®

1696

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Heat suttings from 250 10
1000 watts Hcs o styli ng
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SAVE 'G

C.P,S.C. Llatecl ••...... No Aobeotoo

~~:.~ =--SiLVER BRIDGE PLAZA STORE
-

-

- ----------

Young Men's
Flare Jean~

$10~~
Young men's favorite flored
w-rn jeons with five
p&lt;&gt;ck!lll. Tough 14-ounce
I 00% cotto.n denim with
Sanfonet8 for 1hrinkage
control , Comet out af the
dryer wrinkle and pucker
free. Navy blue in
size• 29-42.

NO RAINCHECKS
360 TO SELL

AM-FM STEREO RADIO
WITH 8-TRACK AND
PHONOGRAPH
BSR RECORD CHANGER
2·SPEAKERS WITH WOOD
LOOK FINISH

REG. 131.88

tiO TO SELL

00

'.

'12.97

NO RAINCHECKS

Clairol® Crazy Locks ®Styling Wand
Heats in only

NO LAYAWAYS

20 TO SELL .

NO RAINCHECKS

WRANGLER
INSULATED
COVERALLS

'

Nivea®

o. 1. , 'n. 2. detlccha~e

AS PICTURED

'.·'
....•
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'...'..
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Fluorescent Light Fixture

CRICKET UGHTER

OUT
SPECIAL

NOT EXACTtY

SAVE '6.88

;,

week.

CLOSE
·

CBS ·700

..

Durable pile in assorted
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A rugged. compact electric portable wlll1 many
"big-maclltne" teaturea: Ml tlze 88-Charact" ·
keybollrd • pow" carriage retum • , _ , spece
bar • .._, backspace 81\d underline keyo •
electric touch tab • touctc set margin • margin
releue key • electric shift • venleat tine

REG. 152.88
NO lAYAWAY
NO RAINCHECKS
. 17 TO SELL

'

==-=-~-~®

2~~97

00

With CarryinK Case

$4800

NO lAYAWAYS
NO RAINCHECKS
44 TO SELL
1---~~~~~--------------------------~
•,:

Hook over window
silL Aluminum and
stee L 15-ft long.
Non-skid steps.

ELECTRIC 12"
Portable Typewriter

OUR LOW PRICE

"

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long. 1 fluore5re n!
bu lb incl uded Has

no

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Uses ll 0 film cartr idges . Batteri es e)( fro .

~

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R eg ular or Exlra-Siz•·

' '4.94

With A Built-In Ekctrnnic Flash

I

BREWING
~-~6~;0 333

Everflash ®Pocket Camera

110De&amp;. .....1

NO RAINCHECKS
sELL
NO lAYAWAY
TO PRIOR SAU

MR. Ca"FEE"
·AUTOMATIC

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

REG.
tl.28

FOOD
PROCESSOR,
SLICES, GRINDS,
SHREDS AND
CHOPS. COMES
WITH
SHREDDING

Mop&amp;Glo®

.

'

. REG. '129·94

IDEAL FOR
ANY KITCHEN

WYTO

ASSII I I!

INSULATED
PLASTIC
REG. 58' CUPS
.

With 4-KPy M e mory

Pia"" hous• ng 18 "

,~

(

TELEVISION NO lAYAWAYS NO RAINCHECKS 10 TO SELL

PKG. OF 51

.

..

1------~

NOT EXACTLY AS PICTURED

-.
...-..

94e

TO MARRY
GAUJPOUS - The following
persons fUed for marriage ticense In
Gallia County Probate Court this

'

NO RAINCHFC,KS
lAYAWAY
12 TO SELL

REG. '10.88:

OWN FINE OUAUTY
TONE KNEE SOCKS

Great -looking styles with
ou tsi d e pockets, shou ld e r
stra ps, la rg e tap zi pper.
Eoch nicely detailed with
leath e r- look trim m ings.

144.95
149.95
119.95
124.95
134.95

19" Black and

88

Roomy and Fashionable
STYLES MAY
VARY FROM
PICTURES

1 PAIR OF EACH TO SELL
TYPE FOR
SALE
CHEVY BLAZER 76·79••••••••'119.00
BRONCO 78-79 ••••••••••••••• '122.00
CHEVY GMC 73·79 ........ ~ ••• '99.00
DODGE 72-79••••••• .. ••• .. ••• '103.00
FORD 73-79u•• .. •••• .. ••--•• '110.00

REGULAR

•DATE

charged

home.

I ,

•SECONDS

Discount
Price

Wayne B. Roush, 37, Gallipolis,
carpenter, to ruta K. Neek, 16,
Galllpolil, student; Billy W. Treece,
25, Kankakee, m.. farm manager, to
Connie s. Priest, 24, Kankakee, ru.,
nune; Ray Smith, 25, Kerr, unem,ployed, to Terry L. Hobsor., 18, Kerr,
Wll!lllPioyed; John J , Jones, 18,
GAllipolis, llllemployed, to Sandra
K. Fife, 18, Cheshire, unemployed ;
David T. Crossen, 21, Gallipolis,
student, to Kathy L. Davis, 20,
Colwnbus, student; MarkS. WHite,
20, Rodney, manager, to Deborah H.
Rainey, 20, ruo Grande._seamstress;
Michael E. Tackett, 21, carpenter, to
SbeUey A, Bryne, 18, Ewington, at

PICKUP TRUCK
RUNNING BOARDS

•MINUTES

Auto theft

GAUJPOUS - A Point Pleasant
man was arrested by Gallipolis City
Police .early Saturday for alleged
auto theft.
At 5:58 a.m. Patrolman Jay
Cremeens. was dispatched to San·
ders Auto Sales, 269 Upper ruver
Road, to investigate a report of a
subject taking parts from a car on
the Sanders lot.
When Cremeens arrived, the subject, identified as rucky A. Thomas,
20, 215 Sixth Street, Point Pleasant,
jwnped into the front seat of a
parked car. Cremeens ordered
• Tholll88 out of the car and arrested
him when Thomas admitted to
taking the battery from one car to
start another, Thomas was taken to
the county jaiL
Robert E. Swank, 23, Rio Grande,
was arrested by police at the city
limits Friday evening for ,DWI and
transported to the county jaiL
Ronald R. Smith, 18, Point
Pleasant, was arrested at 10:59 p.m.
Friday for open containc.r. Another
arrest was made at the same time
Friday when Ronald L. ~laxwell, 18,
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va ,, was taken
into custody for disorderly conduct
at301 First Avenue.
Darrell E. Fellure, 31, Gallipolis,
was arrested at I :49 p.m. at the
• Eagles Club parking lot for disorderly conduct. Fellure was iater
charged with DWI,
Maynard E. Ellis, 20, Gallipolis,
was taken into custody at 2:11a.m:
on Second Avenue and Vine Street
for disorderly conduct.

, SALE PRICES THRU WED., AUG. 29TH

•HOURS

44

POMEROY - Meigs County
Sheriff's deputies ate probing the
theft of an eight-track player from a
car Friday.
Deputies report Doug Raines,
Racine, was traveling on Wells Run
Road Thursday evening when hill
car became disabled and he left if off
the side of the road. When he came
back to it around 5:30p.m. Friday,
Raines discovered the rear plate
glass on his car had been broken,
and both the player and the battery

·30% Off!

·TAG Sale

•

MEN'S 5-FUNCTION ~

Canvas Handbags

Theft
probed

.

IN C OftPOAioJI:O

WINCH£S1£A · ~
• 3~30 uu•. GilD-Fill

LEVEI-ACTIOI CARlilE

r~le. a~on r~s:Gj~~~.~~:i~=~g.

Ideal deer
Lever
capacity. 20" barrel. Walnut stock and forearm.

•.

.

7 TO SELL

0 9 00

1

Mot , ,

NO RAIN CHECKS

·

�••
A-4-The SUnday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug . 26, 1979

A.:i- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Au~ . 26, 1979

.

Circle named to task fot:"ce

Ohio gasoline prices continue to increase
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A spot
Nvey of gasoline prices in nine
~ cities this week reflects a
oontlnulng desire by motorists to be
waited on.
The check shows that average
prices at full service pumps
increased Uo 2 percent over costs of
two weeks ago whUe average prices
at self-eerve pumps changed only
fractionally.
There were these other activities
thll week in the motor fuel market :
-The Ohio Department of
Taxation reported that gasoline
sales declined 9.8 percent in June

compare1 to the same month In 1978.
- Revenue from gasoline taxes
dropped by $3.8million for the same
period.
- More stations switched to
pricing by the half-gallon or liter as
prices soared past $1 per gallon.
- Two major Ohio refiners, Sohio
and Marathon , increased prices
across the board.
-A U.S. House antitrust
subcommittee scheduled hearings at
Dayton on Tuesday to look into the
reasons why many independent
gasoline stations have closed in
recent. years.

An Associated Press price check

showed that while prices at full·
serve pwnps went up from one to ur
cents per gaUon, costs at self-service
pwnps changed only slightly. The
survey shows a pew average of 92.6
cents per gallon for regular fuel at
full...ervice pumps, compared to 90.8
cents two weeks ago, Average costs
for unleaded fuel went to 00.5 cents
per gallon, com pared to 95 cents on
Aug .. 10, and for premium gasoline,
they ~ent to 98.5 cents a gaUon from
97.5 cents in the previous survey.
More station owners said they
have abandoned the· self-serve

, concept, but there were exceptions.
"We've got a lot of little old ladles
in CadiUacs who are pumping their
own gasoline," said Steve Naumaan,
manager of a J{ocolene station in
Mansfield.
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio ),
headquartered in Cleveland,
announced a four-cent-per-gallon
price increase at aU of its more than
1,100 company~wned ~IBtions in the
Oil Co .,
state .
Marathon
headquartered in Findlay, raised
prices by two cents per gaUon.
Some station owners switched
their pricing base to liters and half·

~------·--·-- ·---.----------~

••

GALUPOI.JS - The National Conunittee, Board of Trustees, and
School Boards Association hu an- the Policy and Legislative Comnounced the appointment Ill Dean R. mittee ol the Ohio School Boards
Circle, President Ill the Gallia· Association and currently serves as
Jackson·VInton J.V.S. Board of president of the 17-&lt;!0IInty Southeast
Education, to Its Task Force on Region of OSBA. He will also appear
Vocational Education.
on , the prognna of the state
N.S.B. A. President Hiroshi aasociation's November convention
Yamuhlta, of Hawaii, has named as a discussiooleader.
Circle to repreoent Ohio, Kentucky
and West .Virgtnla on the key :Do
member Task Force made up of
STRIXEAVERTED
board members from across the
AKRON,
Ohio ( AP) - A strike
United States. The committee's
threatened
for
midnight Saturday by
primary goal II to fonnulate
·members
of
Transport
Local 1 was
N.S.B.A. policy and direction on
apparently
averted
when bus
vocational education and work with
drivers
ratified
the
same
contract
Congress on development of a new
Vocational Education Act . and its offer they had rejected earlier this
fwxling, due to come up for adoptioo mooth.
Driver eoded a 5 day sirike Aug. 6
in 19110. The gorup's initial meeting
after
officials of the city's Metro
II set for September 27·29 in
Transit
Authority agreed to continue
Washington, D. C., with its work to
contract
negotiatioos.
be COOlpleted at the National ConThe
new
contract calls for a 42
venl.ion!n san Francisco next April.
cents
an
hour
raise the first year and
A six-year member of the
W cents the second, boosting the
G~lla City ftoard of Education,
Circle ill a member of the Executive · hourly pay of drivers to $7.55.

the number of independent guoline
gaUoos as premiwn fuel prices
stations:.
passed $1 Pfr gallon. Many fuel
Rep. Tooy P. HaD, O.Ohlo, -a
pumps are not .geared to compute
.
subcommittee
member, said that
the higher COS!li.
Ohio
Is
hard
hit
by the decline 'of
The Ohio ~partment of Taxation
Independents.
He
will be chalrm8n
said June gasoline tax cOllections
of
the
Daytoo
hearing.
totaled $32.8 miUion, down from
$38.7 million in June a year ago.
June motor fuel sales totaled 479.6
million gallons, compared to 532
million in June 1978.
The U.S. House SmaU Business
Three Soviet cosmonauts who had
Subcommittee on Antitrust and
been
in space for more than three'
Restraint of Trade will hold a
weeks were found dead after theft,
hearing in Dayton on Aug. 28 to look
spacecraft Iandt&gt;&lt;! in 1971.
into the reasons behind a decline in

·-

SAVE $151.00

I

i
l

Beat. • •

I

By Bob Hueflich

The Hillbilly Shriners Of Point
Pleasant are sponsoring a Hillbilly
Jamboree Day on Saturday, Sept. 8,
hopefully to become an annual
event.
There will be a parade, a Dai.sy
Mae and Li 'I Abner look alike con·
test, dancing in the streets to disco
and bluegrass bands and other in·
teresting attractions. More about
that as we move along.

Time marches on ...
Pomeroy's Christy Baer will be
observing his 93rd birthday on Aug.
31 at the lxme of his .son.ffi-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Grueser
at 312 Condor St. Chriaty is still quite
active and is ooe ol the town's attractions as he rides his three wlleel
bike about the community.
S. E. Ralrden of Long Bottom will
observe his flth birtMay on Aug. 30.
He resides alone, his wife being In
the Arcadia Nursing Home.
And - Mrs. Oma Starkey, Route 4,
Pomeroy, will ~ ·her 85th birthday tomorrow while her husband,
Earl, will be 86 on Sept. 25. Mr. and
Mrs. Starkey who live in the carpenter area are both quite active
and are known throughout Meigs
County for their long work in local
and Pomona Grange as well as state
level grange posts they've held. The
Starkeys are also active in church

The active Meigs County Jaycees
will begin a new program this year

preenUng a plaque to an outstanding
high school football player each
week throughout the season. Chuck
Hannahs and Jay Hill will be making
the selection and will be doing the
prellellting each week.

I
•
UNCONDITIONAL

· ·-----------COUPON.----------,

l

LIFETIME GUARANTEE

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Logan Monument Co . Inc.

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REFERENCES
FURNISHED

Pomeroy ~ Ohio
, or
Vinton, Ohio
45769
45411
( JPiene send me FREE booklets showin9 memori.ls
printed in full color with sizes end pt"ictslistecl .
( )Kindly .h ave 1n 1uthorlud L.ogan Monument Co . consul ·
t1nt call,., my homi . No obligations.
( ) Plene send me det1ils altout M~1oleumt wttttout

Lloyd lr. lloftmal'! of _ . , ud

obll~tion .

Nam••----------------------------~----

SlrHt or Route ..... , . . . ... ... . . ... .; .. . ... . . .... . . .. • ·
C:lty or Town

Phono

.

LOGAN MONUMENT

CO., INC.
· Pomoroy , 0.
at Pomeroy-Mason BridVt

Leo l . vaughan, Mgr .

AU-

Vinton

w. Main St.

JamesO. Bush, Mgr.

Phonetn-2511

Phono 311·1603

und-the-house

PAINT SALE

Uccnscd a Bonc1cc1

PAINTS

Call Collect Day or Night
r------------------------,
.Y£5, I want further infonnation. .

basement waterproofing ~o.
,•

Hydro-Flow Drainage Systems Specialists
Serving all Ohio.
856 South Yearling Road, Columbus, Ohio 43213

1

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PHONEHUMilR

ROGERS basement waterproofing co.

856 S. l'car11ng Road, Columbus, Ohio 43g13

'·

ONLY

'13.28
'14.56

Gal.

'14.68

Gal.

$10.88

Gal.

s12.08

Gal . ·

.
I.
I

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.

.

446-2374 .

GALLIPOLt~ ,

~~
~v

.......__.._...... ,~d·-

tiow DO YOU JUDGE A DIAMOND!

Pubu.st.l every Sundly by The Oho·Valley
Pu~ c..- Mwtlmedlo,lnc.

GAIJ.IPOUB
D4ILy 11UIIVNE
IZ Third An., Galllp:llll, 0Not:il31.
PuhUJhod ...IY -*dar ...,u,g acep&lt;
Saturday. Second a... l'&lt;lotoC• Paid ot
Gallipolil, Ohio al31.

YOU MAY BE ALL WRONG
Is size the on ly criterion you set for judging
the worth of a d iamond ? That's w rong!
Diamond va lu es are determined by n:&gt;any fa ctors ...
. co lor, clari ty, ant! cut as we ll as size.
We'll be pleased to show yo u. So you can be sure
your di amond is th e finest . . . and pr iced right.

11IE 04ILY SENTINEL

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, 0 . &amp;5788. Publl.ol&gt;ed
OY&lt;I}' day ....... ·=~~~ Sotunlay.
Enlend u oecond clua malllnc molter at
""""""'. Ohio Pool Ollie&lt;.
By canter diUy. and Slmday 90c per week.
MdM route $UO por month.

MAIL

SUBSCRIPriON RATEZ
The Golllpolia lloUy Tribune In Ohio one!
Woot Virginia '"" yeor f3!.00; liz montllo
117.50; llree IDillllhl li0.50. E - r e $11.00
por y-; . . . ... ; IIIDIIlhl
111.00; '"""' • .• monthly.
, . Dolly SenUnet, '"" :roorl3!.00; Biz 1111111·
lJio $11.50; 120.00. ..
138.00; rrlz montllo 120.00; three roontho $11.00.
The A.uocialed "'- Ia e&gt;clualvely entlllod
to the ..- for _publication ol aU lleWI di.sulltchel!l
crodll&lt;d to tile .......por one! a1oo t6e local•
~'" pubUshed hereD\7"

Jew.,.,.
D1 SECOND AVENUE

•

.......,.

M£MBER AMEAICAH GEM SOCiEfV

----

no
matter
-rniPioNosl
where you look•. .IN A NEW
CONCEPT.

service You Can Count On, Quality You ·Can Trust

Gal.
_..

Gal.
Gal .
Gal.
Gal.
Gal.

Complete line of Hospital Beds/Side Rails
Large .Selection of Wheelchairs
Walkers, Canes, Portable Commodes
Brace Shop with Trained fitters
Full line of Convalescent Supplies
Home OXYGEN, Gauies, Humidifiers
Hand Nebulizers
Portable Oxygen Units

___

MP.n's
from

$250
to
'500

'

OH . .

TAWNEY JEWELERS 1
424 Second Ave.

'

MON.-FRI. 9 to 5
SAl'. 9 to 1

Gal.

CENTRAL SUPPLY CO.
17 COURT ST.

Su.oday Ttmes-8eallllel

Gal.

INTERIOR PAINT SALE
ONLY
BL. FLAT -LATEX
SALE '11.16
SAVE $2.79
$13.95
B.L. ALK SATIN GLOSS LATEX
SAVE $3.57
SALE '14.28
17.85
B.L. ALK GLOSS.
SALE $14.60
SAVE $3.65
$18. 25
H.D . FLAT LATEX
SALE 19.20
SAVE $2.30
$11.50
H . D. SATIN GLOSS
SALE 111.08
SAVE $2.77
$13.85
M.S. FLAT LATEX
SALE '8.08
SAVE $2.02
$10.10
FLOOR ENAMEL .
· SALE $12.72
SAVE $3.18
$15.90

Dr. John H. ViaU,- a native of
Ashtabula, Ohio, join"!~ the clinic ·
this month after completing his ser·
vice commitment with the United
States Navy at the Naval Rel!ional
Medical Center In Portsmouth,
Virginia. After compleUng his
Bachelor of Arts degree from Miami
University in 1968, Dr. Viall received
his Medical Degree from Ohio State
University In 1972. Subsequently, he
completed a rotating internship at
Riverside Methodist Hospital in
Colwnbus from 1972 to 1973, and his
residency
training
in
Otolaryngology at Ohio State
University Hospital prior to entering
the Navy in 1977.
A member of the American Coun·
cil of Otolaryngology and the
American College of Surgeons, Dr.
Viall was a member of Phi Ala
Sigma, Freshman Undergraduate
Honorary In 1964; Phi Sigma,
Biological Science Honorary in 1967;
and Phi Beta Kappa in 1968. Dr.
Viall received the Senior Medical
Student award in Otolaryngology in
1972.
Dr. VIall is single and also
residing at. Spring Valley Green
Apartments in Gallipolis.

Hartman.
Gal.

. $9.64

pennits under the new law are now
oo sale.
They will be on sale in four
local.iona in each county and the four
places in Meigs County include
Ebersbach's Hardware, the Beacon
Service Station , Gloeckner 's
Restaurant, and the Tuppers Plains
Hardware.
The law requires aU persons
securing a trappmg penni! to also
have a hunting license.
Anyone havil)g any questions can
contact Andy Lyles, Meigs County
Game Protector at 992-J947 or Roy
Howell, Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy,
992.$421. Howell is the Meigs County
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe,
Chester, were in Columbwl where
they visited with Mr. and Mrs. T. K.
Bell, Phoenix, Ariz., who were at the
home ol their daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Joseph.
Bell was a fonner teacher at the
former Chester High School in the
early 19408. Also visiUns with the
group in the afternoon were the
Wolfes' daughters, Marlene Thorn·
pson, Doma Van Meter and Nara

SINOUR

Free Estimates

The Ohio Department of Natural

Resources annOWices that trapping

License Agent.

We have over 2,000 Interior and exterior
Martin - Senour colors to choose trom. So
no matter what your taste or mood. we have
the colors you need. Let our
MARTIN
e xper ts help you choose the
right color s tor your home .

EXTERIOR PAINT SALE
GREAT Ll FE FLAT·LATEX'
$16.60
SAVE $3.32
SALE
GREAT LIFE SATIN GLOSS
SAVE $3.64
$18.20
SALE
ACRYLIC
GLOSS
SAVE $3.67
18.35
SALE
HOME STYLER FLAT LATEX
SAVE $2.72
13.60
SALE
HOME STYLER ALK GLOSS
SAVE $3.02
SALE
15.10
MARTIN SENOUR TRADEMARK
SAVE $2.41
SALE
12.05

Patrolman Kenneth Hoffman, formerly with tbe Pomeroy Police
Department, received a letter of
commendation from the safety
director at Circleville where he i.s
now employed.
Patrolman Hoffman worked as an
undercover agent at the Ted Lewi.s
Park where he was successful in
making several arrests after
nwnerous residential complaints
about various offenders.
Hoffman and wife, Barbara, and
son, Bobby, have . re~~lded in Cir·
· cleville since April. He i.s the son of

Barbara i.s the daughter ol Bess
Hendricks ol Middleport. The Hoff·
mans spent a recent weekend
vislUng families and friends here.

. L--------------------------~-~

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'

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Physicians added to
Holzer Clinic ·staff

GALUPOUS - Hol2er Clinic,
Ltd. has recently amounced the ad·
dillon of two new physicians to its
MILLS ELECTED
staff earlier this month, Dr. Don P.
GALUPOUS - Tom Mills,
Rake!, a Pediatrician and Dr. John
Columbus, son of Tom Mills, retired
H. Viall, an Otolaryngologist (ENT).
Gallipolis insurance agent, has been
A native of CinclnnaU, Dr. Rake!
named Imperial~ (out guard)
joined the clinic after completing his
for the Dramatic Order I&lt;nights of
Pediatric residency at Children's
IChorassan.
Medical Center in Dayton, Ohio. In
Mills was elected to a two-year
1971 he earned a Bachelor of Science
tenn. He and his father just retur- degree in Natural Sciences from
ned from Roanoke, Va. where the
xavier University in CinciMati and
organization held its · bi..amual
his Medical Degree from the Universession.
sity of Cincinnati Medical School in
1975. He subsequently completed a
rotating internship at Miami Valley
Hospital and Children's Medical
CRUISE SCHEDULE
Center in 1971i-76 prior to entering his
CHANGE
residency training also In 1976.
GALIJPOUS - THe Gateway
A member of the American
River Belle, 400 pas8enger ster- Medical Association and an
nwheeler from Pittsburgh, has . Associate member of the American
altered its cruise schedule according College of Physicians, Dr. Rake! serto a fleet official, who made the an· ved as chief resident in Pediatrics at
nouncement Saturday.
Children's Medical Center and was a
The captain's DiMer Dance
junior clinical instructor in
Cruise and the Gallipolis to Pediatrics at Wright State Univer·
Charlestoo Cruise will sail as sity School of Medicine also In
previously scheduled on September Dayton. Dr. Rake!, and his wife,
1 and 2 respectively. However, there , Joyce, are residing at Spring Valley
i.s now scheduled a Lock and Dam Green Apartments in Galliwlis.
Cruise through the Gallipolis Locks.
Sailing from 2 p.m. to 4:30p.m. the
cruise costs $3.5Qfor adults, $2.75 for
children 12 years and under.
Also sailing as previously an·
nounced will be the Early Bird Sight·
seeing Cruise on Monday, September 17. It saUs from 10 a.m. to
noon and costs $2.25 per person.
Cruises are scheduled fOI' nearby
Point Pleasant on both September 16
and Sunday, September 17 from the
old hn'1' .s. . . . . . Kaftllwba
River.
Gallipolis Cruises board one.Jialf
hour before scheduled salling times .
at Riverside Park. For tickets and
rservaticins, phone (412) 391·2382. Or
write : Galllpolis Excursions,
Gateway Clipper -Fleet, One Wood
Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15%22. Be sure
to enclose a self-addressed, stamped
enveloped with payment. Please
specify cruise.

Wiseman, Harrisonville, has the
highest praise for her parents for the
patience, courage, IQve and religion
that they have had in their lives as
well as the overflow of these charac·
teristics onto others. Mr. and Mrs.
Starkeys' ~r daughter was the
late Wanda Jones.

JOHN H. VIALL, M.D.

DONALD P. RAKEL, M.D.

Now who turned on that rain
machine? So- you just keep smiling
in the rain -singin'too, of course.

work.
Their only living daughter~ Wilda

This memorial shows husband and wife looking into the
sunset. They have precious memories of their lives
tQ9ether. this monument is 60 inches long, 29 inches
high and Is of the everlastingly guaranteed granite from
a quarry owned by Rock of Ages Corporation, Barre,
Vermont.

I
I

Of the Bend

I

L--~~~~~~~_j

Sales • Rentals

•••11••1 lla•ll...
Spring Valley Plaza
Phone 446-2206
.,
~
Gallipolis, Ohio ,

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·~~~

lift•

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~

�A~-The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sundav, )\ u ~ .

:re. 1979

Peeps.

• •

A Gallipolis Diary

Court news. • •
GAL!.JPOLJS - Twelve cases
were tenninated and two were con·
tinued in Gallipolis Mwliciapl Court
Friday.
Jack L. Stegall, 36, Gallipolis,
charged with DWI, was fined $300,
placed on six months probation and
had his jail sentence suspended.
James W. Wilford, 33, Rio Grande,
also charged with DWI, was fined
$300, placed on six months probation
and had his license suspended for six
months.
Michael G. Lockhart, 35, Coolville,
charged with DWI, had his jail sen·
tence suspended, was placed on
probation for one year and had his
license suspended for one year.
Patrick A. llarrls, 25, Gallipolis,
charged with fleeing an offlcer, was
fined $75 and placed on probation for
one year. Also charged with
marijuana, Harris had his case con·
tinued upon request of the state.
Lydon M. Montgomery, )8, Crown
City, charged with failure to
with a distress flag flying: sad. The
Gallipolis people made up a $100
fund to help the suffering. Feb. 21,
1884-The river is falllng (ast.
JOHN SHOEMAKER of Mill
Creek has the philosophy that if you
can't do something for somebody
while he's living you certainly can't
when he's dead and gone.

GREEN BERET SGT. LESLIE L. BRUCKER, JR.
BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLlPOIJS-When the Times·
Sentinel commits a typographical
error, it's a simple matter to rerun
the name the n~xt Sunday correctly.
But when a bronze plaque does it,
how do you make a correction?
The plaque on the wall of Ina Belle
Sibley's entrance to the Gallia County courthouse lists the names of men
who died in action in America's recent wars. For Vietnapl, there's
"Bruche, Leslie L." There's the typo
in immortal metal! It should be
Brucker, 29-year-old son of the
Times-Sentinel's maintenance
superintendent, and his tragic an.niversary was just yesterday.
Eleven years ago.
St. Sgt. Leslie Lawrence Brucker
Jr., was killed by gunshot during ~
firelight at 9:10a.m. Aug. 25, 1968 at
Pleiku in the northern half of what
was South Vietnam. He was on
patrol duty at the time, though a
_paratrooper ,since March 29, 1965.
Young Leslie was a Green Beret
-with Detachment A of Company B
'23lh'i Special Forces Group.
This war hero was born in Gallia
COunty. He was born Jan. 13, 1939, in
Clay Twp., to Katherin Wise
Brucker of Circleville and Leslie
Lawrence Brucker of Gallipolis.
Leslie, Jr ., was graduated from
Circleville High School in 1957, attended Ohio State University for two
years, and was in the Ohio National
Guard.
. His brother Michael was serving
10 the Navy (on an atomic submarine) when Leslie was killed.

nailed a board water mark to the big
hickory tree at the creek. The
Thompson landed in our cornfield to
let Will's brother Charles off. Feb.
23, 1883-The Thompson let Momma
and my little girls off at our landing,
then went on to Crown City and sank.
Charles' horse threw him into the
creek. Feb. 8, 1884-The river is high
again; today at 4 o'clock it reached
the high water mark of Feb. 15, 1883.
We took the children up on Newsom
Hill to 5ee how awful the river was.
Could see nothing but water. It was
'way back to the West Vlrginla hills.
We could see houses, barns, corn
cribs, and everything else floating
down the river. 'Tis simply awful!
Feb. 9, 1884-lt is still raining. The
river is still rising. It is ·up on a level
with our barn lot. It is terrible to
think how many people must suffer
the destruction. Sunday, Feb. 10,
1884-The river rose 2ll inches last
night and still is rising. The high
water and destruction are all folk
are talking about. Will had to move
the horses from the lower stalls.
~me of the Crown City people had
to leave their homes. There will be
no mail by rail or boat, so we are
isolated. Feb. 12, 1884-The river
began to fall, only two inches. Will
caught a corn crib from the bank.
Feb. 13, 1884-The river fell 30 inches
last night. Sixteen houses lodged in
the drift below Crown City. The IJ1811
boat will run soon, I hope, and we
will hear from relatives along the
river. Feb. 17, 1884-The river falls
slowly. We can see the top of the old
tree trunk in the bottom. The mail
boat B. T. Enos made her first trip
yesterday. The Nora Belle was
chartered to carry provisions to the
suffering people. She passed here

GRANDMA GWOOI:&gt;'S diary :
Feb. 15, 1883-The river seems to be
on a stand at 66 feet four inches. Will

A·7-:-The Sunday Times.&amp;ntinel, Sonday, Aug. 26,1979

TOM FOSTER, small tJwn boy
who made good at railroading, is
taking a big jump clear across the
continenent - from Arlington, va.,
to Sn Francisco.
F. L. DICKEY got out of the
Veterans Hospital Aug. 10 and has a
new address: 801 West Idlewild
Ave., Tampa, Fla. 33604.
MARGARET PRICE is the only
one to call our attention to a
Gallipolitan's representation in the
July Reader's Digest. It's in the article, "The Tongues of Dying Men,"
by Thomas D. Bedell, starting on
Page 122. Near the top of Page 125 it
reads: "Wives were frequent recipients of last words. Columnist 0 . 0.
Mcintyre asked his wife, 'Will you
please turn this way? I like to look at
your face.'" That's been printed in
this paper several titnes since 1938
but his wife Maybelle, 95, has resid:
ed in the mansion on State St. for
several years.

Weekly Wall Street

register, pleaded guilty and was
fined $41).
Charged with no operator's licen·
,se, Roger L. Oldaker, 21, Gallipolis,
had his case continued. Hennan H.
Wright, 49, Vinton, charged with
speeding, entered a not guilty plea
and had his case continued.
Gerald W. Delozier, 41, Columbus,
charged with parking in a no
parking zone, was fined $25. Janice
C. Luman, 47, Gallipolis, charged
with failure to keep assured distance, pleaded guilty and was fined $30.
Harold B. Pennington, 46,
Albemarle, N. C., charged with
failure to stop at a grade crossing,
pleaded guilty and was fined $40.
Fined $35 for open container was
David B. Merry, 20, Bidwell.
Eleven cases were terminated and
three were continued in Gallipolis
Municipal Co.urt Thursday.
Harold F. Harmon, 30, Gallipolis,
charged with DWI, was fined $300,
placed on six months. probation and
had his license suspended for six
moniJis.

SAi.Es ASSOCIATES of Toney Realty Co., Becky Lane, right, and
Vickie Hauldren received awards from The Gallery of Homes for the
unique distinction of residential real estate sales in the period of one year
19711-1979, presented to them by their Brloker, William D. Toney, therefore
awarded membership in this select group &lt;i su~ssful sales people.

William A. Jenkins named outstanding senior citizen

Beatrice I. Springer, 43,
Gallipolis, chargl!ll with DWI, was
also fined $300, placed on six months
probation and had her license
COLUMBUs-William A. Jenkins,
suspended for six moniJis.
vice president of the Area Agency
Originally charged with DWI,
for the Aging District 7, Friday
Merrill A. Nibert, 41, Northup, had · received a plaque, a framed cita·
the charge reduced to reckless
lion, and a Senate resolution com·
operation and was fined $100. James
mending hitn as Gallia County 's
A. Bloomer, 36, Crown City, also
outstanding senior citizen during a
charged with DWI, had the charge
ceremony in the new $2.6 million
reduced to left of center and was
Martin Janis senior centerat the
fined $15 and costs and ordered to
Ohio State Fair.
attend AA meetings.
Jenkins, former president of the
John Rees, Gallipolis, charged
Gallia County Senior Citizens
with possession of tnarijuana was
Center, accepted these things from
fined $75 and sentenced to 30 days in · State Senator Oakley C. Collins
the county jail. Judge James A.
before an audience rl. 500 oldsters.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins were among
Bennett ordered 23 days of Rees '
84 passengers wbo went to Columbus
sentence as having been served.
Larry R. Hartshorn, Gallipolis,
charged wiiJI open container, was
found not guilty and his case
dismissed.
Wade S. McCain, • 25, Jackson,
charged with expired operator's
license, entered a guilty plea and
had his case continued . Robert D.
Collins, 19, Gallipolis, charged with
no operator's license, was placed on
probation for a year.
Melvin B. rreeman , Jr., 18,
Cheshire, was fined a total of $200 for
charges of driving under suspension,
reckless operation, and fleeing a
police officer.
1

on two chartered Greyhound buses
Friday.
They included Ethel Robinson's
Olde Tyme chorus which entertained with a comedy presentation
featuring Dewey Walker,' F.dlth
Gilkey, and Mary Walker. ~dith
Gilkey and Florence McDaniel daneed; TOOl Ware sang a solo. Frank
Claytor was heard in a colo and also
in a duet with Walter Neal, A trio
was Vilma Pikkoja, Ethel Robinson,
and Ruth Wroblewski.
NextappearanceoftheOideTyme
chorus will be Sept. 23 at the Addison
Free WIU Baptist Church.

Back to School Sale

travel

/ Week's business

rate rises favorably ao far, but I
think that if the increaaea begin to
have ar. effect on business, the
market will be adversely affected,"
Zinder said.
Some analyst&amp; feel ·the dolcrums
will be. replaced by a stock ..-Ice
surge. "The amount of money that
. wants to get in II perlliltent,"
Wachtel !iBid. ''The bull market, this
summer rally, is going to cmtinue
because of internal c:lynamics, no
matter what the ne111s Ia."
· "When the market moves into a
so-called holding period, that's the
best kind of action," he said. "It
means nobody wanta to let go.''
MD I ER RELEASED

MEIGS COUNTY
FAIR POLL RESULTS
InflAtion, energy, and unem·
ployment, were llated in that order
88 the national las)ll!ll of ~test
concern to Mei&amp;J County fair]jGen
accorVing to a poll conducted by loth
District Coogressman Clarellce E.
Miller during the Meiel County fair.
In response to specific questlona
concerning our nation'• · energy
situation, fairgoers lllnJn8ly (80 per·
cent), endoned the creation rl. a
federal ·loan program to stimulate
the development rl. synthetic fuela
while laying principal blame for the
energy crls1IJ on the bacll ol the oil
companies and the OPEC Nations.
In the area rl. defenae and foreign
policy, 89 percent ol the poll resPon·
dents opposed ratification rl. the
Strategic Armll Umilatlon Treaty
(SALT D) 88 negotiated by tbe
. President, while eo percent oppoeed
recognition ol the new government
in Ilhode8la and the llftlng rl.
econcmlc aanctlona againlt the
African nation.
On the economic front, 112 percent
rl. those re.ponding to Miller's poll
favored a conatltutlonal amendment
requiring a bmnced federal blldget.
In rating President c.rter•a Job
perfOI'IIli!ICe, 14 percent of !11011!
polled gave him good to euellert
m8rb wblle '19 percent judges hi.o
work fair to poor. The remaining 7
percent had no opinion.
Coilgl'esl wu rated good to ex·
cellent by 16 percent. Elghty.four
pen:ent rated ita performance fair to
poor.

VJSITQRII
POMEROY"-Mr. and Mn. Ivan
J...oftil, S.vqe, Mlm., 111111 cblldren,
Shawn and Katie, are here for a two
week visit with her parenla, Mr. and
Mn. Walter Kennedy.
Studies of moon and earth rocks
have revealed Ulat the two bodies
were both formed about 4.6 billion
. years ago in about the same part ot
Ule solar system.

This Week's Special
Good Aug. 20 thru Aug. 24

SABATIER CHEF KNIVES

25% OFF

SAVE
UPTO

KllatEN GADGETS

50% OFF

Peddler's Pantry

IT COSTS
NO MORE,
TO USE
THE BEST!
These

NEW YORK (AP) - August
traditlcnally ia a dull month on Wall
Street, 81 trading volume drops to
low leve!J whUe tra~rs play on the
beach rather than on Ule stock .
exchange floor.
But this August has been
SOOlewhat different. While volume
has been uncharacterlatically !risk,
Ule activity hu signified Utile.
· In Ule past week, f~r eDI!Iple
daily New York Stock Exchang~
volume averaged 35.61 million
shares, unU&amp;uaUy high for Ulis time
of year. But the market's net
movement for ihe week was
negllglb1e.
The Dow Jones average showed a
net decline of 3.16 to Ml.20 In the
week, the NYSE composite index of
its more than 1,500 llated common
stocb role .:M to 61.94 and the
American Stock Exchange's market
value indelt Watl up 5.24 to 216.24. ·
Analysts said the week's mixed
results repreeented a holding action
lUter four straight weeks of increase
Ulat drove the Dow average up from
the 825 level.
And they noted that the market
held ita III'OIIld In ~~plte of a great
deal of bad news - riBing Interest
rates, a reccrd gold price, continued
bad econcmic news and j&gt;roblenur in
Iran - illdicatlng that there was
underlying ltrength.
The metket "ahrugs off bad
news," aald Robert Stovall of Dean
Witter Reynolds .
"When you try to equate news to
the market over the last three
monthl,you'retalltlng about (a Dow
level of) SUO, not 800," llllid Larry
Wahtel, an analyst at Bache Halaey
Stuart Shlekll.
But tlie news bu led to · aome
cmfualon in the marlriet, resulting in
the heiVy volwne and minimal
movement, analy., 181d. WhUe
!IOille invelt«llre 1J10Vin8 out of the
market because of the ne'l!a
backgroUPd, others, llllelllng good
deal.a, are moving in.
"There's been a lot of inatitutional
action," aid Newton Zlnder, an
anal)'ll at E.F. HUUCJI . "Some
inltitutlona have talrien advlllt§8e of
the Jtrensth to lighten _., on their ·
ooldinga, others have been in looking
f« bargalna...
The halt of the market'sfour-week
ucent II aetn u an end to the socalled "Volcker rally," the positive
responae to the lppointment of Paiil
Volcker aa Federal Raerve
chalnnan. "The Volclrier rally ia
!lho'l!lnc obvlolll qrw Of fatigue and
overatenllon," aald SlovaD.
Zlnder said that while the Initial
reaction to Volcker wu favorable
becauae it '1!11 felt he'd be a strong
inflatlcn.flglter and defender of the
oou. ttrough increued Interest
rates,
that
pleaiure
'I! I I
replacedwith aniiety on the stock
market that rates coukl go too high.
The market "greeted the interest

State &amp;Third

that moderate trend.
NEW YORK (AP) - McDonald's
"Thanks to a leveling off in Ule
much publicized move to give a
retail
trice of meal, which accounts
nickel lreak on ita halnbutgers and
foc
25
cents of the average food
cheeaeburgers, quickly followed by
dollar,
food
prices in the last half of
a price cut at the ll!laller Roy
1979
should
increase at only about
Rogers fut.(ood chain, may not
half
Ule
13
percent
annual rate of Ule
signal a fullacale burger war.
first
six
months
of
the year," said a
Burger King, for inltance, baa no
recent
repoct
published
by Chase
plans to lollow suit. "We lltW have
the 111011 ci.t.etlclent luunburger · Manhattan Bank. .
Tommy Beale, economist for
on the market," aaya 11polrieaman
Cattle-Fax, the marketing arm of
Paul Reinhart, arguing that
the National Cattlemen Association,
alllsumer8 wiiJ 1t111 go for a bigger
a1ao sees sljlble beef price for the
burger and "a price-value"
next several months. But he thinks
relatlonS!Ip.
the respite may be brief and that
Still, the price cuts anmllleed this
meat prices will again climb next
put week llllllllrate an encowaglng
year.
development on the lnfliltlon fi'OIIt
Beale cites seasonal factors as a
already sliowtng up at grocery
milj&lt;r reason for Ule recent easing
storea. While overall consumer
of beef prices. A increase in beef
prices have continued to rllie
supplies, coupled with slower
atdoublH!glt levela, food prlcee Ire
dei!Wld conunonly occurs in hot
riling at a much slower level.
summer months, he says, In
r.teat prices have actually
addition, pork and poultry prices
declined in ~nt weelu.
have been winning away some
The
National
Cattlemen
cmswners 'l!ith the net effect. that
Aliaociatlon 's survey of retail beef
beef supplies have not been as tight
prices llhowed, f~r lnatance, that the
recently and the price squeeze not
price of a pound of hamburger feU
focceful .
from a high of .1.82 in May to about
But the looger-tenn problem of
$1.46 currmtly, on a nationwide
!lhort supplies of beef as cattlemen
'average bula.
rebuild stocks from a sharp cutback
The Department of Agriculture's
and
faUing prices several years ago
IIII'Vey on all cuta of beef abo'l! a
ltill
will
continue next year although
8lml1ar trend, from about f2.44 a
the
price
squeeze may not be ao
powad ill mid-May to P-25 a pound at
sharp.
the beginning ollhli month.
Beale predicts that overall beef
Food prlcea in general, which
prices
will increase about 10 to 12
have been riling at doublHiglt
percent
in 1980, compared to more
leve!J Iince last fall, are alio on a
than
20
percent
in 1979 and 197a.
slowing trend . The Labor
Department repcirted thil past week
Some economista see renewed
that whUe overall COIIBUI!Ier trices
pressure on food inflation
roae 1percent from June to July, the
developing in other area.s. Raymond
component 'ldllclt measures food
Daniel, in a repoct .Ia- Chase
and beverage l)l'lc• lncreued ju.&amp;t
Econometric Associates, points to
0.1 percent, Ita amallelt rile in a
increases in grain priCes as a
year.
potential ..-oblem area.
For the next few months
Thole will begin to have some
econorru.-. expect a continuation of
!Ufect on bread and bakery products
within a few months. But since only
· about 4 centa of a 40-cent loaf of
!read re..-eaents wheat costs, he
AUTO TAG
says the biggest impact will come
CIIOICEB AVAILABLE ,
later when farmers find that higher
GAIJJPOUS - The AuiC«Jllll;le grain prices for livesiock feed cut
Club rl. Southern Ohio, in cbecklng at
into profit&amp;. That may cause sharp
the Bureau rl. Motor Vehicles, bu cutbacks in hog and poultry
found field reeerve 11cen1e platea product len, and .their prices may
may ltill be available to Oblo rile.
motorilta.
StiU, between Ule farm cycle and
The reptrv ol motor vehicles the supermarket and restaurant are
advlles tiM* per80III wiahlng to a variety of trice stepe which make
keep their ~ llcetlle plaie long-range projectlcns difficult.
mgnber, willcb they received from
·Burger King spokesman Reinhart
the local deputy retliltrar. abould 1111)'1, for ~"'"· "Our total food
8llllmlt a w1tua ,...,.. to lbe COlla .a re well under half the costs of
Bureau of Mol« Vebll:lel by Sep- doing business.
Labor
is
tember1.
approaching food aa the single
A pbatollatll: CGpf of tbe CIIITellt Jars est piece of overall costs."
vehicle reglltratlon card lbould ac·
· The Food Marketing Industry
complny the reqllelt, but 110 money blames much of the food ..-lee BPiral
llhould be aent at tbla time.
m relentless cost increases in labor,
t1lil
tnrm tbe rec~~~rar fuel and utilities - which have
applies to field reeerve llcenle raised costa at every link in the food
platea only. It cloel not include tbe chain, from transportation to
vanity plalel ..- tbe Initial J'elerve checkout at grocery stores.
leries obtained dlndly from tbe
In other business developments
Bureau.
Ibis past week:
In put yeara the field reserve
-U.S. auto companies reported
sy11em, 'l!blch _. been very lhe first improvement in sales since
pop1!er with Oblo moton.ts, made It March, after offering discounts and
]lOIIible foe' an indlviUI to keep the
same llcena plate each time be pur·
chued plalel.
With tbe I.S-mcdh staggered
vehicle regiltratlon system begin"What~
ning in January 1.,, .local deputy
are~
res1atrars wW 110 lqer be able to

dlredioa

H0111!Yef, lep.latlon II 110'1! under
atudy ill the Ohio c.-a~ Allembly
which develo!ll a metbod for reaer·
vlng U.. platea at tbe Bureau ol
Motor Vehicles. Tllepi"CCIl08edfeef..reservtnc I plate II tJO in addition to
the current alate and local
reglatration fees.
In order to put the new system into
effect, the Bureau llllllt have all
requeltl by September 1.
If and when the leglalatlon Ia
p8Sied later thla year. tbe Bureau
wW provide a formal application to
all wbo have made their requeata by
September 1. All requires f - wiiJ
be paid with the flll'l!lai appllcatim.
Mall reqllll8tl and reglatratlon
copy to: The Oblo Bureau rl. Motor
Vehicles, AttentiGII : MVVPF, P. 0 .
Bolli 111621, Columbus, Ohio 43318.

Gallipolis, Ohio

counselors

cess of the Gallipolis AAA
t ravel agency . If yc;u

whether

for

business or for pleasure, be
sure to call one of our
AAA travel eJCperts.

ONE-STOP TRAVEL SHOP
eAAA membership not
required - open to area
residents ,
'
• On the spot ticketing for
international
and
domestic flights .
• Hotel and Car Reserva·
lions.

Serving the

Kimball Console Pianos

• Thomas Cook, Travelers
Checks.
• Quality
Tours
and
Cruises
eAAA Escorted Tours
and Cruises.
• AAA quality service at
no extra charge.

Commun~y

. •

Regular Price $169500

.00

Second &amp; Court Street

PHONE 446-0699
NO DOWN PAYMENT NECESSARY AND ONLY Sfi.43 PER. WEEK. APR 14.!2

BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC.
Polly oarnbrough

.,.,
.

Corner 3rd &amp; Court St.
.

Phone 446-468.7

.

1'4- Length Sleeves, bodice accented
with mini tucks and the all around
elastic waist complete the new
lnr·~ for f=~ll. Swan Knit Fabric.

YOUR LOVE DESERVES
A KEEPSAKE RING
•''

Bill Eshenaur

If you're shopping , find out

if I can save you money.

'24.50

You can choose from a wide
selection of Keepsake· 14 Kt.
engagement and wedding rings.

From Your White Swan
Distributor

Clark's Jewelry Store
342 Second, Gallipolis, OH.

·--.---~----~----~

I

•

in the reporting period, reported a 19
percent decline in sales. But General
Motors and Ford set sales records
for the period.
~ol~ hit new records in major
bullion markets, rising to $314.62 a
troy ounce in .Zurich Friday and
$313.75 . in Lonoon, Europe's other ·
major bullion market.

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

JOHn$On$

.'
I

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp;SUN. 9 to 9:30 p.m.
VINE STP.En, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE 446·9593

· Prices EffectiVe Sunday, Aug. 26th thru Saturday, Sept. 1st
''We Reserve the Right to

GOLD KIST

lim~

Quantity''

CORN KING
WIENERS

CHICKEN
BREASTS

I

iI
I

t
i

SUPERIORS

WILSON'S PLATTER STYLE

BONELESS TAVERN
WHOLE HAM $
57

BACON

LONGHORN
CHEESE

GOLD KIST

1 LB.

OR HAll

•1••

99e LB.
CHICKEN LEGS

' 69~LB.

LB.

FRESHEST PRODUCE IN TOWN

JONATHAN
APPLES

YEUOW COOKING

ONIONS

I

89~

3 LB. BAG

79¢

3LB, BAG

CRISP CRUNCHY

MICHIGAN
CELERY

CARROTS
POUND·BAG
g~

2

39e

STALK

COKE
TAB OR SPRITE

PRINGLES
POTATO CHIPS

8 16 oz. BTLS.
$'119

•Extta •Country Style

~: a•Orig~g·nal ~

PLUS DEP . ...,JSCOT lAD~

..........__
_ "- MARGARINE ........._,.,.,
~,...._..._ Pound Quarters ~.-..........
BROUGHTON

2 FOR 79 ~H"OLSUM SPEcitL

COTTAGE
CHEESE

SLICED WHITE

oz.$109

3~99~
. R

BREAD

20 OZ. LOAF

24CTN.

Come in. or give me a call.
C. K. Snowden
417 Second Ave.

Phone 446-4290

Gllllpolls, Ohio

IJke a 10011

ndlhbor.

leaahnn
• tt.e:re.

lfAtl fAIM

A

VALLEY BELL

NEW RALSTON
HONEY BRAN

Chocolate Drink
GALLON $ 59
PLASTIC

CEREAL 79~

12 OZ. BOX •

INIUI .. NCI

STATE FARM FIRE
AND CASUALTY COMPANY
Home Otlice: Bloom•nglon. IllinoiS

FALL FASHIONS
IN WHITE UNIFORMS

'

for over 20 Years

'li&amp;w!l
Da11y 9-5:15 p.m.
Sat. 9·12:45 p.m.

insurance' I'm
ue•aUytheir
last stop••!'

p 71131

GALLIPOLIS

LOCAL &amp; WORLD WIDE

for honliowllers

n!lll!rve platea.

are the reasons for the suc-

travel,

I

incentives to lift sagging sales
particularly of big cars . . Industry
reports lor mid-August showed that
sales of the big Ulree automakers
jumped 21 percent in mid-August to
a record for the period, compared
witi\"Wie previous year sales.
Chrysler Corp. which started its
$400 direct-UH!ustomer rebate late

RINSO DETERGENT FACIAL TISSUE
44 OZ. BOX

gge

ge

175 CT. BOX

WISK LIOUID

NABISCO CHIPS AHOY

COOKIES

'!:~!NEf4l499

99~

13 OZ. BAG

COLGATE

PILLSBURY PLUS

TOOTH BRUSH . CAKE MIX

3 ggc

18 OZ. BOX

FOR

69~

---· COUPON----, ----·COUPON~---

COLGATE
I
TOOTH PASTE
10' OFF LABEL7 ~·I
5 OZ. TUBE
, ~

l

~!,ohnson's Mkt. Ex .

pt. 1\

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
2-LB. CAN

$539

~hn's Mkt. Exp. Sept. 1

..,

I

�A~-The Sunday Times.SCntinel, Sunday , Aug. 26, 1979

Press denied access
to murder trial
NORWALK , Ohio (AP ) - The
press is being denied .access to the
list of p.erscms testifying at a closed
pre-trial hearing in Huron County,
but the presiding judge says he
didn't order the closing of the
witness books.
Clerk of Courts Clark Hunter
claimed Friday that Common Pleas
Judge Robert Smith ordered him not
to disclose the .names of those ca)led
to the stand in the hearing on a
murder case . But Smith said later in
the day that the books shot~d be
open and that Hunter must have
misunderstood him.
The hearing on a motion to
suppress evidence against Walter
Dewiel, 19, of Ashland, enters its
sixth day on Saturday.
Doors hav e been locked and
shades drawn at the spectator's
entrance to the main courtroom of
the county courthouse since th e
hearing began Monday .
Dewiel is charged with murder in

J

connection with the shooting death
of C.11fford Hartwig , 23, of Norwalk .
Hartwig was shot to death ea rly on
July t5, apparently as the result of
an argument at a party.
Two Ashland men , Michael Lee
Roseberry, 20, and James Sherman
Ska ggs, 20, were arrested
Wednesday ilfternoon by sheriff's
deputies on charges of failure to
appear in court. T)te only case being
heard in the court is the Dewiel case,
but neither the defense nor county
Prosecutor Richard Hauser would
say whether the two men were
witnesse~ insthe hearing.
At the outset of the hearing, Smith
granted a motion by defense lawyer
George Howells to shut out all
persons except court officials, the
·defendant, attorneys and witnesses
being questioned. The lawyer said
publicity could be prejudicial and
inflammatory toward his client.
Hauser said he took no position on
the motion to close the hearing.

AUGUST 26 THRU SEPTEMBER 1
SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY
BROASTED SUPREME

CHICKEN
SNACK
2 PCS. CHICKEN,

BOX

s

MASHED POTATOES,

GRAVY, ROll
All white or all dark meat additional charge.

Today's education

Mendell E. Beattie
Fonner College Professor
of Education aod
Retired Superintendent
of Schools .
Much has been said and written on
the subject "What is wrong with our
schools, children in the grades and
pupils in our high schools cannot
read, do simple arithmetic or spell."
Some educators blame the parents
and T.V. Parents l&gt;!ame the
teachers, others blame the lack of
discipline in the schools. I would surmise that all of these play a part. l
would like to lay a part of the
problem at the door of the teacher
training institutions. I realize that
this will be a point of controversy.
Many of the departments of
education are so far removed from
reality that the infonnation given to
students leaves them dissillusioned
when they enter the classroom for
the first time. In my opinion the
reason for this sad state of affairs is
that many of the teachers of the
professional courses have never
taught in the public schools. In some
cases they are using texts written by
research persons who have never
taught. The only recommendation
that the colleges have for employing
these professors is that they have a
P.H. Degree. That in itself does not
make a teacher. I am of the opinion
that a person who teaches
professional courses, if called upon,
could go into the dassroom and
demonstrate how it could be done.
He should have been a successful
public school teacher before
teaching professional courses. We
have become the victim of theorists.
A few years ago I attended a
meeting for teachers where the
speaker was from a large univesity.
This professor was talking on the
subject of discipline. The 'YaY to
solve the problem was this. If
student "A" misbehaves you call
him out of the class and say to him
"you want people to like you, don't
you? If you want people to like you,
you won't act like that. " A member
of the audience asked, "what if he
does the same thing again? Answer ·
- "you call him out and say you
remember we talked a bout this
problem last week, now if you want
people to like you, you won't behave
like that. "
A teacher in the audience spoke up
and said, "I have pupils in my class
who would say, 'I don't care if they
like me or not.' what do you do

.•

tb\!n? '' They are coming up witll the

~~

HOpp~
POPOUI

SODA
PAlLOR

e

Uti I!

Phone 446-1611
Second &amp; Olive
Galli polis, Ohio

AUG. 26 THRU SEPT. 1
SUNDAY THRU SATURDAY

FOOTERS
(

"FIXED THE WAY
YOU LIKE 'EM"

Phone 446'\2682
Second &amp; Olive
Gallipolis, Ohio

~~
SODA
PARLOI
.""'""

HOPpe_
POPOUI .

I ATilT

•

idea that you should not punish a
pupil · in front of his peers. Why
should the teacher hesitate to punish
the pupil in front of his peers if he insists on embarrassing the teacher in
front of his peers? The reasoning is
that you don't wish to inhibit him as
you might have an adverse effect on
his personality. Many· of our young
teachers do not say to the pupil •·you
must do your assignment." Don't
just say "I will give you an F." Take
some means to have him do it. He
may not do it well, but once he understands that he has it to do he may
become interested in doing it better.
We are told not to assign memory
work , that it has no value in the learning process. I do not agree with this
assumption. It will at least teach or
help the student to concentrate. We
no longer tell our young math
students to memorize the tables.
Why? They will encounter them
every day of their adult life.
Many of our college students are
not getting a good basic education.
One reason for this is that the
classes are too large. Classes are
taught by T.V.; also classes are
taught by student assistants who are
not equipped to do the job. They get
their position because they are the
fair haired man or woman of the
head of the department.
A young teacher or any teacher
should be in command of his or her
classroom; if this is not the case
there caMot be a learning situation.
There are many young teachers who
come into the teaching profession
with the impression that if students
wish to learn they will teach them;
those that show a lack of interest are
neglected. Teachers must be interested in all their students. Some
will do well. These will do ·well in
spite of the teacher. What you do
with the lower sixty-tiix percent wiU
tell you what kind of a teacher you
are.
The sending of a student to the
principal's office should be a last
resort. The teacher who caMot
maintain an academic atmosphere
should not be there. The argument
let Johnnie do his thing just won't
work . When you walk into that
classroom the first day you must be
in command. The principal's office
in many cases is not being used to its
fullest capacity. II should not just be
a place of punishment but also a
place where any student can go to
discuss personal matters. A student
should also be able to go to a teacher
to discuss his or her problem. ·
Parents should learn to accept the
school as "Loco Parentis." That is,
the school takes the place of the
. parents during schooL,hours. Too often parents with little knowledge
about their son's or daughter's at.
titude in school, attempt to coerce
the teacher or principal.

Professors of education go on
binges. Many of the theories they
espou ~e
have been given to
homogenous groups and not on the
average group you find in the
average classroom. A few years ago
we tried sight .reading, it was supposed to solve the problem. But we
have returned to phonics. Then we
went to "New Math," we have not
solved the math problem.
Now we have gone on a testing
binge. In many cases the only ones
to have profited have been the
authors and the companies that
publish them. Several years ago
when I was coMected w\th a college
in the state of Ohio, they gave the
Ohio State Psychological Test to all
incoming freshmen. Two of the incoming group's score was so low
that there was a question of their admittance, it was decided to get
another test and administer it to
them. Both passed with high scores.
Yes, I believe in research. Yes, I
believe in using the information
gained. Yes, our coUeges and
universities should engage in research. But let those who have taught in
our public schools teach our
teachers. Eliminate from the
professional eourses those who have
had no public school experience, and
could not instruct a class if someone
stole the text. We do some funny
things in education. The other day I
was watching T.V. and it was announced that a supervisor ri
desegregation was appointed in a
city in Ohio. There · was no
suggestion among his qualifications,
work in a system that had been

Here they are learning a vocation so . people to become responsible
citizens. And one way to assist them
that they fit int!J the main stream of
is for those of us who are charged
society .
with their education to be responProvision is made for our
educational mentally retarded, to sible; an :1 to take a personal vow "I
assess them to fit into the main will do my best to teach all mmy
stream. The education o.f our young pupils regardless of race, color or
people is of prime importance. creed or economic status to the best
Education should aid a person to live of my abllisy so that they will
most, and serve best. Let aU people become a vital part of our SQCial orwork to that end: to aid our young der ."

B·l- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday,Aug. 26, 19'11'

B

Old French City has flair for furniture fare
By Sallyanne Holtz
GALLIPOUS - "George, now
that I think of It, don't )'ou think that
chair would look much better over
there?''
So quoth the stereotyped
housewife to her harried, slightly

NAMES

Personalized iewelry
you can wear anywhere .

overweight and puffing husband after he's moved the lillme chair for
the fifteenth tlme in the last halfhour.
"Or maybe even over there ... now
let 's see '... "
Poor George. His dilemma may or
may not be somewhat exaggerated,

Let us make up a beautrfut Neck Name wrth
the name. wordso r ~ett ers that mean the most to you.
Avarla ble rn Steri!Qg Srlver. Gold Plate. 1OK or 14K Gold.
FromSOO 00.

DERIFIELD JEWELRY

Gallipofi~.

417 Second Ave.

but a wife's or single woman 's or
man's for that matter - relish for
redesigning his habitat every sd often to keep f~Ym getting bored with
it certainly isn't.
And no small wonder. In a world of
the 9 a.m.-5 p.m. workaday week,
same ol!j job, same old people for the

•

0.

"Across from the Theater"

desegr~gated.

Another problem or discipline is
the attitude of the coUrts. One
almost comes to the conclusion after
seeing some of the court decisions
that the administrators and teachers
have no rights, only the pupils.
To add to the seriousness of this
problem is the gulf that has
developed between the teHching
staff and those who administer the
schools. Over the past decade the
teacher organizations have
developed the attitude "we want to
run the schools." !'lo fair administrator will deny that teachers
must receive a fair and equitable
salary. But what about the districts
that do not have the funds to meet all
the demands of the organization? In
some cases they are driving the
district to the verge of bankruptcy.
Administrators at the request of the
teachers should give an honest accounting of the monies available. No
administrator or board of education
should ask its clerk to sign vouchers
when the money is not available. Administrators should be honest with
the teachers and the teachers should
be fair to the administration.
Perhaps we should adopt a system
used in some states. There is a state
salary schedule. Every two weeks
the teacher gets a state voucher. No
district can pay more than the state
salary schedule. The present attitude of teachers, boards of
education are issuing one year contracts. It is the board of education
and the administration that decide
who is to teach in the system.
With.all this struggle between the
administration and teachers, who is
getting hurt? TilE STUDENTS !! !
Teachers are being paid to teach,
and the administrators to operate
the system.
Administrators must decide who
they will recommend for employment or re-employment to the
board of education. U the board
decides not to accept the recommendation of the administrators
they should be looking for new ones.
Teachers have a tendency to discuss
administration and administration
policy before students.
We have been over some of our
problems in public education, now
let's look at some of the brighter. We
are providing vocational training for
our young people, who are not interested in college prep courses.

EMPIRE FURNITIJRE - ''Showing a classic in

78 Sc•·it·s

modem design, this round, luxurious bed is Indicative

shown.

them feel that way."
Finally veering off Second Avenue
and onto Third (I was getting In a
rut), I entered Larry's Wayside Fur- · .
niture, whose proprietors were kind
enough to rearrange their entire
window display so I could take a picture 'without going backward
through the plate glaas window which, needless to say, I appreciated.
While I was there, a kindly employee, whose name I failed to get,
told me their best sellers were
claasic designs, and that theY deal
more in whole sets of furniture
rather than in uidlvidual pieces.
"We try to please.'' this friendly
young man smiled; "sometimes
people want our advice; smretimes
they don't. We do whatever we can
do in order to aid a cUBtomer'll
choice and selections ... No two
people want the same thing."
WeU, after a brief, but boWitiful,
survey of room designing In our Old
French City -and we are, I believe,
indicative of the rest ri America it's obvious that Ameli cans prefer
their own styles ... and Early
American plays the lead in most furniture choices. ' And as. moat
everyone knows, Early American is .
beautiful, heavy,long-lasting fare ••.
Indeed, POOR, POOR GEORGE!
He may be moving Mljrtha 's furniture for a long, long time!

Photos by
S'allyanne Holtz,
Kevin Kelly,
Larry Ewing

CUT28% t:UT28%

*3595 nised while84495
AR 79· 13

AR 78·13
whitewall

was $49.95

letter
.
was U2 .95

Plus $0.CKI F.,dentl E*nse Tax
C hoose sta nd a rd 7H ser ies whi tewall or wide
70 series with r~i s onl - white - o u tl in e letters .
Both have 2 steel IJc lts a nd 2 r11dial pli es.

'40FF
maintenance-free
Sears "48" battery

with lr11de -i n
~1u l nle n anct• - frce
m&lt;'u n ~

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broken spring on your sofa can be a · is big, 1 suppose, because you can
bit of a pain in the derierr - in mor.e get it in such an assortment and
ways than one.
combination of colors. It can be matHaving embarked on a tour of a ched to any decor."
sampling of the furniture stores in
He went on to note that his three
Gallipolis, I decided to find out what largest sellers are living room
kind of furniture George was lifting suites, mattresses and dining room
these days .
suites, in that order.
At Empire Furniture, newly
Even further up Second brought
remodeled and located in the 800 me to Corbin-Snyder Furniture,
block of Second Avenue, I found a where I talked with Michael Corbin.
And, once again, Early American
wide variety of different styles and
looks that should even perk up poor was ahead in the stretch.
old George. There was everything
"We sell more tum-of~entury­
from modem to· traditional, from pieces - like grandmother had heavy oak to the lighter woods.
than we do anything else. We usually
· According to the Senior Meadows, sell entire suites, but sometimes
proprietor of Empire, Early we'll sell an individual piece. People
American seems to be the big seller beying homes come in · and want
in Gallipolis. His customers, he ob- good furniture; things that will hold
served, seem to prefer that style in up for many years. (Author's note :
darker colors, while showing a which translates to mean ''heavy
preference for upholstery in lighter furniture ." Again Poor, poor
George.) Sometimes, people come in
hues.
"Some stores won't carry Early and want to furnish a whole bouse;
American because the store buyers others, just one room. Whatever the
don't care for it; that's a mistake. need, we do our best' 'to acIt's what the public wants. It's commodate it."
Back DOWN Second Avenue (puff,
definitely our biggest seller. We try
to cater to every taste. I won't refuse puff) to where Tope's Furniture is
a style because I don't like it per- located, Tom Tope and Arden Dobsonally. Not everyone feels the same son indicated they felt traditional
way. You can never teU when styles go well in the Old French City,
something is really going to catch which, they added, probably has
something to do with the city's
on. ''
Meadows also noted that heavy heritage.
·'Our strongest style is plain
furniture goes better than its lighter
traditional, with the market
counterpart (poor George!).
A mere few doors up Second dominated by (three guesses! )
Avenue brought me to Rice's Fur- Early American. We're getting very
nituni, whose owner agrees with strong emphasis on " country
Meadows that Early American was casual" designs: people don't need
Gallipolis' best seller. He went on to to be so formal any more."
"People need to be comfortable.
clarify : "We carry a lot of it (Early
American) because it's what our That's why we 're here - to make

Phone 446· 2902

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r

•

�B-Z:- Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, A!Jl! . 26, 1979

Priscilla Dayton weds james Clark

R ev. and Mrs. james Clark ·

GALUPOUS - Priscilla Elaine
Dayton and James Millard Clark
vowed their lives together April 21,
at the First Presbyterian Church in
Gallipolis.
The bride was given in marriage
by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
J. Dayton of Gallipolis.
. The groom's parents are Mr. and
Mrs. Russell M. Clark, Sr. of
,Upland, Ind.
One-half hour of music preceded
the ceremony which began at 7:30
p.m. Rev. Bruce Webster of New
York played several selections on
the organ. .. Merlyn Ross sang
"Beautiful Savior" and Stephanie
Ross sang "Love Is Surrender" and
' 'The New 23rd. " Both Merlyn and
Stephanie were accompanied by
Edie Ross on the organ. Rev. Mark
Stewart from Pennsylvania sang
and accompanied himself on the
piano a song he had written for the
occasion called "Shiniitg Love."
Instead of the traditional wedding
march, the couple chose to have
some of their favorite hymns played
as the wedding party entered. These
hynms consisted of "Praise To The
Lord, The Almighty," "Amazing
Grace, " "For the Beauty of the Earth1" and ''Morning Has Broken. ••
As the bride progressed up the
aisle with her ·father , the groom

.

sang, "You Needed Me" and accompanied himself on the guitar.
The ministers officiating for the
ceremony were Rev. James V.
Frazier, Jr. of Grace United
Methodist Church and Rev. Russell
M. Clark, Jr., brother of the groom.
The traditional wedding vows
were used in the double-ring
ceremony. A special candle lighting
service which was written by the
groom, "Symbolized the love of
Christ being passed on to the son or
daughter as the parents participated
by lighting the candle from the
minister than passing the candle to
the bride and groom," he said.
Together they lit the one candle
symbolizing the love of Christ that
would be shared in them as a
married couple and would be passed
on to their children. A holy communion service was shared by the
whole congregation. Dr. A. Keith
Sheets sang "The Lord's Prayer" as
the couple knelt at the altar. For the
recessional the congregation sang
"Joyful, Joyful, We Adore Thee."
For herweddiing, the bride chose a
full-length dress with a chapel
length train. The dress was white
with a sheer overlay. The neck was
scooped with a three tier ruffle
which formed a cape effect over the
shoulders. The bodice was sprinkled

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with polyester icae flowers which
matched the flowers on the band of
her veil. The train had three rows of
ruffles which matched the ruffles on
the neck. She carried a cascade of
yellow and white flowers on a white
Bible.
The mother of the bride wore a
light yellow polyester full length
dress. This had a blouson effect at
the waist and elbow length sleeves.
The bodice had a. lace insert in the
front. She wore a corsage of yellow
.roses.
The groom's mother chose a
medium green, full-length dress.
The bodice criss-erossed to form a
V-neck. The elbow-length sleeves
were sheer and the empire waistline
tied in the back. She also wore a corsage of yellow roses.
Serving as matron of honor for the
wedding was Mrs. Leland (Becky)
Ours. She wore a yellow full-length
dress of polyester.. The sleeeless
style had a scooped cowl neck. The
dress had an empire waistline which
bordered the flowing accordion pleat
skirt. She carried a floating candle
which adorneed a yellow silk flower
and light., green streamers. The
floating candles were made by the
bride. Becky also wore a gold butterfly stickpin which was given to
her by the bride.
·
Those serving as bridesmaids and
junior bridesmaids wore dresses
identical to that of the matron of
honor. They also wore stickpins and
carried floating , candles matching
those of the matron of honor.
The groom chose to wear an all
white tuxedo and wore a yellow
rosebud on his lapel.
Serving as best man was the
groom's father, .Russell M. Clark,
Sr. He --:ore a light green tuxedo,
matching that of the .bride 's father.
They both wore yellow carnations as
boutonnieres.
The ushers for the wedding were
Rev. James Caldwell, Rev .
Raymond Lyon, and John Sowers.
The ushers wore tuxedos and carnations that matched those of the
best man.
The acolytes were David Brown
and Mark Danner. The guestbook
registration was handled by Tere1&gt;11
Danner and programs were passed
out by Robin Henderson. r
Those serving at the reception
were Connie Burchett, Tiana
Dayton, Wilma Mullins, and pam
Spencer.
The reception was held at the
Grace United Methodist Church
dining hall following the service.
The couple enjoyed a week on St.
Thomas Island for their honeymoon
in the Virgin Islands.
James Clark is the associate
pastor at Grace United Methodist
Church.
The couple reside at 26 Lower
River Road in Gallipolis.

r--------1
Social Calendar

..
:jlj'':;:::::,ch,:,;;h,:~;:,~:,:;::,,y~;:, ,,,,;;,:;i~:::,,,,,h:/d,,,,h;;;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,·./1

Th~ annual
r~union was

Church.Stevens•Yoho
families were in attendance. Mr. Steven, Milton, W. Va.; · Mr. and
held at Clay Local'
Mrs. Larry Blankenship, Robie,
and Mrs. Nile Nowlin and Sean
Elementary School August 19.
Kari, and Jarni, and Mrs. Jolm
Woodrum, Lesage, W. Va .; Mr. and
The oldest person present was
Mrs. Homer Nowlin, Ona, W. Va. , Smith, Ironton; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Vesta Yoho Rollyson, Ironton, 93 in
and Shelia Welch and Stacy, Hun- Yoho, Kathy, Beth and guest, Jon
December of this year. She is a grantington, W. Va. represented the Ellis Thompson, and Mr. and Mrs. Denddaughter of Jeremiah and Hannan
and Virginia Stevens Nowlin family . ver Yoho, Gallipolis; and Mr. and
Anderson Yoho, and the grandMrs. Charles Jones, Todd and Clay,
Mrs. Hooper Stevens, Ft. Lauder. daughter of Alexander and Frances
dale, Fla.; Mrs. Victor Stevens, El Paso, Tex.
Tucker Church. The youngest
Other Yohos were Vesta Yoho
Chesapeake, and Mr. and Mrs.
present were twin sisters, Keri and
Francis Stevens, Mike, and Kim and Rollyson · and Alice Rollyson Hall,
Jarni Blankenship, 16 weeks of age,
George Cole represented the J. B. Ironton; Mr. and Mrs. Claude A.
of lrpnton, and the great-great - Stevens farnilv .
Yoho, Linda Yoho Cwnmings and
Fifty people represented the Yoho Jeff, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry
greatof!randdaughters of the Jerry
families, of which forty-two could Kelley, Huntington, W. Va.
Yohos and the Alex Churches.
have been registered in the Church
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jones, Todd
or Stevens family , since they are
and Clay, El Paso, Texas, were
descendants of all three families.
recognized as being the . family
traveling the farthest distance. The • They are Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Cazad, Mrs. Clyde Yoho, Sr., HunMelvin L. Church and the Larry
tington, W. Va.; Ernaline Yoho
Blankenship families were
Smith, Kitts Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
recognized as being the largest
Yoho, Mr. and Mrs. David Terry,
Is temporarily closed for
families present.
Chris and Clint, Mr. and Mrs. James
The present officers, Claude A.
relocation at
Smith, Bethany and Travis, and Mr.
Yoho, president, Francis Stevens,
41 Court St.
and Mrs. Lawrence Woodard and
vice president, Denver Yoho,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Bryan Downney, Ona, W. Va.; Mr.
secretary-treasurer, were reelected
and Mrs. Clyde Yoho, Jr., Greg and
for another year in a business
Watch For Grand
Rhonda, Ripley, W. Va.; Patty
meeting that was conducted after a
Opening Sept. 3rd
Collins, Lesage, W. Va .; Mrs.
picnic dinner. Emmett Church, past
George Shy, James Michael and
president, will also serve on the
executive committee.
Music was provided by family
members, Willie Church, Barbara
Thomas, Rick Thomas, Cynthia
Langona, and Dawn Church. The
monotony of clearing the table was
relieved by a sing-along by Mary
Yobo, Mildred Yoho, Helen StevenS
and Kim Cole accompanied by Linda
(:urnmings on the piano.
It is planned to hold the 198J
reunion atthe same location Aug.17.
Forty people representing the
SUPERIORS
Church families. They were Mr. and
Mrs. Emmett Church, Mr: and Mrs.
Cody Boothe, Todd and Brent, !rime
and Imogene Church, Mr. and Mrs.
"LEAN ' NO .WASTE"
Melvin Church, Willie, Stephanie
and Loreda, and guest, Reginia
FULLY COOKED - READY TO EAT
Kingrey, ESR Gallipolis; Frances
LeNoir, Henry Dillon, Kim, Vickie,
and Angie, and Gale Notter, Mark
and Rusty and Terry Moore,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Murray
Church, Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
Don Thomas, Barbara Thomas,
Cynthia Longona, Michael, Bree,
HALF OR
and Elizabeth, Rick Thomas and
Dawn Church, Chshire, of the EdWHOLE
ward Church family; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Church, Proctorville; Edna
HAM
Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Beller and Marie Beaver, Crown
City of the George Church family.
Fourteen people of the Stevens

C&amp;R PAINT
CENTER

TAVERN HAMS

HAM

MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International Order of
Job's Daughters, 7:30 Monday Middleport M11$0nic Temple.
'
TUESDAY
AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY, Racine Posl 602, 6:30 Tuesday dinner at the Meigs IM. Dues are
payable now and may be sent to Mrs.
Julia Norris, Route 2, Racine.
ANNUAL POTLUCK picnic of
Ladies Auxiliary ·of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, 6 :30 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Reva SimmS. All members urged to attend
and take recipes for cookbook being
compiled by group.
REVIVAL Aug. 17 through Sunday, Sept. 2, at House of Prayer and
Praise, Uberty Ave., Pomeroy, with
Bob Schrecengosi, ;~, Cleveland
evangelist, speaking and singing.
Services at 7:30 p.m. nighUy and
public invited.

~portswear
11 nd

we 're readv
witb t!Je J!randest
r.:ul/ection ever.

Desi!{ned b1'

D~von
A/km Green

Shaker Sport
}enie ·Lurie
Kayser
Open Friday Night till 8 p
336 Second Ave.

Gallipolis

'""I"" '

Now Available rh r ough Th e

McqiNNEtS-STANLEY AGENCY, INC.
Nicl&lt; Johnson, Account~nt Executive
45 2 2nt! .fl.vn .
Phonl' 446 ! 761
Gallipolis

0
LAYAWAY YOUR CHOICE FOR 90 DAYS
WITH ·ONLY 20% DOWN. SPECIAL
ORDERS ALSO AVAILABLE AT NO
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lHE ClASSIC CHESTERFIELD IS BACK

SLICES

2%
MILK

Two smart sTyles· to choose from
in an 80% cofton . 20% nylon blend
to keep out those cold w inds this
winter. Colors .are black and
camel and sizes start at 5/ 6.
Reg. S105.00
S84,()()

llfE BASIC All-WEATHER
It's really two coats in one because It
features a beautiful plaid zip-out lining for mild days and with the lining
in, keeps you warm on the coldest
days. Sizes 16 to 24. Rust only.

SALE

SALE _s44.00
WARMTH WITHOUT WEIGKT

Reg. sss.oo

Classic walking length ·coat from
Betty Rose 1979 Collection featuring
100% cotton suede outer shell that
never becomes dated . You'll find
this ever -popular coat in a host of
colors. Sizes 10 -20
Reg. $82.00
·u

69

Reg. S7o.oo

Kathy Clarb

GAU.ON
RICH AND CREAMY

ICE CREAM
~

FLAVORS

SALE s56.00

Wedding plans told

HOLLAND

ASST.

In active outerwear from Betty Rose
for 1979. 100% nylon shell with
polyster lightweight batting for that
great fashion look for the Fail
season .

SALE u::S.50

PLASTIC

Plans have been completed for the Thursday, Aug. 23, at 7 p.m., at the
church wedding of Miss Kathy Chefhlre Baptist Church. The Rev.
Clark. daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. William Uber will officiate.
"
Cl)'(le Clark, Gallipolis, and Douglas
A reception will be held at the churCottrell, soo &lt;I Mr. and Mrs. Marvin ch immediately following the
Cottrell, Addison.
ceremony.
~ wedding will be an event of
~

GATEWAY CUPPEB. FLEET .

PEPSI

or

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RIVER CRUISES ·
SAILING FROM RIVERS! DE PARK

DIET PEPSI

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SAT .. SEPT. 1-lloard S:JO,P.M. eSoll 6 P.M. To 10 P.M.
cruise Includes : •Copt'sllulfel Dinner •Music
•Donclng H Hour Cruise •ONLY S12.95 per person

**************

GALLitOLIS TO CHARLESTON BOAT/BUS TOUR
SUN., SEPT. 2-lloord 7:30 A:M.eSolll A.M. Tol P.M.
Crulselncludts: Cont. Breokfut •Buffet Lunch •Music
•sus Retum to Oolllpolls •ONL Y S1S.9S.per person

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sa vi ngs!

SYRACUSE--Mr. and Mrs. Robert Nina Miller, Portland, and Kelly
Chapman, SyraCUBe, announce the WinebreMer, SyraCUBe.
engagement and forthcoming marBoth Mlas Chapman and her
riage ol their daughter, Bobbl Kay,
fiance are graduates ol Southern
to Perry K. llill, soo of Mr. and Mrs. High School. Miss Chapman Is also a
David Hill, Racille.
graduate of Rio Grande CoUege and
The open chui'Ch wedding will be is employed at the Holzer Medical
an evl!llt ol Saturday, Sept. I, at 1:30 . Cenler u a medical laboratory
p.m. at the Racine Methodist technician. Mr. llill employed at ImOlurch, flacine. Nuptial music will
peria] Electric, Middleport.
be present«~ by Mrs. Marlene
The receptiOII will be held imFiahet'.
.
mediately following the ceremooy at
Attending the couple will be MIJs
the Alnerican legloo hall in Racille.

MONIDRO. SUEDE

SUNDAY"
FEENEY BENNE'IT POST No. 128
American Legion first annual girls '
softball banquet Sunday at 3 p.m. at
post home .
HAZEL CMMUNITY CHURCH,
between Long Bottom and Portland
off Route 124, will hold its annual
homecoming Sunday, ·with an afternoon service beginning at I :30. The
service will feature Dan Hayman and
the Hymntimers, and will have a
special speaker, Dodle Bogard. A dinner will he held at the grounds also.
MARILYN TURNER, opera singer
and classical music teacher in Italy,
will present a public concert at 3 p.m.
Velei'IIIIS Memortal
Monday at the Meigs Junior High
H011pltal
.
School in Middleport. Admission is
POMEROY - The followmg perfree to the concert which will feature - sons ":ere admitted to Veterans
Marilyn singing so~e light music and Memonal ~ospital Friday: Kimseveralfarniliar tunes.
herly Petrie, Pomeroy; Thomas
MISSIONARIES to Korea, Mr. Basin, Long Bottom;. ~ry I?er~n-.
and Mrs. Marshilll Ruth, will speak berger, Pomeroy; Wtlliam Moms,
at the Mt. Union Baptist Church at Pllll_ICroy.
7:30 p.m. Sunday; the public is inDischarged we~ Douglas A.
vited.
Rosenbaum and BenJanun Moore.

For years, yo u've
tiee n and heard
® adve rtisi ng a bout
Allstate Homeowne rs ins\,Jrance.
And now, it's ava i18ble here, at our
agency . But, did you know that if
you r house is 5 yea rs old or less, you
may qualify for All state's "New
House 10 Percent Di scount" on you r
basic premium?
Alh;tute has found it costs less·
to ins ure newer homes, and they're
p ass ing this sav ings on to you .
Give us a ca ll and get in on t he

It's the sa le yo u've bee n waiting for! Those
lovely new coats of the seaso n are at "buy
now" price tags ... in a se lection that's not to
be mi ssed! You ' ll save on th~ latest-look
shapes and styles.. .co l0rs and fabrics!
Tweed texture reefers, slimmer-shaped ...
fleecy wraps in smok y shades... flattering
belteds with newer detailings... they' re al.l
here and more! Come select yo urs.

jWiss Chapman to wed this week

$}9!

Here in Gallia Onmty

Fall

Bobbi Chapman

SUN., SEPT. 16 eSolllng 2 P.M. To4:30 P.M.
•Sail thru the Gallipolis Locks •2'1• Hour Cruise
Snock Baron Boord for Your En(oymont
ADULTS 13.50 · CH1LD $2.75 (12 yrs. &amp; under I

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Mon. -Tuurs.
9 A.M .-9:30P.-M
Fri. &amp; Sat.
9 A.M.-10 P . IV'

Closed
Sunday

SUN., SEPT. 16-iooro o:JG P,M. e$1116 P.M. To 11 P.M).
crulsolnclucles: •Copt's Bullet Dinner •Music Donclng
· •• Hour Cruise •ONLY $12.95 per person

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. MON .,SEPT. 17eBoord9:30A.M.e5aii10A.M. To12Noon
El'f'JOY THE BEAUTY OF THE OHIO IN EARLY AUTUMN
ONLY SUS per person
NOW BOOK1NG DINNER CHARTERS AND SCHOOL CRUISES FOR
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' self·addrttsad envelope. Please specifY cruise, send to

SiLVER BRIDGE iiii!!VISAI!!I!I.
PLAZA

Sunday Hours 1:00 to 6:00

�B-5-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Aug. ~.1979

B-4- The Sunday Times-8entlnel, Sunday, Aug. ~. 1979

~t.t.O"( ~

·"""....,,

Library

•••
"' ~··
.

I

8
~

, ..·! .

.~~~

L

Leuers

Wedding
planned
Sunday

,o,,.
~,on\.t
,,,.,...r

..

{1,~ ;\~

A
R

FA C plans fifteenth
anniversary celebration.

GALUPOUS - Plans have been
completed for the wedding of Terry
L. George, daughter of Jack F.erreU
and . the late Juanita Ferrell,
Gallipolis, to Ray A. Smith (Smitty),
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. Smith, .
Gallipolis.
The wedding will be an event of
Sunday, Aug. ~. at I p.m. at The
ChapeJ·in the W.oods, at Rocky Fork
S(.ate Park, HIUsboro, Ohio.
Rev. Gallagher will officiate.
A reception will be held immediately following the ceremony.

August 21,1979 Legion Auxiliary, l!usiness and
Professional Women, and so on) and
aU of the churcheS will ask me or
JealUle to be their guest speaker so
we can teD tham aU about ABE. (We
'De.arJo,
can teD them about other library and
I hope by now you 'I'll feeling better. bookmobile services, too, of course I've tl&gt;ought of you often and miss but what reaDy "turns us on" these
you. I apologize for not sendlng a get- days is the thought of turning other
weD card ; but by the time I was able people on to learning! (
to shop for one, I figur,ed you were
Please let me know how you are and
probably healthy and would wonder keep In touch. I'm sure I'll enjoy your
whether "I" was sick!
company by mail almost as much as 1
Aggie asked me-to remind you tl)at did In person.
John F. Stahl, a retired mailman,
you still have at least one library book
10,000 miles over Central
trudged
Mfectionately,
America,
Mexico and the United
out - "The Riddle of the Past : How
Ellen BeD. Librarian
States
as
a hobby, according to
Archaeological Detectives Solve
Serving AU of Meigs County
National Geographic.
Prehistoric Puzzles." She suggested
that your realtor might be willing to
drop it off.
I'm a radio star now. Eric Evans
and I do a program caned "Your
Ubraries" on WMPO-AM and FM
every Monday morning from 9:45 to
10. The flrst morning, we messed up
knock-knock joke; the second morning, Eric overslept and missed the
program. (Luckily, Barb Karr was
our guest, so she and I went on alone.).
RETAILSEFFECTIVETHRUSAT.SEPT.l,
Last week and this week went pretty
smothly. I hope it stays that way!
CAMPBELL'S
•• ,.,en, tht n,ht te IIMif
Adult Basic Education classes start
II itltllt ill 111ft H . Mtllt IGif ro 'tftrt.
Met "'P"titlle ftr r-,..,..phic.lto-.of11.
at the libraries the day after Labor
Day. Each library will have a "Learning Center," open from 10 AM to 2
· PM at Middleport and fnm 6 PM to 9
PM at Pomeroy - on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. People who
want to learn to read or read better,
THOIIOfAII
improve their math, or study for the
high school equivalency diploma test
will be able to come in as often as they
want for as many hours as they want
and learn. Lucy Amsbary, Barb Karr,
and Ra!alinda Qualls will help people
learn what they want to know at the
pace they want to go. (A little more
IIIOUGHTON
work on that line and it could he
poetry!) We are all f.lcited about this
new way of giving service.
I am hoplng that aU of the service
organizations (Chamber of Commerce, Lions, Eagles, Rotary,
Clo.
AAUW, American Legion, American
Jo Teschner-Caruzzi
1249 Glerm Avenue
Columbus, OH ~12

Penngfare

REYNOLD'S
WRAP
12" a 2s Ft. aou

38-'

~Z8-'

ICE
CREAM

48-'

BACON
DRESSING

~--otjlol

•'

SAUCE

.••

••

CHUNKLIOHT

TUNA.~:O.

0

Crystal 1h Your Table Wtth•••

M .... OIIAI

STYRO
CUPS

· PAPER
NAPKINS

44'·
I-AN .

CHOCOUTE
PUDDING .:..

Bring
the
Beauty
and
......................................................, ·-.
,I Romance Of Genuine European

RETAILS EFFII;CTIVE THRU SAT., SEPT. 1, 1979

·::·54~
_..

LUNCH
BAGS

GRAPE

'::·JZ'.

~99~

68 e

JELLY

VJSITORS HERE

CHESTER-Mr. !lnd Mn. WJWam
Krackonberger, Mrs. Opal Hollon,
Mrs.. Mary Jane JJempeey anct
dall(lhter, Mrs. Iva Rayburn and
801111, aU of New JtnJey, have ..,em
the past week here visiting Mrs. Opal
HoUon. Weekend callers were Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Parker and famJl.y,
Marietta; Mr. and Mrs. J1111es Hollon
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Rick HoUon
and sons, Parkersburg; Mr; and .Mn.
Jimmy Snow, Spearfish, S. D.; Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Hollon and family
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. E. R.
Hollon, Mrs. Mildred Arnold, Pattr
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Elaon Lcmg and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Eug- Laue
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Long and
ly, Long Bottun.

TC:bellini Pizza ~:g ...... ~~ 5 1.48 Read's Salads •••.•••••• '""u...c.o 58• Unsweetened Kool Aid .. ~":.":',.. 6179•
L!ng r--Q.no Cotton Swabs •....• , ......,
Bondware Paper Plates ... ,,::r:., 11• Ragu Coo...
_,..,, •• .- • ••uu••··
•...... 78&lt;
C1UIM1 htJUIItOIT
•
Jif Peanut Butter •••••••• , ••. "' 78 Sealtest Sour Crecn ......•••.,... 48&lt; Heinz Kosher 0111 Sp••• •• • •. ~· 78•

aa• '

PESCHKE FULLY COOKED SMOKED

'Dduu. 'THOROFARE QUALITY

i

SEMIBONELESS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF
"GREAT FOR THE GRill"
CENTER CUT- BONE-IN

)

Rams

HYGRADE

HotDogs

WHOLE
lS·Ibs.
&amp;OVER

""'
,..'"Port1ons.
" . • • 95c Ham
,..""' Chunks
Ham

Refreshments were served following the meetlng.

DINNIRIILL •fULLY COOKID
IONILII5

Announce birth
ewe steal! •••••• . •.•

Aft

••• ~2.29

FrMI GroiiiHI CluCk .•. s.. ~.•. ~1.79

ARS!Nll

Kolbassi ••••

. ....

InHb.$f.H

AIMOIIts,..4yC.O

eoo•M S...l-8ofteleu

fully

HALF HAMS

:HAMS

~!.69 ~1.99 ~J.J9 ~i.l9
BEEF
PAnYMIX
S-lba. or MORI

lATH

PORK SAUSAGE
u~. 11o11

ARMOUR -tr STAR
HOT DOGS .. ".... •. . • • • • • • • • n ....l"'·5 1.09
HOT DOGS-............ ; ••••...,.1 1.8
JUMIJO BEEF HOT DOGS •••••• ,~.., 5 1.59
DINNER FRANKS ••••••••••• ,.. ..,. 5 2.99

SERVICEMAN NEWS

DINNI.IILL

A•MOUR f&lt;o STA.

GRAND FORKS, N.D. -Sergeant
Roy A. Kiser, nephew of Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Kiser of Route 2, Racine,
recently paiiicipated in Global Shield
79, which involved bomber, tanker,
mi8sile and recormaissance forces,
and ~iated Air Force Reserve
units, wsa the largest and most comprehensive test of SAC forces in more
than 20 years.

WIIIIIIS., TUAS WINIS •••••••• •••• ,... .., 'I.Jt

_..,.,..
SJ89
lulbassy... • •

aPUJIIIIIG
fUNIS ... nus lllf fUNIS .... . .......... ·•·"
ICilOIIIA...... .. .. .. ........... 'l.lt

S:lllfllllnks!::5 1.ft

SUCID 1.U11C11D MEATS ..... ... , • , ••••• ••·.., 'I ...

i.i:b , ••••·"" SJ.99

SMOIID SAIISAGI OIIIII.IASSI..,..;.. •••••••• •· '1.79
St.ICID IACOII . ........... .. . .. . ............ 'IM

Dll.l ••oltl

••

0

•

0

••••••

0

•

0

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

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

U.I.D.A . IMIIt.
PAMIU lla11

IUOAIDALI

IONILIIS

HALF HAMS

WHOLI12to 1s.lb. AVO.

- -STEAK
- - • • • ~~. 51.1!
SWISS

,

faml:

.•

l·lb.
Pkg.

• • • $159
- cmaeu1
Hen Roasts. ••. $179
-

AIMOURII77
IIONIUII

. HAMS

ssG. and Mrs. Gerald E. Sellers are

•

lb.

••
••

CHICKEN

.49•
.......
-·-&amp;I •.
A•MOUIIVerl-VAIIIITY

PORK CHOPS

a..,. -

.•

...
..

:•

•••
•
.•••
•

•
••'
•
••

•
'

.••

_outstanding Features._________-:--_______,:::c"::A:;Nr::E::LL::,E_::PAT~r~E~RN:_
• Genuine European
fine crystal
• Smooth Sheer rims
• Tall, graceful stems

••

••

-••
~

• Five-year warranty against
defec1s i~ materials
or workmanship
• Eldraordinary clarity

.••

• Weighted bases
• Seamless cxiristruetion
• Dishwasher safe
• AttraCtive gift pacl&lt;aging
• Open stock availability

IIG. GIIIG

FRANKS •• ~~:

SAN ANTONIO, Tex. - Ainnan

-

Michael D. Salser, son of Verna M.

IIG-GI

Salser of 752R Roberts St., Sheffield
Lake, Ohio, bas been assigned to
Lowry Air Force Base, Colo., after
completlng Air Force basic training.
During the six weeks at Lackland

BEEF
. $
FRANKS •• ~~

- •. ••u
.,

Fuly CGDked HAM

FRIED
CHICKEN

$179

1-11.

u....

JO
Potatoes..

s•aa
.,:z:z.

-~

...
s
CHEISI. ~ .......

SUPIIIIIF
PAJTIIS

33
Prune Plums ••••.

U.S . NO . IEASTEON
IOUNDWHITI

Air Force Base, here, the ainnan
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special ttainlng In human
relatioos.
In addition, ainnen who complete
basic training earn credits towards
an U80Ciate degree In applied science
through the Community College of the .
AirForce.
·
1be alnnan will now receive
specialized Instruction in the
numitlons and weapons maintenance

-MIARITPUMI

.

IID,Wl)matllla

0e1ee .. . . . . ..

..Ot

79t

IIDII"

;~:it.&amp;;:;;;;;; .. 9:::$1 . . . . ._.

i:'dive, Escarole, Romaine •••

••

.•

••

•w \
~

SAVE

49t
I~.

•
'•

.

i'

C~ ER

FOUR WINE
GLA~SES FOR ONLY

.

,,

99
'* ...

$

.

:

!

.
:
:

I I I I I II I I I I I I I It I II I I I .

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP

cial offer todly. Buy one, two. thrH sets or more and
start bulldlllg your vwry own service of genuine Euro-

.

VenMeltr

.

~

992-2039

or
.

' 992'·5721

•.

••
•
•••
••

.••
•

•••

•••
•

••
••
••
••
•

Mn. MIIIud

,..

!

•

Full Dried end
Silk Flowers
Arriving Deily

.. I 0 • I I

Tnis week only, to intrOduce vou to the beauty and

pean crystal.

New Shipment of

'

charm of Lady VIctoria Fine Crystal Sl-••· ,.. oro

.

''

•
:

~·················~···········
- :

•

···~
. · ' 1...-~---------- ~---------------------------------.J
'

••

I» sent worldwlcJ..
:.
It cosh so 1/tte, yet ,...,-n• to :
much. So stop by our shop today, or
glvo us a call. We'll to. loal&lt;fng ,,...
ward to serving yhou.

offering a set of lour wine glassas at the specta1 lntrc&gt;ducta&lt;y prioe of only $3.1111. Thllt'l $3.00 oil lhe regular
discount price. Stop in and take advantage at ttia spe-

7

:

•••

Thlt summery bunch 11 ture to •
: brfgloton tloo day of any Grandparent :
: ~uose Jt' s a cpnatont reminder that :
: you care.
!
:, The "You'r:•So-G~nd Bunch" con :

SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY OFFER

..

.......

-.

••

stop in and start building your set today. You will soon be the prvud owner of a service of genuine European
crystal that will be treasured by you and your family for generations .

••

.•
...•••
•

:

OVer the coming week s, we will be offering this fine European crystal on a simple, convenient item-a-week
program at savinl!s of over 40%. Each week of the program a set of four place sening glasses. or a tabletop
completer 1tem, will be featured at a special sale price. During non-feature weeks, all items will be available at
their regular prices. All items in lhe Lady Victoria Fine Crystalline are carried in open stock so you can add or
replace pieces long after the promotion has ended.
'

~

field.
.
Airman Salser is a 1979 graduate of
Eastern High School, Reedsville.

•

..••

..•.'

,

Jqt

•
••

•

.A
.
.

..,,t

.

Your table se.t with elegant European oystal st~mware doesn't have to be a mere dream anymore. Because
now for a Hm1ted .t1me only. we are offenng genume Lady Victoria Fine Crystal Stemware ... an elegant French
cryslal that Will bnng the beauty. charm and romance of the Old World to your table at prices lhat will easily fit your
weekly budget

••

a

SJZ9
~
Sweet Corn....... .&amp;
;;;en Beans ••• I~.fJt
Grapes ......
Watermelon ••••.
NIWaor
Sp;nish vldv••.s ••.
Southern Yams •.., .
NOilHWEST·
ITALIAN

•'

Notional Grandparents Doy.
SeptemO.r 9, Is rhe pwfecf time fo
show your olfectlon with tM "Yoc/r•
• So-Grand Bunch".

• Generous capac~ies
• Richly faceted design
• Tempered for durability
and safety ·

F

BALLPARK

Grandparents desen~e
a special bouquet
on their special day.

I

'1.19

IWANSON- Ptoten
''TAKIOUTITYU"

bodice. She

Fme Crystal Stemware Imported from France

~···
Thorofare Tomato Juice ... . ........ 59• Meadowdale Dog Food,.,. . ........... 19• Glad Trull Bags .....• • • ,.., ,., 98•

Extra Ordinary Jobl!."

Hl.s father, Raymond B. Salser,
resides in ruppei'!I' P~.

I

•'

IT AIIKIIT

off~r

A reception was hei&lt;Jimmedlately
following the ceremooy. 1be bride's
table featured a tllre«iered wedding cake with pastel floral trim. ,
Bells accented the first and second
tiers, and the cake was lclpped with a
miniature 111'lde and gromn•
Diana Rose registered the guesta
and poured the , punch, and Mra.
Thelma Osborne served the · cake.
1be weddlng bouquet was caagbt by
by Imogene Armstrong, GaWpolls,
and PhD Ohllngercaughtthe(lll'ter.
For a wedding trip to Claanrater,
Fla. the bride changed Into a lUI ·
sundress. 1be couple nqw resldel at
325 Lincoln St., Middleport .
The new Mrs. Warner i.s a 1m
graduate of Meigs High School and
ts employed at the Ohio Bureau ol
Employment Sel'vices, GaUipolla.
Mr. Warner graduated from
Meigs in 1976, attended Objo University for a year and one balf, and Is
now attendlng Hocking Tech. He IIi
employed at Ebersbach Hardware
in Pomeroy.
Out.U-county guest&amp; at the wed·
ding were Marvin Warner, London,
uncle of the groom; Cynthia Col·
eman and Imogene Armatrong,
Gallipolis; Pam Hill, Gallipolla.

MON ., S!PT. 3

10 A.M. TO S P.M.
CHICK STOll N£Aim YOU
fOI HOLIDAY iiOUIS .

51-ct.I'ICG.

58-'

- -t::

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Warner

OPEN
LABOR DAY

~55' '1:78~

~~~88-'

'l~

,i

wore &amp;I'Oilebud corsage.

"
•'

•.a

"Time in a Bottle", "Jesu. Joy ~

Man's Desiring" along with several
original compositions, and ''The
Wedding Song" as the bride
deacended the stairs.
1be ceremony w113 perfonned
beneath an arch decorated with
yeUOl\' and white dalsles. Candles in
taU wrought Iron holders were used
on the mantel.
Given In marriage by her parents,
the bride was attired in a floor
length gown of white eyelet. The
three tiered stlrt f:atured blue ribbon trim and the c:amlaole top was
accented with white l8ce trim and
mother of pearl buttons. She carried
a bouquet of white, blue and
lavender tipped carnations and
baby's breath .with lavender, blue
and white ribbons tied In lover's
knots.
Her jewelry included the diamond
engagement ring which had been

presented to her by the groom a gift
to him from his aunt, Miss Manon
Ebersbach; dial!lond earrings borro'lfed fnm her mother, and a diamond l!eart locket necklace, gift of
the groom. The !ride carried a white
lace covered Bible and a handkerchief embroidered by her grandmother, Mrs. Mabel Walburn.
Mrs. Debra Thomas served as
matron of honor for her sisterin law.
Her gown was of identical style in
white eyelet with lavender flowerS
and abe carried three carnations
ooe lavender, one blue, and on~
white with baby's breath, also tied
with lavender, blue and white rlbbon;s. She wore an engraved
necklace and lavender butterfly
bracelet, gifts of the bride. Mrs.
Janet Peavley fashioned the wedding attire.
Tim Thornaa, Middleport, brother
of the bride, served as best man.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.
11Kmas wore a purple floral chiffon
over lavender crepe gown. It was
designed with a tiered skirt and ruf-

fled

•

PINEAPPLE

The Rev. Robert Melton performed the ceremony following a program of music by Phil Ohlinger
guitarist. Hl.s selecUons included

..•

WILL BE ,

~

FIG BARS

Shrine .10 banquet and reception
honoring Esther A. Stenkin, supreme
second handmaid, on Oct. 28 was read
at the recent meetlng of Mary Shrine
:rl, White Shrine of Jerusalem.
The reception will be held at the
Drawbridge Motor Inn, Ft. MitcheU,
Ky. at 5 p.m. Vivian May, worthy high
priestess, and Thomas Edwards,
watchman of shepherds, presided at
the meeting held at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
1be ways and means conunittee
reported on a housewares and clotblng party as a fund raising project
with a decision to be made at the next
meetlng. Wesley Buehl read an article. entitled "Ordinary Persons for

chlld, Samantha Lynn. She was born
August 15 at 11 a.m. at Pleasant
Valley Hcepital. The SeUers have two
other children, Michael ADen, 7, and
Amy Dawn, age 3\2.
.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis C. Roush, Pomeroy, Mrs. Ada
Rowe, Racine, and Mrs. Gerald
SeUers, Middleport.
Mrs. Sellers and the chUdren will
soon be joining SSG. Sellers InGermany, where he is stationed._

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

~

DISH
DETERGENT

33' •: .:·5 8' -

An Invitation to the Covington

announcing the birth of their third

SHOES

MOST PENNYFARES

•' - A R I

CHOCOLATE
SYRUP

~~.SJO IH~ac
c.
..
....
BARBECUE

Mary Shrine
37 meets

.....
.....
""" SJ~

SIYIN UAICr....y

CATSUP
14-ea ... t.

•soo

A family picnic was held Sunday ~
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert .
Duckworth and Bobby, Middleport. .:
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. ·
William Fred Smith, Mr. and Mrs.'
Fred Ho~ , Beverly and David, ~
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith, Tina, Ray,
Aitthony, Laura, Eric and Matthew, .
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Smith, Tim.,
John, Mark and ~oe, Mrs .. Steve.
Hawk and Stacy, Mike and Vicky ·
Hoffman, Tami and Jon Buck, and..
the host family.

YOGURT
5PieWIOftht. Cfn.

REG. OR SUGAR fftl

TAmOPNATI..I

TIIOtlOI'AII fency

LADIES SUMMER DRESS
&amp; CASUAL SHOES

UCitfT N ' Ll VIL Y

IYOIY LIQUID

MINTS
av••-a.o•. eo..

~88-'

ALL REMAINING

. a..

IICHA-'1

ELBOW
MACARONI

7-UP

Grant St. In Middleport.
The •bride i.s the daughter of
Harold E. and Charlene V. Thomas,
and ll1e grocm i.s the 1100 of the late
Marion Jean and Jay Edgar
Warner.

SUNDAY ONLY

Family picnic noted :
.

1979.s~1i8~~~ TOTAL DOWN Cook-out Values
PORK N'
BEANS

a

~

LABOR DAY

~-tit!.t 011

MIDDLEPORT- Wedding vows
were I!Ichanged by Teresa L.
· Thornaa and Jeffrey J. Warner on
Sunday, Aug. 5, at 2:30 p.m. in
double-ring ceremony held at the
home of ~ bride's parents, 4.'17

the French Art Colony, but also an '·:
ideal time {or members to enjoy a •
delightful social evening together. ~

members who are still residing in
the area and who attend the evening
celebration, wiD be Introduced.
Plans· are underway for the
dedication of a special memorial gift
to the French Art Colony. Also a
short program of entertainment is
belng arranged.
Members should bring their
favorite covered dish and their own
table service. Reservations must be
made with Ida Thaler by calling 4469705, or, if no answer, 446-1119. The
minimal charge of $1.50 per person
or $3 per couple will be made to
cover the cost of the Anniversary
Cake and the beverages which will
be provided.
This is an opportunity npt only to
celebrate the 15th Anniversary of

GALIJPOLIS - The Trustees of
the French Art Colony are planning
the 15th Anniversary celebration for
the organization to be held on Saturday evening, September a, at Riverby.
Members are urged to mark their
calendars now so that they may plan
to attend and enjoy the potluck dinner at 7 o'clock on the Saturday
evenlng following Labor Day . .Mter
the diru\er, a "Lighting of the Cake"
is planned, along with the blowing
out of the candles, with aU members
urged to concentrate on special
wishes for the continuing growth and
Influence of the French Art Colony in
the conununity during the years to
come.
Those of the original ten ~barter

Afternoon cere.mony unites Thomas, .Warner

lBl.i'

••

•

····························~·····~·

.

--· -- . . . ...... ··· ------·-·-·

�0

•

B-6-The SWlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

Evening vows unite Breech, Lusher
RlO GRANDE - Miss Cathy Jean
Breech and John Henry Lusher exchanged wedding vows in the early
evening ceremony on June 22 at the
Calvary Baptist Chw-ch, Rio Grande. The bride is the only daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Breech,
Route 2, Gallpolis; and the groom is
the youngest son of Reverend and
Mrs. Olarles Lusher, Rio Grande.
The Rev. Charles Lusher officiated at the double ring 6:30 p.m.
open-church ceremony. Prenuptial
music was presented by Mrs.
Ev~yn Tingler (COW! in of the bride ),
Ol'l!anist, whose selections included
You Ught Up My We ; Whither
Thou Goes!; Hawaiian Love Song ;
Close to You; and Wedding Prayer.
Stanley David Lusher (oldest
brother of the groom ) sang Hand in
Hand; Gregory Allan Tingler
(cousin of the bride) sang The Wedding Song and The Lord's Prayer.
Mr. Tingler is a professional
muaiclan and Is a member of the
Gospel Harmony Boys.
The young couple were wed under
a goldo()ll·White arch decorated with
boxwood and white forget-me-riots .
The arch was adorned with white
bows, doves, and bells. At each end ·
of the altar were two gold-on-white
pedestals holding fireside !laskets
with roses, forget-me·nots,
gladlolas, and stephanotis. White
Mrs. john Lusher
bow ribbons marked the family
pews, and the bridal path was of
neckline edged in Venice lace ; and silk flowers which held the finger-tip
white aisle cloth.
full sleeves adorned with vertical veil and blusher of English net.
Escorted to the altar by her father
Her jewelry was a golden heart
!lands of Venice lace tapered to poinand given in marriage by her parents at the cuffs.
locket with a pearl in the center artd
ts, the bride was attired in a white
Highlighting the contours of the golden earrings. The bride carried a
formal gown of sheer organza,
full skirt and the chapel-length train cascade of open white roses and
fashioned with an empire waistline
were vertical bands of Venice lace. rosebuds with beige, pink, blue, and
trinuned in Venice lace; a keyhole
She wore a camelot cap with white yellow forget-me-nots with a white
lace bow and streamers placed upon
a lace-covered Bible . For
"something old" she wore the
golden heart locket belonging to her
Grandmother Penix; for
"something new" she carried her
Bible (a gift of the groom); for
"something borrowed" she carried
a piece of her Great-Grandmother
Margaret Breech's wedding gown;
and for "something blue" she wore a
blue garter.
IS NOW ACCEPING NEW
Miss Angel Galul) (cousin of the
MEMBERS - NO PREVIOUS
bride), Of Minford, served as maid of
TRAINING IS REQUIRED.
honor; ami the bridesmaids were
Karen Heller (cousin of the bride),
of Portsmouth; Becky Call (school
friend of the bride ), of Gallipolis.
Serving as bridesmatron was Mrs.
AGES: 3·16 YEARS
Susan Breech (sister-in-law of the
TIME: 6:00P.M. WEDNESDAYS
bride), or' Colwnbus. All four wore
PLACE : ROYALOAKPARK
floor-length flowing sheath gowns
RECREATION BUILDING
with a matching blue jacket. Becky
wore beige; Susan, pastel blue;
Karen, pastel pink; and Angel,
pastel yellow. Each wore. a silver
circulaNhaped
charm necklace, a
INSTRUCTOR
gift of the bride.
All the attendants carried a single
rose, the same color as their dress,
with a matching streamer. They
wore matching rosebuds in their
CHESTER
hair.
ENROLL NOW:
For his wedding, the groom wore a
985-3595
white tuxedo accented with a satin

RANGERETTES
BATON CORP

shawl collar, a white ruffled shirt, a
vest, and a white bow tie. For his
lapel he wore a white rose with
baby's breath. Paul Montgomery of
Arcanwn served as the best man for
his school friend.
The ushers were James Lusher
(brother of the groom), Warsaw, In·
diana ; Dan !;Usher (brother of the
groom), Chillicothe; and Randy
Breech (brother or the bride) '
Columbus. All the attendants wore
identical white tuxes to the groom's
and white carnations tipped in the
matching color of the attendants '
dresses. Paul wore a yellow rose.
The father of the bride wore an
identical tuxedo to the groom's and
~ attendants. He wore a white carnation tipped in aquamarine. The
father of the groom was attired in a
light blue suit and a white carnation.
For her daughter's wedding Mrs.
Breech was dressed in an
aquamarine full~ength dress with a
pleated skirt. The sleeveless dress
had a rounded neckline and a sheer
cape. Mrs. Lusher was attired in a
full~ength rose gown with a Vneckline. The neckline and long
sleeves were accented with
rhinestone and pearl jewels. Their
corsages were white carnations and
white roses.
The gtandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Thurmall Penix, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Laura Thompson, Portsmouth, wore
white carnations, gifts of the groom.
Registering the guests was Miss
Linda Tingler (cousin of the bride),
Portsmouth. Handling the rice bags
was Miss Debbie Lybrook (cousin of
the bride), Portsmouth. Mr. John
Gloss of Gallipolis decorated the .
couple's car.
A recllption was held in the church
basement foUowing the ceremony.
Mrs. Thelma Ward was in charge of
the reception.' Her assiStants were
Misses Rita Bevan, Laura.Canaday,
Sarah Winters, Brenda Lanier, Nancy Fraley, Julia Lybrook (cousin of
the bride ), Mrs. Sheila Bevan, Mrs.
Mildred Winters, Mrs. Audrea
Hamrick, Mrs. Marianna Tope, and
Mrs. GarneUe Lynch.
The bride's tables were covered
with white tablecloths trimmed with
lace. The wedding cake was a threetier butter cake topped With a bride
and groom. The tiers were divided
by cupid pillars and surrounded by
six sweetheart cakes. In the center

of the cake was a fountain with running light blue water. Mrs. Thelma
Ward, great aunt of the groom,
baked the cake.
The sUver punch bowl, serving
tray, ladle, plates, and cups were
furnished courtesy of Paul Davies
Jewelers. Nuts and mints also were

served.
Also adorning the tables was a
floral arrangement of colored
flowers used in the wedding theme.
The flowers were placed In a silver
wedding bowl with a candelabra
Centerpiece. Mrs. Mary Henry of
Flowerland handled all the flower
arraDf!ements.
On the night before the wedding
Reverend and Mrs. Lusher hosted a
rehearsal dlMer at the Rio Grande
College-Community
College
cafeteria for the wedding party and
members of both families.
The newlyweds are at home to
friends at Route 1, Crown City. John
Is a 1974 graduate of Hannan Trace
High School and a 1978 graduate of
Rio Grande CoUege. He is employed

as a lecher at Hannan Trace
Elementary School. Cathy Is a 1m
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School and a 1979 graduate of
Southerr. Hills School of Business.
She . is currenUy enroUed at Rio
Grande College where she Is _
majoring in elementary education.
Out-of-town guests registering
were Mr. andMrs. BlllFletcher,Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Breech, Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Lusher, Undsey, Tam·
my, Julie; Mrs. Sandy Frazer, Debbie and Shelly, Columbus; Gary
Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lusher,
DanieUe, Stephanie, Andrea, Jean
Continued on B-11
r ite, ega,artd bean noodle , bro11.1"n !"itt.,
,.,, ~, to..~ - fu, .r,-,h sauee, ~kk0ft18rt,
Teri~a~i, swee:t an::iSour
'31Ur.C ,

1

tf....

mythrQOI11 t

,~ bl.c~ vin~r, hcain sat.t.,

'

·),. u= 1 ;·j"""int.o'i r,bamboo~t,
• •'"':' ....,.- ' 'I'Y'i'ter che~rNt. tc.mrn ,
,; intse n"'Ufitard,~'"3~S,

Gif t.Tn1&gt;rnat;onal

e1e.,ot

, _ t .,.j

1-..e.nut. , ~ ·U•,..h , &lt;&gt;hv

Tips

B-7- Tbe Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 19'19

REUNION TODAY
POMEROY - A reunon will be
held at the Poplar Ridge Freewill
Baptist Chw-ch after Sunday school
today . There' will be special
speaking and singing. The public is
invited.

Thomas reunion held
at Tyn Rhos cemetery
0

RIO GRANDE - ne.pite the
severe storm earlier in the morning
of AIJIIUil 19, the delcendanta and
frienda of Abraham and Elizabeth
Jones 1bomaa had a lovely day with
SUilllline for their 49th reunlm held
at Tyn Rhos church.
Forty-three attended and enjoyed
the baaket dinner in the shelter
boUle with Manhall Canaday of•
feting grace before the meal.
Later the group "'"e'i'!J!ed in the
clwrch for the llusl.- meeting conducted by president, Helen J.
Canaday. Several favorite hymns
were 111118 aCCGI1Iplllled by Harriet

births were reported - Jared
Patrick MIUer born Dec. 31, 1978 to
Kent and Susan R. MWer, grandson
~ Tom and Elaine Robinson; and
Katie Elizlbeth Canaday born Jan.
4, 1979 to Pat and Belay s. Canaday.
granddaughter of Marshall and
Helen Canaday.
The business meeting closed with
singing. The IIIIMI reunion will be
held the third Sunday in August.
This will be the fiftieth A. and
Elizabeth Thomas reunion held at
Tyl1 RIIOil. The group Ungered after
the meeting to take plclurel and to
renew frlenjlshlp~~.
Attending the reunion from Gallla
Minulel ~ the 19'18 reunlm were · County were: Dr. R. D. and Harriet
read and ~ed. Tbe treasurer's Thcmu, Edwin T. Thomas, E1enor
report wu given and accepted.
1.bomu and Kem, Dan and Pal
·Offlcen elected to ller'Ve for l!IIMI
'l.bomu, Scott, Kelll, Beth, BU1 and
were Helen Jones Canaday,
Frances 'l.bomu, Susan, Sara, Berpresident; Frances B. Thcmu, vice
nice D. Jones, Ruth Jones, Pat and
president; and Aldeth T. Robinson,
Betsy S. Canaday, Katie, Marshall
secretary~.
and Helen Canaday, Joyce Canaday,
There
no marriages or Scott Canaday, Betty M. Jones,
Aldeth Robinson.
deatlw cllarinl the pUt year. Two
From Irontoo were: Elizlbeth'
Mary PbiWpll, Beth, Kathie, David
·PbiWp~~, Janet Rowe; nm Hodges,
•
/lr.l/11·
Mark Canaday' South Point; Allee
M. Thomu, Loul.svllle, Ky.; Erwin
ONE WEEK
L. and Sulan Nickels, OllkJWl; Tom
Frldly thru
and Elaine ROOinlon, Mlami•burg,
Thursdly, Aug. 30
0 .; Kent and SUian MIUer, Ian and
Jlll'ed, Mt. Vernon, 0 .; Wayne
W1lt Disney's
lbomu, Los Angeles, Calif., and Ed
Harria, San Diego, Calif.

'lbomu:

Gen~ral Hints for .summer
FRAGRANCE DO'S
Do wear fragrance all the time . Pu1 on ea_u de. c0109ne
during the day and change to perfume at n1ght.
Do spray perfume on each af vour pul!e spots. .
oo experiment. Try different scentS: for d1fferent

seasons, plac;es, people.
oo test a perfume before buy ing it. Dab on a l ittle, let tl

an hour .

Do sOak a cotton ball in perfume and place in the vent
ofyourairconditioner .
4Do pour a drop or two of perfume on • light bulb. Turn

CARTOON

It on - !nstant Incense.

IN THE
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

r

w

- - - - - ___________
1

c.J

t
:

.:_f

t

I. ~
·,-~~
Society.

Gallery Hours - Saturdays and
Sundays, I p.m. Wllil 5 p.m.;
~71 and '11wndaya, 10 a.m.

until3p.m.
Aiq!ult 28, 7:30 p.m. - F .A.C. lnterdepu1men&amp;al Meeting, ~i
9 p.m. - F.A.C. 'l'rulltees Meeting,

4DAYS ONLY!

Rlverby.

Ezhiblt f&lt;r the llonlb ~ ~
!ember - Print Edllbll for the 15th
. Annlvenary, Riverby Edna ....
Hernl, Qllumbul, Olllo. Speclauin etdiii'WI, engnvq, dry point.
wood cull and pen and ink.
SeptemberS, I p.m. - F.A.C. 15th
Annl--ry Lecture Dmlooltratioo
by FAie Mae Herre!, Rlverby.
September a, 7 p.m. - F .A. C. 15th
Anniversary Celebntim, Riverby.
Potluck Buffet Dinner, Cake
Ughtlng, Special entertaininent.
Reservations HU'III5.
October 6, I p.m.-12 Midnight Annllll Charity Dence: Riverby·
Round-Up. Bob Evans Shelter
• HOIISe; Eldon Pittinger, Caller.
Gwen Carter and Jewel Evans
chairing ulilted by Bill Carter and
Bob Evans.
October 2$-:&amp;4 - Ninth Annual An0

JUDY RIGGS

Sew long and leon with cotton/
polyester pinwale, 7 -wale and
ribleu solids . Machine wosh and
dry, 45" wide .
Plnwale
7-wale &amp; Rlbleu
•••. $3. 79 y4.
• ••• $3." yd.

Terrific for tunics lhat Ioyer!
Cotlon/polyeller solids ond fon ·
cies. Machine wash , dry, 38 -45"
wide .
Reg . $2.49. $3 .49

sundiY thru
Thundly, Aug. 30

HI RIDERS
PLUS

tique Semlnar -ttl&gt; '11va Walker
He!Jeenbuttel of Wllllington, D. C.
Beth Olerrlngtoo, chalring.

SWAP MEET

y~ .

30'oFF

'2!! '3~!

··~·······························

Reg. Price

CUT-liPS SLIP BY LORRAINE

'

YOU CHOOSE THE LENGTH

Luxurious Velours
For special dressing I Acetate/nylon and Arne I® lrioce·
late/nylon solids. Machine wash, dry, 45" wide .
Acetate/Nylon'
Reg. $2.49 yd.

.•

Trlacetate/Nylon
Reg. $3.49 yd.

'I!!

•

'2!!

Elegant Polyester Suede .
You'll find it easier to pay your monthly gas bill if its the same each month.
You can budget for it when you know the amount in advance.
Ask Us to Level Off Your Bills
We can btll you so those awfully htgh wtnle r gas btll s can
be spread ou1 through the whole year. We l tgure tn!o the
tormu la yo ur past usage hts tory. th e cost 01 gas and nor·
mal weather condt!lons

the twe l!t h month balances out the customer's ac tual
usage w1th the gas he has paid for. so it m1ght be lower or

Vou Never Pay tor More Gas Than You Ac tually Use
During the Year
Because tne formula ts seldom perfect. we review each
cus tomer s progress at the end of the wuller season and
the budg et IS adjus ted Wnecessary The bill re rider0d for

S1mpty pay the budget amount shown on your Augus t gas
bilL That will enroll you in th e program aut omatical ly. It will
probably be larger th an the amoun t o f current charges .
but you wi ll be pre -paying some of those larger w1nter billS
that are on the way.

h1gher than the normal budg et amoun t.

A natural for slim-line sports·
weorl 100"(. polyestersolids .
Machine wash and dry, 48"
wide.
Reg. $4.99 yd .
Calicos and Such ... I 00 "(.
cotton colico and blend prints .
Machine wash and dry, 45"
wide .
Reg. $2.49 yd.

e-f&amp;D ·~

~-

Q

0I

Machine wash, dry, 60" wide.
.
Reg. $3.99 yd.

All Decorator Fabrlu .. .

'399
YARD

'1'9

•

includes entire in-stare stack
and special order twatch
books.

YARD

Idea from Lorraine ... A slip that allows
YOU to choose the length 1 Three bottom panels are
det~chable by merely snipping the thread that attaches
the lacy trill)! White, beige, black of Antron Ill Nylon.
Ha f slip, sizes XS·S·M·L -XL, S6.00. White, beige of An·
. tron Ill nylon.
.

Reg. Price

STYLE CENTER

The Budget Payment Plan Is Another Free Service of the Gas Company.
It Can Make It Easier For You to ?ay Your Gas Bills .

lu•~~ ~ ~~ r~P ~

Oper ated

b~

340 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, 0.

Fabrf ·Centers ol ~lfler i CI , Inc .

1 Hours:.IOtll 9 Monday thru Saturday-Sunday 1 1115
Headquarters for Draperies, Slip Covers and Upholstering Materials

~LUMBIAGAS

Silver Bridge Shopping Plm-Route 7t Gallipolis, Ohio
zane Plaza
: tJ III' .-:othe, Ohio

258 Grand Central Mall

Parkersburg, W.Va .
7

111 6th Ave.
Huntington, W.Va .

Putnam Village
Shopping Cenler

,

Hurricane, W.Va.

•••••••
....'

"''

' ' ']

,' Run· Around\'·

,.1
~

We'D give it to you straight. The
\
leather's soft. Foam ·padded ankles
are even softer. The rubber soles
walk e;~sy; wear long. There's even
~~- '
the famous Lev~:s tab . Try a ~air.
,
Levt s lor Feet bnng
} .
'Q:tns comfort down
:
to your
'I Jjj
,r..,-1),. toes.
I .llf!

J .J

rr;;.,l): )

-~ -

Mi. and Ml'!l. KennethR. Frecker, Route 1, Reedsville, are annOUI)clng
the engagement of their daughter, Brenda Kay, to Ronnie Dale McGrath,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy H. McGrath, Sorden Road, Long Bottom.
Miss Frecker and McGrath are both 1979 .graduates of Eastern High
School. Miss F~ker i.s employed with Wal Bon of Ol:Uo, Inc. of Belpre.
Mr. McGrath IS presenUy employed wtth Jones Boys Grocery in
Pomeroy. Wedding plans are incomplete.

The fifth annual
Bailey reunion wu held Sunday,
Aug. 19, at the Shriners Park in
Racine.
Forty.four relatives and guesta
were preeent for the occasion, and
all enjoyed a bountiful picnic dinner.
After the dinner the group enjoyed
vi.sltlng together and did some jlicRACINE -

ture taking.
In the afternoon the president,
Lenora Spencer, conducted a short
business meeting. Minutes were
relld by Eva Teaford and approved.
The treuurer's report wu given by
Charlotte Wamsley and accepted.
Offlcen were reelected for 19110.
Carroll Teaford, president; Unda
Bailey, secretary; l'tlyUia Bailey,
treasurer.
Awarded gif18 were John Bailey,
Linda Bailey, Loia Bailey, Scott
HyseU, Christa Bailey, Todd Hysell,
Brenda Hysell, Otis Bailey, and
Elmer Bailey.
TraveUng the greatest distance
were Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bailey and
family One birth during the past
year wu Krista.Sargent, a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. Guy Sargent.
The reunion wJil be at the same
place neat year m the third Swlday
in AIJIIUil.
Thole attending were Mr. and
Mrs. CarroU Teaford, Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
BaUey, Christa Bailey, Jori Bailey,
Michael Bailey. Mr. and Mrs· Guy

Sal'fient, Jolin llargent, Krista
Sargent, Lois Bailey, Jim Howard,
Mr. and Mnl. Dick Wamsley, Richie
·Wamsley, Mr. and Mrs. Otis Bailey,
Mr. and Mnl. Rex Bailey, Mr. and
Ml'!l. Edward Hedricks, Mr. and
Mrs. Wilbur Bailey, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Blacbton, Joseph G. Me·
Nabb, Mary E. Shaffer, Francis E.
Shaffer, Lenora Spencer, Sonia
Keams, Monica Hill, Margaret
Bailey, Debbie Bailey, Keith Bailey,
Brenda Hysell, Scott FiyseU, Todd
Hysell, Henrietta Bailey, John
Bailey, and Harry BaUey.

~ ~

A Whirlpool Laundry Team pairs
.the features you want with
prices you 'II love.

0

I

~ASf'ier -Model LFA 7800
Ooubl&amp;-auly Super SURGILATOR"'
agitator • Washes up to 18 lbs. of
heavy denims and twill garments•
• 5 cycles: SUPER, NORMAL,
KNIT, PERMT. PRESS and GEN·
TLE • 2 wash and 2 spin speeds
• Energy~saving water temp selec..

JAMES H. JONES
Marine P{c. James H. Jones, son
of Ayward C. and Mae Jones of
Route 2, Box 11, Racine, has completed recruit training at the Marine
Col1)ll Recruit Depot, Parris Island,
S. C.
During the ten and one-balf-week
tralning cycle, he learned the buies.
of battlefield survival. He was Jn.
traduced to the typical dally routine
that he w1ll experience during his
enUatment and studied the peraonal
and professional standards
traditionally exhibited by Marines.
He participated in an active
physical conditioning prcignun and
gained proficiency in a variety rl
mWtary akllls, i~~j:ludlng first aid,
rlfie 11181'bmanahlp and clOL'Ie order
drill. Teamwcrk and self-discipline
were empha!lzed throughout t1Je.
tralninl! cycle.
A graduate of Southern Local High
. School, he joined the Marine Corps
in October, 1978.

tor with· 5 wash / rinse comblna..
liOns • MAGIC CLEAN" seU:clean·
ing filter'· • 4 level water·savlng
IOad ~s ize selector • Agitatormounted fabric softener dispenser
• Bleach dispenser and more.

Model LFE 7800 Dryer
e Custom Dry Control
eSpec:ial cool ·down care for Perm!.
Press and Knit t•brlcs
e 5 drying temperature settings
e TUMBLE PRE.SS control
e Extra-large llntscreen
e Full·width h~·nper dOOr
· eLarge 6.9 cu. rt. drying drum
eAutomatlc door ~hut off
0 End ·of-cycle buzzer
e Bac· Pak Laundry Information

center.

White-Almond-Gold

CICCLUBMEEI'S
GAWPOUS- The CIC Club met
Thursday evening at Helen Gnun·
bling's with seven members preaent.
Ethel Steele opened the meeting
with the Lord'sPrayer.
Evelyn Rothgeb and Pina Ward ·
read and had their reports approved.
The birthdays of Irene Wellman
and Jurrie Reynolds were obllerved.
For the evening's entertainment,
gameil were played with prizes
going to Ethel Steele and Evelyn
Rothgeb.
On Sept. 27, the meeting wW be
. with Mrs. Reynolds.
Refreslunents were served by the
hostess.

washer LHA 5700
eSuper SU RG I LA TOR agltatcir
e~ cycles, NORMAL, KNIT , PERMT.
PRESS and GENTLE
e2 wash and 7 spin speeds
e Energy -saving water temp. selector
with~ wash, rinse combination
e Easy -clean filler.
el level water-saving load·slze ·seiiiC·
lor
. ·
eAutomatlc cool-down care tor Premt.
Press fabrics

$299

20~FF

- '·

~ · ~

YARD

An

,

·~

Your August Gas Bill Is Our Signal

PreHy Printed Knits . . .
100'/. polyester interlocks.

1/

The

: Baileys hold reunion

Ezhiblt f&lt;r the Month of August "Ohio's Hiltortc Indian Peoples. "
Multiple c:oiGr llilk ~ prinla, in·
cl~ graphics and copy, IIIOUI1Ied
· m .fiberllua panela. Traveling
exhibit from the Otao Historical

... 11 quality

Entire Stock
Gauze &amp; Krinkles

)IbM
·/:;;:;~&gt; -.-'~"~, .
/t:7 ·

.

litE APPLE DUMPUNG
GANG RIDES AGAIN

dry , and see If you still like it after fifteen mmutes or

Corduroy
Classics

WITH

CO l 0\, ·

Cosmetic Departmen

POMEROY - The Ladles
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, w1ll meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the post home in
Pomeroy.

BACK TO SCHOOL

were

from our

TO MEETmuRSDAY

\

Dryer LHE 5700

'

eSpecial cool ·doWn care for Pern:tt.
Press and Knit fabrics
e 3 drying lemperature selections
eTUMBLE PRESS control
e Extra ·large lint screen
elarge 5.9 cu. 11. drying drum
e Push to start buttoo.
eAutomatlc door shut·olf
eEiec. Pak Laundry tnformat!on
center

·
jl

"

�B~- The SWlday Tirnes-&amp;!nlinel, SWlday, Aug. 26,

1979

Open meeting planned
POMEROY - Plans for an open
meeting IAl be held on Sept. 12 at the
Aihens County Savings and Loan
Co., Pomeroy office, were made
when ihe Winding Trail Garden Club
met recently with Mrs. Alice
Thompson.
Francis Schaeffer will present the
program on showing and growing
dahlias. Read at the meeting was an
invitation from the Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts inviting
members to attend a demonstration
by Mrs. Irene Jackson, Sept. 8 at
Royal Oak Park,! p.m.
The Meigs County Fair flower
shows were discussed. Cleaning of
ihe planting area at the Meigs Coun·

ty Infirmary was handled by Mrs.
Thompson, Mrs. Marianne Mitchell,
and Mrs. Addalou Lewis. Mrs.
Thompson and Mrs. Lewis reported
on the Community Club Awards
noting that the club received $20 in
awards.
Mrs . Thompson gave each
member a cutting from her
houseplants. Members toured the
Thompson garden preceding the
meeting which was held in ihe log
cabin on the lawn of ihe Thompson
home. A thank you note was read
from Mrs. Iris Kelton.
Refreshments were served by the
hoste~ to the members and a guest,
Mrs. Linda Butcher.

B-9- TheSundayTimes-Sentinei.Sundav.AuR.26.1979

,

POWELL'S

·

gown featured a row of lace 'at the
waist. Her full skirt with lace appliques scattered throughout, feU
into ~ full chapel-length train with
ruffled hemline. The lower ruffle
· had the same look as top rufnee with
a net underlay. Her cavalier hat of
~uiana knit set the look with a layer
Jf lace under and over brim edge.
Lace and seed pearls covered the
circular cone of the hat. A pale
yellow rose and lilly of the valley
accented top and underneath of the
hat brim. tipping the brim up on one
side.
. The Roor length nylon illusion tulle
was gathered at the cone and stood
up forming an arch over the hat with
lace scattered on edging. She wore
white wrist length bridal gloves and
carried a bible given by her parents.
Covering the bible were white rose
buds, stephanosis, and baby's
breath with ivy and White ribbon
streamers.
Betty Hoschar of Charleston, WV.,
- was maid of honor, and Mrs. Wilbur
Jordan of Gallipolis Ferry, WV., was
her slster'smatronofhonor. Serving
as bridesmaids were Mrs. Jim
Meglio, sister of the bridegroom of
Marietta, .Oh .• and Mrs. Tom Moore
of Gallipolis, OH.
Th e honor attendants were
wearing full length dundle skirts

Store HouJS:
MOI1.·Sat. 8 am·lO pm

Sunday lli am-10 pm

PRICES EFFECTIVE
lHRU
SEPT. 1, 1979

Mr. and Mrs. Alan}. Poling

Harless engagement announced
The open church wedding will take
place on September I at I :30 p.m. at
ihe Cheshire Baptist Church with ihe
Reverend Isom GibBon officiating.
Miss Harless, a 1978 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, is a
student at Rio Grande College.
Mr. Beaver, a 1978 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, is a
student at Rio Grande College, and
he is employed by Crown City
Mining Company:

HAMS ···:···!!1!'1\!. .•...ii

Returns from vacation
Pomeroy, 0.

354 E. Main

SPJ~.~~~

Aug. 27-Aug. 31

FOOTLONG
&amp; FRIES

$1..19
Don't Forget
To Register For

The CAR SWEEPSTAKES
(No Purchae Necessary)

Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz has returned
from a six week vacation in Teus.
She visited with Dr. and Mrs. N. W.
Kramer in Plainview, Texas, and Mr . .
and Mrs. M. G. Hoelscher at
Amorilla, Texas.
Saturday evening the Barnitz family enjoyed a family picnic. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnitz, Mrs.
W. 0. Barnitz, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Barnitz, Ann Margaret
and Brian, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr.
an Mrs. Keith Barnitz, Tom and Tim,
Kingston; Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Young, Galion; Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Bamitz, Rick, Scott, Jeff, and John,
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Barnltz, Mason,
W. Va.; Robin and Lisa Young, Lan·
caster; and Lisa Hyes, New Haven,
W. Va.

Active Honor Society
members announced

GREAT
FOR

BACK TO·

SCHOOL

a career in medicine. He is vice

president of the society. Teresa

'

Oh her e, oh h ere they w ill be .. . wi th th eir so les so woody ,
th ei r inso les so comfy and t he ir d et ai ls so upd at ed.
You k n ow , I'd have real ly l o st i t , i f I hadn 't f o und
th ese cute ' n' lova bl e clogs ! Sid e b uckle st yl e,

CHAPMAN SHOES
Next to Elberfelds In Pomeroy

i....

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
the Pomeroy Junior High School is
open 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday.
Monday, Aug. 27 - Movie,
"Williamsburg Sampler," 11 a.m.;
Square Dance, 12:30-3 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 28 - Craft Making,
10:30 a.m.; Movie, "Williamsburg
Sampler," 11 a.m. ; Chorus, 12:30-2
p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 29 - Social

e~, Top on Campus
For School or

Campus Bohr's
Has the Wearing

Hammond, secretary, Is the
daughter of l'lfr. and Mrs. James
Hammond, and while she is laking a
college preparatory course, is
undecided about her future plans.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Joe
Thompson, Cheshire, Theresa is
treasurer of the Society and is currently undecided about. her future
plans. Woody Burnett is news
reporter for the group and enrolled
in the college preparatory course.
He is the son of Woodrow Burnett of
Addison and the late Carolyn
Burnett.
Security Representative, 9:30-12:30
p.m.; Frank Petrie, Director of the
Meigs CoWlty Health Department
will speak at 11 a.m.; Games, I: 152:30p.m.
Thursday, Aug . 30- Craft Making,
10 :30 a.m.; Talking Book Demonstration, lJ a.m.; Kitchen Band,
12:J0..2p.m.
Friday, Aug. 21 - Art Class, 10
a.m.·l2 noon; Bowling, l-3p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through
Friday. ·
Monday - Boiled Polish sausage,
buttered lima beams and buttered
spinach, applesauce, cornbread,
butter, milk.
Tuesday - Egg salad on whole
wheat bread, cream of potato soup •
crackers, baked potato (M.A.H.), 3
bean salad, citrus, sections; milk.
Wednesday - Fried chicken,
mashed potatoes and gravy, cole
slaw, apricots, biscuit, butter, milk. _
Thursday - Spanish meatballs, ,
buttered whole kernel corn, buttered
broccoli, yellow cake with chocolate
icing, bread, butter, milk.
Friday - Tuna pattie, scalloped
potatoes, buttered peas, fruit
gelatin, bread, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register the day before you
plan to eat. Pomeroy, 992·7886; Portland, 843-331H.
Menu for the Satellite Site at the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of the Latter Day Salnts, Old Town
Flats, is similar to the above menu.

ramblin gs of Willia m
Wordsll'orth ttnd other lile1·ary men in
F ror• lan d's Lake District helped
ponulnrize ll'lllking and make it
rc•&gt;;pcctabl c. But for many years
English W&lt;•ikcrs carried umbrellas to
The

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

ind ir;.t ,· !.:ley

MIDDLEPORT 0.

wt~re

FLEXSTEEL CHAIR

Week!,m d Getaway at Cincinnati 's

.
PIZZAS·················· 69

FLAVORITE

13

oz.

.

COUPON DAYS

~

·

Luxur 1ous double room
· Sumptu ous luau buffet ol Potynes•a n an d Ame rican loods
,
Floor sho w w1 th authen •c Hawa tt an Hula·Hu\a dancers and •stand enter.
ta mers · 5ee the fierce hredance and learn to Hula-H ula
Indoor sw1mmmg . indoor tenn1s. game room · the Ult1ma te 1n electronic

2 Cushion Hide-A-Bed &amp;
Chair
Green-Brown &amp; Orange
Plaid.

Sealy Queen Size Hide-A-Bed
Blue &amp; Black Plaid

PH. 446..0699

Sealy Queen Size Htde-A·Bed
Wheat Color-Modern

IF WE DON'T HAVE YOUR SIZE WE CAN GET IT.
4

89~·

4~

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6

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7 N

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'
X

911

K K K K X X

ZA

X X K· X X X X X
X X X X X X K l

10~

II ~

II

X X X X

4A

BJ

10

X X

X K l

l

12

x.

X l

BEDROOMS

Sealy Queen Size Hide-A-Bed
Rust
Sealy Hide-A-Bed
Flower Velvet

X

WAS

Easy
The ultimaleln comfort . ..a smooth kldsl&lt;in moccasin
balanted on an easy walklng·heigl\t wedge and a bouncy
crepeeolt.A concealed elasticized gusset assures snug fit
and 1M padded insole cushions your every step.
Easy COlors

t
t
,ro erS ¥ "&lt;

8/$1

CHAIRS

UMBRELLA
TABLE

Traditional Sola &amp; Love Seat '
Gold &amp; Rust Velvet
Traditional
Sola·LDVIStat &amp; Chair
IUrt Oran,. &amp; Brown Print
Sofa &amp; Loveseat,
Euly American
Gold &amp; Rust with Blue
Traditional Sola
Belge-Oronae·Biuo·Prlnt

..OtDMAINE

J./k.
"WE MAKE SHOES,..fOR WALKING"

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Ex
1979

The Shoe Cafe ·
:.1ioSecond Ave.

gentlemen and not

Lafayette Mall
· Galli olis, OH
~-

$42 95
$465 $249 95
'23(F $12500

PAUL BUNYAN POSTER BED

'689f!i

Solid Oak, Queen or F.ull Size.
Pennsylvania Solid Cherry

00

.POSTER BED .
Queen Size.

NOW

$45000
'549.95 '349 95
'620.00 • 3 9995
499.95 • 34995
739.95 '43995

'629.95

NOW

WAS

PEDESTAL TABLE
&amp; 4 CHAIRS Pine

499.95

1

38 INCH CHINA

'479.95

Dark Pine

MAPLE TABLE 40x60
With Leaf

'649.95

4 Cha .i rs

1

34 INCH CHINA

1

58 INCH BUFFET

459.95

1

Maple

399.95

1

Maple

$32995 ·
$31995
'399 95
'299')$
$24995

Genuine Bourbon Barrell Furniture

LAWN FURNITURE

Tradillonal
Sola·Lovtseat·Chalr
Nylon Velvet Print

COUPON DAYS

NOW

WAS

~

2

NOW

PRICE

3-Bar Stools &amp; Bar
48" Round Table &amp; 4 Chairs
3 cushion Sofa &amp; Chair

LIVING·ROOM FURNITURE

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Expires Sept. 1, 1979

CAN~

For Registration Phone 256-1392 or 675-3219

WOOD DINING ROOM SUITES

X X

KINGSFORD CHARCOAL
10 LB. BAG ·$129

12 OZ.

CLASSES NOW BEING FORMED
BEGINNER TO ADVANCE

K X

TAKE IT EASY!

- --

BALLET &amp; TAP- BATOf\1 &amp; ACROBATICS

KING SIZE

HIDE-A-BEDS

~T~avel ,llgency

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

Gallla • Mason
rforrr:dng Arts

Brown Velvet .

•

Limit 1 Per Customer
Onlv at t&gt;oweli
Sept. 1, 1979

,

OAK HEADBOARD

FLEXSTEEL CHAIR

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Ex
1' 1979

Rust .

early American, Blue &amp; Rust .

YOUR EXCITING
HAWA IIAN VILLAG E WEEKE ND
INC LUDES.

games

oz.

REGULOR OR SELF RISING
MC 092843~20x5

1

PENNSYLVANIA WING CHAIR

September 22, 1979

$17995
229.95 '119 95
'239.95 '11595
289.95

Aela"es whnlpool bath

VAN CAMP
PORK &amp; BEANS
16

LARGE EARLY
AMERICAN CHAIR

DEPAifTING
GALLIPOLIS/JACKSON

ces. Grandparents are Mrs. Pearle
Pope, GaiUpOiis, and Mr. and Mrs.
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Middleport. GreatGeorge E. (Candace) Pope, Bidwell, , grandparents are Mr.. and Mrs. M.
announce ihe birth of their son, Ben· L. Balu , Long Bottom, and Mrs.
Martha Childs, Middleport. BenjaminJoseph.
.
HewasbornAugust:Uat7 :32a.m. jamin was welcomed home by his
and weighed nine pounds eight oun- two sisters, Kelly and Mindy.

NOW

1

Green Velvet.

HAWAIIAN VILlAGE

Third child born

GIANT STOCK REDUCTION

WAS

tJiH PJ ·&gt;:
l•·

of white Rowers stood between green
shrub!! on each side of the archway.
The unity candle stood to the left of
the archway with a single red rose
on each side of the altar.
The bride was escorted to the altar
by her father. After the bride was
given in marriage by her parents, a
solo. '.'The Wedding Song", was
sung. At this time a long stem red
rose was given by the bride to her
mother, JeMie Stewart, and a long
stem red rose was given by the
bridegroom to his mother, Mildred
Poling.
After the couple were pronounced
husbsnd and wife, a solo,
" Evergreen". was sung, At this time
the unity candle was lit wllich
symbolizes the unity of lives
together.
The bride was attired in a satin
face chiffon gown with scoop neck
line accented with a row of venice
lace. The sleeveless dress had two
layers of sheer chiffon ruffies with
soft design and scalloped edges. The

with ruffle at the hemline and off the
shoulder ruffled tops made of blue
Rocked organza with a design of
yellow rose buds and white lilly of
the valley. Each was underlayed
with a ~lue polyester satin slip. The
ladies wore Mat Ching picture hats
of blue.
The bridal attendants wor e
dresses and hats identical to the
honor attendants e~cept for a color
change of mint green. Each attendant wore white wrist length lace
gloves· and carried a lace fan . The
fans were decorated to one side with
yellow, blue and green miniature
carnations and white rose bud. The
same color scheme was used for bow
and streamers to complete.
Heather Rulen, cousin of the.bride
of Gallipolis Ferry. WV., was flower
girl. She wore a long dress of yellow
flocked organza with the same
design as the attendants. Her dress
had contrasting neck ruffle with a·
yellow ribbon drawstring thru
casting. The _sleeveless dress also
had a contrasting lower ruffle. Other
accessories included , a white lace
bonnet and white wrist length
gloves. She· carried a sheer basket
with lace edging of yellow rose
petals. Colored bow and streamers
accented the side of the basket.
Continued on_Page B-11 ·

CHAIRS

ELF POP

Apparel For You.

N. 2ND AVE.

}

NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY-Left to right, front, Sherry Harrison,
Theresa Thompson, and Teresa Hammond, and slanding, David Crabtree, Jr.,left, and Woody Burnett.

KYGER CREEK-Members of the
Kyger Creek National Honor Socie·
ty; selected last spring, who will be
active during the coming school
term, are Sherry Thompson, Teresa
Hanunond, and David Crabtree, Jr.,
left, and Woody Burnett. Sherry
Harrison, Society president, is the
daughter of Mr. ad Mrs. Paul Har·
rison, Route I, Gallipolis, and plans
to major in math in college. David
Crabtree, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
David Crabtree, Sr. Addision, plans

where,
ohwhere
have my liUie clogs gone

Mary Frances Stewart and Alan
John Poling were united in marriage
on Jllly 14 at two-thirty in the af.
ternoon at St. Paul United Methodist
Church in Point Pleasant.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James M. Stewart of
Henderson , WV.,
and the
bridegroom i.s the son of Mr. and
Mrs. John A. Poling of Marietta, Oh.
The Reverend Herman Hayes
performed
the
double·ring
cerem ony. Wedding music was
provided by Keith Burdette,
organist and pianist, and Susan
Sayre, soloist. A half hour of music
selections chosen preceding the
ceremony were : '"Two Candles",
"Oh Perfect Love•·, "Say Forever
You'll Be Mine". "One Hand One
Heart". " You Ught Up My Ufe",
"The Tlfelfth of Never" . and "The
Wedding Prayer".
The church was decorated with an
archway of porn pom.s of blue, green,
yellow, and white with two doves in
the center of the archway. A basket

$ ]g

SUPERIORS E·Z CARVE

•

St. Paul Churc'h scene of .Stewart - Poltng weddtng

· Tarissa Harless
SOUTH POINT - Mr. and Mrs.
Danny F. Harless of South Point are
announcing the engagement and for·
thcorning marriage of their
daugh~r, Tarissa Gay, to Mr.
Michael Alan Beaver, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jessie E. Beaver of Cheshire.

•

WAS

NOW

'769.95

'499.95

'1189.90

'699.95
'599f!i
'49995

859.95

1

839.95

1

1549.95

SJ9995

LOVE SEATS

WAS

NOW

$17995
'269.95 $17995

2 CUSHION LOVESEAT

1

299.95

Blue &amp; Brown
Earl Am ri

2 CUSHION LOVESEAT
Green Plaid

Open Monday Til 8 P.M.

LA.RRY'S
WAYSIDE FURNITURE
THIRD &amp; OLIVE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

�B-10- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

Paul Bunyan Queen 's

Antique toys, dolls
needed for FA C exhibit

AnntuJI picnic held

Senior Citizens' Scenes. ..

To benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association.

,;-EYenfy«&amp;
.

_,.•

.

WSAZ-TV

.'

Lay-A-Way For The

WINTER
Yellow Freestone

CANNING

Now Thru September 15th

BOB'S MARKET
Open 9 a.m. To 9 p.m. Everyday

773-5721

Maso.o..._W. Va.

Ccntlnuedlrom Page B-9
David Poling of Lumberport, WV .,
brother of the bridegroom, served as
best man. Ushers included James
Stewart Jr. of Henderson, wv., ·
lmlther of the bride; Mark Doak of
Jane Lew, WV .. cousin of the
bridegroom; and Brien Davis of
Marietta, OH . Ringbearer was
Timothy Siders, cousin of the bride
of Gallipolis Ferry, WV.
.Ruthie Richards of Gallipolis,
OH., attended the guest book and
~ssed out programs. Nancy Jordljll, niece of the bride of Gallipolis
Ferry, WV., passed out scrolls and
rice bag3.
For her daughter's wedding,. Mrs.
Stewart wore a long tent dress of
trivoli chiffon with flower designs of
blue with tints of white and green
clover scattered thru the blue dress.
Her sheer short sleeves were pulled
up in button loops on the sides. The
sheer gathered front insert was
surrounded by alternate rows of
chiffon and posh ruffles to make up
the neck line. The dress was un·
derlined with posh polyester satin.
Sbe wore white wrist longth gloves
and a silk wrist corsage of miniature
blue carnations and miniature white
rose buds.
Mrs. Poling chose a long blue

NELSONVILLE - Applications prize of $100. Two runners-up will he
are available for the Paul Bunyan selected as members r:J. the queen's
c.Jurt.
Show queen 's contest.
Entry blanks are available by
Jointly sponsored by the Ohio
writing
to the Paul Bunyan Queen
Forestry ABsociation and Hocking
Contest,
Hocking Teclmical College,
Technical College, the annual
Nelsonville,
Ohio, ~764. They also
festival will be held Oct. 5-7 on the
may
be
picked
up at the college's
college's campus near Nelsonville.
AdmLsaions
or
Natural
Resources
Ms. Paul Bunyan will prE!llide over
Department
offices,
the
First
the show's main events, highlighted
National
Bank,
the
Peoples
Bank,
by lwnberjack competitions each af.
ternoon. The queen will be crowned · and Nelsonville · cable T.V. in
at 12 :15 p.m., Oct. 6 preceding the Nelsonville.
Three black and . white ·
Ohio State Lumberjack contest.
photographs
are requested with the
Candidates are judged on perapplications,
which must be retur·
sonality, poise, and beauty as well as
ned
before
noon,
September 30.
knowledge of the forest Industry in·
eluding the Paul Bunyan Show itself.
Applicants must participate in a
contest orientation and luncheon
from I to 5 p.m., SePtember 30 at the
The annual picnic of the Pomeroy
Hocking Valley Motor Lodge. The Seventh-day Adventists Church was
actual judging will be 8 a.m., Oc· held Thursday evening at the RoadIober 6 at Hocking Technical Side Park, Route 33, north. After a
College.
,
vegetarian supper, the group played
To be eligible, candidates must be games under the direction of Rita ·
at least 18 and not more· th8n 25 White.
years old. They must be unmarrted
Among those attending were
from the time entering until the win- Pastor Albert Dittes, his wife Pat,
ner is selected. All applicants must and children, Jim and Julie,
either be enrolled in school as of Sep- Amesville; BurdeU and Effie Black,
tember 15 or be a high school
Pomeroy R. D.; Walter and Adelene
graduate.
France, Rutland, Joseph and Rita
The winner will receive a cash White and Wllma WeirnaM, Ky~er.

.

· Don't miss the All-New
Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon.

St. Paul

Contest for 19 79 set

GALUPOl..IS - Peggy Evans " coverlets.
Anyone willing to have their apwho is chairing the October Exhibit
for . the French Art Colony, urges propriate items included in the
residents of the area to look in their Riverby exhibit during the month of
closets and attics, as well as their October should contact Mrs. Evans
favorite collections of antique toys , at 446·1819 during the day or 446-:!325
dolls , furruture and other children's in the evenings. She is in real needof
items including clothing and pic· . local participation 'in this upcoming
tures, to consider having them used project.
The noted authority on antiques,
as a part of the exhibit to be placed
Orval Walker Heissenbuttel · of
in the Galleries at Riverby.
Ideal for inclusion in this unusual Washington, D. C. will conduct the
exhibit planned for October would be Ninth Annual Antique Seminar at
all kinds of toys and dolls enjoyed by Riverby on Tuesday and Wed·
children previous to 1930. Also in nesday, October 23 and 24. One day
demand for such a display are of her two day workshop will be
rocking horses, school items such as devoted to antique toys and dolls.
Those interested in having items
slates, doll furniture as well as
in the October exhibit should contact
children's furniture. Most appealing
Mrs. Evans lnunediately. She will
would be antique pictures, antique
be most appreciative of any
baby beds, rockers, chairs and desks
assistance given her.
as well as baby carriages and

. FALL FESTIVAL
Contestants are invited to enter
the cake decorating contest (money
POMEROY - The Senior Citizens
Center staff are all busy making
prizes awarded) with the winning
cakes to be auctioned to the public.
plans for the Center's Fall Festival
. The featured speaker of the day
scheduled for Friday, October 5.
will be Jim Alexander, Assistant
This fun filled-money making
Director of the Ohio Coriunission on
project will be going on throughout
Aging, who will speak at 1 p.m.
· the day and evening and will offer
something for everyone.
This event is open to the public and
we are asking for your support and
The annual apple butter making
participation. More details will be
will be taking place. The apple butter will sell for $2.50 per quart (we
announced.
ask that you provide your own jars) . .
AcrJVITIES
The film Williamsburg Sampler
Please place your orders by calling
992-78116 or 992-7884.
will be shown Monday and Tuesday
mornings beginning at 11 a.m. This
Soup beans will be cooked over an
open fire and will be sold along with
film iJresents a visitor's eye view of
the Colonial Williamsburg, including
homemade cornbread. If you don t
architecture, crafts, gardens,
care for soup beans, sandwiches,
music, costumed guides, and the
soft drinks and homemade baked
goodis will be for sale.
philosophy of the reconstruction.
This Wednesday, August 29, Frank
The 'Country Store will offer craft
Petrie, Director of the Meigs County
items, home canned goods, fresh
Health Department, will be at the
produce and baked items for sale.
Center at 11 a.m. to talk abo~t the
Continuous entertainment will go
Health Department Services. On
on throughout the day and evening
Thursday, August 30, at .11 a.m.,
with bluegrass-country western banJeanne Robanna will demonstrate
ds . featured. Square dancing will be
the talking book machine which will
gomg on for those of you who ·are
be at the Center for seniors to use.
"ambitious" and game booths will
Have a nice week.
offer prizes for those lucky enough to
"beat" the games.

R-11- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26,!979

Vicki Wolfe and Perk A ult

~o!fo

engagement announced

RACINE-Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Wolfe of Racine are announcing the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Vicki Kara,
to William (Perk) Ault, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William L. Ault, Middleport.
The open church wedding will be
an event of Saturday, Sept. I, at 6
p.m. at the Wesleyan United
Methodist Church, Racine. A recep-

tion will be held at the church annex
immediately following the
ceremony.
Ault is a 1975 graduate of Meigs
High School and is employed at the
Phillip Sporn Power Plant in New
Haven. Miss Wolfe is a !975 graduate
of Southern High School and a 1978
graduate of Ohio University. She is
employed at the Gallia-Meigs Com·
munity Action Agency in Cheshire.

PINECREST CARE
CENTER NEWS
BY JUANITA WORKMAN
GALLIPOIJS- Rosie Raines, our
oldest resident, received the
following letter from Congressman
Clarence E. Miller recently:
Congratulations on being presented
a plaque by Mr. and Mrs. D. Lester
Davis recently in honor of being 100
years young. Please accept my warmest greetings on the celebration of
your !Olst birthday this month. It is
indeed a happy occasion and a
distinct privilege to be able to
celebrate your IO!st birthday. May I
wi.sh you the best for the coming
year. Again, my congratulations.
Reports are circulating that Leslie
Penrod is doing nicely at Holzer
Medical Center. May God give you
. strength to bounce back with vigor is
. our prayer
. Virginia Jones, Portsmouth,
_, Virginia, remains at the bedside of
-. her aunt, Hattie canterbury.
Susan Elliott~ lnservice Coordinator, has resumed her duties af.
'ter taking a leave of absence. Susan
has been happily busy caring for her
new heir, Ryan Allen. Little Ryan
made his first visit to the Care Cen·
ter Wednesday along with his grandmother and aunt.
Gertrude Davis has been
discharged from the Care Center.
We are most grateful to Rhonda
Pushkar, a new employee, for un·
dertaking the tedious job of weeding
our flower beds.
A hearty welcome is· given to our
new residents, Hattie Canterbury, •
William Plants, and Virgie Hoff.
man. We trust that you will show
brotherly affection toward them by
visiting or sending them cards.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Crump and
daughter, West Monroe, La. visited
Monday with her aunt, Wretha
Finley.
Two of our nurse's aides, Pam
Jarrell and Danny Territo
celebrated their birthdays last
Friday. Cel Terrtto, Mary O'Brien,
Carol Lewis, Kathy Boggess, Kathy
Bennett, Kathy Brown, and Joanna
Caldwell were on hand 'to help with
the celebration. Lora Rice, Pl.
Pleasant, was a special guest. A
potluck dinner was enjoyed by these
eager1!Bters, and after ice cream
and cake were served I understand
they were needing a plastic surgeon
to perform "tummy tuck"
operations.
·
Beth Ables, Winston.salem, N. C.
visited her aunt, Maxine Conn, last
week.
Mrs. Linda Black is an "unseen
angel" to our residents here at
Pinecrest. Linda lives at Carroll,
· Oh. (a town on Rt. 33 between Lancaster and Colwnbus). She reads
our news in the Times-Sentinel and
sends each of our residents a bir·
thday card as their birthdays approach. Words are inadequate to express to Linda and ' .er family just
what it means to eacn of our residents, to \heir children, and to those on
'the care Center staff, to know
someone cares across the miles.
May God bless you and your family
as we remember you in our prayers.
Kay Wheeler, a nurse 's aide on

second floor, has returned to her
duties after spending three days at
Kings Island.
"No question about it, it's great to
get together with your family ."
These were the words of Petrone~
Hesterman on her 76th birthday
Thursday. Those coming from a
distance to spend the day with her
were her two children, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Chesser (Chris ), Albany, Oh.
and John Hesterman, Lindenwold,
New Jersey.
We are happy to report that
Everett callicoat and Joy Tha~on
have returned home from the
hospital and are recuperating
nicely.
Our sympathetic prayers go to Mr.
and Mrs. Stewart Keeton and
family, Ewiington, in the loss of their
'mother, Ola Keeton.
Gideon 's International, donated
New Testament Psalms, in large
print, to each resident Tuesday.
Lenora Morgan, Charles Haner,
Alma Brown, Irene Sayre ,
Petronella Hesterman, Mildred and
Continued on Page B-11

£'

Evening vows

Argentina has been authorized a
'116 million credit from the Inter·
American Development Bank. The
credit will be used to finance scientific
and technical research and
development and to improve rural
education .

K marl's Ad-verlised
Policy

Mer c handl ~.e

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Ou• peoac, 1110

ooi'•I..,U&lt;&gt;~~

•""•Y• ·

•

•

CARPENTER'S DANCE STUDIO

'

OPENING SEPT. 18TH

.•

ClASSES: BAU.ET, TAP &amp; JASS
AGES - 4 AND UP

•

Up-Beat

!

SHIRLEY CARPENTER • INSTRUCTOR-CHOREOGRAPHER

,
••

Located in Racine, Ohio (formerly weaver's Skiff
Building).
Ph. 949·2710 or 949·2150

•
,,

Group Men &amp;. Boys

Pinecrest

Charles Shafer, Glenford; John and
Nancy Fraley, Brunswick ; Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon West, Melody, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Montgomery, Ar·
Continued from B-41
can
urn; Tim Newberry, Letart,
and Church River, Eliza Bawn,
·west
Virginia; Barry and Evelyn
Evelyn Ost, Rona Throckmorton
Sheets,
Zanesville ; Mr. ·and Mrs.
Chillicothe; Mr. and Mrs. Joru;
Jlm
Lusher,
Nathaniel, Micah, WarShafer, Julia, Jay, Jamie,. Joey, Mr.
saw, Indiana; Clarence and Marand Mrs. ~omas Shafer, Todd,
cella Phillips, Mentor; John and
Tommy, Teme, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Eleanor Ames, Elliot Dayton,
Shafer, Mr. and Mrs . Steven
Shafer'
.
Painesville; Mr. and Mrs. George
Thompson, Sarasota, Florida; Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Tingler, Mr . l!nd Mrs.
ever had."
Vernon Lybrook, Mrs. Mary
If you have never been to our Care
Lybrook, Debbie, Julta, Mr. Joe
Center we cordially invite you to
visit us. We would appreciate the op- Ronulnello, Mrs. Carolyn Gahm,
Mrs. Nonna Webster, Mrs. Dora
portunity to have you sample the
true hospitality our residents, staff · Bree~:,h , Mrs . Penny Breach,
Machell, Mrs. Laura ThomJlllrxJ, Mr.
and adnilntstration are known ·to
and
Mrs. Harry Heller, Sam, Julie,
give.
Jill,
the
Portsmouth area.
Don't look now but the Hawaiian
Lei is just around the corner.
Residents are getting butterflies as
The all-time champion literary
the big event Is less than a week
is probably William
pedestrian
away.
Wordsworth, who had walked 180 000
Thought lor the week : The Bible is miles by the time he was 65, accordmg
meant to be bread for our daily use, to National Geographic.
not cake for special occasl~~.

G"'• "'" e wo l""''''

ANNOUNCING OPENIII#G OF:

BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS

ducted services on-.econd floor and
quiana knit dress. The shoulderless
spent the entire afternoon visiting
dress had . a turtle neckline with·
and praying with residents in their
~athers forming a flouncy top witb a
Continued from Page B·IO
room. Rev. Colvin has displayed his
tie belt at the waist and flowing Charles Wolfe, Ma&lt;lge ByUs, U&gt;is
unique ability of communicating ·
skirt . She wore a silk wrist corsage Smith and Harrison Robinson were . with our elderly through songs,
identical to Mrs. Stewart's.
testimony and love. We deeply aphonored with an infonnal getA reception and buffet was held at
preciate his outstanding volunteer
together recenUy. The occasion was
The l.oyal Order of Moose Shelter at to celebrate all residents having bir·
work every Tuesdlo.y here at the
Point Pleasant, WV., with Ruthie thdays In AugllSt. The color motif of
care Center.
Richards, Betty Hoschar, Ellen rainbow hues were carried out in the
Peggy Baird is a new employee in
Jordan , Joan Siders, Carolyn · relreahments. The serving table was
the laundry department.
.Holley, Hazel Siders, Joe Siders, laid with a white linen cloth. The
An iMovation of interest does
Bob HuRhes and Bill Wallace as cenleqliece was a lovely birthday
amazing things for our p~~yche, and
aides. The three-ti~r wedding cake cake baked by Ella Long. Yolanda .we find this to be true as our third
and the mints were made by Mrs. Howard, Pam Jarrell, and Juanita
floor residents spend much of their
Kenney Siders of Gallipolis, OH.,
time mending clothes lor residents ·
Morgan presided at the serving
cousin of the bride.
on second floor.
For their weddng trip to the west table.
Mr. and Mrs. Buddy Thompson
All eyes were on Michelle Unroe
coast the bride changed into a white
and
children, Amsden, Oh. spent last
and Shawn Halley as they danced to
polyester sleeveless dress that
week
in Gallipolis viSiting his grand·
the disco mualc of He's the Greatest
buttoned. up the front with rainbow
mother,
Alma Brown. Buddy had
Dancer, by Sister Sledge and Bad
colored flower trim on the collar,
lost
contact
with' his grandmother
Girls, by Donna Summer. These
pocket, and waist. She wore a going
for
a
long
period
of time, and by
nine year olds wbo have "more than
away corsage of silk miniature
sheer
luck,
he
heard
that she made
adequate" talent were sponsored by
carnations of blue, green, and
her
home
with
liS. He was 'one day
Jessie l)fae Bills, Crown City, Oh.
yellow.
Approximately 100 attended this tate arriving for her 93rd birthday,
but she repeated over and over,
gala celebration.
Tuesday, Rev. Robert Colvin con- "11lis Is the best birthday present 1

i

styles
with down
to earth

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NEW YORK (AP) - George
Foster's leadoff homer b'iggered a
llv«un ninth-inning rally Saturday
that lifted the streaking Cincinnati
Reds to an 8-4 victory over the Ne'!"
York Mets.
Foster's 23rd home run of the
seaaon tied the score and came off
Jeff Reardm, 0.1, who had pitched a
9COI'eless eighth imlng in his major
league debut. The Mets had taken a
4..1 lead In Ute bottom of the eighth on
Joel Youngblood's two-l'un , two-out
homer .
Following FO!IIer's h001er, Johnny
Bench doubled and Nell Allen
relieved Reardon. Intentional walks
to Dan Driessen and pinch hittel'
!larry Spilman around Ray Knight's
sacrifice loaded the bases.
Helty Cruz, another pinch hitter ,
s:ored Bencll with a perfect squeeze
bunt that put the Reds ahead 5-4.
Dave Collins added a twwun single
and the final run of Ute inning came
borne on Dave Concepcion's
grounder, his third RBI.
lt was the fowth consecutive
lrlwnph and seventh in the last eight
games for the Reds, who be@an play

HAIDWAII DII'F.

RAZOR BLADES

one-half game behinc) firsti&gt;lace
Houston in the National League
West.
Youngblood's horner, his 16th of
the season, came after Doug Bair
issued a "tw!Klut walk to Ricllie
Hebner. However, Ute ninth-iruiing
rally made a winner of Bair, 9-6.
Cincinnati broke a 2-2 tie when
Bench hit his 16th horne run of Ute
seasoo leading off Ute fourth Inning.
1t carne off New York starter Craig
Swan, who was forced to leave the
game after four innings when he tore
the skin on his right Utwnb.
DETROIT (AP) - Seattle slugger
Willie Horton turned on his fonner
club with a grand slam hm~er and a
liOio allot and Mike Parrott pitched a
live-hitter as the Mariners defealed
the Detroit 'ngers 11-4 Saturday.
Horton 's grand slam, which keyed
a five-run third inning, wa:l the ninth
of his career and his sewnd this
!e88011 .

SeaiUe's Dan Meyer cracked his
19th h001er in the second Inning, a
liOlo slut, but Dei!Vit's Champ
Sununers tied it 1-1 with his 14th

forcing grounder by ROO Carew and
a two-run single by Carney
Langsford.
The Angels added three runs in the
second on Grieb's homer and an RBI
At Toronto, Don Baylor drove in
single by Jirn .Anderson and got two
eight runs with a double and two
home runs, including a grand slam more in the third on Baylor's RBI
in California's elght-l'un first inning, · double and Brian Downing's RBI
single.
as the Angels pounded out 26 hits in
bombing the Toronto Blue Jays ~2 ·
Saturday.
Baylor's eight RBI 's gave him 118
on the year, setting club records for
a season and a game. His two
homers gave him 30 for the sealiOn.
Bobby Grich,Dan Ford and Bob
Clark also contributed two-run
homers as the Angels rolled up the
largest score in club history, as well
as the most hits.
Toronto used four pitchers ,
starting with Bator Moore, 3-0, and
was kayoed in the first inning, and
including backup first baseman
Craig Kusick . The winner was Dave
Frost, J:HI. .
Calil&lt;rniB piled up an ~ lead
befll'e the Blue Jays came to bat.
The outburst Included Baylor 's
slam, an RBI double by Grich, a runhome run in the bottom of the inning .
Parrott's record now is 12-8. The
loser was Dan Petry, 5-4.

KC hoping to bounce hack
after disappointing· season
CHESHIRE - Following a disappointing 44-1 record and fifth place
finish, Coach Jim Sprague's Kyger
Cn:ek Bobcats winnen1 ol five
straight league titles hope to bounce
bact behind 15 rellll'lling lettermen.
Squad wise, the Bobcall have juit
:Ill playen, the ~ in the
IIChool's history but will offer
"quallty this fall not Just quantity,"
one aporia fan aald.
• Lut winter's ~tlonlnc
prosrarn Ia expected to help boost
the team 's strength.
Stneen aquae! members can beneh
'pn!SI over 200 pounds. 1bua far, the
Bobcala have had no rnaj()C injuries.
' Footblll fortunes at Kyger Creek
dwindled aomewhat last Jell80I1 at
alllevela. However, the experienced
Jettem_len and other squad members
are cleiennlned to retain the "Bobcat Image." Key InJuries played a
1,1l8jor role in laat year's rlnal

reconl.
The Bobcalllost eight starters due
to early aeuon Injuries. lnduded in
those elght were rwuling backs,

4soeter, VanSlckle, Gary Nibert,
Bryan Sutphin and \'dark Curnutte.
Returning lettennen Include
senior nmnlng backs Paul Lasseter,
Woody Burnett and VIctor VanSickle; aenlor linemen, Chris Elliott,
Mike Kelley, Doug Stover, LaiTY
Harrison, Bruce Gllinore and Allen
Sheets.
Junior lettennen are Jack Minor,
TerTy Plll'ter, Preston Coughenour
and Mike Shoemaker while
110phomorea Rob Waugh and Mike
Elkins gained valuable ex.
perienceas freshmen lut season to
qualify as returning lettennen as
aophornores.
Kyger Creek's starting backfield
La expected to feature aenlor ~ ' ling
back Greg Smllll, a 170 pounder who
did not play football lui year.
Olher running backs will be Van·
Sickle at fullback; Ed Moore, 147
powtd sophomore, and Blli RIXIB, 166
powtd junior.
Lasleler and Rob Waugh hive
been battling It out for the top quarterback's slot. Another Bobcat plus

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ALL
RAID
INSECT
KILLER

X

Victory puts pressure on Astros

should be the kictlng game led by
punter Chris Elliott who averaged 32
yards a punt in 1978 and placekicker
Jack Minor who was 12 for 16 a year

ago.
KC ,.W use a varied offense this
fall mixing ll up wlllla pro set, 1-eet
with flanker, split or Power 1.
Ddensively, the Bobcats will use
the H .
Saturday, Kyger Creek . defeated
Glouater, 1.0 in a controlled two-boor
IICrimmalle at Cheshire. The Bobcall acond three others, but those
were nuiUfied on penalties.
Coach Sprague was pleaaed with
his offense and defense on the run
!Jut must make !I&lt;JIIII! adjustments on
puaing defense.
.
Kyger Creek drove to the Tomcat
l:J-11 and 12' yard lines before being
held on downs during other drives.
Last Saturday, KC and
Southeastern of Ross battled to'a ~
tie at Riclunondale .
Kyger Creek opens Its I 979 season
at horne Friday against · Federal
Hocking. Other non-league foes Include Waharna, Alexander, Oak Hill,
and Symmes Valley.
The Bobcats' coaching staff Is Intact for the sixth straight year.
Returning are line coach Mike
Mulford and receiver coacll Daryl
Well.
The Bobcats' major strength 1:1 expected to be In the offensive and
defensive lines based upon their 15
returnees, good qulclmess, and solid
leadership provided by the senior
squad rnem))ers:
Weaknesses would be freshmen
turnout with·just one, Roger Stroug,
174 powxl fullback ; overall size and
the intangible, development of a
championship attitude.
Sprague's sophomores are expected to play a key role in the success of this year's aquad.
BOBCAT ROSTER
PLAYER
POS. YR. HT. WT.
x-Paul Lasseter QB 12 $.10 164
x.Jack Minor
K 11 6'0 164
x·P. Coughenour E 11 $.10 156
Mike Swisher
WB 11 ~ 121
x·Mlke Waugh
QB 10 S-10 176

John Amos
Oill RO'IS

E
FB
TB
E

12

.~

140

11 $.10 166
11 5-3· 142

Scott Bwnett
DavidSands
55 5-10 141
Tim Barr
FB 10 S-10 169
GregSmlth
E 12 5-10 170
x-BnrceGllinore WB 12 ~ 136
x-TerryPorter
E 11 r&gt;-9 133
x-V. VanSickle FB 12 5-11 lil:i
Roger Stroud
FB 9 ~ 174
Mark Lee
FB . 10 5-4 134
Ed Moore
TB 10 5-3 147
Kevin Parsons
TB 10 5-10 160
Jason Pr9Ctor .
G 12 ~ 130
Bill Swishe{
C II 5-3 156
x-Mike Kelley
C 12 f&gt;.lO Ul8
x-Doug Stover
G 12 5-7 160
Jeff Ward
C 10 ~ 166
Ed Halfhill
T 10 5-3 184
Mark Glbnore
G II ~ 124
x-Larry Harrison T 12 .5-11 I T.l
Carey Martin
G 11 5-3 . 135
x-Mlke Elkins
C 10 ~ 180
x·Woody Burnett G 12 5-4 1,39
Shawn Thomas
G II 5-11 148
Rusty Taylor
G 11 $.7 135
x-Mike Shoemaker T 11 5-7 172
IpChris Elliott
T 12 6-3 250
Bob Haner
T 11 5-3 195
Troy Edwards
T 11 5-3m 137
x-Ailen Sheets
E 12 ~ 135
Terry Rees
E 10 $.9 132
Craig Richards WB 10 5-4 117
x -Denotes lettennen.
Head coach, Jim Sprague;
A88lslant coaches, Deryl Well and
Mike Mulford; Principal and
Athletic Director, Dr. David Miller;
Cheerleaders, Elaine Ward, Terri
Corbin, Kelly Nibert, Stephanie
Noble, Kay Palmer, Vicki Russell;
Band director, Charle5 Wills;
Manager, Rankin HaHhill; Athletic
trainers, Todd Mayes and Jacll Matthews ; Nickname, Bobcats; Color.~,
Scarlet and gray.
KCSCHEDULE
Aug. 31 Federal Hocking
Sept, 7 at Wahama '
Sept. 14 Alexander
Sept. 21 at Oak Hill
·Sept. 28 Hannan Trace
Oct. s Eastern
Oct. 12 at Southern
Oct. 190pen
Oct. 26at Symmes Valley
Nov 2 Southwestern
Nov . 9 at North Galli a

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Bruce Gllinor~. Chris Elliott, Victor VanSickle and
Paul Lasseter.

BOBcAT CAPTAlNS- Serving as captains for the
)979 Kyger Creek Football team will be four seniors,

I

~

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP ) Dennis leonard, backed by Willie
Wilson's offensive and defensive
heroics, fired a four-hitter Saturday
as the Kansas City Royals edged the
Boston Red Sox 1-0.
Wilson accounted for the game's
only rtm when he led off the first
inning uainst loser.Mike Torrez, 13-

NATIONAL LEAGUE ALL STARS, senior league.
Front, 1-1', Tonja Salser, Paula Horton, Pam Crooks,
Kellie Rought, Pebbles Blake, Pam Ewing; back,
Teresa McDermitt, Kathy Whitlatch, Barbara Gordon,

9, with a slicing line drive past l'!ft
fielder Jim Rice for his fourth
inside-the-park horne run of the year
and fifth overall .
Leonard, evening his record at 9-9
with his second slluto\11 of the
season, struck out four, walked two
and held Fred Lynn and Rice hitless.

Mel Sisson, Donna Gilman and Penny Wamsley. Absent Wllre Melanie Weese, Karen Brown, Sonia Ash,
Bonnie Marr, Andrea Riggs and Nancy Smltl). Coach is
Sue Grueser.

Saints kicker's streak ends
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS .
Rookie New Orleans kicker
Russell Erxleben found it rnucll
easier to work his right leg once he
got the people off his back.
"I told everybody that if they'd
just get off my back , things would be
all right," ' said Erxleben, who
signed a big-money contract after
being the Saints ' first -round draft

pick, but endured a scoreless· streak
which didn't end untU Friday night's
Courth and final National Football
League preseasoo game against the
Houston Oilers.
"I don't even know how I lived
those weeks,'' he said. ''Everywhere
I'd go, people would ask me the

· same thing : 'What's wrong ?"'
That affecied him a bit in the

closing minutes of Friday night's
contest. The game was tied 7·7 and
the Saints were driving downfield; a
57-yard pass play from quarterback
Archie Manning to Tinker Owens
brought the ball to the Houston 12
with 37 seconds t.o play.
Erxleben found himself thinking
about Coach Dick Nolan's next
move.

Tanner advances in tourney
MASON, Ohio (AP ) - Top-seed4:d
Roscoe Tanner defeated Bernie Mil·
ton, 7~, 7~. Saturday to advance to
finals of the $200,000 Association of
Tennis Professionals Championship
t.ournainent.
Tanner will play In Sunday's
televised final against the winner ol
the match between Pat DuPre and
Peter Fleming, which was to be
played Saturday.
Down 1-4 in the first set, Tanner
broke Mitton 's serve In the seventh
and nth games to help win the first
set.

Tanner, from Lookout Mountain,
Tenn., also used his powerful serve
to overcome Mitton, who admitted
he was a little surprised by his early
lead.
"Maybe I started thinking too
much," Mitton said. "! got too tentative ."
Facing elimination in the second
set with Tanner serving for the matcll, the unseeded Mitton broke back
to tie the second set,~.
Tanner twned around to break
Mitton's serve and then held his own
to win the match.

Tanner said he was pleased with
the improvements in his · ground
stroke.
"It's not just the serve anymore,"
said the finaUst in this year's men's
singles at Wimbledon. "I can put
more press\ire on my opponent than
by just serving an ace."
Tanner said he was not surprised
at the caliber of Mitton's play.
"He has a great forehand that
when it's on can be really
devastating," Tanner said. "He
played a good game to break me." .

SVAC champs have
.nine lettermen. •• •
By Greg Dalley
The Eastern Eagles have two Allleaguers returning to fonn the
nucleus of their 1979 gridiron team.
Quarterback Brian Bissell and
mlddleguard Greg Hayman , both
seniors, were named to tile All.SVAC
aquad last fall after the Eagles captured the league title willl a perfect
record.
The Eagles, under the direction of
head coach Joe Mitchem, opened
their new campaign Saturday
traveling to Waterford for an afternoon game.
Their league competition doesn't
be@in until October 5 when IIley battle the Kyger Creek Bobcats at
Cheshire.
Eastern's 'first home game is on
Friday, September 7 when they host
Zane Trace.
One other senior lettennan that
will join Bissell and Hayman to lead
the club in the backfield will be
Mark Norton, a 5'11" running back
who saw quite a bit of action last
season and gained some big chunks
of yardage .
Other lettennen returning, aU
juniors, are Kenny Larkins at end,
Dennis Durst at a backfield position,
Greg Wigal as a linebacker and
back, Rodney Kellel', a 250 pound
lineman, Ray Werry, a 183 ·pound
linebacker, and Rick All!lll, · a
linebacker and running back.
Those nine lettennen will be ex·
peeled to give strong leadership to
· the 22 sophomores ·and freshmen

x-Dennis Durst
B 5-11 165 11
who make up the rest of the 1979
x-Greg
Wigal
LB
5-3 140 11
Eagle squad. Five other seniors and
x-Rodney
Keller
T
6-1 250 11
two juniors will be trying to break In·
x-Ray
WelT)'
LB
5-11
183 11
to tile starting eleven.
Greg
Scarbrough
LB
ii-6
160 11
The Eagles' strength lies In the
x-RickAllen
I:.B 5-11 155 11
leadership of the experienced
_ · 8 5-4 135 10 ·
players and on the size of their of- John Beaver
Charles Massar
T lHI 190 10
fensive and defensive lines.
Depth could be a question mark,
Jolumy Riebel
B HO 150 10
although the youngest players can
Nick Leonard
LB ~ 165 10
be expected to come along quickly
Mike Bissell
E 5-11·186-10
under the fine tutorage of Coach Mit· Virgil Taylor
LB 5-4 134 10
chem, who is well-known for getting
Ed Riffe
E 5-11 155 10
the most out of younger players.
Lee Gainer
NG 5.J 158 10
Most of those lettennen are ex- Mike Hauber
LB ~ 155 10
perienced on defense, so the other
Ray Spencer
T fHl 215 10 ·
SVAC teams might have a hard time
Chris Allen
B S-10 150 10
again this year reaching paydirt
Todd Norton
B ~ 140 10
Barring Injuries, things are
JoeSayre
T 6-4 245 10
looking cautiously optimistic again
Dave
Wolf
E
6-1 · 177 10
this season for the high-flying
Dennis
Robinson
E
ii-6 130 10
Eagles. With a strong squad and a
Roger
Bissell
B
5-7 115 9
healthy one through the entire
5-11 135 9
David
Durst
B
season, this season just rniglit be
Ken
Browning
B
~
J35 9
another strong one for the grid
11-0
206
9·
Dave
Gaul
T
squad out Eastern way.
Mark
Holter
E
6-0
150
9
EASTERN ROSTER
JerTy
Larkins
E
5-6
130
9
Player
P011. HI. Wt. Yr.
BarTy
Staats
B
~
110
9
x-Brian B)ssell QB $.10 165 12
x
Denotes
lettennen.
x-Mark Norton
B Hl 163 12
x-Greg Hayman MG 5·11 180 12
JoeStout
LB $.10 170 12
Sept. ~~~a~e~~o~~DULE
Scott Hill
E $.10 150 12 _ Sept. 7 Zane Trace
Mark Smith
B 5-7 145 12
Sept. 14M Iller
Leonard Myers . E 11-0 165 12
Sept. 22 at Parkersburg catholic
Sept. 28 Federal Hocking
DewayneGood
T' • n lTl 12
~
Oct. sat Kyger Creek
Steve Browning
B ~ 130 11
Oct. 12 Southwestern
Randy Staats
B 5-Q 135 11
Oct. 19 at Hannan Trace
Oct. 26 North Gall ia
x-Kenny Larkins E 5-9 175 11
Nov. 10 at Southern ··
~

~

�C.2-The Sunday TimesoSenUnel, Sunday. Aug. 26, 1979

~-The Sunday Times.IJentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

.DATE - GYMNASIUM

Outdoor sports

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE

:t;Jearcats prepare for major

Week of August 261979

Aug . 261 · ~ p.m.·Open Gym
8 :J0-10-Camp Crescendo

p.m. ·Faculty Only
I Aug . 2712 N·lp.m.·Open
Gym
Gym
I ·~ ; 30p . m. ·Open

6-8

.

12 N·l p.m.·i'aculty Swim
p.m.·Camp CrescendO
6-8 p.m.·Open Swim
8·10 p.m.·Camp CrescendO
12 N·l p.m.·Fac\!Jiy Swim
1 ·~:30 p.m.·Camp CrescendO
6-8 p.m.·Open Swim
8·10 p.m.·Camp Crescendo
12 N·l p.m.·Faculty Swim
H :30 p,m,·CampCrescendO
6-8 p.m.·Open Swim
1 ·~:30

8·10 p.m. ·Camp Crescendo
By MICHAEL HOFTMAN
played a big part in making the
Aug . 2a 12 N·l p.m.· Faculty Only
Associated Press Writer
proposal.
1-4:30 p.m..Open Gym
Walleye limits would be cut back
"Sure, what they do is important,"
6-8 p.m. ·Open Gym
8·10 p.m. ·Camp Crescendo
from ten to six fish a day under a Wasson said. The Canadians have
N·l p.m.· Faculty Only
proposal by the state Division of indicated that if Ohio cuts back on its Aug . 29 12
1-4
:30 p.m.·Open Gym
Wildlife. And that's one proposal sport fishing limit, they won'tincrease
6·8 p.m. ·Open Gym
that's drawing heaps of fire from ti]e catch allowed their L'Ommercial
8·10 p.m. ·Camp' Crescendo
Aug . 30 .12 N·l p.m.· Facu1ty Only
12 N·l p,m.·Faculty Swim
sporWisherrnen who like things the fishermen, Wasson allowed.
•·• :30 p.m.·Open Gym
I ·• :30 p.m. ·Camp Crescendo
way they are.
As to the biological reasons for
6·8 p.m.·Open Gym
6·8 p.m. .Open Swim
The !X'Oposal gets a hearing Aug. 31 lowering the walleye limit : "It's
8·10 p.m.·Camp CrescendO
8·10 p.m.·Camp CrescendO
at division headquarters in Colwnbus biological in the sense that we can Aug . 31 12 N·l p.m.· Foculty Only
12 N·l p.m.·Faculty Swim
H p.m. ·Open Gym
Hp.m.·Open Swim
and opposition has for.med already, make the most out of (that)
6:J0·8·Camp
Crescendo
6-8
p.m.·Open Swim
with at least three bUsloads of resource ," said Wasson.
NOTE : All facilities in Lyne Center will be closed to the public uritll Wed·
.opponents scheduled to be qn hand
"We as managers for a resource nesdlly, September 5. A new Fall schedule will be published at that time.
when the proposal comes up.
want to make the most of that
Most of those actlvely fighting the resource ... lor the people," Wasson
cutback are members of the Lake said. " And we think the proper
Erie Sport Fisherman's Association strategy is to slow down the walleye
GAME SOLD OUT
seven kickoffs for 137 yards.
and operators off sportfishing take for Ohioans."
CLEVELAND
(AP) - The
'fumer's return was engineered
charterboats. But the opposition isn't
Dick Ferguso n, a charterL;;;:t
Cleveland
Browns
announced
captain in Port Clinton, is among by Mike Brown, assistant general
limited to outsiders.
Friday
that
the
National
Football
Some wildlife division staffers say those opposed to the cut. "It's the kind manager of the Bengals.
League
gam~
between
the
Browns
there is no biological reason for a limit of deal I can't see," he said. "I think . Brown tried to contact Turner in
and
the
Pittsburgh
steelers
on
slash, others contend it's aU political it's pressure from the commercial Califor.nia Tuesday to advise him
Sunday,
Oct.
7,
In
Cleveland,
has
- an attempt to gain concessions fishing industry. " Ohio has not that he would not be permitted to
from the Canadians who already have allowed commercial fishing for play with any Natiooal Football been sold out.
A team spokesman said 80,385
a six-walleye limit for sport fishing walleye since 1972.
League team in 1979 if th.e Bengals
and who also permit commercial
H the limit is lowered, Ferguson placed him on the "reserved - left tickets f&lt;r the game have been
fishing for the fish .
feels it's bound to hurt the charter boat camp" list .
purchased, the earliest sell-out of a
Ilisthislastreasonthatseemstobe industry on the lake. "I know if the
home
game in the club's hi..tnrv.
After failing to locate Turner,
the most logical on the basis of limit is six, in ~une and July I can go Brown reached his older brother and
interviews with some division dock-to-dock in four hours (with full
was told Deacm was having second
officials.
limits for everyone on board)
thoughts
about his decision to retire
Last spring, division chief Carl and at my rate ($210), who wants to
·from
football
.
Mosley announced that plans to cut pay that lor only four hours of
THIS WEEK
Given
that
much hope, Brown
the limit to six were being scrapped, fishing. "
because a report that the fiSh had
In addition to the walleye proposal, cmtacted the NFL office and was
Friday thru Saturday
been overharvested · due
to several commercial fishing changes given a 48-hour grace period In
miscalculatioos turned out to be are to be heard . The most which to resolve the Turner matter
insccurate. While, there had been controversial of th.ese is a proposal to and submit a roster.
Turner returned Brown's call,
errors in figuring the number of fish . increase the minimwn commercial
caught, there also were errors on the size limit on white bass from nine agreed to report, and took a late
nwnber of walleye in the lake . Both inches to II inches.
flight from San Diego to Cincinnati.
miscalculations were on the low side. . Wasson said any final decisions
"He was fined, but his contract
Tom · Wasson, the head of fish probably won't be made by the was not changed," Brown said.
'
management in the division, admits Wildlife Commission till December.
Turner offered no explanation for
that gaining concessions from Ontario
leaving camp July 22, two days after
making a cross-country drive to
Wllmington, where the Bengals
REGISTER FOR THE
train.
CAR SWEEPSTAKES
"I just felt it was the best thing for.
(No Purchase Necessary)
me to leave," said the 24 year-old
Turner, who gained 333 yards as a
:-~. Aug. 27 thru Sept. 1. ~
rookie.
Turner said his friends had urged
him to reconsider !X'O football, and
he added, " It was kind of lonely at
1'Even on Ule spec jal teams, we've
home. "
CINCINNATI' (AC) - Ken Riley's
got
guys
giving
100
percent,"
Rlley
best friend on the C!nciniiati Bengals
may have been his worst enemy said. "We had that at the end of last
year (after Rice succeeded Bill
professionally.
Until Lemar Parrish was traded to Johnson ) and we've got it now. What
the Washington Redskins, following we need to do is to keep it going.
the 1977 season, Parrish continually Everything now is pointed toward
upstaged the soft-spoken Riley wliile (the Sept. 2 season opener at )
they were the Bengals cornerbacks. Denver."
"I'm not very emotional, at least.!
"! hope Kenny makes AU-Pro this
year. He would have made it lots of don't shOw it, bul the enlliusiasm is
times if he and Lemar Parrish hadn't there. I just do what I've got to do to
been on the same team,'' a woman fan get ready."
"I think the younger players respect
told a sideline group as the Bengals
me,
·and that has a ·Jot to do with the
ran through their last heavy work at
way
you carry yourself, " he said.
swnmer camp.
Riley,
32, is the oldest Bengals
In 1976, Rlley had nine pass
player.
He
says he keeps in good
interceptions for a Bengals record but
shape
during
the off-season although
Parrish was chosen for the American
running
never
has been fun.
Football Conference Pro Bowl team.
"Conditioning is the hardest part of
Riley was named to the Associated
football but nothing good comes easy.
Press All-Pro team, however.
"My secret is that I work just as
"Lemar and I were very close,"
hard
as a rookie. I always come into
Riley said, recalling their friendly
camp
feelin g like a rookie, not feeling
rivalry. "It hurt to see him leave, but
like
I've
got it made."
it was his wish to be traded."
Riley is the Ben gals career leader in
interceptions with 43 and is the senior
member of the team, having just
completed his lith swnmer training
camp.
Now Riley has emerged as the elder
statesman on the Bengals, a role he
feels was thrust upon him naturally
because he has endured the longest.
"Bob Johnson had that role last
year, and when he retired I kind oi
CINCINNATI (AP ) - The
picked up on it.'
Cincinnati
Bengals have traded wide
Riley said it's a misconception that
receiver
Dennis Law to the '
he's a great stone face; lje just uses
Washingtoo Redskins, following the
words economically.
"I'm not one ofthose guys who goes surprise return to the team's
around running my mouth off," Riley training camp of Deacon Turner.
Turner , who left the team a month
said. "But I've always spoken up
when I had something to say that ago, rejoined the club Wednesday
would help the team.''
and the ruming back will try to
That's happened more frequently make the ball club in the . days
this year a~ Riley rallied the Bengals remaining before next week's final
at team meetings.
cutdown to 45 players.
"Everything is different this year,"
His return caused the Bengals to
Riley said. "And it all starts from the . trade Law for. an undisclosed future
Iilli 2 Freezer door she lves Iilli 2
top."
Mode l CTF 18AY
draft choice.
Easy- Release"' ice trays rEl 2
Translated, that means General
Law was a fourth ... ound draft
Cabinet shelves with wire storManager Paul Brown and Coach .
choice
for
the
Bengals
in
1978.
He
age rack !illJ 3 Cabine t door
Homer Rice, whwt Riley says, ''are a
caught
five
passes
for
81
yards,
shelves [] Pocketed egg rack.
lot alike," are remolding the Bengals ·
25
punts
for
106
yards
and
returned
after last year's 4-12 season.

~pponents beginning .Sunday
•

•
CINCINNATI - It's a widely
~wn fact that bears and other
fUfl'Y creatures are pressed Into
hi\lefnatlon during those hard winter months. But a local breed ol
"llEARCATS" that have been
hi.ting out since la8t spring are being

lpil.....iiiiiii;:::~::::;;;~

Wildlife
drawings
..
set next month

...

'1.19

Riley, Parrish
friendly rivals

!!dairy1sle~

"

"'

Harman-Southern in 0-0 tie

detloelt.

~addition to the parks drawings,

Roclevitch out
with broken leg
HANNAN -

SALE

NOW!

AT POMEROY LANDMARK

FOR MORE INFORMATION
241-1111 EIT. ztl

BIG CAPACITY
17.8 CU. F1 REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER!

WBI CI! l or our fall Oua rrer Schedu le ot Clas Ses 1n your
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and oil tanks for longer cvttlng . eJ.5 cubic Inch loop scevenge engine.
eCar rles bars from 16" through 2• ". eldeal saw for contractors and
farmers . • Both automatic and manual chain oiler to match all cutting
conditions. • Fast starting, qu ick cutting, easy handl ing .

•

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PLUS I

I lui polnt-

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freezer • Buill· In lock
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divider

• Power·on

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•

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985-3308

CHESTER, 0. ·

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.-•
•

$50
DISCOUNT

HOM ELITE MAKES IT .EASIER

Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Main St.
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30
Mill Closed at5:00 P.M.
Serving Meigs, Gallia &amp;
Mason Counties.

cmtrolled scrinunage Friday. Each
team ran a total ol 30 offensive and
30 defensive playa.
Coach Maynard fell that the
~ point of both teams was
defense, in ,that neither team was
able to cross the goal line.
Weather conditions were
definitely contributing factors to the
lack ol offense. The field was e•tremely wet and muddy causing
many dropped pal!Ses and several
fwnbles .
During the middle cl the secood of.
fensive series, Hiuman 's starting
quarterback, Steve Roclevitch ,
received a leg Injury and was transported to St. Mary's Hospital.
It was later learned that Steve's
leg was broken and he will be out indefinitely.
Hannan begins its regular season
next Friday night when they travel
to Buffalo r:l Putnam

@hio Valley Bank ·

Dennis Law

#±:[jj (e&gt;lWtW:±

The Hannan Wildcats

hosted the Southern Tornados in a

DISCOUNT

Bengals trade
wide receiver

hopes will be free of those dangerous
"bear-traps" set om by the op-

ponents.
And just who will be trying to trap
the Bearcats In 1979? For starters,
UC will tangle with three schools
ranked among the lop 20 teams In
the country. Two of them, North
carolina (Oct. 6) and Pittsburgh
(Oct. 13) are new additions to UC's
schedule and both will be played on
the l'OIId. Florida State meanwhile,
will travel to the Queen City for ooe
of UC's four home encounters on
Nov.3.
Of his opponents and the 79
the
Division
cl
Wildlife
of
the
Ohio
.
Coach Staub conunents,
schedule,
lX&gt;LUMBUS - Drawtnga for
Department
of
Natural
Resources
"I
think
the
next four years will be
Jll!eferred sites for Ohio waterlowl
hljnters wanting to build duck blinds will have drawings for blinds at Mer- the toughest schedule UC will ever
face over a four-year period. I do
a~ state park lakes this year wfU be cer Wildlife Area (Grand LU:e St
Marys) and Mosquito Creek Water- think we •re capable ol beating any
conducted Saturday, Sept. 8.
!rhe drawings will be held fowl Management Area (Mosquito one ol those ranked teams, but we
have so much to do and so much to
following registration at 8 a.m. at Creek Lake) on Sept. 8.
The drawing for blinds at Grand accomplish if we are to beat any one
the respective park offices.
1he parks, with the number of Lake St. Marys will be held cl them. It's really a matter ol how
bijnds at each are: Alum Creek, :.1; following registration at 10 a.m., far and how fast we progress to be a
&amp;ckeye LU:e, 24; Caesar .Creek, 3S; Sept. 8 at the Mercer Wildlife Area good foothall team. "
Staub, a foothall fundamentalist
Cowan LU:e, 12; Deer Creek, 34; headquarters south cl Celina on
from Ule word go, will operate oo a
~!aware, 25; East Harbor, II ; In- state Route 703, just east cl U.S.
philosophy of muttial respect, or as
diAn Lake, 32; Kiser U.ke, 10; U.ke Route127.
The drawing for blinds at he puts it, '1reat everyone like you
L&lt;tamie,15; Long LU:e (at Portage
UO&lt;es state Park), 5; Nimlsila Mosquito Creek Waterfowl want to be treated." He and his staff
Resorvotr (at Portage Lakes ), 25; · Management Area will be held at the will consciously steer away from a
Rqcky Fork, 18; and West Branch, area headquarters at 10 a .m., Sept. 8 fear-motivating philosophy.
also. The headquarters i.s on Park
Asked about the NCAA's new
15:
Hunters must regiBter for 811 Avenue, two mlles north of State ruling which allows freslunen to
Route 881n Trumbull County.
drlowings In person .
report four days earlier than returWhile the Division of Wlldllfe does ning lettermen, Staub was enThoee wanting to obtain pennits to
CllOstruct duck blinds must have a not require a $20 deposit, it does thusiastic. "It allows the players to
require that blinds . be removed at get to know one another - get to
va)ld Ohio bunting license and a
the close cl the season.
know the coaches - and in general,
fecjeral waterfowl stamp.
become 'climatized' to college life
~t the parka, individuals receiving
a ...,rut must deposit $20, which ill
relurned after the blind is removed
by:the pennlt bolder.
ll1 duck blinds must be removed
wllhln 15 days at the clsoe of the
setsoo. Hunters have up to :.1 days
arqer the close cl the season to apply
In :wrJting for a refund ol their $20

.
.

SPECIAL

QUARTER
POUNDER

unleashed by the University cl Cin·
cinnati.
Freshman football recruits and
returning lettennen begin two-a-day
practices Sunday searching for the
right tracks that will hopefully lead
them to a winning season, the kind cl
season third-year coach Ralph Staub

•

••
•

•
•
•

~

---..-- ALSO I
.-- .
.
...
-•.
....
..•

Mor~

Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

5.25=5.46
ANNUAL RATE

ANNUAL YIELD*

Bank Safety an~ Security
For Your Savings
Each Account Insured Up To
$40,000 By The FDIC, An
Agency of the Fed. Gov't.

•

DENTURE SPECIAL

COMPLETE DENTURE. ••••••••••••••• $125.00

H. D. BROWN, D.D.S.

4-H AND FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA WISH TO
THANK EVERYONE WHO PURCHASED ANIMALS AT
THE MEIGS COUNTY FAIR.
IT WAS AN EXCELLENT SALE!
No. Times Bought
BUYER
2
Pomeroy National Bank
3
.Ohio University Inn
5
Racine Home National Bank
I
Central Soya
1
Elberfetds
Farmers Bank
6
1
vaughan's Cardinal
2
Jones Boys
2
Gibson International Harvester
Citi1ens National Bank
·4
Jackson Production Credit Assn. !Gallipolis)
2
1
Sugar Run Flour Mill
3
M&amp;T Construction &amp; Escavating
1
Swisher &amp; Lohse
1
Veterans Memoria I Hospital
1
French City Meats
Diamond Stone Quarry
Green-Up Reclamation
Southeastern Equipment
Athens County Savings &amp; Loan
Benedict, Inc.
Eberts Construction
Rawlings &amp; Coats Funera I Home
Ron James
Crafty Ladies &amp; P .J. Pauley lnsuran!=e
Kyle Meat
Kroger's
Boggs Sales and Service
Quality Print Shop
Larry Spencer, Clerk of Courts
Landmark
Wesley Buehl
1
Gaul's Market &amp; Parker construction
1
· Chester Agrico Service
1
Tracy Fire Equipment
1
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter
1
Fraley Logging and Chipping
1.
Riggs Used Cars
1
Holier Clinic
1
Oakley Collins
1
Green Acres Farm (Floyd Avis)

Amount
$2,648.00
2,004.70
2,835.20
964.25
1,084.50
3,915.20
967.50
h810.30
I, 160,.30
2,415.70
1,362.50
1,005.70
2,917.85
920.00
876.65
912.25
$1,283.65
955.50
909.00
940.80
931.50
868.50
625.95
371.20
481.80
113.75
181.90
717.20
195.00
179.40
206.80
188.60
234.60
525.60
309.40
348.75
417.00
276.25
203.00
170.00
221.00

t

DONATIONS

Gibson International Harvester
Ron James
Racine Home National Bank
Landmark
Gaul's Market &amp; Parker Construction
Pomeroy National Bank
Green Acres Farm (Floyd Avis)

August Rate

7.70'= 8.12

ANNUAL RATE

row - Rodney Collins, Chris Burnette, David Hoke,
Scott Davis, William Strait; bottom row - Allsla
Walton, Sheri8n Splete, Leslie Chevalier, Coach Tom
Collins. Not present are Betsey Sanders, Todd HUlon,
William Amsbary.

before the varsity starts coming in." - amazing 56 tackles; five pass deflec- it each and every day. Jt promises to
The time for "climatizlng" will be
tions ; and one fumble recovery.
be a very competitive year and the
over Sunday when nearly 100
AU-in-ell, football at the Univer- competition officially unfolds Sept.
players stream out of the locker
sity of Cincinnati is alive and well 15 when UC visits Southern
room onto Nippert Stadiwn's green
and getting fresh blood pwnped into Mississippi.
carpet to begin team drills.
UC i.s touting two All-American
candidaies this year among the 14
returning starters. Soft-spoken
sophomore tailback Allen Harvin
With This coupon
(Willingboro, N. J .) hopes to eclipse
his record...etting freslunan season.
The ~; 200 pound speedster pounded out 1,283 yards on the ground,
CALL: FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
tops in ·the nation as a first-year
man, and hit pay dirt six times.
FOR APPOINTMENT
On the defensive side of the fence,
(614) 992·2878 or (614) 992-2387
~plain Farley Bell (Toledo) will
anchor one of the defensive end
slots, where he was a starter last
200'12 West Main ST.
year after transferring here from
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
Ohio State. The~. 228 pound senior
Offer Expires Sept. 1, 1979
led the '78 squad in quarterback
sacks with eight; accounted for an

A NEW 4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

ANNUAL YIELD

... .
.

.

.·

Farmers Bank donated a hog for the 4-H raffle .
Boggs Sales and Service donated a lamb for the
4-H raffle.

Paving an"'i nterest rate related to the average tour -year yield of
treasury securities. Minimum deposit $1 1000.00. Interest must re ·

main on deposit a full year to earn annual yield . Substantial in ·

terest penalty upon early withdrawal.

.•••
•
••

GREEN T·BALL (RED TEAM) -Sponsored by
Downtown Shake Shoppe finished the season undefeated ~. Top row - Tony Vance, Mark Johnson,
Allen Elliott, Brian Kopack, Ghad Thompson; second

*Minimum deposit $5.00. Interest must

rete: in on depOsit a full year to earn an ·

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• • -~ v '
·•
•
·\1

The Sale Committee would like to thank the following: Car·
nahan Auction Service; Ringmen - Rick Avis, Red Carr,
Dan Smith, Danny Young, Lloyd Blackwood, J . E. Somers,
and Jim Meredith. our thanks to Ken Grover for taking the
pictures and Production Credit Association .for clerking the
ale
S

•

.•
.·:
:
.,

. ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._.:
•

J.

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�.....••-

C-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

....••

Bryant Signs ·new cOntract :;

Cincinnati .Bengals face different
Tampa Bay squad says McKay
CINCINNATI (AP) - Two years
ago, Tampa Bay came here during
the preseason and suffered their
wor!lt defeat e.ver.
The Bengals, under then Coaclt
Bill
Johnson
crushed
the
Buccaneers 45~ in the 1977
exhibition season opener.
Tampa Bay was back for a
preseason game Saturday, and
Johnson now · ls an offensive line
coach for Tampa · Bay .
"The difference between our team
then and now is night-and~ay," said
Tampa Bay Coach John McKay.

"We will cut players this week whO
would have started then ."
Both McKay and Bengals Coach
Homer Rice want to use tile giune as
a tuneup for their National Football
League regular season openers .
September 2.
"I'm not overly coocerned wth
Winning in ihe preseason," McKay
said . "It is nice if it comes, but our
main job is to prepare a strong 45man roster for tile season opener.
Two weeks after the season starts,
no one can remember a team's
record in the preseason .' '

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Rice will be trying to erase the
memories of last week's 17-!3loss to
Chicago, so his team can have some
momentum going into its first
regular season game, at Denver .
The Bengals are 2-1 in preseason
play , while Tampa Bay is 1-2.
"It's important for us that we play
well," Rice said .. ''We will be
playing, for the most part, the
players who will be there in regular
season. We waot to keep everything

••

The Bengals will be operating
without running back Pete Johnson,
who is lost for an indefinite period
because of a dislocated left wrist.
Potential replacements for
Johnson could be rookies Charles
Alexander and Nathan Poole or
veteran Boobie Clark who may
return this week from a knee injury.
"I can play Saturday against
Tampa, but I'd rather be ready to go
full steam the following Sunday

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successful active coach is a virtuai
cinch to move put Amos AlonZit
Stagg on college football's all-timl!;
victory list.
·
':
Stagg won 314 games In 57 Yeu:s'
and Glenn "Pop" Warner had 3131n
season.
44 seasons.
"I have a llfetime contract,'" he
Bryant Is third oo that !1st with 284:
quipped toward the end of a news
cooquests
in 31 campaigns, needlnlt
conference Friday with media .
only
31
more
to break Stagg'l:
personnel on the Southeastern
record.
.•
Cmference Skywriters Tour. "It's
"My
contract
ran
out
June
31,"
b~
for five years, and lhls ts the first
said. ''Yes, I got a raiJe. Five year~&gt;
year oo it."
puts me past the retirement age. ~ ~
It means that the game's most
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) Coach Bear Bryant of defending
national champion Alabama says he
has signed a oontract to coach the
Crimson 'ride through the 1983

moving forward ."
A1TENDS CAMP -Chrt&amp; Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mn. Clifford
Kennedy, %4a Riverview Drive,
Pomeroy, allended VaHey Vl.tla
SporiB Camp Dear Balubrldge,
Qblo, receoUy. He received
professional lostrnctlon In
baseball from Ted Kluazewsld
and Bill Wolfe. Cbrill wW be In the
sixth grade at Pomeroy Elementary tbls fall.

know the team needs me right now,
and I'm sorry I can't just step right
' into the fullback spot."
The Bengals rwming attack has
averaged 3.1 yards per gain. Lenvil
Elliott the leading rusher with an
· Baseball At A Glance
By The Associated Press
average of 4.3 yards per carry.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
The passing of Ken Anderson and
EAST
rookie Jack Thompson have given
w . ~ . Pel. GB
Baltimore
81 43 .653
the Bengals more to smile about.
Boston
76 49 .608 5'1'
The team is averaging 259 yard~
Milwaukee
77 52 .597m6 1h
per game passing .
New York.
69 56 .652 12 1/:z
Detroit
67 60 .528 15 'h
Last week against Chicago ,
Cleveland
6-j 64 .500 19
Cincinnati ran up 484 total yards and
Toronto
40 67 .315 42 1h
399 of those were by passing.
WEST
70 56 .5'.7
Anderson completed 13 of 18 for 204 · California
M innesota
66 60 .524 J
yards, while Thompson was 13 of 22
Kansas City
66 61 .520 3'12
for 2Q5 yards.
Texas
62 66 .404 8
Tampa Bay is still puzzling over
Chicago
56 71 ..Ul lJ V&gt;
Seattle
54 74 .422 16
what to do about its quarterback
Oakland
41 66 .316 29 112
situation. Second-year man Doug
Friday's Games
Williams has started tile first three
Toronto 6, California 4
Cleveland 5, Oakland 2
games, but Mike Rae, playing in the
Det roit s. seattle 2
second half, has hit on nearly 60
Baltimore at Chicago, ppd ., un percent of his passes and directed
playable grounds
New York 7, Minnesota 5
the Bucs to considerable yardage.

..

Gallipolis midget league organizes
GAIJ.JPOIJS - The Galllpolis
Midget Football League held its first
meeting ri the 1979 season at Bob
Saunders Quaker Stale Service Center recently.
Special recognition was given to
I:'hil Skidmore and the Gallipolis
Area Jaycees for their outstanding
service.
Directors for the 1979 season are :
Phil Skidmore, Ron Ellis and Pete
Nibert and chalnnan of the board,
Bob Saunders. All entries for the
1979 draft must be received by
August29.
The first draft will be held Sept. I,
6 p.m. on Memorial Field. All new
applicants should aUend. The next
meeting was set for AUif. :JI, 7 p.m.
at. Bob Sal¥1ders Quaker State Ser-

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico ( AP) Carlos Romero Barcelo, the
governor of Puerto Rico, said his
commonwealth would not seek to
extradite Indiana University
basketball coach Bobby Knight .
Knight was convicted Wednesday
of aggravated assault on a Puerto
Rican policeman during the Pan
Americ·an Games la st month.
Knight - who did not appear at hls
' trial - was fined $500, sentenced to
six months in prison, and given until
next Monday to appear in court and
ask for suspension ol his sentence .

MkCan

California at Toronto
Oakland at Cleveland
Baltimore at Chicago
New York at Minnesota

Seattle at Cleveland
California at Detroit
Boston at Chicago
Baltimore at Minnesota
M ilwaukee at Kansas City
"New York at Texas

LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB
73 53 .579
69 53 .566 2

New York

WEST

56

.548
.528

59

•
6 117

62 .512 8'12
72 .415 20 112

Houston
72 56
Cincinnari
72 57
Los Angeles
59 66
San Francisco
58 70
San Diego
55 74
Atlanta
50 78
Friday's Games

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Brown's vs. Gilley 's.

•

•

Sunday and Monday's

13;

.426 17 1h

3;

Issues

Number

1

3;

15 .
6:25-For Our times 10; 6:JoDragnet 17 : 6:45- Mornlng
Reporl 3.
t :50-Good Morning, West VIrginia
13 .
6 :55- Chuck White Report! 10:
News 13.
7:0D-Today 3.15: Good Morning
America 6,13; Monday Morning
8; Balman 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17 .
7: 15- A.M. Weather JJ . 7:30Famlly Attalr 10; Sesame St . 33.
8 :OD-Captaln Kangaroo 8.10; Lassie

and

Pro.

Morning Magazine 13;
" Hor izon' s West" 17.

10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3.15 ;
S20,ooo Pyramid 13; Bonkers! 6;
Whew ! 8.10.
10 :55-CBS News 8 : House Call 10.
11 :00- High
Rollers 3.15 :
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6. 13; Price Is
Right 6,10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune J. 15; '
Family Feud 6.13; 11 :55-News
17.
lUlO- NewS&lt;enter J: News 10,13.6;

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TRACK AND FIELD
MONTREAL ( AP) - Edwin
Moses sped to hL&lt; 33rd consecutive
400-meter intermediate hurdles
victory and James Sanford edged
favored Silvio Leonard of Cuba in
the 100-meter dash as tile United
States men's team bolted into the
lead after the first day of the World
Cup tr ac.k and field meet.
The Americans collected 38 points
after six events.

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J :OD-Track and Field 6.13; NFL
Preview 8. 10: Insight. lS; Movie
" The Cossacks" 17: Wall Street
Week 20.
J :JO-i&gt;GA Special JS ; Poldark 20 .
4:D0-5portsworld 15; Tennis 8,10;
Films ol Olin Sewall Petllnglll
33 .
o:JG-Bewllched 3: Meeting ol
Mlncb 20.
S:OD-1/oyage lo lhe Bottom ol the
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Keyboard Sonalas 33.
5· 30--Bette.r Wav .. 15 : Draqnet 17;

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S:Ss-Summer ·Semester 10; 6 :oo700 Club 6; 700 Club 8; PTL Club

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" Thunder in the East" 17: Bir thday Party lor Josef Slrauss 20.
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S:JD-World AI Large 17; 5:45Farm Report 13; So50-PTL Club

1:00-Tony Brown's Journal3; NFL

. 391 22

Sunday's Games
Cincinnati at New York
St . Louis at Los Angeles
Pittsburgh at San Diego
Chicago at San Francisco
Montreal at Atlanta
Houston at Phildephla
Monday 's Games
Houston at Montreal

4 : ~Maverlck

Answer.s 6,1 J; Face The Nail on
8; National Geographic 2ll,JJ ;
The Issue 10; This Is the Life 15.
12 :JG-Meel lhe Press 3,15;
Directions 6 ; Viewpoint 8; Face
the Nation 10; Evangelistic
Outreach 13 .

CARROLL

12, LosAngeles5

3:79 Park Avenue 15; Tennis 6i

17; Zoom 20; Big Blue Marble 33.
11 :00- Ernest Angley 8; Rex
Humbard 15; Rev . Henry Mahan
13; Que Pasa . U.S.A.? 20 ;
Photography : Here 's How 33.
11 :»--Super Bowl XIII J; Animals,
Animals, Animals 6; Rev.R.A.
West 13; Electric Co. 20; Tur nabout 33.
Issue

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J'ffersons

Gunsmoke 8; Movie "Shadow on
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Money , News and I/ levis 33.
l :OD-Baseball 17 ; 1 :31}-ABC News
13 ; 3:JD-12 o'clock high 17;

" Witness for the Prosecution"

12

.453 14

Time Sunday 3, 15;

8.10 Betwwen lhe Wars 17; Mqvle
" Tillie and Gus" 20; Firing Line
33.
10 :3D-Ruff House 17 .
II :OD-News3,6,8,10,13,15 ; Open.Up
17; .Wall Street Week JJ .
11 : 15-ABC News 6; CBS News 8, 10;
PMA Pulse lS .
11 : 30--Movle "Edge of Darkness"

Sesame sb '"

12 :00-A.St

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9:0D-Movle "Stone" 6,13; Alice
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9:JD-Rat Patrol 17: IO:OD-Prlme

lO :OO _ Human lmenslon J; Kids
Are People Too o ; ~ooert
Schuller 6; Movie " The Bobo"
10; Jimmy Swaggart 13; Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15; Hazel 17.;
Studio See 33.
10 :»--Rex Humbard 3;
Mov ie

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Best of Groucho 20 .
6:0D-News 3.10; In Search of 6;
Amer ican Life Style 8; ABC
News 13; Little Rascals 15;
Wrestl ing 17; Electric Co. 2ll ; An
Hour of Gospel 33. ,
6 :30--NBC News 3,1S ; News 6; CBS
News 8,10; Baffle of the Planets
13; Sesame St. 20.
·
7:0D-Worid of Disney 3,15; Hardy
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Baseball l . 17 ;
James
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7:30--Mr. Rogers 20; 8:0D-Movle
" Rooster Cogbum" 3,15: Mjlrk
&amp; Mindy 6, 13; All in lhe F~n)lly
8.10; Evenin9 at Pops ~,33 .
8:30--Ropers 6,13; One Day A~ A
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SUNDAY, AUGUST26, 1979
5:30-AG -U.S.A.
17 :
6:00Amerlcan
Problems
&amp;
Challenges 10 : Between the
Lines 17 . .
6 :30- Chrlstopher Closeup J :
Treehouse Club 101 This is the
Life 13.
7:DO-Thlsls the Life 3; Thinking In
Black 8; Public Allalrs 10;
Jimmy
Swaggarl
17 ;
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Newsmaker '79 13.
7:»--TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
6 ; Jerry Falwell 8,10; The Bible
Answers 13; J lmmy Swaggarl
15; Christ lor the World 17.
8:0D-Mormon Choir J ; Grace
Cathedral6 ; Christ lor the World
13; Three Stooges and Fr iends
17; Sesame St. 20.33 .
8:30--()ral Roberts 3; Contact 6;
Day of Discovery 8; James
Robison Presents 10; Lower
Lighthouse 13; Open Bible 15.
9:00---Gospel Singing Jubilee J; Oral
Roberts 10; Rex Humbard 6;
Rev. Leonard Repass 8; Rev .
Jim Franklin 13; Ernest Angley
15; Maverick 17 : Mr . Rogers
20,33.
9·»--Chr lstlan Cenler 8; Electric
, Co . 33; It Is Written 10; Outreach

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Cincinnati 2, New York 0
Philadelphia 5, Houston 3
San Diego J, Pittsburgh 2
Chicago 4, San Fran cisco 1
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Boston at Kansas City

Milwaukee at Texas
· Monday 's Games
Oakland at Toronto

Montreal
Chicago
St. Louis
Philadelphia

vice Center: All coaches are asked tG:
attend.
::
1979 MIDGET
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
••
September 11

CAR CLEARANCE
CARNIVAL II

Seattle at Delroil, 2

Pittsburgh

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Kar'lsas City 4, Boston 2
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against Denver,'' Clark said. "I

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-Cruise Features-

••

c.s-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

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••

�C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aul(. a;, 1979

C-7-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

· Miller takes early command
PINEHURST, N.C. (A P) Johnny Miller took note of Ute fact
Utat Tony Jacklin of England ended
a live-year winless streak last week
in. Ute German Open.
Then Miller, once golf's G&lt;Jlden
Boy but a stumbling, struggling
also-ran for Utree years, considered
his own 11-under-p!ll" 63 Utat had
given him a 3-stroke conunand of Ute
$250,000 Hall of Fame Golf Classic.
"Maybe," he said, "the moon is

right lor us has-beens."
But Miller, again possessing Ute
unerring , rifle-accurate approaches
Utat marked the stunning successes
of his glory years, quickly offered a
word of caution .
"I'm not saying I'm coming back.
I'm not saying I'm back. I'm not
saying l'm ready to do what I did in
'H," when he won eight
toWT!aments and set a single-season
money-winning record .
"I haven:t even given winning a
Utought. I just want to start playing
better. It's been quite a session I've
had the last Utree years."
From Ute very top of the game,
from a peak reached by lew of Ute
greatest golfers, Miller hit the skids
as lew golfers have ever done .
From the British Open champion
in 1976 (his last victory), he went to
non-winning status in 1977 and
slumped from ihere to ll!th on Ute
money-winning list last year. And
now, at 32, when he should be at his
peak, he 's missed the cut in hall his
starts this season. He really hasn 't
come close to winning in two years.
· But as quickly as it deserted him,
just so suddenly did it return on this
hazy, breezy day in Ute Carolina
sandhill country.
He made a couple of long putts. He
played the deft and delicate little
par-saving chips when necessary .
But more importantly, just as he did

Milhoan names
GAHS golf team
GALUPOUS - John Milhoan
head golf coach at Gallia Academy
High School, Saturday announced
the results of a 72 hole event held to
de_tennine the starting players on
this year's GAHS golf team.
J. D. Jones heads the field with a
289. Others qualifying were Aaron
Jeffers, 30; Mark Allen, 303; Brad
Rodgers, 319 and Tim Skidmore 327
First alternate is Jeff Beattie at
331. Others trying out were Nick
Petrella, 403; Randy Orr 405 and
Rick Jackson 410. Par is 272.
Gallia Academy will play Unioto
Sept. 4.

~-·

energy dollars

when he was winnin g with
monotonous regularity , his iron
shots seemed to eat the flag , homing
in on t~e hole as if it were a magnet.
He scored seven birdies from
within five feet.
"It was fun, " Miller said . "It was

an amazing feeling , just like I had in
'74. I don't really know how to
describe it. Kind of a tingling
feeling . Like I could do anything I
W81lted to dO, 11

He came wiUtin a single shot of Ute
record on the revered old No. 2
course at the Pinehurst Country
Club. He reeled off one string of five
consecutive birdies. He one-putted
seven times on his back nine.
"But we're only half through,"
Miller said. "I'm not even thinking
about winning ."

NEWINGTON, Conn. (AP) Muhammad Ali met 6-year-&lt;Jid
Krista! ·Yates in a one-round fight
and lost.
"Don't you want to kiss the
champ?" Ali pleaded.
"No. No I don 1," said Ute yoUng
New Haven resident.
As Ali persisted in attempting to
plant a kiss on her forehead, she
squirmed away. Ali smiled and
moved on .

It was Ute retired heavyweight
boxing champion's only defeat
during a visit Friday to Newington
Children's Hospital, which cares lor
about 80 young patients, most of
them physically handicapped but
some
suffering
psychiatric
problems.
"When you see small people, you
see the closest people to heaven,"·
said Ali, who was beseiged for
autographs · in a fourth-floor
corridor. He said he makes frequent
hospital viflits hoping that people
confined "might feel good for a few
rninutes.' 1
Earlier in Ute day, in Hartford,
Mayor George Athanson presented
Ali wiUt a flag "to attest that he is a
great American•: and gave Ali a
plaque noting Friday was
"Muhammad Ali Day" in the city
and in Connecticut by proclamation
of G&lt;Jv. Ella Grasso.
Ali was to have received a flag in a
similar ceremony at the state
Veterans' Home and Hospital in
Rocky Hill, but "that visit was
canceled after some veterans
objected because Ali, citing his
religious beliefs, refused to enter
military service in !967.
·
He eventually won his draft
resistance court case and regained
the boxing crown stripped from him

~

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Still, his 3~ole tot~ of 132 put
10 shots under par and Utree ahead
of Tommy Aaron, Danny Edwards
and Mike Brannan, tied for second
at 135. Aaron had.a second round 66
Edwards and Brannan 68s.
'
KeiUt Fergus was next at 68-!36
Australian veteran Bruce ·Devw;
and surprise first-round leader Dana
' Quigley were at 137.
Quigley went from an opening 63
to a 74. "I was kind of on my )tnees
aU day," he said.
Tom. Watson, the defending
champio n and leading moneywinner Utis year, shot a 68 that left
him at 138. U.S. Open champion Hale
Irwin, the holder of Ute Pinehurst
scoring record, matched par 71 for
139.

The latest st«my chapter in Ute
cootroverslal career of basketball
Coach Bobby Knight app-oached ita
end when Carlos Romero Barcelo,
the governer of Puerto Rico, said his
commonwealth would not seek
Knight's edradltim to serve a
prison !lenience.
·
Knlsht, coach of Indiana
wa~
convicted
University,
Wednesday of·aggravated &amp;1188ult on
a Puerto Rican policeman durjng
Ute Pan American G11111es I8st
month . Knight- who dld not appear
at his trial - was fined $500,
sentenced to sii months in prillon
and given . unW next Monday to
appear In court to ask fer suspension
of his !lenience.
Knight had been quoted as saying
there was ''no way" he would return
to the ia1and and Barcelo said

Kristal Yates whips champ

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as a result of the draft controversy.
At a news conference Thursday
night, Ali had no light to pick wiUt
the veterans who lobbied against Ute
Rocky Hill visit.
"! wouldn't oppose the veterans.
They are great people. They fought
lor the country," he said.
Fielding questions from the civic
center crowd, Ali showed Ute spark
of wit and self-aggrandizement Utat
first brought him fame beyond the
boxing world.
"I was really so surprised to see so
many people come out after I
retired. I figured after I retired,
they 'd forget all about me."
In response to a question about
plans after his recent retirement:
"I'm at a turning point in my life.
I'm real confused. I don't know what
to do," he said.
"I'm 37 and still dancing, still
pretty ."

MEET MONDAY
POMEROY - Southern Athletic
Boosters will have a work session at
the high school Monday at 6:30p.m.

CHESTER T-BALL TEAM - ·Front row,l-r, Don
·• Spencer, ,Amy Mann, Alvena Van Meter Matt
fUdenour, KeiUt Spencer, Susan Wolf. SeCond ~ow 1-r
Dean Mays, Tim Michael, Melissa Miller, J~~

fUdenour, Jared Spencer, Christi Adams, Greg Csr·
penter. Third row,l-r, Paul Erwin, Shawn Bush, Floyd
Ridenour, Mike FrU9t, D. A. Harris, Tom Morrissey,
Ralph Wells. Back row, coaches Louis Bush and
Patrick Morrissey.

Reds behind by one-half game
CINCINNATI (AP) The
Cincinnati Reds should top the twomillion mark in home attendance for
a record-tying seventh consecutive
season when they return to
Riverfront Stadium early next
monUt.
Te home attendance total ,
currently at 1,957 ,152, should go over
the two million mark during the
baseba!J team's two-game series
wiUt the San Francisco Giants on
Sept. :&gt;-6.
The Reds and Los Angeles
Dodgers will share the record.
The. Reds already hold hold a
major league record as the only
team to draw 2.5 million fans three
consecutive seasons, achieving Utat
the last three years.
Ironically, while the Reds are
Setting new records, they are also

down in attendance from last year
when Utey drew the second largest
crowds in the club's history.
At Utis time last year, Ute club had
drawn 2,244,341. The Reds finished
the year attracting 2,532,497,
There was much speculation
during the offseason that the
departure of Pete Rose and Sparky
Anderson would hurt the club's
attendance.
Reds officials have denied this and
blamed poor weather and the
gasoline situation lor the decline in
attendance.

~~'V'+-\·

,.

MEIGS 992·5554

JACKSON 286-5554

POINT PlEASANT
-Coach Steve
Safford's Point Pleasant Big Blacks opened scrimmage play Friday night with a 3-2 loss to Portsmouth
West. According to most o~rvers both varsity squads
looked good. Big Black returning lettermen are front
row, left to right, Dave Atkinson, Jim Daugherty, Dan
Sprouse, Todd Pridemore, · Tim Jackson and Herb

By JOHN MOSSMAN

AP Sports Writer
Qnly one game separated the top
four teams in the final standings of the
American Football Conference's
Westem Division in 1978 - a
competitive balance which figures to
continue this season.
The Denver Broncos earned their
second straight AFC West .crown last
year, compiling a !o-6 record before
being knocked out by Pittsburgh in the
first round of the playoffs. San Diego,
Seattle and Oakland each wound up
wiUt 9-7 records.
The Chargers finished wiUt a flurry,
winning seven of Uteir last eight
games. Sea We was the surprise of the
league, and its record was the best
ever for a third-year franchise.
Oakland, although torn by dissension,
just missed making the playoffs for
the first time in seven years. Only
rebuilding Kansas City was not a
factor in Ute divisional race .
"I really believe Ute AFC West has
re!WTled to its position of being the
strongest divisioo in the National
Football League," says Bronco Coach

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on reserve list
CINCINNATI ( AP) - Dennis
Law, the wide receiver who balked
when the Cincinnati Bengals traded
him to the Washington Redskins Utis
week, has been placed on Ute
Bengals' retired list.
Law, traded foc an undisclosed
draft choice, told Ute Redskins he
was . retiring, according to a
statement from Ute Bengals. The
action voids the deal.
The former East Tennessee State
player caught five passes lor 81
yards in 1978, his rookie season, and
returned punts and kickoffs.

Most experts feel Denver, which
relies on a swarrning defense, and San
Diego, which has an explosive offense,
are the top teams to watch in the
division in 1979.
The Raiders, with a new head coach
and some personnel changes, are
more of a question mark, but their
record over the past decade indicates
they can't be taken lightly. The
Seahawks also should be a factor
again, especially if Utey improve their
derense. Kansas City still is several
years away from being a contender.
"We will be better overall," says
Miller. " But San Diego and Seattle
will be better, too, and Oakland is
lliways tough. There will be lour
teams right in there again , wiUt
Kansas City not far behind.
••1n the past two years, we 've
established ourselves as a contender.
Now we'll have to work our tails off to
stay on top ."

Sports Tr1nsactions
By The Associated Press
BASKETBALL

National .
BaskettMII Association
NEW JERSEY NETS - Signed
Jim Boylan, guard, to a multi -year

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opponents than San Diego, who came
under Ute direction of Coach Don
Coryell early last season. In their last
three games of 1978, the Chargers
averaged 41 points and 460total yards.
Coryell's wide-open offensive
philosophy was reflected in Ute club's
topping all NFL teams in passing
yardage.
' Oakland quarterback Ken Stabler,
after a frustrating 1978 season which
saw him throw 30 interceptions, is
back and playing well, and talk of a
possible trade has diminished.
Seattle's big threat is scrambling,
left-handed quarterback Jim Zorn,
who completed 248 of 443 passes for
3,283 yards and !5 . touchdowns last .
year. Wide receiver Steve Largent led
the AFC with "/1 catches for 1,168
yards and eight TDs. Sherman SmiUt
' and David Sims are capable running
backs.
Second-year Coach Marv Levy feels
he has Kansas City on the right track.
Denver's major weakness a year Alter a 2-12 season in 1977, Levy's first
ago was in the offensive line. An club went 4-12 and ranked second in
. avoidance of injuries and the addition ' the league in rushing yards. The
of new faces such as free-agent tackle Chiefs will stick )l'ith their runDave Studdard and No.I draft choice oriented wing-T formation, although
there are indications Utey plan to
Kelvin Clark will help .
Few teams strike more fear into . upgrade Ute passing attack.
Red Miller.

· F.rld•v 's

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BRISTOL, Tenn . (AP)- Richard
Petty, driving a short-track
Chevrolet Caprice for only Ute third
time this year, won Ute pole position
for tonight's Volunteer 500 Grand
National stock car race.
Petty, for whom Ute start on the
pole is his first since Nov.ember 1977,
hit a top speed of 110.524 mph.

Alley; second row, Dave
Jay Minton, Rusty ·
Woods, Tony Thompson, Ray Gandee, Gilbert Rodgers
and Gary Newsome; back row, Coach Safford, Bryan
Step, Henry "Bo" Elliott, Danny Jones, Greg Thomas,
Troy Krebs, Glen McClellan, Greg Lynch and Rob
.Beller.

Western division may be
AFC's strongast in '79

PR(li'HET BURTS
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -Pro golfer
Mac McLendon wu a !IIYchic at the
Masters Tournament In April and 1t
proved painful to -of all people - his
wife.
After the first round, he told his
wife, Joan, "I'm playing 10 poorly 1
Jlllt know I'm going to hit sam~
and hurt him."

RIO GRANDE
COllEGE
COMMUNilY COLlEGE

Sports briefs
TENNIS
MASON, Ohio (AP)- Pat DuPre
upset second-seeded Harold
Solomon 6·1, 3·6, 6-1 in the
quarterfinals of the $200,000
Association of Tennis Professionals
Championships.
In other matches, Peter Fleming
defeated Stan Smith, 6-1, 6-3 and
Bernie Mitton of South Africa
downed Tom G&lt;Jrrnan 6-1, 6-1.
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) - Tracy
Austin advanced to the semifinals of
the $75,000 Women's Tennis Cup,
scoring a 6-1,6-2 quarterfinal victory
over Czech star Regina Marsikova.
Bad weather conditions postponed
quarterfinal matches between topseeded Chris Evert Lloyd and
eighth-seeded Sue Barker of Britain,
and another between Betty Stove of
The Netherlands and Ivanna
Madruga of Argentina.
BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) Defending champion Manuel
Orantes of Spain moved into Ute
quarter-finals and America's last
hope was eliminated in the third
round of the $175,000 U.S. Pro Tennis
Championships.
Orantes swept past !3Ut-&lt;!eeded
Heinz GunUtardt of Switzerland, IN,
6-4 , while lOth-seeded Hans
Gildemelster of Chile crushed
Tennessean Mike Cahill 6-2, IN.
In other matches , fifth-seeded
Johan Kriek of South Africa won 6-2,
6-4 over Australia's Ross Case and
Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia
eliminated Chris Lewis of New
Zealand, 3-6, IN, IHl.
. NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - Cliff
Drysdale defeated Australia's Roy .
Emerson 6-2, 4~. 6-4, and advanced
to the semifinals of the Legends of
Tennis tournament.
In another quarterfinal match,
Tom Okker won by default when
Roger Taylor tore his right
hamstring in the first game of the
first set.
· GOLF
PINEHURST, N.C . (AP ) . Johnny Miller birdied five holes in a
row en route to an eight-under-par 63
and a three-stroke lead after two
rounds of the $250,000 Hall of Fame
Classic.
Tied for second, three strokes
back at 135, were forrner Masters
champion Tommy Aaron , Danny
Edwards and Mike Brannan. Aaron
had a 66, Brannan and Edwards 68s.
KeiUt Fergus, with a 68, was at 136.
MAPLEWOOD, Minn . (AP) Beth Daniel fired 4-under-par 69 and
look a three-shot lead after two
rounds of Ute $100,000 Patty Berg
Classic.
Daniel had a 9-under-par "total of
137. Hollis Stacy is second.
AUTO RACING
ZANDVOORT, The Netherlands
(AP)
Switzerland's Clav
Regazzoni drove a Williams over the
rain-soaked track in one minute,
16.32 seconds to lead drivers into the
second day of qualifying lor

said "He ( Knlght) does not deserve
Friday: "Then we're at peace. He
Ute punishment they are trying to
doellll't want to come back and we
mete
out to him," IUld would refuse
don't want him hack."
to
sign
such .papers were he to
The coach, who guided the U.S.
receive
them.
team to a gold medal at the Games,
Bowen, in Seattle, Wash., for the
told The Associated Press at SeattleEducation
Commllalon of the States
TaCOO!B Airport Friday he .did not
Clllventim,
said Tburaday he hoped
want to talk about Ute case any
to
be
in
touch
with Barcelo and "see
mere. Knlght was en route to a
if
some
sort
of clemency
fishing vacation in British ·
be
worked out" to
arrangement
can
Colwnbla.
wipe
out
the
miademeanor
Barcelo, who by law could sign Ute
cooviction.
petition requestlnf! Knight's
Judge Rurlco Rl~ra cmvlcted
extraditi&lt;rl, sald Friday, "It Is not
Knlght
fer striking a policeman
customary, lther. is there any
during
a diapl!le over practice
ll'ecedence fer extraditing persons
courts.
coovlcted of mildemeanocs."
Alter the conviction, Knight
However, Puerto Rican law
offered
his resignation to Indiana
pennits extradltlai for any crime.
University.
But Eqar WWiama, the
Indiana Gov. Otis Bowen, who
-llnlver~lty's vice president for
would have had to sign papers
administration, said: "I have not
permitting ~lght's extradition,
asked for Bob Knight's resignation
and I do not want Bob Knlglit's
resigriation."

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�C-li...:.The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, A\Ill. 26, 1979

Reds attendance should surpass two million mark

•

Concepcion's double gives Reds wzn
NEW YORK (AP) -Cincinnati 's
Dave Concepcion won a guessing
game with New York Mets pitcher
Neil Allen and pulled the Reds
within one-half game of the National
League West-leading Housion
Astros.
Concepcion slashed a tWt&gt;-out
double In the eighth inning Friday
·night, scoring Joe Morgan with the
rtm that gave the Reds a I~ triwnph
over Ray Burris and the New York
Mets.
Burris made his debut as a starter

LOY&amp;"; FINESSE
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Donna
Caponi Young, winner of the LPGA
Championship Tournament in June,
says she likes to play on a goU course
which demands pinpoint control.
''Give me a tight course where
there is a preriliwn on finesse,'' she
said, "and I always feel I have a good
chance. I like to play on a course
where you have a good chance. I like
to play on a course where you have to
put spin on the ball to make a decent

pa~~~;~~~~~~;;::;1 JIU,,uwfor the
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for these organizations. He plans to invest the rest of the money in a .swine
operation of his own. Pictured with Bob Evans are Ohio Pork Queen Kay
Meyer and Rusty Coe.

score."

·

Fumble recovery sparks BrQwns
WASHINGTON
[AP)
Linebacker Clay Matthews picked
up a fumble and returned it 53 yards
for a touchdown to spark the
Cleveland Browns to a 21-9 victory
Friday night over the Washington
Redskins in the final exhibitiOI\
game for both teams .
Matthews, a first-round draft
choice from Southern California last
year, ·recovered a fumble by
Washington running back Ike Forte
and, in the middle of a steady
downpour, raced into the end zone
unmolested with little more than a
minute remaining oh the clock
bef!re halftime.
Less than a minute earlier,
defensive tackle Mickey Sims also
picked up a fwnble by Redskins'
quarterback Joe Theismann, who
was hit by newly acquired defensive
end Lyle Alzada, to set up the
Browns' first touchdown.
Mike Pruitt, who had picked up 19
yards on the first play of the series to
put the ball on the Redskins' 3,
blasted over from the 1 with 2:06
remaining in "the half foc the first
score of the evening.

·

In the second hall, the Redskins
. moved 76 yards on 13 plays and three
penalties to have Benny Malone

crash over from the 1-yard line for
Washington's first touchdown via
the rush in four preseason games.
Nick Lowery, a free agent who has
been used the past two weeks as a
placekicker for the injured Mark
Moseley, missed the extra point.
On the ensuing Redskins series,
Washington quarterba ck Joe
Theismarut tossed an interception to
Cleveland
linebacker
Dick
Ambrose, who set up the Browns'

fun out there."
foc the Mets with a two-hit shutout
In the eighth, Allen, 4-7, got the
through seven innings, but it wasn 't ·
first two hitters on strikeouts, then
enough . He was replaced by Allen in
allowed Morgan to chop a single to
the eighth.
right field .
"Neil Allen has a great fastball,
"He threw one curve that dropped
and a heck of a curve," said
two feet and I missed it, but I hit his
Concepcion. "I was looking fastball
fastball, " said Morgan, still
and I think he thought I would guess
handicapped l)y a ligament problem
curve. I hit it in the hole In right
on the outside of his right foot. "I
field . The minute I hit it, I knew
was going for the plate all the way
Morgan would score. We know how
when I saw the ball go In the hole.
to win -and I think this will be the
With two out, you .have to try and
difference in the race."
make them throw you out."
Bill Bonham, 7.{), m~tched Burris
Mocgan stumbled going around
through seven innings, giving up
third but scored easily.
only five hits. He went out for a
Concepcion credited the Reds'
hitter in the eighth and became the
pitching with having them in the
pitcher of decision when the Reds
thick of the NL West battle.
scored in that inning.
"Since the AU.Star game, we
"Bonham and his wife Donna are
haven't lost a game because our
the god-parents of my son from my
pitcher got bombed In the first
days with the Chicago Cubs," said
inning," noted Concepcion. "Our
Burris, 0-1. "It was a nice ·cool night
bullpen and our starters !lave been
and I could have pitched more than
superb.''
the seven innings, bUt I'm not here to
Ci ncinnati
Manager
John
question the manager. I was having

SMITH'S

SALE
1979 PONTIAC l.eMANS STATION WAGON

Wagon Clearance

I

third touchdown on the Redskins' 26.
. Four plays after lh• i"t•rception,
Cleveland quarteroact&lt; onan o:&gt;Ipe
hit wide. receiver Reggie Rucker in
the end zone for a 12-yard touchdown
pass.
Lowery added a 35-yard field goal
for the Redskins in the fourth
quarter.
The Browns and Redskins each
finished with fl.1l records last year
and ended the exhibition seBS(In with
2-2 records.

Midwest Regionals .
He was the first draft pick in the
second round of the and 18th player
selected overall, taken by the
Chicago Bulls in 1976.
He also played for Indiana before
joining Portland as a free agent
prior to last season.
Commenting on the trade,
Cavaliers' Director of Player .
Personnel Jinuny Rodgers said,
"We felt this to be an excellent
opportunity 'to acquire a guard who
we rate as having both potential and
versatility."
The Cavaliers are expected to look
at Smith as a possible replacement
foc guard Butch Lee, who underwent
successful knee surgery this week
and will be sidelined foc an indefinite
period.

The King of
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NO RECORD
PITTSBURGH ( AP) - Preston
Pearson, the versatile halfback of the
Dallas Cowboys, lives in Pittsburgh
during the off-reason. Pearson was on
the losing side in the 1979 Super Bowl
in which the Pittsburgh Steeler~
·downed Dallas, 35-31.
His wife , Linda , went to a
Pittsburgh bank to deposit hubby's
Super Bowl check. A lady teller,
somewha t embarrassed, informed
her that a deposit of that size entitled
her to a souvenir - a record albwn
which reviewed the Steeler season.

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Esther Lucas of St. Louis, a Delta Queen passenger, said later that the
journey changed her opinion of Carter. "I was not an admirer of President
Carter," she said. "But to see that man go out in the rain at all hours to shake
hands with people. And to see the faces of the kids when he went down on
shore. It was just something special."
Others aboard described the first family as down-home folks.
Captain Charles Fehlig, one of ihe boat's pilots, said it was not unusual to
see the president on deck in a pair of shorts, barefoot.
"111 tell you what kind of president he is," Fehllg said, grinning. "We were
sitting up in the pilot house having an order of chicken wings when he just
comes up and ~rabs one out of my plate."
During the trip, Carter reread "Life on the Missisaippi" in which Twain
wrote, "the eight hundred miles of river between St. Louis and St. Paul afford an unbroken succession of lovely pictures."
For a week, the president saw them +steep, spectacular palisades; fields
of corn; farrne!'ll' markets with tables piled with muskmellons and sweet
com. There was a white stueco tavern south of Andelusia, ill., built in the
sha~ of a riverboat; White 's Variety store in LaGrange, Iowa, where the
sign m the window says they still give Eagle Stamps; the little blue .diner
near Old Monroe, Mo., where the house specialty is "Whole Hog Bar-B4."
Juruny Carter se.t out to see America, and for seven days he traveled
through the heart and soul of it. But the people who saw him did not always
react kindly: many on shore said that while he was a good and decent man
he was not a capable president.
'
'
"I don't think he'll be elected again," said Willlam DuBois, 90, eating
breakfast at Lamb's Cafe in Burlington, Iowa, just an hour before the Delta
Queen was to dock.

suNDAY. AuGusr 26. 1979

WASHINGTON [ AP J- The Social
Security Administration , borrowing
a page from private pension plans, is
ernbarkina on a pilot project of
sending notices to workers spelling
out how much th ~!Y would gel if they
were disabled , died oc retired .
The experimental notices, which
will go to 16,000 wockers in two or

three months , could be the
forerunn er of r egular benefit
sta tement s to the 110 million
Americans whose payroll taxes keep
the system going .
Social Security officials ar e
cmvinced the idea is a good one , but
the big question mark is the cost ,
which would run into millions . of

CARSON CITY, Nevada (AP ) Convicted killer Jesse Bis hop
received an unwanted delay in his
execution from a U.S. SuJieme
Court justice Saturday, two days
before he was to dle in the gas
chamber.
The condemned .man called the
order a "farce " that was only
"prolonging the suffering" for him
and his family.
Justice Willlam H. Rehnquist
issued an indefinite stay in
W8Slington and ordered the state to
submit answers to a series of
questions by midnight Tuesday , said
Nevada Attorney General Richard
Bryan. The death warrant expires at
midnight Momllly.
The announcement came as
Bishop was meeting with the
Nevada Pardms Board on another
reqiiest to put off the execution
scheduled Moo day . No one has been
executed In the state's two-seat gas
chamber since 1961.
Bishop, his hands and feet
manacled, listened intently as the
attorney general informed the other
board members of the development.
The &gt;~&amp;-year-old prisoner asked the
board, "Why should I have to wait
forever foc the gas chamber ?"
Bishop received t~e death
sentence foc the gunshot slayin~ of

newlywed David Ballard of
Baltimore in a Las Vegas casino in
December 1977. He pleaded guilty to
the crime.
In Baltimore, relatives of Ballard
said the ACLU had asked them to
plead for Bishop's life .
"The man wanted my son to sign
some papers and my son said he
would, but after he talked to the rest
of the family, we decided oot to do
it," said Stella Bmard, grandmother
of the slain man.
The questions th e Supreme Court
wants answered include whether
Bishop ever authorized public
defenders to represent him at any
level in any court proceeding and
whether any court ever found him
competent.
Bishop said he still expects the
Supreme Court to make ·the "same
decision " as an appeals court in San
Francisco and a federal district
court in Las Vegas, both of which
declined after hearings to stop his
execution . The Pardons Board
session, chaired l)y Gov. Bob List,
was convened afte.r the earlier court
attempts at a stay were rejected.
Bishop says his defenders are
violating his constitutional rights,
calling them "fools'' for trying to
"prolong what is inevitable."

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pi.

Cease-fire reached Saturday
between Israel and Lebanon

southern Lebanon Friday, the U.N.
as 28 miles north of the Israeli
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP ) peacekeeping force there said three
Premier Salim el Hoss announced a border, were also struck, he said.
of
its men were killed and two others
Right-wing Christian Pltalangist
United Nations-mediated cease-lire
wolll\ded in an ambush. A
seriously
· between Israel and Palestinian radio charged some of the villages
U.N.
spokesman
in Tel Aviv said a
guerrillas took effect in southern hit , especially those in the vicinity of
of Fijian troops
seven-man
patrol
Lebanon at noon Saturday. Shelling the port city of Sidon, were shelled
was
ambushed
three
miles east of
was reported in the south in that by Syrian and Palestinian artillery
Tyre.
Survivors
of
the
attack could
dollars.
positions in the south.
morning .
not
identify
their
assailants,
the
Deputy Commissioner Robert P.
"A ftrst-hand inspection proved
Beirut state radio reported Gen.
Bynum said the agency will follow
Spokesman
said.
·
Emmanuel Erskine, corrunander of that some of
Thirty members of the 6;000-man
up the 16,000 notices with a survey
"This is the seventh day running
the United Nations Interim Force In
multinational
peacekeeping team
and study the results ..
Lebanon arranged the truce · that the lsrelis have persisted in
have
been
killed
since it was
"Sometime in early spring we will
between the Israelis and Palestinian their savage operations against
deployed
be in a position to decide for fiscal
in
southern
Lebanon
in the
guerrillas and their Lebanese left'ist Palestinians and Lebanese nationals
1981 to what extent, if at all, we
swnrner
of
1978.
in southern Lebanon/' said the
allies.
Friday's barrage focused on the
lTlllve with this project on an acrossEarlier radio reports said today's spokesman, who declined to be
the-hoard basis," he said in an
ancient
port of Tyre, 45 miles south
identified.
shelling was minimal compared to
Interview.
of
Beirut,
but shells reportedly hit
Friday when 20 persons were
In Tel Aviv , an army spokesman
Private pension plans l)y law must
and Palestinian
Lebanese
villages
reported killed and 50 wounded near said, "We will neither confirm nor
send workers arutual statements or' Tyre and other towns near the deny the reports."
guerrilla strongholds aU along a 59mile front rimming· ·the Israeli
their retirement benefits, and some
The Israelis earlier denied they
Israeli border. Lebanese officials
frontier
from the Mediterranean
companies also tell their workers
said up to 100 may have died in the were responsible for a massive
· what Social Security they can
to the foot of Mount
coast
east
In
southern
Lebanon
Friday
barrage
barrages.
l;lermon.
expect.
A
Palestinian
Liberation that Lebanese authocities said killed
Bynwn said people need the
In
Washington,
Lebanese
Organization spoke&amp;nan claimed more than 100 Moslem and Christian
information for their personal
three persons were killed and nine civilians. However, the denial did . Ambassador Kahlli Itanl blamed
Israel for the shelling. He met senior
flllan cial planning. But he added
others wounded , including women not rule out the possibility that
State Department officials Friday
that the agency also views it as a
and children, today in the Israel's Lebanese Christian allies
night to ask them to pressure Israel
way of bolstering public confidence
Palestinian camp of Rash idiyeh, were doing the shooting.
to stop the shelling and "put an end
in the system, which has been
south of Tyre. Other villages, as far
As the cannon fire .slammed into
to this tragedy."
buffeted both by a financial crisis
and an outcry over higher taxes.
Yasser Ararat's Palestine
Uberatlon Organization said Israel
Bynwn said most people do not
and its Lebanese Christian allies, led
understand · that their Social
by renegade Lebanese army Maj.
Security taxes buy life insurance
Saad Haddad, were responsible. An
and disability protection, as well as
Arab guerrilla spokesman said
retirement and Medicare benefits.
Palestinian
gtmners ''replied to the
" That la ck of awa~eness
of
enemy fire both in
sources
contributes to a cmsiderable degree
which has plants in many of the
OSAGE
BEACH,
Mo.
Lebanon
and
across the border in
to that sense of uneasiness about
conference states, according to one
Indiana Gov . Otis Bowen,
Israel."
whether the system will hold up," he
conference official. No exact time
chairman of the conference, said
said. " ... We 're not trying to sell
Israel has said it running a war o{
for the meeting was announced.
energy , transportation and the
attrition
against the guerrillas in
them a bill of goods , but inform
The Midwestern Governors
impact of the recession would be
southern Lebanm with nwnerous
them .''
COilference is made up of state chief
majoc topics foc the governors,
cross-border attacks aimed at
He said the pilot project will cost
executives from Illinois, Indiana ,
according to William Watt, an aide
$250,000 at most , with most of that
keeping the Palestinians on the
Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan,
to Bowen.
for the survey and studies.
so they can't mount raids
defensive
Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska,
Along with energy and the
The actual cost of programming
into Israel.
Ohio, Oklahoma, North Dakota,
economy, rural health care, taxes
the agency's computers to send out
A PLO spokeiiman - in Beirut
South Dakota and Wisconlsin.
and state budgets are to be taken up
the 16,000 notices is only 15 cents to
claimed
the shelling was tied to
Three governors have armounced
by the governors.
20 cents apiece, plus a l~ent
Council debate on
Friday's
Security
they will not attend the meeting .
"There is no question energy and
stamp, he said.
Palestinian
rights.
They are: William Milliken of
matters related to energy will be a
. It would cost at least $15 million to
"The purpose of this (shelling)
Michigan , who has Imposed a freeze
paramount subject in the conference
$20 million to send notices to
was for Jsr ael to exert pressure on
on travel by state officials; James
business sessions and in private
everyone , but that would be only a
the United States not to change its
Rhodes of Ohio, who will be
discussions among the governors,"
small poction of the extra expense,
negative
attitude on the Palestinian
attending the Ohio State Fair, and
said Gov . Joseph Teasdale of
Bynwn said.
Albert Quie of Minnesota, who . question during the current debate,"
Missouri, vice-chairman of the
"The bigger cost would come in
spokesman Mahmoud Labadi said.
carutot attend because the state's
commission. Traditionally, the vice·
handling inquiries and questions
The council postponed a vote on a
lieutenant governor also will be out
chairman of the conference moves
that people would have about the
resolution
calling foc a Palestinian
of state.
·
up to the chairman's job and
statements," he said. If only 2
state·
.
Non-aligned
and Arab nations
As of Friday, South Dakota Gov.
Teasdale said. he expected to be
percent of the public came Into
supporting
the
resolution
agreed to
selected to replace Bowen, whose
William Janklow had not decided
Social Security offices, there would
delay
a
vote
so
that
outgoing
U.N.
whether he would attend the
term will expire.
still be 2 million extra people a year.
Ambassador
Andrew
Young
would
Kansas GOv . John Carlin said he
conference, an aide said .
not have tci veto the resolution .
was especially concerned with
finding out the status of fuel supplies
·for agriculture. IDinois Gov. James
Thompson also listed energy as
among the major topics for the
POMEROY - Come rain, snow, threEHiay session, along with rural
sleet or hail, Bob Lewis will bring health and agriculture.
the mail.
Watt, who is chairman of the
This could easily have been the ex- conference's Task Force on Energy
pression ·of many Pomeroy residents and Natural Resources, said the
over the past T1 years who hilve group would recommend .greater
depended on reliable Pomeroy mall eooperation among the United
carrier, Robert J . (Bob) Lewis to States, Canada and Mexico, as well
deliver their mail.
as development of a pipeline system
Friday afternoon Bob walked the to get Alaskan oil to Midwestern
· "last lonesome mile" on his route· in refineries.
Pomeroy. He is retiring after 30
Teasdale said in no area was
years set:Vice - T1 as a mail carrier
" innovation and regional coand three years in the U. S. Air Cor- operation so despertely needed as it
pi; which adds to his time in the
is In energy policy." ·
postal service.
On the opening day's session
Lewis plans to spend his Shiekh Faisal Alhegelan, the Saudia
retirement in enjoying his hobbies of Arabian ambassador to the United
hunting and fishing, raising States, ill discuss the international
pheasants and fancy birils, gar- energy 'situation, followed by a
dening and working around the presentation for the ~etgy task
home at 306 Spring Ave.
force.
TOMATO WITH ELEPHANTIASIS - Laban R. Burtow, Rt. 1,
Bob and his wife, Addalou have
Ainong ·~conomic matters, a
Galllpolls,
holds the huge tomato he grew In his George! Creek Rd. gartwo children, M~s . Carol Durst, Hun- tentative meeting has been set up for
den.
Lensman
Kevin Kelly took this picture of a vegetable which weighed
: tington, W.Va., and David, who will discussion of the problems
two
pounds
seven
ounces, measuring six Inches in diameter and 18% In·
' be a senior at Meigs High School this connected with the plight of the
ches in cirCumference. '
·~
fall , at home .
II: rlll!!llcially ailinR Chrysler Corp.,

Energy major concern
of midwest governors·

Lewis will
retire soon

We also offer 6-Month Money M2rKei t;ehrficates- $10;000 minimum.
Interest .payable mommy on an certificates with $1,800 minimum.

500 Third Ave.

PAGE 1-o

"I tel1you these prices are bad, people's pocketbooks are being drained,"
he said, holding up his toast, with the velils on his hand stsnding out like blue
rivers. "I think the world is heading for bad times, I really do. There are
worse limes ahead."
Howard King, a &amp;}-year-old retired brick mason, nodded solemly. "I'm a
horn,again Christian, but it's not enough," he said. "President Carter is sin·
cere. He's a good man, but I don 't think he can handle the job."
The next morning in Canton, a town where the president had made a late .
night stop in the drizzle, Bill Cox was saying Carter is being blamed for
problems he didn1 cause . .
"Everybody thinks the president has all this. power, but Congress won't
work with him," he said. ''What we need is a strong personality. Old Lyndon
Johnson would have been twisting arms, getting them to go along."
It was much the same all along the journey, to the end. Standing near the
Gateway Arch in St. Louis were 7,000 people gathered at the end of the trip,
Hugh Cunningham talked about Carter.
"AfterNixon, we were all hungry for a leader we could trust," he said. "I
can trust him, but he just doesn't know what he's doing ."
The significance of the river odyssey may not have been that people
gathered to see the president, but simply that they gathered. For the first
time in decades, families all along the river went down to the landing again
to picriic and visit.
"This is like the old days when people used to go down to the levees and
bands would play and everybody would h8ve a good time,'' said Bill Ewing,
a wood craftsman from Dllnois City, ill.
For seven days in August, life made sense again, at least on the Missisaip-

Benefits outlined for
Soci~ Security recipients

Despite objections,
Bishop's life spared

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COLUMBUS, Ohio [ AP) - Cher
Hawihorne came from fourth place
at the top of the stretch to edge Wen
Her Sue by a nose in the feature race
Friday at Scioto Downs.
Jim Pollock drove the victor to her
eighth win in 29 starts in the $5,000
open pace for fillies and mares. The
winner 's lime was 2:02.1. She paid
$11.~0, $5.40 and $4, while the runnerup returned $15.40 and $7. Thirdplace Flying Mary paid $6 .
The loth race trifecta of 8-10-9
returned $1,240.80 and the crowd of
6,356 wagered $523,477.

• 497cc four ·
stroke engine
• Exclusive
des1gn t~r es
• Lon g trav el
suspension

LOUISIANA, Mo. (AP ) - Jimmy Carter was gone and Main street was
c!fowsing again.
,
, Bill Erickson sat in his barbershop, drinking a Sun.Spot soda, ruminating
on the cruel nature of politics and the presidency.
"It's a dog's life, that's for sure, " he said." "I think it's good he could get
away on the Delta Queen. He paid us a courtesy by coming down the
Mississippi and letting folks get a look at him."
Per!"'~ 100,000 people got a glimpse of President Carter on his seven-ilay,
680-mile Journey downnver that ended Friday in St. Louis, 1,000 of them
nght here Ill LoUISiana where an hour earlier the stern wheeler Delta Queen
stopped briefly and the president of the United States spoke to them from the
captain's perch.
"About everybody went down to the riverfront to watch " Erickson said
swatting at flies in the heavy air. "That's all people have ~n talking aboui
for days . ~ here was hiStory and folks won 't hardly forget it. "
.
Not all the talk was favorable to Carter, of course. But, still, It was history .
!flere was. the O:lta Queen rounding the bend, black smoke tumbling from
Its stack, Its calliope playing, its wheel churning the water. And over the
.
loudspeaker. a familiar Southern voice.
"How many of you agree with me that we live in the greatest nation on earth?" Carter asked in Wabasha and McGregor and Savanila and Nauvoo.
"God bless America," he said in Canton and Dubuque and Muscatine.
And always a cheer went up from the shore where for seven days in August
people gathered, day and night, at locks and levees, in riverside parks and
on the brick squares of towns that line the river that Mark Twain decribed as
''the majestic, the magnificent Mississippi , rolling its mile-wide tide along,
shining In the sun."

voL. 13 No. 30

RETAIL LIST PRICE: 17053.64
DISCOUNT:
'1000.00

D

Carter's trip historic for river people

~

scioto downs

HONDA XLSOOS

cla$silied

iunbau X[imts . ,itntintl

Cavs obtain Willie Smith
CLEVELAND [AP) The
Cleveland Cavaliers on Friday
acquired 6-1 guard Willie Smith
from the Portland Trailblazers for a
third round draft choice in an
undisclosed year.
Smith played in 13 games for the
Trailblazers in the 1978-79 season,
averaging 4.5 points a game. He was
on the Injured reserve list from Feb.
19 w1til the. end of the season.
Smith. 25, sc;ored 25.3 points a
game in his senior year at the
University of Missouri in 1976.
Against NCAA finalist Michigan, he
scored 43 points and was named
Most Valuable Player in the 1976

McNamara agreed, adding, "'lbe
pitching on both sides was superb.
Burris did well In his return to the
National League. I think maybe the
Yankees just needed a relief pitcher
and overlooked him when It came to
starting."
Burris had been traded by the
Cubs to the Yankees In May for
relief pitcher Dick Tldrow and
inunediately flopped In the Yankee
bullpen.
"I was pleased, very pleased '!rith
Ray," said Joe Torre, the Mets
manager. " I don 1 wantto guess why
the Yankees didn't start him."
'lbe Mets almost lied the game In
the ninth against relief pitcher Tom
Hwne, who chalked up his lOth save.
With two out, Doug flynn cracked a
double, hls third hit of the game.
"I went to three balla and no
strikes on (pinch-hitter . Ron)
Hodges," said Hwne. "But then I
knew 1had to throw a strike. He took
it and popped the next me up."

D-1 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

'

VETERAN MAILMAN RETIRES - Bob Lewis walked his last mile
all a mall, carrier in Pomeroy Friday afternoon, retirinf after 30 years
~~~.
.

...

�..

'

)'

D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

BY :
DIAN A S. EBERTS
4
COUN TY EX TENSIO N AGEN T
HOM E ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

POMEROY - Problems, concerns or whatever you caU them
develop in any . relationship, i.e.,
husband-wife, parent-child, employer-&lt;!mployee. According to John
Lembo, there are three types of
problems that can develop m any
one of these relationships. These are
the first person may have a grievan ce against the other ; the other may
have a grievance against the first or
both may share a problem.
In order to successfuUy lodge a
grievance, it is advisable . to communicate the grievance in a way
that encourages the other to respond
in a constructive fashion rather than
in a defensive or hostile one. George

Weinbert in The Action Approach
suggests · that one consider the
foUowing to elicit constructive
responses :
(I) State the .grievance as soon as
it can be articulated. It is the WJSald
things that pile up day after day that
lead to ~esentment and bitterness
and the g~adual destruction of a
relationship.
(2) State your grievance in
private. To avoid . the destructive
and retaliatory behavior that often
occurs with public discussion of in\erpersonal problems.
(3) State how pleased you are with
ma~y aspects of the other person •s
behavior before lodging the com-

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plaint. It i.s advisable not to permit a
grievance to overshadow the
positive aspects of a relationship.
( 4 ) Most important when lodging a
grievance use "I don't like" and "I
don't appreciate" statements such
as "I don't like to be disappointed"
and "I don't appreciate being left

alone," instead of "you are"
statements such as "You a.r;e in·
considerate. " "You are " statements
are accusations and accusations
lead only to counter-accusations and
emotional upsets.
(5) Focus on the actions tha.t are
unpleasant, not on the other person's
possible motives. Actions not
motives are the issue. To focus oo
motives implies that the intention
was to cause pain. It may have been
but It may not.
(6) Do not compare the other person's actions with the failings of
other people. The other person is accountable only for personal actions
and not for the misdeeds of others.
(7) Avoid at all possible coot
dredging up the past. The present
and the future and not the past is the
central issue.
(8) Focus on one and only one
complaint. U more than one grievance is lodged at a time, the other person may believe that he or she is
being attacked. The essential issue
may then become obscured.
(9) Propose, in a non-angry and
non-demanding manner, some of the
realistic ways that the problelfr'
could be satisfactorily resolved.
(10) Make every reasooable effort
to work out a specific agreement
about the way the present problem
could be handled.
.,
( ll) Set a system whereby both of
you .can monitor the implementation
of the solution and evaluate its effectiveness.

Edward Payson Weston walked
from Boston to Washington to attend
Lincoln's first inauguration. At the
age of 71 , Weston walked from New
York to San Francisco in 105 days.

LOW-PRICED USED CARS MARKED DGWN1975 VOLKSWAGEN

1977 MERCURY COMET

1977 PONTIAC TRANS AM

.

SUPER BEETLE
'

6 cy l. engi ne, 3 speed trans ..' _am

4 speed t r ans., flip -up roof, 4 good
tir es, A -1 condit i on .

radio , low mileage , A -1 cond1t1on,
whi'te side -wa ll tir es.

Was
$3295

NOW

Was
$3295

NOW

350 eng ine, P .S. , P. B., auto., A.C.,
AM ·FM stereo tape, bUcket
seats, cbnsole, T -roof, style
wheels, w -s-w tires, low m ileage,
local owner . A·l cond .
Was
S6195

'2795

'2495

1977 FORO F-250
SUPER CAB

'5493.

1978 MERCURY
ZEPHYR

1976 FORO MAVERICK
4 OR SEDAN

V -8 engine, power steering and

brakes, automatic t ra ns. , air con di1ioning, am -f m rad io, good
tires, 8 foot bed, dual t anks, spare
tire, rear step bum pfir .
Was
$4695

NOW

6 cy l. eng in"e, power

~t eer i ~g ,

automatic tr ans ., a m ra d10, wh,te
sidewall tires .

4 D~r . 6 cyl . engine, power steering and brakes, automatic trans .,
am rad io, white side-wall tires .
Stk. No . 4428

NOW
Was
$3495

'4195

1978 F-150
4X4 SHORT WHEEL BASE

Acy l. engine, power stee r ing and
brakes, automatic trans ., AM FM stereo, r;adio , white side-wall
tires, low milea ge .

351 engine, auto., P .S , P . B., free

Was
55395

NOW

'4895

1971 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS

'3895

1977 FORD PINTO
3 OR RUNABOUT
4 cyl. engine, automati c tra~s . ,
vinyl r oof, wide bOdy s1de

mouldi ng, white side ·wall tires ,
wi re wheel covers.

NOW

'4995

NOW

Was
$3995

1971 PONTIAC

'3395

1976 PINTO

TEMPEST

~ Cy /

auto .• P .S., 3 dr . _Runabout ,
radio, good t~res, now
m ileage, in A -1 cond .
AM

2 dr ., V·ll engine , power steer ing
and brakes, automati c tr ans. , a ir
conditioning, AM rad io, good
tires, A -1 cond it ion .
Was
51695

'2995

NOW

$4495

1979 FORD MUSTANG

running hubs with a leisure tim e
con versiQn kit , white st y le
wheels.
Was
$5695

NOW

was

V·B engine, power steerin g and
brakes. automatic trans., air con d itioning, AM radio, good tires.
Was
$1295

NOW

Was
$2695

NOW

'1095

NOW

Homemakers'
Circle

INVENTORY CLEARANCE
O.N ALL NEW CARS &amp; TRUCKS.
GET YOUR BEST DEAL AND BRING IT
TO THALER FORD FOR A BEnER DEAL.

Thaler Ford Sales, Inc.
FOR A GOOD DEAL SEE
. Tom Sprague, Nancy Fowler, Rod Ferguson,
Bob Ross, Jim Thaler, Bob Swain, Howard Plantz.
24 Hr. wrecker Service
Phone : 446 -3575 Dav, 446·3650 Night

PH. 446-3575 ·

It only taKes·a minute to ~at abatter dial .
'

,.~r-.

•

I V I Ertl£ CLAM

.••

.'

UP-DATE ON CANNING

We have been getting so many
telephone calls about canning
problems lately, that we decided to
digress from the subject of Clothing
for a few weeks to give yoq an update on home canning. Anyhow,
we've given you some &lt;1. what's new
in men's and boys' clothing, and if
you can wait until the last Saturday
evening in September we wiU he
showing you the latest in women's
and girls •clothing in a style show at
the Buckeye Hills Ca~r Center.
Circle September 30 oo your calendar so you won~ miss this prevue of
fall and winter fashions .
And now let's concentrate on those
safe and accepted canning
procedures. Remember, always to
choose your method of canning
carefuUy! Most foods contain some
naturally occurring organic acids - ·
some foods more than others. These
acids have the ability to limit,
inhibit, or prevent the growth &lt;1.
many of the bacteria and other
microorganisms that cause spoilage
and disease.
Usually, the greater the acidity of
the food, the better it wiU slow down
the growth of spoilage bacteria. Acid
foods include fruit, tomatoes and
pickled vegetables. Because of the
higher acidity of these foods, most
spoilage organisms can be killed
when processed in a boiling water
bath. This method is also used foc
conserves, butters and sauerkraut.
The boiling water bath should not
be used for other vegetables like
com, peas and green beans since
these foods are low in acid. These
foods should be processed in the
pressure canner. The bacteria which
produces the poisonous botulism
toxin wiU grow in these foods, partly
because of their low acid content,
therefore, it is necessary to heat
process the food at temperatures
weU above boiling water (212
degrees F) to kill aU bacteria and
microorganisms. The only safe way
to do this is in a pressure canner
with a weighted control or dial
gauge.
The open ketUe method is only
recommended for jellies, .when
paraffin will be used to seal the jar.
Their high sugar and .acid content
allows them to he proCessed at the
lower temperatures reached in an
open ketUe, and usually sealed
satisfactorily with paraffin .
However, if you experience mold
problems with this metbod, consider
next time using the boiling water
bath metbod (with a two piece lid inatead of paraffin).
No matter which canning method
you use, be sure to follow directions
carefuUy. Don t cut recommended
processing time just because the
food' is young and tender. It still
~ to reach a certain temperature to be certain of kiUing all
spoilage organisms. If less time is
used, chances are the food won'
have reached the proper temperature.
When you are ready to use your
home-canned foods be absolutely
sure your vegetables are safe by
boiling them ten minutes before serving. Starchy foods, such as com, or
greens need a 20 minute boil. Never
taste them first. You should boil the
vegetables even if you're sure you
canned them the recommended
way. This ten minute boil will
prevent any chance of botulism
poisoning.
If any canned foods look
suspicious -bulging lids, leaks, off.
odors, off~olors , or mold- don't use
them. Destroy them out of the reach
of children and pets. And remember
- never taste home canned food
before It has been boiled.

'695

WHILE THEY LAST

I,

SIDE GLANCES

'2395

BIG CAR SAVINGS

..•••

by Gill Fox

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Sunday, Aug. 26, the 238th
day of 1979. There are 127 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On this date in 1920, American
women obtained the same voting
rights as men as the 19th amendment
to the Constitution went into effect .
On this date:
In 1316, the first reported use of
artillery occurred - in the Battle of
Crecy in northern France.
In 1936, Britain and Egypt signed a
treaty ending British occupation of
Egypt except for the Canal Zone.
In 194~, the German army reached
Stalingrlld in the Soviet Union in its
drive toward Moscow.
In 1945, Japanese representatives
boarded the U.S. batUeship Missouri
to receive surrender Instructions at
the end of World War II.
In 1962, the Soviet Union called for
an international conference to
establish a world trade organization .
In 1972, the Ill-fated 20th Summer
Olympics opened in Munich, West
Germany.
Ten years ago : a demonstration for
more black construction jobs in
} PittsbW'gh resulted in 45 injuries and
180 arrests.

•

~······
~ .

'

.'

.....
"•"'

REG.

••

...•

SALE

~

'-

...
_,

~

•

" When are you going to teach me
how to overe xtend my credit?"

.,.

•

POINT CLINIC LTD
708 ViAND ST.
PO.INT PLEASANT, W.VA.
PH. 675-3610
Announce revised clinic hours effective Sept. 10, 1979.
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY 8 A.M.-8 P.M.
TUESDAY 8A.M. · 4P.M .
THURSDAY-SATURDAY 8 A.M. ·12 NOON

• •

38.67

llllltllltltttttttttltltltllttltltlltlttl

ONLY

84.95

1

7.17

1

1

29.20
1
89.20.
1
13.55
1
10.00
1
5.90

I

WATER BASKETBALL

'

REG. '9.95

WATER
VOLLEYB-ALL

1------------------t
--~-..
ALL OTHER POOL SUPPLIES
.~
\""

'6.75

4

.l"'i

.

•

-~

IN STOCK·

j

ONLY

••

••

•
..,•
••
"•

$599

s
$599

•

'

•'

Aftor Solo Prlco 17.50

••
•

ARROW-CONTICO
MAIL BOX

...••
~

1

••

BARN
.OR CEDAR SHAKE

"

22

Spring

steel

tines cover a full 22'/' '
sweep. A qualily rake made
to lasl. 48"
wooden ha11dle .

'1995

20~
if'\

...~..

,....

10%·

.."...
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.•
-......•.
x

in abo)( .
' a2-11211000 Trn
782· 1ZOI 1001 Evt rgr"n
762-13811002 Frull

:'"-

.87 OLIVE ST.

·~
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..

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GAlliPOLIS. OHIO

.."'•
••.

FLYING
BUGS
UP

OFF

Aftor Silo
Prlcl 12.31

V

'

:I

TO

1h
ACRE

LAWN &amp; GARDEN
TOOLS
20% OFF

PENN or WILSONI-~~-----1
WHEELING 20 GAL
TENNIS BAUS

GARBAGE
r.AN

'5''

20
Gallon
galvanized garbage can complete with lid .

OFF

PHONE 446-4464
.

.STORE HOURS
MON.-tHURS. 7:30 to 5:00
FRI. 7:30 to 8:00
SAT. 7:30 to 5:00

•

'

FREE PARKING

;~
j

$ 395

KILLS

'

,i....
'...•.•.
...
,,

·•840

BUG LIGHT

SPRINKLING CAN

.

'3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

$ALE

LAWNW ARE 2 GALLON

EMB
GASGRILL BY ARKLA
GOOD
SUPPLY
IN
StOCK

•••

w

Your Bank

·0

INSECT ASIDE

......iiiiiiiiiii.iliiii.iiliiji............~

REG. '29.99

YOUR CHOICE

'op

We Want To Be

REG. •24.95

ONLY

75
ALL GOTT
WATER
COOLERS
AND
ICE CHESTS

DELUXE LAWN RAKE

••

The ac tu al re tur"n to inves tor s on Treasury Bill s is higher than fhe dis
·
count r ate off ered.

I\0

DIVING RINGS

ONLY

REG. '7.99

'
••

"'Pe ter al r egul ations r equi r e a substanti al inter es t pena lty for
prem ...t ture withdr awa l of certifi cate fund s.

•2000

....

C 'l

~

I

The new 6-month CD will really get your money going .
And your interest rate is guaranteed .
Whatev er th e 6-month Treasury Bill auction rate is the
week you purchase your certificate of deposit, that's the
inter est rate you are gu aranteed for its maturity .

\)

5~~-=-W;A~JE~R~S~PR~IN;K~LE;R-,.~Z~I~FF~Y~B~O~A~R;D~-=-=~,lif~DECORATIVE
LITES

''

There are big things going on in the money market.
Now, we can help you be a part of them .
Every w eek, th e U.S. Treasury announc es th e average
auction discount rate being paid on 6-month Treasury
Bill s. Th e figure is arrived at through the weekly money
market au ction ;
First National Bank has a w ay to l et you get in on
th e action ·... with a 6-month, $10,000 minimum CD that ' s
tied directly to the si x -month Treasury Bill interest
rate .
Earning this kind of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years.
No longer . Our 6-m onth certificate of deposit gets you in,
and out, in only si x months .
Of co urse, if at the end of your CD's 6-month maturi ty you like th e Treasury Bill rate the_n in--effect .. . we'll
renew your CD for you at that going rate.
Th at's one of the big advantages of the 6-month CD :
you ca n ree valuat e your investment every six months!

ONLY

·- · ~'- . .

15% OFF

I

MEMBER FDIC

REG. '16.65

1

STAIN PREVENTOR•••••••••••••••••••••• ~· ••••••••••• '7.95

GET YOUR
.
MO-NEY
IN THE
lNG RATE

j

'1270

4.67

TILE &amp; UNER Cl.EANER••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !S.SO

SUPER BASKETBALL

'840

'6.75
'6.75

PH MINUS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'7 .95

REG. '29.95

FLOATING
CHAISE LOUNGES

10.00

1

ALGAECIDE •••••••••• ~ •••••• ~ •••••• ••••••••••••••••• !6.95
.
PH PWS•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•17·95

WE WANT
TO BE
YOUR
BANK

'2110

1

.
~ECI[ME •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !ll.95

.,..,.

At.

35.00

1

100 lb. CHLORINE TABLET•••••••••••••••••••••••••• :.104.95
115 95
.
ALGAECIDE
.

BEANBAG FLOATER

8.40

1

100 lb. CHLORINE GRANULAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••'99.95
6 lb. CHLORINE TABLETS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'8.44
6 lb. CHLORINE TABLET•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !11.95
25 lb. CHLORINE TABLET•• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••• !44.95

'

VICTOR A. POLITANO, D. 0.
JAMES P. WAGNER, D. 0.

'6.91

51h lb. CHLORINE GRANULAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••'8.13
6 lb. CHLORINE GRANUlAR ••••••••••••••••••••••••• !9.95
25 lb. CHLORINE GRANUlAR •••••••••••••••••••••••••1.42.95
35 lb. CHLORINE GRANULAR•••••••••••••••••••••••••145.50

..,,.

)

,..

D11ilding aHardware

�[}.,)- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday , Aug. 26,1979

D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

MORE TI1AN 1,500 feeder calves from about 200
fl!mlS scattered over a HI-county area of Ohio &lt;!lid West

Virginia were marketed through "Ohio Approved"
Feeder Cail sales at Gallipolis last fall.

the stl&gt;te receives a flve-4ay
vacation and third prue is $300 cub. .
In addition, lbe top yield entry ill
each county receives $100 cash. ";
Remember, the eotry deadline is
less than one week away. There i8..no
cost or obligation to enter and one
local farmer will win $100. Maybe
.
that car be you!
For rr.ore infonnation, contact the
local Soil Conservation Service Ofr
lice here at 529 Jackson Pike or caU
446-M87.

try deadline is September 1, (4)
yields will be adjusted to 15.5 percent moisture and weighed by scale,
(5) Soil Conservation Service or
Cooperative Extension ·service
agents will take the yield test, (6)
yield entry deadline is December I.
There are otber points to be con·
sidered, and these details are
available from the SCS office.
Top state winner will receive a
trip for two to Hawaii. Hanner -up in

Calf Creep Feeder

~~MOUR SPECIAL··

SALE
IS IN

.

By Bryson R. ~Budl CartPr
Gal1ia County Extension A~ent

It's about time for faU feeder calf
sales. So make plans to consign your
calves with one of the six Gallla
County farmer-members of the Ohio
Valley Feeder Calf Conunittee.
They are DenVer Yoho, Gary Fallon,
Dick Neal, Alden Wedemeyer, Jack
Pickens and Roger Dee!.
You can also sign your calves up
at our office or at the Ohio Valley
Stockyards in Gallipolis. It's not
mandatory that you sign up your
calves ahead of time, but it's a good
idea to in case of large sales where
the yards could .fill up to capacity
before all calves are in.
Yard Sales
fARO SALE · lf"' mile out

;sa. Fri.

&amp;

Sat. Chi ldrens

clothes.
town. Third at State. An ·
tiques, glass. dishes, furn .,
appliances·,
clothing,

jewelry, toys, If Its been

made, we . have it. Sat.

25th., Tues. 281h.
29th. 910?

&amp;

wed.

PATIO SALE · GOOd school

clothing,

coats,

dresses,

slacks, etc. Mon. Aug . 27.
203 Bastlani OrJ·ve. Rain or
shine.

Professional Services
CALL US for your
photographic needs. Por tralt, commercial and wed ·

jewelery ,

TAWNEY

•

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poln mox.
diam.ter 10'' on largest end.
$12 per ton. Bundled slob. $10
per. ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pallet Co., Rt . 2, ' Pomeroy.

992·:1689.
OLD FURNITURE . ice bo-.. ~ .
braS&amp; beds, iron beds, desks ,

etc., complete households.
Write M.D. Miller. Rt . 4 ,
Pomeroy or coli 992-7760.
OLD COINS. pocket watches.
class rings. weddin~ bonds.'
diamonds. Gold or sliver. Call
J . A. Wamsley, 742-2331.

422 Second Ave.

;I

Mock I

Code No . OnriU
Length

CC-21)0

12-2009

CC-250
CC-100
CC-150
CC-50

12-20 10
12-2007

....

1S l Yr"

8&lt;'"

12-2008

40"

12- 200f:i

11 '11~

Width

Height

7"i ' l

.

.

..

'51)'1~

..

71)' l

,..
')('I ..
. . Sl:l', ..

75'~

..

1';'-~
,.., '1 •.

"'~'

~ ijl'

..

Feftl

Wel ..,ht

CIPK:It y ,

141lC

&lt;. JO lb"&gt;
J6" lOs

50
50

12 I!'J

.:tr ~ lb ~

121 0
600

" '"

Cep ., lb•. •

uoo

?S...

11;11

Model CC· 250 rs same .u CG ::000 l e s~ ::N 'Is
Model CC -150 rs sa me as CC- 100 , le ss Sl arl&lt;;

c.,,..

"

2!

"

·1979 CHM BlAZER 4 WH. DRIVE

'7793

NEW CHEVY G-20 VAN

CC200
'~.95
CC250
CENTRAL SOYA
of OHI INC.

MANY MORf

both rec lin e, exc. cond .,
One cocktail &amp; 2 end tabl es.

HELP WANTED

Full

time custodian to work late
afternoons and eve·nings ,
six days a week for local
busuness . Wr i te c -o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune ,

P.O. Box 143, 825 Third

Ave ., Gallipoli s, OH ,
stating
e x p e r ie nc e,
references ,
sal a ry
requirements.

WANTED

TO

FARMALL

F·20 tractor

with rubber &amp; steel wheels.

Calt 4-40·2088 att,e r 5 p.m.

NICE USED Dinette set.

Two chest ·of ·drawer s. Cal l

446·3224.

OIL FURNACE , 2 oil
old fur - tanks . Call245 ·5267.
BUY

Various types of
niture · dresser s, stand s,
tables, cabinets, etc Call

446·7872.

dark pine . exc . cond . Ca l l
446·4572 after 5 or wk. ends .

..

WANTED : SAW logs. Povment
upon delivery to our vord. 7:30

to 3:30 weekdovs . Blaney
Hardwoods, SR 339 , Barlow,

OH . 678·2980.

GOOD Used 5 fl . brush hog .
SJOO. Caii 245·54J9.
PU LL ETS 1!. FRYERS
For sa le. Ca ll J67 ·75JJ .
PEA CHE S

Yel low

Freestone, and canning
ANTIQUES, FURNITURE, gloss, peac;hes. Now t t)ru Sept . 1S.
ch ino , anything . See or co li Open 7 day s 9 to 9.
Ruth Gosney , antiques . 26 N.
2nd . .
Middleport .
OH . HUFFY
J·spd . bicycle.
9'12·3161.
GOOd cond ., SSO. Cal l 446·
1578 after 5 p.m.

For Sale

15 FT . Chry sler Boss Boat
SILVER DOLLAR S and w
ith trailer. 50 H.P. Mer·

gold coins. For investment
or collection . MT S Coi n

cury Motor . Call 367 ·7784.

Shop. Call 446·1842 or 446· After 5p.m.
0690.

It's a rugged . plug-free 7 fl machme that 1~r oduce s fast
drymg . h igh q ual ity hay at low er m 1t 1al cost. No cu tt er bar
or reel means less maintenance cos ts. too

MEIGS EQUIPMENT
992·2176

Pomeroy, Chi o

Call 446·

New Impala, Caprice, Monte Carlo

7434 .

Discounted to Save You Money.

...

crete, roofing , gutter ,
plumbing, you name it.
Free estimates to local
area. Call446·7623 .

KITCHEN

Wood Shop, 101 court Sl.,
446·2572. Open 8am to 4pm,

Mon . thru Fri.

SWIMLAN D POOLS and

accessories . Pool supplies
and service. Che-micals,
opening of pools in spring.
Free est i mates. Free
delivery on ch emicals .

Corvette, Z28 Camaros, 4 speed,
4 cyl., Mo.n za Coupe
SfL.ECTfD USfD BUYS

.•
.••

~

'

---.·

.....•
~

CABINETS,

vanity, picnic tables, lawn
chairs, qu ilting frames, or
anything made of wood .

ON MASSEY-FERGUSON'S

.••••"
,.••

FUEL·EmCIENT
TRACTORS.

~

..."••

Less than 25 ,000 miles, air, on chassis &amp; body . A clean unit that Is

sharpwllh full equipment.

-...
~

Rt .1 Albany69a-8205

~

-,.......
.....
...
--..
"

Grant , 446 ·8SOB.

JOHNSON Water Delivery .
Call .u6·1004 anytime .

COLUMBUS - Gina Rutan and
Cindy Sisson, Gallia County, were
riamed winners in the Food and
Nutrition Show Aug. 21 at the Ohio
State Fair. Their food projects were
entered in the All American Foods
division.
Tocompeteinthedivision,allcontestanls must exhibit a food for one
meai, arrange a place setting for
service for that meal, including an
appropriate tablecloth or mat, and
prepare a plan of food for one day
writteninmenuform.
·
Participants are intervie'wed to
evaluate their exhibit . and
knowledge of their project.

Big power in a small package, an easy
handling tractor with the strength
to get things done fast. They're waiting for you at our dealership with a
special money-saving price during
A
ction Time '79.
We've been given a fac tory
allowance of $400 on all new MF
265- 275-285 trac tors which mean s
extra savings for vo u.
· It's our best trac tor de;Jl e ver on .
these popular MF utility trac·tors·.
MF 265-60 HP; MF 275 ~ 67 HP;
MF 285-81 HP.

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC Real Sp•clal

1975 CHEVY G-10 VAN
terlor, bed, air vent&amp;. skyroof.

Cab chassis, 292 engine, 2 speed rear axle, 825x20 tires, solid cab&amp;.
.good mechanically. 102" to axle .

VISIT OUR LOT, CHECK OUR NEW CAR .&amp; TRUCK

:

•'
'
'

1;

£:

'---- ---..1:

,,""

lj';
Massey Farguson
Exp iration date,
Sep(em ber 28, 1979

SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES

'::
~

..
:.

::
:

I

,;t
··~

·::
~~

______;::--.:.J:__~:__

DISCOUNT PRICES
WE WANT YOU~ I.'IUSlNeSS

.,

,.

.;

.

1976 CHEVY C60

.,'.,•
..,,

r
.
-

'2499

6 cyl ., std. trans., radio, speakers, partial conversion with carpeted In·

a

~

'2295 ·

glass, am-fm stereo radio, clean Interior, dark blue tln1sh.

Here's what vo u get; Perkins
diesel power, 8 rir 12 speed trans- :
mission, and hydrostatic power
:
stee rin g wi th cl short 12 foot turning :
radius. Plus, Massey-Ferguson
dependability at once-a-year savings.;
See us for details!
~
""

M

75,000 miles. Commercial car, l.SO V·8, automatic, p.s., p.b., p.

•door, 76,950 miles. V·Bengine, automatic, P.S., P .B., factory alr,llnl.

-E..

Food and Nutrition Show
exhibitohrs rtaep reMsen! t4-haH'~s fromH
across t e s 1e. ore n •• 4members are expecld to take part
240 UPPER RIVER ROAD (STATE RT. 7)
during the 13-&lt;lay Ohio State Fair,,
PH. 446-1044 _
,OHIO
which continues through August 26. J L-------------------'------_:.:~_:_:_:_

900

4 doOr,

'2495

brakes, air, color white, blk. vinyl interiOr.
NADA wllh mileogecleductlon 54050.00 .

~

Two Gallians
named winners

1978 PONTIAC CATALINA

~

and cleaning. Pumps sold
and installed . Ca ll W. T .

POMEROY MOTOR CO•

•'

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;.'

..,.,,
.,

"Your C/uwy DNier"
992-2126

Pomeroy

'75 BUICK REGAL 2 DR

_._.

.....

WemaMgedtosavetwouilinalll
and are lookin~. f~r ~~ for them.

· - -· - · --·

'

$3195

'7,5 GRANADA 2 DR

· of neglect.
So I! you are thinking of dropping a
dog, puppy, cat or kitten because
you have tired of it, or have been
careless and let your female breed
WIW&amp;nted puppies or kittens - do
something intelligent lnlltead and
either advertiae for a new home for
lt (them) or take them to a vet and
have them hlllll8llely put to sleep.
Thia last story - we have four more
just like it- but different animals.
The minute I deliver this article to
the Sentinel I am leaving for
Gallipolis with anothem "statistic"
who was dropped in Racine- it too is
sick, full of wonn.a, nothing but skin
and bones, 'with pieces fi skin off
bothean. It is only about8or9 poun·
.ds and could have been a rlllllly cute
lillie male pup IF lt had been owned
by a responsible pet o)¥1ler and not
dropped to fend for itself.

r
IJ.~;;;;;;;;;;;O;;pe;n;;E;v=e;n;in;g;si8iPi.IMi.ilii~lliiiiiiLI

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.

'77 MUSTANG II 2X2

•

WATER WELL Dril ling

•

'78 GRANADA 4 DR

1976 CHEVY -20' TEC LARK MINI HOME

~

Continuous no leak gutter ing .

One Is a Duffy llUie black and white
1 98 REGENCY SEDAN Dk. brown, black vinyl roof,
puppy that l.s cute as the dickens; a
CB (Demo)
little female. If you would like to see
HnmepeSodety
POMEROY - I had Intended to this one please call -also we have a
mate the article this week about aU large black male who probably is
the reBSOIII you ahould conaider put- part Lab and part Collie, a real
88 ROY ALE SEDAN Red-Red vinyl roof
lln8 a mutt in your life - you !mow, lovable big boy who has had a rough
everyooe knows how much smarter time oflt.
1 88 ROYALE SEDAN , Green-Black vinyl roof
An old injury makes him limp.
they are, etc.
I was going to go on and say how Someone burned him on the nose but
some of the brjghtesi, healthiest and we have had him treated by the vet
1 88 ~OYALE CPE., Mecl. Beige
IDCXIl attractive dogs are milted and he's okay to go now - both
animals can be obtained by calling
breeds. They are generally more
l 88 ROYALE CPE., Dk. brown, black vinyl roof
resilient than purebreds, and don 'I our answering service at 99U260.
Other animals available to good
suffer from the problem ri. inbreeding. Then I was going to homes are located throughout Gallla
2 CUTlASS CRUISER WAGONS, Light blue, Med. Green
recommend that if you, a friend or and Meigs Counties and locations of
relative are looking for a pet to them can be obtained by calling the
pleaR help save a life fi a dog by nwnber indicated above.
2 CUTlASS SALON BROUGHAMS SEDANS,
tn closing I would like to caution
giving a mutt a home.
Med. brown, Beige
We have them most fi the time thoee of you who live or near busy
roadways. There are too many
and then too I! you can seek out a
poeple greiving daily over the loss of
CUTlASS SUPREME CPES, Lt. Green, Silver
healthy one at the powld, the Dog
loved pelll - too many caused by
Warden in Meigs .County woq!d be
READY FOR
more than happy to tell you when he careless drivers, who either are imwould be out there nen and would mature, thWghtle.uly raised by
DELIVERY
give you the animal ... he bas even irresponsible p&amp;rents to have no
regard for life, under the influence
been known to mate apeclal tripe to
of alcohol, or just plain speeding.
get animal5 out fi there.
Some think they save money buying out of town - ACIf cars are ignoring the safe speed
But, that is the story I WAS going ·
TUALLY
you save MORE buying at home.
to tell, instead, I want to tell you posted or if the speed posted is too
about ltGI1le of the little creatures fast for that area, call the Sheriff's
HURRY IN TODAYI
that have come to our attention In fifice and find out how you can go
about having the speed limit
the put week or so.
· Purebreed dogs are being dropped changed: Pes-ha]lll, the only way to
be safe from Irresponsible drivers
all over the CO\Uity - don' know if
though
is to keep any and aU peta
they are stolen from other COWities
"You'lllike our Quality Way of Doing Business"
either
on
leashes, in fenced-in yards
and dropped here or what.
GMC Financing
or in the house.
They aren't han! to place in good
992-5342
Pomeroy
PeniOilaily, I don't let mine out of
llolrw&gt;l, needl~ to llli!Y, but then
see
Pete
Burris,
Marvin
Kee.baugh
or
George
Harris ·
iny
sight,
because
I'd
be
a·
basket
there are the others like for Incase
if
anything
happened
to
them.
stance:
A long haired beauty - female
naturally- sat by tbe the side of the
J'Oid north fi Pomeroy for three
days walling for the owner that
dropped her to return and pick her
up. Shedidn't·move from the spot for
the entire time -lust loyally waiting
LOW-PRICED USED CARS MARKED DOWN EVEN LDWER
for the insensitive individual who
dropped her. The animal was observed by several people it seems,
but finally ltOIDeOile called the
Hwnane Society and it was picked
up,
Factory service cars, 4 cyl., auto. trans. , P.S., A. C., AM·FM stereo !ape, power
booster, P . seats, P. windows, P. dr . locks. Lots more.
·
It was scared, hWIIII'Y, sick and
covered with fleas and tickll when
we got it - but after a trip to the vet
and after I personally dipped,
bathed, clipped, fed, and cared for
• cyl., auto. trans., P. steering, radio, electric rear defrost, w·s·w !Ires, sport
that dog for several days lt turned
mirrors.
into a beauty and Is now happily settled In a new ~e with a sweet
loving pet owner. That lillie story
had a happy ending.
Now, let me tell you another. A
4 cyl., auto. trans., P .S., radio, electr ic R . defrost, sport mirrors, fold down rear
pup, black and white, sort .ri. a Border Collie Terrier combination was
seen for sii weeks Uvtng at the dump
in Racine. No one bothered to call us
or to take the Initiative themselves
and help the poor little thing. So, by
JO:i! V·8, au1o. trans., P.S., air cond:, vinyl roof, AM-FM, w-s-w tires. Nice .
the time we got It, it was too late.
The animal . was eztremely
emaciated, had what appeared to be
a severe skin disease from Uving In
the dirt and fllth of the dump, was
30'1 \1 ·8, auto. trans ., P.S., air cond., AM·FM 81r., appl. decor grp., sport steer·
filled with wonna, etc. The vet had
lng wheel, sport mirrors, vinyl body side mldgs., console, aluminum wheels,
to euthanlze the animal to relieve Its
R.W.L. tires .
pain and SUffering. Thia Ill more
typically what happens when you
drOp an animal 8ll1lllllng that
someone kind is going to ccme along
V-8, auto. trens., P. steering, air cond., tilt wheel, AM -8 tr . stereo, chrome
and give it a good home. Only a
wheels . Extra cheap. ·
small portion of dropped animals
find their way into that type of happy
situation. Ail others are either
picked up by the dog warden or die

By Marioa C. Cnwfonl
MelpCaaaty

-·

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ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER CO.

1 98 REGENCY SEDAN White-White vinyl roof (Demo)

'78 PINTO 3 DR RUNABOUT

...'

Ca ll446·7887.

Hoofs and Paws

'78 PINTO 2 DR

....

_.,,...,

~

HANDY 60, 67,
ANDSIHP

1 98 REGENCY SEDAN red-white vinyl roof- CB

'79 FAIRMONT FUTURA ·2 DR

Other Scarce Model To Choose From

't

of siding, remodeling, con ·

OLDSMOBILE
· CLEARANCE SALE

iDiiiCE

Reg. &amp; 4 wh. drive pl_ckups, Luv Trucks.

WHITE Aluminum storm

Services Offered
J IM'S SIDING AND CON ·
STRUCT ION CO. All types

'79 CLOSEOUT SALE
&amp; SAVE MONEY

KARR &amp; VANZANDT

Window van conversion, uses reg . gas, 350 eng ., P .S.,
P.B., AM ·FM stereo, tape," speakers, air cond., aux .
battery,. 12 volt · electric refrigerator, " captain
chairs, sink, bed &amp; dinette, loaded with options.
Brown &amp; beige color .
Lisl$11,9.18.00 SPECIAL PRICE

For Sale
ft .

KARR &amp; VAN .ZANDT

Ali CARS HAVE AIR CONDITIONING,
UNDERCOAnNG AND WAX

tires, AM radio, H .O . baHery,
Sticker Price $16,..40 Our Spoclol

'216.68
'372.09

door . 36 fl .x 81

cheeses for weight watchers and
and an adirondack-type shelter. Exnatural resources management 1.1
tho8e on salt free diets; how to store
tensive type plantings exhibit windthe ~ of the School fi Natural
foods at home ; and food sources for
breaks and wildlife attraction.
Resources Wllbit.
specl!ic nutrienta lll'e other features.
Enhancing rural income through
The techniques for adding
seleniwn to feed rations for dairy
cows will be discussed by dairy
scientists.
cattle, swine, sheep, and horse
eshlblts will be shown also.
Veterinary medicine topics are
mastitis control, control of
reproductive diseases, and infect!OUB diseaaes.
With woodlot ·production getting
more attention, plant pathologists
(ONLY 14 TO CHOOSE FROM)
will feature diseases of forest and
shade trees as they relate to woodlot
production, to tbe nursery situation,
Olristmas · tree farms, and to ornamentals and shade trees.
Conservation area features are a
pond and boat dock, an A.frame
cabin, a shelter house, a footbridge, ·
1 98 REGENCY SEDAN, RED, WHITE VINYL ROOF

2

color wh ite top a. blue bOdy . 350 V ·B, 4
speed trans., power steering &amp; brakes,
folding R. seat, mirrors, L78xl5 on&amp;. off

'221.42

RECORDS INFORMATION - Denver Yoho, President of the Ohio
Valley Feeder Cail Conunittee, records information about a cail during
feeder calf sale.
·

flock owners to feed llnd otherwise
cere for chickens more
automatically, The outst.andlng
nutritive value of poultry products
will be featured.
Plots of vegeiables and flowers
will show new annual flower
varieties and vegetable cultivars,
Horticulturists also will feature
plants for the home as well as the
best apple, grape, .and pear
cultivars, and landscape ideas for
the home garden.
Pest management is featured by
enloolologlats, includlng.tbe western
corn rootwonn, soybean insecta, the
Japanese beetle, the aUalfa leaf
miner, face mea, and borers.
Making yogurt, cottage cheese,
and American-type cheese at home,
along with making homemade ice
cream, are features of the food
science and nutrition ellhibit. Answers about low sodlwn content,

oo

REG.

SOFA CHAIR · &amp; ottoman ,

NEW IDEA MODEL 272 CUT / DlTlONER
VIRTUALLY PLUG FREE
MAKES QUALITY HAY FOR LESS COST

Jrd

/

player, exc . COf) d . Call 446 ·
4572 a fter 5 or w k.. ·ends.

FAST, NON-STOP
HARVESTING!
1

AUG. 25

ets: .

JEWELERS ,

ding photography. Tawney
Studlos, .t24 Second Ave.

THRU

For Sale
Wanted to Buy
JUNK . Auto and scrap MAGNAVOX Console
metal. Call 388·8776.
stereo with a-track t ape
eSt lite

AUG.ll

NEW Sport V,ans, Reg. Vans, Blazer,

DIAMONDS, gold bands,

LARGEST Garage sale in

EFFECT

)

Sale dates are as foUows : September 'ZI- Yearling Sale; October
4- All-Breed caU Sale; October 10Charolais Sale (sponsored by Ohio
State Charolais Association) and October 25- All-Breed Calf Sale.
calves must weigh at least 'ZIS
pounds and come direct from the
farm where they were produced.
These sales are for beef calves
(steers or heifers), and they will be
graded by a grades appointed by the
committee.
Marketing charges will be made
by the stockyear on a per head basis
plus $1 per head is charged by the
committee except for the Charolais
sale. At this sale,' in addition to the
stockyard charges, consignees must
pay the Charolais Association membership fee of $10 plus $1 per head;
the regular $1 charge by the committee will not be made for this sale.
Bulls will not be accepted on the
Charolais site and I'm not sure at
this time about the other sales check before you bring one in.
call our office (446-4612 ext. 32),
Tommy Joe Stewart or any of the
committee members if you have
questions about these sales.

C:OLUMBUS - A record nwnber
stubble. You can watch the planters
.. of exhibitors will bring Ideas for bet- · and drills work and compare them.
•ter farming and living to viewers at
·Ladies atteJJdlng the Review will
the September 18-:ID Fann Scle.nce
be treated to a style show at 11 a .m.,
Review. The big fann and home
I p.m., and 3 p.m. each day. There
show takes place northwest of also will be rnlni-demonstrati0118 on
Colwnbus fif tlie 1-270 outerbell.
"Sewing Woven Synthetics," "SelecAbout 432 commercial exhibitors lln8 Accessories," and "Recyclin8
have arranged to be there, along and Recmlblning ," A "diet check "
with the vast educational resources ·computer program will run con&lt;:4 the OSU College of Agriculture tinuoualy from 10 11.m. to 2 p.m. Winand Home Economics, the Ohio dow treatments to COIIIIerve energy
Agricultural R!!SC&amp;rCh and Develop- will be demonstrated, along with
ment Center and the Ohio inexpeiJBive decorating Ups, Cblld·
parent communication will be em•Cooperative Extension Service.
; More than $25 million worth of phasized and parent...,bild inequipment will be shown, much of lt teraction toys will be ~layed.
Energy saving ideas by
harvesllrig crops and Wling soil.
:.Farm supplies of all types will be agricultural engineers will include
:exhibited. Company representatives sotar heating of buildings, ln·
will be there to talk about sulation, conservjng energy-using
hot water, proper ballasting .of fann
.capabWti~ of equipment and suptractor tires, and use of double
plies as wellaa prices.
Crops on the 750 acres fi Review waned plutic gteenhouies with
. land were planted early this year, polystyrene billlda pumped in and
the com in April and the soybeans in out depending on the outside temearly May, so they should be r!llldy perature. The design safety of fann
machinery also will be highlighted
' for harvest by September 18.
in
the ag engineering area.
Visitors will qe outstanding
Vari01111
types of bini and equip:maximum-yield corn and soybean
ment
for
drying
and storing grain
•plots. Extension ' and research
· agronomists will explain the com- will be shown and demonStrated.
. bination of herbicides, fertilizers, About 1,000 bllshell of corn will be
dried in a small bin lllln8 heat from
·~ tillage and planting methods used on
a
solar pond. Bot water is drawn
•these plots.
.
from
the pond and clrculated
Minimum tillage, one way to
through
a radiator over which air is
reduce the cost of inflated food
blown
Into
the bin of corn.
• Prices, wiD be shown. N~e
Poultry
science exhibits will
•equipment from seven companies
demonstrate
mechanical In·
' will be demonstrated -seeding corn,
novaU0111
which
allow
small poultry
soybeens, and small gardena in oalll

AG STAR

Agriculture and
•
our community
My wife and I &amp;\tended the groundbl'e!lking ceremonies at the Raccoon Creek County Park last Saturday. We were impressed with the
Phase I project Uiat is currently underway.It's going to be quite a large
recreational area and it's difficult to
comprehend this fact until you stand
in the middle of the site.
See Josette Baker, Director Parks
and Recreatiol) at the Courthouse to
make lll'rangements for tours of the
site. I think you '11 have a better appreciation of what's in store for
Gallla Countians at this new park.

Annual Farm .Science Review scheduled September 18-20

Chemical firm .sponsoring contest,
By Stepbea D. Hlb:stger .
District Conaervatlonlsl
SoU Conaervatl"o Servlce
GALL! POLIS - The past year has
shown much interest in the future of
n&lt;Klll corn here in Gallia County.
The Cooperative Extension Service
sponsored a nO-till meeting last winter and two businesses bought planters to lease to farmers.
The work and efforts seem to have
paid fif. To the best of our
knowledge, nearly 20 local farmers
tried or continued to use nO-till corn
production methods this Y!lllr.
In an effort to show the advantages fi n!Kill a chemical company has sponsored a nO-till com
yield contest. This contest is stale·
wide competition, however each
county with an entrant is guaranteed
a local winner.
The rules of the contest are: (I ) At
least a five acre plot (irrigated plots
are ineligible ), (2 ) no tillage
operations were done, (3) contest en-

·

302 V·8, auto. trans ., P.S. , radio, vinvl roof.

'77 MAVERICK 2 DR
6 t:vl., auto. trans., radio.

'71 CADILLAC ELDORADO
V·8, auto. trans., P.S., leather Int., tilt wheel, teles. wheel, P. seats, P. windows,
P. dr. locks, air cond. , auto. temp. control. Lots more. Local owned, low

mileage.

FORD
461 3rd Ave•
MidOiepon, 0.

PAT HILL FORO, INC.
For a friendly deal see one of these courteous salesmen:

Rocky Hupp, Danell Dodrill or Pat Hill, .Gen. M(J.

n
'

..

�0-7- The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Aug 26, 1979

~-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug. 26, 1979

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found it1 the Sunday Times-Sentinel

For Best Results Use Sunday 1~imes-Sentinel Classifieds

Real Estate for Sale

Services Offered
Card of Thanks

Notices

For Sale

For Sale

Help Wanted

THE FAMILY of Ruby Erb
WIShes to eKtend their heart
felt thanks to all who 0551Sted
1n the 1llneu and death of our
Mother Spec1al thanks to the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
nurses ot Veterens Memor1ol
Hosp1 tol Or Blo1ew•cz Rev
Perrin pallbearers Ewtng s
Mr and Mrs VIctor Young.
Jr , far the1r tneder lovmg
core they gave to Morn whde
she was with them
all
fnends , relatives , ne1ghbors
who sent floral pe1ces food
and cords Vour kindness w1ll
never be forgotten
Daughter Dorot hy Reo son· m·
low Don Rea. grandchildren
Mr and Mrs lorry (Revo)
Bunce and Fam1ly, Mr and
Mrs lorry {Donna) Thomas
ondFam1ly

SWEEf&gt;ER and sewing
machtne repair, parts, and
supplies
Pt ck up and
delivery , Davts Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd
CaTl
146 0294 .

GlASTRON BOAT tn haul
des1gn 16 ft 1 m 19 gal
butiHn gas tank 80 h p Mere
mt&gt;tor Shorelander 11lt tra1ler
1 year old. 9419 -2377

KACH ALL PORTABLE
BLDG . All SilOS, 6x10 to
12x40. See at 123'1&gt; f&gt;1ne 51 .
4A6 2783 or 3 houses below
Bowling Alley on Rl 7, 446
1279

WANTED · Eleperienced
guitar teacher with
references .
WARD ' S
KEYBOARD . Caii4A6·4372 .

In Memory

IN MEMORY
Merrill
" Curly "
Kemper whom joined
God two years ago
Augusl26.

You awake each morn -

ing to share your love.

You love, your love for
hit.
Watching the children
a• thev lav In their
own little world.
lillie world.
Wotchlng your family
os they cope w•lh the
days as thev DISS bv
Some with smtles, some
with not
Wolchlng the animals,

the trees
Feeling the breeze a• It
brushes against your
skin
The wormth of the •un
flll1ng throughout your

body.
The sincer.ty,

THE FAMILY of Dole Howell ,
Jr , thanks the emergencys
that transported h1m to
Veterans Memonal Hospital
to the V A Hosp1tal m Hun
tmgton Also the steff Or s
and nurses chapla1n at Hun
hngton
Wa lker Funeral
Home, contoling words of the
min is ter Amos Till•s Esther
Kannedy the pomtst those
who sent food ond flowers or
helped m ony way at the loss
of our beloved son ond
brother You will never be
forgotlen God Bless You
The Fomtly of Dole Howell , Jr

pro-

udness, joy and love

The d•y arrives for
everyone

Some are ready, some
are not
The day, the preceous
day
The day throughout
your lifespan, you

wonder
What is II like, what is
this heavenly place
like?

How can one explatn,
how can one share?

The last smtle, your one
last smtle that outshenes

the sun,

The smile thai you place
on your family
Is hke God blesslftg the

1

WE WOULD Like to thank
all our fnends &amp; neighbors
for your kindness shown tn
the death of our Mother
Mrs Ida Earles Mr &amp;
Mrs Everett Earles &amp;
Family

earth, knowing that

your love will always re -

Notices

main here upon the
earth.
Deeply mtssed wtth
sincere love from your
f•mlly:
Your wife,
Virginia,
daughters
Fr1nces, Annabelle and
ls1belle1 your brothers
•nd your sisters, grandchildren and greatgr•ndch•ldren .

GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7 30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY

Card of Thanks
THE F.&amp;.MILY of Cl1nton P1erce
wishes to express the tr appreclotlon to rhose who
tiel~ 1n any woy dunng the
death of our father and hus
bond Thanks for the cords
flowers, food and k1nd words
S~1a l thanks to Rev Robert
Stewort and hts tom1ly Dr
Pickens, Ewtng Funeral Home
and the pallbearers
Mrs Mildred Pterce Tmo
Tony Paul Jon ondlerry

MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY
992 6260
Pets
avo1loble for adoption and 1n
formation serv1ce
ERWIN S GUlF Servtce Will be
closed from August 29 1111
Sept 4 for vocotlon
CALL NOW and reg1ster for
coke decorot1ng classes
beg1nn1ng soon ' ot the
Carousel Confectionery M1d
dleport 992-63_,.2

SHOOTING
MATCH
Every Saturday
7: 30 f&gt; .M.
Btlly Walters Farm
Off 218

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1979 - 10:00 A.M
Loc•tion : John R. Sturgeon Farm, Ashton, west
Vlrglnta, 4 m tles east of W. Va Route 1 at Ashton on
County Roule~l. Ashton-Upland Milton Road
The followi ng personal properly will be sold to
sel11e the estate of:John R. Sturgeon .
14 head of high grade beef cattle , Approx•malely
1700 bales of good hay in the barn. Over 1,000 m1ies
of this is thts year 's ftrst cutting of clover and or·
chard grass
Numerous Items of household furntshtngs , tncludtng
an electric range, refrigerator , washer and dryer,
breakfast set. bedroom and living room furn 1tur o
including mattresses, teleVISton set , convertabl~
sofa, reclm tng chairs, heat1ng stoves, etc Several
items of horse drawn farm equ tpm ent
Miscellaneous small tools 1ncludmg electrtc drill ,
lawn mower, etc

TERMS: CASH
Earl Sturgeon
Wiley Conrad
EKecutor
Auctioneer
304-675·1113
304-576-2177
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
OF PROERTY.
,

ACCIDENT~

OR LOSS

PUBLIC AUCTION

ANTIQUES bought and
sold While' s Antiques, Rl
35, Rodney . Call245

soso

FOR THE BEST buy 1n
dtamonds, go to Tawney
Jewelers,
422
Second
Avenue, Gallipolis Com
pare prtces anywhere
CARf&gt;ET and Upholstery
c leantng Davts, phone 446
0294 Quality WORK al
REASONABLE f&gt;R ICES
51 NCE 1970
THIS IS THE Last week 10
get 20 percent Off on Stiver
Bring your
Rep l atmg
teapots. candlesticks and
trays tn for exttmates
Tawney Jewelers, 424
Second Ave Gallipolis, OH

, For Sale
COAl
liMESTONE
sand ,
grovel colctum chlonde fer·
tlilter dog food and oil types
of salt Excelsior Salt Works,
Inc E Mom St Pomeroy,
992-3891

HOMELITE S h p
"d•ng
mower. 700 bu of ear corn
985-3928
1978 KAWASAKI 100 low
m1leoge 992 36-40
ZENITH PORTABLE stereo
Also child's chest of drawers
9~9- 21S. or949 2596

1977 ARROWGLASS BASS and
pleasure boot w1th 85 h p
e•tros
Evtnrude
Many
992-2214
DUROC BOARS, purebred
Reedsv11le 6U-378 6311
lENNOX CENTRAL o~r cond1
flonmg ond heahng w1th
ducts 992-2560

ROTOTILLER 3 5 h p B"ggs
and Stratton .. oe Spring Ave .
Pomeroy after 6pm
CARRY ON truck camper. 8ft
sleeps -i Self contained Ex
cellent cond 1t1on 9_.9-2597
MATCHING BED and dresser
5 small gas heot1ng stoves
992 3850
BEAUTY SHOP equ1pmen t
four hydraulic cha~rs _.dryers,
3 comb out stat1ons ond sham
poo cha1r Shampoo bowl, 1
electromc otr cleaner 1 steel
fthng cob.net, 3 roller carts ,
combs , brushes perm wave
rods roller etc R C cooler
See Dorothy Wtnebrenner.
College St , Syracuse, OH
WURLITZER ORGAN . A 1 con
d1t1on. All trons 1ster Call
667-3550
LIKE NEW tn dash AM FM 8·
track stereo
2 co aK1al
speakers For more mlorma·
t1on call992 3743 after S
BOAT 1960 Gloss Mog1c 18
boot w1th 1971 Mercury 135
h p outboard ond 1960 Gator
T1lt trader $1595
Phone
W2 bbBI after 5992-3 133
CANNING PEACHES now thru
Sept
lS
Bobs Market
Mo'!ion, WV Open 7 days
Phone 30. 773 5721
H &amp; N Day old or started
leghorn pullets both floor or
cage gorwn O\IOIIoble Poultry
Housmg and Automation
Modern Poultry 399 W Matn
Pomeroy Phone 992 216-4
BARLEY Phone 8~3 2105, Don
Johnson, Portland
USED HEAlWAVE woodburn·
1ng sto\le $200 2 double
beds 1 metal 1 anttque $100
each 2 lamps $20 eo I ndmg
needs work ,
lawn mower
$150 949 2450

, TRY THE NEW
"PILLOW SOFT"
SERTA
PERFECT SLEEPER
THI

ULTIMAliiN

SUI~LNG

COMFORT

CORBIN and SNYDER
FURNITURE
9 55 SECOND AVENUE
GALl" I POLI S OH IO

Take Rt. 60 south out of Zanesvtlle to Mcconnelsville- or take St. Rt. 60 north out at Mane1fl to McConnelsville, cross nver through Malta on
51. Ill. 71 we51 for 2 miles- stay left a flop of II• lion·
to St . Rl. 377 to Penn•v•lie at the Bill Janes Farms.
30 miles northeast of Athens or 85 m1les southeast of
Columbus, Ohto.

,.

Selling a collection of over 300 guns - muzzl e
loadtng rifles, shotguns, h1gh powered rtfles, hand
guns, German Lugers, etc A lot w / scopes A lso sel l
ing a large sel~t1on of kn 1ves, boots, shoes, sleep
mg bags, sportmg equ1pment, etc Gold &amp; sliver
coins Se'Veral extra nice gold watches Guns to be
sold both days.
PIStols include Colt, Rem'"glon , Smtih / Wesson
Browning, Spantsh, Ruger, Erma, lnterarms:
Sliver Cup, Raven, Jagger, Hopktns/ AIIen, LLama,
etc In 38. 32 1!. 45 cal • u mag • 22122 mag &amp; 357
mag
Shotguns mclude Germao Dnlling , Wtn chester
J P. Higgtns, Browning, Ithaca, Mauser, H ~ Stan :
dord, Revelal1on , HI!.R, Eastfield, Mossberg,
Stevens, J . P Sauers, Kassnar , Dak 1n, Marltn
Pederson, N•kko, Spnngfield, Ted William s, Atls:
Barker, etc. In 10, 12. 16, and 2() ga , 410 .
Rtfles •ndude Wtnchester, Stevens, Savage, Spr
lngfleld, Rem1ngton, Marl'"· Coil, Mossberg, Ted
Wllll,ems, Browning, Glenfield, Ithaca, Argentin e
Mauser. Manilcher Mauser. etc 1n 22.30 30. 35. 222.
22/ 250, 32 40 cal etc .
Muzzle loaders '"elude Wesley Ri c hard , E l1
Whitney, ConnectiCut Valley Arms, Moore, Enf•eld,
Richards, Parker Snow, HI!.R Huntsman Cofov
Wolfclarns, Tower Musket, etc A large sel~ctton of
sleeping bags (down 11. dacron filled! , shoes, poets,
clothes, and ca mptng gears to be sold eacli day
THE FOLLOWING KNlVES, GOLD &amp; SI LVER
COINS, AND GOLD WATCHE S WILL BE SOLD ON
SUNDAY, SEf&gt;T 2at 1 OOO 'CLOCK p M
Two dtspiiY cases of old Case XX knives (one w / 93
knives &amp; one w/ 60), both app 30 years old Case XX
Moby Dick knife , Commeratlve, Centenntal, Boker,
Calllmus, etc Many unsharpened Thts ts a f 1ne col
l.ction of knives Several gold &amp; si lver cotns, etc
and several extra nice gold watches Not room to
lfsl all of lllem Th1s will be an extra good two day
sale Sale held lns1de large new modern building
Self contained camper space avatlable Plenty
parkmg Bring your lawn cha i r
Nothing shown before day of sale. Lunch on
premises. Terms · cash or check w / pos•live ID each
day of sale. Not responsible for accidents .
1111 Janes in charge of •ale.
Auctioneers- Btll Janes
Randy Newsom &amp; Assoclalel - f&gt;hone 1-614·557·3411

USED FURN 3 liVIng rm.
suttes, ltvang rm tables,
trash compactor Corbtn
and Snyder Furn , 955
Second Ave 446·1171
LUMf&gt;, stoker &amp; egg coal,
4A6·1408

45631
PHONE 614-446-1171

AL L TYf&gt;ES Of bu1ld1ng
matenals, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin
tels, etc Claude Winters,
R•o Grande, 0 Phone 245
5121 after 5pm
USED TRACTORS
MF135 D~esel · MF230
Diesel
MFlSO D1esel ·
MF235 D1esel · MF165
Diesel
MF 285 Diesel
MF1135 Diesel, cab, alf and
heater.
NEW AND USED
IMPLEMENTS
MF9 baler · MFlO baler
MF 120 baler
Matthews
rotary scythe · MFB80
semi mounted 6 bottom
plow MF250 12 1n. diSC
MF2 2 row chopper MF39
2 row planters mechan1cal
transplanter
SH INN 'S
TRACTOR SALES
f&gt;H 485 1630, Leon, wv

1978 HARLEY DAVISON
lo flder, 1200 cc, 3300
miles, white with red pen
slflp, $3,700.675 5576
1979 FIBERFORM Boat
55185 Mercru•ser. 470 170
H.P
•nboard outboard
Length 18ft, 4•n. open bow
new cond. 59,800. Call 367
7750

1979 32FT . Travel Trailer
self contained, air, sleeps 6
See any t1me at KrOdel
Park at PI f&gt;leasant
MUST SELL Late model
travel trailer . 28 fl . Fac
tory air, self contained,
carpeted lhru out Many
extras See any t1me at
Krodel
f&gt;ark
at
f&gt;l
Pleasant
FOR SALE
Tomatoes
Free delivery Call 388
8139

SAWS,
LAYNE'S NEW
AND ECHO CHAIN
USED
FURNITURE hydraulic wood splitters,
NEW· baby beds, $65, saw chain, bars, and all
sofa, chair, rocker, ot wood cutttng suppltes
toman, 3 tables, SSOO, Charles McKean, Fa•rfleld
Centenary Road, 4A6 94A2
bedroom su1tes, $175. $275
$3-4(). $500. Early american
sofa and chalf, $340 .. FIREWOOD,
seasoned
modern
sofa , chatr, oak, ash and htckory, Ph
loveseat, 527.5 , recliners, 446 9.4-42
S9 ©. and up Tables, S60
each Maple or p'"e table, 1972 YAMAHA 250 Enduro,
4 chairs, $235, hutch, $300., 1973 Honda 70, SICkle bar
7 pc dinette, $129. , 5 pc
mower for Bolens, ca II 379
dmette with sw1vel chairs, 2688
$325. , bunk beds complete,
SlSO $225 $275 mattresses
or box spnngs, f1rm s.so
$6© $70 each, captam's
bed. $250.. queen sets, REFRIGERATOR , rel1abl
$175 , 4 drawer chest, $42 . 5 • • $35, 245·5825
drawer chest $49 Sofa bed
w1lh chalf $150 GOOD
USED FURN Dressers, 78 TRIUMPH , Bonneville ,
chest, ntghtstand, dryers, 750 tw1n exc cond, Ph 379
ranges , coffee and end 2166
tables, beds, tables, lamps,
TVS, refngerator, desk, FIREWOOD for sale, 4A6
other items, portable dryer 1437
Cal l 446 0322 Monday thru
Frtday, 9am to 8pm, Satur
BUILDING
All steel
day 9am to Spm . 3 m1 out d x72x 1A, 1ncludes 20xl.C
Bulav111e Rd
open10g, 3x7 service door
$5,854 Also one -4Cx48x14
PENDLETON REBUILT with Jx7 servtce door, 20x12
BATTERY $18 00 plus tax open1ng, only $3,861 Call
419 756-1l32S collect. Ask tor
and exkhange.
Guaran
Ttm .
teed We buy old baltef!es
Phone 388 8596
AIR COND
3 month old
TRUCKLOAD OF lSin 18 Hotpoinl 24,000 BTU $500
Call-146 7126or446·0151
in, 24 in bell f1 ie, 2 II long
Chimney block . 6 sheets 24
guage, 8ft long galvan1zed
FOR SALE · K 1ng wood 1!.
rootm,g . Gall1pohs B lock coal stove used one win
co , 123 1 2 P'"e 51 446
ler $250 Call256 1957
2783
GOOD
USED
Af&gt;
PLIANCES
Washers,
dryers,
re fndgerators ,
ranges
Skaggs Ap
pltances, 1918 Eastern Av
ce , 446 7398
SUZUKI ot Jackson has a
new Suzukt for you Some
'78 's sttll available Clean
trades wanted Parts, ser
vtce, accessones
378 E Ma1nt St , Jackson,
OH
286 4956

·.

2 DAY LABOR DAY WEEKEND SALE

SAT, SEf&gt;T . I and SUN ., SEf&gt;T. 2
STARTING DAY AT 11 :00A .M .
On St,. Rt. 377m Pennsvl)le, Oh10 in Morgan Co.

1978 CHRYSLER BOAT
FOR SAlE I II 16'1&gt; FT 105
HP outboard $4900 Call
4A6 0175.

'79 GOOD SEMI TRAILERS
We have Vans, Flats, Reefers &amp; Open
Tops. 22 good storage trailers. Also new
Trailmobile vans &amp; flats for immediate
delivery. Call Bob or Jim on what you
need. We trade, finance &amp; lease.
COMMERCIAL TRAILER CO.
614-224-1138
Columbus, OH .

FOR SALE · U Holstein
He1fers to freshen m Nov &amp;
Dec weigh approximately
1100 lbs Call 304·273 2B48
1 SET Bunk bedS/ClSO , 1 19
tnch Cromacolor Zemth
T V and a f&gt;hllco 19 1nch
BiloW mcluded for $300 1
wall unit, paid $75 . sell for
$50 See at 2nd tra•ler
behind Higley 's C,rry Out

57 STUDEBAKER
67
Chevy rebu•ll engine, 71 112
ton, new tires. All for
$1,000 980 Maple •n M1d
dleport.

6, 8 1!. 10 week old pigs for
sale. Call379·2138.
1975 HONDA MT 250
Elsinore. Gd. cond , SSOO 1!.
1972 Yamaha 350 street
b1ke, S400 Call446 4371

73 NORTON BSO 16 fl . John
son 's boat and 75 H.P.
motor. Two MSO tires and 8
mch supertor rims Ca ll
388·8230

He! p wanted

SARAH COVENTRY · Is
now selecting and training
a few fashion show dlrec ·
tors 1f Interested . Call 614·
643·2151 torlnlervle\W
BUSBOY Schedule now
open . Mon . lhru Fr i. 10 ·30
to 7 00. f&gt;erson must be out
of school Apply In person,
BOb Evans steak House
REGISTERED NURSE or
HEALTH EDUCATOR for
high blood preosure
program Responslbilll•es
1nclude pattent education
and coordlnataon of com ·
munlly HBf&gt; acllv11ies
Travel
reQuIred
as
program covers four coun
ties Experience in publiC
health or graduate of
health education program
requlfed, B S N proffered
SMd resume to Personnel
Office. Hocking Technical
College, Nelsonville, OH
45764 by Sept. 4, 1979 AN
EQUAL Of&gt;f&gt;ORTUNITY
EMf&gt;LOYER .
CAROLINE
EMMONS
needs S representatives tn
thiS area to start to work
immediately. Wear &amp; sell
our beautiful jewelry whi le
earntng good substantial
'"come Apply HOliday Inn
1n Gall Rm 229 Ask lor
Judi Thurs Aug 30th 10
a.m . to7 p.m
MANAGEMENTPEOf&gt;LE
tor leading jewelry com
pany E)(perlence helpful
but will train right person
Good Income, hours
flexible. For further details
apply Holiday Inn, Gall. ,
room 229 Ask for Judi ,
Thurs. Aug. 30th 10 a m to
7p m
SOMEONE To care for
elderly man In their home
$70. per wk. Call367 0543
PERSON WHO Enjoys hor
seshoes, fishing , campmg ,
and work1ng with mentally
retarded adults •s needec
tor a weekend reltef , ltve In
housemanager •n David
Milliken, f&gt; 0
Box 906,
Gallipolis. OH . Call 446
1642, extension 332 .
PERSON WHO Enjoys hor
seshoes, ftshlng , camptng,
and working with mentally
retarded adults Is needed
for a weekend relief, llve·l n
housemanager in Dav 1d
M11iiken, f&gt; .O Box 906,
Gallipolis, OH , Call 446
1~2. extenston,JJ2

FOOD SERVICE
lndtvlduAI needed for
growing pizza business .
Applicont must be
presently working In
food servtct, or have a
proven tr•ck-record In a
successful management
ca pacify
II you ae
thinking of a chAnge, we
offer a work·week that
averages less than 50
hours per week, paid
v•cation •tter 1 year,
group health &amp; life
av111able All tnterested
Individuals aDDIV 1n per·
son to Mike Donelll,
Donelil's PlnA. Spring
Valley
Pl•11
'"
GallipoliS.
BABYSI'nER NEEDED tn Racine
area 9•9 2862.

DEPENDABLE BABYSITTER In
my home 5 days o week
7 4 30 pm 2 children 18 mo
ond 2 mo References r•
qu1red . must hove own
transportation Den11e Wolfe,
949·2377
BAR PERSON , honest. neat,
dependable Apply 1n person.
Five Points Grill, Pomeroy.
Male or female
NEED BABYSITTER for 1st
grader. for 2 hours otter
school Afttr 5.30 949·2107
ONE PART t ime babysitter
7 30 to 2 30. 3 days a week
overage lor 2 chtldren
9~9- 2~50

PUBLIC AUCTION
PUBLIC SALE

SATURDAY, SEPT. 1, 1979 - 10:00 A.M·.
Located 10 mile• below Gallipolis on st. Rt. 7 at
Bladen The fotowlng will be offered :
Whlflpool washer 1!. dryer (gold, GE re!f!geralor
(a vocado&gt;. kitchen table w / 4 chairs. Hotpoint elec
trtc range (like new J1 pecan fintsh drop leaf table &amp;
.4 ch airs (extends to 70''), set of dishes, a bed &amp; chest
(navy blue antique). maple bed (box spr'"gs &amp; mat·
tress) with chest &amp; dresser, Eureka vac uum
cleaner, new quilting frames, 3 vanity lamps, new
mattress &amp; springs , set of flatware, one lot of
beautifUl patio furniture , matching pair table
lamps, Doughboy , davenport. L R chair. ottoman,
coffee table. wall hugger recl1ner, 2 afghans, G.E .
vacuum cleaner / 2 sets of wood shutters~ chime
clock, 2 eleclnc tans, Toro weed eater, B&amp;D hedge
tnmmer, folding table, 2 roasters, plasftc runners,
few hand tools, dishe&lt;, pots &amp; pans and other
misce llaneous 1tems The art1cles tn thts sale are m
gOOd condttton and have had very good care. All
1tem s must Ue r l' IT'Oved on day of sale
TERMS : CASH
FRI.NK THOMAS, OWNER

•

lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER
Crown City, OHio
Phone 256..740

Not Responsible for Accldenh or Loss of Proerty

SAT., SEPT. 1, 1979

10:00 AM.

The Farm machinery and personal properly of the
!ale f&gt;earl (Benny) Edwards Wtll be sold. Located
1ust south of Middleport, Ohio'on State RDUie 7
"FARM MACINERY"
SO Ferguson gas tractor live f&gt; .T .O. w/power adl
rear wheel , Ford 1 row corn picker 3 f&gt;t., 3 flat bed
wagons, 6 fl. Ford flex a hitch, 3 Pl. disk, 2() ft .
elevator, pull disk, N.H . 256 side delivery hay rake
404 N H hay cOnditioner, 2 row M .F . 3 pt. coni
planter, 5 It M F blade, 3 f&gt;t. cultivator, 5 fl. horse
disk. I.H. 37 transport disk. drag harrow, grass
seeder, and potato plow
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
'!'ood youth bed &amp; h1gh chair, wicker rocker, 6'12 ft.
•ce saw, steel traps, draw knife, corn sheller, fodder
cutler, cream separator, buffets, table &amp; choirs,
wOOd rakes, stone jars I!. jugs, misc. dishes, square
med1cme bOttle w / cork, 2 Rolene motor oil bottle,
pure oil , oak bed, lredle sewing machine, round
table. marble ln·lald dres~er, oak dresser, ;ob
planter, and lots of miSc.
"MISC."
1969 G.M.C 1 ton truck, Wh~rlpool refrigerator
Mag•c Chef eleclflc stove, platform rocker couch
chair, I able &amp; chairs, race horse harness and lots of
leather harness, logging tongs, wagon licks, single
1!. dou.ble trees, pitcher pump, platform scales, bath
tub, stnk &amp; commode

&amp;

OWNER
MRS. BLANCHE EDWARDS
cash
Pos1ttve I. D.
Lunch
Dan Smith
J. Carnahan
949·2033
949·2708
" Not responsible for •ccidents or loss of property"

Help Wanted

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

NOW HAULING limettone In
Middleport-Poemroy oreo.
Call for f ree eatlmole
367-7101.

EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT

DOWNING-CHILDS

PAINTING AND sandblasting
FrM ..umat• Call9~- 2686
DOZER. END loader ond dump
truck. Will do l&gt;ooetMnts.
ponds ,
bruth,
timber ,
limestone,
a"d __ jlrov•l
Charles lufcher. 7~.-;&gt;40.

Ass1stant and secretary to president of mOdern
health care facility . Excellent clorlcalsk•lls ore re·
quired w1th managerial ability peeded to direct
your administrative secretaries . Must Mve
preveous executive secretiul.-1 experience t1nd bl
able to work independently over required project.

WILL HAVE vacancy lor elderly
lady 2nd of Sept-ber Room,
board and laundry Care tf
.-dec!. Reooonable pnces.
992·6022.
HAVE VACNACY to core for
the elderly In our home
'1927314.

send resume to Janet Maier, Director of
Personnel, Holzer Medical center, P.O.
BOK 280, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
All Affirmative Action /E EO Employer

Real Estate for Sale

I•

WILL DO pointing. roof pointing, and carpenter work
992-2657

HELP WANTED
GENERAL MAINTENANCE
LOCAL MANUFACTURING PLANT
EXPERIENCED, WELDING,
ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL
'5.60 AN HOUR

WILL DO babysitting In my
home. 5 dOyo o ,..;. . Any age
child . '149·2758

HE WISEMAN REAl
ESTATE AGENCY

m

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
CALl 446·3643

1.: f A{ l fj'o'

RUSSELL

WOOD

lUlL T HOME lust two yeors
on St
Rl. 1-43, only 2 miles from Rt. 7. Peaceful3 bedroom.
1'1&gt; bath, living room with fireplace, dining room,
kitchen and laundry room Central heat and air con
dillon . Garage and workshop plus a pony barn Over
3 acres with split rail fence. Call for appolfttment
$39,900.00

REALTOR

446-1066

A HOME YOU'LL NEVER OUTGROW
- You'll enjoy eveyrlhlng this home
has to offer; spaciousness, quality plus
quiet
a great location In a
neighborhood This 2 story brick offers
5 bedrooms, equ1pped eat In kichen, 2
fireplaces, 2 baths, large family room 1!.
patio. Situated on 3 beautifully land ·
scaped acres with pond &amp; clfcle
drtveway S miles from town In City
Schools

Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doo'rs.
Repluement
Windows. Patlo
Covers. Aluminum
Sidin1.
and
Accessories. Call

Steady employment plus fringe benefits.
Send brief outline of your eKperience to
BoK 151 in care of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune.

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

A GOLDEN SPOT - Convenient to
most everylh1ng A well kept 7 story
home in a prestigious location m town :t
bedrooms, 1112 baths, formal dining,
large screened porch with a nice view,
family room wlflreplace, full base
ment, nat gas heat, garage, new roof,
new furnace &amp; plubm1ng . $59,000.

BIU.'S

OCCUPATION/VOCATIONAL SPECIAUST

446-1642

Prefer individual with license in Occup..tional Therapy to work on treatment
team in an Innovative rehabilitativehabilitative partial hospitalization program. Salary competitiVE!. EKCI!IIent fringe benefits. For more information, contact:
Lygia Williams, Coordinator
Adult Community Training Program
c/o Juanita Atha,
Personnel Administrator
G-J-M Community
Mental Health Center, Inc.
412 Vinton Pike, Gallipoli~. Ohio 45631
Phone : 614-&lt;446-5500

J BEDROOM HOME In Country Air Subdivision .

Located off George's Creek Rd Nat gas Ileal, at
I ached garage, sun deck pnce SJS.OOO .OO

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surence Co has offered
servlc•s for fire Insurance
coverao~ In Gollla County
for almost a century
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet In·
dlvldual needs
Contact
Eugene Holley , yDUr nelgn.
bor and agent

BRICK RANCH - 2 FIREPLACES
(AND CLOSE TO EVERYTHING) .
This quality built home offers a lot tor
such a low prlte 3 gOOd sized
bedrooms, eat in kitchen, hardwood
floors. Nat . gas heat, full basement
with rec . room, carport and nice yard.
Locate&lt; on SR 160 between town &amp;
hospital . 551 ,000. owners leav•ng &amp;.
must sell

GALLIPOLIS

DIVERSIFIED
CONSTRUCTION CO.
Custom
Dozer &amp;
Backhoe work by hour
or by job . Transit&amp; Lay
out- work General Con
trachng, all types. con
strucflon, hOUsing, com
merc •a L Industrial
Walker Parkersburg
SI"JI Buldlng Dealer
f&gt;hone 446 4UO
Office 116011&gt; 2nd
8·5 Mon .·Fri .

EXEcunVE SECRETARY
To work for Med1ca1 Dtrector and serve
as Aftercare Secretary . Must have e)(cellent clerical skills including shor·
thand, typing, English, grammar and
!he ability to compose materials n~eded
'" both sensitive clinical and adminis_trative
areas .
Work
with
psych1atnsts scheduling appointments
a~d _keeping medication records. Musr bl!
Willing to ~ork fleKible hours, including
s~me l!~~ntngs as scheduled for medica tion chntcs. Also, must bl! willing to
travel and work in satellite offices as
needed. If interested, please contact: '
Juan;ta Atha, Personnel Administrator
G·J -M Community
Mental Health Center, Inc.
412 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis, OH•o 45631
Phone : 614-&lt;446-5500

C W CON 1~ACTORS, All
types
home
im •
provements
room ad
dll1on•
gvtters
down
spouts roding · concrete
work Call l67-()19A or 367

OW
STUMBO
F'lumb1ng,
healing and electr ic. Call
256 6665

3 BEDROOM HOME located on Nell Ave. Modern
conveniences, IdUlly tocaled to G.S.I carpeted and
ready to move Into price SJ7 ,soo 00

REFRIGERATION &amp; air
con d
s erv ice,
Point
f&gt;leosanl Appl , 673 2608 or
after 6 p m 367 7742
GA RAGE Re Open~ng
Warren Woodyard Crown
C• lv Call2561270

Wt

tell

anytfting

for

B.rn or In your home , For

senlce ull 256-lfU.
Solo Every $olurday
Night at 1 p m.

SWAIN

AUC1'IOft SERVICE

KeMeth Swain, Aucl.
Corner Tltlrd I 01\r•

CERTIFIED
MOBILE
WELDING, 256·1550
JIM ' S "DEPENDABLE
water delivery Call 256
9368 anytime.

•

In Vinton

sa ACRES -

Information and plckvp

Supervl5ory work with responsibility for the opera ·
lion of a combination water treatment and pumping
facility on on assigned shill. Emphasis on proper
utlhu11on of s1aff, @CIUlpment anCI tre1tment tKhn• ques 1n tile processing ot water. Applle~nts must be
high school gradu11tes and possess 1 Class I w1ter
treatment plant operator's license 11s issued by the
State of Ohio. Two years of experience or
equivalent. Salary commensur1te with experience.
The City of Galllpoli5 is an Equal Oportunlty
Employer. M/F Applications moy be obtained in
the C•ty Monager's Office, City of Gallipolis, 511 Se·
cond Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio.

'

With 3 bedroom mobile home. Located
5 m inutes from Holzer Hospllal SOme timber, bUy
now for $35,000 oo
ACREAGE - 46 acres loca ted on Liddy Hollow Rd
(Graham School Rd l. off Rl 141 . f&gt;rlce $28,000 .
NEW LISTING - 3 bdrm home in Kanauoa. hard·
wood floors, not gas heat, driven well, l ,car garage
Buy now for S22,500
NEW LISTING : I room house 1!. 7S acres, well
water, fuel oil furnace, some fruit trees, poss•blllly
of coal, some timber . NDrlh Galha School District
f&gt;rlce $54,500.
FOR RENT - small otllce space on Second Ave .
Gallipolis.

IF YOU ' RE THINKING ABOUT SELLING, GIVE
US A C.lt.LL AND WE ' LL BE HAPPY TO DISCUSS
OUR LISTING CONTRACT WITH YOU . WE HAVE
BUYERS BUT WE NEED LISTINGSII LET US
_SEll YOUR HOME WHEN YOU'RE READY .

CARf&gt;ENTRY
Reslden
llal &amp; commercial Com·
plele remodeling 1!. generol
repair Call 245 9555
ELMER
MURREL
FOLDEN, Dozer work , .4-46·
9835

$20,000 to $30,000 ANNUALLY
IF YHOU ARE l~TERESTED IN BE·
lNG MORE THAN JUST A SALES PER ·
SON, AND WILLING TO PUT FORTH
THE NECESSARY EFFORT- WE OF·
FER YOU:

MOBILE HOME
SERVICE

• A ground floor oppartunlty with back-up by a
growth company that knows sales people count.
eA permanent •ales po•ltlon that builds repeat
business.
eAutomob1le Alowance paid monthly •
eoverago checks paid monthly.
eGroup 1nsurance with motor medical benefits.
e$1,000 monthly draw against commission /paid
weekly/.
eOpportunlly to win · Bonu• · Trip• · Awards.
eComplele continuou• training program at com pany expense.
eA •alesman oriented company that promotes
from wflh•n.
eOur traln1ng will assure you of Immediate high
earnings.
• Products of the highest quollty In our Industry.
A college of education or chemical background Is
nof required. To qualify, you should hove direct self·
lng experlence./Your background will be checked/
You should have the ability to learn, and be conll denl of your ability to close.
FANCY RESUMES NOT NECESSARY
WE H"l RE PEOf&gt;LE NOT PAPER
To arrange for personal Interview, please /Insert
c.OP.Y here/

Anchoring, Skirting.
Awnings.
Patio
Coven. Carports.
Roof Paint, Set-up
and R•levellng. Call

BilL'S
446-2642
REESE TRENCHING .
Ditches, 8 Inches wide to 5
ft . deep, sepllc tanks,
drainage lines, concrete
work . Call367·7560.

'

'

:

TANKS
I

.

~

"..

Mid-American Research Chemical corp.

Installed and
Leach Beds fn1tallod
Gall Ia County Certified

I

Box 927
Columbus, Nebr. 68601
Call Cliff Sullivan, phone 1-800·228·8501 on MondAy,
August 28, 1979 or on Tuesday, August 28, 1979 "between 8:00a.m . and 4: 00p.m .

,,"

'

,,
'I

'I

'l
I

RENT IS A FOUR LETTER WORD Get your act tooether, so you can inveljt
in yourself Instead of your landiDrd
Watch your savings grow In the 2 story
home on SR Ul 3 bedrooms, family
room, d1ntng room, eat-1n kitchen, full
basement, nat gas neat, garage plus a
completely fenced yard In c:ity schools
(Green Elem l $29.000

FARM -ACREAGE: 33 acres located on While
Oak Rd .. 2 bedroom, carl)fled nome Slftlaled In an
area thai Is pleasantly surrounded with tree• Buy
tor 539.500 oo

'

anybody •t our Auction

WATER PlANT OPERATOR

LAST
LOT
IN
A
SUf&gt;ER
NEIGHBORHOOD - $11,800 w ill buy
you one of the finest bu•ldlno lots In the
area Surrounded by quality homes and
tn the city school system

COMMERCIAL BUILDING locotea In downlow11
'ialllpolls Can be used for restaurant, or any type
,egal business . Two aportments upstairs, property
ext•nds to service alley in rear, storage building In
rear f&gt;rlce $45,000 00.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING located
Price $11 ,000.00

Reese Trenching
&amp; Backhoe Service

LIMESTONE, gravel and
sand . All sizes. AI Richards
and Son, Upper River Rd ,
Gaiilpolll, Ohio Call 446
7785
BILL 'S MOBILE HOMES
and Home Improvements
Free estimates Call 446
2642

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE
septic tonk service,
residential &amp; commer·
clal. Electric ttl ser·
vice, chemical toilets.
367.0527

DENNEY AND GLASS
Chain link fence. Free
estimates Call 245 9113,
Ken Soles, c;;alllpolls.
THEISS INSULATION, In·
sui master loom Insulation.
New homes, old homes,
commerclol structures .
For free estimates call .4-46·
1971 .

RUSSANDMAK
ELLIOTT
Lennox Healing and air
conditioning Rapco Foam
Insulation . 446·8515 or 446·
0445. Call after 4.30
BOGGS
EXTERMINATING CO
(formerly Folnes and
O'dell) Oak Hill, OH Coil
collect .4-46·7569 .

c; '

Froiik liose const.
1
Remodeling, npaar
new constructton, ali
types. Free estimate•,
all
work
fully
guaranteed . Reslden·
fial , com mercia I, in·
dustrlal &amp; mining, etec·
tricaf work . MSHA Cert.
446-4627

LINCOLN HILL IN f&gt;OMEROY - ~eat niCe 3
bedroom, 1 bath frame home . Conventent locatton
Large living room wtth f ireplace , dining room, eat
m kitchen, full basement, new gas furnac e
$25,000.00.

MAN OF MODEST MEANS? $39,900Don't be put off bY expensively priced
homes. We have a home for just about
everyone - Look Here - Nearly new 3
bedroom home In excellent condition.
Includes a large eat-1n kitchen w / lots of
cab1nets, ut1llty room , bath w / shower, 2
car garaqe plus a huge yard with a good
garden spot Located minutes from
hospital
1978 SCHULTZ MOBILE HOME verv nice, well kept custom home is
perfect tor the young couple. 2 l arge
bedrooms, 2 baths (master bath IS cut
of this world), equipped k•lchen &amp; d1n
lng area, washer &amp; dryer, most fur ·
n1fure, e)(tra insulation &amp; underptnnang

su,ooo.

RUTLAND - 2 bedroom and bath frame home on
large lot Recently remodeled, new roof, central
heat JusiSI6,000.

lAND
D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
All types home lm·
provements •nd room
additions . Also In·
sur•nce c111m rep~lrs &amp;
electrical wiring.
Free Estlm•f•s
446·3407 or 367.0389

JUST LISTED- ENERGY SAVER over 1500 sq It of living space &amp; real
cheap to heat (2 woodburners made last
year 's fuel bill Incredibly low). Th•s
remodeled home offers 3 or 4 bedrooms,
kifc;:hen with !"eW cabinets, dtning room,
huge L ·shaped tam•ly room, lots of
storage, 16X2~ room upstairs, pretty
carpet &amp; tully Insulated. Located on
over 2'12 acres of gently sloping land on
SR 141 in CIIV schools (Green Elem .). A
real buy at $42,500

ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO ..
But move right in. Available for im·
mediate possession . Spacious home on
Edgemoent Drive In town. 3 bedrooms,
2 fireplaces, large family room, dln'"g
room , 2 full baths, full basement,
garage, nat gas heal, pat1o &amp; gas gr~ll.
Owner anxious to sell $42,500.

10 ACRES - GREAT LOCATION Plenty of highway frontage on SR 160
near Porter
Excellent land tor
development

2 HOMES LOCATED 1n Bidwell , one smoll one·
stDry, the other a large two·storv.levellots, central ·
tv located. Buy both for only 525,000.00

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

Limtted Skilled work •n•stlng In the operation of 1
munici~l water treatment pl1nt. Involves respon sibility tor oper1t1on &amp; care of chemic•l feed eqUIP·
menf, operation 1nd care of Ylrtety of equipment in
the plant. Applicants must be high school graduate.
Salary commensurage w/experience. The City of
Galllpolll il an Equal Opportun1ty Employer. M / F
Applications may be obla•ned In the City Manager 's
Office, City of Gallipolis, 511 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

COUNTRY LIVING without a lot of ground to lake
care of l,~ acre lot - 1'12 story home lust five miles
from town on Hysell Run 3 bedrooms, bath, liv1ng
room. d'"lng room, family room with large wood·
burnmo flfelace Peaceful S25,000

NEW LISTING : 3 bedroom, family room, 2'1&gt; baths,
ranch style frame and stone home, c ity services,
F A not oasturnace lllf.,lace You musl see th is
home to apprec1ate In the S60' s

MUSIC TEACHER
Will
give plano lessons In her
home. Call446·2306

ASSISTANT
WATER PlANT OPERATOR

OVER 2,00G SQ . Ft. Of living area In thiS 3 bedroom
br ick nome located In Country Air Subdivision
Fam11y room with w b fireplace Full basement, 2·'
car garage (all ached ) fenced In lot and half lot used
for garden space A quality home, buy for $75,000.00.

THERE'S STILL A CHANCE - tor you
to own a new home tn Clearvtew R1ver
Estates. ThiS large 3 bedroom trl level
Is ready a. wa1t1no for occupancy In·
eludes equ1pped kitchen &amp; d.nlng area,
21f:z baths, large family
room
w / flreplace , 2 car garage, utility rm. &amp;
patio Also use of 6 acre recreation area
w•lh access to Raccoon Creek. C1ly
schools.
_
REDUCED TO $38,500 Beautiful
Dutch 2 story nome in '(Inion .. ThiS
home ts In excellent cond1hon Jnsade &amp;
out and 1ncludes 3 bedrooms, Iaroe kit·
chen, formal dining, fireplace, 11J:z
baths, full basement, lovely hardwood
floors, garage and a huge level land
scaped yard It ' ll be hard to match at
this price.

ltl ACRE FARM NEAR MINES - $625 .00 per acre
lncludtng all mmerals
9 ACRE LAND ON Rl. 143, SIO.OOO.

DOWNING • CHILDS
RODNEY, BROKER
BILL, BR. MGR.
Phone 992-2342
Eve. 992-2449

M

. Ohio

Services Offered

Services Offered
ALLEN'S CAB. GOOD
SERVICE Phone 446 2141
ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. All types of repair.
Upper Rl 7 Call 446·2«5
days and 446 ~792 nights

PAINTING. Residential in·
terior and exterior barn
and mobile home roofs
Free estimates 15 yr exp
Call367 7784 or 367-7160.

SEPTIC SYSTEM. IN
STALLED New leach bed,
sewer lines. Want free
estimates? Licensed In·
staller . Call Russell's
f&gt;lumblng, 4A6·A782

JIM MARCUM roofing,
spouting and sldlno. 30
years experience. Free
estimates
Remodeling .
Call388·9857.

HAMMOND BODY SHOf&gt;.
Sand
and
f&gt;alnt.
Reasonable r~tes f&gt;h. 245
9371 or 379-2306.

GALLI A RESIDENTIAL
IMPROVEMENT
Insulated vinyl S1d1ng,
aluminum gutters and
spouts, storm doors and
windows . Free estimates
f&gt;h. 367 0209 day or night
LIMESTONE
DeliVered
GalllpoliS· f&gt;olnl f&gt;leasanl
area , 25 mile radius Call
367-7101
SWIMMING POOLS
•nstallat 1on ,
repa~r,
opening and closing pools,
add slides or any pool
equipment . We sell all kin ·
ds of pool equipment and
chemi cals Puddle Pool s,
inc Albany, 69B ·5265.

H-

VINTON - ACROSS FROM GRADE
SCHOOL - A very gOOd locat•on on lh•s
1112 story home on 1 acre Th1s well kept
home Includes 3 bedrooms, large kit·
chen, formal dining, flrelace, base·
men!, nearly new furnace, pretty hard
wood floors. Large garden spot &amp; plenty
of shade trees. $37,500.
AUTUMN'S BIG BARGAIN - If you've
been looking for a quality home In a
good location then you must see this 10
yr . old bl level. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
large eat In kitchen (loads of cab• nets),
large family room. nat. gas heat,
garage, huge deck and V2 acre yard on
SR Ultn Centenary Owners anxious to
sell $46,500

HOW CAN YOU RESIST - 3 levels of
•mmaculate beauty priced as af
fordably as $56,500. 3 bedrooms, formal
dining, equipped eat •n k1lchen, Ph
baths, large 11v1ng room, family room,
util ity rm, 2 car garage and patio City
schools (Wash Elem ) Take one look &amp;
you ' ll be sold
BUILDING LOT IN TOWN? That's
fight. One of the very few lots available
•n the coty . 100' frontage on 5th Avenue.
$10,000.

IE ;h'l t-. .. t?ljl\'f£.1

52 ACRES - U.S. RT. 35 - Excellent
farm land between Rio Grande &amp; Thur ·
man. 42 acres til lable, balance in 1
pasture. 2, 1191b toba cco base &amp; 21arge
barns. Also includes a large B room
house needing restored, modular home
with 7 rooms &amp; 2 baths in gOOd condition
plus 12x60 mobile in fair condition.
83 ACRES - R•o Grande area several
good spots for mini farms. Several
acres tillable. lots of woods . 535,000 Cl·
ty Schools.

7 ACRES - A REAL STONEY BROOK
- A real pretty location near Rio
Grande Land lays gently rolling with
just about all tillable Includes garage,
tractor shed, 3 outbu•ld'"gs, cellar
house, 2 springs, and rural water The
remodeled 2 story home includes 4
bedrooms, eat-in kitchen, famtly room,
new carpet, and chain link fence around
yard. Could be a great place for the kids
4 H projects. $46,000.
148 ACRES NEAR RUTLAND - Ap·
prox 20·30 acres tillable. Balance In
pasture &amp; woods . 2 large barns &amp;
several outbuildings Coal 11. gas
reported In area . lall minerals In·
eludes). Older 2 story home needs some
modernization . 5 m11esfrom Rutland .

64 ACRES- ADDISON TWP, -Very ·
good farm for horses and canle. 20 1
acres tillable, balance •n pasture &amp;
woods. Includes a large barn, 2 out - ·
bu i ldings, some fences, 3 wells, (rural ,
water available) and free gas for house.
The 2 story home has 3 bedrooms, Iaroe
quipped kitchen, 2 fireplaces, new fur ·
nace &amp; basement. An excellent buy at
$48,500

WISEMAN IS AHOUSE {I,sQi.o:l WORD
1

.VIseman, Broker. 446-3796: eve.
t. 11! . Wlseman •.aroker, 446-450t. Eve.
J1m Cochran, Assoetale, 446-7811, Eve.

Ev~ ~

Don Eo.ans, Assoctalo, 388·8111
" J H aorston . Assoc•at• . 446-414Q,Je.v'"
Nancy Smith, Assoctale, 446-4910, Eve:

SOO ~ECOND JIVE,

"' - Offered
Services
AND

HOUSE
ROOF Pain
''"g. Free estimates. Call
4-46 ·1562 after 6pm
CONCRETE
BLOCK
WORK ; driveways, patios,
sfeps, walks, garages,
basements, underpennlng.
Reasonable .
Free
estimates Call367·0231
TR I STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHbP
1163
Se c ond
Ave.,
Gollipol is. 4-16 7833 or .4-46·
1833

---

-

Services Offered
Fill dirt, top so11, complete
doter and backhoe work,
tooter and block laying
MCNEAL
CONTRACTING
379·2258
JERRY LUCAS'S water
delivery
Call 446 7534
anyt1me
CHIMNEY ' S cleaned and
repalfed Stoves lnsatalled .
Call the Ch•mney Sweep,
373 6057

:&gt;ervlces Offered
f&gt;AINTING, Interior and
exterior. Reasonable rates,
free esllmates, Ph 245·5050,
evenings please
E &amp; R Tree Service. Pain
ling and excavating. Cal
388·8797 or 388·8860.
STUCCO,
plastering,
plaster repair , texfure
ceilings Free estimotes
Caii256·11B2.
·
LIMESTONE ,
gravel ,
mason sand. top soil f&gt;h
388.9877
'

�D-9- The Sunday Times&amp;ntinel, SWlday, Aug. 26, 1979

•

1

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sale .

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sal~

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Est11te for Sale

Rea I Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate for Sale

...

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

- = - = - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - ----;....,"

STROUT REALTV, Inc

.
ONLY ONCE IN • ' . 1).0\..E,
1
Very well I( eo• - ~~osO~ sE. 0. rom
sc hoo l, 1,-,..0 llE. ~E.f\),"sse ssion .
Call ri gh1 ' ' ,.,E.Il ··'"line .
N352

of.-

Ml NT CONDITION
Elegant and charming best deschbes
this all brick ranch on well landscaped
lot in Srping Valley . 2 or 3 bedrooms,
L R, FRM, f ormal OR , fireplace, cherry
ste p - ~aver kitchen . Best of materials,
workmanship. Full deluxe basement, 2

PROBLEM SOLVER
Has your search for the right home
been hoPeless? You dOn 't want to spend
lots of " fixing ', What a pleasant sur·
prise in store for you. Th is 3 B R
RAMBLER has had, TENDER LOV ·
1 NG CARE! Family room, fireplace,
attached garage. Owner w il l sell with 3J..
acre or more . Only 1 year old . Call for
an appointment tOday - Priced in mid
forties.
of 358

car garage, electric eye, much more.
Reason tor selling · retirement . One of
our better homes . Good Location . N307

BE INDEPENDENT
Kick the rent habit with
this
sharp
new lv
remodeled h ome . 2

bedroo ms, forma l din ·
lng, livi ng room , kit ·
chen, utility room ." 1
acre of ground . 2 nice .

sized

outbuild ing s.

NEW wiring, NEW
plumbing, NEW c arpet.
NEW furna ce . Loa n
assumpti on possible .
Only in the $30's.
N361

FOR THE
LARGE FAMILY
Th is older home has
three
spacious
bedrooms upstairs, plus
fu ll bath . Downstai rs
kifchen , formal dining,
liv i ng room , fa mily
room, large entry and
possibly th e f ourth
be droom.
Lots of
closets, oak woodwork,
full basement. Fu lly insulated with stor m
doors and win dows .
Garage and 3 large cor ·
ner lots . This home
needs some re pair but
nothing major . Buys
like thi s are few and t ar
between, Call Now! t277
PRICE REDUCTION
110,900
A small price to pay for
this 4 . room home . 2
· bedrooms, kitchen and
l iving room . Completely
furn i shed.
·2 • out ·
bui /dings. Ovt!r 1 acre of
g round . · Exceptional
buy
N321
WANT PRIVACY ?
New on th e market Is
th is l4'x64' electri c
mobile home, 2 BR , on
Sowards Ridge near
Crown Ci ty, Si tuate'd on
1 acre surrounded by
woods. Large 10 'x 30 '
po r ch , drilled well ,

·~-l

ONE YOU
DREAM ABOUT
A la rge pr odu ctive
da iry farm , 247 acres,
make arrangement s,
th en
move
in .
Everything
is
go
Pipeline, bulk tank,
storage bins, loaf ing
stalls, 2 silos, plenty
water, springs, ponds,
county water . Close to
Holzer Medical Center,
power p l ants , good
roads . Almost new
modern 1 room house,
full
basement,
105
tillable acres, tenant
house and outbuildings.
Ca ll us now . Good
Far m .
II 292

MEIGS COUNTY
For the unbelievable
price of $18,000 you can
move into this home-r
Four or five bedrooms,
bath , living room and
kitchen . Nice flat lot,
garden spot an~ out·
bu ilding . ONner wi ll
hel p with financ ing to
reliable party. Values
like this sell qUickly ,
easil y, so call today .
U41

"HIDDEN HILLS
FARM"
We never expected to
get th is one. You drive
into a very pr ivate lane,
unlock the gate to a 163
ac re beef farm or
recreation, camping
trail riding - you name
it . Located 4112 miles
from Gallipolis, Green
Twp. A few h i-lites beau tiful landscaped
lake, 3 other ponds, gov.
engineered watering
troughs, a cross net·
work of all new fences ,
also designated as a free
farm . Lush fertilized
pastures , lots of metal
gates, new meta l barns,
w ild game plentifu l,
farming or recreation .
Better look t his one
over :
N347

STOP, LOOK&amp;
LISTEN!
Stop, look, and l isten at
the price · of this 1976,
U 'x70' mobile home and
1 1/8 acre of gfound. 3
bedrooms, 2 fUll baths,
l g. living room , oak
cabinets in kitchen .
Tota l electric . Fur niture included . $16,500.
North Gallia School
District .
11317
COOL POOL
U3.9v0
3,300 sq. fl . overall , 3
BR , 2 baths, shower,
modern kitchen, large
antique decorated fdmi·
ly room, 1100 sq . fl., con ·
crete swimming pool
18'x35', very much in
use picnic area, lots of
living . St . Rt . 141.
Gallipo l is
Scho ol
District . Priced $53,900 .
Modern hew custom
built t:ome c!ose to pro·
perty con be purchased
with property or sold
separately or moved.
Total Package $76,000. N
2
I
2

$29,900
Sceni c area, new double
wi de 24'x52', 8 rooms, 2
baths, 2 showers, L .R.,
FR., D. R ., 3 bedrooms,
deluxe kitchen, good
garden area, new tool
shed 14x28. This is what
you want and ca n't
usua lly fin d. All new
with 10 acr es to use as
vou please.
#219

B_u_s_:_in_·e_s_s_S_e_rv
__ic_e_s_

__

e

J&amp;L BlOWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
AlUMINUM SIDING

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
, lntroduces' -

MARK MORA
HAl R STYLIST

Featuring : men 's &amp;
women's
styling ,
perms.
Call for appt. or walk in .

992 -2367
Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
' - - - - - --:-=8·26·1 mo.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways.
.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE,O.
949· 2748 or
992-7314

CAR SEATS, BOAT
TOPS, FURNITURE
Free Estimates
3rd St., Racine

!..

949-2000

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

N. L Construction

Under New Manage·
ment (formerly Sylvia's
Upholstery),
across
from COdner's Texaco.

WORK, GENERAL

IN SYRACUSE

Rl. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio
99Bl47
1·25·2 mo.

CALL
992-2772

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans)

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E.
11

:, ld H. , Mli'l t: h :.

EXCAVATING, dozer. loo ~er
and backhoe work : dump
truck s and lo-boys for hire ,
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - ' will hau l fi ll dirt, top soi l.
sw-p4!1r'J. toos ters. iro ns , oi l limestone and gravel. Call Bob
small appl iances . lawn moer, or Roger Jeffers , day phone
nig ht
ph on·e
nel(t to State Highway Garage 992 · 7089.
Q92.3525 0' Q97.5732 .
on R ou•~ 7 98'3 3815

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning. Steam
cleane d . Free estima te.
Reasonable rat es . Scotch~uard . ~.....or 742-2348.
EXC AVATING ,
d ozer ,
backhoe and ditcher, Charles
R. Hatfield. Black Hoe Serv ice,
Ruliand, Ot'lio. Pone 742-2008 .

----------

18 Years Experience
Will Make Service Calls

651 Beech S!reel
Middleport, 0 .
992 -2356
725 1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage

*New Home
*Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992-6011
n2

E~PERIENCED

Radiat9r·· ,_,.-...,
Service
From thl!
Bulll'lozer ·• .,,,.,,.

mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland .

·~--59_2-Jo_.~L~J

BRADFORD. Auclioneer, Com·
plate Service . PI-lone 949-2487
or ~49 - 2000 . Racine. Ohio ,
( rift &amp;radford.

949 - ~Hb2--94Y -~160
4·5·tk

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

Reynolds'
Electric Motor

1 -~

H ·lmo .

-

gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleanin.g
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

CONTRACTOR

Free Estimate

.

Call for a Free Siding ·
Estimate, 949·2801 or
949·2860. No Sunday
calls.
6 · 1~ · 2 mo.

BLOCK &amp; BRICK

H. L Wr~esel
Roofing
New, repair,

Shop

-

7·5· 1 mo.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Phone 992·6323
Free Estimates
7 25·1 mo. pd .

ALUMINUM I
&amp; VINYL SIDING
BY
J&amp;L INSULATION

BOB'S
UPHOLSTERY

Siding

_____.J

eNEW HOMES
e ROOM ADDITIONS
e ROOFING
eVINYL SIDING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

Ph . 992 ·3743 or 992-37S2
811 mo.

a 6·1 mo.

FINISH IT
Summer co tt age and 3
acres m / 1 with f r ontage
on Raccon Creek . Due to
th e oWner 's health he
could not co mplete .
· Owner will consider
land contract .
NJJ?
A HOME
DESIGNED WITH
GOOD LIVING
IN MIND!
Near new 3 bedroom,
PI" baths, entry hall ,
(large living room with
beautiful fireplace ), kit ·
chen wi t h plenty of oak
cabinets, formal dining .
Master bedroom has extra large walk ·in closet .
Full basement with
fireplace . Tutor and
stone design. 2 acres of
ground.
063

Vinyl and Aluminum .

BOB'S GENERAL
CONTRACTING

•I nsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• Gutters and
Down Spouts
Free Es1imates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 99n772
8·17·1 mo.

EXCEPTIONAL BUY
If you have missed ex ·
ceptional buys before ,
don't let thi s one pass
you by. Older two story
home and ~b ile home
situated on nice size
lots. Two outbuildings
and cellar . Located on
state route . Owner will
sell
tog e ther
or
separate . Unbeata ble
or ice. $21 ,500
N 340
LOW BUDGET?
And need 2 bedrooms, 1
!lath. This ranch can be
yours at an unbeatabl e
price. HC)S a 30x30
garage only 4 ye.rs old.
City school distr ict . 1
acre. S33 ,000
N3'5
FARMER JOHN
Has the wanderlust.
Says " sell my land".·
Located on a state
highway th is 39 acres,
more or less, ha s 17
acres tillable, 1200 lb.
tobacco base, barn and
rural water available .
For further informa ·
tion , pleasecall .
11339

- ·-- r- - - - - ---

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
A I so Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
OO·Ifc

Services
Offered

All Masonary Woik
Foundation,
Brick Laying,
Concrete. Finishing.
Free Estima,es
992-5304, 992-2238
R·2H mo.

Nathan Big g!
Radiator
1 I

J

Sm~h

Nelson
Motors, Inc.

Ph . 992·2174

Pomeroy

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9·1 M ., W., F.
Other times by appoint·
ment.
.
101 Sycamore (Rear)
Pomeroy, 0.

CALL 992-7544

•·11-to

,._t

2

MONTGOMERY

o'f

Lost and Found
LOST · small black and I an
f emale dog. Mixed breed ,
ha s collar . REWARD .
Please ca II -4-46 ·0716 .

TRAILER SALES
17310 Monlgoml!ry lild ,
t.•n g~~i lt e ,

614·6-6• 4145 EvenilliJ)
1 Mo!l'!

SUPER

E:.1101 Wtl~!! l;vi ll l!
GOOSE

5'TOCK

TIUILER NOW AVA ILABLE .

CE NT ENARY WOODS Pet
Grooming Facilities .
Professional services of ·
fered .
All Breeds, all
styles. Call 446·0231 .

• ~ 1 mo

H ILLCREST KENNELS
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, bOarding , Also AKC Reg .
service, all makes, 992-2284 ,
Dobermans ,
red
and
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.. . blacks. Call 446·7795 .
Authorizltd Singer Soles and
Service. We st'lorpen Scinon .
BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS .
Boarding and
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·
AKC Gordon
plate Service. Phone 992-2-478 . groom ing.
Setters, English Cocker
AU TOMOBILE INSURANCE
Spaniels. Call446 ·~191.
been cancelled? Lost your
operators license? Phone
POODLE GROOMING .
992· 21~3 .
Call Judv Tavlor at 367 ·
E·C ELECTRICAL Cont.-ocfor 7220. ,
S&amp;fVing 01-lio Voltey region .
Sll( days a week, 24 hours serFor sale, Blcinde Cocker
vice. Emergency calls. Call
Spaniel. S65., Siamese kit·
882-2952 or 882-3454 ,
ten, $25. Call 446·0536.
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
:avating, septic · systems,
AKC
REG .
German
jot er, backhoe. Rt. 143.
Shephard pups, exc blood
Phone 1 (614) 6&lt;18-7331 or line, black &amp; tan , black &amp;
7~2· 2593 .
silver $75 ea, 446·8617 .
IN STOCK lor Immediate
delivery : various sizes of pool
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
kits. Do- lt· yourself or let us TERY · KENNEL, AKC
instol l for you . D. Bumgardner Chow Chow dogs. ·CFA
Soles, Inc. 992.5724 .
Siamese, Hlrhalayan and
Persian cats. Chow Chow
WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also. lime hauling and puppies. Black and Reds,
males and females. Ready
spreading. leo Morris Truck·
to go. Call .u.\·3IUI after 7
lng, Phone7-42-2455.
p.m .
ANN'S CAKE Decorating Supplias , 50716 Osborn Rd.,
AKC DOBERMAN · pups,
Reeds ville, OH •5772. For In·
Black &amp; Rust. Bred for
ft.rmation coli, 667-6-485. Will
be oPen late If you need temperment and size . out
of Hvbrlar breeding. $75.
something.
Fl RM . Call367 ·0141 .
RISING STAR kennel . Boording. Coll367·0292.

Lost and Found
FOUND : AUGUST 21 in oreo of
Chester SR 248 . Doberman,
ears not clipped, Red male
neutered. -4 or 5 years old.
Choker chain.
FOUND: LARGE block s~orl
hair, young mole dog In lourel
Cliff area. 992-6260.

POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Taylor. 6U-367·7220.
AKC REGISTERED boxer pui&gt;
py. $125. 6 weeks old.

608 E . ..&amp;iiiiQII.I..I
MAIN
PnMFiinY . 0 .
OVER 20 ACRES
Good home has .c
bedrooms, bath, d ining
room, carpeted ! panel ·
ed, large carport, other
bldgs. Own gas &amp; water .
$30 .500.00.
GOOD HOME - Ha• •
lots , 4 ~room$, bath,
c~rpet. som~ paneling,
Meigs School Dislrlcl,
workshOp, VERY LOW .
SYRACUSE - 21amllv, .
br ic k &amp; block. Hot water
heat, lots of remodeling ,
nice level lot, tots Of
special
fea tures.
$28.000.00.
POMEROY Ranch
rvpe, J bedrooms, lovelv
~itchen, dining, recrea ·
ti on room , sw imming
pool, carpeting, panel ·
ing, many features .
$39,500.00 . .
MIDDLEPORT 2
story frame, hardwOOd
floors with carpe11rtg, 1
baths, lots of remodel ·
lng done. A buy al just
$28,000.(10.
LOTS OF OTHER PROPERTY TO CHOOSE
FROM DROP IN
ANDSEEUSTODAY .
REALTORS
Henrv E. Clolond
Henry E. Clolond Jr .

For Rent

FOR RENT · 3 bdr . house,
turn ., city water &amp; sewer in
Gall ipolis area . Ca ll 446 ·
0021
days,
~46 · 3919
evenings.
FURN . EFF . APT . · AI Rio
Grande, $120. mo. Ca ll 446·
0157 .
FURN IS HED Upstairs apt.
3 rms. &amp; bath. Clean, adults
only, no pets . Dep. &amp; Ref .
required . Call 446·1519.
3 RM UNF . APT . · $190.
plus 6eposit. No children .
Call.u.\ ·3437.
COUNTRY MOBILE Hom• Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomer~ .
Lorge lots . Call 992-7479 ,
3 AND -4 RM furnished and un-furnishjld
opts .
PI-lone
992 · 54~ .

ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
VillageMonor, 992·7787.

SENIOR CITIZENS. I bed•Oom
apts . for rnet . Rental
aullfance a v a i lable .
992· 7721.
TRAILER SPACE . See Mrs.
Wolter Hayes, 635 Mill St. ,
Mlddloporl.

PARTLY FURNISHED opl. In
Pomeroy. Adults. No peta.
Suitable for .workers. Phone
992·3201.
SLEEPING ROOMS for 2 or 3
construction
workers .
992·5786.

Q92·2726.

CHAMPION BLOOD line. Ger·
man .Shepard
puppies.
949·2381.
GIVE A nice pet a good f'lome.
Humane Society. '192-6260.

-·

QUALITY PLUS BEAUTY
.
New L ·shaped bri c;:k home less than a year old, off Sf. ~~ - 35. The quahty
workmanship in this home speaks tor itself . Plush tormalltvmg room and .w . ~ .
f ireplace cozy familv r oom , 3 spac lovs be-drooms, baths, modern bu•lt ·tn
kitchef'l a'J'Id dining area . Well decorated, plush c arpeting, fin ished garage with
opener . Nice well landscaped yard . One of the best on the market!
HOUSE &amp; ANNUAL INCOME
011 St. Rt . 7 - In city li mits . Thi s
package nets you - 2 mobile homes
U x70's, garage, apt. 35x45, under con ·
!.truction . N ice 2 story home , J
bedrooms, 2 baths, basemen1. Large
Hat lot . Use all th is for renta l or you can
live in the home . Rental s will make
your payments.
ELEVANTEDG~OUNDS

With a panoram ic view of St . Rt . 35 and
surrounding area is this stately ranch
designed with a large family in mind . .t
to 6 bedrooms, huge tormalllving room
· lOxlO, spacious dining room, modern
complete bUilt·in kitchen, 2 w .b .
f ireplaces. 2 baths, full basement, 2 V2
car garage. Can ·buy with 2 acres or
more land . A must to see !

INVESTMENT PROPERTY
Unllr:nlt~ opportunlti6. 25 .5 acr~s ,
wafer, septic, gas welL 2 trailer pads.
bu il ding, 1 mlle from city limits on St .
R f . 1. E xcellent development area !
BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF THE VALLEY
and Bob Evans Farms . 2.6 acre more or
less, located In village of Rio Grande.
Clfy water and sewage. Access to all
Ri o Grande fa cili t ies.
COMLETELYREMODELED
Th is olderr home has been redone, from
top to bottom. Ma inten-ance warranty
on some of the appli ances. MOdern
built -In kitchen, dining room , living
room, 3 ~ drooms, bath, garage . Prett y
setting 1

. S.tACRES - WOOOED
Excellent building site,· miles from
town on St. Rf. 588 . Circular drive, rural
water, septic . Land is ready for
development!
HEY LOOK ME OVER I
This one wilt catch your eye. Spacious
trl ·level , off St . Rt: 35, featuring large
formal liv ing room, d ining room,
modern bullt·ln kitchen, comfortable
fam ilv room, 3 bedrooms. l 1J1 baths,
over 2,&lt;XIO SQ. ft ., city water &amp; sewage,
gas grill , basketball , goal , city schools.
Very reasonably pr ic:ed . Mid S50 's .
OWNER TRANSFERREO
And very 'anx ious to sell nice fram e
home . City schools, acre of ground, Hv ·
ing room, family room. 2 w .b.
iireolaces. modern kitchen &amp; dinina
area. Full basement ! well insulated .
Priced in the $.40's . Call today .
WHEN YOU ' RE HOT YOU'RE HOT I
rnfnk ino of pu"ing in a pool - Save all
that headache - here is· a home tha t
hos o new 20X«l STEEL and CON ·
CRETE pool, ready to diVe into. Plus a
very n ice ranch home, 3 bedrooms •• lg,
mOdern kitchen &amp; dining area . Cozy
family room, 1111 baths, formal entry &amp;
living room. detached 211x26 oarage.
Storage barn w ith loft, 1 acre Of ground.
What else cou ld you ask fOr?

GALUA COUNTY'

Wind-powered
oil
·tankers aren't sailing yet,
but mainly because OPEC
members haven't thought
of the idea.
.
~,

-

AC ROSS
I Relund
6 Mo nth
11 Sna red
18 A•oid
19 Fleshy
20 Al le•i ale
21 Slans
23 Coon
24 Greek leller
26 Sle nde r
finia l
27 Sfo rzando
(a bbr .)
29 Build
30 Frig id
31 Ooze
32 Lam prey
3J Through
34 Lease
35 Tree trun k
36 Nonplu ses
38 Sta id
40 Quantity :
Abbr .
41 Nee d
42 Prelense
43 Possessive
pronoun
45 Italian poel
46 Scale note
47 llal ian curre ncy
48 Couple
49 Snoop
51 A ct
52 Lat in conjun ction
53 Poem
54 Flacc id
55 Re co vers
57 Zod iac sign
58 Wait on
60 Burrowing
animal
61 Army gp.
62 ijlfficullies

Are You The
Look-Ahead Type?
If you are, and you're thinking of buying
an aNractive "week'end place, " look even far ·
ttter ahead. With some wett-planned im·
provements, might that· "weekend place" be
a lifetime investment? Even a place where
you·could retire some day?
When you look it over with the local
STA:OUTman, he can answer all your ques ·
tions abOut all its possibilities!

H A R R I 5 0 N'
TOWNSHIP 69 A .
mostly hills &amp; woods,
old house &amp; cellar in
poor condition, possibll l·
ty ot coal , $29,500 .

Plumbing 1 Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone .u.\·3888 or .u.\ ·~77
STANDARD
Plumbing -Heat ing
· 1,15 Third Ave .• 446 3782

Plumbing 1 Heating
GENE PLANTS
AND SONS
Plumbing · Heating · Air
condi t ion ing . 300 Fourth
Ave. Ph . 446·1637.
DEWITT ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Route 160 at Evergreen
Phone 446·2735.

64 Samarium
symbol
65 Diphlhong
66 ln Sirumenl
67 Molher Br il .
69 M ark71 Man ' s ni c kname
73 Enlive n
74 Godde ss of
discord
76 Fodd e r
79 M ounlain
nymph
81 Limb
82 Scolli sh
river
84 Famed
85 Drive onward
87 Amounl
owed
90 Beasts
9&lt; Native : Sulli x
93 Flower part
95 Goes by waler
97 Quote
98 Negative
99 Scale no l e
10t Belt
103 Soak
104 Snips
105 Scorch
108 Old : Poel.
1t0 lawmaker
112 Cavity
113 Fruit seed
114 Printer 's

measure
115 Wi there d
117 Fi nc h
118 Tibia. e .g .
119 Proh ibits
120 Niton symbol
121 Tu s k

123 Pose lo r
porlr ail
124 O ld French

coi ns
125
126
127
129
t 31
t 32
133
134

Suspe nd
Devo'u red
Pe ri l
M ore vapid
Lengthy
Arab chie f
S umm e r: Fr .
Roman
b ro nze
136 Pitcher
137 Zest
138 Nimb le
139 Compas s pt .
140 English
streetcar
14t Fema le rulf
142 Friction 143 De posi ted
144 H o nes!
146 Toll s
148 Color
149 Ralh er
150 Grin
151 Small
amo un ts
DOWN
1 Rul er
2 Ousl
3 Gasp
4 Pai d notices
5 Old pronou o
6 While poplar
7 Await se ttl em e nt
•8 Soak
9 Su pposi ng ·
th at
10 Concert ha ll
11 Stumbling
12 Scale note
13 To ward
shelter
14 Tubes
15 Skinned
••

16 Gorl 's.. name
17 Down : Prell.x
21 Chastises ·'
22 Hermit
23 Youn g horse
25 Dres s bo rder
27 Sofas
28 Liberly
30 Slrobil e
31 Twink le r
33 Jury list
35 Revea l
36 Vesse l
37 M eal cu t
39 Mo m and 4t Broad
42 lde nli ca l
44 Ho l y one
47 Affeclion
48 Lool s
49 Cui
50 Is aware of
54 Appeared
55 Ceremony •
56 Ble mishes
59 Cowboy
competi-

WILL DO BABYSITTING ·
In my home. Prefferably
age 2 &amp; older . Call 446·7712.
D &amp; J RECON Center,
cleans motors, trunks, in·
terlors, polish and wa~
cars, See or call Darrell &amp;
James at 1616 Eastern Ave
or call 446·3481.
WILL BABYSIT · In .mY
home. Spring Valley area.
Call 446·.U79.

86 Ho u se hold
gods
88 Nobleman
89 Row
90 While
91 Frenc h article
94 Palh S
96 Army olllce r: p.bbr .
98 Insect e gg s
99 Dwells
100 Rai se
102 European
cap ital
104 Stu di es
105 y,/arble
106 Chris tian
t07 Went in
109 Mal e bee
111 Snickered
112 Tim!! period
113 Sharp pain
116 Energy unit
118 Afrikaa ns
119 Loud no i se
122 Longs for
124 Slumbe rs
tions
t 25 Sharpen
60 Drudge
126 Priests '
61 Broadway
vestments
hi I
128 Respond
63 Farm struc130 Reveren ce
ture
131
Expire
66 Thoron sym132 Marble
bol
135 Pintail duck
67 Pronoun
137 H ig h
68 Deride .
138 Landed
70 Country
, 140 Meta l
71 Cover
· 142 Siamese na72 Tran sg ress
tive
73 Pro fi cien t
I ~ 3 Greek le ll er
person s
144 Yes : Sp.
75 Arab .
77 Obtain
145 Sun god
78 Netherlands
147 Printer 's
city ·
meas ure
80 Imitat es
148 Man ' s
83 Din es
nam e: Abbr .

'' '

.

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"

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S~RINGFlELD

TOWNSHIP - Approx .
6 acres level &amp; gently
rol li ng land , c~u~ty
water, nice bu ilding
sites, located on the
Floyd Clark Rd . approx .
111 mi. off Route 160 near
porter. Asking $15,000.

''

.

RIO GRANDE AREA - Approx. ~5 acres vacant
land, county water, pond, ·some timber, n ic~
building sites, city schools, $18.000.

POCKET THE RENTAL PROFITS - Three story
build ing downtown corner lot In Pomeroy . Has f1rst
f loor shop and office plus two large apartments, all
occupied . $40,000 .
·
·

'

'.
'

"

GREENFIELD TOWNSHIP -1110 Acres, hill sides,
rockcliff s, brush, good hunting, $12,000 .

"''

PERRY TWP. - 60 acres, about 12 A. til lab le,
ba l ance in timber, stylish older 1 rm . home with lots
of possibil ities, barn, outbuild ings, m iner ai righTS,
fronts On State Rd . Call for more informat ion .
HARRISON TWP. - 147
acres, approx. 60 A.
wooded (commer c ia l
timber· repOrt ed), 40 A.
t-illabl e, so·A . pastur e, 7
rm . home, barn . pond,
' springs, 2 wells, tob .
base, lots of r d. fron tag e, asking $65,000.

.'

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. ''
'
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"•

RIO GRANDE AREA on t he Rio
Centerpoint Rd. Li k e
new l2x60 mobile hom e
completel y
furn ished,
extra mobi le home pad,
cou ld be rented for ex·
tra income , ci ty schools.
Askin g $12,400.

L·O·C·A·T·I-O·N - Enjoy the Scen ic Ohio River
from the front porch of thi s beauty . Thie one is jus t
l ike new &amp; offers 3 BRs. 1112 baths, den wHh
fireplace, dining rm ., foyer , beautiful HW floors,
tassed in rear porch, patio, 2 car garage with elec ·
tric opener plus a detached 22x2.4 garage . Lpts of
priv acy at the edge Of town . Shown bY appointment .

HOMESTEAD HERE or use as a hunting lodge,
vacation home, etc . Rustic log home is built tram
nand hewn beams &amp;. has ·a sleeping loft, modern
bath, large stone firepla ~e &amp; approx . 27 acres of
woods In the Wayne N.at1onal Forest. Extra land
available.
·

I'
I'

"
"

4.1 acres

BABY FARM 13.5 acres near Vinton. com ·
· fortable 5 rm . &amp; bath home, ba r n, ce ll ar house,
pond, tob . base, land is mostly t illable, $27,500.

CENTENARY - 7.41 ACRES, nice 7 room and bath,
natural gas heat, good barn and other buildings,
idea l for development or iust a nice baby fa rm nea r
town . owners reti r ing and priced to sel l at $47 .500.
Don 't linger on this one .
COMMERCIAL LAND FOR SALE - EASTERN
AVE. - Highway front age, r iver front age,_ pr iced to ·
sell. Call for mor e infor mation .

FREE GAS - uio e.tcres m -1, ve.tcant land near
Bulaville, approx . 40 acres wood ed , ba lance rolling
pastu.reland, some timber r eported , 7 miles out,
$55,000 .
.

OHIO RIVER LOT - Located in Eureka , Ga llipolis
Ci1y School Oist., co. water available, ideal for
bu lldino Qr mobile home site. $11,000.
OWN rOUR OWN CAMPSITE In the wilderness of
the Wayne National Forest. 5 td 8 acre tracts of

woodland now available, adjoining thousands of
acres Of government land . Publ ic hunting, fishing
and camping permitted. Prices start at $3500 with
financing available.

NEWEST

Wanted to Do

1:

•I.
'•

OHIO RIVERVIEW - Thi s 3 BR br ick r anch is an
excellent cond ition 8. Offers 2112 baths, den with FP ,
di ning rm ., foye r , HW floor s, glassed in porch,
patio, extra nice landscapi ng, double garage plus a
detached 22X24 brick &amp; concre te garage. Lots of
pr iva cy .
EDGE OF TOWN - VA APPROVED - Lovely 2
BR cottage is situated on a 100x250 lot on State
Route 141 &amp; fea tures. a dini ng ,r m., laundry, full
basement &amp; natural gas heat. Asking $31 ,900.

REAL ESTATE ORG.C.IWIZATION

tor

THE B.RADBUR Y 2nd
floor efti cency apartment ,
adults only , nopets, dep
req ., rental monthly , all ad ·
vanced, 729 Second, Ph 446·
0957 .

446-0008

21 LOCUST ST.

'*~

'

I'

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - SUPER BUY - FHA ·
VA - CONVENTIONAL - This 3 yr. old bi -level is
l ike new &amp; must be sold this month . 3 or 4 BR 's, 2 V:~
bath s, family rm ., heata lator · firepl ace, low heat
bills, Clay gra de school, Ga llia Academy High
School. Ca ll for Ap p~Ji ntm ent.

446 4206
.
ENCHANTING COLONIAL
.
This stately 2 story home with plllary post · formal ent~y . Large open wl ndt~O
staircase powder room · from main entry, formal livtno room, huge fam•ly
room with plank flooring and w.b. fireplace . Spacious eat -in kitchen Vl!ith lot~ of
knotty pine cabinets. 3 bedrooms &amp; bath on second floor . Basement. all sett•no
on 3 acres, c ity schools. Shown by Appointment Only!

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245-9484
ANY HOUR
Bonnie L Stutes, Realtor

RESTING ON BEAUTIFUL

HOOF HOLLOW, Eng li sh and
Wu te rn .
Saddles
and
harness. Horset and ponies .
Ruth RHv•• · 61-4 -698-3290.
Barding &amp; Aiding leuons and
Horse Cora products .

SLEEP ING ROOMS
rent, Gall i a HoteL

Stutes Realtor Assoc.
446-2885
Joseph L Leach., Realtor Assoc.

Headquarters

Pets lor Sale

~ets lor Sale

Ohio

Jilt~.

. 21' . E. Soconcl Street
BUSINESS ROOMS Plus a .4 or 5 bedroOm
home wllh 2 baths, Iron!
and back porches. glass
stuccO, furnace , formal
dining,
ran.o e
af'ld
refrigerator, 2 car
garage and nice lawn .
Only $35,000 .
NEW LISTING 2
acres, 3 bedr oom home,
bath, extra shower,
paneling ,
utl .l lty
building and pig sly .
Leading Creek water,
front · porch ,
an"'d
carpeting. $25,000.
NEW LISTING 6
room
apt . w i th 3
bedrooms, 1111 baths, ci ·
ty water, garage, and 3
rooms down that have
been used as a store.
Ex tra lot for a garden .
Asking jus I $27,500.
ONE FLOOR 2
bedrooms. wall to wall
carpeting, front and
sid e porches, utility
room, all rooms tully In·
sulaled, 2 car garage
and large level garden
spot . Only $17,500.
2 LOTS - one set up lor
2 mobile homes and
large 8 room house w 1th
llh baths, 2 car garage.
Near storrs. $17.500.
STORE BUILDING or you can make a home
out of this one a,-,d rent it
to pay out. Asking
$12,000.
POMI! ROY - One acre
lor$1,500.
DON'T PASS UP THE
OPPORTUNITY OF
MAKING MONEY ON
THE AIDVE PROPER ·
TIES. SURELY . THEY
WILL IE MUCH MORE
NEXT YEAR . CALL
WI -JUSTO Sl!l!.
.

IT'S CLEAN·CLEAN·CLEAN
Brand New - It is not, but better t~an
DON'T WASTE TIME
new - It Is! 3 bedrooms . "Veryth1.no
Don't waste time looking at other
" spic and span ", 2 comr:\,,~ ~ths w1th
homes and take the time to see this at·
showers. You can
..,Q ·: !loo.r s ,
tractive home. Three bedrooms, living
carpeted patio or • ·o~ \)c,~. •tchen loHs
room, bath, ni ce kitchen and din ing
tne bill . Even 'I&gt;-&lt;)
,e buoll in, d! n·
lng room , ~~ ~~,g room, utoll ly
combination . Electric heat, ther ·
mopane windows, U.S. steel siding and
room f .. 0 4t:.9- " carpeted. Electnc
garage . Situated on ni ce sized lot in nice
heat, ~ f~'!le. large lawn with fru i t
neighborhood . Unbeatable price. City
trees , fi
tNith fruit , for shade . Shrub·
bery , dr11led wel l. Even a law~ pump
school district .
~ 31 ~
tor the lovely grounds . See tt~1s spec ·
tacularly clean h?me t~ay . Lower
River Road r iver v1ew . Pnce $60,000.
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1344
FINANCING IS
TAKE ONE LOOK I
NO PROBLEM
Just take one little peep
ASTIMEGOESONI
On this farm house an d
at this nice 63 acre
You will be pa ying mor e
104.51 acres, more or
farm , and you 'll be sol.d!
and more ren t, so why
tess, of good crop la nd
Small pond, . tobacco
not buy your home now .
located in Meigs Coun ·
base, houw·, barn, nice
Th is nice 1 or 3 Oedroom
ty·, Salem Twp. Several
equ ipment shed end
ma Y be just the one.
acres of level road fron ·
some timber. Be a proCarpeted living room ,
tage. House has living
ud farm Investor today .
kitchen , dining room ,
room , dining roorn, 4
1294
family r oom, b at ~. - All
~ ed room s , kitchen. Also
this loc ated on 1.7 acres,
WE 'VE FOUND ITI
CJ
double crib and
mroe or Jess, on s1ate
We have found the pro·
machinery ~hed . Owner
per ty everyone has been
highway
I 326
wil l help finan~e a good
look ing for . Excepqualified buyer . Land
tionelly well kept mOdrn,
contra ct or second mor LOW MA;NTENANCE
nome . Four large rooms
tage. Call tor more
LOW UTILITIES
and bath . Total electric .
dettdls.
N244
LOW PRICE
Very well insulated . 4
LOW MAINTENAN CE
acres of ground w ith
and LOW UTI Ll Tl ES
large stocked pond. E• ·
EYE CATCHER
are what one can expect
cellenf large metal barn
TAX SHELTER
to f ind in thiS attr ective
w ith dutch doors. Road
113 acres ' Greenfield
home. Three bedrooms.
fr ontage on state
Twp., well kept and
2 baths, family r oom ,
highway . Minutes f rom
scenic country hom e, 2
di ning room , kitchen.
Holzer Hospital. Priced
ba rns, 2 car garage,
Over 1 acre o1 ;round.
in t he '30 ' s.
1301
oth er outbuldi ngs, 30
woodburner, county
FARMLAND
acres t illab le.la nd, wood
water . LOW PRICE . I
RE A D CAREFULLY !
lots, s't r ea m runs
3
3
I
acres with ti llable land .
through farm . Plenty
PRIVACY IS
3
or
A
bedroom
home
.
2
water for livestock. You
PRICELESS
baths, one has gerden
must see t hese pretty
In the !.ummer tlme
tub
with
separate
gr een tre ated fi elds to
nature comes to life In
shower stal l. L ivi ng
apprecia te the value,
115 fullness . We are Of ·
room,
attra
ctive
kitchen
beauty
and
living
terino here for the f irst
with plenty of cabinet
sa tisf ac t ion in t he area .
t ime -41 acres. and a
space.
Nice
sunde&lt;:k
.
H306
12 '"65 ' mobile home In a
Newly planted fr ui t
scenic setti ng that w il l
trees: Close to M ine No.
open your eyes. Ha s a
1.
Unbealable
and
GET A HORSE
sprl ng, dril led well,
unbelievable · pric e,
Perhaps you already
24'"60 ' barn . All for f he
SJ9,000.
nn
have one, two or three?
low pr ice S37 ,500. 1 347
With or w ithout a horse,
NEW LISTING
th is is the place for
WHAT A BUY I
OWNERS WANTS
children or guests. 7
Three bedroom home.
TO TALK TURKEY
room house, full base ·
bath w ith shower. fuel
Bring vour Offer on th is
men! with bath, large
oil FA furna ce. w i nd~
•
11f
'
l
story
home
.
-4
barn, gOOd condition
air conditioner, att 1c
bedrooms, lg. liv ing
with hay mow . Garage,
wel l insulated, storm
room,
family
room
,
k
it
coal or wood house com dOOr s and w indows.
chen,
utility
r
oo
m
.
binati on, level yard,
county water , util it y
Natural
gas
heat
.
Base
large prOductive garden
bu ild ing, new 10 ')(11 ' 1og
ment. 3 acres of ground.
area , fair fences. Some
1h mile of ci t y
cabi n . 6 miles irom
Within
tillable acres , tobacco
Gallipol i• . City SchOOl
limits.
If
ttli
s
meet
s
base. 38 acres . $27,000.
sys tem . S21.000 L1St1n9
your needs, we recom ·
US&lt;
Pr ice .
I 368
mend quick act ion . t lU

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A TRULY GRACIOUS HOME - Be.tter Homes and .
Garden s wou ld be taken by t he beauty of this
spacious home set on a beautiful landsca ped lot
abundant with shrubbery &amp; fron ta ge on the OH 10
RIVER . Word s cannot desc ribe the quality of this
brick &amp; frame 2 story home. 3 BR 's, 21h baths, extra
large L R &amp; family rm ., firepl ace, cent . air, full
basement, double garage &amp; MUCH MORE . Shown
.bY appointment.

Building Supplies

Mobile Homes Sale's

COLLIN'S BUILDING
PRODUCTS ,
1515
Washington Blvd ., Belpre,
Ohio, offers a new service
to the Gallipol is area . Over
6,000 building produc ts
delivered eacn week to
Belpre and ava ilable to you
each week at discount
prices!
Calf
Collins
Bui ldlng Products or pick
up a free Pease Catalog
tOday . Business hours :
Mon thru Fri , 8 a.m . to 5
p.m . Ph0ne61H2H881.

1974 1.4 x 70 mobile home.
Good condition. 992·5858.
1965 GEN~RAL60 x l2 , 2 bed•.
1970 Syl va, 601( 12, 2 bedr.
1970 Castle, 60 xl2 , 2 bedr.
197.4 Mark/ ina, 50x12 , 2 bedr.
l%91Joliant , 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional, 12"50. 2 bedr.
B' S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEASANT , WV . 304-675·4&lt;24 .

1975 14 " 70 KIRKWOOD toto/
electric 3 bedroom. Excellent
condition. Phone985-3554 .

BIG SELECTION of pr•owned
10's, 12's, and 1-4 ft . wide
homes. Konougo Mobile
Home Soles . 614-446-9662.

MOBILE HOME · 1971
12x65 Shultz . Furn. new
carpet, good cond . Call675·
6908 after 5.

Mobile Homes - Sale

1973 14 x 70 Park Estate, 2
baths. 2 expando.
1971 12 x 65 Shakespeare,
2bdr .
'
1961112 x 50 Star, 2 bdr .
1970 12 x 60 New Moon, 3
bdr.
Band S Mobile Home Sales
Pt . Pleasant, wv

1~73 12 I( 63 Fores1 Park
mobile home on '/, acre lot in
Harrisonville . 992·36-40.

MOBILE HOME and lo1 in
Mason, WV. Coi/JO..t-773-5905
or9'12-7759.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

_,

Mobile Homes- Sale

··•
·1
·•

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·

,
~

675 · ~24

SALE ON USED MOBI LE . ,
HOM ES.
TRI ·STATE
MOBILE HOMES . 446·
7572. .
BIG SEL ECTIO N OF
PRE · OWNED lO 's, 12's
and 14 WI DE HOMES,
KANAU .G A MOB IL E
· HOME SALES, .u.\·9662 .
1975 FREEDOM Mobile
Home. 12x60 partl y furn. , · ,
ai r cond ., 1 owner . Good
cond . Price reduced . Call
446 · ~2 6 .

1973 FLAMINGO . 2 bdr.,
$5,500 . wilh turn . 15,000
without furn. All electric .
Call446·7762. ·
1976 RICHWOOD 12x60 2 or
3 bdr. mobile home. Call
379·2168.
FOR SALE · 1978 14x70 '
House Trailer with 7x21 ex pan do, 3 b dr ., a nd
firepl ace. Ca ll 446·4807 or
4469595.
1977 ALCONA 1~x7 0 Mobile - Home. Used 1 yr . 6-speaker
stereo intercom . Total elec .
2 bdr ., fa m . rm ., $14,500.
Call 44H342 days &amp; 256·
6364 eVenings alter 5.

NOilOlOS'';~
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�The Sunday T imes..Sentjnel, Sunday, Au~ . ~. 1979

[).10-

,

D-11- The Sunday 'l'imes-Sentinel, Sunday, Aug, 26, 1979

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn the Sunday Times-Sentinel

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

r1rJCANADAY REAL
u::::!l
446-3636

•

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

*

WiHis T. Leadi1ng11am,
Realtor Ph. Home

REALTOR '"

Real Estate for Sale

rr;RD &amp;

· ANY HOUR

TONEY REALTY

Ko1o Canaday, Realtor,
(0

24 STATE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

Gallia County's Fastest Growing

::

lllas s&amp;uul u ~ Sllllll

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Home : 446·1049

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NEW LISTING - llery well kept cedar ranch hOme
in one of Gafl ia County 's finest subdi v isons, J
bedrooms, 2 full baths, 2100 square feet of livi ng
space, fireplace, tree pool and clubhouse.
H0598

AGENCY DO IT FOR YOU!!

~till • '.
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.•....,.,~~~,· ···~~
~~----'"'

Lovely older hoi'ne that

you have to see to appreci ate. Enclosed· back yard
wi th a beautiful pool and a Cal iforn ia atmosphere .
Call Today .

\

SUPERB Describes this lovely home with
everything for lh e family in mind . Large lawn,
beautifu l w .b .f .p. in fam . room and 2112 baths are
just a few of the amenit ies in thi s home .

!t ,.

&amp;

4

NEWHOUSE
1624 SQ . FT.
Bri ck &amp;. frame , city school system, J
B.R., 11h baths, central air, approx .
1.4 'x 17 ' li vi ng room , dining room, nice ·
kitchen, laundry room. utility room &amp; a
garage. Thermopane windows. If you
hurry you can choose your own
ca rpet i ng. Rural water . You 'llllke this
bra nd new horne . COME IN NOW .

DRAMA COMES in big doses in th is stunning brick and cedar ranch, nearly
2800 sq. ft . living area plus 2 car garage. 4 BR : 3 full baths, hexagonal sunken
living rm ., fa m ily rm :, plus b~sement r ecreat1on and hobby rooms, long -long
rear deck . Very desirable locat ion .
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COUNTRY MANOR - ThiS home is for the f ami l y
who needs lots of room ; and Dad , if you lik e to farm ,
hunt or even invest in th e land . 116 acres with a lot of
t imber and al l m inera l rights .

Brick and cedar ranch has ceramic tile
foyer , m irrored walls, massive stone
fireplace covers one livin~ .rm . wa~l,
plush ca rpet ing , formal d1n1ng, eahn
ki1chen, J l g. BR , 2 full baths, 20 ' deck
plus concrete patio with br ick grill .for
outdoor entertaining, 2 ca r garage .
Over •12 ac re velvety lawn . I rresistable
inside and out. $59,600.

NESTLED IN THE COUNTRY - If you like
pr ivacy thi s is the home tor you . J Brms .• liv. rm .
with w .b.f.p ., din ing rm ., kit. , 1 bath and ut ility rm .,
50 acres with beautifu l lush green woods, tob. base
and ou tbuil ding _

ADDISON - All the c omforts ot home
at a ·. price you ca n afford . Nearly 2
acres. 3 BR fram e ho.m e has Fran klin
f ireplace, walk ·in closets, storm doors
and windows. Kyger Creek Sc hools.
$35,900.

'

WE
HAllE
OTHER
PROPERTY
AVAILABLE . PLEASE CALL FOR IN FORMATION .

'

AFFORDABLE AND NICE 3 BR Hardwood floors , c"abinets, at1ached garage ,
fen ce d back yard , city sc hools. $38,900 .

HOME · OllER LOOK ·
lNG THE RIVER
5 rooms &amp; bath , part ial
basement, nice front
porch w ith a beautiful
vi ew of the river . Living
room approx . 15')( 18' .
This is a clean com for tab le home . Less
than 4 mi. of Galli poli s
south on Rt . 7 &amp; pr iced
on ly $28,000 .00 .

VICKIE HAULDR EN .. . , . . ,.,,,. , . . .. , , 446·4042
BECKY LANE , . . , ,, ,,., , ,, •.. ,, , ,,,.,, 446-0458
WALT LANE , , , . , , .. . . , , , , , , . , , , , . . , , , 446-0458
LOWER R IllER ROAD - L i m i tl ess
vi ew, an ex panse of lawn . tree s, shrubs
(l lh acres) , 2 story , 3 ~R . 1 1h ba th s.
unusual qua lity at $66,900.

' t '" TD II

REAL ESTATE loons. Pur c ho~e
and relinonce . 30 year terms .
VA. No monl'ly down (eligible
veteran s). FHA · As low as 3
per cen t down ( non·veterons) .
Ireland Mor tgage Co .. 77 E.
State . A th en~ . 61 .4 -592-3051.
REAL ESTATE: 1 ocre lot in Riggscrest Manor , between Tupp er ~
Plains and Chester.
Phone 995.3929 ond 995-41 2'1 .
NICE COMFORT ABLE 8 room
home on appro)( . 2 acres of
level land wi th plenty of shadl'!
tre es , on Rutland Rd .
992-7255.

20 ACR ES NEAR langsvi lle' 3

bedr . remodeled house.
alumim.1m siding. insulated ,
storm wi ndows , •Iorge born ,
ou tbui lding! . stocked pond.
$36.500 . Owner may Help
finance. 992 -7733 .
THREE BEOROO~M
c;--;ho-u_s_e-:;n
Pomeroy. Fuil bosement, gas
furnace. Coii9Cil2-7839.
SEVEN ROOMS ond both. 2
acres. 992-2523.
THREE BEDROOM house and
ba th in Bradbury . All mdoern .
992-5971 '

MORE STYLE THAN MONEY - hidden in the trees, front la\•wG ·otec ted by
split rai l fence .
chen has
dishwasher . ,.. . "~~ . ..:n range, 3 BR,
I g. ulil " ' 1,.f. .. jJ(lrt plus storag e. LQ.
fenced s~.~ lawn has f ru i t trees, grape
vi nes. In ci ty . Low $30' s.

TREES - PRIVACY Expansive ran ch, 1700
sQ . f t. living area. over ·
si zed living rm . with
stone fir epla c e and
lllt~t
~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME ·sliding glass d oors
~ ~ ~~ ll
byHenriAmoldandBoblee leading onto hig h 10'x 40 '
deck. 3 BR , 2 full baths,
full y equipped "coun t ry
Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
style" kitch en . Plush
We lind this nice man
one letter 10 each square. to form
carpet. A ll the extr as
comple tely innocent
tour ordinary words.
you expect to find In a
custom home. Separate
24'xJO'
ga ra ge.
Beautiful lawn . City
l/1,\"\"' ?•,., , 11 schools. S68,900.
1

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ID'il

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A HI DE OUT - But only a few m inutes
from city , 2.s tory frame home hasJ BR ,
enormous liv ing rm. with firepla ce, eat In kitchen equipped with range,
ref r i gerator, c oncrete block garage. Ci ty schools, $37,500.

... READY
.. ,WHEN YOU
... ARE
L1 KE NEW RANCH in

Green Acres Subdiv i sion only 1112 m iles fro m
city, 3 BR , l'h baths,
cen. air, comb . k it .
f a mily rm ., rang e, ·
dishwasher . Atta ched
garage. Owner has moved, immediate posses ·
sion . $44, 900 .

o

rn

INVITING COLONIAL
styling , 3, BR , 2 full
baths, plush car pet ,
stone fireplac e, country
kitchen with pantry,
dishwasher, range and
oak cabinets . 2 car
fin ished ga rage . Brand
new ..$45,000.

.

WIC HAllE MORE FARMS, HOME &amp; BUSINESS PROPERTY AVAI ~ABLE

NIC E 8-rm . 1!. bath home.
Fruit trees, v inyl siding,
very private . Fuel oil fur nace or heat with wood
from 14 acres. $38,500.
Shown by appt , only. Cen·
fury 21. Grover Realty .
Jane Stewart 367 -7793 .

REAL ESTATE LOANS
SPECIALIZING IN F.H.A .
AN D VA IN SUREDMOR ·
TGAGES · MILLONS TO
LEND . FAVORABLE IN ·
TEREST RATE, LOW OR
NO DOWN PAYMENT
FOR V E TER A NS, LONG
lERM FINANCING AND
N,O
PREP AY MENT
PE NALT IE S.
THIS I S
TH E WAY TO DO IT, I F
YO U CA N QUALIFY .
REF I N A NCING
A L SO
AVA ILABL E,
CALL
TODAY FOR MORE
DETAI LS . LINDA LA NE
446 · 1517.

Now arrange the circled leHers to
lorm lhe surprise an swer. as sug · HOME FOR SA LE - By
gested by the above cartoon.
owner in Crown City . 3
bd r .. nice lg. L .'R., T.V .
V
'l
rm .. lg . D.R., n ice I g. eat in
Answer here: t,
A
f,_
A k.itc hen with bar, 2 baths,
ftreplace w1th carpet thru ·
(Answers Monday out . on 112 acre lot, priced
I Jumbles [)IJ tH:.:E GA ILY PODIUM BROOCH
to se ll . Call alter 4. 256 YBSlerda~ s 1
,
6663
Answer Vl d!J amu sed . thoUyt1 •nwardly exptessing
·
d1sgus1 - " LA ·UGH!·EO "
- - - -- - - '"
LOT FOR SALE · Porter
o t.
Brook Su b·dfvision . Fair · HOU SE f or sale · Large l_
Jwm~Mt 8oo« No. 13, eont•lnlnQ 110 puul•• , II IYIIIIble tor SUS poetpelc:l
fi e ld Ce ntenar y Rd . 3 bdr . $30,000. 1919 Ches t·
lrOfll J ...r.lble, clo ttll1 newap•:r•r, Box 3• , Norwood, N.J. 07848.Include your
n1nw., addrllt, Zip COda •n m•ka ctl•&lt;:ks P• Y•Ill• to NIWIPI~rbook • .
Restrict ed . Caii«H628.
nut . Call446 ·2158.

riJ

XI 1

IT'S •ff&gt;

XX11 'l"

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$29,900,00
AFFORDABLE
4 B. R ., 2 baths, tor ma l
dining room, spacious
kitchen &amp; f ull basement.
Loca ted on U ,S. 218.
PR IC ED TO SELL.

..

F HA·VA -Conven tial HOme
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgag e Co .,
loa n
repre se ntat ive,
Violet
(Cooki e) .V iers, 463 Second
Ave .. Ga lli polls, Oh., AM 7172 1
ATTRACT I VELY DE COR
ATED 3·bedroom home
nea r HM C; fami ly room
with firepla ce, 2 baths , 2
plus garage, C.A ., low gas
budget , carpet, drapes,
patio, c it y .school s, pric. ed
to se ll . Call 18 to 5) 44~ · 7378
or (afle,r 51 446·1081.

JUST BUILT
This home dclivtrs the
kind of living demanded
by todaY 's tastes In a
very handsome design. •
Large lovely kltchen
he.~;. ail the mode"n conven ienr:as a wife would
want ~Iu s a large dining 1
area , eot-at·bar, family
rocm . 3 lar~e B.R . &amp; 2
full ba ths. llery th•teful ·
ly decorated .

LOTS $5500.00 EACH
Two very nlce level lots.
Just off Rt . 3S in very
nice loca t ion. Lovely
bu ilding sites . CALL

6 rooms, wh ite atum .
siding. Includes 2 B.R. ,
2 buill-In pOrches, large
living room, eat·ln kit·
chen, modern bath, 2
maple shade· trees.
large oarden area .
Natural gas floor fur nace, city water, wwer.
Storage bldg . Levelland
located In J ackson,
Ohio. A
nice clean
hOme . A GREAT REN ·
TA L OR INV ES TMENT
PROPERTY CAL L
NOW .

LOT IN EWING"(ON
Lot NO . 44 1!. east half of
Lot No. 45. Clos" to Post

~~~~~~~·co;~~e~. ~~!e~i~~
pole for mobile home .

Septic tank , concrete
driveway with wood
bldg , at its end. Con
crete piers to set mobile
home on .
8 ACRES
LOTS OF
PINE TREES
Deep well. Electr ic
pump. Well house , sep tic tank , -41J, miles to
mine No . 1. App rox . 5
acres of t imber .. All 8
acres levelland .
LARGE STATELY
7ROOMHOME
Large level lot. Bath,
front and back porche•.
.c BR of above average
size . City water. Partia l
basement.
Metal
storage bldg . ALL OF
THIS
F OR ONLY
$12,900.00.
NICE BAR
FOR LEASE
Will sell 0 ·2 licenses &amp;
all stock &amp; equipment
Which includes cooler
(holds approx . 9 to 10
cases
of
beer ),
showcase, Victor cash
register
&amp;
addino
machine, ret. &amp; gas
cook stove. All stock and
equipment
&amp;
D ·2
licenses all for on ly
$5,900.00. Be the first to
pick up this bargaiiY,
COME IN NOW.
LOT OVERLOOKING
BLUE LAKE &amp;
RACCOON CREEK
beautiful lot for camper
trau er . A Pla ce to get
away from it all &amp; fish ,
boat or lust peace &amp;
quiet . Rura l water &amp;
sew er avail able. Elec ·
tric already there. ALL
ONLY $3,900.00.
TWO ACRES HALF
MILE OFF ROUTE 3S
2 B.R . cottage, storage
building, one apple tree,
garden space &amp; partial
basement. ALL FOR
ONLY $5900.00 .

•..
••

Camping Equipment

Wanted to ' Rent

GO CAMPING AMERICA
With co achman RIIS .
Qualify buill, pried right.
Dozens of models with a
wide range of family ·
~l easi ng floorplans .
See
I hem today! Apple City
Recreational Vehi cle 's, Rt
35, 1 m i West of Jackson,
Oh, 614·28H700.

TRAILER LOT, peaceful,
quiet selling desired, Call
Linda Miller at 446 ·~9 at·
ter 5.

992 - ~0 .

PRIVATE OWNER will sacri fice
1979 32 fl . travel t roller. 59/fcon toined , air, rear bu nk ,
s!eeps she See anytime.
Krodel City Park , Pt. Pleosonl ,

&lt;OWESHIRE - N ice ranch with ~ bedrooms, 1'1'
baths, full basement, hardwood floors, ca rport,
beaut;tullarge lot .
f 1579
OUTSTANDING BUY - GoOd frame home with 3
bedrooms, nice bath, county water, large lot, large
storage bu i lding, only $26.500.
OWNER WILL HELP FINANCE - N ice brick
ranch with ~ bedrooms, living room with w.b.
fireplace. hardwood floor5, basement with shower
stall, 1 car oaraoe loca ted on J acres in Hannan
Trace S.D.
K0579
Nice 1968 Belmont 12x55 mobile
GOOD BUY
home, Franklin wood burner , new furn ace. only
f 1115,
$11.500.
Nice 12)(50 mobile home w i th addition
on back furn i shed and air condifi9n, large garage
and lanie lot, $16,900 .
·
K0961
PORTER -

CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - Small farm with 3
bedroom home, new full basement, large barn, 30
acres of rotting ground, city school district .
N0380

MUST SELL late m.odel travel
trailer . · :28', fully self.
contained ,
fa ctory
oii,
carpeted thr oughout, many
ex tras. See on-y time, Krodel
City Pork, Pt. Pleasant.

_____

BIG AUCTION overy Wed., 7
CODNER'S CAMPERS on Rain·
pm. Hartford Community
b ow Ridge . Tents t o . Center. Hartford , WV, 4 miles
motor.,omes. Soles, rentals, ' above
Pomeroy · Mason
parts , service . Phone
Bridge.

6 1 ~ · S.3·30 11.

Wanted to Rent
REASONABLY PRICED counlry
house in Pomeroy area . Phone
9_!~ · 4366 evanlngs.

OHIO RIVER AUCTION,
every Tues. and Fri ., 7pm,
537 N1 High St., Mid·
.dleporl, OH . For aSIIgn ments, call992·7460.
4

---~----''·

30 ACRES - Beautiful building site, nice roll ing
land, large barn, loca ted on Rodney -Cora Rd., pric ·
ed to se ll now.
10522

...

139 ACRES - Good~ bedroom home w ith furn iture,
bath, fully carpeted , full basement, large barn, all
minera l r iohts and some coal and limestone . N 1170

EUREKA - 3 BR home
with full basement.
Carpeted throughout.
owner will help t i ~ance
qualified buyer . BMR
127

NEAR TYCOON LAKE
- 1 BR home with ni ce
kitchen, bath &amp; LR . Par·
tial hookup for mobile
nome . $16.500. BMR 1A1
12x60
KIRKWOOD
MOBILE HOME on •;,
acre lot. BR's 12x12 and
9xl2 , one bath , 12x 14
LR , 8x 12 equipped kit.
BMR 142
12x70 MOBILE HOME
with all appliances,
large metal building
with concrete floor.
Situated on .65 of an
acre . BMR 144

RIO GRANDE Exceptional houw with 5
bedrooms, large living room, 21h baths, spacious
family room. equipped kitchen, oversized 2 ca r
garage, plus loads of extras. This lovely home is
situated on one acre of beautiful landscaped land .
Gallipolis City Schools. BMR 92A

PORTER BROOK - If neatness counts! You can
count on this one . The first floor features family
room with w.b.l .p. , flanked by buill ·in bookshel ves,
3 bedrooms, living room, l lf:~ . beth, combination kit chen, dining area separated by bar . Ful l basement.
BMR 137A
CROWN CITY - Frame
BUILDING LOTS - 2
ranch on .52 of an acre. 3
Acres, ?.738 acres and
BR ·s, L:R , equipped kit·
11.110 acres. Recently
chen, bath and utility
surveyed. These are
area, aHached garage
wOOded lots within 6
with heat. Protected by
miles of Gallipolis. Also
hOme warranty , BMR
a 2 acre lot on blacktop
1-16
road. BMR 135
RIO GRANDE
Frame ranch with full
div i ded
basement
situated on more than
an acre of land . Call tor
complete details. BMR
140M
ON ALICE ROAD Frame home with 3
BR 's, nice kitchen, d in Ing area and bath , and a
large tot. BMR 123

NEW LISTING - Lovel y two story hom~ with full
basement. A luminum siding, storm Wtf!dows an~
doors. With thi s fami ly type home you ~· II ~ I so en
joy more than 30 acres of hill land to entov tn vovr
leisure time . BMR 157

THE BUILDER BUILT th is one tor his own use and
now has decided to sell. Cedar siding, 8x30 deck off
dining roo m , 8x30 patio out of exposed basement,
basement is part ially tinished with 14x38 F . R. plus a
'9x15 den . This lovely home also f eatures a fuii.Y
equipped k itchen with brea kfast b?r· There .'s
much, much more. Call for an appomtment. C1ty
school s. S68 ,000. BMR 156.

FORMER
STORE
building with overhead 3
BR apartment. Plus
tra iler sp~ce. $27,000.
BMR 124
COMMERCIAL LOT This lot fronts on two
well traveled roads.
Owner Is anxious to sell
and w ill listen to an otter. Call now and ask
about BMR 136.
HIGH AND DRY featuring a beaUtiful
view of Gallla County's
hill country . This fine all
brick ranch featvres 2
fireplaces w ith a full
di•ided basement. All
this and more, on 1.64
acres. BMR l3B
NEW LISTING - Flat
lot with very nice 3 B R
hqme in Gallipolis City
SChools District. This
one won't last long . Call
t or complete delails ~ 1
BMR 158

NEW LISTING -Two
story home on Fourth
Ave. in GallipOliS. A BR,
living r oom·, dining
room , fam i ly room , In
good condition and It 's
priced to sell! Beat to·
day 's inflated prices.
BMR 159
CROWN CITY - JOx .4Q
metal building wilh 2 ci ·
ly lots. BMR 147
30 ACRES more or less
on Clark Chapel Road.
Mostly wooded with
pine. BMR 149

BUILDING LOT
in
town, restricted for your
protection . 75x258. BMR
150
'
III~ITON Two story
home and it's priced to
sell . Carpeted . Orapes
and curtains stay . Call
today!

LET'S
TALK
BUSINESS
The
owner of this 4 B R brick
ranch wants an offer.
Situated on 2.3 acres of
land, this home features
a full basement plus lots
more. Located in Ad dison Twp, Call tor an
appOintment: BMR 121
EUREKA - Another quality home priced in the
mid S.CO's. Neat In apperance . 3 BR's featuring FR
w ith woodburner , VA financ ing , BMR 13~

"'

NICE LOT Good building si t e located in Rio
Grande, gas, sewer &amp; water avaialble .
N 0056

Evenings Call

Darwin Bllomet~J Assoc. 675-6627
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
John Fuller, Realtor 446-4327

Auto Sales
1978 SPITFIRE CONIIERTABLE .
3otOO miles. Great condition.
EquiOQOCI. 30 to 3.4 m.p.g.

m -1:142.

•·

1974 1/ECA HATCHBACK, call
303-675-ISol or JO!i-675·2d8
or 304-67S-15$3,
197~ DODGE CORONET 4·door
Cuatom . 992·5858.
I ~9 DODGE DART, 4·door,
new paint, new tires, $600.
Potat~s . $8 per hundre-d.
Pigs . 7 weeks old , $20 each.
Straw $1 .25 per bal e.
985-4104 .
1978 VW DASHER. 12,700
miles. Good gas mileage.
304-882-:1252.
1976 PLYMOUTH IIOLARE, 2·
door. Maroon with white vinyl
top, radial tires, power !ltaar·
lng, power brakes, slant slx
engine, good gas mileage.
29,000 miles. Good condition.
Phono992·3198.
1'178 JEEP CJ5, 304 11·8, Levi
package ,
P. S., . P.B..
aluminum, spoke wheels, JS
Gumbo tires , headers. Take
over payments. Call992·6363 .
1976 OLDS REGENCY. All
power, $3995, or will toke
trod• in. 949·2818 7:30 unti\3
or 949-2150. May be ' 'en ot ,
CarP,enter' s Pennzoll In
Racl.e.

Auto Sales
1975 CHEIIROLET IM PALA. 2 dr .. hardtop, PS,
PB, air, cruise control, tinled glass, 350 11·8 eng ., onl y
40,000 mlies. Dark metallic
blue, one owner. Like new
with 5 new tires. $2900.
Caii446·A223.
1976
THUNDERBIRD .
white, all power, new
radial tires .
Pric ed
wholesale. Call 446-()()()8,
1974 VEGA Hatchback ,
Call 675-2588 or 675·1501 or
675-1553 . '
1966 Ford Econollne Super
Van, owner must sell ,
leaving the state. Call 446·
8671. ·
'
1977 CHRYSLER Town &amp;
Country station wagon. 9·
pass .• air, cruise control.
tape deck . 37,000 miles
reduced from $5,000. to
$3,800. Call 446·4431.
79 JEEP CJ7, Renegade
with 8,000 lb. worn wench .
Call446·7922 after 5.
t

Auto Sales
1967 CHEVY VAN , 6 cycle, '
needs work . $100. And 1968
Dodge Polare . Auto., 11·8.
Fair cond. $300. Call 379·
259~ .

9~9 - 2545 ,

1972 T·BIRD · $1,100. And
1965 Chevy Impala 5900. 2·
dr. Florida car, exc . cond .
Air cond. , p .s., p.b ., 327
eng ine. Standard shift . Call
256·156-4.

1977 C~EVROLH CAMARO
V-B, auto., olr, Rally Sports,
P.S', AM·FM B· trock, cruise
control. Phone 992·6681 , aher
59'i2-3133.

Auto Sales

FRAME RANCH with full basement. T.his home is
in great shape. Fully carpted, an exceptionally
clean. Equipped kitchen with lots of cabinets. Basement Is divided with family room , utility room and
large storage and shop area. Will consider FHA or
IIA financing. BMR 129

1975 CHAN TORINO 5&lt;!ulre
wagon. Auto. , P.S., P.B., air.
1979 CHEVROLET 4 x~ 350
auto., 2500 mi les . 992-53%.

:\
Auctions

THIS ONE MUST be
sold soon . owner is out
of state and he insists
we get an otter . Great
location with 1.1 9 acres
of prime land plus an
18x36 inground pool .
Property is ideal for
commercial purposes.
For more details call!
BMR 112B

a

IN TOWN and in good
condition . Thi s two
stor y home has 3 B R •s
up, FR, LR, DR, kit. and
bath down, plus utility
room off back porch .
Priced fQr quick sale .
BMR 139

NEW BIIICK RANCH - Lo•ely home with 3
bedroorns, 1 1/ 2 baths, full basement, central air,
garage, should wllfast .
f 1150

9 ROOM
COUNTRY HOME
5 BR . Nice front porch,
nice kitchen with buill ·
In cabinets, double s·s
sink . Bath with shower,
lots of shade trees &amp;
fruit trees. N ice garden
spot. Th is home has
blown In Insulation.
Located bes i de St .
H ighway 160.. 84 acre of
la.,d. More can be pur·
chased with thi s home. 2
mobile homes that now
•re br inging In a rental
ot 5175.00 pr month plus
a total of 3.84 acres of
land . All located beside
Stale Highway 160.
CALL
FOR
ALL
DETAILS,

camping Equipment

CHESHIRE - LOOking
tor an older home in
mint condition . This
lovely home was built at ·
t he turn of the cen tur y
w ith quality materia l
and since has been pro ·
perly maintained . You
must .see it to appreciate
its true values. Call now
for an appointment.
BMR 94

CLOSE TO TOWN - Nice frame home, 3 bedrooms,
cellar house, garage with lar~e storage roon:-. 2
small buildings, 2.2 acres, pr;ced to sell qu ock ,
$38,900 .

LOVELY IIIVERIIIEW HOME - This charm ing
!'lome has" bedrooms, formal dining room , kitc.hen
w ith bu ilt· Ins. library or family room , .5 f ireplaces,
2'h baths, large 2 c ar garage, beautiful lot w ith f r.on ·
tage on 1st &amp; 2nd Avenues, call today for an appcuntment.
K0775

FANTASTIC
BUSINESS
LOCATION
Approx. 900 sq. fl . floor
space, J rooms &amp; bath .
Convenien1 locati on &amp;
la rge park ing area . Call
for more deta ils TO DAY!

FRANKLIN TRAVEL trailer, 22
ft. Good condition . A lso Trail
tJaven camper. Sleeps six .

446·0552

NEW LISTING - Beautifully roll ing farm of 65
acres. Lovely home with 3 bedrooms. s~;,. baths, ful ly carpeted the wife will love this one . Also , 2 car
garage, tob'acco ba se, J barns, priced to sell fa st,
call todaY .
K1175

SlS,OOO

BEAUTIFUL RIIIER
FRONT HOME
.VA APPROVEDOWNER WILL
HELP FINANCE
Beautiful 7 roo.m home
with panoram ic view Of
the river. 2113 A . Full
basement with wood burn ing flrela ce, 23
ll.x41 fl . room with kil ·
chenet1e, excel lent for
enterta ining or dancing,
Nice mOdern kitchen Incl ud ing d ishwasher ,
range &amp; refrigerator,
formal ~ d ining
room,
family room, formal llv·
inQ room &amp; J BR and 2
full ba t hs &amp; showers.
Fuel Oil F. A. furnace .
Excellent location for
f ishi ng , r ight out your
back door . City school
di51. Must see to appreci ate lts value.

NEW LISTING - seauty in the woods describes
this lovely BHevel with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, hv·
ing room with w .b . f ireplace, family room with w .b .
f ireplace, kitchen with range, disp~sal ~nd
dishwasher, util i ty room and gargage . N1c e setttno
on acres on St . Rt. ~ . Call today .
N0598

10 ACIIES PLUS - Beautiful brick home on
blacktop road, ·carpeted basement, l :J&amp;. bath,
garage, pond, barn, close to school, store, church ,
p .0., and Rt. 35. What el!!'l could anyone want. f 1082

CAll NOW. OFFICE 446-7699 WME 44b-9539

3 BDR . Mobile hom e. Ph
bath, 1 acr e of ground .
19?3 23 '/J foot Terry trove!
12x 12 concr ete bldg . 5 miles
trailer. _Ai r conditioning, full
off of 160 at Ewington . Ca ll ... both w1th rub and shower,
241 9120 after 5
AM-FM wilh 9-lrock . Cood
· _....____ '
condition . Co 11992-J580.

··--

HOME ·
2 ACRES IN
THE COUNTRY
7 room home wi t t. 3 or
possibl y ~ BR .. k itcnen
wi th bu ilt -in cabinets,
storm w indows &amp; doors.
Large barn , chicken
house, storage bldg . 2
wel ls plus rural w afer .
A ll this for only
l4.\,000 .00 . Call for your
appointment now.

JUST LISTED KYGER CREEK SCHOOL
DISTRICT - F;fty acres of .good tarmlng land
located apx . 7 m ires trom Chesh ire. Four bedroom
i" solid older two story farm hOme. Excellent buy at
• •$44,900.00.

We're Out To Sen The Earth

----~

IHAWRTI I

I

THE
... RIGIITLOCATION
.. ,RIGIIT HOUSE
·... RIGIIT PRICE

FINANCING AVAILABLE Conventional, FHA, VA

I NOLFE

I

INIIESTMENT
PROPERTY
Four apartmen ts , 4
roo ms eac)l apart ment ,
2 BR , kitchen w i th bu ilt ·
in c~b i n e ts ,
st ove,
re f rigerato r ,
dining
room. plus bath util it y
room . Has a good rental
income, cOuld pay tor
the bu il ding within a few
years. A retaTtVely new
apar tm ent home. Each
apartment has own gas
furna ce . Do ou need a
good income property?
DON ' T WAIT TO SEE
THI S.

o'""' ..

$$INVESTMENT PROPERTY Dupl ex on Second Av e., 2 Br . fram e and
garage apt . on First Ave ., Ohio Ri ver
frontag e. Great location , $65,000 .

COMMERCIAL LAND
BUSINESS '
BUILDERS
We now have approx . 14
A . avai labl e, just Off Rt .
35 West. w i th a close ac cess to ci ty sewer &amp;
water, &amp; nea r thr iving
bu si ness community .
PRICED TO SELL . Can
sell in 7 A . Plot.

558,000.00
SPACIOUS
"
4 BEDROOM
Thi s lovely alum . &amp;
stone ranch has a
roomey li v ing room , for ·
ma l di n i ng room ,
br ea kfast nook, bu ilt -in
kitchen, sewin·g r oom,
den 8. 3 large ci ty lots
near golf course .

AFTER HOURS PHONE

rn

4LOTS
LiiTs No. 31. 32, 33 &amp; 3A in
Patriot . Rural water
availa ble . Will sell In
pairs or all. CA L L TO DAY .

535,000
139 ACRES
RACCOON 'T WP.
Between 20·30 acres of
tillable land . Lots of
timber or pines &amp; others
- of 12 inch diameter &amp;
l arge . CALL .

COUNTRY QUEST ANSWERE.O Roll ing land and river beyond, c ozy
Cape Cod styling, firelace, 4 BR ,
breezeway, attached gara ~e . $63 ,900.

LAND - 20 acr es, Bulavi lle Rd .
LAND - Apx . 40 acre s, Route 35 ar ea .
LAND - 16 acres, Addison Twp ,
LAND - 4 acres , Add ison Bulavil le Rd .
LOT - 1h acre bui Iding site, Bulaville Rd .
LOT - Mabe line Dr ive , $5,500 .00.
LOT - Nice subdi v ision .
·
LOTS - Route 141 are a, 1h acr e each .

517,000 .00
HOME SITTING
IN THE WOODS '
J B.R .• bath, area for
washer
&amp;
dryer ,
spaci ous li ving room ,
bu ilt · in kitchen cab ine ts
w ith range, has drilled
welL all sitti ng on ap proX. I A . of lively wOOd ed la nd near Merce r ville .

RODNEY - Four year old three bedroom he'!'•
with aHached garage and large fenced lot, pnce 1n·
eludes some appliances, available immediately .
f083

1 ACRE
BEDROOM COTTAGE
Ni ce com fortable home-with nice Iaroe
shade trees, concrete front porch . Lots
of fru it trees (apple, cherry, plum !.
peach) . Grape harbor. Good garden
land all level . In Green Twp . Rural
w atef . 2 car garage, fuel oil F·.A . fur nace. Basement. Barn approx . 16'x24'.
PRICED IN THE 520's,

Broker

OFFICE HOURS
9:00·5:00 Monday lhru
Saturday

F':;,':,

CITY CONVENIENCE -

McGhee,

446-0552
428 SECOND AVE.

Phone 446·7900

: . LISTINGS NEEDED-PARTICUlARLi IN THE
! $25t000 TO $55,000 RANbl: - ~UALIFIED
!·
,.., BUYERS WA1f1NG - lET THI: UILLCN

PRESERVE IT... ENJOY IT... INVEST IN IT ••.

Real Estate for Sale

'other hours by appoi~tment

&gt;t- Bob Lane, Sales Manage,r

:t

Real Estate for Sale

M . L. (Bud)

'R~

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

Rtea~lrE;;;;;;:A~g~e:n:c;y-

Real Estate for Sale

M~GHEE

OFFICE 446 7013

,..
,..

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

(

FULL~

Real Esfate for Sale

~ud'

REALTY

Phyllis Lcweday, Realtor
Associate
Ph. Home 446-2230

JusT LIKE GRANDMA ' s HousE Front porch for · rock in ', nice lawn for
croquet, cellar tor truit and potatoes,
·
llh story fram e has"B R. There 'salsoa
Gallipolis, Ohio ~~~soJ4 'x36 ' block bldg . At Porter .

Audrey Canaday
Realtor 446·363&amp;
.~ ,
25 112 Locust St .

446-3087

446-3636

Real Estate for Sale

1%9 CAMARO, fMvor and
black, tront and rear 1pollers,
cowl hoOd, much more. Excellent condition inside and
out.
Pr ice
negotiable .
742 - 21~ .

1976 1/t TON Sierra Grande
GMC. P.S., P.B., outo., air,
rodlo. $3200. John lhlo,
Racine, OH. 949· 2780.

1971 VEGA ond 1969 Ford LTD
wagon. Both for parts .
992-2503.
197~
OLDS
DELTA 88 .'
992-5796,

1975 AMC Matador , gd .
cond., air cond., new t ires.
$500, 446·7762 .
1969 GMC TRUCK , 5 speed,
2 spd axle, new 11 ·6 motor,
sale or trade, see at 146
Jackson PK . 446·1085.

~57 .

1968 PLYMOUTH Road
Runner. 383, ~ - spd . Call4-16·
9710 alter 6 p. m .
1976 FORD PINTO · Stan·
dard transmission. Best of fer . Call4-16·0793.
1974
FORD
VAN
ECONOLI N E
300·302
auto., p.s., gd , body , gd ,
mechanical shape, Must
sell. $1 ,050. Call &gt;76·2398.

EXTRA NICE LOT including 3 JIR ranch style
home in Gallipolis City School Dist. priced in the
$30's. Call for an appointment . BMR 154

1972 CHEVY Bela ire
52,000 actual mileage. One
owner · cheap. Ca ll 446·
3361 .

68 PONTIAC LEMANS, 400
F lreb lrd engine, PS, new
carburator, carter ther moquad. 446·4730.

16 DODGE ASPEN , AM·
FM, 318. P S, PB , 30,000
miles,
g ood ' co nd .
reasonable, 245·5841 ,
1974 CHEVY BLAZER, PS ,
air cond , auto, $3.200, 379:1246.
76 MONZA, sport coupe,
good cond, reasonable, ph
367-0297 att.e r 7,

Rlch•rd E. C•rt.r
S•lesAuoc.
446•1370

Anlto Kackley
Slles Assoc .
245·9136

GiveAway

Giveaway

1974 MUSTANG II · 4 Spd .,
4 new tires, new muffler ,

14,000

Tom White
S.les Assoc.
44HSS7

9ECAUSE Of .R£etrt, SALES WE "ARE EXTREMELY LOW ON LISTINGS. IF YOU ARE
CONSIDERING SELLING GIVE US A CALL WE HAVE A FULL TIME STAFFOF COMPETENT
PEOPLE READY AND WILLING TO ASSIST YOU AT YOUR CONVENIENCE. CALL NOW.
Auto Sales

1975 FORD PINTO, call
256 ·1171.
1978 G.M .C. Diablo, loaded ,
With specral package ,
Good gas mileage, Call 4-16·

WE NEED 50 TO 100 ACRES IN
THF K'LGER CREEK !CIIOOL
DISTRIC1. CALL NOW!

77 BUICK RE GAL ca ll446·
3797 .

new brake shoes,
miles, Call675-6081.

RUTLAND - Two acres with lovely ra nch ~""~
home . Modern kitchen features buil1 -ins, eye-h'! ';\.:1
oven, island range, bar and dining area . Family
room with stone fireplace . Fo, more details Call i !
BMR 123

1973 VW, exc cond , 52,300,
ph 4-16·2A40.
1976 HONDA 750, excellent
cond, many extras, call
4-16·1229 or 446·2302,
197~ OLDS Custom Cruiser
.. station
Wagon .
9
passenger, p.b. , p.s .• a.c .,
new tires, 51,500. Ca ll 24S·
5312 alter 10 a.m .

Auto Sales
1979 Pontiac Bonneville.
Black with black landau
top . Carmine, red int~rior .
Ldaded with extras. $7 ,BOO.
f irm . •Call 446-7161 or .440·
4942 .
1950 WILLY S Jeep
Wagoneer . 4-wheet ·Dr.,
call 388·8713
1976 INTERNATIONAL
Scout · ~ - whl. drive . Low
mileage. Call245·5267.

ANY PER SON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any ot her thing tor
sale may place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser. io

BEAUTIFUL MEDIUM alzed ""-:
white long kaired female, : 1
looks like shHp dog but ~
sma ller . loves children .
Humane Society, 992·6260.

SHEPARD Collie dog. Gen ·
tie. needs good home. Call
446·2203.

m ·6260.

DOGS to good home. 3
males , one spaded f ema le .
Sliver trailer . Glen Summ it
Rd .. Vinton ,
SMALL

CHEAP Transportation .
1968 Oldsmobile, 2·dr., R &amp;
H, P. B., P .S., Call 446·2838.

1977 ~ - dr . van . Auto., p .s.,
Call 38B-9061.

1971 FORD f'ICK ·UP · 76
Honda 500. Ca ll446·4282.

1971 CHEVY Mid ·size 11·8
wagon. Good condlflon.
$600. or best offer. See at
no. 2 trailer behind Hlgl eys
Carry -Out .

1979
PLYMOUTH
VOLARE · 2·dr. COUPe.
Pewter Grey · 3.500 miles.
Call after 7':00 p.m . -146·
~16 .
)

rock ~r.

BROWN Swivel
Call446·0702.·

MALE German Shepard
pup . 5 months old. Can see
at 603 Jackson Pike .
PUPPIES &amp; Angorian
Hamster. Call 4-16·4976.
FREE TO Good home.
Dogs. 3 males, 1 femal e,
spayed. Silver trailer , Glen
Summit! Rd., VInton.

WHITE MIXED female dog with .. ~
block on body and .ar. To , ; :
good home. Humane Society, ~ 1 1

•

,

SHORT HAIRED kittons, black _ ~
ond white; ond tlgar. Humane
Sociely. 992·6260.
BLACK ond white Labrador
le(Tiale puppy. To good home.
Humane Society. m -6260.
.
YOUNC MALE dog, largo but
frlendi'J' , black. short holr.
Humone Society, 992-6260.
· :EIGHT WEEK old mlxod brood
puppies. Will be small dog.
949-2319.
YOUNG MALE dog, block,
short hair. Appears to 1M
labrador and Collie. Humane .
Society. m -6260.
RED

..
j

DOBERMAN,
houoo ,
1
Humane Socletr . -

·-~-~26o.

�D-12- Thc SWl\IUI' Tunes-S,•ntinel . Sunday. Aug. 2\i, 1979

BRIDGE

By Th(• Assuriatt-d Press

totals during the first half of next
Here is U1 e " ~ri c ultural advisory
week will push many soils back to
for Ohio as prepared Saturday by
near
saturation .
Haying
Ole Agricultural Weather Center at
opportunities will be poor again for
West Lafayette, Indiana :
Uw coni in ~ week.
,.
Saturday night, scatte red showers
Some summer sun will dry central
will start to spread northward
and northern sections of the state
across centr al sections of the state,
today, but the rapid return of a
and by Sund ay morning, rain is
lingering rainy period wiU prevent
likely. statewide.
most n ~w cuts.
To really put the final blow to our
Scattered showers will remain in
F'riday promise of a few days of dry
the forecast Sunday through
weather. The extended forecast is
Wednesday , so any cuts put on the
now ca llmg for scatterd showers , ground Saturday will fa ce a
daily, Monda y U1 rough Wednesday.
continuing risk of wetting from cut
Eva porative loss rates will
to dry harvest .
average .15 of an inch today central
Sprayin g
and
harvetsing
a nd nor th , but more so uth ern
conditions will be acceptable for a
sections of the state will receive
large part of the state today. Surface
another quart er to a half in ch of
winds . will hold below threshold
rain .
level s for con trolled drift and
Soi I surfaces will dry slightly
uniform appli cation.

........... ~ ..... Gj~i"" ...l
~
CEstate
:
•

central and north today. but rain

~

.•
•

:

•
•
e
•

e

e

. •

•e
e

! he

si tuat i o~

is_ thi ~. Yo_
ur

~ome

:

is for sale. A prospect wants to

•

e
e
e

buy 1f.buf sa ys , I l1ke 1t, I like 1t. But I will not have the money tor a
couple of mon t hs . Can I m o ve in unt i l we f inalize the sale?"
One of the bes t ways t o kill a sale is to allow a prospective bu'ier to
move _i~ a _c o_nside rable t ime before se ttl emen t . Often when this oc - •
curs, tt •s drff 1cu! t to get to get him to sett lem ent. He may keep finding •
fh 1n gs w r ong w1th the h_o use . keep insist ing they be fixed, or even
worse demanQ tha t a n ad tus tment be made in price.
•

.

Somet in:'es th e r esult is even more disastrous. The seller becomes

e
e

d1 sgusted w1th all the all eged com plaints and ca lls the whole sale off
He m ust then sta rt all over again .
· •
~rimy op i ni on, i t is better t o let a house sit empty than to let a pro- •

spec f ive buye r m ove in before closing the sale. Although it is not gOOd
fo_
r a house to be em pty, i t 's sti ll a faster and surer way of selling it
With the least trou ble.
If th ere is anyth ing we Cdrl do to help you in the field of real estate

As yo n can sec , poor

NORTH
+A Q J 7
• J 76
t A K 10
+A K 10

However, expert East had

EAST

• 10 9 3 2

• K864
¥ 5I

• 54 3 2
• 43 2

ca rded all his four spades in

claimed the grand slam.

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: North
West

North East

Au tomatic. blue, low miles, showroom cond.

'78 GRAN PRIX

2 NT

Pass

4+

Pass

4 NT

Pass

7•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Victor

for dummy
play , bid seven hearts.
There are any number of

ways to play the hand , but
the Hog decided on his own
line . He played two rounds of
trumps

and

cashed

minor suit jacks.

$8990
$4895

$7995
$4195

·,

I

I

I

$5295

,A I

6,900 miles . Sti l l smells new .

'77 BUICK ELECTRA
2 Dr . Hdtp ., loaded wi th power assist s, silver with silver landau top .

$5995
$3995
$3895

'

~
~
~
~
~

~4

L .J. Burgu ndy wi th mat ching landau top, loaded. N ice, new Gran Pr ix
trade .

1

/-

20%0ff
SUGG RETAIL

~Cross Your Heart" Soft Siders··

~

~
~
~
~
~
~

~~

4
~

g

gLiving®bras

A ir , whi te with burgundy I andau top, R: allye wheels.

$6295

'76 BUICK SKYLARK
4 Or ., air cond ., one owner , V -6 eng. Econorny'he,re.

y
Welcome/ ,
Come In and Browse Around

$5495

~

~.

~ i can't believe it's a girdle· s1ylesl
~

~

~

~

;-;.
~

~

.

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
~
LINGERIE DEPARTMENT, 2ND ruJOR .
.

5',2;}- **1rtrtrk*

.

at y

Vlasova had been " under heavy
escort since the defection of her
husband."
Tass quoted Miss Vlasova as
saying the grounding was
"outrageous ." Earlier , In the
presence of Soviet officials, she had
!Did American negotiators, "I love
my husband, but he made his
decisioo to stay here and I made .
mine to leave."
However, Schell said Miss
Vlasova and Godunov had agreed to
defect together. He said Miss
Vlasova "began to ·Waffle" two days
before Godunov sought asylum .
Schell said he had warned the
State Department on Thursday that
(Continued on page 10)

•

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1979

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
proposed state transportation
budget which contains no gasolide
sales tax increase and does not allow
f&lt;r maj&lt;r new construction goes
before the House Finance
Conunlttee Tuesday.
The $1.7billion document includes
1546 million in federal funds that
won~ be spent unless the state can
cane up with its share of highway
funding.

Pomeroy Police have

buslnesl! houses early Sunday morning. Police Chief
Jed Webster said Plcke01 used a heavy log chain attached with wrenches in his alleged window breaking
l!pl"ee! which started at the Excelsior CG. on E. Main
and moved down into the bualnes8 !lection. Some
glasaes cracked and broken were large window fronts

~

~ Support Can Be Beautiful• bras ~

'76 MONTE CARLO

•

failed, but it was restored . A
suggestion that the pa~ngers be
transferred to a secluded airport
lounge was rejected, McHenry said.
Forty-gine Americans and 10
other non-Soviets left the Moscowbound plane early Saturday.
McHenry, who was not permitted
on the aircraft, rejected a Soviet
suggestion that U.S. journalists be
allowed to talk with Miss Vlasova.
McHenry said U.S. officials
wanted Miss Vlasova to get off the
plane and tell them she was leaving
of her own volition, but said there
were "ather alternatives,'' which he
did not specify .
He said one reason the
government ac:U!d was because Misl!

New ·construction projects
not included in proposal

&amp;milled Ronnie M. Plctens,.23, Racine, who allegedly
went on a window breaking ipree at SOD'le 19 Pomeroy

~
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~
~

~and Cotton bras

'76 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX

to hold the plane until U.S. officials
collld talk privately with Miss
Vla!llva.
Henry Owen, U.S. ambaSsador at
large, said President Carter was
being briefed on· the stalemate
"several times a day" during his
weekend at Camp David, Md.
Owen said Carter was making
policy decisions in the negotiations,
but declined to specify 1"hether he
was referring to talks at the airport
and elsewhere in New York.
Meanwhile, the passengers
aboard the Aeroflot jetliner were
probably "quite uncornf!l'table" as
a result of their long confinement,
McHenry said.
At one point, the air cooditioning

And the Soviet news agency Tass
on Sunday published the text of a
telegram from the ballerina's
mother, Alexandra Gerasimova
Drozhdina, asking Carter to end the
"cruel abuse of elementary human
rights ."
"For two days my daughter has
been subjected to cruel moral
tort\ll'e," It said.
The woman charged : "The
American auth&lt;l'ities are setting
absolutely illegal conditions f&lt;~" the
departure of the .aircraft with my
daughter and other Soviet
passengers aboard ."
The Soviet Union has formally
protested to both the · United States
and the United Nations the decision

POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 94

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4
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**** ******1rtrtr{;( ~f ·

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Two
JX'Iaoners died today in a burst of
gunfire at the city jail where
inmates were holding three guards
hostage , officials Said. One of the
guards was wounded slighUy before
the three-4ay siege ended.
Pollee sharpshooters with
automatic weapons entered the
second-floor lockup and began
emptying tbe celli! and taking the
inmates tD a nearby county jail.
Three guns were recovered . .
All three guarda later emerged
from the sec011d-floor lockup. The
wounded guard walked without
assistance and the other two were
unhanned.
Police Lt. J.O. Smith said seven or
eight shots rang out at 5:32 a.m. In
the lockup where 84 inmates had
been holding the three guards
hostage since Saturday morning.

in businesl ~ wtule others were only windows In
doors. The windows were not really broken out by the
chain and wrenches but they .were damaged with
cracks and hole. and will have to be replaced. Olief
Webster said that Pickens Ia on parole from a penal institution. This Ia the front window r:i the Pomeroy
National Bank which had several large holes in It as
weU as being cracked to the top followings window
breaking spree in Pomeroy earl)' Sunday morning.

Seven people injured
in three accidents

z

~

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~

But Soviet officials said Miss
Vlasova, 36, wanted to return to her
homeland and was afraid to leave
the plane to · meet privately with
American auth!l'lties f!l' fear that
they would spirit her away.
Chief U.S. negotiator Donald
McHenry,
deputy
U.S.
representative ID the United Nations
Security Council, told repo~rs late
Sunday that the crisis would soon be
over. However, McHenry did not
disclose the basis for his optlmiBm.
Meanwhile, Orville Schell,
Godunov's lawyer, said he and
Godunov were certain Miss Vlasova
wanted to remain in · the United
states. The dancer was standing by
near the airport, the attorney said.

e

VANDAL CHARGED -

Aug . 26

LJ P. EE

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$3995

Black , AM FM·Tape, new Pre m bi ll board t ir es, one loca l owner . 79
Trans Am t r ade.

i

NEW YORK (AP) -The mother
of ballerina Ludmilla Vlasova
appealed to President Carter to end
the "cruel moral torture" as her
daughter and 52 other Soviet citiZens
remained aboard an Aeroflot
jetliner grounded at Kennedy
International Airport since Friday.
Carter was "cl011ely involved," a
state Department official said, l!S
negotiations dragged Into another
day over the fate of the wife of
Bolshoi Ballet star Alexander
Godunov, who defecied last week .
American
officials
want
assurllnces that MlM Vlasova, also a
member of the internationally
renowned troupe, was returning to
the Soviet Union voluntarily.

month period beginning Oct. 1.
Despite
the
efforts
of
Transportation Director David Weir
and lobbying by supporters, Gov,
James A. Rhodes did not endorse the
tax increase.
Without the governor's backing,
the proposal drew less-thanenthusiastic reviews from · an
already tax-ehy Legislature. It will
be dropped from House Bill 656
before the House Finance .
Committee
reviews
the
transportation budget.
The federal fiDlda included In the
budget are expected ti) be replaced
by a provision saying the money can
be spent if additional state funda are
available.
The transportation department,
whose budget is traditionally
separated from the state's overall.
He said some of the inmates spending document, has been
apparently turned against the operating on a three'-rnonth budget
ringleaders of the siege and began included in an Interim spendlng bill
firing . "The prisoners themselves passed on June 30.
have revolted against the leadership
There's some agitation within the
of their spokesmen," Smith said;
Legislature to put the transportation
The dead prisoners were Identified department on a fiscal year
as FeUx Lorenzo and Eugene Shaw. beginning Oct. I, three months alter
L«enzo, Serving a !&amp;I}.year term for the financial year starts for other
a previous crime Involving hostages, state departments.
had been seen earlier wearing a
Supporters of the plan say the
guard unlftrn1.
change would give legislators more
Guard William Nellon, 52, was time to W()l'k on the transportation
grazed in the hand and leg. He was budget. But department officlals
taken from the jail by ambulance. claim the switch would Cl!USe
The other guards were identified as ll'Oblems In scheduling contruction
Dave Murray, 35, and Bob Hansen, starts ihat have to be moved from
52.
one year tAl tbe next.
The shooting ended the siege that
House Finance Commitee
began when an unknown number of Chairman Myrl Shoemaker, Dinmates overpowered a guard, took Bourneville, said he expects the
his gun and used it to take the other transportation budget to be ready
two guards hostage In the lockup. for floor action shortly after the
Starpshooters were stationed on Legislature resumes regular
the roof of the three-story pollee sessions oo Sept. 11.
building, situated about 4 miles from
Shoemaker also said he ell)lects to
the Strip casinos.
receive a proposed capital·
Earlier In the day pollee had improvements budget from the
agreed to a list of 18 demands issued Rhodes administration early In
by the inmates dealing with jail
September. He also plans to move
conditions and prisoners' rights, but that document quickly to the floor.
the prisoners refused to release their
hostages.
Sffilth said "they didn't like all of
them (the pollee responses) ."
The points that were . denied
Included demands for better
representation by public defenders,
improved facilities for Sunda¥
religious services and radios In
every ceU.
.
A local att~r~~ey and a television
newsman had served as mediators
during negotiations with the
NEWMATAMORAS,Ohio (AP)inmates.
Sffilth said the first two demflnds Teachers In the Frontier Local
could not be met because they were School District In Washington
outside pollee juri8dlction, and the County walked off their jobs thla
thlrd'was Impossible because not an morning, refusing to wcrk any
longer without a contract.
jail cells had electrtcal outlets.
Classes are not scheduled to begin
The prisoners had demanded
better medical care, access to court until Wednesday, but teachers were
recorda and an exercise area. They to have been at wcrk · today to
also complained about cold food and prepare for the opening of scbool.
lukewarm showers, and sought
The teachers' contract expired
better laundry service, complaining last January. The action today
poorly-done laundry "makes us look follows intense negotiations during
even worse when we go to court and which the Frontier Local Educaticin
Association said the school board
confront the judge."
offered little In tenns of salary
improvement or Improvements in
non-economic issues.
·
Association President Kevin
Official resigns post
Whitby said last minute efforts to
McARTHUR, Ohio (AP) -Vinton arrange a meeting between the
county's director of elections has board and the teachers failed
resigned because the county board because not all board members were
r:i elections would not adopt a punch- avfl,ilable Sunday. Whitby said
another meeting is set for thla
card system of voting.
George Booth, who served In the afternoon.
Superintendent Charles Brown
pOst for 'll years, wanted the county
to do away with paper ballots, which had no comment.
are still in use In only 12 r:i Ohio's 88
COWltieii.
SQUAD RUN
The paper ballots take longer to
The Pomeroy Emergency SqUid
tally than do machine-counted was called to the Pine Grove Road
ballots. Booth wanted the county to Sunday fer Hugo Kaptelna who was
make the switch before next year's taken · to Veterans Memorial
presidential primary.
.
Hospital.

"Nobody wants to get in the
middle of a tax Increase at the
beginning of a recession," ooe Ohio
Department of ,Transportation
official said in explaining the
unpopularity of a proposed 4 percent
sales tax boost on the wholesale
price of gasoline .
The tax would have raised an
estimated $244.1 million f&lt;r state
and local governments for the 21-

Two prisoners
die in battle

~~*******PLAYTE~ *******~~

~
g

. IMPALA SEDAN

Seeking entertairunent? Or information' Then look no further
than the Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries! A veritable treasuretrove of data and enjoyment is
stored on the shelves of the libraries,
and iJ is all available at no charge.
The Bookmobile also offers excellent ·servic-e to those of you in
other vicilJities.

Aug . 19, 24 .

Ballerina's mother seeking Carter's help

make available S329,000 In
uncompensated services
during the fiscal year
which begins on July 1, 1979
and ends on June 30, 1980.
Uncompensat~
servicn
w ill be- available upon
request to c:lig lble pers.ons
on a first -come first-serve
basis until the annual com ·
pl iance level Of 1329.000 Is
satisfied . Eligible persons
are those who are In neec2 Of
care and whose family in ·
come does not exc~ the
current poverty income
guidel ines .. tabllshed by
the Community Services
Administration. Income is
defi ned In accordance wifh
the Community Sendces
Administration gu idelines
definitions. This notice i s
published pursuant to
federal law set forth at •2
CFR 124.SOS Notice of
Ava i lab ili ty
of
Un compensated Sen• ices.

Jim and Susie Soulsby are anXiously awaiting the arrival of the
$5000 they won ln. the Ohio State Lottery. It should be about a month
before they process is complete. According to Susie, they have the
money spent about ten times, but
then again, who wouldnt have!! !

LEGAL NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
Notice · is hereby given
that sealed bids will be
received by the City
Manager of the City of
Gallipolis, Oh io at his Office
in the Mun icipal Building
tor approximately JOO ·tons
(more or less) of snow and
ice salt, approximately 5
tons (more or less} of
calcium chlor ide, and ap ·
prox imately 75 toms (more
or less) of cold mix for use
by the City Street Depart ment .
Bids will be received at
the above named Office un ·
til 12 :00 Noon, on Friday ,
August
31 , 1979 and
publicly opened and read at
that ti me and place . Bid
forms may be obtained in
the Office of the City
Manager .

queen-jack of spades. The
Hog held one spade and the

'78 CHEV. MAILBU 4. DR

'77 TRANS AM

(Do yo u have a qu estion fo r
th e expe rts? Write ·· Ask th e
Experts ." care. ol thts news·
paper. Individ ua l questions
will be answered If accompanied by s iJmp ed, self-addressed envelopes. Th e
mos t in tere s ting qvestions
wifl be used tn th is colu mn
and w1fl receive copies of
JACO BY MODERN .)

points

10,813 miles . Nice.

E CHARGER SE

1N EWSPA P F. H F.NTEHPHI SE ASSN .)

trump showed three aces
and the Hog, adding at least

'78 CHEV. NOVA

Regency, loaded with ext r as, silver , one local owner .

have opened one notrump .
Now your best r ebid i s an
underbid of two hea rts.

points for his dummy play .
His {our-club bid w as
Gerber, North's four no-

'78 CHEV. CAPRICE 2 HDTP

'77 OLDS 98 SEDAN

rebid. With a balance d 16
high ca rds points you should

Mollo's Hideous

Cl assic , cruise, AM ·FM. Rallye wheels, 22. 127 miles. Sharp.

3

• J 873
Partner · re spo nd s one
hea rt to your on e-diamond
opening . A California reader
wants · to know the correct
rebid . -There is no corr ect

Hog uses a special point
count in which he adds three

three

8-25-B

+ A5
¥A J 3
+ K QJ 2

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Air , AM FM , 10,240 miles, new Bonnevill e trade,lik.e new.

Pon1iac trade .

You hold :

Opening lead: • 3

$5995 $5495

Tudor , 6 cy l., aut omatic,

Ask liM IXDIPtl

South

Dummy retained tht:: ace-

'79 CHEVELLE TUDOR

very bad player, had come
to the Hog's rescue. He dis-

an effort to give his partner
a count. So the Hog simply

•

Ai r , cru sie, ca st alum . wheels, custom in1erior , low mileages .

been fooled and gone down if
it had not been that West, a

• J 76
• J 76

rest of the trumps to come
down to a three-card ending.

'79 TRANS AM

ent pain .
Even the Hog ·would have

¥AKQII98

kings. Then he ran off the

~

discarded his three sma ll
spades as quickly as poss ible and without any appar-

• Q98
• Q98 5
SOUTH
• 5,

•

e

king of spades in order t o
retain both t.he dia mond and
club queens.

WEST

• 32

East

had bee n forced to blank his

8-25-A

m

Incidentally, library hoW'S are
By Jayne Lee Hoe!Ueb
10:30
a. m. to 8 p. m. on Mon-.
Quite an unusual house in quite an
day;
10:30
a. m. to 5 p. m. Tuesday
unusual location!
through
Saturay,
and 2 to 4:30p. m.
· I'm speaking of the home of Dele
Sunday.
However,
the ho\11'8 will
and Ainy Hill, located in a very
change
Sept.
4
to
10
:30
a. m. t~ 8 p.
rustic (to say the least) location outm
side. of Racine. The house is an Aframe, which. was designed by the Mondays through Fridays, 10:30 a.
Hills themselves after they weren't m. to 5 p. m. Saturdays, and 2 to 4:30
satisfied with standard A-frame p. m. Sundays. Please, take advantage of this marvelous service! ]
plans.
The hideaway home has some
Where has the summer gone?
very WJusual features, including a
Area
students will be seeing their
Jacuzzi, which is a whirlpool-type
vacatiQO
come to a screaminl! halt
sunken bathtub ; a living room with
when
school
starts Tuesday in the
Ole ceiling the full height of the
Eastern
Local
School District, and
house, open staircases which lead to
Sept.
5
in
the
Meigs
and Southern
upper floors with each overlooking
districts.
"It's
been
a
short
summer,
Ole floor below (there are three in
Chllrlie
Brown!
"
all) and a chlnmey extending from
Ole basement through all three other
stories, over 42 feet high and 10 feet
wide. Additionally, the hoUBe'is very
tastefully decorated, and each
room's decor is related to the rest of
Remeber
the house.
SUNDAY
And the Hilli! had never even set
GENE WEST, Falnnont, W. Va.,
foot in an A-frame before they drew
will be the viSiting evangelist In a
their own plans I
series of gospel meetings to begin at
the Chapel Hlll Church of Christ SunDon't forget Marilyn Turner's conday,
Aug . 26 and continuing through
cert this afternoon.
Thursday,
Aug. 30. The sehedllle of
She will present some lovely light
services
will
remain the same on
melodies in her deep contralto voice
Sunday:
Bible
Study, 9:30 a.m.;
that I'm sure you would enjoy.
Morning
Worship,
10:30 a.m.; SwtThe prsentation will be this afterday
evening
worship,
6. Service. lrill
noon at 3, at the Meigs Junior High
be
each
evening
at
7:30, Monday
School In Middleport·. A freewill of.
through
Thursday'
fering will be taken to help cover expenses.
NOTICE OF
Mter the concert, the personable
AVAILABILITY
·Miss Turner will be mingling with
OF UNCOMPENSATED
SERVICES
the audience in an lnfonnal gatherAugust 26, 1979
ing. Do try to attend . It 11 be well
Holzer Medical Center,
located at 38S Jack$0n
worth your while.
Pike, Gal lipolis, Ohio, will

Defense blunder cues game

dummy's minor suit ace-

•

I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

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pl ease phone or drop in at LEADINGHAM R: EAL ESTATE, 512 Second ·
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MOVE IN BEFORE SffilEMENT?

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Today
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Statewide rain expected Sunday

Execution
scheduled
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP ) Jesse Bishop wu scheduled to
die in the gas chamber today, but
public defenders are staWng to
give the confessed murderer
more time to live.
Bishop had opposed appeals
and other legal delays, calling ·
them a "farce" that violated his
rights and "prolonged the suffertng" for him and hla family.
But u.s. Supreme Court
· Justice William Rehnqulst on
Saturday iaaued an indefinite
ally of execution, and provided a
aerie~ ol questl011.1 to be . answered by the attorney general's
office and the public defenders
who asked that the execution be
stopped.

Rehnqulst . set a deadline of
midnight Tuesday. The defenders
were expected to wait unW after
the current death warrant for
Bishop expired at midnight
tonight.

Sniper examined
HONOLULU (AP) - A mental
hospital outpatient held as a
suspect In a l!niper shooting that
lett six people wounded was
eiBIOJned a day earlier by
specialists who found "nothing
unusual" In his behavior, offlclala say.
·
Robert Ernest Mlller, 35, was
booked for investigation of attempted murder Saturday nigh~
lJl minutes after il sniper opened
fire on a crowd of people along
Walklkl's main thoroughfare,
pollee said. A .22 caliber rifle was
recovered llbortly afterwards
from a secon&lt;l-elory construction
(Continued on page 10)

Seven persons wre Injured in three
accidents investigated by the GaiiiaMelgs Post State Highway Patrol
over the weekend.
At 1 p.m. Sunday, Ernie K. Davis,
22, Langsville, was driving east on
SR 124 In Meigs CoWJty when a car
driven by Mary J . Bums, 16, Radcliffe, came left of center striking
Davis ' car head-&lt;Jn.

Ohio records seven
traffic fatalities
By The Associated Press
At least seven people were killed
in accidents on Ohio roads this
weekend, according to the Highway
Pairol.
Only two of the victims were
drivers. Three were paSsengers and
two were pedestrians, Including a II).
year -&lt;lid Morrow boy hit by a car in
Warren CoWJty Sunday .
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 ,p.m. Friday to midnight
Swtday.
.
The dead :
SUNDAY
MORROW - David A. Odorn, 10,
of Morrow, struck by a car on a
Warren County road.
DELAWARE ...:william P. Seils,
2i; of Bucyrus, in a one-car accident
oo U.S. 23 In Delaware County.
SAINT MARYS - Mlletus H.
Miesse, 76, of Celina, a passenger, in
a two-car.accident on a Saint Marys
city street.
SATURDAY
DAYTON - Dawn F. Pugh, 30, of
Daytnn, a pedestrian struck by a
ftelght train at a Dayton railroad
crossing.
JACKSON-Marlin K. McGowan,
30, of Jackson, a passenger, in a onecar accident on Ohio 139 In Jackson
County.
PORTSMOUTH - Willlam C.
Brodt, 54, of Blue Creek, in a two-car
accident on U.S. 52 in Scioto County.
CAMBRDIGE - Ronald J . Iiay,
16, of ·Senecaville, a pas.enger, in a·
ooHar accident Qn Ohio 761 il•
Guernsey Count,y.

Both Davis and Bums and a
passenger In Bums' car, Pam J.
Bums, 15, WUkesville, were injured
In the mWtap.
Pam Burns was treated and
released from Holzer Medical Center while Davis and Mary Bums
were admitted. Mary Sums was
cited for left of center.
Earlier Sunday, at lO :.S a.m.,
Gwenda Christian, 20, Oak ijili, was
driving east on U.S. 35 near Rio
Grande when sl)e attempted to pass
a vehicle traveling ahead of her. She
lost control and collided head-on
with a car driven by James W.
Doughty, 32, Columbus.
Both drivers and a passenger in
Doughty's car, Betty Lott, 49,
Columbus, were Injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center, where
Christian and Doughty were ad·
mltted. Lott was transferred to
University Hospital.
Allen Oiler, 31, Gallipolis,' was in·
jured In a one-car accident at 2 a.m.
Sunday when he was traveling south
on SR 7 below the Meigs CoWJty line,
lost control of·hla car and went Into a
ditch. He was taken to · Holzer
Medical Center and admitted.

HIGHWAYS CLOSED
.. Due to beavy raiD fall over !be

weekend, two blgbways were cloeed
Moact.y momlng.
.. The Oblo Department of Highways
in Meigs County reported Route W
cloaed al Lanpvllle aad Route 881 at
Saowvme. 11le routes ""re expected
to be reopened soon as lbe
backwaters re&lt;!eded.
.. The Meigs County Department of
Hlgbways reported no roads closed
due to tbe water.

Stolen car
recovered

Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports a 1974 Che\orolet
·Vega reported stolen Saturday
morning from Roger Little Used
Cars at Pomeroy has been
recovered.
The vehicle was
discovered Sunday afternoon sitting
along
County
Road
40
approximately one-tenth of a mile
Mostly cloudy wlih a chance of off U.S Route 33, near Burliogbam.
showers or thunderstonns tonight · The Pomeroy Police dusted the
·
and Tuesday. U:lw tonight In the mid vehicle f&lt;l' fingerprints .
The sheriff also reports Olarles
60s. High Tuesday in the low to mid
McLain, GaWpolls, was driving
Ills. Chance of rain Is 40 percent
north on state Route 7 near
tonight and Tuesday.
Bradbury,Saturday afternoon and
struck and killed a deer that ran into
EXTENDED FORECAST
his path. There was slight damage
Wedne1day lhrougb Friday: ID his vellicle. ·
Chance of abowen or tlnanderatorma
Sunday, Olarles Hysell, Meigs
eacb day, Higba In the 80s and lows County Dog Warden, reported tha
In the lOB.
someone had apparently backed a
vehicle into the fence at the county
dog pound. A metal post was bent,
The vehicle and driver are unknown.
ASSlST GlVEN
Debbie King, Route 2, Racine,
The Middleport Fire Department
reported to the sheriff that
answered a call at 2;·15 p.m. Sunday
to assist lbe Lakin Fire Department sometime after II p.m. Saturday
night, someone punctured the tired
in extinguishing a fire at Ul~ Lakin
on her vehicle. The incident is under
State Hospital.
investigation.

Weather

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Frontier
teachers
striking

t

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