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pesember 26, 195:
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Pag-1G-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio
a

Health project advocates looking.for new fUnding
CLEVELAND (AP) ~ Despite
cancellation of a federal grant, advocates of a planned health care net·
work for the citY's ileedy neigh·
borhoods are opttmlstiQ that new
funding sources will be found.
Medical school adminiStrators at
the Case Western-Reserve Univer·
sity learned Tuesday that a $1.6
million federal grant which they had
counted on has been set aside by a
congressional conference com·
mittee.
Neighborhood groups had been
lobbying. for the medical school to
land one of five proposed medical
and dental offices. The Cleveland
Health Network project was
designed by the medical school to
provide health care to needy neighborhoods.
.
Philip Frieder, associate dean of
the medical school and responsible

OPENSATIJRDAY
The Meigs County Registrar of
Motor Vehicles office, ioc;ated in the
former Gibbs Grocery, Mulberry
Aile.,. Pomeroy, will be open lor
business about 9 a.m. to noon Saturday for residents needing license
plates after having been closed
Thursday and Friday for the
holiday.

PRESIDENT WITII TilE PRESENTS- Pesident Jimmy Carte~ and
First Lady Rosa lynn Carter leave the home of her mother, "Miss Allie"
Smith with a bag _of gifts during a Thursday Christmas Day visit in
Plains, Ga. The Carter family spent the Christmas holiday in tbelr
hometown of Plains.

lor the network's planning, said
physicians had been interviewed for
hiring and office sites had been sur·
veyed.
The Chicago regional office of the
.U.S. Department of Health and
Hwnan Services said Oct. 30 that the
project would be funded with the
grant. The medical school had ex·
peeled an initial installment of
$350,000.
"I'm an optimist enough to believe
it will still come, but not the day af·
ter tomorrow,' said Frieder, who
has worked on the project lor about
two years.
The grant cutoff surprised Dr.
Richard E. Behrman, dean of the
school, who said he received no prior
notice that the project's funding was
in jeopardy. The Oct. 30 funding announcement caused him to believe
the network was on solid ground, he
said.
"The real problem is that this
deprives the people of needed health
care," said Behrman, who is seeking
a review of the decision. "Those
people (federal administratorsin
Chicago) are so detached from the
needs of the community."
U.S. Reps. Mary Rose Oakar and

}

~~~~~;:;:;:;:;::;;;~;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;;:;:;;;;;~

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ELBERFELD$

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nation 's aider metropolitan areas.
" [n our view the moral a nd
material reso urces of g.overnment

would be better expended 10 planning for the future and helping
people to adjust to future im·
peratives in way• that deri ~e from
an understanding and acceptance of
change," the report said.
The panel urged programs to
assist older cities in coping with
fin ancial pressures, particula rly
welfare costs.
Transforming older cities. from

I

ANTI-SOVIET DEMONSTRATION - Tehran pollee and
revolutionary guards push back a crowd of angry demonstrators at the

.

'

REWARD

I

A reward of $500.00 is being offered by the
Southern Local Board of Education, for information that will lead to the arrest and con·
VICfion of the person or-persons that broke into
the Southern Local High School on the night of
December 1S, 1980.
Informant to contact Th Sh 'ff D
e erl
ep t

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Afghan embassy In Tehran Saturday. The group protesting Soviet In·
terventlon In Afghanistan earlier attacked the Soviet embassy. (AP
Laserphoto).

Vol.

14

No. 48

Copyighted 1980

.

.J

10 Sections, 74 Pages 35 Cents

WASIDNGTON (AP)- A Reagan
transition task Ioree says most of the
remaining 1,547 miles of the planned
42,500-mile interstate . highway
system should not be constructed,
lfhe Washington Post reported
· Saturday.
·,, The newspaper said.the transition·
Pllnel indicated it favors limiting the
fl;equefley ~lrnment recalis of.
"- ape-.edly ·-tiirfl! ·automobil_.,
whlje ~going ~ ~- ~ ,
federal .hlel-tii1CliiOIIIY ltandards for
motor vehicles appear to be un·
necessary.
The Post said it obtained a copy of
a report prepa red by the task Ioree,
headed by Claude S. Brinegar, a former transportstion secrc'" "Y· The
group includes Drew Lewis,

.

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

NOT GE'ITING RICH - ~ppareotly operators of
gasoline 'statiow; In Pomeroy are not getting rich. This
station, operated by Jack Welker for eight years and
then several ye31'!1 by Lou Smith, is the third station on

Pomeroy's Malo St. to close in the past lew months.
The narrow margin of profit, difficulty in securing
capable help, high rents and long hours on the part of
the operator are given as reasons for closing of such

'Solidarity'
everywhere
in Poland

SAVE

ALL PRICES HAVE BEEN REDUCED
FOR THIS YEAR-END SALE! ! !

UPTO

•

SIMMONS OLDS-CADIUAC, INC.
Loaded Demo

1980 OLDS 98 Regency Sedan.......... '9895

1976 VW Dasher Cpe.••••••••••••••••••• s3695
11 ,000mi les, 6cy l. std. '4295
1979 CHEV• lJz ton C10•••••••••••••••••
1979 FORD LTD Cpe.••••••••••••••••••• s4795
1978 Olds 98 Regency Cpe. ••••••••••••• '4795
1978 CHRYS. Cordoba Cpe ••••••••••••••• s3695
,1977 PONTIAC GP CtJt! •• ~ ••••••••••••••• s3495

ON BEDROOM, LIVING.
ROOM,
.
.
DINING ROOM AND
.

OTHER SELECTED MERCHANDISE

1980 AMC Spir~ Cpe.••••••••••••• ~ ••••• '4395
1974 OLDS Cut. Sedan •••••••••••••••••. '995
1974 OLDS 98 Sedan ••·••••• •••••••••••. '995
1975 OLDS Cut. Sedar... •• •• ••••••••••• '795
1973 CADIUAC DeVille Sedan ••••••••••• s1295
1973 CADILlAC DeVille Sedan ••••••••••• '595

LARRY'S
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WAYSIDE FURNITURE
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WARSAW , Poland (AP) - The
name of "Solidarity," the trade
union that has changed the face of
Poland, is emblazoned everywhere
in a country where the independent
union movement did not even exist
four months ago .
.
The Solidarity emblem, a jumble
of 'letters unde r a red and white
Polish nag, is proclaimed from ban·
ners on Warsaw buildings, village
bulletin boards and the backs of
country buses in' a show of un:
precedented popular ap)ieal.
It is printed across T-shirts and
' buttons worn by countleSs Poles.
The emblem appears on posters
advertising art auctions to raise
money for the independent union,
which the &lt;;ommunist government
agreed to let Polish workers set up
as a condition lor ending a crippling
surruner strike wave.
Now the name adorns advertisements lor an exhibit of photos
about the shipyard strikes in Gdan- ·
sk, headquarters lor the strike
movement.
'
Pias and posters are just hints of
~ soctal. force that i.s revising the
'
way
Poland ,runs itself' and handles
~· ·
1 ••
i~ huge ecQJlorhic problems.
Sll,EIISTILL SOARING - Americans held off for a whDe before ,
One change most visible to Poles
Cbrlltma but ID the end pve in 8lld illwldalt.'CI stores across the nation,
hu been more open reporting and
geaenlinll very 1ood !~vela of olalet1 ill most areas. Even after the holiday
discuSsion of the country's problems
Aletl are good ae aboppen Wke advantage of post.Cbrfatmas bargaiw;.
In newspapers and on television . .
Selae bu)' their cards early tao, !Ike tbls woman In New; York, ..vtng
Poll!ll joke of a countryman who
them ·~~rUle nest year. (AP Laaerpboto ).
returned from a long vacation after
· the changes were made and so was
afraid to listen to the new-style
~tate
reporting 01\ the evening news that
Moatly cloody, beCOIIilng windy and warmer with a high in the low 40s , The
he ~ in.a haUway outside the
clwlce of preclpitatiqn is 20 percent. ·
·
room containing his television, · ·
.
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Announcllll 111M· the strikes were
OlilaBIIIEdld Foneut- For Monday through Wednesday - a chance of · oflleldy over on Aug. Sl, strike
IIIOW ftlll'l'ltllll U1e nortb Tuelday. Olberwllle, fair thro~ the period. Mild
luder Lech Walesa gave a hint of
on Monday. TuniiJII COlder Tuelday and Wednesday. Htghs in the 406 and his cllolce of a name for the new
low 11011 ~, cooling to the mlcl-111 to mid-30s.by Wednesday. I..ows in the unton by ustna the word "solid11rit1"
101 Mondf, fallinl to the upper teens and Ill by Wednesday.
(Cuntlnued on pa1e A3)

Extended ·forecast,

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business .
Phone 992-6614
Pomeroy

President-elect Ronald Reagan's
d foice to head the Transportation
Department. ·
The report asserted that federal
support of new mass-transit rail
systems "has been largely a wasted
effort" and that no new systems
should be started. However, the
panel did support funding "at a
-mode,st level" to upgrade
established subway and trolley
1!1~· ·

'.·.

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00 the Interstate highway system,
the task force said concluded that
" most of the remaining . 5 percent
should not be completed."
According to current government
figures, 96.4 percent of the planned
42,500 mile interstate system is open
to traffi c or under construction. The

govenunent has spent a total of $78.1
billion on the system since it was approved in 1956.
The Reagan task force report
noted that some sections of proposed
interstate highways running through
urban areas "are too expensive and
too disruptive to be worth building.."
On automobile recalls, the panel
silld "the frequency and 1JU18111tude
of I'IICIIIJ. ~Y have .,._r -ny
beyond • reMOIUible cosl-effectfve
'!Jnlll"ln the put four years and that
criteria for recalls "should be
examined promptly."
The wide-ranging report contended that " market forces" would
be sufficient to insure the construction of more fuel-efficient cars.

Midwest, East warm up Saturday

LE4,DERS CONVICTED
Twenty-two · Nazi leaders were
convicted of war crimes by the International ·Tribunal in Nuremberg
in !946.
·

A LOT OF USED CAR

A MtJitimedia Inc . N ews paper

Interstate system should
not ·be completed--panel

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Sunday, December 28,1980

Middleport- Pomeroy- Ga ll~p~l is-Point Pleasant

surance program.

- Giving industry more nexibility
in meetin g environ mental
regulations.
- Economic policies aimed at
reducing government interference
with business, to foster' 'a climate in
which the private sector can move
toward greater rates of growth and
productivity."

fast later Saturday and the demonstration disbanded with no reports of
violence.
Reports from the Iranian capital
of Tehran said Afghan militants
scaled the walls of the Soviet Embassy there and tore down the Soviet
flag. Those who gained entrance to
the compound reportedly were par·
ticipants in a demonstration involving thousands in the streets outside the building. The reports said
the inv~ders were driven out of.the
compound by Islamic revolutionary
guards.
The Soviet news agency Tass '
denounced the attack as an
"outrageous provocation." It called
the demonstrators " thugs" and
"hooliga.ns" and said they inflicted
"considerable material damage" in
the embassy's reception hall,
Tass reported from the Afghan
capital of Kabul the opening of a conference of " the national and
(Continued on page A3)

tntint

tmes

manufacturing centers to ones
focused on services and consumption ." will require that their
'health' bedefinedatnew,andoflen,
)ower levels of population and em'
ployment,"itsaid.
According to the Post, other
proposals offered by the corrunission
included :
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- A negative income tax to
llllll!llllll!llllll!-111111!111111!111111!111111!-llllll!llllll!llllll!llllll!llllll! ... _llllll!
replace the welfare sy~tem.
r--~---------------:-~-------L------,----~----,----------''-"-"--+!-:
- A voucher system enabling
people to purchase their own health
insurance, rather than creating a
comprehensive national health in-

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ByBARRYSHLACHTER
Associated Press Writer
NEW DELHI, India (AP)
Afghan nationalists and their supporters Saturday marked the first
anniversary of a Soviet-hacked coup
in Afghanistan with anti.Soviet
demonstrations from India to Norway.
Afghan President Babrak Karma!, who came to power in that
coup, told a Kabul coruerence that
the continuing anti-communist
rebellion has seriously damaged his
nation's economy.
In New Delhi, about 250 Afghans,
some ca rr~i ng burning effigies .of
Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev,
marched on the Soviet Embassy
shouting " We kill Russians." They
joined some 80 of their countrymen
who began a hunger strike Friday to
protest the presence of an estimated
85,000 Soviet troops stationed in their
nation.
The hunger strikers ended their

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fMEiGs -EQUiPPiEir-ool
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WASHI NGTON ( AP ) - The
Umted States should adopt an urban
· pohcy that not only accepts but actually . encourages the current
populatiOn sh1 ft from the Northeast
and Midwest to the Swl Belt region,
a presidential panel says. .
The Washmgton Post sa1d today
the recorrunenda t io~ ·was contained
in a new report drawn up by the
President's Commission for a
Nationa l Agenda fo r the Eighti es.
Th e co mmission's re por t
acknowledged that the new urban
policy it recommends could have
~ .~ trawnati c consequences" fOr Nor, thern cities.
However, it declared thai there ·
was "a fundamental problem" in
trying to slop the decline of the

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KIMES ARRIVES
Going Out of Business Now 1
FOR DUTY
.1
Now In Progress
1
First Sergeant Thomas M. Kimes,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth K. 1Pomeroy, 0 . Ph. 992·2176
Kimes of Hartford, W. Va., has 1
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Hours: 8-S Mon.- Fri.
arrived for duty at Fort Knox, Ky.
8·12Sat.
I
Closed Sunday
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Sergeant Kimes, a first sergeant, I
New Idea 1
was previously assigqed at Dulmen, ltnternational
West Germany.
~~~~~----~~2!~~~

Presidentilll panel urges
urban move to sunbelt states II

Demonstrations
mark anniversary

will try to find replacement fedel'!'l :
funding lor the project.
•• ~

Louis Stokes, both De_mocrats with
Cleveland constltuenctes, SBld they

GallipOlis

weather

t

·By MIKE SILVERMAN
Associated Press Writer
The Midwest and East warmed up
Saturday after record cold that contributed to at least 10 deaths. But
holiday travelers were hampered by
snow and free~ ing rain in the midAtlantic states, flooding In the Northwest and fog that shut airports in
California.
South Ca rolina got its first
snowstorm of the season as 4 inches

fell in the Charleston area Saturday,
snarling traffic on icy roads. Twenty
cars piled into each other on the
Cooper River Bridge in one ac·
cident, but n·o one wa s seriously injured.
Li ght snow fell over much of
so utheas tern and south-central
Virginia, and North Carolina 's central and southern coastal counties
were dusted with up to an inch of
snow.

In southeastern Georgia, sleei,
freezing rain and snow knocked
doWn trees and utility lines, cutting
off po&gt;ter to 4,000 Savannah Electric
x Power Co. customers during the
night. The Georgia state patrol said
one man died after his vehicle skidded on an icy bridge.
Around the nation, 293 people had
died in traffic accidents by, Saturday
afternoon since the start of the
(Continued on page A3)

Report heavy
fighting in
El
Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador

DOWN - Rick Sbaw of Gallla Academy, (rear) tackles Gable of
Logan In the preliminary ma1ch of the first GAllS lnvitaliooal wrestling
matcb beld at the high school gym Saturday. Complete results wlll appear 1n Monday's paper. See additional pictures on c-t. (Brenda Wilson
photo) .

·

Inside ·today. ..

Areadeaths ••·•••.•• .•..•....• ..• .... .. ~ • .•••• ••••• A-5

Classified ads •. •.....•....•••..•............... • · D-4-7
Editorial ... . . , .. . ......... ....... .. .. ...... .... · · · A·~

Farm . , . ...
Lifestyle
~
~al • , , ~ ... , . ..
Staae.-Nitlona.l ..•.•..•..•.
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Spor:ta •••••• ~ •••• ,••.•••.• •
'I\' guide •...•.•••.•..•.••••••••••.•..•....•
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(AP) - Leftist guerrillas mounted a ·
major · attack in northern El
Salvador against troops loyal to the
ruling civilia n-rnilitary junta Saturday and heavy fighting was under .
way, a military source said.
"A large number of guerrillas"
and at least three soldiers were
killed in the fighting, said the army
source who asked anonymity ~
Government and official military ·
spokesmen refused to comment on
the report, which could not be con- ·
firmed independently because of a :
cut in communications with the
area:
An estimated 1,000 guerrillas are .
taking part in the attack in
Chalatenango, a province 400 miles
north of the Central American ·
capital, said the army source, who :
asked anonymity.
. The source said government rein- :
lorcements being rushed to the area :
included Infantry, planes and
helicopters. The source refused to
give details of the military
deployments.
"The attack can be considered one
of the strongest the leftists have
launched in that region and it could .
be an attempt by the Marxist· ·
Leninists to control a zone where ·
they can set up a revolutionary .
government," the source said.
Chlilatenango, a province of
jungle and hllis, i.s near the border
with Honduras, and the source Aid
the terrain " makes counterlnsurge!IC)' operations dllflcult:O• ·
The an111 hu been a hotbed of ·
guerrillll activity In recent months.
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December28, 1980

•

Commentary and

Pomeroy- Middlep!)l-t- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

perspec~ive ::::;.::;~"~ :1

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§

-1 980:- a taxing year in Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It has
been a taxing year in the Ohio
· General Assembly.
Months of financial crisis, intraparty squabbles and political bloodshed eventually gave way to the
state's first general-tail: increase in
nine years.
But budget-balancing moves
. aside, the 113th I,.egislature sent only
· a handful of major bills to the governor's desk during an election year
torn by disagreements between
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, DNew Bollton, and Senate President
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron.
Although legislators strengthened
Ohio's hazardous waste disposal
laws and tightened management of
the state lottery, they produced
school discipline and anti-litter
measures considerably weaker than
50IIle backers had proposed. The
school discipline bill was vetoed
Dec. 19 by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The other has become law.
Legislators acted quickly to implement provisions of a voterapproved measure to help protect
residential and farm property
owners from increases in their real
estate taxes caused solely by inDation. But they .killed a Housepassed bill reinstating the death
penalty after keeping it bottled up in
a Senate corrunittee for !IIPnths.
In other business, Ohio's giant
mental health and mental retardation department was split into
!eparate agencies; the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency was
allowed to gear up for mandatory inspections of anti-pollution devices on .
the cars of big city drivers ; and
planning began for the possible construction of five newstate prisons.
But action on those measures and
others was overshadowed by a slumping national economy that sent
.state tax receipts plummeting. It
produced a staggering deficit that
experts said wouid approach $500
million by the June 30, !981, end of
the fiscal year.
" You're dealing with the worst
fiscal crisis in the history of Ohio,"
Senate President-elect Paul E.
Gillmor, R-Port Clinton, said.
Mid-year steps by R])odes and
legislative leaders to solve the
problem, estimated at that time to
total $266 million, included a 3 percent spending cut and a 5 percent increase in liquor prices.
·
Although Republicans warned
only the tip of the iceberg had been
removed, talk of additional fiscal
restraints was put off until after the
Nov. 4 election.
Rhodes broke his longtime stand
against a tax hike in November as
the stain of red ink on Ohio's budget
grew. He ordered a second 3 percent
spending cut.
Then he caoped a series of

-Created a new 12th District Ohio
m"""'"gs with legiSlative leaders by
appealing personally for legishitive Court of Appeals in the southwest
support of a $395 mllllon package of corner of the state and added
tax increases, highlighted by a 1- municipal court judgeships in Cin·
cent hike in the state's 4-cen!s-&lt;ln-the . cinnati and elsewhere;
- Eiimlnated the fuel adjustment
dollar sales tax. Lawmakers, facing
clause
which allowed utilities to
the prospect of sharp spending cuts
automatically
pass their increased
if they failed to act quickly, relu(}fuel
costs
along
to conswners;
tantly gave Rhodes what he wanted.
-So~ht to crack down on
Rep. Myrl H: Shoemaker, DBourneville, compared the tail: bill to troublemakers and lawbreakers in
castor oil. "It's bitter medicine but pl blicschools.
- Provided for increased crowd
we have to take it to get better."
Ohio's chronic financial problem control at rock concerts and olher
eventually took its toll on a capital .Jive entertainment events staged in·
·
improvements bill that originally doors. •
- Appropriated $90 million in
had fallen victim to the Riffe-Ocasek
federal funds for a program helping
dispute.
The House had quickly adopted welfare and other poverty levellegislation that ultimately called for income families · pay their winter
$774.8 million in cOnstruction work heating bills.
- Made major revisions in Ohio's
at state facilities throughout Ohio.
coal
strip mine reclamation law,';
But dozens of projects, including a
bringing
it into compliance with
proposed $25 million cancer hospital
federal
statutes.
at Ohio State University, were sliced
-Gave county commissioners the
from it by the Senate, where memauthority
to raise the salaries of
bers expressed doubts about the
most
elected
county officials who
need for some projects and thecost
will
take
office
Jan. !.
of others.
House leaders, miffed at the
Senate cuts, insisted the projects be
restored. The bill languished for
months in a joint conference committee.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ronald ,
By the time Riffe and Ocasek Reagan's solid presidential victory
reached agreement on a scaled- and the Republican takeover of the
down version that would at least ohio Senate highlighted a political
allow for maintenance projects, the year In which Ohio basked in the
state's fiscal condition had grown so national limelight.
bad that it could not afford to
The biggest surprise, however,
proceed.
was not so much Reagan's defeat of ·
Money woes or a different sort President Jimmy Carter but the size
plagued the state transportation of it, In a state that national pollsters
department.
said was too close to call right up to
Constructjon projects dwindled as . election eve.
Ohio's 7cents per gallon gasoline tax ·
Reagan and Carter campaigned
failed to produce enough revenue to extensively in Ohio, possibly more
keep up with inflation-sparked in- than any other state, citing its
creases in the cost of maintaining traditional role &amp;S a weathervane
highways. Motorists who reduced and its big bloc of 25 electoral votes.
their consumption of gasoline in the
It all came to a climax in
face of rising fuel prices and calls Cleveland on Oct, 28 with the
for conservation added to the presidential debate, won by Reagan,
problem.
most experts say, arid beamed to an
Rhodes and legislative leaders, alldlence variously estimated at 50
unable to reach agreement on the mlllion to 80 million people.
need for increasing the gasoline tax,
Although it didn't show in the polls
put the question before voters in the 'at the time, Reagan was to
form of a bond issue on the June . devastate Carter in the industrial
ballot. But the $500 million proposal and downstate rural COWities where
was rejected. The task of finding Carter bad put together his narrow,
more money for the beleaguered ll,IJOO.vote victory over Gerald Ford
.
highway agency was left for the in 1976. .
114th General Assembly to carry
Gov. James A. Rhodes must be
out.
given some ol the credit for
Legislators had more success in Reagan's successful invasion of
providing a measure of help to the these Democratic strongholds. He
state's troubled auto industry, hard prevailed upon the former Califor'hit by recession-sparked worker nia governor to hit hard at the
layoffs. Ohio's sales tax was ef- economic issues and blame bard
fectively lifted for two months last times on Carter.
fall in attempt to stimulate the sale
Indeed, Reagan spent two days In
of American-made autos.
Columbus with Rhodes and other
Also enacted by the Generar Midwest governors putting together
Assembly in 1980 were bills that:
the campaign strategy that

Today is Sunday, Dec. 28, the
363rd day of !980. There are three
days left in the year.
: Today' s highlight in history:
On Dec. 28, 1836, Spain recognized
the independence of Mexico.
On this date:

'
In !846, Iowa was admitted
to the
union as the 29th state.
In 11169, William Semple of Mount
Vernon, Ohio, was granted a patent
on chewing gum.
In 1942, during World War II, the
Japanese bombed the Indian city of

Calcutta.
One year ago: President Jimmy
Carter sent a delegation to Britain
for talks with America's allies about
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
Thought for Today: 'Tis the mind
that makes the body rich

Letter to the editor I
Supports Rhodes' effort
I can't see blaming Governor Governor Rhodes for not cutting.
A lot of the policies should not
Rhodes for trying to do something
have
been created in the first place.
about the financial mess we are in in
Remember the big pay raise the
Ohio. Representative James' alternative suggestion of cutting "non- legislators (forced) on themselves
essential spending" smacks of in- when a lot of jawboning was being
sincerity. He did not name a single done on a national eve! to curb in- ·
cut he would make. If what I think he nation?
Another case in point is the way
infers is correct - that there is half
a billion dollars worth of waste In schools are straight-jacketed.
Ohio's government - why wait till Legislation dreamed up by the
this late date to holler. He has been N.E.A. and the O.E.A. was pushed
In the legislative majority for a long onto local conununlties by the
time that created the spending majority democrats of which Mr.
policies for Ohio that he..now blames James is a member. Their principal

junbltll 'iimea ~ ~e~l ..

.

Publi.ahedevt cy Sunday by The Ohio Valley Pubifanli1&amp; CO."Mullimedla, Inc.
Ldten of oplnioo are welcomed They should be leaalhan 300 words long (or ~ubject. to reducUon.by the editor) and must be slg~ed with the aicnee:'s addresa. Names may ,be withheld upon
publlcation. Howtver, on request,,names will be disclosed. Lettera should be m good taste, a~
dreulng issues, not personalities.
GAlLIPOLIS

DAIRY TRIBUNE
liZ Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 4$631.

.
PubUJhed every weekday evening except Saturday. Second Class Postage Pald at GaWpolia,
Ohio4513J.
11IE DAILY SENTINI!L
·
111 Court St.. Pomero)' , 0 . U789. Published every week day evening exnpt Saturday'. Enter«
.as second claY rna lUng matter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.
By ca rrier daily and Sunday $1 .00 per week. Motor route Jt,40per month.
MAIL
•
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
. ••The GaltlpoliB Daily Tribune ip Oblo and West VIrginia one year P.'Uil; six months 117 .50~ ::-.:;:
moiltha: 110.50. Elaewhere $38.00 per year; six months $20.00; three months $11.00; motor rv....
fi.IIOmontllly.
· '
M E' "'
he oM oo·
The Daily Sentinel, one year $33.00; SLI: mont.ha llUO; three rnoo.ths PJ.w. U~CW re ..- •
olxfll&lt;)fti/ISI20.00; lhreemonthslli.OO.
. ,
.
• ....
The Associated Press iB exchWvely entiUed to the U»e for JM:lbhclllion of aU news dispatc.cr~ted to the newspaper and abo the local new1 published herem.
.
.

.e .

-~_...... ......._~·'

(

11Biarp
By J. Samuel Peeps

t .

..

. ~.

Ohio in the national political limelight

history.~-----

Today in

®allipoll!i

interest was to build political power
and not to educate children. One
third of the people working in
schools, according to a reliable
estimate, do not contribute direcUy
to educating boys and girls. A
specialist is required to chaiige a
light bulb in a schoolhouse. There
need be no worry about a three percent cut in spending· hurting Ohio's
schools much.
·
I am tired of hearing laments by
bleewng hearts about all the classes
in this country being victimized by
ano~r class. A lot of those getting
various helps are living better than
those making or trying to make their
own way. Governor Rhodes has been
running a rear guard action for a
long time trying to save some remnants of the free enterprise system
from the lily white liberals who want
to create a weUare state to lean on
for votes SO · they can perpetuate
themselves in office.

So I say If there has to be a tax let
it be a sales tax. That way
everybody pays. That . way
everybody Will have to use a little
discretion about how he apends his
money and everybody has to make
some sacrifice. The sales tall is not a
claSs tax, it is easy to collect and the
proceeds get to the state treasury
quickly and at low cost. - Gayle
Price, Portland, Ohio.

"

produced Reagan's 4M,l31-vote uruo
victory.
Independent John Anderson ,
whom · many Democrats feared :
:would hurt carter, polled only
254,472 votes, and was not a factor.
All his votes wouldn't have helped
Carter.
U the polls were not on target,
there may have been significant in'dications of what was to come in the
crowds that showed up for the major
contenders in the closing days of the
campaign.
Carter stood in a feed lot on a farm
outside Toledo to read a fann policy
speech on a chilly October morning.
The• several hundred congregated ·
there, many having to stand in the
mud, yawned.
The president did far better with
his town meetings in Dayton,
Youngstown, and Toledo, but those
crowds were limlted in numbers and
made up mosUy of Democrats who
probably would liave voted for him
anyway.
By contrast, Reagan got wild
cheers at a rally in Cincinnati on
Nov. 2 which wrapped up his campaign. About 10,000 persons bad
showed up for the Convention Center
event where Reagan shared the
stage with Gerald Ford, Bob Hope,,
Charlton Heston and other stars.
. Heston helped fire up the crowd
with a rtnging endorsement of his
old movie bUddy, in which he used
the voice of a Moses come down
from the mountain.
Reagan stirred crowds In cities
such as Steubenville, Marietta; and

Dayton, with his promise to "get
government off your backs." And he
stood before television cameras at a
shutdown steel mill in Youngstown,
calling it ti ghost town that reflected
Carter economic policies.
·
But if Ohio's Republicans enjoyed
Reagan's triumph, they were ecstatic over what was happening election night closer to home.
After a two-year plan tl(at involved careful candidate recruiting
and big infusions of money, the GOP
was winning control of the Ohio
Senate for the first time in six years.
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, RAshland, who engineered the feat,.
WBII almost Indignant that some observers ·were crediling Reagan's
coattails. ·
When the Sinoke cleared, the GOP
bad reversed what bad been an 111-15
Democratic edge , and four
Democratic incumbents - inclu~
the venerable Anthony 0. Calabrese
of Cleveland - the dean ol Senate
Democrats- bad bitten, . ' dust. •
House Democrats wer~ more fortunate, salvaging control but having
a 62-37 advantage reduced to 56-43.
Democrats have controlled the
lower chamber since 19'72.
The Republ,ican Senate victory is
significant because since the partY
also holds the governor's office, the
GOP will have a beefed up voice in
state govenunent. Rhodes has bad
to fend alone since be ·returned as
governor in 1975.
Sen. John H. Glem surprised no
one when be waltzed to a second
term over little known State Rep.

James E. Betts of Rocky River. Tile
Incumbent piled up a reCord 1.5 ,
mllllon vote victory margti!.
'
There were surprises in a couple . .
of the races for U.S. House. Veteran : ,
Rep. Thomas L. Ashley, · a , ,
Democratic, was upset by a 48-ye&amp;r!' ' '
old attorney, Ed Weber. In CoiJUDo )~
bus, longtime Rep. Sanwel L. -;;,
Devine, a Republican, wu ousted bt. ~
Robert Shamansky, an attomey wblfi~ ~
bad run against Devine 8lld 101( · •·.
several years earlier. ·- · ~
Republicans headed for Detroit in. ',
July for Ronald Reagan's coronaUPil...~:
as the GOP candidate.
·:1
'But the GOP conclave, bUled ill ....,
advance BB a love feast, turned out
to be a cHff hanger of sort&amp;; , ;
following premature news repolti,·_
that Gerald Ford bad been ask to nlll ,1,
for vice president and aet&lt;-epted.
"{
Gov. James A. Rhodes,- who riii:;;
not a delegate and said' be - ~
going to go to the CODl
lil!l'1!'!
sleep in the balcony, went lifter all. .
And be was in the thick of Ford af.. ·~
fair until Reagan squelched the ·.
rumor and announced his choice q(
George Bush for the No. 2 spot.
Rhodes said he was inspired by the .
speech Ford gave at one of lhe early 1
sessions ol the Detroit cuwentic111, $
and felt it bad inspired the delegaiM· '
to the point that a Ford-ReagiiJII ;,
"dream ticket" might be poosibJe. . ,
The 71-year-old governor at.owed • ,
up on the second day of the COD-' :
vention and disappeared IntO'·1
Reagan's inner COWlCIIs for tbe If: 1
ternoori, but then abruplly retui'IIe4 I
to Colwribus without eliJllanatlon. ··l -

'"

·i;

U...

The Sagebrush ·R ebellion
WASillNGTON (AP) - The Frost
Belt ~q the Sun Belt aren't the only
regions of the country feuding these
days. TheWest is angry, too.
Westerners have labeled their
revolt the Sagebrush Rebellion. Its
target, rather than another area of
the country, is Washington, and its
object is to force the federal govern- ·
ment to relinquish control of 450
million acres of land in 12 Western
states.
The land is managed prinnarily by
the Bureau of Land Management
and the U.S. Forest Service. The
acreage Involved is substantial. For
example; federal lands comprise fll
percent of Nevada, 66 percent of
Utah, 64 percent of Idaho and 45 percent of California.
·
Western unhappiness stems from
the fact that many in the region see

Uncle Sam as a big absentee tandlord who knows little and cares less
about their problems.
While the Sagebrush Rebellion has
involved minor skirmishes over the
past two years, leaderS of the
movement feel the November elec· tions have given them substantial
reinforcements.

GALIJPOUS - To have 39 or-40 Harrison Twp.
In 1985 it will be Thomas Hannan
people out for last Sunday's regular
meeting of the Gallia County in Ohio~.
Historical Society was a compliment
to them. They respect our heritage.
YOU KNEW that the Gallia Counto the point that even on the Supday ty Historical Society had voted $50
before Christmas - with a zillion gift to the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
preparations to be taken care of - Memorial -Library in memory of Erthey'll attend a meeti~g dedicated to -nest N. Wiseman. Jonathan Louden,
Blennerhassett Island.
the librarian, said that the $50 will go
And it was cold 1
to microfilming the Gallia Times
Yet they came and sat and · and the Gallipolis Bulletin - two
listened as Ray Swick, historian for weekly newspapers.
· the Blennerhassett Historicai Park • The Gallia Times started in !898,
Commission since January, 1979, and it still lives in the Sunday Timestold the adventurous and romantic · Sentinel! Harry R. Hurn once was
parts of the story of the island. There its editor and publisher. The grandwas a connection with Marie An- father of A. Don Pope and J . Samuel
toinette', whose figure was com- Peeps - Ira W. Pope- was one of
parable - aye, even superior - to the two founders ofthe Gallia Times.
Dolly Parton's. At least, that's what Pope lives in Florida, buf was born
Ray Swick said.
in Gallipolis.
Swick's park commlssion is overMRS. IRENE SMELTZER
seeing the development of Biendonated
an original 1874 atlas to the
, nerbassett Island into a park. Born
Gallia
County
Historical Society as a
in Parkersburg, he grew up in
memorial
to
the
late Robert SmeltBelpre, where he attenJied high
school, was graduated from Mariet- zer.
ta College in 1964 with a, B. A. degree
SUSAN GRIFFIN, Columbus, is
in history; got his master's degree
. .from the University of Virginia in the · wife of Margaret Finnicwn's
!971; and then in August, 1978, he nephew, Gary. She is the subject of
received his Ph. D. in history from the big article in the Dec. 14 issue of
Miami U. in Oxford, Ohio. His the Colwnbus Dispatch magazine - .
dissertation was on Harman ·Blen- " Couponing and Refunding: Double,
nerhassett, and he is expanding it in- Double, Is The Toil Worth The
to a full-length biography for · Trouble? " by Carol Ann Lease, with
publication.
two pictures by Gordon Kuster: Jr.
Margaret Finnicwn, you. know, is
Swick showed half a tray of slides
in the Times-sentinel's composing
to illustrate his talk.
room, but it's her blonde niece-in·
GEN. GEORGE E. BUSH is. the law whom we're interested in for
president of the Gallia County this c orrune~t. There's one complete
Historical Society, and he obtained magazine page of typewritten
the approval of the,society's board of figures to show that Susan Griffin
directors of a proposed five-year profited $24.55 for a week of groceryplan for emplacing historical signs store purchases. These included
coupon clippings, refunds, store
in Gallia County.
The general pointed out that the 0 . specials, manufacturers~ coupons,
0. Mcintyre Park Commission will and doubled value in rnany inprovide funds at the rate of $500 a stances.
Lewis Griffin, Gary's father, is
year to defray the expenses of in·
Athens
district manager of the
stalling one sign each year for fi ve
Western
and Southern . Life Inyears.
surance
Co.,
and Margaret's older
In 1981 it' ll be Col. Robert Safford
with the sign in Centenary, Green brother.
ON THANKSGIVING Ev e,
Twp. - the old colonel is buried at
cooperating
churches held a com·
Centenary.
In 1982 it will be the Gallia Fur- bined Thanksgiving service at the
nace-narrow gauge railroad in First ,Church of the Nazarene. The
choir was made up of voices of these
Greenfield Twp.
In 191\3 it will be for Samuel Vin- cooperatihg churches.·
Handel's Messiah was also presen·
ton, and they'll r,nake the decision
ted
at the new Rio Grande Fine Arts
later ·whether the sign should be in
building.
This, too, was made up of .
Gallipolis or at the edge of Vinton voices
from
tile corrununity and
the edge in Morgan Twp.
cooperating
churches
in this area.
In 1984 it will be Ann Bailey in

Sheri G. Norman, 18, Point
Pleasant, had yielded for him to go
through the intersection, Shato went

Second Ave. driven by Mary M.
Fraley, 32, Gallipolis.
The collision also knocked a fen·
on.
der off Shato's vehicle, striking the
However, as Shato drove through Norman auto and causing slight
the intersection, he noticed a vehicle damage . Shato's Jeep was
approaching him on Court St. at a moderately damaged, Coulson's car
high rate of speed. driven by was severely damaged and the
Kathryn L. Coulson, 17, Gallipolis.
Fraley auto suffered moderate
Coulson told officers she hit her damage.
brakes but was too late and .collided
No citations have been issued in
with the left of Sbato's Jeep, after the case officers said.
1
Sbato said be tried to avoid collision
Officers also investigated a minor
by accelerating.
twe&gt;-Car crash on Court St. Friday afThe impact of the ~rash spun the ternoon. '
Shato vehicle around, forcing it to ·
According to the report, Mary L.
collide with a southbound auto on Akers , 52, Gallipolis, was backing
from the municipal parking lot at
4:40p.m. when she collided with an
eastbound auto driven by Randall S.
Russell, 26, Gallipolis, causing slight
damage to both. cars. No citations

RECOGNIZED FOR SAFETY - W.J. Probert, aulslant plaot
mauager at the Pbllip Sport Plant, located above New Haven, accepts ,a
certificate of merit award for Olllltaodlng achievement lo accident
prevention from Jobo W. Vaughan, president of Ap~lachlan Power
CGmpaoy. The 373 employees at Phlllp Sporn received the award lor
%,000,000 consecutive sale work hlllll's durlog the period from ·Feb. 23.
1978 to Oct. 26, 1980. Their accompllshmeat surpasses the all-time
record for Appitlachlan Power plants.

Denwnstrations.

• •

(Continued from page AI)
patriotic forces" of Mghanistan.
Tass said the meeting was attended
by some 1,500 delegates represen·
ling workers; peasants, clergy and
tribal groups as well as party and
government leaders.
· The a ge ncy said Karma!
acknowledged "serious damage to
industry, agriculture, transport,
schools, health institutions and other
branches of the economy'.' inflicted

COLO'l'lrf'ulr ·
-n

•

f

•

·· Ask me about
Ufe Insurance
forTodays
Homeowners

(Continued from page AI)

Denver

President-elect Reagan sent a
telegram to a meeting of 600 1 ~nterior.
Such sentiments strike a l1!lpOIIo
· rebellion supporters last month in
sive
chord with many Westemel'!l
Salt Lak~ City. He el'tended "best
wishes to all my fellow Sagebrush ' who have sullenly watche4 u the
rebels" and ·renewed' his pledge to Carter administration enacted • .
"work toward a Sagebrush solution host of new regulations lovemlnll ;
... to insure that the states have an how Westerners graze their catae; ·
equitable share of pul&gt;lic lands and water their fanns, drill oil wellllliit·~
minecoal.
~
their natural resources."
The opening shot of the Sa.gebruilf ·
More meaningfully, Reagan has
picked as his interior secretary Rebellion was fired by the N89-idi:
Legislature In July 1979,
passed a law llll8l!l'ting state
l
over 49 mlllloo acres of
The law alone can't change
· )
ownership, but Nevada offlciala
the measlire is the opening gllllibltlft '
. a yet-1&amp;-be filed lawsuit.
· So far, similar Sage~ 1J1111
have been introduced IIi . lbe ·
legislatures of AI;zona, Callfariatlj,t
Colorado, Idaho, Oregon, UWt;
WBihingt.on, Wyoming and New
Mellico.
.
. And Sen. Orrtn Hatell, ~·.
8lld Rep. James Sanllnl, ~i
have Introduced billa that would lilll
up li conunllaloo to esteNJoh an "...,
·derly proceu" for t r . -·
federal land to the Ita..---·~

':'.J'

federal=;

illmiiK
Iii ·

EnvirontDentalll are
hopes for derailing tbe rehei!l.a

House Intarlor ·Committee Qllli;.:
man Morrla Udall, D-AI:lz. Udall. ••
strong IIIIJIPOI'tl!r ol ~tlaa
CIUieii,IA)'II CIM
be IIIII liD

be maste foreuiiiD
pvq ..- ,~==
around
Wlltern eltlll, bat Ill

. ' I"

~ t'

'Solidarity'
· t'
(Continued from page AI)
a number of times .
"You all kn ow how massive the .. '
solidarity of the working people was . •
in our country," he said. "And now, .'
with the same solidarity'and' pruden- ' :
ce as when we went on strik~, we will ' ~
go to work ... I declare the strike en· ·.•:
ded."
.
Solidarity, in theory the first -~
major independent labor movement ·
in the Soviet bloc, ·claims the.
backing of about 10 million Poles, ;;
almost ·a third of Poland's:;
population .
.:

•

Chr istmas checks deser ve more than ca sual spending Invest them
w tsely - pomper you rself with really f1ne jewelry tha t will be o
permane nt reminder of the thoughtf ulness of you r giver. Our seleC ·
ti on o f quality pieces will e)(c ite you r intere st . Stop in soon . .. and
do b ri ng your Christmas ched !

A UNIVERSAL RElEA SE

PAUL DAVIES
.

G Ill ' II

Insurance COiliV&lt;lllY
II'O i UII.N (t

·~:

1

I!'~ tO
Sti1\B hHill lilt;

Charles W. Hatfield; 23, Patriot ."
Star Route, said he was westbound
on 141 near the junction with SR 775 ·. ·
when ah eastbound van went left of ''
center and forced him off the road, .::,
causing moderate damage.
.,

Don't just spend rt
. .wear rt.

I haw d tt'11 11 IH\• pl&lt;:ln l rJ hdp you 1
far'nily kl.!ep vo ur hornl!. fn.'l! .md
d!.!&lt;~T . if vom monydyt&gt; outlivl!:- vou
C 1!! nw for d~t~il -.

'""" ,....

night.

Police cited Michael W. Dalton, 23,
Gallipolis,. for running a stop sign; ·
Trent W. Harrison, 18, Gallipolis, for
illega l exhaust; and Anthony P.
Weiher, 18, Rio Grande, for DWI.
Trailer Damaged By Fire
The Gallipolis Fire Department
reports heav.r damage to a trailer
which burned Friday night.
Firemen said the trailer, located
one mile west of the junction of
Bulaville-Pprter and Bulaville·
Addison Rds., was owned by James
Johnson, Rt. !, Gallipoli s, and tenanted by Connie Johnson, Rt. · 4,
Gallipolis.
It suffered an estimated $4,800
damage when an electric space
heater is believed to have caught
fire at 8:30 p.m. and ignited the
structure and its contents.
Twenty-two firemen were on the
scene for two hours, whicn also
caused $5,000 damage to the contents. Minor heat damage was also
reported to a campe r parked near

flllTHmC fARJHUNGL
WHQ CAN SAVE YOU NON?

Gallipolis, Ott. ·

of flooding re{IIained serious. On
Friday, dozens of rivers spilled over
their banks, destroying homes,
covering roads and washing out
bridges. Hundreds were forced to
flee - some by rowboat.

were issued .

TONIGHT THRU .
JANUARY 8th

C. K. SNOWDI!N
4171ecDfiCIAW.

Midwest...

the trailer.
Vandalism, Theft Probed
The Gallia County Sheriff's Depariment ~ probing a vandalism and
theft reported early Saturday.
;-:"
Dennis Lantz, Gallipolis, infonned .;
deputies the driver side .window of · his car and the rear-view mirror
were damaged when the car was entered sometime Friday night while ,'
parked at Spring Valley Green Apar· . ••
tments.
Taken were a radar detection .,
device and a knife, total valued at
$75.
..
Terry Carhart, Gallipolis, in- ..:
formed deputies a spare tire was
removed from his vehicle sometime 1
during the week. The spare is valued . :
at $150.
."
Deputies are also probing a hit·. :,
skip accident on SR 141 Friday ~;

by the anti-conununist rebels.
But Karma! told the delegates the
Afghan people and their Soviet allies
have "overturned the plans of international reaction. "

P~one 446-4290

James G. Watt, a ·coniiervat!W
lawyer ·who heads a
legll
foundation which has been flghtlni '
the federal government the IUf .
three years over issues dl!ar to 1M ·
hearts of ~;ebellion leaders. · · ,
At a press conference earlier llllfr1
week, Watt called him!elf a IIM'IT!br I
ol the Sagebrush Rebellion, wblcb .. i
said sprang from "opptdllllve 116tions" taken by the Department II

....... · - liD
federalllndllolbl .......

GAWPOIJS - A four-.,ar pileup
at the intersection of Second Ave.
and Court St. Friday night was still
under investigation by Gallipolis
City Police Saturday.
No injuries were reported in the
mishap, which began when a volunteer Gallipolis fireman answered a
call at 8:30p.m.
Officers said Jinuny D. Shato, 34,
Gallipolis, was northbound on
Second Ave. with his red light and
siren .rurming to indicate he was
going to an emergency.
.
Shato said he slowed as he approached the intersection with Court
St., and observing a car driven by

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-3

MATINEE SUNDAY
1 Show 2 P .M.

~/['.'~'IP /,''

L

f,'

I

I','

JEWELERS

Ohio
IT

~·:...

1

H
111 01 111111
Chr istmas holiday Wednesday
evening. The National Safety Coun" -1 624 J
cit warned that 650 to 750 might be r-------------..l.-------------1------------:....l------------------:-:---:------:~
killed before the weekend officially
ended at midnight Sunday.
Most parts of the Midwest and
Northeast had readings in the 20s
and 30s Saturday, after three days of
temperatures that often ·plunged
below zero. In Philadelphia, the extreme cold Friday·night knocked out
36 'at 58 patrol cars that normally
patrol inner--city streets, forcing
many o(fi.cers to make foot patrols.
Among the deaths in· which cold
was thought to be a factor were
those of a man found in a snowbank
in Chicago, two men found d~ad outside in Philadelphia, a man in
Latrobe, Pa:., two homeless residents of Washington, D.C., a man in
Boston, a man and a woman in Hartford , Conn:, and an elderly woman in
Jonesville, N.C.
In Northern California, heavy fog
made driving hazardous and forced
the closure of the three major San
.TO
.
Francisco Bay area airports - San
Francisco International, Oakland
wAA~ ~NEW
International and San Jose.
.Incoming flights were diverted to
~
f'EEN
rTsf~CE
as far away as Reno, Nev., and Los
~NG-!
OU~
~NIE
Angeles, but fog became a problem
in Southern California, too, forcing
(WELL O'tt:R A MIWCN OOL.I.A~ IN KUJCJUT"
the shutdown of the Orange CountyJohn Wayne Airport in Santa Ana, 30
miles southeast of Los.Angeles.
Los Angeles, where record-high
temperatures in the mid~ sent
hundreds of thousands of people to
beaches over Christmas, began .to
INTE~T {JIJ
cool off as a sudden shift in offshore
breezes brought In moist'air. ,
The warm, temperatures brought
millery to ski operators in eastern
Expect more from
California's Sierra Nevada, where
.
Excluding
Fun
the holiday wu snowless and the
heat melted much of what snow hlid
In The Lafayette Mall
been on the ground.
Four location a to aerve you better.
:100 Second Ave .. Ga
In the pacific Northwest, raiD!I
t
Member: FDIC
dli\Jr'±r'laturday, but the danger

COAT

SALE

25% .~
'4 0%

All

Coats

WHA.TS SO NEWA60UTNCNJ?'-

N!hff GeTIN&amp; INTERESr ON CHECKIIVGNXJJU"'TS MY Pt:.AtJ 11AS
t:Xm"&amp;
TH£ SNCNJ
MS-TED tA5r
JUST A5l&lt;
MANV HAFF(
CUST'OMERS
6ALHJCES 1}. CHECJ&lt; WITH t-IE NJ!Ji· IF YOO MAIN"mlt-./ NJ
1800 MININVJM OR #·1,500 AI.JEF./Jf!JE. MONtHt..it' BN.HJCf,
1UERE.'S NO SERVICe dlA~E f'JJD \(OU EA~~ o'lt~ ,P
YOOR f'N:&gt;NEY.
.
f10'1{ ~NiS? WEJd)ME ABlJNW, FfllfJWS!

Valley

..

�·1980

w. va.

Ti

1980

Pomeroy

NO INJURIES
POMEROY Meigs County
Sheriff James J . Proffitt reports the
department investigated a one-car
accident Friday afternoon on CR 31,
approximately two miles west of the
Stiversville store.
According to the sheriff's department, Neva Curtis, Chester, was
traveling east on Route 31 when she
lost control of her 1974 Plymouth on
a patch of ice. The vehicle went off
the road to the left and struck an embankment.
Neither the driver nor the
passenger, Alice Curtis, Long Bottom, was injured. Moderate damage
was caused to the right front of the
automobile.

PARTY WEDNESDAY
RACINE - The Racine Legion
Post will sponsor an adult New
Year's Party Wednesday evening
from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Music will be
provided by the Country Ramblers,
and admission is $10 p.r couple, $5
single, including refreshments.
Tickets may he purchased at Simpson's Hardware and Spencer's FasChek, Racine.

(

The Meigs County Grange youth
ritualistic team will Jnl&gt;et Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at Star Grange. Offices and
style of dress will be chosen for the
•
contest.

I

va .

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 prr.

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0• .
PRICES EFFECTIVE.THROUGH SAnJRDAY. JANUARY 3, 1981

BUCKET :

Cube

$.
Steak .~ •....L~~.

SUCED

.

29

$
129

•

' Moore Funeral Home in Vinton will
: he on Monday, from 7-9 p.m.
Funeral services will be held II
: a.m. Tuesday at the McCoy-Moore
: Funeral Home.
. Burial will be in Vinton Memorial
' Park.

A Pork Lo1n ..... .t~·••

1

.

Arm Roast ........ ~.~···· .·
USDA ~ONELESS

..

.$

Chuck Roast ..•... ~•..
;

159

'. $}59

Ground Chuck .. ~.L!·...

Service, and was manager of the
Downie-Gross Clothing Store in
Pomeroy for 20 years Mter the
Theodore Downie
closing of the clothing· store, he
POMEROY-Theodore k (Ted) . worked for three years at the Gav'in
Power Plant construction site.
Downie, 70, 106 High St., Pomeroy,
Throughout his working years,
fonner Pomeroy businessman, died
Mr.
Downie was active in civic afFriday evening at the Holzer
fairs.
He was a member of the
Medical Center following a lingering
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
·
illness.
and served on Pomeroy Village
Mr. Downie Willi born May 10,1910,
Council from 1935 to 1940 and from
a son of the late Dr. Charles E. W.
1960 to 1965. He was a member of the
Downie and Flora Elizabeth
Pomeroy United Methodist Church
Downie. He lived most of his life on
and of the Masonic Blue Lodge F &amp;
High St. in Pomeroy. He graduated
AM.
from Central High School in ColumSurvivors include hi s wife,
bus. He served as c&lt;&gt;-manager of the
Beacon Service Station in Pomeroy;
worked for the U. S. Railway Postal

Dorothy T. Downie; a brother,
William B. Downie, Morning Star; a
sister; Christine Bright, Dunbar, W.
Va.; two sons, Charles A. Downie,
Wolfeboro, N. H., and Allen T.
Downie, Pomeroy, and two granddaughters, Deborah Ann and
Elizabeth Renee.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday at the Ewing .Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert McGee
officiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after II
a.m. today.

OPEN AS USUAL

END OF YEAR

NEW YEAR'S DAY

PRE-INVENTORY SALE
MON. • TUES. • WED.
DEC. 29 THRU DEC. 31
'

3 DAYS ONLY

Lean,
waste
"Sliced the
Way You
ike 1t 11

OFF
STOREWIDE

20%

EXCEPT SEWING MACHINES
&amp; ·REMNANTS

•'

•: Worley Newsom

.·

:

~
·
GALLIPOLIS Worley G.
'
•, Newsom, 68, ' a resident of
: ' Wilkesville, died unexpectedly at
, 1:10 p.m. Friday in Oak Hill
Hospital.
He was horn Jan. 'n, 1912, son of
the late J. A. and Irene Lyle
Newsom. He never married.
Mr. Newsom was a 1930 graduate
of Wilkesville High School, and was
a retired farmer.
Survivors include his sister, Miss
Enna Newsom, Wilkesville; two

.

Don't Miss This Sale .

.

OPEN TIL 8 P.M. MONDAY

fRENclt CiTy FAbRic Sltop
....

58 COURT ST.

GALLIPOliS; OHIO

Extra Lean

FLORIDA

Are you getting

Tomatoes ............~~

Noodle Sou11~~!5.~4 /

MAXWELL HOUSE

· ..

.

COUPON

----

$ gg

!0~~~ ••

Instant Coffee..
I

l

CC'l· JP()N

--

OXYDOL

·GOLD MEDAL

DETERGENT

FLOUR

171 OL

5-LS•.

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Expires Jan . 3, 1980

89~

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
Jan. 3, 1980

PORK &amp;
BEANS ·

•
LB .

,,
1

SPARE
RIBS

NO MINIMUM BALANCE ...
UNLIMITED C~ECK WRITING
W1111: u rnanv chucks

~s

vuu r1eed.

PERSONALIZED CHECKS ...
t•dct ~

. all vou need .

TRAVELERS CHECKS, MONEY
0 RDERS, CASHIER'S CHECKS

ROYAL CREST

WithOUt ISIUC Chai!IC

Buttermilk.. ~ ......~.~~.7

510.000 ACCIDENTAL DEATH
. INSURANCE
Wor khV•tlt•; 0 11 ami of t th u tUIIi!ulOmat •c
cu vcr;,IJI! bv FutJffidli'\

.

BANCLUB DIGEST . ..
mlly , . thuw IUuu c•ch year· h11ng
~alua bl u r)il hOnal dr5cuunu- HERTZ
Cill remal!.. ~rllcrpatrng HOLIDAY .
RQOEWA Y , ar'klother hotul and mOlt.! Is;
~11'1U,51:nwur pa11ts from New England ro
Calrfornra ; frnanclill , hei lth . wh:tv ~ml

l

(liiVIIIIIjn; ~f)L'Ciill JT1(!1 Chclll drw Jlld

PERSONAL MEMBERSHIP CARD ..
Yuw

..

•
WILSON'S

.

BAG
limit 1 Per c;ustomer
Good Only At Powell's.
Offer E
res Jan. 3, 1980

' 145

Dl5f$,200

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's

~- -~;;Jan. 3, ltlf

,,I '

''.

o~t fl11s B~ull

cars Bank's

Del Monte
Whole Kernel

CORN

.;.

•

The Commercial • Savings Bank·
2~ CriUrt ktot

111,... Bridvt pt...,

~ Vltlley

- - FDIC

,,,.

3 303

Cans

3

APPLE
SAUCE

l'

NEW
CABBAGE
·lB.
~

19C

E

BAG

FOLGER'S
INSTANT

$289

RED
GRAPES
LB.

OUPON

SAVE $1 .80

POTATOES
20 LB.

303
Cans

'1'·

·U.S. NO. 1

ClcS Bank a ·

•

. ' I

BANCLUB Membt!l shr11 C;ml

BanCiub services.

•
••

..•,•

1rwr1

nwkr!S i!ll I hi!~l.' §t1 1WIC\Il\IHIIy avariCIIJI~

Take a look 'a t

.

EVAP. MILK
5-LB.

Amt:riCiln

A ITliiiJ&lt;IItllc l or BAN C LUB nlt'mi)L'II

J

FLAVORITE .

Fw1d

L1fc lmuliltlct' ComtMIIV

$. O
Jony's p·lzza......~~~~ .. 9

PEPPERONI or·SAUSAGE

cnLJP(Jl'~

3303
Cans
•100

LB.

HAM
SALAD

Thi!U! in dude :

and dt!llOSol

$

169
169 GROUND.
CHUCK

from your bank?

Orange Juice... :n.~.
·. .

CHUCK ,
ROAST LB .

Hollywood

these services

GOLDEN SUN PURE

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN

Francisco and fueling hopes that interest rates have peaked.
Wells Fargo, the nation's lithlargest commercial bank, cut its
prime from 21 percent to 20.5 percent, effective today . A number of .
smaller banks cut their r&amp;tes even
further Monday, to 20 percent, but
other major banl&lt;s held to the 21.5
percent rate that swept the banking
ind!JStry on Friday.
Chase, the nation's third-largest
bank, said its rate reduction reflected declines in its cost of acquiring
funds but added it was uncertain
whether the declines would continue.
The reductions mark the first
decline in the rate charged to to!&gt;"
ranked corporations since the prtme
fell to the year's low of 10.75 percent
at some tianksJuly 24.

WE WILL BE

FRENCH CITY FABRIC $HOPPE'S

POINT PLEASANT- Edwin Clifford LaRue, 69, HarUord, died
Friday at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
, Born April3,191l, in Hartford, he
• was the son of the late Andrew L.
: and Blanche Gibbs LaRue. He is
: also preceded in death by his wife,
• Hattie LaRue and a son, James L
; LaRue. ·
,
: Surviving are two brothers,
: James Dallas LaRue, .El Toro,
" Calif., and Orland Todd LaRue,
0: Nitro, W. Va.
,
The deceased was formerly a
• welder lor the Wheeling Steel Corp.
' Services will be held at I p.m.
; Sunday at the Foglesong Funeral
• Home in Mason with the Reverend
Clyde Fields officiating. Burial will
be in the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call Saturday from 4
to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

(3 LBS. &amp; DOWN)

Theodore Downie

NEW YORK ( AP) Chase
Manhattan B;mk Tuesday cut its
prime lending rate by one percentage point to 20.5 percent, matching the cut announced a day
earlier by Wells Fargo Bank in San

'r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiij;,:;,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i

Edwin C. LaRne

•
b
$ 29
R
I s.........L!.••
Spare
. $Jl9

Lowers interest rate ,

I

.

PORK

USDA CHOICE

Word has been received of the
death of Uoyd L. WatSon, Ill,
Fremont.
Mr. Watson was the father of
Dorothy Baker, Long Bottom, and
John Watson, formerly of Meig:~
County, now living· in Lancaster.
Locally, he h,as six grandchildren
who include David, Rodney, Mike
Baker, ·Dearma Shepard, Athens,
and Greg and Angela W;1tson, Lancaster, and two
great·
grandchildren, Carrie Knapp ' and
Jeremy Blake.
Funeral services will be held Monday at the Weller-Wonderly Funeral
.Home in Fremont.

Two brothers, Edward and Carl
GALLIPOUS - James Francis Newsom, preceded him in·death.
Jacobs, 51, a resident of 344 Lawzer
Funeral services will be held 2
Lane, Dayton, died unexpectedly at p.m. Monday at the McCoy-r.foore
his home Friday.
Funeral Home with Rev. A. il.
Mr. Jacobs was born Feb. 1, 1929 Maloy officiating. Burial will be in
in Vinton, son of Myrtle Ston~ Wilkesville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
Jacobs, Fairborn, Ohio and the late
JarneaF. Jacobs Sr.
·
home on Sunday from 2-4 and 7-9
He was a 1947 graduate of Vinton p.m.
High Sch!Xll, and retired from the u.
S. Air Force, having spent 21 years
Flossie Phillips
·in the service. He was a Vietnam
RUTLAND-Mrs. Flossie Lenore
War veteran.
88, fonnerly of Rutland,
Phillips,
He was later employed in Dayton
Friday
at the Hocking Valley
died
at the Top Value Service Center.
in
Logan.
Hospital
The following children survive his
Mrs. Phillips was a resident of
maniage to Yvorme Donnett, BidRutland
for some 25 years. She
well: Charles Jacobs, Kettering;
Maureene Young, James Michael operated a grocery store arid
Jacobs, Yvonile M. Jacobs, all •of restaurant there.
Surviving are her husband,
Bidwell; one daughter, Sheryl ,JohnStanley Phillips; three ·daughters,
son, preceded him in death in 1978.
Dessie Conway, Pastaskala; Eura
Three grandchildren survive.
. One brother and six sisters sur- Phillips, Lancaster, and Cassie
Berry, Gahanna; three· stepvive:
children,
Harold PhiiUps, LanEva Wagonrod, Tipp City; Alma
caster;
Reva
Smith, Logan, and
Hart, Omaha, Neb.; Enna Van
Colo., eight
Eileen
Widger,
Security,
NeSs, Milbourne, Fla.; .Lila Barner,
gramtchildren,
and
two
sis.t ers,
, Dayton; Peggy Jacobs, Mansfield;
Elvira
Barr,
Langsville,
and
Helen
John Lee Jacobs, Belville, Mich.; ·
She
was
preceded
in
Bails,
Hamden.
-Mary Jane Durke, Westerville.
death
by
a
son,
Marion
Hull,
two
, Visitation will he 2-4 p.m. Sunday
: at the Burcham Funeral Home in sisters and a brother.
Funeral services will be held at 2
: Fairborn. Visitation at the McCoy-

Store Hours:

' POMEROY - The lull in the . sales tax receipts totaled $62,441.29
while this year in November receipautomobile industry plus the lifting
ts totaled only $16,206.15, a decrease
of two percent of the state sales tax
of 74.04 percent.
for a part of November is reflected
Retail sales tax receipts for this
in the November, 1980, motor
November were also down 18.23 per·
vehicle sales tax receipts, which
cent under the receipts lor Novemshow a decline of almost 75 percent
ber, 1979. Receipts for November,
compared to November, 1979, ae1980 totaled $85,321.83 while Novemcording to State Treasurer Gertrude
ber , 1979,
receipts totaled
Donahey.
$104,351.72, a decrease of $19,029.89.
In November, 1979, motor vehicle

Lloyd Watson

nieces and two nephews ..

James Jacobs

The Sunday

Motor vehicle receipts do"Wn

F~ral

BAG
TO MEET TUESDAY

w

p.m. Tuesday at the Leonard Lyke
Home lnb Logan. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 7
to 9 p.m. Sunday and from 2 to 4 and
7 to 9 p.m. Monday.

Collins reports
on state budget
COLUMBUS - Sen. Oakley C.
Collins (R-Ironton ) remarked after
an address to a joint session of the
Ohio General Assembly by Gov.
James Rhodes Dec. 15, the General
Assembly concentrated its efforts
the remainder of" the week on the
state budget crisis.
Rhodes indicates in his remarks,
"Ohio is ·the victim of the .economic
blizzard that is rampaging across
·
the country."
Despite earlier budget cuts, including a two percent across-theboard cut made by the General
Assembly at the time the current
budget was adopted, a three percent
: cut ordered by Rhodes in June and
another six-percent cut ordered by
. the Governor November 7 of this
year, the state is approximately $500
million short in state revenues. This
deficit grows by $2.75 million every
.
day.
Not only have high interest rates
and double digit inflation wreaked
havoc with Ohio's economy, Ohio's
. dependence on the automotive industry has caused the state's unemployment rate to soar to 912 percent.
During 1980, Ohio will pay close to
$1.7 billion . in unemployment
benefits. This is almost a billion
dollars more than what was paid out
in 1979. In addition, the State of Ohio
will have to find apprmtimately $153
million more in state funds to meet
welfare payments.
The governor's proposal, passed
intact by both houses of the General
Assembly last week, includes the
following provisions. ·
First, the Governor will order an
· additional $101 million in budget cuts
effective Jan . I, 1981. Temporary
tax increases will therl provide an
additional $395 million of over the
next six-month period in order to
balance the budget.
The temporary taxes, which will
be in effect until June 30, 1981, include a temporary one percent increase in the state's sales tax (this
will increase that tax from 4 i&gt;ercent
to 5 percent); a temporary a!&gt;"
plication of the state's sales tax to
cigarettes and packaging; a tem·
porary increase in beer and wine
taxes; a tempoi'ary surtax of 15 percent on the corporate franchise tax;
and finally, a temporary one percent
increase in the utility gross receipts
tax, which will raise that tax from 4
percent to 5 percent.
It is estimated that the increase in
the sales tax will produce a!&gt;"
proximately $165 million; the increase in the beer and wine taxes
will amount to $18 million; the surcharge on the corporate franchise
tax will net $55 million; and, the one
percent increase in the utility gross
receipts tax will generate a!&gt;"
proximately $85 million.
In the area of sales tax, cigarette
sales are expected to produce $19
million. while applying the sales tax
to packaging sales will produce
another $85 million.
During the week the Senate passed
emergency legislation allowing the
Department of Transportation to
temporarily assign employees to
work outside their classifications.
The purpose of the legislation was to
allow the department to transfer
construction workers over to winter
maintenance crews. Although a long
established practice, a September
MJ!ing from the Ohio Attorney
General's office. into pennanent law
so that D.O.T. will be able to temporarily reasstgn idle construction
workers to the winner maintenance
crews as long as the employes oct.sent to the temporary reassignment.

Ohio-Point Pleasant

M

.
10oz.
Jar

COFFEE

'369

With
Coupon

I

I

1
I

II

~.::.:.;-..;.o.•·..,!!!!!!.'!..Expir~.l;t!l.J
69e.L_
.,.

-

�Pa e--A-6- The sunda v'Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middle port Gallipol is, Ohi&lt;r--Poin t Pleasa nt, w. v a.

Smoke

A Happy New Year

alarms
Open Daily 10-9
Open Sunday 1-6 ·

recommended
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In the
city's posh suburb of Upper
Arlington, five employees work lull
time in lire inspection and fi re
safety progranns. And each recommends a smoke detector in all
bUildings, commercial or residential.
Such a device was not found in the
home of Dr. James Ferraro a
plastic surgeon , wh ose f~ur
children, mother and only sister
perished in an early morning fire
Christmas Day.
The blaze originated nea r a
fireplace and Christmas tree in the
family room, firefighers said. Loose
and deteriorating mortar in the
chimney was the proba ble ca use of
the blaze, with sparks escaping
through the cracks, said Capt. John
Leddy on Frida v.
Dr. and Mrs. ·Ferraro left home at
about II p. m. to attend a Catholic
midnight mass. · They said ' they
believed the fire was out in the
fireplace wl)en they left.
The Upper Arlington Fire Depart·
ment's recommendation uf smoke
detectors includes those approved
by a recognized agency such as Un·
derwriters Laboratory or Factory
Mutual , said Michael Such, the

.

By Bob Hoeflich
The Saving Place ···

7 Big Days To Save. Now Thru Sat.

.•.

-.

..

•

(900) '

Sale Price On Twin Flat Or Fitte d

''
y
\

\

\

I ;~

, , ..
__

Percale ''Dainty Daises"
Sheets Made With Kodel "'

department 's inspector,

"Both test the detectors that are
sold to make sure they meet stall'
dards and operate as they should un·
der certain conditions, " he said.
Acc01·ding to Such, the fire department offers various progra ms to
prevent blazes.
"We have a fire education
prog ram in al l Upper Arlington
schools fo r grades one through
eight," he sa id. "We have inspection
programs for all commercial
buildings in the city a minunwn of
two times per yea r and a home in·
spection program whereby we go to
all dwellings in the city. We cover
the city every two years."
The Columbus Fire Department
offers inspections in all of the city's
n eigh borh oods, ~ spokesman said.
"But we have no jurisdicti ons in
private residences," said inspector
Jim Grosshart. " We go door to door
and offe r free home safetv in·
spections. Other than that, th~re is
nothing we ca n do if we are refused

Permanent-press Ka de l' polyeste r/cotton
b le nd for beauty a nd wear . 180 threads
pe r squa re inc h. Spring-minde d pastel s
.;;·

.~ :

·:~:~

:~\\.&gt;:.: ':·.::·.:·····

Standard Pillowcases .. , .... C90J ). Pr. 4.22
Double.Sheets, Flat Or Fitted .(902 ).. .. 5.32
,Queen Sheets, Flat Or Fitted . ( 9031 . .. 9 .22

1

\\

~

.( 904)
Sole Price

Ou r Re g 6.6 7

--&lt;- ·~ .. '

---------w
,,.

bound edging. Ma
chine wash 72x90"

.I

.. ' Flo ! or Fill eo

By The Associated Pre!lfi
At least five people have been
killed in traffic accidents in Ohio so
far during the holiday weekend, according to the State Highway Patrol.
The patrol Is counting fatalities
from 6 p.m. Wednesday to midniglrt
Sunday.
The dead :

Our Re g . 4.97

2.77rwin
No·lron Sheets
Wh ite polye ste r/co t t o n . 1 30
. threads per sq. in.

\ ~ \\.e~.$$,,.
~~!
t
/ ~~~~~~~~~~ke~lt h
:::::_. \' l

(905)

. I

5.27

Five killed

(909)

3 . 9 7 s t d.
Satin Pillow
In p rint a ceta te
satin with polye ste r fill . Colors. '

'

· Our Reg. 5.97 Que~n Slz'e, 4.97 [910)
~u~~ttg. 6.97 King Size .. . 5.97 (911)

Jl'iuDAY
AKRON - 'Jeffery G. Freeland, 18,
of Mogadore, in a one-car accident
on a city street.
·
EMPIRE - James Joseph
Chesney, 24, of Toronto, in a two-car
accident on Ohio 152 in Jefferson
County.

admission to a home."

Columbus offers free home in·
spections upon request. but the city

Our Reg. 14.7· 1.67

has no way to enforce ret:om-

(917)

98~

mendations in pnva te · dwellings,
Grosshart said.
State and loca l laws give
fi refighters clout in cmrunercial
buildings. Such structures in Colum·
bus are inspected bi-monthly.
Schools and high risk-buildings those with a large concentration of
people or with a concentration uf
dangerous materia l - are checked
monthly.
"We do have the ri ght to enter
corrunercial buildings for inspection
purposes through city and state fi re
codes," Grosshart said. ''We have
authority to write orders for correc·
tions to be made when we find a fi re
code violation and to follow up to see
that they are accomplished.''
If corrections arc not mad e, th ere
is provision in law for lega l ac.tion,
according to Grosshart. An uncorrected first offense is a fi rs t·
degree misdemeanor under state
taw , he said.

Kitchen Towel
41!-cotto n le rry
wilh c hec ked
design. l5x25"

~--···'--,

~ ""' __

ftiUJVIDAY
COLUMBUS - James D. Comer,
66, of Colwnbus, in a two-car crash
on a city street.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
MARIETTA - Valeria P.
Holdren, 46, of Newport, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 7 in· Washington
County.
OREGON - Ervin A. Koester, 33,
of Toledo, in a .snowmobile accident
on a rural road in Lucas County.

.1.26

..,

Sale Price (919)

l

[921)

3.9l~~~42 "

2For$7
Standard Pillow
Poiyesle r 1 col ton
li c k1ng. p o lyester
f1ll . 20x26" Save.
20x30" Queen
Size. .... . 2 For $8

1.96~i~:h

Sheared Towel
.

.

" Bittersweet"
print on cotton
polyester terry.

[920)

(924}

Sale Price

Terry Towels
Unshea red te rry in
l oo p ~ cotton/
polyester 24x42".

.,

12x12". C92S). 76~
15x25" [926) .1.26

••

i

'

(928)
(927)

I

Our Reg. 1.33

94¢

Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY- The Meigs County
Emergen cy Medi cal Se rvice
Headquarters report' nine runs
were made Friday by area emergency unil,.
At 12:48 a.m., the Ra cine sqqad
transported Louis Lee, Racine, tu
Holzer Medical Center, and at 9:43
a. m., the Pomeroy squad was called
to 34851 Rocksprings Road ,
Pomeroy, to take Homer Willard to
Veterans Memorial Hospi tal. The
Middleport squad made the third
run at 10:15 a.rh ., to the home of
Nellie Nelson, 70 North 2nd St. She
was treated on the scene.
The Middleport squad answci·ect
another· c«ll at 11 :50 a.m., tran·
sporting Daisy Sisson frmn her
home at 144 Coal st. lo Veterans
Memoria l Hospital. At 1:40 P~ m . ,
the Tuppers Plains unit was called to
Silver Ridge, Reedsville, to take
Jane Smith to Holzer Medical Center, and the Raci ne squad transported Joe Stobart from his Racine
.home to Holzer, at6 :35 p.m.
At 6:48 p.m., the Middleport
emergency unit took Mamie Hendricks fmm her hmne at 657 S. 2nd
St. to Veterans Memorial, and the
Raci ne squad t ran9ported Yetta
Knight from her Racine residence to
Veterans Memorial at 10:32 p.m.
Finally, at 11:57 p.m., Jack Lance
was taken from Five Points to
Veterans Memorial by the Pomeroy
unit.
A

Were you among the absent
Friday?
Seems like there was·little stirring
what with the courthouse, banks and
other ~loesses closed for the day
to stretch Christmas a little longer.
The next time I go through this .
world, I hope to get a job at a place
where you get aU of these little extra
fringe benefits like extra days· off
several times during the year.· It
m\lllt be nice. I always smite when
people mention Veterans Day.
Seems to me that everyone gets
Veterans Dny off but the veterans.
Well - if you had the strength and money - to ·venture forthFriday you probably picked up some
great buys. Some merchants staged
post Christmas sales with mark
downs up to 50 per~nt off, a good
return for your "mad" money if you
had any.
Frankly, r think . Meigs County
should have a white elephant
business for a week or so after
Christmas. This would be a place
where you take ali of the Christmas
presents that you don't like and
trade them for something you like a
'little better. Keep in mind, that one
man 's trash is another man's
treasure, so such a shop could work
out very well - and think of the fun.
Our publisher Robert L. Wingett
says he had a good Christmas - got
the usual socks and ties. We keep
telling him there are things worse
than socks and ties. You DO know
wl\at I mean, don't you?' ·. ·

· tos tman lc:odok Re g IM

I .~~~~. ct~

Cyanam l(j
Reg . TM

'

Our Reg. 1.38 Yd.

Ske in

Sale Price

Cotton Percales
Colorful c o lle c tion o f nove lty
pr~ n t s
35-36" .

Cre s lan acr yli c
ny lon.

( 929)

••
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•
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•

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2.97~i~~h

9 7 t i : Yd.

4 Ply Dazzle Aire

" merlean

Velvety Towels
Co tto n I polyes te r shea red terry
in colors. 22x44 ".

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(931)

(932)

SFor$1
Colorful Choice!
Polyester Thread
225-yard spools of
spun polye ste r in
whih3 nnrl &lt;:r)lnrs.

Save! Lux · Liquid
Mild Detergent
Mild liquid detergenl tor dishes or
ha nd wash 22 oz ."

•

' fl Ol

(933)
3FoA8e ·
Jergens· Soop At
A Stock-up Price
Lotion-mild Soap in
thnfty 3-oz." size
b(m Sqve now.
··1

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Our Reg. .S.48

( 934 )

4.44

6-pr. Pkg. Men•a
Tube Work Socks .
Qual ity cotton/ny.
Ion soc ks In white
One size fits 10-lj

Our

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5.78-6.78

4.97

(935)

• 3-ln•pl(l. lrlefs,

OrTee hlrta
100 % Combed c otton. In men·s sizes.
Our 3.78-3.97 Boys• 3·.
ln·Dkg. Underwear
.·1--llog.IM

.

Re~;~. 2.96-3.22

$ 2 e a.
Faahlon lraa In
Neat Fabric a!
Choice of styles.
Save on Fashion
llklnla, 2 pr., $1 ·

1 GROUP

1

MEN'S WEYENBERG·

_ PAl~ .

1 GROUP
CHILDREN'S

•

CHILDREN'S
SHOES
"f2 PRICE'
INTIRE STOCK
LADIES' LEATHER

'10"

•••

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P

FASHION BOOTS
l!JPRICE
WOMEN'S SHOES
VAWES TO '30JIO

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GALLIPOLIS
446-2342

l ' GROUP

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WOMEN'S. SHOES

'700
.
PAIR

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w. Va.

T imes· Senlinei- Page-A-7

SHOES .&amp;

'1599PAIR.

·DINGO BOOTS

1 GIOUP

SLIPPERS

•200 P.AIR

'if2PRICE

MARGUERITE
SHOES
.' Plf.
'

rate for commercial customers·
because the· bank doesn't believe
New York and Califorru·a lenders
Should dictate local interest rates.
"I don't think we should depend on
those big guys in New York or Los
Angeles," he said. "We have to serveourconununity, not theirs."
A bank's prime rate is that
charged its best commerCial
customers, such as large businesses.
Other firms often pay from one to
three percentage points more, as
the~ will atthe Sylvania bank.
· Across the l)ation, the prime rate
bas climbed in recent tnonths until it
now generally ranges 'from 20t per;.,;nt to 21t per~nt .
,,
The Sylvania bank followed until
. the prime rate hit 20 pe rcent.
"That's when we decided to stop,"
Alcock said. "And that's when I
began to think there had to be
another way."
Although
bank$235
isn'tmillion
large -assets
total the
about
Alcock hopes the action will catch on
with other lenders.
Sylvania Savings Bank has made
about $23 million in loa ns, or 18 percent of its total, to commercial

TOTAL NEW DESIGN
IN MEMORALIZATION

c~tomers who will be affected by
the new base rate, he said. Most of
its loans,·$76 million, or 58 percent,
are for real estate.
Alcock said the bank's new base
rate will be adjusted weekly, \llling a
fof1\lula based on the interest rates
paid on six-month money market
certificates. The bank will take that
rate, add 3t percent and round off to
the nearest quarter percent.
The certificate rate is determined
as a tesult of the U.S. Treasury auclion of 26-week bills. By law, that
figure then is used to determine the
money ma~ket rate for banks and
savings and loans. ·
"We wr'It pay the gomg
· money
market tate," Alcock said. "At. this
point, we're not going to restrict it."
The bank, with a loan level of
about62 per~nt, decided to lowerits
prime rate because of the sluggish
economy, he said.

" It's good for any business to have
nk
inventory, ba ing included," he
'd
"B
t
hat
ood · ·
t ·if
.
881 ·
u w g 15 mven ory
you can't move it? Nothing'smoving
... houses aren't moving, builders
have stopped working."
Al.cock said .the bank received
several telephone calls about the
new interest rate. But it was too soon
the day after Christmas to know
whether the bank's lending activity
would rise, he said.
He's convinced the bank is taking
the proper course.
"Everyone has to help right now,"
he said. " If we only get down to one
person in the community, I'm convinced it will spread .
"I've been a banker for 34 yel!l'S,
and there ~rtainly are some things '
1 don't know. But I j\lllt have to
believe we're taking a step in the
right direction. We're sure going to
give ita shot."

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t

New Year's Sale
Dec. 29 • Dec. 30 · Dec. 31
We will have a ·large
selection of new books

on sale! (Quality hardbacks)
DISCOUNlS RANGING FROM
10% to 50%

SALE IS FOR 3 DAYS ONLY
No refunds. No Exchanges
Write for brochures showing memorials in c~lor
with sizes and pnces
stated .

Also assorted Hallmark Christmas Ornaments,
gift wrap, etc. on sale at reduced. prices.

LOGAN MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.

42 Court St.

In the Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, OH .

POMEROY, OH .
Leo L. Va ugha n. Mgr .

Remember, if you doll 't ."'ee it, a.Yk us! We sp erial order
Jtlbum."l, tap es , book.~ .

Ph. 992· 2l 88

VI,NTON, OH .
James 0 . Bli s h, Mgr.

We~re

Ph. 388-8603

Open Mon.-Sat., 9:30-8:00

- - -- - -- - - - - - L -- -- - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - - ----

t s times like these ·you
wish you had home
delivery of the. • •

Starts Monday Morning at 9:00A.M.

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Favorable energy
fuiure predicted

ClEARANCE SAlE

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Ohi&lt;r--Point Pleasant.

I hope you aU live on a little street
that is as pleasant as ours - that's
High St. ·in Pomeroy. For several
day&amp;before Christmas tile goodies
flow from house to house and it's
great. Could this . be THE "little
street where old friends meet" from
the song? Well - could be.
One of our neighbors, Ted Downie,
this year is quite ill at Holzer
Medical Center in GatUpolis, and
that threw a bit of a damper on the
street. His wife, Dorothy, spent a
great deal of time at the hospital.
WASHINGTON (AP) - If the
It's been quite a trying time. The
trends
in energy \llle and production
Downies' son, Chuck, and his jwife
established
in 1980 continue,
came in from the E.ast due to Ted's
Americans
will
enj oy a future ti
illness and spent several days before
"fewer
gasoline
lines,
more secure
having to get back home. Chuck had
jobs
and
less
dependence
on foreign
to start a return trek to Pomeroy afresources,"
the
president
of the
ter his father passed away Fr!day
Petroleum
Institute
American
evening.
If you've !reeo worried about predicted Saturday.
Charles J. DiBona, the head of the
Frances Smart - don't he. Recen;
Uy, Frances sold her home in ·Mid- oil industry's main lobbying group,
illeport and went to Colwnbils to live said 1980 was a year that saw many
- she's also spending time in favorable signs for the futu re, in·
Fiori'da. Everyone worried about eluding the setting of all-time recor·
Frances because she had such deep ds for oil and gas drilling in the
roots in Middleport. Well - Frances United States.
BecaUse of the increased exwas back in Middleport to be with
ploration,
oil production, which has
her family over the holiday and she
been
declining
for a decade in the
is delighted with her new living
lower
48
states,
is "much closer to
arrangement and now resides within ·
stabilizing,"
he
said.
a couple of hours traveling time
Hi gher prices prompted
from all of her children. She's doing
Americans to use 7 percent less oil
well.
·
Middleport's Gene Grate still than in 1979. Foreign oil use dropped
manages to make a few goodies over 22 percent below 1979 when the counthe ho)lday period. Remember when try imported 8.2 million barrels
he used to turn out piles of candy and daily.
That level can be cut in half by
cake for friends? Ge~ gave up the
1990
with some "relatively minor
large 5eale production a couple of
changes
in goverrunent policy,"
years ago but still hangs· in there
DiBona
said.
with a few handmade things which
get better every year if that's
possible.
I'm delighted that Vernon Weber work at Pomeroy Village Hall after
hangs in there to keep me and many . some real serious health problems.
others ~millng with ·his humor.ous It se&amp;ns soon because Llnda was so
signs a! the Quillity Print Shop in ill, but she swears she's really get;
Middleport. His wit is worth a trip to ling along fine and we welcome her
Middleport - and don't forget to back.
read both sides ol the sign.
It's just about time again to take
We did well·weather-wise over the pen and paper and note all 1lf those
holidaf. To the not1.h and south of \Ill, resolutions for the New · Year.
driVing was treacherous due to the Breaking them as you move through
ice ar\d snow. We bad a touch of 1981 will help you to keep smiling.
white and that was it. I hope that we
can have a mild winter ~ mild ones .------ - -- - - - -L
are so much safer - and chea{lfr.
I hope you noticed that the
Pomeroy Community did get a nice
Christmas gift in the .large cross
overlooking the community being
relighted after several months. The
cross has been moved and atr
parenUy new light bulbs installed.
It's a mighty welcome sight.
The flu continues to take its toll.
Our dependable Margaret Lehew is
the latest victim among our offi~
staff. Margaret held out as long as
possible ·before getting mpletely
down but finally had to give in and
go to bed: If you haven't had the
latest strain, color yourself mighty
lucky.
Linda Brunty has returned to ber

Marguerite 's Fall &amp; Winter

•AUDITIONS •JOLENE
•VOGUE •FANTASY
•NATURALIZER

•

Ou r Re g . 5 Fo r S I

SYLVANIA, Ohio (AP) - Officials of the Sylvania Savings Bank
are eager to see if anything happens
now that they've lowered their
prime lending rate to 17+ percent.
" If history holds true, I expect
some other banks (in the area)
might follow. And I hope we 'll have a
f av orabl e reaction from
_ cUstomers;" · said Bruce Alcock,
chief executiv_!! officer of the suburban Toledo bank, after the interest
rate dropped Friday.
Alcock said the bank's board of
· directors decided to drop its Wse

Of the Bend

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Bank drops .prime rate to 17 percent

Beat•••

WHITE AND BRIGHT SALE
.•'~;:. ~,'&lt;&gt;·~

Porn

Decem ber 2a, 1980 '~-

!IIMMM •
~~~~

,I

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~unllav
., 'm-imes· Jentinel

POMEROY
9'J2-2156

On the spur of the moment you decide to
. see a show and have to run out to get a
paper to find out what's playing, where,
when and what time at the last minute.

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

~

ISo, before that next time fill out thisl
I coupon and mail today for your ver;.y own I
.convenient home delivery. The best part
about It is that it wi II cost less for the ad·ded convenience.

I

Name ______________________

Str"'------,....----------------City_ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ __
5tate_ _ _ _;.__ _ _ _ _-:--

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TOM'S FIRST TIME EVER
SECOND AN.NIVERSARY
DENT - SCRATCH - DEMO

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HAMILTON, Oltio (AP) - A Pairfield couple is suing a group of
alwninum wiring manufacturers
over their 2-year·old son's death in a
house fin~.
Fifty defendants are named in the
$2.5 million damage suit filed in
Butler County Common Pleas Court
by Ralph and Sally Selonke. The
Jan. 2, 1979, fir·e at their home killed
their son Gary and injured another
son, 14-year-old Scott.
The suit said the defendants knew
the aluminum wiring in their home
was "inherently dangerous." The
couple seeks $500,000 compensatory
and $2 million punitive dama~es .
Defendants include the home
builder, Mack Reed and Mack Reed
Construction Co.; the Gilkey E)ectric Co. of Cincinnati; Underwrit~~s
Laboratories Inc.,; and nwnerotLS
alwninum wiring manufacturers ,
and distributors in several stales.

Bt.AZE.I(

1864
CAPT. RICHARD BLAZER was sketched by A. Don Pope, Orlando,
Fla; Pope was born in Gallipolis 73 years ago, and is a frequent con·
tributor to the Peeps column. Capt. Blazer was a half-brother of Hortie
Blazer Wetherholl, who was the mother of Winnie Wcthcrholt, 919 Fourth
Ave., Gallipolis.

Capt. Richard Blazer heroic
at war, died of yellow fever
BY JAMES SANDS
GALIJPOUS - In a November
letter to the Tribune from A. Don
Pope, he asked the question as to
whether the Capt. Richard Blazer
who died in Gallipolis in 1878 as the
result of yellow fever is the same
Blazer who was hired by Phil
Sheridan to clean out Mosby's
Raiders in Virginia during the Civil
War?
Indeed they are one and the same .
In Pope's letter he states :
" Most certainly he (Blazer )
should have a memorial more
meaningful than being a statistic on
a bronze (John) plaque in sor,ne city
park."
.
It is interesting to note that the
November, 1980 issue of Civil War
Times Illustrated has a rather
e"haustive story of the capture of
Blazer, complete with his picture.
It seems as though Blazer, who
was one time sheriff of Gallipolis,
became a notable marksman for the
9lst OVI during the war. His work
got the attention of General Crook
who appointed Blazer to head a !()().
man unit of marksmen whose chief
job was to hunt out bushwhackers in
West Virginia. These bushwhackers
robbed the supply trains and boats of
the Union cause.
In August of 1864 Crook mentioned
the 35 year old Blazer to Gen. Phil
· Sheridan who was having trouble
with bushwhackers led by John
Mosby. Sheridan liked the idea and
in late August telegraphed
Washington of his plans to clean out
"Mosby's gang ." Sheridan asked
Washington to send him 100 Spencer
rifles.
Blazer who lives in Gallipolis and
West Virginia as well as out west
fighting Indians, spent much of his
non-military life as captain on
various steamboats that plied the
Ohio River.
Blazer was " a stern looking of·
fleer, " accordtug to Jeffry Wert
wriUng In the Civil War Times
IDIIBtrated. "He had high cheek·
bones, a pronouaced forehead,
stralgh~ well-groomed hair and . a
mustache and neat chin beard
framing a small mouth."
It is indeed strange that most of
Blazer's admirers for his work done
in the war were Confederates. He is
mentioned only briefly in the works
on Crook, Sherican, and oiher Union
soldiers. One .- Union historian
I

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Family sues

c ...n. R,nt ... ~

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holiday season. The figures, made by Mrs. Neutzling,
were aw,arded first prize in the most original category,
in the recent lighting and decorating contest sponsored
by the Winding Trail Garden Club.

A FAR CRY from the traditional Santa and rein·
deer decorations, these " Peanuts" characters at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James Neutzling, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, express a more Hioday'' view of the

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The name of the game-couponing and refunding

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claimed that Blazer was "eq mpped
with fnore buildup than ability."
On the other hand, John Scott, who
fought with Mosby and later wrote a
book about the exploits of Mosby's
Raiders, had a far better opinion of
Blazer, saying that all Mosby's men
·· respected the valor of Captain
Blazer."
" He often assailed the outposts of
the CoOlederate army, and unfrequently par1icipated in larger
combats. Scouts who had been sent
to the Valley wou,ld, when they retur·
ned, often entertain their comrddes
with accounts of their escape from
Blazer.''
Blazer operated in the same manncr that Mosby did. His movements
were rapid and his expeditions of attacking Mosby's bushwhackers
would last three days, during which
time he rarely went into camp until
late at night, and always moved
before daybreak.
· Blazer also used Mosby's tactics
in becoming kind and considerate of
the local fanners. According to

Scott:
"His kindness sprang from the ·
heart, but lt might. weU have been
the dictate of a refined pollcy, for II
engendered for him a sympathy
·among the people which opened to
him many .· a channel of in·
formation .''
Blazer had done such damage on
Mosby's forces that Mosby concluded that Blazer's Scouts had to be
wiped out. In late November, 1864,
Blazer had crossed the Shenandoah
Mountains by way of Snicker's Gap
and was headed to Cabletown, West
Virginia, where the townSpeople
were largely sympathetic toward
Blazer. It was here that Blazer
played his last trick on Mosby by
capturing several of Mosby's men
while Blazer's Scouts were
masquerating as Confederates.
Soon after this Blazer was drawn
into a trap : 22 of Blazer's shar·
pshooters lay dead before Blazer
could rally his men . True to his
fighting spirit Blazer tried to continue !he fight but to no avail.
Clearly the fi ght was lost, and it was
eve ry man for hilnself. Blazer ·
headed off on horseback toward Rippon with severa l Con federates in.hot
pursuit. With shots whizzing over his
head, he bent close to his saddle so
as to reduce his target. Finally
Blazer's tired horse was overtaken
as he was knocked from his saddle
by a blow tu the head.
Blazer had seen 24 of his men
killed, 12 wounded, and 62 taken
prisoner. Only two of the Scouts had
made it back to Union headquarters.
After some months in the Libby
Prison, Blazer was released to his
9lst OVI, but the Scouts were never
reot·ganized. ·

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ONE WEEK'S TAKE - This local refunder
displays here one week's "take"- about $27 In money
and free products. The excitement, she says,. comes
from finding money In the mall instead of just bills!

•

HE'LL
.

OF FINE HOME FURNISHINGS
"QUALITY NAME iRANDS ·

AT SALE PRICE$"

--FLEXSTELL
-lANE
-ARMSTRONG

··.

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TE-LL

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YOU'LL HAVE TO COME IN
AND SEE! I• I•

20%

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60%

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OPEN MONDAY
TIL 8:00 PM·
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p .\.-..:.-.::---·-··"--'
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TURNING' TRASH INTO ' CASH - April Smith,
Uncola Heigllta, Pomeroy, spends about an boar -h
evening oa relnndlq. She fiDda that It'• reaDy paylllg
off. Very organlled aboat 1be wbole lhllll, Mn Smith
"uves everyWq" uatac 1 fJUq c:ablaeiBDII smaUer
carlool iD wblch to store her labels, boxes, fOI'IDI and
Information. "Mesay," abe says, "but weD worth II!"

TUESDAY TIL S: ·WEDNESDAY TIL 5
••

'MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,/

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-SPEED QUEEN

'

· ' " Just seems like too much trou bl e, " s he com·
coupons.

mented. On this shopping cart of groceries which cost
Mrs. Spencer nearly $70, she might have been able to
save between $10 and $20 through the eouponing and
refunding system.

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SALE STARTS
MONDAY, DEC. 29
AND .ENDS
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 31 _.

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SAVINGS. • • •
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MUCH TROUBLE? - Margaret Spencer of
Route 3 Pomeroy, has never gone in much for clipping

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BAKER. FURNITURE

along with the required form. Some
six to eight weeks later' the
manufacturer sends a check, or a
coupon for free products, or some
gift.
Serious refunds can bring in
several hundred dollars a year- all
tax free.
!lefund forms can be found in
stores, on products, in newspapers
and magazines, but are more dif- .
ficulllo find that regular "~ents-off"
coupons.
There are nwnerous publications
which list hundreds of current
refund offers, but the one most men·
lioned by local . refunders is
"Moneytalk."
According to Margaret Ella
Lewis, who has been in the business
of saving money through couponing
and refunding for years, subscribing
to a refund bulletin is almost essential.
If a refund bulletin tells of a friend
for which you can't find a form
locally, then the company can be
contacted for one, or an exchange of
couJions and forms can be made with
another ref under.
While you can't expect to get rich
. on refunding or to save a " bundle"
with coupons, it is a way of helping
to balance the household budget.
And if 1981 does bring forth that
wild burst of run-away inflation
predicted by economic forecaster
Howard J . RUff, then now is the
time to get in on the game and begin
turning trash into cash.

)

--"HOOVER
-F.IGID~IRE

POMEROY - "Couponing and
the shopper .
refunding" is the mime of the game, '
While April Smith of Lincoln
and it's big business as more and
Heights is relatively new in the
more become involved in turning
game of trying to beat the high cost
trash into cash.
of food and household products
The ever-increasing food ~rices
through coupons and refunds, she
have made grocery shopping sheer
does have this advice- "never buy
frustration for families with limited
anything you don't need."
income and more and more are turShe suggests making a list of the
ning to "cents-off" coupons and
groceries you need, and then
refunders as a way of saving on the
checking your coupon and refund
total.
file to see where you can save. She
Smart shoppers who are really inswitches brands if it saves money,
to couponing and refunding contend
but she never buys a product simply
that they can save between 25 and 30
because she has a coupon or a refund
percent. But that takes real
is being offered on it.
organization and time.
When shopping, items with
Many shoppers use coupons clipcoupons should be separated from
ped from newspapers and
items without coupons to make it
magazines occasionally. Few use
easier for everyone including the
enough to really make a difference
c~sltier and the people in the line
in their grocery bill.
·
behind at checkout time.
With !Sto 20 percent of a family's
Where do you get the coupons?
income being spent on food , using
From newspaper ads, in special
coupons an(! doing refunding, as well
displays at the stores, in magazine
as watching the sales, can make a
advertising, enclosed in products,
difference in lifestyle.
from home mailers or from trading
Issuing coupons and giving r.efunwith friends.
•
ds is a promotional scheme of inMeigs County has a refunder club
dustry- a method used to·promote
with regular monthly meetings and
the use of new items and to increase
lois of trading goes on there.
sales on specific items.
Refunding is "where it's at" inCouponing means good sales for a sofar . as actually coming up with
store, PLUS a handling fee from the
cash, free products, and a variety of
issuing company, so there is no need
gift items.
ld be embarrassed. There's nothi~g
The manufacturer issues an offer
"cheap" about saving coupons and
of a refund to all customers who
cashing in on them. Coupons and
have bought a particular product
refunding benefit the store as well as
when they send the "qualifiers"
which means proof of purchase,

.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

JANUARY SALE

1

Saving money

•

,.-.&gt;{'

....

B

•

'·

~ ,·&gt;

December 28, 1980
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

~

1ont.'4 S~Meo.
l43 Third ~ve.

•

Pll. 446·7'

t1et,tell.
G.lllpolls, O!

•

.•'
.•
•
••
•

••

'

VETE'RAN REFUNDER - Meigs Local teaeber
(reUred) Margaret Ella Lewis bu been In the refandIDg business for yean. A-spedal eclaeaUon teacher at

the Pomeroy Elementary Sebool lor many yean, Mn.
Lewis •was able to 1e1 many of 1be toys ud alter
elaaaroom supplies free ol cllarge tbroalh reftmdlal,

�is , Ohio-Point .

Pomeroy- Middleport- Ga

Pillge--8-2- The Sunday "times-Sentinel

w. va .

New speech form improves life, creator says
CLEVELAND (AP) - Ask the
old Harold Kirkland a question
and he would likely be af('aid to
look at you.
"I was SAl shy," be said. "Ask
, me a question and I'd put my
head down. Now, my head is up
and l will not accept 'no' fo!' an
answer."
The difference, according to
the ~year-{)ld Kirkland, is
Responsibility Language, a
relatively new form &lt;i speech
that has gained acceptance by
!Wme governmental bodies.
John Taylor Dt)nnis, inventor of
Responsibility Language, said
the principle is illustrated by the
difference between an openended statement like, " I'U see
you around, " and a positive
assertion such as, "I'U meet you
in the cafeteria •t ~ n.m .

tomorrow.''
The city of Cleveland paid Dennis S84,000 to train 200 Comprehensive Employmert anll
Training Act employees and 15
CETA workers who can now
teach the language.
"When you talk responsibly,
you are in control and the person
develops a power which ordinary
language does not convey," he
said. " It eliminates copping-{)ut
language. When you say you'll do
something, you must do it."
Dennis, a foriner educator,
developed
Responsibility
Ulnguage Systems Inc. in Atlanta in 1975 after he had suffered
through a particularly
distressing time. He was unemployed, recuperating from a bout
with cancer and in need of

Star Grange hosts holiday fare
MIDDIEPORT - StarGrange778
held its annual Christmas supper
recently with a highlight of the
evening being the arrival of Santa
who distributed gifts from beneath a
decorated tree.
Attending were 46 members and
friends including Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Midkiff, Crystal Vaughan, Laurie
Ann and Denise Shenefield; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Montgomery, Mrs.
Pauline Rife, Mrs. Christine Napier,
Kevin and Lark, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Rife, Carla and Becky, Mrs. Mildred

Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Will,
Mrs. Anna E. Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Macomber, Mr. and Mrs.
Ricky Macomber and ·Davi!l, Waid
Nicholson, John Holliday, Mrs. Neva
Nicholson, Joe Denison, Mrs.
Maxine Dyer, Opal and Patty, Mrs.
Ruby Lambert, Bobby and Cathy,
Scott and Marilyn Haddox, Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Hatfield, Mrs. Charlotte
Erlewine and Jenny, Mrs. John
Colwell and Dean, Mrs. Frank
Colwell and Bryan, Anna and Alan
Halliday.

Community Corner
Shower helps burn victim
Such a nice gesture, and so very
appreciated ...
Margaret
Lewis lost
of her ~~~i~i~
when h~
home burned a
week or so
Chri stmas and
Tu es da y
as
classes at the
Charlene
Pomeroy Elementary School were
dismissed for the holiday, the
teachers, janitors and cooks gave
her a shower of personal and
household items.
Mrs. Lewis for the past six weeks
has substituted for Mary Hysell at
the Pomeroy school. It was one day
while she was teaching that her
mobile home burned. ·
She is now at her Bradbury Road
home. Perhaps the mils! distressing
for Margaret Ella is the fact that
several of her animals were lost in
the fire.
Originality abounds durng the
holidays and the Christmas tree
decorations at Janet's Hair-GO:.
Round in Mason were most appropriate. She used a wig for the tree
top, cotton, hair clips and other
beauty shop paraphernalia for the
decorations.
Henry and Edna Reibel had a
quiet 67th wedding anniversary on
Christmas Day. Henry had been confined to the Holzer Medical Center
for over a week, but was able to
come home for the holidays. He is 91,
up and down now, but improving.
Guests at the Reibel home were Mrs.
Althea Strong, Wilkesville; Mr. and
Mrs. Donley Strong and daughter,
Columbus; Bill Strong, Columbus,
and-his fiance , Kathy, of Jackson;
Diane Strong, Chesapeake ; Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Shato and Kristen,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Craig
and daughter, Sarah, Minersville;
Danny Saunders, Ewington.
From far and near families
. gathered for the holiday.

more positively:"
Dennis' system strives to erase
words s~ch as can't, try, should,
ought, nght, wrong, can, never
and always from a person's
speech. Classes, held from 8 a.m.to 4:30 p.m. daily, involve the
reading and writing of the
language and the videotaping of
students' conversations in
various situations.
B.N. Bosiljevic, administrator
of · CETA 's public service employment programs, said he's
satisfied that . Responsibility
Lang\Uige improves workers'
language patterns.
"Although the test scores won't
be ready until next week, I understand there has been- con~
siderable improvement for most
of the employees," he said.

money.
Responsibility Language was
his response to that depressing
portion of his life. The following
year, the city of Atlanta hired
him with federal CETA funds to.
train 150 adults.
''Sometimes a word or a phrase
is the difference between love or
hate, or getting the job or not," he
said. "And it's been our experience that anyone who learns
and applies RL achieves satisfaction .through success, and
becomes happy."
Dennis' students seem pleased
with the results they see in them. selves.
"I feel it will help me get a ~Jilt·
ter job," said trainee Randy
Baker. "I was .using a lot of
failure language, like 'I can't' or
,'(might..' This m• kes you think

EM Society gathers
hospital and at home. Officers'
reports were given.
Christmas gifts were ·exchanged and for a dessert course
members were seated at
decorated tables. Mrs. helen
Miller and Mrs. Eva Dessauer
were guests. Members attending
were Mrs. Janet Venoy, Mrs.
Gertie Bass, Mrs. Betty Spencer,
Mrs. LaDonna Clark, Mrs.
Evelyn Woodford, Mrs; Judy
Grogan, Mrs. Marjorie Kapple,
Mrs. Trudy Andrews, Miss Ann
Davidson, Mrs. Alkire, and Miss
Naomi Ohlinger.
·

POMEROY - Friends and
members &lt;i the Evangeline
Missionary Society, Pomeroy
Church of Christ, gathered at the
home of Mrs. Eileen Bowers for a
Christmas party.
Miss Ann Davidson read the
Chrisimas story from St. Luke;
and Charldene Alkire accompanied the group for·singing
of Christmas carols.
During the business meeting a
donation was made to the
Japanese mission station. There
was a report on the gifts, flowers,
cards went to members in the

Here for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. .--------------------------1
Dale Walburn and daughter, Jill, .are
their son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Steven Walburn of Bristol,
Tenn. Friday the family was joined
for a dinner by Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Walburn, Sr., Middleport.
Mrs. Trudy Andrews spent Christmas in Athens with her son, Larry
ESCORTED MOTORCOACH TOURS
Irwin, his wife and their daughter.
She had telephone calls from her son
in Florida and her daughter in
EARLY BIRD
California. It was Mrs. Andrews' first Christmas in Ohio for 10 year~,
For Any Reservations Made Before Mar. 1, 1981
Middleport's Pete Roush marked
up another birthday on Christmas.
BUCKEYE CARD HO~DERS INQUIRE
Day. There was a family gath~ring
at the home of Roy and Maida Long,
. YOUR ADDITIONAL DISCOUNT I
children, Ricky and Larissa, with
CLIP THE COUPON .BELOW AND MAIL,
Mr. and Mrs. Roush, Richard Long,
Middleport, his daugtlter, Mary
F.OR A F.QEE BiU)CHURE QN OUR _
Beth Long, here from Georgia, and
1981 Motorcoach &amp; Worldwide Tours
Lori Rupe. On Christmas Day ·the
OUR BUS TOURS ARE MORE THAN. A
fwnily WIIS joined by Mr. and Mrs.
BUS RIDE, THEY ARE PROFESSIONALLY
Russell Roush and children, Eric
and Chris, Pataskala. Mary Beth
ESCORTED MOTOR COACH TOURS . .
and .Richard Long of Georgia are
here visiting their father and his .
MAIL TO:
mother, Mrs. Mildred Long.
AA.A GROUP TOURS • 33 COURT ST.
Betty and David Ohlinger observed their 18th weddinb anGALLIPOLIS, 0.
446-0699
niversary on Christmas Day. The
family gathered at the Ohlinger
. . NAME
home for the traditional holiday
celebration and in the group were
ADDRESS
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Baer, Tricia and
Eddie, ·Sandy lannarelli, Dave and
CITY, STATE, ZIP
Andy , Sonya Ohlinger, Mrs. Lillian
Gress, Carla Smith, and Jim
· Frecker.
·
PH. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I am Interested
Spending Christmas Eve with Mr.
and Mrs. Phil Ohlinger, Laura, and
in Going to
Phil and Abby Ohlinger were Mr.
and Mrs. Don Hunnel and Artie, Mr.
GALLIPOLIS
• 33 Court st.
and Mrs. Charles Warth and
children, David, Darrin and Amy,
Gallipolis, Oh.
Agency
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sisson and Nate.
446-0699
L--!'.S,!:,0273 SUB 1M;!',!!_O,!J.!. __ ..:.
Also making a holiday visit with the
family were Mrs. Bernice Evans
and Mrs. John Cunningham of
Gallipolis.
·
·
Did you have guests for Christmas
or go out of town to be with relatives
or friends? Share your news with us

1981

5%

Discount

r-----------------------------I

~®
'T.:~vel

..
Buy Times-Sentinel dassifieds ..
.
....
. '

H 1,

"

~

CH-E:RISH- ME:MORIE:S OF

CHRISTMAS

PRE-INVENTORY SALE .
MON.· TUES.· WED.
DEC. 29 THRU DEC. 31

We Reserve the R i9ht to L.imit Q_uantlt.v PHONE ~411·9493'

EFFECTIVE lHROUGH
-.
·-SATURDAY, JANUARY
"We Reserve tte
.......:......,.,
'

SUPERIOR
BONELESS .

·

'12!
GOLD KIST

· SUPERIOR

FRANKIES

99~

Chicken .Wieners

89C

POUND
PKG. ·

SUPERIOR

COUNTRY ·STYLE

Polish Sausage

SPARE -RIBS

'1 O!e.

'139

~-:I:Y.i7

FLORIDA

FRESH GREE.N

CABBAGE
~LB.

TANGERINES

69Cooi

180CT.

Sandra Hill ·weds William Baer

ON ALL CASH SALES

ALL WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES
CONNIES -

~yes were host and hostess at a

: liALWPOUS- Barb and Charley

Pearl Thomas, daughter Donna and

s1Jh&gt;rise birthday party at their
!1Drpe for Kermit Fisher on Dec. 13.
::r;hose present w\fi Phil and Deb~;Fisher and son, Travis, Jim and
Btgit ~isher, Joan Elkins, Rose and
R~er James, Dick Brown, Bill and
delte Mi.ller, Bob and Beth Bainter,
Jmlzi, Chad and Stephanie Mayes,
~th Ann Johnson and wife , June
l!lsher, all of Gallioolis; Sid and

of
Circleville.
Marsha,
son Glenn, ·and Lola Ertel
Fisher a~o got a call from his
sister, Faye Proffitt of Belpre. He
received many cards and gifts. His
birthday cake was decorated by
wife, Jeane, and Pearl Thomas.
Opal and B. J : Diddle of Racine
visited on Dec. 12 and treated Fisher
to a dinner in Pt. Pleasant, W..Va.

110·12ii
11[1.128
1i10
135
12 EXPOSURES f'O EXPOSURES 24 EXPOSURES 24 EXPOSURES

·,

'

OPEN Til. I P.M. MONDAY
Offer Expires Janua iv 5,

1981

FRUTH'S PHARMACY
JAckson Pitce

FRENcll CiTy fAbRic Sll
58 COURT ST.

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

Gallipolis
1.

master
charge
• . , ..._
·~

.SAVE 10% OFF
WOMEN'S DRESS BOOTS

.

THICKNESS OF ICE
Ice three inches thick will support
one man on foot. Seven and a half inches wiU hOld an automobile. A foot
of ice will sustain a small truck.

~u·.

.

I

r-;:============:;;::;:::::::=::=========================~

While Present

Stock lasts
I

STALK

PEPSI or
7-UP

IL,LA ..._D A
GRADE A
'
EX-LARGE

VLASIC

SAUERKRAUT

- -~~~~_J

Hours
. : M-T
• 8 tilll
Fri. &amp; Sat:
8 til 2

EGGS

32 OZ. JAR

87~

69~

8-16 oz.

TRUST'S

$}09 .

Btls.

.

+Tax
&amp; Deposi1

Ice Cold Beer, Wine &amp; Pop
Drive· Thru Carry-Out

-GALLIPOLIS ICE CO.
709 First Ave.

Gallipolis

OR
DIET RITE OOLA

.,39

8-16 OZ. BOITLES

VALLEY BELL

.,,.

SHERBET
Half
Gallon

HUNT'S

TOMATO ·JUICE

46oz.
Can ·69C

BROUGHTON

French Onion Dip

59~

8 OZ.

ROYAL CREST .

EGG NOGG
Quart

Ctn.

99~

ALL

run111

3 .oz.4~.,.
Box

R

00

Central Trust announces the Inn;rest
Account-:a checking account that pays
interest. No gimmicks, no aut9matic trans·
fers, just 5!4% interest, compounded daily. ·
on every penny you keep in checking. The
· federal regulations that will make this
possible go into effect on January L But you
can 'open your Interest Accourt now and
stan earning interest on New Year's Day. ·
Get your checking without service

.,39

7-UP or Diet 7
8-16 oz.
BOITLES

·

Plus

.

charges, too.

&amp; REMNANTS

Don't
Miss This Sale
.

HUSH PUPPIES

INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE

7

PROCESSING

AUDITIONS -

M~RQUISE

Mr. and Mrs. William Baer

EXCEPT SEWING MACHINES

~: COLOR FILM

group smgmg of ' Away m a
and Elsie Ba rnhart, Paul and IIa
Manger." P-dula Haynes read a Darqell, Pauline Hudson, Jackie
poem sent to the church from Randy Michael, John Michael and son,
a~d Tammy Haynes ~~titled "God's
Chris, Larry and Paula Haynes,
G1!t of Love to Us. There we re
Kristi and Matt, Dan and Karen
treats g1ven at the conclusiOn of the . Meadows and Elislja, and his grandservice.
daughter,_ Br~ndy Meadows, Bob
Sunday evening a party was held and Bessie Kmg, Bill and Naorru
at the parsona ge where there wa s a Kmg, Hank and Kathy Johnson, and
gift exchange and a carol sing.
the host family, Jerry and Karim
Bob King had prayer before
Pmgley and children, Adam and
refreshments. Attendin~ were Dale Rebecca.

SAVE 20% OFF

J!ir.thday party honors Fisher
-

-

B-3

LEARADCE!

--

••

The Sunday Tim es-Sentin e l- Page

Church
members present
holiday
recitations
Tlie children's program at the
. .
,
.

Bradbury Church of Christ was
presented Sunday morning during
the Sunday school hour.
Recitations included "God's Wondrous Gift" by Adam Pingley· "A
little to Say" by Elisha Mead~ws ;
" AStar Did Guide" by TobySwartz ;
" Blessing" by Matthew Haynes;
"Far Off on the Hill" by Kristi
Haynes.
Kristy Haynes played a piano solo,
''A Star of the East" anrl there w•s

POMEROY - St. :Paul's Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy was the setting
for the Nov. 22 evening wedding Of
Sandra Lou Hill, daughter Of the late
Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Bowen, Minersdlle, and Charles William Baer,
S'/1) of Mr. and Mrs. George Baer,
Minersville.
:the.
William Middleswarth
pWforrned the double ring ceremony
fdllowing a program of music by Lee
!A. For her wedding the bride was
atr:!red in coral gown with a matclJing picture hat and carried a
bziquet of multi~lored daisies.
Her matron .Of honor was f1ecky
MftUory, Racine, whO wore a
t.:iQuoise gown ;md also carried
nWlti-colo~ daisies. The bride's
dlhghter, Marcy Hill, was the
flm,vergirl.
::John Costanzo, Portland Road,
sctved as best man for the groom
· w:!Jose son, Andy Baer, was the ring. !Jtarer. Usher was Ray Andrews,
Pemeroy. Qther immediate family
members attending were Sonja Hill,
daughter of the bride, and Chris
Bier, son of the groom.
:Mary Huddleston and Kay Wardlh, Racine, were hostesses for a
rereption which followed at the
hJllne of the couple.
~he new Mrs. Baer is a teacher at
the Syracuse Elementary School.
1\lr. Baer is teacher and principal ~
!tie Syracuse School.

LIFORNIA

3 DAYS ONLY

20%

PORK ROAST

117'·lB9

WHOLE
HAM

12 oz.
PKG.

~.

LOIN END ·

TAVERN HAM

•

Pomeroy- Middleport- Ga llipolis, Ohio- Point P lea sa nt, W. Va .

Rev.

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

Ctn.

OFF
STOREWIDE

.~

H

END OF YEAR

And now, a Happy New Year!

I

'" ~

FRENCH CITY FABRIC SHOPPE'S

- 992-2155.

December 28, 1980

December

HATS - FAVORS- NOISE MAKERS - BALLOONS

OF' GAlliPOLIS
RESERVATIONS
PHONE 446-0090
EXT. 306
Entertainment Bv

LARRY MAS$
1n the Lounge
By Popular Demand

(

••

Just keep a minimum balance of $1,000
in your Interest Account and you pay no
checking service charges. If y~ur balance
should fall below $1,000 , you 11 pay only

$5.00 for that month. And all the money
in your Interest Account will go right on
earning interest Or, simply keep $2,000 in
a regular Central Trust savings account, in·
eluded on your combined statement, and
your service charges will be waived.
SY&lt;;% interest Service charge free check·
ing. That's the Interest Account Get one.
today, and stan getting more from your
money-January 1. It's another better banking
service from Central Trust ·

1HE
CEN1RAL 1RUST
COMB\NY

Bette; Banking Service. That's The Central Idea.

CJ. · WI WIU. C&amp;.OSI CHRISTMAS lVI DICIMBER 24_tft AT 3:0,0 P.M.
·- - .

·

.

MAIN BANK AND BRANCH BANKS

.

.,.e..,ae• FDIC

\

�Pome~oy - Middleport -Gallipolis,

Page- B-6- The Sunday Times-Sentin el

dllng ,~Umething, which Jrwutvei ~ lai'JCt:
orgumfJitloo. N9 crowd il too bi~e, for you to
CqJeWith.
.

brce'i nber 2!. 198(1

Du

Paige Smith
and Corbet Cleek

.• m busme~:s admin istrait ou ctt the

• University of Dayton . He i.; &lt;'liiTco:tly employed with the Win ter's
· : National Bank of Dayton in a super·
: v•sory capacity.
• The wedding will be an ev&lt;•nl uf
:Jan. 17.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas E. Smith, 1691 Lincoln
Heights , Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Alicia
Paige, to Cm·bet Allen Cleek, son of
Mary Cleek, Route 3, Racine, and
Corbet 0. Cleek, Racine.
The bride-elect is a 1978 graduate
of Meigs High School, attended Ohio
UniverSity For one year, and is
currently employed at the Meigs
County Courthouse.
Her fian ce, a 1977 graduate of
Southern High School. b employed
at the Racine Hydro Plant as a carpe nter.
The open churcl1 wedding will be
an event of Apri 125 at Trini ty Chul·eh in Pomeroy. The recepti on will be
held at Royal Oak Park lodge. The

t

.....

•

Doo't lodt YOUI'IIV lnW U1 lliilwervlng
wth.d. thbr ~ year. You can mUe

maJor~ r you art' ~ble
.t cho=~ taetka &amp;o take adYaru~:~~e ot

lhe ....

-

•

CAPRI
illoo_- IIJli&lt;Jmtlline,
when we believt too lndepenclenUy we tum
urt the dolire of -loa who .,.
This might happen t.o you today it )'OU're nol
L'wrefuJ. Romance, travel, luck, rt!SOUI'Cel,
poollible !&gt;llfaU. and '"',...' lor lhe C&lt;lll1lni
rnOfllha are aU ~ in )'(lUI' AltroG"piJ· S.. • . Radio City Slalioo N Y
. IOOJ9.8esuretospedfybh1hdate. ' · ·

yuur mate areal an impa&amp;;e on an important
matter. Each MWit Prt~.dice j~lve-and-takt.
LEO fJoly 1$-Aol. ltl Othe1&gt; are lriltl)lg
to help tOO.y, Dut only if yoo 're not too
l)e•OIOildinB· Ask nothing ol them _ you

wouldn't do yoursetf.

VIRGO lAIII• z:s..8ipt. 12) Finance i.a an
lftl where you wiD have to be extra Wat-·

chiLli today. Use your smarb to protect y"our

n!80W'Cel or other valuable pos5eS.1ioos.
LIBRA ~~pl !3-0rcl bl You have small

respect Qr apprecla.tlon

~rself

:-:~ .

.-_,._,

U) Enjoy

-·

._•.

today but keep s~i ng for fun ac-

tivities to a minlmwn . Being in f8st com·
pan)' could also accelerate your ext ravagant

uq:es.

)

'

::~:

--~·

·:~
~--:.J
~-~..J

_...~

-r:-~..-

,PISCES (Feb, ·~rclo It) This ~ oot a
goocj
to req~aest favors of • bwlneas or
flnal\cia nature frwn friends. Even If lhey
wunt to help;lhey may not be Hble to
ARIES IMareh Zl·Aprtl D~ .Be eXt remely
tactful tod.,.y in dealing with persons Who
cuuld pill obstacles iii )'OW' path. Ther~s a
•trooheg chance Iiley
~· you rulfle their
1eat rs.
TAURUS (April lt-May It) There Is a
~~bllity you ffiii.Y have extnl responSJDI.li~l~ to contend \lrith today. A pleasant,
JMlSrtive attJtude wlU help make what yoo
hne to dueaaier.
GEMINI (Mit) %l.Juoe !t) Suppress urMes
lu K~nble or take fooliSh risks today. You
tnay not be as !harp u usual In figurinK out
the udt.ls, and you Could make some bwn

dar

.
,.-·.

.~:-.'

._

EAR,· NOSE &amp;THROAT
.
. GENERAL ·ALLERGIST

;m.

Close 7 P.M~ .
New Year's
Eve.

or

CANC£11 ilue !J.Jii~ lti Back off ond
be prepared to comp~ nuse today if you 1nld

..-. ·'

..-..... •
~
~

.

~

· ~

SCORP·IO !0('1. .t4-Nov. 22) lm~·ardl}
yuu 'll know that the good furtunc yuu' rc 1'K·
p!.'ncndng in u fimmdal situJ.J tiun wasn't &lt;~ 11
lt_Jd!. The SP&lt;Jdcwork Wil li alrco li) duuc l1~·
c1tl~r }'IIUr:ielf u r il friend.
SAGITIA RJ U~ tNtW. lJ..Oc(', Zl ) Yuur furLt • \tltl:t)' rs in di:!~linl:! with gruupti, ur in han-

~

-Year-End
Sale

Furniture
. Galleries

.

~

.

.-...

........

-.--. .
--. •
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~

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.-. "
---- •,.•'
- ••
.

.-·-

MON., DEC. 29th THRU SAT., JAN. 3'- 6 DAYS ONLY

'&lt;;;.

"A . OFF

Rev. W. H. Perrin will officiate the
wedding.

·~·

"

.;

·~·
··~

:'
!·
,.e

--- ,.
.r

·WATCH IT GROW
WITH A
CENTRAL TRUST CO.
26 WEEK
CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT

AliP V•iety Meat Shop
.

....

1M' WAFER SUCED

-- ~

Sliced Bacon ..... .

·114

TO

lf2

~· $149

AliP .Vsriety Meat Shop

Country FIM'm Pork
39

Mixed Pork Chops .. LB. $1
'
$199
Boneless. Pork Chops LB.
P.IRtNDOE I.JTTLE JR.
. $199
Boneless Ham . . LB. ..

..

...~ -1 tI
l · ,"

Sofas and Chairs
REDUCED

~

LB. ·

·SELECTED

~

•

Round Steaks . . . . .

LB.

BONELESS BEEF EVE OF

Round Roast ..... .
CAPN JCHIS

P~D

.

Shrimp ...... ·.

LB.

$259

12-02.$579
PKG.

$199

Hil.l,SHAE SMOKED OR

Polish Sausage . . .

LB.

A&amp;P - BY TIE PIECe

Braunschweiger ...

79~

LB.

OSCAR MAYER

Sliced Bologna .•.• ~a9~

FA

II

--- •
-.,.,
--. i
---· ••
-·- ..
...-. ,.'•
--- ..,.,
-"
l- "
~

~

O FF

$2 2 9

BONELESS BEEF lkll IDM

AltP Variety Meat Shop

~

·,;.-

~
~

II

~

ALL STYLES OF SOFA CHAIRS, RECLINERS, R~KERS, LOVESEATS

Invest in a s ur~ t hing ...
li ke our 26· .v£:ek term
savi ngs accou nt ! With a
m1 n1mu m deposit of
$10,000 ( held to .maturi t y) , you'.ll yie ld more
th an any oth er reg ul ar
savi ngs pl an.

Dining Room and
·Bedroom ·Suites

MINIMU M DE POSIT SSOO

r

REDUCED

12.65%

•,

Annu al Yield

The r ate to r th is certific a te is
a pli ca b le for t his p eri od and
average 2\f:l year yi e ld for

y4

TO

~

.

~

Jl

~

-

1f2 OFF

jJ .

.;

-.
J.

~id

: - ..:.

..

MATTRESS and
BOXSPRING SPECIALS

wi thdr awal of certificate fund s.

The ac tu a l retur n to invostors on
Treasur y Bil ls is higher tha n the dis·
cou nt ra te offered.

1HE
CENIRAL 'IRUSf
COMB\NY
Me mbe r F .D. I.C .

FOR ,

ll%li:D~~

ONLY

99

Delu xe
lnnt~rspring

Quality

~

"TIFFANY';
10 Year Matt.

(Our Best Seller )
REG .
SAL E

I

Days
.
'

Only I

Cola Drink ....... ..'1:."-

CI!NI!IIC

79~

'119.95
FUll. (Each) 1159.95
QUEEN CSet) 1369.95
KING cset&gt; '499.95
lWINCEach&gt;

PUi AIOES .&amp;

'99
'129
. '299
'429

179.95
1
219.95
1
529.95
1
759.95

ALL PURPOSE

White -

15

Lemons
or Limes ...ea.

Potatoes ~=9

Cabbage .

33~

=LB.

-

'149
'179
'429
'599

~OOIJ)

•

Egg Nog ......... . J:m:· 99~
ICJWrT Ylll a

:w

Cream Cheese • • • •

79~

C:d::&amp;;rel .... ,~$159
IWJ' 011 I" I

I

"liJaN CtiUNK

• 1~

s149

6.5-oz.

Tube

sse

WELLA 'W S"M Rm OR BlmiA IIODY

Mugs &amp; .Bowls

CHOOOL.ATE OR STRAWBERRY

t&amp;&lt;ll.$139

RED OR LOW SUGAR

Hawaiian Punch ...
1-(lZ.

TRAY

CAN

CAN

$119
$18 9
·

~

.

11.50Z.

Cake Mix .. . ... .. . . aox .

Lebel

\1f $1 09

FOR

$1

JAHE PARKER

~~

12-CT

.

PLUS LlEPOSIT :H.&amp;

Potato Chips . •... • .CAN

$399

s;;,.ghettl ......... ~$1

.

49

~MAIO
Orange Juice . • . .

2

IWIIIUROER, SA1'6 AGE OR PEl I 040111 12.5-0Z.
T
PKG.

' P'1zza .....
.oti nos

ii

E'ER QUEEN AS80HI ED

Entrees . . ~.:..~ ...

Call b7 5·6272 For Reservatians

.'

•

'

.,

ttt

79 °
99
~
¥

$159

..oz.. Q c
3
Pot Ptes • .. . . . . . . IIOlCEIIQ9

BANQUET BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY

Dine And Dan;;e With The Steve Yates Band
Roast Beef, Seafobd Platter, Cluckr.n A La King, Ham &amp; C~ bbage, Mixed Vegetables,
Salad &amp; Dessert, Partv Favo i~ , Champagne. 135"' Per Couole. .

r

II-OZ.

CMS

NEW YEARS EVE

••

69 c

.a.&lt;IZ

$300

~I

~

&amp;-TO

REDUCED.

' .

99~

.ASSORIE0- 14 VARIEnES

Nestle's Quik . . . . . .

79 c
V-8 Juice •... .• .. • ~ 79 ~
JMEP~.---OR 2 = 89~
Hot Dog Rolls . ..
~.J
2
99
~.
Brown 'N Serve . PKas:
IJUNCNI . _ ,

30•'0tf

•, •, 2

FRESH 'T'FIOPICANA

Qrange Juice ....

. . . .. . . . .

10Q.CT,
BOX

BEAN WITH IIAt;ON OR VEO. BEEF

Conditioner • -~. • .
·
a 'IIOL
. _.,._
1:1$129
Final Net . .•."".:"':". . . .. .
PII Mlm QOI 0)11

wtiTE

Mushrooms • . . • •

.

Coupon

·
3
1G- TO $1
.
Sou
Ann Page .
p . . . 11-0Z.
CANS

.Pepsodent
Toothpaste
-JO
.J ~

-

.;,.,~.....

89
Nabisco Snacks ... tWx.
.

SUNKIST

$139
Salad Size Tomatoes
.

Kraft Colby ••••.••

$495

MIC:HI(~AN

.FAMLY PACKAGE

" CORRECT COMFOR T"
15 Y ear Ma tt .
(Our Finest)
RE G.
SA LE
1

Tea Bags

~een

Save now on our deluxe quality
extra firm mattresses. These
features eitrher a 10 or lS year
guarantee. Stearns and Foster is
considered by many to be finest
bedding manufacturer today:

PREMIUM MATTRESS

w ill c lOse Ch r is tm as

. 24th a t J: oo p.m.
M ain s ank &amp; Branch

OUR OWN

Bleach .• •... 011· . 75~

~
1~$139
-.~... ' Tea
. Bags •• • . • ...• .
OENEJIC DIIED
1-lb.
Pinto Beans • ....... PliO- 45~

FAMOUS STEARNS AND FOSTER

Federa l regu lations require a subs ta ntial in terest pena lty l or pr em at ur e

,,

..;.. .

I

'

.
.

:_.
J

SELECTED

21Jz YEARS

Children

79
Grade 'A' Turkey . .
59 c
Thin Meats ••...... =:
11 L88. AND 1.1'

RENEWALS 14.282%

All For Only

•

-PAGE

14.282%

GRAVEY, SAlAD &amp; DESstRT

e

-

*CANDLE RINGS, HOLDERS
*SELECTED FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
*SELECTED ACCESSORIES

ROAST BEEF, TURKEY &amp; DRESSING, PORK CHOPS, .MASHED

10 A.M_ to 6 P.M.

.-.,r·

p la~ .

Treasur y Secur ities.

New Year's Day

(304~75- 1244

By Caroline

Annu al Rate

upen

1

*SEASONAL CANDLES(Red, Green)

11.75%

M'I~STOI'tES

CALL (614)·992-2 104

:":

NEW

'.

Office Hour s by A ppointmen t Only

bets.

POINT. PLEASANT INN

~.

•"

· SCORPIO (Oc:t. !4;-Nov. Ul Continue to
keep your guard up today about information
you det"m CQrlfidential. 1llcre are sWl
~lbUiUes you may suffer from slips of the

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .-. _....
_..

YVUttslray.

..~ ----------~-----------------~-~----~
DON'T FORGET OUR SUNDAY BUFFET
•
AT THE
..-

-----

accusations about you.

~Nov . !S-Dce.

Ti

. :.-,' '.

t.ir pushy. CondUct yourself today S()

SAGIITARlUS

Ohio-Point Pleasant, w. va .

rt- Gallipoli

-·-....-..;,;t:-· .

ECW meets for
~ 980 final time

---·--

arrQ8~&amp;nt

that those with whom you deal can't make

..;

leads to eucceas, whU! hunches could lead '

TAURUS !Aprii20-May 20) Thi.s .slwuld bf
&lt;m eXtremely produdi\'e de~y for you
~'Ci:lu.se. ItS you get intu · thing.~. you'll
dt.scuver you possess the lmuw·huw and
you'll find the. tasks fun as well .
GEMINI (May Zl·June20) There i.:;a ~rcOJ l
Ueal vr juy in store for )'Ol1 today in gett ing
together with .sume uld pal li. 1'he
l'omrade.ship you all stuu·e will be fe lt
dt.'t'ply.
CANCER IJUlie 21-JIIl.y .t! 1 Your luvl!d
Ul"le.s are merely reciprocating today when
thl'y do lhooc little ellras for you. You .set the
exampl e whkh they are followin.: .
LEO (July !3-Aug. HI FrieJJdlinc:;s ami
slntc rity an~ )·our tratlernttrks, r~nd are
t•asJl)' rcq J~ niz ed by Qthers tuday. They are
t ~ rawn to you :ind ttre trying tu respond in
kind .
VIRGO ~ Aug. %3-St.'Pt. 22) A little bi t of
luck will give a boost to sumclhing 011 whkh
you've it Iready spent e~ luf uf huut·s. Chanees
ttrc r uu'IJ be a bll! to brinK &lt;!bout th&lt;1t ~A-·hil' h
yuu'w wanted.
I.IBRA l Sepl. Z3-tkt. 23 f Those niec lhin!{S
yuu arc hcann11. people say about yOu tudiiJ
nne well deserved. Your bcha viur and treat·
mcut of il diHicult situation warr e~n ts ap-

ror persons who are

•

.GALUPOLIS - Episcopal Churchwomen iECWJ of St. Peter's
:Church, 541 Second Ave .. Gallipolis,
mel Mon day. Decen1ber 15. fo1· the
last meeting of this yea r. It was a
:noon luncheon, business meeting.
HosteSses were Bobbie Holzer. Ruth
. Paddock a nd Linda Carey.
• President Bobble Holzer opened
the meeting ; Beth Cherrington,
,c haplain, gave a meditation on
: "Contentment," and the speaker,
.• Jeff Paddock , was introduced.
: Paddock, director· of Social Ser: vices at Holzer Medical Center,
: sp~ke on "Social Service in the
: Hospital Setting." This department,
· initialed in 1973, is a non-revenue ·
: producing area of the hospit;!l. and
: has a staff of three persons, who help
: with famil y-patient problems,
~ patient discharge and after care
: planning, requests for Iran: sportation; they sometimes arrange
• for short term hospital stays; they
: work with referrals ; and all Social
: Services in the State. Jeff Paddock
: received his Bachelor of Science
: from Baker University in Baldwin ,
: Kansas, and h1s Maste r's in Social
:Service work from U1e University of
~ Kai1SC:IS1 U:l '.rrence, Kansas. He and
:.his wife, Ruth, and son. Bryan; live
. at 994 fourth Avenue, and are com·
-·rnunicants of St. Peter's. His father ,
William Paddock, is Ca non
•. Missioner with the Diocese of
·· Southern Ohio, Cincinnati.
The ECW minutes of the last
• meeting were read by N&lt;1ncy Evans ·
· and treasurer, Ann Jenkins, gave
her report. The Dec. 6 bake sa le and
: its success was di scussed, and
possibilities of ECW public dinners
were explored. final plans were
• made to help a needy family at
: Christmas time, and a motion was
: made to help with the repair of the
: church stai ned glass wi ndows. Hen: ny Evans reported that the re-order
: of the ·reprint, Hardesty 's 1674
: History of Gallia County has
: arrived, and that she may be
: reached at 446-1775 for their pur• chase. The price is $8.50.
• After welcoming guests, Gerry
: Bowman and Olive Miller, long-time
: member, the meeting was ad:., journed.

Pomeroy- M

~~~~~~~~~~~::+~·
~
If

AQUARIUS (Ju . . .Feb: ltl Be Jugical
•.nd realisUc ln Yoip' a&amp;1t:!iSment &lt;J# UnporUmt fllltten today . Godo judgement

Ct!Uil:S CI VOU .

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
J oseph W. Wyne, Route 4 Pomeroy
'
are announcing the engagement
and'
forthcoming marriage of their
: daughter, Lori Ann. to Dennis L.
- Astor, son of l.eona Astor and the
: late John Astor, Centerville.
: The bride-elect is a gra duate of
~ Meigs High School , class of 1978, and
: is presently stud ying business
~ management at Sinclair College in
: Dayton and is employ£d witjl the
• Winter's National Bank of Da\'lon
: Her fiance, a 1970 gra duate ·uf Ohio
: u niversity, look his ma ster' s d&lt;•grcc

·~

-·~-·

This €;011ling yea r holds large promist&gt;s for
you, but yoor Sucetlssel may not C\llllt! 100
~asHy . You'll get your share of lucky brealu,
proyidtd you hl"llt Jay solid foulldat.iuiUI.
CA'PRIOORN fDtt. zz.J~11. ltl Youri!rup
of th.Ht which 1.!! n!ally imporl!tul ls r.11tht:r
rema rkable today. You'll find wyys to use
your instincts advanto~geously, e:;peci1 lly in
cc.reer matters. Find out inure ol whit lit-'S
ahead for you in the year foliG~o~o· in~t your bi r·
thday by !iendintt for yvur copy of At~t~
Graph. Milil II fur !:!itch tu A!&gt;1n&gt;·Gntph, Box
4&amp;9, lbtdio City St &lt;:~ tion , N. Y. 10019. Be SUn!
tu specif)' birth d&lt;lte.
AQUARJUS (Jan. ~t&lt;'eb . 19) An opportunity nwy arise today to help a friend
realize~ !lope. You'll be as happy fur lli:s or
htr .!SUC\.~~asyou would be fur your own .
PISCES !Feb. 2&amp;-Manh to' This t•ould be
a very lucky day for you. SomHhing forturU:t te rru~y happen for Ulle with whom
yuu'ru mvulved. and its benefits muy ~pi ll
\lvt:r ttl yuu.
,
ARI~ (March U· April I" Ext't'llcnt ~td·
vice is il vailabl e tu you Lud&lt;~y lln~r~J y fur the
.st..'t!klng and .l:lsk ing. You'll make :ill the righl ·
cormec timts with thotie who can and wll l

•

December 28, 1980

----------~ASTROGRAPH----------~ ..

Couples plan to wed

Dennis Astor
and Lori Wyne

Ohio-Po int P l e~sant, w. va .

~ ·

�,,

December 28, 1980

·-·

Turn.

• •

:Newspaper. people-PRmasters

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Marshall University's ·continuous
registration program for the Spring
Term will be interrupted for three
days, Jan. 7, il and 9, Registrar
Robert H. Eddins announced today .
Eddins said the interruption is
necessitated by tile fact the West
Virginia Computer Network,
headquartered in Morgantown, will
be perfornting a "network reconfigura\ion" at that time. The state
network serves all of the public institutions of higher education in
West Virginia.
Eddins said he was told the
"reconfiguration" would include
modifications in the network's
equipment.
Spring Term registration will be
conducted Dec. 29; 30 and 31 and
Jan. 5 and 6 at the registration of-.
lice, Old Main 1-B. " Regular"
registration for spring is scheduled
Monday, Jan. 12, in Memorial
Student Center. SpMng classes begin
Tuesday, Jan. 13.
Eddins noted that it will not be
possible to make any schedule
,changes during the three-day shutdown Jan . 7-9.
·

.•.•

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmes-SendDel
Staff Writer
One thing you learn working for a
newspaper-you have to be a master
of public relations.
: ) thought there was nothing to
~pare with .the time when I
Worked for three years in a retail
itOre and put up with every little
eompiaint,. request and form of verbal abuse possible while attempting
to. do my job. l figured there was
,~~~~~ething worth looking forward to.
fwas wrong-partially.
· :. Much like the store where I
7orked, working for a newspaper
requires the same fortitude , both
imysically and spiritually, in dealing
lace-to-face with the public.
: I have been told by newspaper
:t&gt;eterans they couldn't understand
:lvbY their predecessors were so
Jrllff and hard-boiled when they first
'"tered the field. Since I'm pretty
much in the same boat as they were
years ago, I'm beginning to un.erstimd why.
: People who watch "Lou Grant"
let a slightly distorted view of how a
l)ewspaper operates. What we see
)'londay nights is how a big city daily
:P put together, but in a smaller
!IIJeration, like the Tribune, Sentinel
ed Register, with smaller staffs,
4he video version of newspaper work
aoesn't exactly ring true.
: Frequently we're under pressure
lo get things done in lime-and I'm
lfraici a Jot of people who come into
$he Tribune newsroom in the mor»&gt;ng feel we're nasty and uneommunicative. Really, we're very
Rice people once ~eadline is past.
; Because our staffs are sma ll, and

to

for the variety of things we do to
bring the news out daily . some feel
we're either being lazy or playing
favorites because we don't send
photographers or reporters to certain events. There's only so many of
us to go around, and once the
weekend rolls ar.ound,' we all need
the rest. While the Ironton or Huntington papers can afford more
reporters or correspondents to get
more compreh.ensive news
coverage, we have to work within
our framework, and on the whole,
we feel we do as good a job as
possible.
·
Having filled in for our lifestyle
editor, Sallyanne Holtz, l realize the
frustrations a lot of people have
because they haven't seen their article or birthday notice in the paper-and it's been three weeks to a year
since they brought it in for
publication.
Part of the problem there is the
amount of space allotted to us
through advertising sales-there are
only so many pages for society, so
many for sports, and so on, and if
one of us gets only two pages for our
particular section and finds a fivecolumn by 2~inch display ad on one
of them and a gigantic wedding or
local game to run, it's a real exercise of the imagination to get
evel')'thing to fit.
· And unfortunately, something has
to wjlit for the proverbia l rainy day
to ruh.
As in public relations, our side
must be explained. We're not being
purposely cruel or exclusive in our
selection of ne:ws and in how we run
it. You have to understand, we're
doing our job, much as you do yours.

OP£N ·

1T06

Miss ·Wood turns eleven
Patti Wood celebrated her lith
birthday Sunday with a party at the
'home &lt;i Frank and Jo Ann
Newsome, Five Points. Patti is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wood,
Eagle Ridge Road.
Refreshments and treats were
given to each child attending. The
Cl)ristmas cake for the party .was

Sloane, Brett, Shannon, Lorraine
and Auston Newsome, Roger and
ANNOUNCEMENT
Greg Carpenter, Donald and John
POMEROY-The Past Matrons of
Dodson, Brenda Bailey, and Laura
the Pomeroy Chapter 186 Order of
and Cathy Allen.
Games were played and ChristEaotern Star will meet Tuesday at
mas stockings and toboggans were
7:30p.m. at the home of Evelyn Lan·
given to each child. The door prize
ning . There will be a $3 gift exwas won by Janet Merry.
. change.

baked by Sheila Curtis, a guest at

----------'-------------1

&amp; MONDAY, DEC. 29

ALL
FALL &amp; WINTE~
ClOTHING
(BLUE TAG ONLY)

.

20%0FF
Heck's Reg. Prices

NO REFUNDS

NO EXCHANGES

ALL SALES FINAL
Sports visW:Jls: instant heroes in the winter,
protests in the summer; a champion crosses the
line, a champion goes to the ropes.
"·"

3 SPEED

HAND MIXE~

1- ' " - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
the parents
party. Also
wereMony,
Pat- .,II
ti's
andattending
her brother,

REWARD

$2,000 reward will be paid lor information leading to the
arrest and conviction of the pers.ons w.ho ro.bbed Dr.
Donald R. Wareh ime and burglarozed h1s res.tdence o~
Dec . 1, 1980. An additional rewar~ of $2,000 wtll be P~•d ·
lor the return of the two diamond ~mgs stolen from .h.IIJ'I
· Dec. 1, 1980. 11 they are returned tn the same .condttton
th.ey were on said date.
Th's offer of reward will terminate at 1·2 noon, on
Ja~uary 30,1981 . AnY persons having inlormatton on t~e
above may call the following numbers :

614 44{».1313
614 44{».1221

"

MEETING CHANGED

POMEJWY--The Januar y
meeting·of Bricklayers Local 32 will
be held Thursday, Jan. 8, rather
'than the first Thursday in the month,
which falls on New Year's Day. The
meeting will be held as usual at the
Meigs Inn, beginning at 8p.m.

HOLIDAY POOLS
SWIMMING POOLS
~HOLESALE

- RETAIL

4 Adults Comfortably .

•Fits through almost any door.

•S)ays hot24 hrs. lor pennies.
•Hn •II features including
therapy.
•61 Air vents.

ALL ELECTRIC

nov.

JUJI Plug II ln.

Buy all· your needs from
locai w;trehouse
and save.
.

868' CAM DEN RD.
NTINGTON, W; VA.
42\47RR

cUI Hr11r, 11 ~ura w•d n well .. '"': d•Jiilllll. fifo~x .MIIta to kltll

$

intlrior ltlnltllltlun Iiiii. It

tiwt

w-. eHicttnCJ .

•cr

3 spoe~ mloer wllh

fingertip controi. tdoai!Qr mixing,

:_:~:;EWAR;.E;;_;DE;:.:PT.;..-~-liiil

_ _..;;;;;-.;;;;...-.._R_•a_
. *-29-9."1'99.....,_"i-rrL•-ao,_..

8 Ol

ARMORALL
Men's
Western

Cowboy Hats
niched bnm. lfl blue demum With

Reg. 12.98

What's Your Choice?

fancy btnlla. or Stemper style s~tedt

haitgh
·~~~~ .

Penetllllls 1o protect and beautify . Surfacn treated
to shed wa1er and dlrl ancl discharge ttauc elee trlclly .
FOJ au10 and home use.

SIX MONntS

ONE DAY

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

Each
Rog. IO 117.99
CLOtHING DEPT.

Minimum Deposit S10,000
This Money Market Certif icate
rate is effective e~o~erv Thursaay.
Federal regu lat ionS proh ibit
compo und ing
of
in lerest.
Autom at ic ally renewab le at
maturity at t hl! prevailing rate.
The actua l relurn to investor5 on
Trenurv ·s Bi lls Is hiEJhtr.

Earn ie' s chec king ·sav i ngs plan
ear ns you S1t•% in terest eve ry
da y on your tot51 savings accou nt
ball!lnce. Wri te checks n you
need to. Savings account Interest

·Ask for " Earnle!"

5.25% · 5.46%

'\

,..

21fz YEARS

Washer

. .,. ,.. , 31h YEARS

Tt1e rate shoWn below for tnls
Certif icate is applicable this
period and is related to the
li~terage 21n
vur yield Of
1reuurv securiflts. Interest Js

compounded daily ai"'CC Is paid
monthly , Quar te rly , uml ·
annually, or annual! I' .

11.75% 12.65%

.t.nn11ol Aot•
Ann LUll Yiald
TMRU WED ., JAN . 7
...

Minimum Doposil$500
For ttlose Investors wtlo prefer a
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PROTECTANT

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Miss Wood

AMERICANS WIN GOLD Members of the United States 19110
Olympic hockey team and their
fans react to the team's 4-2 win
ov~r Finland in the final game of
the hockey series at the Winter
Olympic Games in Lake Placid,
l'&gt;!.Y., last February. The young
Anlerican team took the gold
medal in the event and beca~Tie instant heroes to most of the country.
(AP Laserphoto)

Not ResponSible for Typographical Errors

GALUPOUS - Thursday Club
met Dec. 4 at the home of Mrs. Miles
Epling. The review was given by
Mrs. William Jenkins. Mrs. Jenkins
reviewed "Margaret Sanger - A
Biography of the Champion of Birth
Control" by Madeline Gray.
The book is a biography of one of
America's great revolutionists, a ·
woman who, almost singlehandely,
founded the birth control movement
in America. She assured women for
the first time in history that it was
within their power to decide how
many children they would bring into
the world and they could make important decisions about their own
lives.

•

1980!' national pride, international controversy

SUNDAY

Thursday Club meets

••

and a sister, Terre, Larissa Long,
jiJl Moore, Terra Morris , Carol
~ing, Janet Werry, Brian Holley,
Terry and Rod Newsome, Neal

Page-C-1

The year in sports

Registration
interrupted

~·
~

•

The s~nday Times-Senti.nel

iddl

Times·Sentine.l

!t 's My

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va .

.

.

~·

- .... -·
' . .
' '" ,,..,
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ROYAL

SHOWDOWN - An unidentified man holds up the
American flag in stands of Moscow's Lenin Stadiwn
as the Sovi~t flag is carried out following the opening
ceremony of the 19110 Moscow Olympic Games in
July.

CHEESECAKE

MIX

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PROTECTS UP TQ ZO'

11.75% 12.65%

Annual Rat~
Annual Yield
TMRU WI! D., JAN . 7
__..4

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subaran1111 pen11ty tor prem•turt wltftdr~wal of Ctrtiflctft funds . Mlnl'"um
Deposit u ,ooo tor Monthly Inter est ,
.. EACH DEPOSITOR IN SURED l.IP TO 111)0,000 IY THE . FDIC. AN AGINCY OF
THE FEDERAL GOVIRNMENT .
ftlt Ohio vi::.u,:.:,c::I::.••"•'"M"'•"'•n="'o"'o"'li"'ce:-,"'""
I •"'•"'•n:::,-.
•.,;;-;.·;;;n•"•"•r:,,:=
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will closit ll3 p.m. Wtd .• Dec. 24 C(hrlttmls Eve).

UP AGAINST THE ROPES - C.arry Holmes corners Muhammad Ali against the ropes during their
bout for the WBC tiUe in Las Vegas in October. Ali is
the first boxer ever to gamer the heavy-weight
championship three times. (AP Laserphoto)

Heck's Reg. '1.27

Colmetlc Dept.

UNDER THE RAIL - Genuine
Risk, with Jacinto Vasquez In the
irons, left, crosses the finiBb line to
win the !06th Kentucky Derby at
ChurchiU Downs last May. Jaklln
Klugman (2) with Darrel
McHarque up, finished third. (AP
Lascrphoto)
·

�Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Ple.1s.:1nt, w. va .

Page-C -2-The S'\Jnday Times-Sentine l

.oecember28, 1980
December 28, 1980

Illinois humbles Ohio .University, 84-54

'

~~7i~ '28·~~~~ r·~~~~:

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knock Dallas out of the playoffs for
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KENNY'S HUMOR - Oakland Raiders Kenny King grins, but Injured quarterback Dan Pastorini scowls during a moment in Raiders'
practice in preparation for game against H'ouston Oilers Sunday. King
and Pastorini are former Oilers traded to Raiders. ( AP Laserphoto 1.

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Wolfpack nips
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•
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24" or 36" Lengtk

BIG DEFENDER - Dlini Der ek Holcomb 144 1 keeps Sean Carlson

IlSI of the Ohio University Bob&lt;:a ts pinned to the base!ins dur ing action in
U of l's 84-54 victory in the opening game of the Fighting lllini Classic at
the Uof I Assembly Hall. I AP Laserphotol.

R edmen lose in
Bluefield meet
BLUEFI ELD, W.Va. (AP I ~
Bluefield State met Concord College
last night in the playoff game of the
Greater Blu efi eld In vitational
basketball tournament.
Keith Oakes, a Bluefield senior,
scored 27 points to bring his school to
a 101-94 'victory over Rio Gra nde
College of Ohio on Friday night.
In the first game, Concord, 5-5,
was led by Tracy Poindexter for a
!17~ win over Tusculum College of
Greenville, Tenn.
Yet, the high scorers in both
games came from the losing teams.

·REGUL AR ' 4 . 59 • ,

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477

: 50.
Chesapeake and Fairland met for
the championship Saturday night.
Hannan Trace hit 19 of 54 field goal
:attempts for 35 percent. 'rhe Pan'·lhers connected on 20 of 54 attempts
for 37 percent. The Wildcats were
, three of 10 a t the foul line ,
· Chesapeake 12 out of 22.
Hannan Trace had 38 rebounds, 10
by Ron Pack and nine by Greg
Webb. The Gallians had 17 turnovers.
Webb paced the losers with 14

points.
Kev Gillen and Tracy West each
had 16 for the winners, now 5-1 on'the
year.
Ha nnan Trace, now 4-2, battled
Holy Family Sa turday night for consolation honors.
The Wildcats host Ironton St. J oe
Tuesday, then Eastern on Jan. 9.
Box scor e :
Hannan Trace ( 41) - Richard
Jones 2·0·4; Ronnie Pack 4-0-9;

Craig Cha pma n 2·0·4; Kel ly Petr ie 1H ; Mike Waugh 2· 1·5; Greg Webb 7·
0·14; Toby Sheets 1-0-2. Totals 19-341.

Chesapeake (521 - D. Wil liam s O·
0·0; S. Moore 0·0·0; M. Rice 1-1·3; D
Kipp 5·0·10; S. Harris 1-3-5; K:
Gil len 7-2-16; T. West 5-6·16; D. Jordan 1·0-2. Totals 20· 12·52.
Scare by quarters :
Hannan Trace

Chesapeake

6 8 8 19- 41
8 18 13 1 3~52

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NEW YORK (AP) ~ North
Carolina State basketball Coach J im
Va lva no was joking, but there ma y
have been a grain of truth in it.
He saw his Wolfpack battled down
to the fi nal buzzer by the Gaels of
lona, the school where he coached
last season. He didn't come out a
winner until sophomore guard
Dereck Whitte nburg hit three important h·ee throws in the fina l 4:IY7
for a 61-58 victory Fnday night in the
first round of the ECAC Holi da y
Festival.
" For a while at the end , I a~nost
started yell ing, 'Go, Gaels! Go,
Gaels!"' Valvano said. " [ was way
down on the other end of the court,
and I almost turned to the wrong
bench.' '
St. J ohn's beat Penn 66-58 in the
first game of the tournament behind
the shooting of Curtis Redding. The
victory gave St. J ohn 's 1,200 in its
history, a plateau reached by only
three other schools ~ Kentucky ,
North Carolina and Kansall.
Valvano left Iona in a state of confusion. He coached the Gaels to a 259 record in 1979-30, but Jona lost lour
starters to graduation a nd a fifth,
junior center J eff Ruland, was
declared . ineligible by the NCAA
because he signed with an a gent.
Valvano was replaced by his
assist, Pat Ke nnedy, who has the
Gaels off to a 3-6 start.
"I can' t say this was our toughest
loss of the yea r," Kennedy said .
"It's s uch a young team , and every
loss is a tough one whe n you're
building. It would have been a gr eat

:::tr.
•• OX'
.,,, ;'4

;~~

:t(

win.''
The Wolfpack, 6-2, came in heavily · ::;.
favored , but Valvano credited lona's : ~ ·
size and tenacity for making it close. · :i~:
" They 'ta ttooed us on the boards, :~·:
and we're the No. I team in r eboun- · ;;~
ding in the Atla ntic Coast Conference," Valva no sa id. N.C. State
was outre bounded 42-27, but when
three of l ana's fi ve starters ~ including two big men ~ fouled out in
the final six minutes, the edge wore

off.
: ~~~
The Wolfpack led 52-42 on a jum- . ,;;;,;
per by Kenny Matthews with 12 :~ '
minutes left, and it was a struggle
the rest of the way. Iona ran off six
straight points to tra il 52-48. After a
Wolfpack timeout, Whittenburg and ....
Art Jones hit jumpers , but Jona
came back with another six points,
four on baskets by Steve Burtt, to &gt;•
trai1 56-54.
· 1
N.C. State went into its four- .;,
corners offense, slowing things down
a bit, and Wolfpack center Thurl ,
Bailey wen\ to the line for two as 6- !
foot-10 Jona center Kevi n Vesey ;"1
fouled out. Burtt got lona back ..
within two with a steal and layup ,__
but 13 seconds later, he picked up ,,::_
foul No. 4, sending Whittenburg to . • ,
the line for two more and a 00-56' · ·
Wolfpack lead with 4 :07 left.
With 3:32 remaining, 6-10 Iona for- ;
ward Mike Ice fo uled out, and Whit· · i:l
tebnu•g hit one of two for a 61-56 ;!· ,
lead . Iona guard Tony Iati hit a long· -· \
jumper with 2:45 left to make it 61-· •-•• .
58, and the two teams traded missed. • ·
baskets to the end.
• ·o

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:Chesapeake tops HTHS
PROCfORVILLE ~ Chesapeake
defeated Ha nnan Trace, 52-41 , In an
: Ul*ning round game of the Fairland
Holida y Basketball Tournament
:here F'l'iday night.
In the other contest, Fairland
rolled over Ashla nd Holy Family, 67'-

la

c:

l a rge , e a sy - to- read
d i al . White c ase .

REG. 1 8,97

W ov en ched pn tt orn So l•d colo n&gt;.

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Tusculu m 's J amey Di ckson
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Dona ld br ought in 31 points and 13
rebounds .
Coach John Lawhorn's Red.men
dropped to 4-7 on the year .
High scorers for Bluefi eld, now :;.
6, were Chafie Williams, Stan Ma rtin
·and Rick Marsha ll, with 24, 22 a nd 18
respectively.
Concord's win was a ided by Scott
Frye's 19 points a nd 15 points from
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vances to play in Philadelphia or
Dallas moves on to Atlanta.
Dallas Coach Torn Landry said
there's no doubt Ferragamo will try
to throw long against the Cowboys.
" Our secondary will play hard,"
said Landry, adding , " We ,got our
confidence back" in last week's 35-27
win over Philadelphia.
Earlier last week it looked as if
Los Angeles might be without the
services of fullback Cullen Bryant,
who was hospitalized Wednesday
with the flu . But the 236-pounder,
who led the Rams in rushing this
season, was discharged and listed as
a probable starter.

...l

I
I

357

PR.
___
L _ __ _

I

is not to get caught up in all the
Plunkett, who came off the bench in
rhetoric about going back to the fifth game of the season when
Oakland."
Pastorini went down with a broke n
Campbell, by far the leading
leg.
MJSher in the NFL, racked up I ,934
Artother forme r Oi ler, running
yards this season, including 203 in back Kenny King, came to Oakland
last week's regular season fina le.
in an off-season trade for safety
" We'll be playing again st
J ack Tatum. He went on to lead the
probably the greatest pure passer
Raiders in rushing and gain a Pro
and bes~ and most powefful running
Bowl berth .
back the game has ever known,"
"I feel like this is going to be my
said Raiders defensive end J ohn
playoffs, I really do," said King, who
Matuszak.
will be coming off an ankle injury
The Raiders will .be led on offense . that kept him out of action last
by recycled quarterback Jim
weekend .
The NFC game at Dallas will
detennine whethe r Los Angeles ad-

December, Ferragamo ·fired three
touchdown passes against the
Cowboys, a feat he repeated in a 3814 Monday night victory two weeks
ago.
.
Raider fans will be familiar with
the sight of Stabler throwing passes
to All-Pro tight end Dave Casper.
Both played for many years with
Oakla nd before being dealt tO"
Houston in separa te deals.
Stabler, who came to Houston for
Dan Pastorinl, sa id, "It'll be nice to
ilee the guys I played with again."
But he emphasized. "The main thing

ball-hawking cornerback Lester
Hayes, a unit which some feel is as
good as the defense that helped the
Raiders win the Super Bowl in 1!176.
Oakjand and Houston, both ll-5,
are the wild card teams that will
begin the American Conference
playoffs. The National Conference
wild card game, aiso Sunday, will
have Los Angeles, 11-5, at Dallas, 12-

.• .

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OAKLAND, Calif. ( API - When
the Oakla~d Raiders and Houston
Oilers meet in their National Football League • playoff lllday at
Oakland, it could be a case of an ·
irresistible force vs. an immovable
object.
The force is Houston's offense,
with Earl Campbell doing the
rushing and Ken Stabler the passing.
Thanks to them, the Oilers were
second to San Diego in offense this
season in the NFL.
The object is Oakland's defense,
led by linebacker Ted Hendricks and

'I

~)5;;;;:;~T~~;;;~;.;~;----==~~~~~~~~~~~~E~G••.w
""
---~ I CAREFREE CHENILLE
I
I

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

W. Va.•

.It's irresistible force vs. immovable object at Oflkland

1;~me to clobber Yale 95-54. Ben Hill
A pair of freshmen paced their
has the size,'the speed and the depth
John's, N.Y., will play tonight for three ducing a ~ burst midway in
By JOHN NELSON
scored 32 points, and NelsOJI Franse
· to be a winner in the Big Ten. I didn't
the ti!le of the ECAC Holiday the second half that gave St. John's a teams in the Gator Bowl. Russell
AP Sporjs Writer
sank six free throws in the second
4!).4{)
lead
-and
the
Redme~
Cross,
playing
much
of
the
game
in
weaknessesc
.
Festival
at
New
York.
see
too
many
Even in victory, no matter how
overtime as Te,xas Tech struggled
coasted
to
a
66-511
victory
over
Penn.
foul
trouble,
scored
18
points
as
PurN.C. State got 23 po[nts and three
Nee added : " We're the best G-7
lopsided, winning coaches on winpast Washington, 93-85.
other.
·
tournament
chanjdue
downed
Georgia
Tech
53-45.
,
In
-crucilll free throws down the stretch
team in the country."
ning teams seem to find fault.
Front court mates Ron Davis and
'
pionship
games
tonight,
Florida
Ronnie
Williams
scored
22
points
Oklahoma edged Bradley 53-52 in
from sophomore guard Dereck WhitCoach Lou Henson of 18th-ranked
-Robby
Dosty each scored 16 points to
the
Gator
Bowl
at'
in
11
rebounds
to
help
and
hauled
meets
Purdue
in
tenburg to edge Iona 61--58. The
Illinois was no different Friday night the opening game of the lllinl tourhelp
Arizona
clobber Cal-8anta Bar·
Jacksonville,
Fla
.;
Texas
Tech
and
6:&gt;-59
victory
over
Florida
to
a
game marked the return to the Gar'
nament and will face lllinois in
after his team moved into the final
bar
a
87
~
in the Copper State
in
·
the
Pillsbury
Minnesota
play
Jacksonville.
den of N.C. State Coach Jim
round of its own Fighting Illini tonight's final.
Classic.
Alvin
Brooks scored 18 of
In the Pillsbury tournament, Ben
In the only major upset of the day,
Valvano, who coached Iona to a 25-9 1 Classic final at Minneapolis, and
basketball tournament with an 84-M
his
19
points
in
the second rum to
No. 19 Utah lost to Drake, ~. in
record last season but left for Arizona and Lamar square off in the Coleman scored 15 points and Trent
vi~ory over Ohio University.
Lamar
over
Grambling State,
power
Copper State Classic at Tucson, Tucker added 14 as Minnesota ran
"We never could quite put it &amp;way the fir.t round of the Far West· Raleigh, N.C., this year.
83-82,
in
the
other
game.
Ariz,
off 23 straight points midway in the
Curtis Reddi ng scored 19 points in the fi!"St half," Henson said. " In' Classic at Portla nd, Ore. Charlie
Nichols
stole
the
ball
from
Utah's
~
the 'second half we played much bet- Danny Vranes, -who fouled with 12 r-----...!.--..,.-------------:---...;__________;____,__________________
ter. We played more intense,' we hit
the boards much tougher, we played seconds left. Nichols sank the first of
two shots for the final margin of vicbetter defense."
tory.
IUinois trailed 11H6 in the first half
· Barry Walker sank five free
until outscoring Ohio 17-4. Mark
throws
in the fina l minute of overSmith scored siK of his 18 points in
time
to
give
Oregon an 82-78 victory
that surge, a nd the lllini led 39-31 at
over Cal State-Fullerton in the other
the halftime.
fi rst-round game in the Far West
Illinois really put the game away
Class ic.
by scoring 10 straight points to move
The second round of the Far West
ahead 53-35 midway through the
has
No. 4 Oregon State playing Norsecond half, and lllinois improved
NowThru
thwestern
and Rhode Island facing
its record to 6-1 while Ohio remained
Sat., Jan. 3
Princeton . The semifinals · were
wl.nless.
(Ciose.llaw
scheduled for Sunday with the fina ls
" Wha t's an 0-7 guy say ?" Ohio
11
Dna•MDchl•"
Year's Day)
on
Monday.
Coach Da nny Nee asked. '' lll inois
BID PILLOW '
Norlh Carolina State a nd St.
11

Pl~asam,

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-P.oint

JUMBO ROLL
PAPER TOWELS
REG.
69"

43(
.

100 SHEm, 2 PLY
LIMII 310LLS

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1-6

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GET IT! St. Joba's University'a Wayne McCoy (511 tl.. the b.n lftJ

from Pt DDAylvanla Unlven~ltf• George Noon Friday nf&amp;hl darltlc a
E.C.A.Co HoUday Festival baiketbaD gtuile at New Yort'.• Mwtlna •
Square Garden. St. John's 'l"on tbe game,11.-. (AP Laserpboto.

"'

...

�.

Page-C·4-The Sunday .Times· Sentinel

•
December 28, 1980

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

•

Pomeroy - Middleport-Gallipoli~,

December 28, 1980

Jack Nicklaus, Gerry Faust draw·top headlines in 1980

••

.

AP Sporta Writer
Jack Nicklaus whipped Old Man
Time and his skeptics at the same
time In 19110.
Written off as a ha&amp;-been at 40,
goH's greatest player r:i all·time- if
you measure greatness by major
champiiiiiSbips- II!Oilthe U.S. Open
and. the PGA National ChampiIIIISbip.
His dramatic comeback ran his
major lilies to 19, sill more than the
late Bobby Jones. Nicklaus' . perfonnance led Ohio's athletes in 19110.
· "It gave me the confidence that I
~an go out and play well for several
years to come," said the big blond,
reared in Columbus and now a
Floridian.
"This year I've worked harder
than I've ever worked in goH. All the
work has finally paid r:if," said the
winner r:i an unprecedented ·$3.5
millloo In his 19 professional

•
•

~

••

..••
••

-•"..
~

•

.

-..
H

•
•

.
~

·'

#

••

seasons.

.•-...

..
~

'

TIJAT'S IT :._ Peon State quarterback Todd Blackledge (14) and team-

mates Mike Meade (38) and Joel Coles cheer as time runs out in Peon

State's 31·19 win over Ohio Slate in the Fiesta Bowl Friday In Tempe,
Ariz. (AP Laserphoto).

.

•"

Freshman ·quarterback kills Buckeye~
SANDWICHED - Penn State's Johnathan Williams finds himseH
sandwiches between Ohio State's Gary WIUlams (44) and Keith Ferguson
(65) on a punt return in the third quarter of the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe,
Ariz., Friday. PeonS tate defeated Ohio State, 31·19. tAP Laserphoto).

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - All week ' controlfootballinthesecondhalf."
Sophomore tailback Curt Warner
long, Penn State Coach Joe Paterno
led the way- rushing 18 times for a
was saying ·a quarterback would
Fiesta Bowl record-setting !55 yar·
deCide the outcome of Friday's
ds,
45 more than the entire Ohio
Fiesta Bowl game.between his lOthStatesquadmanagedin39carries.
ranked Nittany Lions and No. 11
He scored his team's first touchOhio State.
down
on a 64-yard run on Penn
"Bl\t I feared that it would be
initial play from scrimmage,
State's
(Buckeye junior Art) Schlichter,"
setting
another new Fiesta Bowl
said Paterno. "I didn't think it be
our guy. He's justa freslunan ."
stan~rd.
"We feel we can run against
Overcoming· a slow start, Todd
anybody," Warner said. "Our of·
Blackledge directed Penn State to
fensive line is that good. I j~t went
three touchdowns in the second half
with the now."
as the Nittany Lions notched a 31-19
Ohio State jwnped to a !9-10 half·
come-from-behind victory over Ohio
time
lead behind Schlichter's
State.
record-tying
three touchdown tosses
Blackledge, a native of North Canand
244
yards
passing.
ton, Ohio, who was shunned by
Schlichter,
who wound up with a
Buckeye recruiters, directed a Penn
career-high
302
passing yards with a
State ground game that amassed 351
2(}-for-35
performance,
managed
yards. He also hit four of eight
only
five
completions
in
13
attempts
passes for 68 yards in the final 30 .
in the second hall.
minutes.
"They got their pass rus!l
" It takes me awhile to get going,"
moving," Ohio State Coach Earle
Blackledge said. "I've been doing
Bruce said. "They were .stunting.
that all year and I hate to keep doing
They did a good job of getting in."
it But I knew it was going to work
After Warner got Penn State on
out We just came out and played

the scoreboard at the 1:07 mark of
the first quarter, Schlichter found
flanker Doug Donley on touchdown
passes of23 and 19 yards and hit split
end Gary Willialllli with a 33-yarder
for an 19-7lead.
·
Placekicker ' Herb Menhardt
booted a 33-yard field goal with eight
seconds left to cut Penn Slate's half.
time deficit to n_ine. ·

Blackledge's three-yard touch':
down run on a bootleg capped a 75-~
yard drive early in the third quarter •
and made it 19-17.
·
·;
Freshman tailback Jonathan '
Williams' four-yard scoring carry,;
coupled with a 37-yard touchdown~
run by fullback Booker Moore with'
45 seconds to play, sealed the Nit·.
tany Lion victory.
;:

,...--------------------~------~---------------:"

Nicklaus will maintain his same,
abbreviated sehedule in 19111. He will
play the four major tournaments
amidst his dozen or so PGA Tour ap-

pearances .
"People have sectlnd guessed me
and I've second guessed myself,"
Nicklaus said of his limited play,
"b1,1t this is the sehedule that's right
for'me. .
"I want to play goH for a long
time. I know if I pljlyed a full
schedule I was going to be out of the
· · game very shortly. I just could not
keep my incentives up. I could not
keep myself working on that kind of
basis. I had lost the drive to do that."
Nicklaus had not won since the
Philadelphia Classic in July 1978 un·
til June. He won the Open at
Baltusrol in Spring{ield, N.J., that
month, breaking his own tour·
nament record with 272. He captured
the PGA at Rochester's Oak Hill in
July by seven shots over Andy Bean
with274.
"I don't think I have ever played
in the four major championships any
better than I did this year," he said.
Besides his two victories, he was
fourth in the British Open and 33rd in

UMPH!- Penn State
Blackledge (14) gets
Impact of Ohio State linebacker John Epltropoulos (33) during the second
quarter at the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Ariz., Friday. Blackledge managed
to unload the ball and avoid a sack as Penn State went on to defeat Ohio
State, 31-19. !APLaserphoto)·.

Bowl lineup

Push It

CONDITION. HUNDREDS MORE FOR lATE
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OFFER LIMITED TO BELOW LISTED VEHICLES.

YEAR .END CLEARANCE

Monday, Dec.29
GalorBowl
AtJ&amp;cUmlville, F1a
No.3 Pittsburgh (10-1) vs. Nu .ltl South
Carolinl:l (8-3), ·(nJ
Wedaesday, IJec.ll

Price
Trade-in

$4,995.00
1,000.00

V-8, auto. trans., air,
stereo radio, rallye
wheels, low mileage.

6 cyl., auto. trans ., air,

Price
Trade·in

Price
Trade·in

$4,995.00
1,000.00

Bluebonnet Bclwl
Nu.ll

At Houston
North Clrolllll fl()-1 l

Thunday,Jao. I
CottouBowl
At Dallas
No.9 Ale~bama (9t21 y's. No .6 Baylor ( 10.
•

ROHBowl
AtPaudeoa, Calif.
No.Hl Washington (9.2) vs. 'No.5 Mictligan 19-Z J
SucarBcMI

At Nn Orlt:am
No.I Georgia (11.()) v:s.
Dome l!f.l-11
·
Friday, lao. 1

No.7

Notre

Peach Bawl
At.Atllata

You Pay

Virginia Tech (8-3) vs. NH.20 Miami',
Flo. 1~3)
Satunlly Jan. It
Ellst~wn·t shrtne Bowl

V!j .

Hula Bowl
At HoooluJu. Hawaii
West
Saturday, Jan. n
SeaJorBowl
AI MobUe, Ala.

•Substantial interest penallY re&lt;~~ulred for early willlclrawal.

North vs. South
Swdly,Jao.ll
Ja,.DBowl
· At Y&lt;Jloham11, Japaa
East vs. We.n, [nl

I

BASKETBALL LEAGUE
ORGANIZING
A church basketballleague'will be
organized Monday al 7 p.m. at the
Middleport First Baptist Church,
comer of Sixth and Palmer St. All
churches al'l invited to join the
league by either attending the
meeting Monday night or contacting
992-3625.
I

cyf.., auto. trans. ;
p.s., radio, bedtiner.

6

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you Pay

'-. @s
Z'JI

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. THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

$4,895.00
1,000.00

•389500

'

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You Pay

$8,200.00
$1,000.00

•720000 .

auto. trans.,
p .s., am·fm, low
mileage.

Price
Trade· in
You Pay

$2,795.00
1,000.00

20%,

OFF

GAF.

See Garland Parsons or Pat Hill-Gen. Nigr.
992·2196

15%0FF

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Pll'£.,

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Buy any stove and have it installed for '12 the
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also buy glass doors for the fireplace at 1!2
Price.
Your Choice

1

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Many, Many
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FLOOR TILE

SCREENS AND

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ALL CAULKING
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Related training or education can be substituted for up to one and onehalf years experience .
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The Board will hold a public meetin9
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•1000

BURRIS INJURED.
TEMPE, Ariz. - Ohio State Of·
fensive Guard Scott Burris, a native
of Point Pleasant, is scheduled to un·
dergo knee surgery Monday after
being hurt midway in the third quar·
ter of the Buckeyes' 31·19 loss to
Penn State on Friday in the Fiesta
Bowl.

10% to 50%

. 10%,0FF

LATON~RESULTS
!;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - .Saren
covered a mile in I: 42 2-5 seconds
00
Friday to win the featured race at
. Latonia, paying $7.40, $3.20 and
$2.80.
Second-place A Gray Jet paid $3
and $2.80. while Reservation Life
paid $5.20 for show.
The 2~ daily double combination
of Adanac Night and Aquiledon paid
$27.40.
A crowd of 5.118 wagered $632.519.

.
.
.
the Masters, the other members r:i · South. His $100,000 pay~y gave him in the National Basketball Rocavert 6-4, 6-3 for the singles 19, from Wahpeton, N.D., for the
the Big Four.
yearly earnings of more than Association's Central Division. The championship in the National Grand American Handicap cham·
A high sehool football coach $500,000, unparalleled in the men's Cavaliers won 37 r:i 82 games and Revenue Classic in Colwnbus.
pionship at Vandalia. They all hit 99
rivaled Nicklaus' achievement for sport.
finished 13 games behind division·
HORSE RACING
of 100 targets. Hazlett followed it
the biggest Ohio story.
"I have a little better than winning Atlanta.
Stone Manos, a 6-1 choice, upset with 24-of-25 in the shootoff from 22t
Gerry Faust, tbe founder of Cin- mediocre ability," said Watson
BUI MusSelman replaced Stan favored Colonel Moran in the yards .
cinnaU Moeller's program '17 years following his sixth U.S. tour triwnph
Albeck as the Cavaliers' coach, but $150,1100 Ohio Derby thoroughbred
COlLEGE FOOTBALL
ago, fulfilled a boyhood dream when of the year.
Cleveland didn't fare any better in race at Cleveland's Thistledown.
Ohio State, the nation's preseason
he replac,ed Dan Devine as the
And these were more state sports the early 1980-81 season. They were Stone Manos , ridden by Pat Day, No. I choice, settled for No. 14 after
University of Notre Dame coach.
highlights in the last 12 months :
nirting with last place in the traveled the I and one-eighth miles bowing to UCLA 17.() and Big Ten
"I used to whistle the ~otre Dame
PRO BASEBALL
realigned Central Division and won in I :52 and won by 2'h lengths over champion Michigan 9-3 for a 9-2
light song as I rode my bicycle home
The Cincinnati Reds stayed in conjust 10 r:i their first 33 starts.
Colonel Moran.
,
record and a berth in the Fiesta
from football practice in grade tention for the National League West
AUTO ROAD RACING
PRO GOLF
Bowl against Penn Slate.
grade," the 45-year-old Faust said. title until the final days. They
Johnny ' Rutherford, driving Jim
Dayton won its first national fool·
Australian David Graham shot 21!0
"Since the fifth grade, I thought finished three games behind the to nip Watson by 1 shot and earned Hall's ChapperaU .S. Auto Club's ball crown, walloping defending
about playing at Notre Dame. The Houston Astrlis with an 89-73 record $54,000 in the $22li,IIOO Memorial Red Roof Inn 256-kilometer race at champion Ithaca 63-0 for the
only reason I didn't go there was I for third place.
Tournament,. part ·of the men's Mid-Ohio in Lexington. It was the Division III championship in the
wasn't good enough."
The Cleveland Indians stayed
national tour over Nicklaus' Muir· first USAC road ra~e for In· Stagg Bowl. The Flyers were 13-0,
But his coaching is good enough. above the .500 mark before tailing field Village layout at Dublin.
dianapolis championship cars in 10 their best record in history.
Faust produced a 174-17·2 record at off for a 7~1 record. The Indians
Wilmington finished second in the
Sally Little of South Africa won years. Rutherford beat Gordon
Moeller, winning five of the last six were 23 games behind the champion . her first major women's tit)e by Johncock by 12 seconds.
NAJA Division II playoffs. The
big school state playoff cham- New York Yankees in the American
Brian Redman and David Hobbs Quakers lost to Pacific Lutheran 38shooting 285 in the $150,000 Ladies
pionships.
League East.
Professional Golf Association Cham· of England combined to win the 10 in the finals.
Other major 1900 developments in
The Colwnbus Clippers won their
Central Michigan won the Mid·
pionship over the Nicklaus Golf Cen- $150,000 Lwnbennan's 500, a com·
Ohio sports were:
·
second straight International
ter at Mason. Sbe earned $22,500 and bioation race for Can-Am and grand American Conference crown by one
-The Cleveland Browns reaching League pennant and followed it with
was 3 strokes ahead of Jane Blalock. touring cars at Mid-Ohio. Redman game over Western Michigan, Bald·
· the 1~victory plateau and the their second playoff crown in the
The inaugural $150,000 World and Hobbs drove the 130 laps in 3 win-Wallace beat Wittenberg 16-0 in
National Football League playoffs Class AAA minor league. The Clip- Series of Women's Golf title went to hours, 22 minutes and won by 11ap.
the Ohio Conference championship
for the first time since.l972.
pers' success earned Manager Joe
·patrick
Tambay
of
France,
game and Wilmington tied Hanover
Beth Daniel with 282 at The Country
By winning 10 of their first 14 Altobelli the third base coaching job
Club in suburban Cleveland. driving a Lola, beat AI Holbert by and Anderson for the Hoosier·
games, the Browns matched their with the parent Yankees.
Daniel's fourth straight triumph, 1 eight seconds in the Valvoline Can· Buckeye Conference title.
1972 record of 1()-4. A final game vic·
PRO FOOTBALL
shot better than Nancy Lopez· Am event at Mid-Ohio.
PREP SPORTS
tory over the Cincinnati Bengals
Despite a new coach in Forrest
PRO BOWLING
Melton, led to a $46,500 c~ck.
Ohio
high
schools went to five
Dec. 21 gave them a playoff spot and Gregg, the Cincinnati Bengals lost
Wayne Webb outrolled Gary
Spunsors of the tournament,
divisions
and
40 teams from three
a final record of 11-5. ·
nineof their first 12 games and
avoiding a legal fight with the men's Dickinson 219-194 for the $30,000 fir·
classes
and
12
teams in the football
- Joe Charboneau; the Cleveland quickly fell out of AFC &lt;;entral . tour, changed the 1981 tournament st·place check in the $150,000
playoffs.
The
champions were
Indians' colorful left fielder, winning Division title contention. However,
name to World Championship of Firestone Tournament of Cham·
Moeller
in
Division
I, Youngstown
pions at Riviera Lanes in Akron.
the American League Rookie of the the Bengals did stun the 19!10 Super
Women'sGolf.
Mooney
in
Division
II, Cleveland .
TRAPSHOOTING
Year award. Charboneau, 25, hit .289 Bowl champion Steelers twice early
PRO TENNIS
Benedictine
in
Division
III, Garfield
William Hazlett, a 35-year-old
and 23 home runs and drove in lr1 in the season.
Gene Mayer mowed down Victor
Heights
Trinity
in
Division
IV and
runs in 131 games.
PRO BASKETBALL
Amaya 6-2, &amp;-I for the singles title in telephone repainnan from Sarber,
Tiffin
Calvert
in
Division
V.
All are
-Niatross capturing .the $201,361
The Cleveland Cavaliers tied for
the Western in Cleveland and Bob Pa., beat Randy Wilheim, 14, ct
schools.
parochial
Mount Vernon, and Indika Morris,
Little Brown in straight heats of 1:55 fourth place with the Indiana Pacers
Lutz turned back Australian Terry
and 1:541-5 at the Delaware County . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Fairgrounds.
The 3-year-old colt became
pacing's first Triple Crown winner
since Most Happy Fella in 1970 and
the sport's all·time money champion
with earnings of more than $2
million. He broke six world records
in the Jug." "No harness horse can
MOBIL£ HOME N.UMINUM
push him," driver-trainer Clint
ROOF KOTE
Galbraith said of Niatross.
- Tom Watson's victory in the
. $400,1100 World Series of Golf with a
l~under·par 270 at Akron Firestone
'

By GEORGE STRODE

.•

''

The Sunday Times·Sentinei-Page-C ·S

Ohio- Point Plea sant, W.Va.

MON •.fll •••••• ··• •••••••••••••• 7100-51()0
CONCRETE MIX
(COARSE ) .

fCILB . BAG

SAT.···~·····················.'.. 7100 · 4100

�va.

Pom er oy Middl eport Galli pol is, Ohio- Point Plea s ~nt, w.

December 28, 1980

Page

.-....

w. Va .·

n
· ~

C-6- The Sundav Times-Sentinel

,.. ..
_

.

I _;
-~

.,...

;

"'

~·· "

MATCH ACTION - GAHS wrestler Mike Rowan
I top ) tries to get a lock on Ironton's Bob Clay during
the preliminaries of Saturday's wresiling tournament.

-

The tourney, which began at 11 a.m. Saturday, ran until 7 p:m. with finals , semi-finals and consolation mat·
ches.

DePaul rips UCLA, 93-77
CHICAGO (AP ) - All-American
Mark Agui rre scored a game-high 23
points and Terry Cwnmtngs added
19 as top-ranked and un bea ten
DePaul raced past previously un- .
defeated UCLA 93-77 Sa turday m a
nationally televised college basketball game.
Both teams roared out of the starting blocks, with DePaul's Teddy
Grubbs providing six quick points
for an early 16-14 Blue Demon lead.
A steal by Clyde Bradshaw which
led to Skip Dillard's breakaway
layup pushed the DePaul cushion to
24-20 with seven minutes left in the
half.
From there. Aguirre scored seven

of his 15 firs t-half points to key a 15-3
scoring stretch that lifted De Paul to
a comfo rtable .19-23 margin w1th
almost three minutes remat ning.
Only Darren Daye's I i firs t-half
points kept the Bruins in the game at
the new Rosemont Horizon. He

scored their fi~a l six points as
DePaul, shooting 63 percent from
the floor, took a 47-29 lead at the intermission.
DePaul was able to open an 18point lead by nullifying UCLA's
great quickness at the guard spots.
Rod f oster, who led the.Bruins with
19 points, had only one at halftime
and his backcourt partner, Michael
Holton, had none.
After Cw1m1ings opened the

Cr~rter r~pp11rently

second half with a short jwnpcr,
UCLA tore off eight quick points to
close within 49-37. But Cwrunings
countered with a pair of baskets and
Dillard led Aguirre for a breakaway
slam dunk.
Even with Coach Ray Meyer sh uffling among his fir st seven players,
DePaul widened the gap to 68-45 with
10 minutes to go and the Demons
never were seriously threatened after fhat.

4-~+ a~5
&amp;Rcx.JP-&gt;
bull which will not casue dystocia.
M!:ff I~ 1'\0folle
Also, select healthy, growthy type
§C-11001-S oR ANY
'
heifen that are not prone to difficult
CONV ~N I eN"r PI..AC~
birth."
'1'oUR CDMMUNrfY.
You should pay special attention
YoU CAN ev~&lt;N IV\ e:~-r
to heifers wben they are ready to
1-ifREo. IF 'bJ v.JitiJ\ .
give birth. Be ready to assist the
heifer when calving, to work wlth
t e=-.
'1 1i-the newborn calf and to aid getting
1t !
colostrwnintoit." .
You should analyze your nutrition
program by looklrlg at your herd.
Are the cows in good condition?
The cows should be gaining weight
Where 4-H cl ubs me e t and how oft er t hey meet is determined by the
during the last third of pregnancy. If
Volunteer Leader .and the 4-H' er s . They may meet in 4-H'ers homes, schools ,
they are losing weight, there is a
communi t y centers. chur ches , places of bu s ines s, convenient to the member s .
good chance tbe caiyes are not
killer, causes several problems in- quite effective.
receiving proper nutrition.
Ration evaluation is also an im- cluding abortion, birth of weak
There are several items you
portant means of maintaining a good calves and loss of fertility. "I think should have available to assist in
nutritional program. This requires a every beef cattle herd in Meigs saving that newborn calf. 01&gt;periodic examination of the forage County should be on a leptospirosis stetrical chains to assist in difficult
beir)gfedtodetennineifthecow'sor vaccination program. A close births, a stomach tube, if inexheifer's nutritional needs are being working relationship wlth a com- perienced, buy a commercial one, to
Offers
met.
petent local vet.erlnarian in whom provide colostrum to a weak calf
Infectious diseases are the •econd you have confidence Is.a necessary unable to nurse. You can secure
major factor causing newborn calf part of controlling this disease."
colostrum and freeze it. In case a
deaths. The weak calf symdrome is
The third infectious disease 1 men- calf scciurs 311d dehydrates, you
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . , a viral disease of cattle caused by in- tioned Is neomitill diarrhea or calf should be able to make up an elecfectious boviite rhinotracheitis and · scours. Vaccines ior some of tbe .trolyte solution. Iodine to dip navels.
budgets prepared by the Bureau of \ BVD.
.iUo Gr.alde, Ollio
more conunon fonns of scours are ·To me, these are the bare essentials.
Labor Statistics glves some inLeptospirosis, another major
dication of the effect of price in·
creases on family living costs. For
1979, the BLS Intermediate budget
for an . urban family of four was
about $20,500. Now if the r.ost of this
budget package Increases at an annual rate of lO'h percent, this same
'-1.-tfll
BY DIANA s. EBER1'S
budget package will cost around
Antill Altytlally
ExteDBIO!l Agent
$25,000 by the fall of 1981. In short,
1\' U1Tl! Cl..Uut
Home Economics
making ends meet will continue to
J:J-.111 A.ltll,
M"'w c
be a financial challenge.
~~:
...,s ounty
Considering this relatively bleak
PoMEROY .:_ For the last tw&lt;&gt;- forecast, whatcanconsurnendo?
PORK COOKERY three years, only the "up" button on It wlll be 'increasingly important
KEEP
IT LOW, SLOW
the price elevator has been working for families ·to budget for Inflation
GALLIPOUS
- Once thought to
lll)d increase5 family living . costs just as they Jiu&lt;!get for other costs.
require
extra-long
cooking time,
hav~ become lncreasmgly ·We are likely to see more dualcooking
methods
for
today's
learner,
womsome, to more and more earner and multi-earner families,
Clarinette®-110 by Realislic®
changed
conmore
tender
pork
have
customers.
butfor many the added net earnings
siderably·. II the tradition in your
~eofthebigque~tio~_is"What's will only en~ble them to stay even
family caJls·for pork for New Year's
gomg to be the family livmg outlook wlth inflation rather than get ahead
you may be Interested in tbese.
for 1_981?" . . , .
,
of it.
.
Pork roasts shoUld be cooked to an
Wtll families l~d tt any easier to
More people will nefi/ to seriously
Internal
temperature of 170· F. ·for
make ends ~~ m .1981? Well, un- . consider ways of changing their
optimum results. This means
fortunately,. tt ~ unlike!Y· For 1979, spending habits and modifying their
removlng a pork roast from the oven
median family tncome ,tn the Uruted lifestyles to conserve, make do wlth
• Cassette Record/Play Deck with Dolby* NR
at
185 F. lntetnal temperature, since
States was about . . $19;685 w~_ch less, and eliminate some of the exthe Internal temperature wlil rise
• Bell-Drive Changer with Magnetic Cartridge
means that baH of the U. S. families tras. This can also include doing
five
degrees
after
the
roast
another
earn more than this amount and half more research before making major
• AM/FM Siereo Receiver with Dolby Decoder
is removed from the oven.
earn less. Now lite ·1979 level was purchases and giving greater atRecQmmended oven temperatures
• 24"-High 3-Way Speakers wilh 8" Woofer,
?bout 11.6 percent over 1978 but the tention to shopping calendars to take
for
cooking roasts is 325 F. This low
5" Midrange and 2" Tweeter
mc~e wa~ abnost totally eaten up maximwn advantage of special sale
tempertures reduces the amount of
by an Inflation rate of around 11.3 prices. Although it won't work
Save 24% on a. feature-packed e ntertai nment
shrink, leaving the meat more ten-·
percent _fo~ the_same period: We equally well for all families, some
cente r. Play cassettes or rec ord from pho no,
der, juicy and flavorful. Higher oven
have a similar &amp;t~tion dunng 1980 ; will find . economic pay off in sul&gt;radio or mike jacks . Dolby System improves
temperatures (as recommended , in
and mqst economtsts see no qwck · stituting their times, talents, and/or
sound on Dolby FM broadcasts and tapes.
the past) tend to dry out the surface
end to inflationary pre&amp;&lt;~ures. Thus, ·. labor for money through borne
Has FM muting , tuning meter, hi-f il ter. EO/
and reduce the yield of servable
the 1981 p~ts ~or ma~y families production or do-it-yourself acbias selector. bas s a nd treble control s·, dust
meat.
wtll mclude little, if any, mcrease m tivitles, thrOugh ,bartering or parcover . 12 watts pe r ch a nn e l. min . rms. 8 ohms,
To eliminate guessing when
20-20 ,000 Hz. 0.8% THD. Hurry' #13-1205
purchasmg ~wer. .
. .
.
ticipation in consumer co-ops. None
testing
lor
doneness,
use
'
a
.
meat
What d~s II cost a family to ltve of these options is, of course, going
Tapes not
thermometer. Tbey are inexpensive,
these ~ys · .
.
to guarantee success for everyone.
mc ltJoed
easy to use, and a very worthwhile
That s noi an easy questton to an- Rather each family will have to coninvestment. Insert the thermometer
swer since all · families have sider its own resources and try the
'
so
the bulb is In the center of the
somewhat different needs and spen- options which seem best for its parthickest part of meat, not touching
ding habits. However, the standard tiCillar •ltuatlon. ·
bone or resting in fat. As the pork
roast cooks, the thermometer will
measure the internal temperature of
Optlmus®-27 by Realistic
the meat.
A resting period. of about ten
minutes after cooking "sets"·juices,
·increasing yield because of reduced
drip and making roasts easier to
By Bryson R. fBud) Carter
carve. The meat industry has announced recommendations for the
Reg. 149.95 Each
Gallia County Extension Agent
degree of doneness on both
their own local veterinarian to have
Fahrenheit and Celsius scaies. It is
Advanced "Slim-Line" Design- Only 6 " Deep!
- On Monday, these treatments completed. Anyone
recommended that pork reach an inJanuary 26, 1981 and March 23, II plaruung
' toconsigncalvesmaypick
ternaltemperatureofl70F. (75C.);
Save 53% on this speaker system in a minimuma.m:, a Buckeye Feedlot Con"cook-before-eating" hams, 160 F.
reflecti on enclosure that delivers ultra-lowup
a
consigrunent
blank
at
the
Gullia
ditioned Feeder caH Sale will be
(70 C.); and "fully-cooked" hams,
distortion hi-fi l Features a 6'h'' woofer coupled io
ds
County Extension Office located In
heldattheUnlonSt~Yar in theCourtho
lnGlli lis d
140F.(60C.).
an 8" pass ive radio tor for deep bass , plus a 1"
Hillsboro, Ohio. This sale Is to
use
a po an you
· Not all pork should (or need) be
soft-dome tweeter for soaring highs. The
demonstrate the value of in- . need to return your consignment
oven-cooked. Generally, thin cuts
enclosure
design projects sound from the driv.ers ,
corporating· the Buckeye Feedl ot form to the Union Stockyards as
are pan fried or pan broiled. Thick
not the back of the cabinet. You'll love it!
Conditioning Program wt·th feede r soon as possible prior to Januar)' 2,
cuts of meat usually are roasted,
1981 Of March I, 1981 so· that
braised or broiled. For the most tencattle sales.
the arrallgements can be made wlth
. red
Cattle may be deI1ve
to
der and juicy results wlth b.roiled
· between 6 a.m. your veterinarian to supply him the
8-Track Deck with Dolby* N 40% Off! Stereo Headphones
pork, each cut should be at least one
stockyards any time
and II a.m. January 26 (saIe day). Buckeye Feedlot Conditioned ear
inch In thickness.
TR-803 by Realislic
Nova@-40 by Realislic
f 1$
h d tagsandthelivevaccine.
The consignment ee s I per ea
have
all
this
infOI'IJWtion
in
letter
Don't
be
afraid
to
experlinent
wlth
1
Uand the yard commission is $6.50 per form at the Extellllion Office and if
different cuts and cooking methods
•- .

bre11ks coll11r bone

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Carter fell whi le cross-country
skiing near the presidential retreat
at Camp David. Md., on Saturday
and apparently broke his left collar
bone, the White House said.
White House spokesman Rex
Granum said Carter was (!own by
helicopter to the Bethesda Naval
Hospita l outside Washington for X
rays. He said Carter expected to

Wh eele r sb u r g

:.

return to Camp Dav id later in the
da y.
Carter, who is 56, has frequently
cross-country skied, Granum said.
He said he ·did not know who was in
the party skiing with the president. ·
He said the White House would
issue a more complete statement on
the accident after it was determined
that the collar bone was actually
broken.

final buzzer sounded. He nailed 15
in that furious last period.
Hipley, with fou r juniors and a
senior in their starting lineup. was
paced by a sl im 5-10 youngster
named Terry Snyder. Terry hit his
first four shots from18 feet but, and
finally wow1d up with 23 tallies to
lead thr ee Vikin gs in double
fi gures.
Glen McClellan was also in double
digits with 14, John McDermitt netted 7, Jim Stewart 5, and soph Scott
Rutherfo rd added 4.
Ripley's Don Smith caged 15 and
held off the Big Blacks la st ditch
charge in the final heat when he hit
three baskets and dropped in six
straight free throws before missing.
Cremea ns, who la id up 13 buckets
and dropped in 4-of-7 fo ul tosses for
his leading total. also led the locals

C r emea n s 13-

4 30; Mc Der m itt 2·3·7; M c Cle lla n 5·
4·14 ; Nott 0-2·2; Ba rne tte 1-0·2;
Stewa rt 2-1·5; Porte r 1 l 3; Burr 1s 00 0; Ruth erfor d 2·0 4; Si mpki ns 0 00; Total s 2&amp; -15-67 .
RIPLEY (]Jl · - Snyde r 8·7·23;
Lawhon 0-2 2; Stra i ght 3 2-8;
H i leman 3+ 7; Ra in eS 4-3·11; Brown
OS S; Smi th 4 7 15; Mullin s 0-0·0 ;
Tho m pson 1-0 '2 . Total s 23 -27 -73 .

Score bYQuarters:
9

B ig Bl acks

18

. Rip ley

9
.17

Ironton
M eigs
Pt . Pl easant

Dec . 23 resun s:

393
1 531

0

322
444
2 597 490
2 367 324
5 2 431 ·384
5 3 531 485
3 4 366 430
3 4 419 447
3 5 473 461
2 5 342 470
2 5 342 400
t 5 314 332
0 1
48
41

Portsmouth 82 Minford 51

I

Dec . 30 games :
Co lumbus Cen t ral at Portsmouth
South W ebster at Wheelersburg

' "

20 2915 23-

67
73

CENTER CLOSED
RIO GHA NDE ~ All facilities in
Lyne Cen tel· at Rio Grande College
rgym, weigh t reom, and handball
court\. will be closed from Dec. 19
through Jan. 5, 1981. A new schedule
will be published when classes
resume after the holidays.

Lo gan at Gal l ipoli s
M e ig s a t W,el l ston
waver ly at A the ns
Jackson ar Iro nton
P t . P le a sant at Parkersburg South
Chilli coth e at w estland

·~

..

Jan . 3 gam es :
'
F ederal Hock i ng at Log an
Wa hama at Meigs

•P

OP

257 190
202
231
249
228

.

tat ·
20t
245
242

For the record.

2 2 196 220

L og an
1ro n ro n

National Ba.slu~ llaall AssMiatlon

1 3 190 236
0 4 206 244
M eigs
16 16 1759 1759
TOTALS
SEOAL RESERVES
W L P OP
TEAM
3 t 166 122
Gal l i p oli s
3 1 138 122
Log an
3 1 158 114
wa ver tv
3 1 155 138
Ironto n
2 2 152 153
A th en s
2 2 158 141
Ja ckson
0 4 138 196
Well sto n
0 4 120 199
M e ig s
16 16 1185 1185
TOTAL ~

Mi l w~:~uk.e e

India na
Al41nt.a

Chicago
Cleveland
Detroi t

W L

with lB an d nine

p o in t.~

respectively.

me nl for the Defenders was Lon nie

Sanders, John Elardo and John Van
Meter.
In the preliminary game the Ohio
Valley Junior Varsity won 38-14
against the J . V's fnnn Marietta .
Leading scorers fu r Ohio Valley's
J. V's was Phillip Archer with 16
points and Chris Wood with 10 points.
Top rebounders for Ohio Vallc(s
J . V's was Phillip Archer with mne
and Brian Odell with fi ve.

l:nllcgr liask1•tball S&lt;'ctre~
1-~ AR

Ne\'.-!.os Vegas Bi, New Mcxku 7~
TOUFtNAMENTS
CoppcrCiassk

.
Flrst RtJund
Amona 87. C&lt;ti-Sanl.a B~:~ rb;ml ~
l..amar 88, Gra mblin~ 82
ECAC H111idav Fcnlval
fo'lrst R1iund
N.Camtin;t St, 61, run u ~
St.Julu!":;, NY GG, Pt.••m $8
Fnr \\'t st Cle~ sslt·

First Rour1d
Oregon !12, l'u llcrtml St 7B OT
Dt·11 ke 69, Ut.c1h 68
.
'
Fighting llllnl C la ~;si c
First Round

Leading in the reboundtttg· depart·

ll linoi!:l &amp;1 , Oh iu 54
Oklahmna 53. Br~:~dley 52
Gator Bowl T1•umcy

Local bowling
"fllursduy Swingers stomdm!ls fur the week d
Ocr . 18&lt;~re :
-

Team
H&amp;C Plant F'uod
JtJhn.'iun'.s Mi:i rkct
D&amp;f Contract ors
Mitkl lcpurt Cenlnt11'rusl
fiillln,dlmn D ru ~
Hocktmberry Pharmacies
Warehime F uneral Home

W. L
84 36
00 ~
61 59
6ll 60
55 GS
. ~4 ti6
53 67
J.A. R.
47 7J
Hig h ~u uJe and 5crics : U&amp;C, l.ucJIJc Hk kman
2 1 2-~ 1 ~. Juhnson·s. Ncmcy.. Ma n..:um lii8, Vnnda
Jordan 436. D&amp;F , Bunnie FLIIIer 1~. N&lt;tnt·y Dobbi n ~ 399. Centrll l Trust, Sheryl Wal tcrs 1 63-4 ~ 7
G!lli n ~ham 's,

Odellu Mack 145-367. Hocken·
l&gt;t:!rry 's, Ton i Pcarsun 187-479. Warehime's, Put
Hunter 150-t28. J .A.A.'s, Dollie: Ada ms 156-396.
Splits convertl't.l : Faye Rowland ~10 and
Vi rgh1 it:1 Hubinsun 3-10.
t~ rly

Wcdnctidll)' Mixl·c.l
l ~ug u e
~ r. 3. 1980

Tea m

Pts.

Tony 's Carry Out

73

I . tm~shul'i

Gn

Hc:nlquartcr.;
65
SmitJi.Nclson M u tur~
64
Zidc'sSpurt Shup
.
51
Nel!lllll U ~u~o~ s
i ()
H i~h !!cries - Lou-ry DutJan 58H, C;m1lyn
BIH:hnc r 496: BubCIJut·h 549, M t~li iu c Dugw1 ~ n
lli~ /1 lol•IIOC La rry Dugan 21J. C" fu·olyn
Uuchner IM , Bub Couch 20:1, MH xi11c I}JJI!&lt;t tJ IRil
Tcrun scric::; - l.llllt.:Shol'i HIIIO.
Team l{i:ll ne - Smith-Nelson M•Jll ll'.\o 70 1,

M1ke·'s Trm
Han,ll itl~:"s T~ r~c

Tl'nm

Reutcr-Rro)CHil
Mt:ljjN I/111
J il n'sGulr
H u~t~ I C rn w n

J

First Roond

F'lt1rid.a 65, Jacksonv ill e 59

Howell 698 i Dave Somerville 672; G .~ti !
Snyclt!r li65; Ken Whit!.! 663 ; Bub Tillis, Jr. 657:
Dave &amp;Jrnervi llc 652: .Jerry Bry11n 642; Denni!
Hcmer 639: Bill Krl\11. 6:19; Da ve Somerville 833 J ack Mink 623; Tum Huse 621; Kent BrBIUI ti20:
Cral~ &amp;rncs62U: Kcr11 Brau 817; Bill Knu• 816 :
l ~e Huweii 6U: CraiK Barnes 614 : Dalla!! &amp;lyre
1KH: Wally Srmth 604 , 6a.l ; C&lt;&amp;f lislt:! DeWIU600.

.U7

17¥.!
21 ...

.316

.100
.563
,159

5
'
.4~
9
.3011 15
.'Z70 "16

24

14

.632

16
15
15
. 11

22
21
22
24

.421

8

.117
.100
.314
.132

8
8V.
11 1,-z
19

5 33
PaC'Itk Dlvl•lon
31

.795.
.6M

8

.514

5l"l

.48?
.412

11
12
12V.

. ~59

13

Huuslon l14, Detroit 94
AlhmUt 108, New Jerst.o.y 95
Dall!ls 119, ~nver 111
Philadelphia 113, IU!rws City 10.'1
Gulden State 110, Utah 100
l..o:.; A~ele!:l 116, lndhm01 115
PorUand 96, Seattl~ 00
Suaday'•Games
Ktm~s Ci(y Ht New J~rsey
Philadelphia at Los Angeles
Monday's Game

:~ :~ ~

36
34
29
48
43
30
30

."',,•

21
ll

·~

49

;.&gt;$

38
33
•
27.......... .:.
!2
43
40
29
29
211

~· '"'-

:"

"'

• !.

-·
...
'"' ';&gt;

St.Louis . at VaRCtJUVI!f
Mo.day's Game•

....-------.
..
Year-End Cfearancef
Dtill!ll:l at Cle\·eland

No games scheduled

•....,.!&gt;

·~-

•

Now

Availab~e

•U

I ~~ .'•

PLUS MUCH. MUCH MOREl

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

McGINNESS..STANUY AGENCY, INC.

.~----------~~~~----~~-·

.
'

\

II

Nick Johnson, Accountant Executive
452 2nd Ave.
Phone446-1761
Gallipolis

•'

....-. .

•SCANNERS
•TELEVISIONS

.
rhrough The--'

-

'3995

All&gt;&lt;! ,,,. j,. ,,., •••~ ' ·..,,!'"'• •

,"',.nlti•&lt;•"O

., '
....

I

House 10 Percent Discount" on your
basic premium?
Allstate has found it costs less
to insure newer homes, and they're
pass ing this savings on to you . ·
Give· us a tall an~ g~l in Qn the
savings!
'

I

,.

CB RADIOS As Low As

may qualify for Allstate's "New

Aaoss fllllll SiMI' -

'

Plaza

'"'"

~-..,~·-=''~-=·:::.!Oh:lo:..~---J·~
1-;-

...

.,

'

'

.

Electronic

t

-

Save 20o/o to 53o/o

Year-End
Savin s

Our Best Compact Stereo System

Save37995
120
.

4::.:~

5

I

2-Way High-Efficiency
Hi-Fi Speaker System

~ave69~~
· 80 ·

k~~~are~to

cattle 60 days prior to sale date.
you would like to obtain it, just call
please you and your family.
The grading of a consignor's l"""o,;;;ur;..;off=lce=a;;.:t..:.446-46;.;...:;.:;1;;;;2;;..e;;,:xte=ns=io.;:n..:.32::;·------...----'------i
calv!!S will be done BB follOWB:
a ~ steers and heifers will .be
separated
b.•cattle will be sold as "fanners

sortr•

-'

NOW'S YOUR CHANCE TO
'
SAVE•••

For years, y ou 've
seen and heard
1.":1 advertising about
All state Homeowners Insura nce.
And now , it's available h(!rt,, .at our
age ncy . But, did you know tha t if
your house is 5 years old or less, you

RIO GRANDE
COUlGE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Techn-

~~~~~~

r----------'--_;;,;_=__::::::::::::.._ _ _ .,

,
W

Wumen's 5Stl

Pts.
80
71
68
:;o

HunterColltge C1as~l c

Here in Gal~ia County
Allstate can save you 10%
on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

J uAnn Het&gt;d 600: Sh11run Tawney 561 ; Opal
Casto 556: Marilyn Br owni11~ 555.
Mr: t~ ' siOO

21

11 12 a 121 121
Washingtvn 12 12 10 132 122
N.Y. Rangers
12 18 5 126 143
Smythe Dlvl!!lon
St. Louis
!2 9 • 151' 118
Vancouw r
17 10 9 147 12.1
Chicago
138 166
ColtJrado
121 141
Edmmlllm
8 19 5 113 131
2
,.
7
Winnipt!g
100 176
Wale!i Conf~r~n ct!
Norris Dlvlafoa
!3 .9 3 152· 117
Lus Anl!!eles
Montreal
17 13 4 I« 103
Hartford
13 15 7 Ito 167
Pittsburgh
to 18 1 131 164
Detroit
8 19 6 tOG 139
Adams DIYtslon
Buffalo
17 8 9 137 106
Minnes ota
16 9 e 123 i02
Toronto
12 16 5 132 147
Booton
II 15 7 120 118
Quebec
10 II 8 121 141
Frlday·a Games
Hart!urd 9, Pitt.sburl!h 7
Washington 7, New Vurk Ranf!:ers
Buffalo 3, Chk."11 go 2
Minn~ot.a 5, Winnipeg 3
Colorado 5, Calgary 2
Los Angeles G, Vancouver 3
Sunday's Games
Boston Yl Buffal o
Montreal al N~w Voril Rc!ngen
Philadelphia at .Edmorilun
Toronto ·at Chlca!IO
Delruit at Winnipeg

Calgary

"

~--~~~~~!-=~~-~~_::-=~-=~-=-~--~~--·~_I Ur_l!r

Agriculture and
our community

W L TGFGAPts
23 7 7 16t 114 ~3
~
7 ~ 139 93 ~1

N.Y. I!lhmders
Phllildelpllht

\•

Sky1hw. Lanes
Ten Pin H(mur Roll
Week Ending 12-! ~80
Men's ZZ5
W;•lly Suutll 280; C lwr l h.~ Williams Z58 ; Bill
Knux :!!"•R: Wa U,v Smith 257 ; Larry.Patrick :'.57;
Dave SutJJcr\"l llc 2M: John [...i:lne 1!16 ; Gail
Snydt:r 255; l.t!C Howell 2$3 ; C;.~rlisle Dewitt 248:
Dale Smncrv•lle 245; 'ferry Sayre 244 ; Jerry
Brya r ~ 119; Chut·k Lane 2311 ; Wally Smith 238,
238 ; Bn!J Tillb , J r. 233; Danny Maynard 2.17;
Davtl Somtrvlllc 236: Cra i~ B.arne.s 2.'36 : Jiick
Mink 2.'16 ; l.knni s Hunc•· 2::lfi i Jerry Brya n 235:
Dave Surucrvillc 234: W;~ l ly Srnilh 234 ; Dallas
Sayre ~: Jerry BI")'Gn &lt;!.32: Chi:irlie Me&lt;~duws
l"\2; Larry Pgtrick :!3 1; JtJhn Finney 231 : Lee
Howell Zl l ; Larry Hnss;:ll 'm : Ralph Mitchell
226; Mooc Ni111Tlan 226: Ci:trlisle Dewitt 226 226·
Ken Pridemore Z25; Da liBs Sayre 225; Jim' Be~
225 : Ken Wh itt! 22.1.
Wt~m c D'8~

IS

Golden Stale

-42
40
Beverly ll er1~ley 2fl3:

Opal C;uto 232; Vir~lnly Grover 223; Doris
Sl.ac ~ 223; Vtnhta Sm1th 219; .Juc.JJ l~ac 217 ;
She~1 Whlte 216; Cooilic Kraullcr 214; JtJAnn
Reed 21.1; Kathy Van Winklt&gt; 2ll : Marilyn
Hruwnlng 210: ROlulllne Mnn mc ." 200; JoaAno
llt&lt;etl 202; Bw Custu201; Jun 11\w.'cll \m.

9'-';i

2S 13
19 18
Purtland
19 211
Sea ttle
li 19
San Djego
17 211
Friday'a Games
ChicHgo 100, Cleveland 98

Pu rdue ~. Georgia Tech 4S
Qreatcr Bluefield Iavttltional
First Round
Blut!fiel d St. 101. Rio Grand e, Ohio !M
Flr!il Roond
Baruch 83, Old Weslbury S9
Otrmi nic11n 75, Hunter 67
Plllli bUI')' Cla s&amp;k ,
First Round
Minncsul&lt;i 95, Vt~ le 54
Tt!ll ll~ Tech 98, Washint:lon SS, 2 OT
Purl Cit)! Classic
First Round
NC-CIUJ rlott c 68 , Temple 65
Northea'tcrn 70, Maine SO
TARCAChrl!ltma11Tou111e:y
First Rou•d
Ha mpton h1st. 71, Eliutbeth City St 69
Norfolk St. 91, SL " Paul '~ 73
Windy City Claulc .
First RouOO
Murg11n State 94, Texu!l College 8S

.639

Patrick DlviHiuo

"'"' 1-:l'

lhgh md 1V1dual ~me
l'&lt;rl C&lt;mwn 198; Marle11c Wi\so n\9~ .
J hl-(ll scr u.-s
Marlene Wl l.'il!n 560: Beverly
llcnsl••t 5-18: Pal Cllrsun :H~ .
Tcwn hi~l1 ;.:arne - Uculcr·Brugan Ill!; :;50·
Hcutt•r·HI"OKanlus . 1507.
·
'

l .t~e

WEST

Phoenix
Uti Ang:elt=s

13

Wetttem Collferen~e
Midwest DIYI&amp;Ioo

Houston
Ut.h
Dt'"nvcr
DalJBS

33

12 2S
Central Dlvlalon
26 11
21 16
17 20
17 20
12 'rl
10 'rl

Kan.sas City

Defenders lose 49-38 decision

Pet GB
4
.892 8
.m 5

33
27

• •

Campbell Conference

AUanUc DMslon

Philadt!lphlu
Buston
N!!w Yolil
W01shingtun
Nt:wJ ersey

"

NaUonal Hockey League

Easkm Collftrence

Stln Antuniu

GALU POLIS - The Ohio Va lley
Christian Sehoul Defend ers lost
third game of the year to Marietta
Christian Schoul49-38 Wednesday .
At the end of !he fi rst quarter the
Defenders led 12 to 7. By halftime
the game was tied 24 all. The Defenders' shoott ng turned cold in the
third quarter and Marietta pullet
ahead and Wj&gt;nt on to win 49-38.
John Elardo and Lonnie Sanders
led the sco t·in g for the Defenders

;;;&gt;

.

Gah ann a at Chillicothe

SEOAL VARSITY
W L
TEAM
4 0
Athen s
3 1
Ga llipol is
2 2
wav e rly
2 2
Well st on
2 2
J a ckso n

' •,

..

Ch i 11 it:: ot he .as Worth ington 38

Ath e ns 67 Be lpre 55

.

.'

MIDDLEPORT-The
Meigs tory Jane against Southern, ·33-26, in · - ~
Marauder seventh grade basketball a very hard fought contest. Both
,,
team of Coach Bruce Wilson are off clubs lost two starters to the flu.- ,.,
to an e.cellent start and are well on Mike Chancey again prevailed as
their way to a successful season. The Meigs' leading scorer with 13, Rick
Marauders are ~. with victories Wise and Parker Long each had
eight, and Brian Buffington four.
over Jackson, Shade, and Southern.
Southern was led by Kelly Grueser
· Coach Wilson's little Marauders
defeated Jackson In the first outing with eight, Jay Bostick wlth nine, ,
49-42. Talented Mike Chancey led the Tracy Cleland with six, and Sean
winners with 15 points, Chris Shank Grueser who bucketed three.
Meigs was scheduled to play
sank 13, Rick Wise ~ight, Brian Buf·
"
fington six, Brian Houdashelt five, Athens on December 17, but the contest
was
postponed
due
to
a
flu
and Lee Powell two.
,_
In the second outing of the year epidemic. The game wilr be
'
Meigs handily defeated Shade, 37-25. scheduled for a later date.
Meigs team members are Rod
Nine Players scored for Meigs.
High point man was Mike Chancey Harrison, Parker Long; David
wlth 12 markers, Chris Shank, Brian Warth, Chris Kennedy, Brian Buf- . .
' •I'
Buffington, and Lee Powell with fington, Mike Chancey, Rick Wise, . ,,
Paul Duff, Chris Shank, Eric Mitfour each~ and Rod Harrison three.
Chris Kennedy, .Brian Houdashelt, chell, James Keesee, Brian
and Shawn Baker all chipped in two Houdashell, Lee Powell, and Shawn
Baker.
each.
' "..
Th~ little Marauders again hit vic-

Jan . 2 games:

in rebounding with II.
BIG BLACKS (67) -

J ackson
W aver l y
Washi n g ton CH

P

Gallipoli s at Pt. Pleasan t

Big Blacks lose second contest
Poi nt Pleasant's Big Blacks
staged a magnificent second half
charge to wipe out a conm1an ding
Ripley lead. only to have time run
out on them. and succun1bed 73-67
to the Ripley Vikings in the Keith
Simmons Memorial tour nament up
in Jackson County Friday night.
Point's 6-2 se nio r forward. Hon
Cremeans, led the hit parade fo r the
entire evening when he ba ttled a
touch of the flu bug to pour in 30 big
points in a losing cause. Feeling
unde r the weather, Cremeans was
'' held" to only six points in the first
half when Frank Marino's Ripley
Vikings raced into a comma nding
17-point 35-16 lead. But Ron shook
off his illness and blazed for 24
counters in the last two periods to
lead a Garri son finish that sliced
that Viking gap to only six when the

We llston
Logan

L

National Report FOI'IJW are
due in our office by January 'll. Jn.
Acrbllllft
dlvidual belp to members is
MelpCGaaty
scheduled for Wednesday, DecemPOMEROY- Fair Dates for 1981 . ber31, in our office.
.
You may want to add these dates
Since we have already had a taste
your ~r. These are the of cold weather, 1 woufd like to give
of the Meigs County Fair and you some tiJMI on reducing newborn
~:=~ counties. Athens Coun- calf losses.
IY
IG-15; Gallia County,
"The statistics a~e ·atanning.
~ugwn ,....,; Jackson County, July 13- Nationwide, more than half the catCountv.August lt.-22; Vin- tie deaths occur during the first two
lo·~~t2:~(~JUly~
· :. :IS-August I; weeks of life. Ohio statistics reveal
W
September 5-9. that about 20 percent of all ·calves
have the entire
schedule In born alive, die shortl:v After birlh.
office if you need other dates.
There are two basic. reasons for
Junior Fair Milrket Aliimals In- these losses: First, poor
de~:~:~: Dates - All market management and nutritional prac111
must be checked; weighing tices, and se,cond, infectious
optional. Steen must be checked diseases.
Saturday, January 3, 9 a.m. to 12
Dystocia, or difficult birth, is one
at Royal Oak Farm near Five of the primary killers of newborn
r-oinLS. The lamb and hog iden- calves. But there are several
tific:aticln date Is Saturday, May 23, 9 preventive measures which the farnoon at the show arena, mer can take to belp avoid this
Fai1rgrourttls.
problem. .
"Prevention begins by selecting a

.... ......

I Meigs seventh graders
OP off to 3-0 start this seaso~

Cage standings
ALL GAMES
W
Chi ll icothe
7
Athe n s
7
Po rts mouth
6
Ga ll ip oli s
5

s-,

~H

Homemakers'
Circle

STRUGGLING FOR POSITION. - Andy Mills of wrestling tournament held at Ga,lllpolls Saturday. Also
Gallipolis ltop) jockeys wlth Dougherty of Point partidpatlng In the match were Logan, NelsonvillePleasant In the preliminary match of the GAHS ' York, Ironton, \1reenflel,ti-McCialn, fairland and
Ashland. (Brenda Wilson photo I.

Team

Cooperative E•tension Service
· The Ohio Stole Unlverolly

corner ~

unty.agent's

BY JOHN C. RICE
Ert I loaA,Ift!

,,...

The

ANNOUNCINGI

The sale order will be detennined
by amval time at the stockyards.
The Certificate of · Buckeye
Feedlot Conditioning lllWit ac~ny cattle at lime of delivery.
The consignors of the caggle will be
paid'an additional $5 per liead sold to
help delraY veterinary costs of the
Buckeye Feedlot Conditioning
Program. This $5 per head will be
paid by the buyer.
011iy Buckeye Feedlot Conditioned
feecjer cattle will be accepted for
c:lllll!llnmenl Here are the de&amp;aiJI as

to whiittueqallecl.
Cattle mtllt be treated for Rftl'8l
dla.lll!ll at leut 21 days prior to
IBie. (PriOr to January 5, 1111).
Treitment .-t be done by a

wtetlnarlan. Treat calves prior to

January 5 for the JanUBry 211 sale
and March 2 for the March 23 sale.
Cattle al8o need won~~ treatment,
&amp;rub and lice eontrol, de!Ivrned,
e..iated llld ll"l*'b' hilled,
B.\Q). m='="=t, jAWW
J ud

.....

hd, I i II U1r • Ill!, IIIli
P. 1 s• rniDt Cctotlltlallld ....

JOE'S fOREIGN CAR SERviCE .

MlfiURS &amp; TAilPIPES
at Route2
Vinton, Ohio

W. ALWAYS llllft the rtght exllll•t system
lr'l.•tock for IMMEDIATE lnstelletlon.
'

Tll ............_

.~

oiWirtully given.

Come to our Ot.,-,cl Opening tor 1 really grtlt "buy! You r.;11n eltpec~ono.
quilt lift aneltupetler perfOrmance rrom fttll Lltlllmt UuartntMd multter
tticltaiiPII)e--a rutl rttisiant 00111"1. 1'111~ mtleltrtlcknn•. expe" In·
lt..latlon and OWII!tM;d IIUIIICI!on lhll ..OU top ll'i&amp;lhy II I budget
Jr'Ot. C0tnt In INI be corwtnced. All lntiiiiiM&lt;wlt ,,_ Qvll'antMd In

Reg . 24 .95

Record stereo tapes tor car or home . Tape
Feature-packed at a budget price! 3'h"
off-the air. from records , or the mike jacks . drivers deliver full- range so und . Cushioned
Do lby NR c uts "hiss," extends dyn a mi c
earcups. 10' coiled cord . #33-993
· ra nge . Selectable Auto-Stop , fast forward ,
program re peat and timer for easy re.c ording . -,...-=E~Ie-c-t"'"r_o_n~ic....,li--y-C_I_e_a-ra_n_c_e_!

H:;.~:ry5-TiRe~slntel:Jre

0
25 tO 5QOJo

Save
20°/Q

z~~s

•"ttflt. .

111

Ollllpn wW lllld to c:Gidiici

14995
Save sso
1~:.~s
#14 -933

Check Your Phone Book for the ladle lllaek'Store or Dealer Nearest You
A OtVtStOWQf TANDY

'

"

CORPORATION

PRICES MAY VARY AT tNOIVIOUAL STORES

�·'

.

. o·

Decein ber 28, 1980
·
The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-

We .Reserve The Right

.•.......

.

.

SHOP, COMPARE EVERYDAY PRICES. WE SAVE
YOU CENTS ntAl MAKES YOU OOUARS.

~

.

CENTER

WHOLE

14 PORK LOIN
OR

PORK

SPARE

09

Referendum on Stctlllon
Otftettd In Quebec

.,.

$ 59'

.."'

,,;,

LD."....,

....

CENTE~

'

·L8~ ·

BEEF

Whole Round

STEAK

Bologna

.--

I

lndlre Gendhi
(
. Beck in Power

,.·

EL SALVADOR

'

C.lvll Wer

LB. ::..

u.s

G'ROUN.D
CHUCK

s
'

4 PAK

$}19

··~

CHERRY PIE ·
FILLING

BLEACH
GAllON

59~

GOLDEN ISLE

TEEN QUEEN

IODIZED

PINTO .BEANS

SALT

gg~
BANQUET
CHICKEN - BEEF
TUNA - lURKEY

3 For

1-LB.

BOX

$109

•

Sno-Kreem

.-··

SHORTENING
~.
.

~·

......

3 LB. CAN
·MINUR MAID

FROZEN ORANGE

~

JUICE
CAN

.•..••''
'

:..:
•
: ·~
'
: ;

;]

lh GAllON

~ ;:

'

CHEF CHOICE POTATOES

F.RENCH FRIES

3 LB. YELLOW or RED

MAINE

10-LB.

POTATOES..............~~~ ..'1'9
RED or WHITE

5 LB.

GRAPEFRUIT........... P:'.~ '1 29

8

16 oz.
BTLS.

...
..
~ ··')

ICE CREAM

Delicious Apples.......... 79~

.. I

•••

'

49c

&amp;Ol

..
'

fROZIN FOOD

RC
·coLA

.-....
,.
..~··~•.

.

CABBAGE •••••••••••••••••••. 10~
Yellow Onions .......t~~~·. 79~

ITALY

YPT

Pope VIsits Africa,
Frenct, Brezil, Germany
Eerthquekt

Shah of Iran D"•

ISRAEL
ZIMBABWE
IIKka Take Over

Ambush of Settlers
in Hebron

lB..

GOLDEN ISLE

TISSUE

U.S. Rtacut Mistion Filii
lrlq·lren Wer
Hotllttl Still Held

•

Aeegen Elected Pretidtnt
Mt. St. Helena .Erupta
,Cuben Boltlift • Influx of Rtfugett
Black Riot in Mlemi
Economy in Aeceaaion
. Auto Industry Slumps
lntereat Ratta So.r
thweat Droutht
Mi11ile Explodes In Arkenut
Draft Reglatration Resumes
IYc•y~yr $-,rveiUenct of Satum
Laa Vegas Hot.. Flrt

-

·TOILET

A

'

...

CHARM IN

Contolidettt Rule

'

LB :~

,

RUMP ROAST
SIRLOIN
TIP
ROAST

lB.

LB.

·SttC)ft9men o· oo-Hw11n

..

·----·
--------·
·
Slab Bacon $ 09

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

99

KOREA

r

lB.

79

29

After e-Day Siege In
lrtnlan

'

.
.

..
·-------------~~~~

GROUND

Union Arter Str••

Triel of Chine' 1
Geng of Four

,'

WHOLE OR HALF

USDA CHOICE

A

D
lrttlth Fret H01teg11

Menley Otftettd
·•

Ttrrorltm In Europe
Schmidt ~·· et.cted In Germeny

Worllert Win lr.cltptndtnt

JAMAICA .

''·

-------~---------!i
CHICKEN

19

lB.

·~

•

PORK CHOPS · Loin Chops
J

GERMANY

.;:
Rib
Chops
______________.,.
.

FAMILY PACK

LOIN

RI.BS

-

--------------J
$.. 49
To Limit Quantities.

PORK

Top Stories of 1980

.

.

·1

Broughton Whole
Vlt. D MILK
.

GAL$1 99
ILK ..........~.~.

-

Year in review
'

1980: a year of hostages,
inflation, nature's ·fury
We grimaced, we smiled. We wept, we l!!ughed. We
The captivity of 52 Americans in Iran had trees
hated, we loved.
sprouting yellow ribbons in the United States, and the
' The year flickered across our faces, but brandl!d our nation and its leaders prayed, protested and pursued
hearts,
solutions. Nothing helped.
We saw Injustice. We saw violence. We saw nature
Major airplane crashes killed more than 1,000, In·
kill thousands of our neighbors. And mankind, too.
cludirig the 22-member American amateur boxing
But·still, we hoped and we prayed.
·
team. A floating oll platform collapsed in the North
We hoped through.all 31,622,400 seconds that a bear- Sea, and 123 died. ·
·
ded religious man would free 52 of us held hostage in a
Soviet troops entered Afghanistan artd the United
distant land. We enter the next year stlil hoping.
States responded by halting grain shipments to Russia.
We hoped we could jail a worldwide pickpocket- in- The president called for - and got- a U.S. boycott &lt;t
flation. And we hoped we could kick the oil habit. · ·
the· Summer Olympics in Moscow, and the events
There were reasons for hope. We were learning-more became a Soviet romp when 36 nations stayed away.
about our bodies and the heave!l8, finding new
Rioting broke out In Miami streets after an all-white
limitations and new potential. And we found out - Jury acquitted four fanner police officers in the fatal
finally - wlw shot that TV oil baron namedJ.R.
heating of a black man. Eighteen people died, and the
The second hand spun.
$100 million in damage made it the most costly urban
Natllre wrote plenty of headlines ...
disorder In U.S. history.
The earth moved in Italy. And belched in Washington
Undercover FBI agents offerfll bribes on behalf .of
state.
·
.
bogus Arab sheiks, paying out almost $500,00010 public
Ferocious winds fed timberland fires In Southern officials In the lsrgest investigatibn of political corrupCatifornla, and homes were consumed. Soaring teffi. . lion In FBI history.
peraturila in · the United States parched crops and
A U.S. senator and six members of the U.S. House
claimed lives. Floods and storms took land and lives were indicted becaUBe of the Abecam Inquiry, and
from CalifOrnia to Ilidia.
trials successfully tested the FBI's newest type of ·
... and JDil1kind wrote a few headlines, too.
evidence - videotapes. The senator was not up for reA grisly prisoo uprising in New Mexico, the Fill's election In November, and voters rejected five of the
Abscam Inquiry, race' riots in Miami, war between six congressmen.
.
Iran 1\'ld Iraq, Soyiet mllliary moves In Afghanistan
The world got its best view ever of the solar system's
and labor unrest with a Soviet shadow In Poland.
sixth planet when Voyager 1 skipj)ed through Saturn's
Republican Ronald Reagan, fomiel'' Catifornla rings,
governor and actOr, became the oldest man elected
Scientists found a way to produce interferon in com·. president In U.S. hfaiOry- at age 89 - by defeating mercta1 quanitites .. But after touting Interferon as
Jimmy carter. Independent candidlite John B. An- .(lOIIibly THE cure for cancer, scientists backed off.
deraon wail few votes, but seCured a footnote IIi history Studies continued.
•
by making haUots in every stale.
The ptsy U.S. hockey team won the gold medal at
Republicans took control of the U.S. Senate for the the Ol,ymple Games at Lake Pla~ld, N.Y., besting,
first Ume In two decailes. Among DemocraUc losers 8monc otberll, the top,rated Sovieta. And a muscular
were such longtime senators as George McGovern, 21-year-old American, Eric Heiden, won five golds in
Frank Church, Birch Bayh and Warren MagnliiOn.
apeedllliatinc- arecordin·wlnler competition. ·
llame 125,000 CUbans 8lreamed to Florida on the . Nlnely yun of whit. rule and 10 years of civil war
"Ft:8edom F!OIIlla" with Fidel Cutro'a blessing. A few eoded when Jlhodeala became the independent nation
were d1uppelnled with the land of the free .,. six U.S. of Zimbabwe. Robert Mugabe, a black leader, was
flighls were later hijacked 10 CUba In the worst spate of f)eCied prime miMter by a landslide.
·
air piney in 11 yun. At'yelll''send, aome 8,000 Cubans
Former Beatre Jiiln LenDon was gwmed down, and
were In a resett1emen1 ~· and tboulands were In mllllana apent alllenllO minutes mourning the alncerprilanl.
lllllpl'iter and the real demlae of the Beallea, the most
111e year had tr. dlahearlenlnc momenta ...
• IIUCCelllful rock group of all time.
Our standard oflivlnc er'llded Wlatlan was nullo be Elmn black chll!hn were killed in Atlanla, and
raped. Tbe U.S. tiCGIIIIIIIJIIIIIIk IDtcl reo nl'lll, and the four more were mllllng. Blacks and whites joined a
r«VVi&amp;f wu shaky. lntmeal ralell rode a roller Mal'dlfortheldllera.
couler. Bayers ntaJecl'-·
'1'he ailed - ollnn died in Egjpt. YIJIOBiavia
. M01111l St. Helena blew lin lop, lllrninc a luab pine PreaidiDt JOIIp Brw Tito died In the country he led for
fonlll int\1 a Jlllllberyard. MOUIIIaill man · Harry 35 yeara. ADd Col. Harland Sanders, the fried chicken·

Truman wouldll't ._.., and bnme 1 Jtllad oiiOI'III JdaC, dltd at • • ·
incleatb- arate lllll'ldbtiiGIIIIIO Gillin. Alb Ja1ed
Weaulllnd. Werajolced.
11 mUll bJch drlftld alllf tamed day to J1i1bt in Idaho,
But we MrQI bciped.
Ort&amp;aa and WtM'QI L
Wunter the nat 31,N6,000 seconds still hoping.

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GRIM REMINDER - Tbe badf i:l a U.S. . .
viceman Ilea face dDwn .-r tile cblrnd ••• ' lie
helle!Ol!W .... tra.part ..... lbat mJ1!ded Iii ..
Iranian delerl Clll April • In tile IJUated I ' WI
rescue attempt. Aboft: IlL a. Bellnlreara .... • ·
Oct.17, seiiCIInc apllme olimcDaadanh.,a:d.

�~

P~ge-o-0·2- The

Sundav Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport

Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va . -

December 28, 1980

December 28, 1980 :

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

Election tops
•
m
1980 news

SENDS MESSAGE HOME Amerlcau holtage WIUlam Belk
of Colilmbla; S. C. ~~ to bls
family llllil frlelldl 'lu a televlsloa
broadcast from Tehran Friday.
Tile film ol the hosla&amp;es wbo
speut their second Christmas In
captivity was made by lralllau
television and was relayed to tbe
United States Friday.

NEW YORK (AP) - The
Republican Party's sweep of the
elections, which put Ronald Reagan
in the White Hoqse and gav~ the
GOP,control of the Senate for the first time in almost three decades, has
been named the top story of 1980 by
member editors and broadcasters.
. The election story narrow1Y edged
t})e Iran hostage crisis, which
finished first in the 1979 poll. The
troubled U.S. economy was third.
The Top 10 were chosen on two
ballots; a preliminary vote and a
second that included the top IS votegetters and three late breaking
stories. The ranking:
, I. The election.
' 2. The Iranian hostage crisis.
:3. The U.S. economy.
4. The Soviet intervention in
Afghanistan.
~ 5. The volcanic eruption of Mount
Sl. Helens in Was!iington state.
: 6. Events in Poland. The strikes
tl1e growth of an independent unio~
JI\I&gt;Vement ·and the threat of Soviet
in~ervention.

•7. The murder of former Beatie
J ohn Lennon in New York.
: 8. The ea rthquakes in southern
Italy, which killed thousands.
:9. The war between Iran and Iraq.

IO.(tieiThe boatlift from Cuba
and the influx of thousands of Cuban
and Haitian refugees and the fire
that killed 84 people at the MGM
Grand Hotel in Las Vegas. "
.
The second 10 included the FBI
Abscam operation; the Voyager 2
pictures of Saturn; the drought in
tile Midwest and Southwest; the goid
medal won at the Winter Olympics
by the, ,U.S: hockey team ; the
Moscow summer Olympics; racial
riots in Miami; the resumption of
draft registration , tbe murders of
black children in Atlanta and the excitement over "Who shot J .R. ?" on
the television show "Dallas."
TheTopiO:
I. The Election - Reagan's election on Nov. 4 wasn't el&lt;!lcliy a surprise. But pre-election· polls had
predicted a very close race and the
size ol the mandate was unexpected.
Reagan and-running mate George
Bush got 51-percent of the vote to 41
percent for Carter, and 7 percent for
independent John Anderson. Reagan
won 489 electoral votes to 49 for Car·
ter . The president carried only the
District o( Columbia and six states
- his own Georgia, Vice President
Walter Mondale's Minnesota, Rhode
Island, Maryland, West Virginia and

A,ppalachian Power wins
~onor

third year in row

'
~OINT

·Iran repeats hostages will not
be released until terms are met
Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai summoned foreign diplomats.and reporters to his office in
Tehran today for a 71)-minute meeting in which he
reiterated Iran's stand that it will not free the 52
hostages unless the U.S. goverrurient meets its deman·
ds, according to an Iranian official who attended the
meeting.
·
He said Rajai and other Iranian officials compared
Iran's demands and the U.S. replies and added that
Rajai made no mention of trying the hostages as spies.
"It was not a meeting for negotiations ___ Iran only
gave some information to the foreign diplomats," he
said.
Some Iranian officials have said the hostages would
be put on trial as spies unless America met Iran's terms that $24billion in cash and gold he deposited in the
Central Bank; of Algeria.
President Carter has called the demand a " ransom,"
while Secretary of State EdmundS. Muskie has termed
.it " unreasonable" and beyond the constitutional
powers of the presidency.
One Iranian official said Saturday's meeting began
at 9 a.m. EST and among those attending were Iranian
Executive Mfairs Minister Behzad Nabavi, head of the
Iranian hostage negotiating team, and other Iranian
officials involved in the hostage case.
As the meeting got under way, Tehran radio in an
Arabic language broadcast monitored in London
quoted Prime Minister Rajai as having told news agency correspondents that " If the U.S.A. does not respond
to the Iranian conditions, the spies will never be
released. 11
Foreign diplornaiB. in Tehran, including the ambassador of Switzeriand, which represents U.S. interests in Iran, were summoned today to the of(ice of
Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai in connection with the "subject of the hostages," the Swiss
ambassador said.
An Iranian official said among those attending were
Iranian Executive Mfairs Minister Behzad Nabavi,
head of tbe ·Iranian hostage negotiating team, and
other Iranian officials involves in the hostage case. The
unidentified official said the hostages would "most
probably" be discussed along with other topics.
· Meanwhile, Tehran radio in an Arabic language

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w. Va.

PLEASANT - Ap palachian Power Company was the
mest efficient steam·electricgenerating company in the United
States in 1979, the third consecutive
year ii has achielred a No.-1 ranking,
according to findings recently cornpin.! from annual reports filed by·
el~tric utilities with the Federal
El}~rgy Regulatory Commission.
In both 1977 and 1978 tlie comp&amp;ny, which generates most of liB
electricity. from ~cal, was · first
among multi-plant utilities in the .
'lll!tlon. But in 1979, It exceeded
exen single-plant electric utilities.
!\ppalachian's flve coal-burning
planiB in 1979 achieved the lowest
combined heat rate of 9,363 Btu's
pel' kilowatt-hour genersted in the
cdmtry. A sixth plant, Mountaineer Plant in New Haven, began
OA!ratlon In September of 1980 and
is not considered in the 1979 results.
Heat rate, which is a measure of the
efliciency of a' generating unit,

I

revolution" in recent days had spread false rumors
about an imminent release of the 52 hostages.
Tehrim Radio quoted Prime Minister Rajai as
having told news agency correspondents that " If the
U.S.A. dOes not respond to the Iranian conditions, the
spies will never be released ."
Iran often refers to the U.S. captives as spies and on
Christmas Day, the Moslem spiritual leader of the
Islamic militants who seized them nearly 14 inonths
ago, Mohammed Khoeiniha, issued one of the strongest
calls yet for spy trials

.

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power plant or entire electric
utility, Is the number of British
thermal u·nits (Btu) of fuel energy
required to produce one kilowatthour of electricity. ·The lower the
Btu·'s, the more efficient the
operation.
Appalachian's heat rate in 1979 of
9,363 was the lowest for the company in several years. In 1978 the
company's heat rate was 9,450 and
in 1977 It was 9,418.
·. Among Appalachian's plants, the
John E. · Amos Plant near
Charleston ranked 13th; Clinch
River Plant at Carbo was 15th ;
Philip Sporn Plant at New Haven
was 17th; 'and Kanawha River
Plant at Glasgow was 19th.
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission findings also showed
thst the American Electric Power
System, of which Appalachian is a
part, ranked second nationally
among holding companies, ex- ·
ceeded only by the New England
Gas and Electric Association.

THEY WENT ON TO WIN - GOP presidential candida te Ronald
Reagan and his running mate George Bush were joined by their wives on
podium of the Joe Louis Arena In Detroit last summer. Mrs. Reagan Is at
Hawaii. Even more startling was the
GOP capture of II Senate seats to
take over that body . by a 53-47
margin.
2.lran- Crushed hopes. That was
the story -of the Iran hostage crisis
which, with one or two interludes,
spent much of 1980 on hold.
One interlude was the death in
Egypt of the .deposed Shah, whose
admittance to the United States started tbe crisis. Another came in
April, when a mission to free the 52,
who were taken Nov. 4, 1979, was
aborted in the Iranian desert . Eight
U.S. soldiers were killed.
3. The Economy - Double digit inflation continued in 1980, the prime
interest rate soared over 20 percent
and a new recession th~eaten ed. As
the year ;ended, OPEC raised oil
prices again and some of Reagan's
advisers urged him to consider
declaring an economic emergency .
4. Mghanistan - About 100,000
Soviet troops inarched into
Alghanistan in January to try to put
down a rebellion several years old.
The U.S. then led a boycott of the
Moscow summer Olympics, cut off
sales of grain and technOlOgy fo the
U.S.S.R. and withdrew consideration, of the SALT nuclear
weapon limitation treaty (rom the
Senate. ·

left, Mrs Bush Is at right. Reagan went on to win the U. S. presidential
eleclion in November in a landslide. Bush is the vice-president-elect. (AP
Laserphoto 1.

5. Mount St. Helens ~ Mount St.
Helens erupted May 18, blowing
1,300 feet off its 9,677-foot top and
devastating the surrounding 150
square miles. Thirty lour died at the
southwestern Washington volcano.
Another 28 . were missing and
presumed dead .
·
. 6. Poland - Strikes in August in
Gdansk shipyards led within a month protests by other workers in
Poland, troubled by low wages and
food shortages. Facing a general
strike and possible Soviet intervention, the Communist regime
replaced party boss E:dward Gierek
with Stanislaw Kania, and granted
the workers the right to independent ·
unions.
7. Lennon - It harkened back to
the violence of the '60s, the decade

John Lennon was so much a part of.
over the world.
Late in the evening of Dec. 8, the 4fl9. The Iran-Iraq War ~ Iran and '
year-old former Beatie was entering
Iraq had _been squabbling for years
the Dakota, the luxury New York
over border provinces heavily
apartment building where he lived,
inhabited by Kurds .. In late Sej&gt;when he was gunned down. Mark
tember, Iraq finally struck David Chapman, 25, a Georgian now
toward the Iran 's Persian Gulf oil
livmg in Hawaii, was captured irnrefineries. Iran fought back with
mediately. Lennon had signed an .. unexpected strength and the conflict
autograph for Chapman only hours
became a war of attrition ,
earlier. There was a worldwide outthreatening Mideast oil supplies.
pouring of grief,
10. Cuban Boatli!t -It was dubbed
8. Earthquakes in Italy - On Nov.
" Freedom Flotilla," from the
23, much of southern Italy rwnbled
Florida Keys to Cuba, about 100,000
and crumbled under the shock of
refugees Fidei Castro decided to let
Italy's severest earthquake in years.
out of his country arrived in Miami
Cities were devastated, some cornand southern Florida and presented
munities disappeared· and nearly
political and economic headaches to
3,000 people were killed with many
the United States. Some of the
more still missing at year's end.
refugees were Cuban convicts.
Relief supplies poured in from all
Resettlement was slow.

THIS COULD BE
YOU •••

JO·ARBI'ABBIOS'

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SAVI 80% TO 80% orr

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Sale ends Satu~y, January 3rd. ·

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80%
! :orr
.
·r 88%
:orr
•
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0

• ENTIRE STOCK WOOL BLENDS. Polyester/wool plaids
and heathers. 54·60 " wide . Reg. flom $7.99 yard.
• ENTIRE STOCK FUN FUR. Acryl ic and modacrylic.
Machine wash , dry, 60" wide. Reg $7.49 yard
• ALi. ACME·KLEENCUT SCISSORS. Dressmakers,
pinkers, m01e. Reg . $1.39 to $6.(5.pl.

,

•

• INTIRE STOCK CORDUROY.Poly lcorton.assorted
walt~s . Machine wash , dry, 45"wide. Reg. from $4.49 yard .
• ENTIRE SToCK VELOUR. Acetate /nylon and Arnet·
'lrtacelate/nylon. Mochine wash: dry, from 45 " wide .
Re11. 11om $2.99 vord.
• ALL REGULAR STOCK ZIPPERS. Coats &amp; Clark.
8eufi::mTM, Ur11que . Invisi b le, more .

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ENTIRE STOCK QUillS. CoHan, blends in singl e or
double-face. Poly fill. Mochlne wa sh. dry, 45" wide .
Reg. from $3 .99 yard.
.
SELECT SUIDIS. Acetate /nyl on or polyester. Machine
wash, dry, 48-60" wide. Reg . $4.49 and $5.49 yard.
• 'PINS AND NEEDLES. Select g1oup ot pins and needles,

•

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IN CAPTIVITY - Bruce Lalugen,
American charge d'affaires In Tehran when
the United States embassy was seized 14m,...
tba ago, Is seen Chrtsbnas day at the Iranian
Foreign Ministry In Tehran In this photo
released by Pars, tbe official Iranlaa aew1
' ageney.lAPLaserphotol.
·

broadcast monitored in London said" ... enenu~·es:.:o~!th:,e_.!;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;jjjiijiijiijiiiiiiij;jiiiiiiiiii~

I

VISIT AT FOREIGN MINISTRY - VIctOr Tomseth, right, aud Michael Howland, seated second frolls
rl~hl, talk with members of Algerian Em~sy ' u'i
Tehran during tbelr visit at Iran's Foreign Ministry do
Chrtsbnas Day. The two, along with U. S. Charge d' Af.
(airs Bruce Lafogen, have been held at the ministry
since Nov. 4 take over of tbe U. S. Embassy In Tehran

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CHRISTMAs MASS - Bru~e
Lalnlen, rlgbt, U.S. ~barge d'af.
fain In ltan, 1fll wllb VatltfU 0.
voy Alllbale BuplnJ u lrultQ
Roman Catholic ·arebbllboP · of
Tehran Youbannu Semon
luayl, center, celebrate! Chi11~
1DU llervke It lraa'1 Forelp
Mlalltry Ia Tehraa Friday. 1'hla
pbefo wu rele•ed by Iran'• of-_
lldaJ ...... New AlfteY In
Tlllralllllnlay.

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We know you appreciate a bargtll~ . and this
Is one ¥OU can't ollord

to pass up! Choose from
o wide selection ol
lobrlcs for sportswear,

kids' wear. cralfs and
more. Hurry in today,
and save!

IO"To80"
orr

hand and mochlnt;t.

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Select group
of fabrics
and notions

40%
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·AN
-INDEPENDENT
BUSINESS PERSON.
FOR MORE
INFORMATION 'CALL:

• IOUCLI!' BRIGHTS. Arne/ ' trtacetatel nylon solids:
Mdchtne wash, dry, 48" wide. Reg. $4.99 yard.
• POtril DOUILI KNITS. 100% polyester solids. Machine
wash . dry, 60" wide. Reg. $3.99 yard.
• SELECT HIRCULON • UPHOLSTERY FAIRICS. Plaids.
stripes. solids. 54" wide . Reg. S5.&lt;19 yard
• ENTIRE STOCK PRINTED FLANNEL. Poly I cotton .
Machine wash. dry, .s· wide . Reg. $2.29 ya1d.
• THI DINIM LOOK. Conon lpotyesler: mochtne wash.
dly, 45" wide. Reg . $3.99 yard .
• HAPPY TIME APPLIQUES. Floro is. denims. more.
lhe per1ecl finishing touch/

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l\c·~~~.!!..-~
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(6allipoli' iflallu ;tihune
PHONE 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

PHONE 992-2156
- ~

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�Page-D 4 The Sunday Tomes Senl ooH!I

f&gt;omeroy

.. Winslow of the Na vy (go

MORNING
5 3D C1J AGRICU~ TURE USA
8 Of) (I) CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
CIJ BETWEEN THE LINES
9J AMERICAN PROBLEMS AND
ALLENGES
8 30
• CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
HARVESTER HOUR
I]) A BETTER WAY
TREEHOUSE CLUB
7:00
• THIS IS THE LIFE
JAMES ROBISON
EDDIE SAUNDERS
I]) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
BAN LEAGUE
NEWS
7 3D
UNITED CHRISTIAN
INTERNATIONAL
(]) DAWSON MEMORIAL BAP
TIST CHURCH SERVICE
I]) IT IS WRITTEN
I]) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(!)JIMMY SWAGGART
®liMES ROBISON
(Hi
BIBLE ANSWERS
8 00 (])
MUSIC AND THE SPOKEN
WORD
(]) THE LESSON
0D THREE STOOGES AND
FRIENDS
81]) DAY OF DISCOVERY
(l)(HI SESAME STREET
®II~ IS WRITTEN
(Hi
G)
EVANGELISTIC
Q_UTREACH
8 30 (]) 0 ®I ORAL ROBERTS
CHAPEL HOUR
CONTACT
OPEN BIBLE
81]) REV LEONARD REPASS
IUJGI LOWER LIGHTHOUSE
9 00 (]) 0
GOSPEL SINGING
./J,!BILEE
W
ROBERT
SCHULLER

I
I

&amp;i~REV
HENRY MAHAN
AT ISSUE

C1J

11 3C

ANIMALS ANIMALS
ANIMALS
llJ [jJ FACE THE NATION
(I) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
UGH)

THE USGA Jack N ck aus d ama
t c 19BO US Open v eta vat Bal
tus at w II be the focal pont of lh s
sports apee a whiCh also nc luc;tes
1'1 gh ghts of th a years USGA
Champ onsh ps nclud ng the U S
Sen or Open and the Wo d Am a
leur Team Got Champ onsh ps

0 1]) VIEWPOINT
CIJ MOVIE (WESTERN ) '
Markt,e! For Murder 1945
12 3D
NFL 80
(]) LARRY JONES
(]) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ooo Sound
.And Tho Fury
1959
[jJ TONY BROWN S JOURNAL
llJ I]) THE NFL TODAY
®J -HE ISSUE
illJ ONCE UPON A CLASSIC Boy

me w

~APTIONED)

ClJ

REX HUMBARD
(!) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
llJ I]) NEW LIFE TEAM
(I) STUDIO SEE
®J CBS SUNDAY MORNING
ffil MISTER ROGERS
iUJ REV JIM FRANKLIN
9 3D 0
0D ROBERT SCHULLER

m

~APTIONED)

C1J BIG BLUE MARBLE

10 00

ffil ELECTRIC COMPANY
iUJ m REV R A WEST

C1J 0

REX HUMBARD
(]) CHANGED LIVES
(]) HAZEL
I]) GIGGLESNORT HOTEL
(!) KENNETH COPELAND
CII (jj) SESAME STREET
IUJ GI JIMMY SWAGGART
1D 30 CD SPIRITUAL AWAKENING
@ MOVIE (DRAMA)"' MyCou
sin Rachel 1g53
I]) KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
llJ @ ERNEST ANGLEY HOUR
®)
MOVIE
(COMEDY ADVENTURE) 00 'lo
The Silencers 1966
11 00 ffi 0 TV CHAPEL
(]) IN TOUCH
(!) REX HUMBARD
C!J ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
Sw sh of he Cur a n The Haifa d
ch ld en sol c t the Bel s help n
gel! ngthe rpa ents perm ss onto
per1 c pate nadrame compet I on
us ngthecompet ton top ovethe
ab It es
(Cl osed Cap t oned US A )
ffi! MATINEEATTHEBIJOU Gong
Hal Randolph Scalf sta s nth s
exc te ng t ue sto 'I of the Ma ne
a d on Mak n Is and du ng the
Second Word Wa
Se acted
shorts nc ude Chapter I of these

4 30

W thTwoHeads WhenyoungChr a
P.age thwarts a burg ary nan o ld
ant que shop h s rewards a e a
So u h Arne can w tch docto s
sh unken head an old nat ve drum
Bnd sorrw bamboo p pes The ad
venture beg ns when Chr sand h s
s ste J Up ay the nst uments and
he shrunken heatl comes to fe
(C osed Capt oned US A ) (60
m ns.)

m

m

us~!!Qmnol

BOO

December 28 1980
Schneider and Grandma Romano
Into once again putting on a New
Year a Eve show (Repeat)
II 00 (I) 700 CLUB
1])(11). SUNDAY NIGHT MOVIE
SPECIAL Tho Shadow Bo• 1980
Stars Joanne Woodward Chris
!QpDJ.r P ummer
8W®l ALICE Alice end Tommy
spend a aemi Merry Chnetmaa
with
Mel
flo
and
Eve
Vera ensconced In the cab of a
trailer truck en route to Colorado

Pubhc Not ce
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Oh o
December 19 1980
Contract Sates Legal
Copy No 81 12
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT

m

EVENING

F 7 ( 16)

RS 983(2)
Sealed proposals w I be
rece ved at the ott ce of the
D rector of the Oh o Depar
tment of Transportation
Columbus Oh o unt I 10 00
AM Ohto Standard T me
Thursday
January 22
1981 for mprovements n

Gall a County Oh o on

Sect on GAL 35 3 76(5 68)
of u S ROute 35 n Rae
coo n Townsh p
by
prepar ng the re nforced
concrete surfaces and
overlay ng
w th latex
modlf ed
concrete
repa r ng the abutments
nstall ng new ra I ng and
other appurtenant work to
Br dge No
GAL 35 D376
over
nd an Creek and
Br dge No
GAL 35 05&lt;18
over Racc oon Creek
Protect Length - 322 27
feetor0061 mile
War&lt; Length - 949 05
feet oro lBO m le

The Oh o Department of

T ran sportal on
hereby
not f es all b dders that t
w II aff rmat ve y nsure
that n any contract en
tered nto pursuant to th s
m nor ty
advert sement
bus nessenterpr sesw 11 be

11

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ffi

• (!) SHARKS
KENNETH COPELAND
C!JMOVIE~COMEDY) 00 French
Pootcaldo 111711
0D .IIIl EVENING NEWS
8(1J(JD)TRAPPERJOHNM D II a
28 years after Korea and Dr John
Mcintyre the legendary Trapper
John of M A S H fame now a no
t ceably older and mo e aedate
civil an II learning what t 1 like to
be on the ace v ng end when he 1
faced with a carboncopy ofwha t he
used to be a rebelltoua w sea ere
of a young surgeon (Repeat 60
m ns)

Rev 8 17 73
Dec 28 Jan 4

I&amp;'Ml'em&lt;lll•
News
NEW$1GHT 80

1980

22

Po me

Money to Loan

31

FHA VA Convenllal Home
Loans
Columbus F rst
Mor1ga11e
Co
loan
represent at ve
1otet
1Cookie) VIers 463 Second
Ave Gall polos Oh 446

v

7172

PubliC NOtiCe
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus Ohto
December 19 1980
Contract SaJes lega I
CopyNo 8112
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
F 7(16)
RS 983(2)
Sealed proposals w II be
rece ved at the off ce of the
D rector of the Oh o Depar
tment of :Transportation
Columbus Dhlo unt I 10 00
A M Oh o Standard T me
Thursday
January 22
1981 for mprovements n
Gall a County Oh a on
Sect on
GAL ~5 (3 761
(5 68) of u S Rou1e 35 n
Raccoon Townsh p, by
prepar ng the re riforce&lt;T
concrete surfaces and
overlay ng w th latex
mod fed
concrete
repa r ng the abutments
nstall ng new ra ng and
other appurtenant work to
Br dge No
GAL 35 0376
over
nd an Creek and
Br dge No
GAL 35 0568
over·Raccoon Creek
Protect Length - 322 27
teet oro 061 mile
Work Length 949 05
feet or 0 180m le
The Oh o Department of
Transportat on
hereby
not t es a 1 b dders that t
w II aff rmatlveiy nsure
that n any contract en
tered nto pursuant to thts
advert sement
m nor ty

bus ness enterpr ses w tl be
afforded full opportunt1y to
subm t b ds m response to
th s nv tat on and W1ll not
be d scnmmated aga nsf
on the grounds of race
co or or nat anal or gm n
constderat on
for
an
award
M n mum wage rates
tor th s prooect have been
predeterm ned as reqUtred
by aw and are set forth In
tre b d proposal
The date set for com
plet on of th s work sha I be
set forth n the b ddong
proposal
Each bodder shall be
requ red to f le woth h s b d
a cert ted c heck or
cash er s check for .. an
amount equal to five per
cent ot h s b d but n no
event more than flttv
thousand dollars or a bond
for ten per cent of h1s btd
payab e to the D rector
B dders must apply on
the proper forms .. tor
quat f cati on at least ten
days pr or to the date set
for open n9 btds n ac
cordance wtth Chapter 5525
Oh a Rev sed Code
Plans and speclftcat ons
are on ftle m the Dep~rt
ment of Transportatton and
the off ce of the D1stnct
Deputy D rector
The D rector reserves
the nghl to reoect any and
a b ds
DAVID L WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev 8 17 73

23

Professional
Services

CALL
us for your
photographic needs
Por
tra t
passports
com
mereta/ and
wedd ng
photography
Tawney
Stud1os 424 Second Ave
COMMERCIAL and
n
dustrlal
photography
Phone 446 2909 or 446 7226
after4p m

WE do custom wood
plan ng any amount 245
5846

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
Not ce s hereby g ven
that on Thursd ay January
8 1981 at 10 00 am a
pub c sa e w II be held at
the off ces of Central Trust
Company N A of M d
d eport Oh a o se
for
c ash
the
fo low ng
co ll eraterJ t tow 1
1 - 1976 Ford 2 door har
dtap
Se ra
No
6G21H1 51763 Th e Cenlra l
Tru st Company
M d
d eport Oh r eserves the
r ght o b d at th s sa e

SWEEPER and sew ng
mach ne repa r par s and
suppl es
P ck. up and
de l very
Dav s Vacuum
C ea ner one half m e up
Georges Creek Rc
Ca l
446 0294

FOUND Large bl ac k &amp;
wh te tom cat V c n t y of
Mu berry &amp; He ghts 992
5354

10 ROOM br ck 3 baths 1 •
acre 6 rooms 2 baths 1 2
acres 6 rooms basement
bath 2 mobole homes
Mason 3 bedroom never
I ved n 2 bedroom rented
2 acres John Sheets 3 2
moles south of M ddlepor1
Rt 1
Trat er lot for sale S5 000
Modular home lot on Route
7 three bedroom farm
hoUse located on Route 7
992 2571
Beautiful three bedroom
ranc;h bnck home n Baum
Addtt on Pomeroy Oh o
Gas heat centra a r con
d ton ng Call 985 3814 or
992 2571
NICE TWO bedroom house
wtth three car garage n
Racine $33 00 00 949 2801
No sunday calls

THE BUTCHERS SHOP
PE
f eezer beef sw tt
s des custom work done
j:a I 446 2851
Bulav e
Porter Rd Owned by Bar
bar a Glassbur n

- -Card
- of Thanks

1

WOULD Ike to taketh s
t me to th ank everyone who
v s ted sent flowers and
cards dur ng my recent
I lness tn the hasp ta Ken
neth Ra ney
2

_ In

SHOOTING M ATCH a
Corn Hollow n Ru and
Every Su nday start ng at
Proceeds be ng
noon
donated to the Boy Scou
Troop 249 12 gauge fac tory
choke gun only

13

JOKG

__ ,.

1

P'/NAM TG

.9;):Z (;oW s w ~

8

Publ c Sale
&amp; AUCfton

SWAIN
AUCTION BARN

""'
THE secaNe&gt;
iXX:ToRSEZ ;t&lt;Y
BAR6EP. 101.0 ME

We sel anvth ng for
anybody at our Auction
Barn or tn your home For
nformat on and ptckup
serv ce ca lS6 1967
Sale Every Saturday
N ght at 7 p m

Russell o Wood
Even ngs 446 4618
Realtor
Ken Morgan
Eventngs 446 0971
Realtor
MODERN
HOME
overlook ng the Oh o
R ver 3 bedrooms tu y
carpeted kttchen new y
remodeled
level lot
w th several frutf trees
2 car detached garage
En,oy the pr de of
ownersh p for only
$49 000 00

------- --

~al Est~~-:.~e n~~

"• BAIRD &amp;FUUER
REALTY

SANDY AND BEAVER n
surance Co has offered
servtees for ftre nsurance
coverag~ in Ga a County
for almost
a century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
ava fable to meet
n
d vodual needs Contact
Eugene Holley your ne1gh
bar and agent

HOT WATER •

N LOVING m emory of
Lester D
Roush
who
passed away two years ago
December 27 1978 Sadly
m ssed by w fe Maz e
daughters Ethe Geneva
and Befty and tam es

In tov ng memory ot
Dane R ch c who pa ss
ed away tour ve.ars ago
Dec 25 1976
Tp your grave we often
wander
F towers we place w th
tender care
And
we
fe el vour
presence near us
A s we sadly I nger
th ere
The Fam iy

Ann.2:'unce,r;~ts

Heating Fuel 1 &amp; 2 Ex
ce star
Oil
Company
Phone 1 614 992 2205
YOUR
PIANO
Too
valuable to neglect expert
tun ng &amp; and repa r Lane
Dan1els 742 2951 or 992
2082
_ _ _ _ _ _L__

16
HAVE YOUR deer trop hy
mount ed
B rchf e ld s
East on 124 at Ru and 742
2178
DEER Cu1 &amp; wr apped a
Map e Wood Lake between
Syracuse &amp; Rae ne Oh
$25 per head $5 add on a
for sk nn ng
FAYE S G It Shop n M d
dl epor t w II be open fro m
2 5 unt ! Christmas

2 CUTE sma i breec pup
p es ca 379 2727
6 WEEK old
mother Is wayw o
man father va gr
446 7783

r

u

(

FIRE WOOD
n N
stacked and rea y l
call 388 8896
~NY PERSON wl o has
anyth ng to g ve av
JRcl
does not offer or air r p t to
offer any other n ' Q tor
sale may place an ad nt h s
be no
co umn There w
charge to the adve t s

WE WIL L PAY you cash
lor you d amonds w ed
d n g bands class r ngs
taoc kel watches
denta
go d anyth ng that s 10 14
18 K god
Tawney
Jewe ers 422 Second Ave
Wanted Ia Buy class r ngs
wedd ng bands anyth ng
stamped lO K I4K or 18K
gold S l ve co ns pocket
watches L II Joe Clark at
992 2054 at C ark s Jewelry
Store Pom eroy Oh o 45769
USE D FURN1TURE Gold
&amp; 5o ver c ass nngs pocket

w ntches cha ns d amonds
&amp; c:.o on Copper brass and
b ~ He es
nt que Items
o Jo 1.1/ prJ sa ls com
p efe avt.t onee r serv ce
Over 30 years experience n
bus ness W I buy c: orrt
pte c es tates Mtddleport
Oil 9V
70
WANI EI.)
TO
BUY
GOLD
S ILVER
PLATINUM STERLING
CO NS RINGS JEWELR
Y
M SC
ITEMS
AB
SOLU rE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
~ H lO 992 3476

11
OLD COINS pocket wat
Ches. c a$S r ngs wedd ng
bands d amends Gold or
s lver Call J A Wamsley
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co n Shop Athens OH 592
6462
PAY NG TOP PRICES
FOR u S solver and gold
cons Due to the quock rise
n s over and gold bullion
please call for buy quotes
for your cotns and sterl ng
s lver Also buymg War
N eke s Canadtan SUver
Co ns go d class and wed
d ng r ngs dental gold 333
Jackson Oyto or phone
286 6663 Hrs 10 a m to 8
p m Monday thru Satur
day

Help Wanted

NEWLY RENOVATED
home n Gall pol s one
bedrm I v ng room k t
chen bath and u1 I ty
rm downsta rs - two
bedrms
upsta rs
Pa nted and ref n shed
nstde and out New 1200
BTU FA nal gas fur
nace new bath and ktt
chen Can be FHA or VA
ftnanced
Pr ce
$29 000 00

GET VALUABLE tra mhg
as a young bus ness person
and earn oood money plus
some great g ffs as a Sen
ttnet route cltlrr er Phone
us r ghf away and get on
the ellglbolty I st at 992
56 or 992 2157

RON S TV SERVICE
Specla z ng tn Zen th
House Calls Now serVlc ng
Motorola Quazar Call 1
304 576 2398 or 446 2454

w th

11

VA LOAN ASSUMPTION - Good home care free
alumtnum s dmg 3 bedrooms beth wtth shower
N0062
woodburnong stove garden space $26 000

HAROWOR KING co lege
student
needs
work
Cleanmg tnventorles etc
ref~rences
call Pauline
7497

ui

Furnace repatrs electr cal
work
plumb ng
mobtle
home or restdence 992
5858 classified
ads
THAWING Water Iones
replace damaged copper
tubing or plast c lines
General plumb ng 667 6139
or667 61SO

lAFF A DAY

1Ca
•

_.!!!-

----

GOOD CITY L9CATION - 2 story remodeled home
basemen1 double lot and 3 car garage w th
workshop
N0514

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - SpIt level with a
great of the Ohio R ver has a recreation rOOm wlth
wood burner central a rand nearly 3 acrt:s of ICIInd
Pr ced m the SO s
JUST USTE D - Extra nice ranch 3 bedrooms
bath weth shower den central atr carport locateed
close to ROdney n c ty sch d st Callloday
N1014 •
BEST BUY - Ranch with a brick front only 3 yea~
old 3 bedrooms fully carpeted garage large lot
Only $38
state road
11131.

.

ooo on

TO SETTLE ESTATE - Th s home hal been reduc
ed $10 000 fully carpeted 3 BR brick 2'• baths for
mal don ng fireplace basement 2 car garage acre
land has manv more e)Ctras between Rio Grande
and Jackson Call today

f.et 11 stop her- 1 a/wan
wanted to know how old she Is r:.

v

9l ACRES -

Vacant land good nvetlment proper
IY some timber all mineral rights located In Ad
dlson Twp
1 1012
150 ACRES - Good tarm beautiful rolling land 3
barns tobacco base pond Rt 141
11012"

E111111np Call

- -----

IF YOU RE LOOKING
for acreage we have
lust listed over 100 acres
in Gu.,an Twp ro I ng
to hilly Owner w II per
m t core dr I ling Call
for more lnformat on
Pr ce $300 00 per acre
Excellent buy

RldooTV
&amp; CB Repa.r

Wanted to Do

$149.55

CANADAY.

w ndsor

Fatrmont
Baron Fuqua Norns
Bayvtew un b1lt

REALTY

Only

3 BR m ob le home n Centeroo nt on 2
large ols 2 slorage buld ngs Call today S21 500

mEihott)
Rt 93 North
Jack son Oh•o
286 J752
(J

m le from

Audrey Canaday, Rea"or 44tl·.:!tl.:!,tll
25 locust St, Gallipolis, Oh1o

BM~

371 - Large restr cted bu ld ng lot 2 m es
from Ga I po s Ca for complete deta Is

BMR 376 - 3 BR s tua1ed on Iaroe ot Located n
EwmQton $27 900 Near mines Cal for deta Is
BMR 377 - In Centenary 3 ots each 80x1BO n
c udes 1970 mOb te home 2 add ttonal tra ler pads
ca 110day

BMR 379 - Br1ck ranch nc udes 3 BR s l h baths
LR DR k tchen 2 car garage S tuat ed on g flat
lot C ty Schoo s Call today

GALLI POLIS - S35 500 - Spa kl ng 2 BR home has
hardwood f oo s w th plush carpet n I v ng rm
Soia um v ny n k tchen Carport p u s g storage
b dg Fenced leve lawn Easy care v ny exer or
exce lent cond ton

BMR 381- New Ltshng- Two story frame home In
c ty nclud,ec:. fn m.-.. .:on :o n
G room with
f replace d•SALE PENDIN
basement
fam ly room wtrn f rep ace fh s one won t ast long
BMR 3UF - 69 acres MI L vacant and M neral
r ghts and t mber Land contract Cal for complete
deta I~

BMR 382 - New L s1mg - Frame house n Cheshtre
tncludes J bedrooms v ng room k tchen w th dm
ng area and ful baement S tuated on large flat lot

SHOESTRING RIOGE - 119 500 - Frame 4 BR
basement 2 4 ac es Wood bu r ner rang e and retr g
Barn C ty schoo s

BMR' J83 - For Lease - 4 BOO sq It ght ondustrv
warehous ng w th reta I or wholesale possible Call
now

112

0552
0552

9507
0552

I
I
I

Dlnln Bloom•, - . 446-2599
Jahn Fulllr, Realtor 446-027

NEW LISTING In
vestment
property
three rentals one faces
has I v
Second Ave
rm d n rm ktt bath
otlllty rm
down
2
bedrms up 1 bedrm
utl1 ty apt back and
bedrm garage apart
ment in rear Call for
more nformatton and
appointment

z

MOVE INTO THIS 2
bedroom home conve
n1ently
located
to
schools
churches
grocery and downtown
shopping Don t lei Old
Man W nter bother vov
anymore Buy now for
$24 500 00
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED on Lower
River Rd
2 or 3
bedroom home New Y
car~ted
R ver fran
loge ci!Y water nat
g.. FA furnace 2 baths
lem1ly room with .deck
&amp;uy now for $42 000 ~
WDODRI!ALTY INC
ULocus!S1

ol

GIIIHPGIII

FOR RENT OR LEA SE
Modern 3 bdr ranch car
pet garage 5275 per mo
pus depos t Referenc es
requ red
Strout Realty
4-46 0008

2 BEDROOM furn shed
mob le hom e n Crown
c ly ph 256 6474
MOB LE HOME 3 m es
from HMC on o d 160 $160
mo Ca 446 1471

4 BDR B le vel oft Rt 35
near HMC 2 bath s F R
W seman
gas heat ca
Agency 4-46 3643
2 BE DROOM mob e home
full y furn shed 446 9669

SMALL house turn shed
adults only 446 0338

2 BEDROOM tr a er

par
tty furn sh ed $200 mo
hea t &amp; wa er pd
$50
d~ pos 1 245 9170

5 ROOM HOU SE n Crown
C ly Ca I 256 1744

2 BDR house f urn o unf
washer and dryer
n
c uded Sec depos t and
per so na
and
cred t
rete ences req $225 Cal
367 7690

Real Estate

2 BEDROOM house tra ler
for ent 446 1052
'l T RA LERS Roushk.ane
Chesh re Ca 304 773 5882

Gen eral

WISEMAN

J m

11 11

Cr;~Ch

.ln A S 0

E a

A!&gt;ot:

u~

.l t'

liS I

~6E

4~6

88

e

E I!

Eve

B

JH ast~nA s o

N net Sm h As o
Cy d e W~k

TomHo s

PHONE 446-3643

I

I

57 ACRES
Roll ng m eadows wooded h lis de
pond p ne grove S21 900

STROUT REALTY, Inc',

PPED $5 000 -OWNER
WANTS OFFER - Your tam y w
ove t h s pr vate res den ce s tuated on
near!).' J woOded acres w th pond of( Rf
218 The SPtac ous br ck h om e offer s 5
bedroom s 2 ba ths 2 f rep aces 2
pa os hu ge tam l y roo m heat pump &amp;
c rcu lar dr ve Call l or m ore nfo c ty
schools $72 900 9 2% m1g

LIINDCONTRACT - LOW INTEREST
-LOW OOWN PAYMENT - lw II be
hard to f nd another dea
ke th s for a
long lo ng t me Brand new 3 bedroom
ran ch n a new development Th s ho me
offers ave 1560 sq ft of I v ng ar ge
fam ly oom b g beut f ul k tchen 2
baths 2 ca ga age &amp; hea pump
S tuat ed on over l ac e flat Ia n a lov e
y coun y se t ng C y schools $59 500

WHAT S IT WORTH - T o be 1 b ocl&lt;
rom GAHS n an extr a n ce ran ch sty le
home 3 bedrooms 2 ba hs v ny s d ng
f rep ace n a huge v ng oom eq u P
ped k tel en washer &amp; dryer garage
nat gas hea t p us arge f a1 yard We
say $54 000 Tak e a look &amp; you II agree

. . .,.:!!,

{t

446-0008

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY
- Unf neshed one story home wtth 3 4 acres on RAC
COON cREEK Located on the Green Saunders Rd
neor Northup $15 000
40 ACRES NEAR VINTON - About 'coea some
timber reported S2 000 down
ECK ROAD - Reslr cted bUIIdong ot
gpa~~; ~ce wooded setting c ty schools $5 9SO
"NEW LISTING L ke new 14X7D W ndsor
mobtlehome wtth expando Thts beauty s complete
IV furnished &amp; has a built tn stereo radar range
wB stove covered pat o &amp; all set up on a large
shadY rented lot en the Green School D1st
BABY FARM NEAR TOWN- .O,pprox 13 h acres
on Kelton Rd mostfv pasture mce 5 rm and bath
home basement barn othttr buildings assumable
loan
NORTHUP AREA - Farm tor sa e foqnerrv used
as datry good 2 story home lots of other b ldlngs
187 A m 1 approx 35 A t liable balance pasiUre &amp;
woods could e used for most any type t~rro ng
ope rat on or development F ti"St t me on the
market
LOG CABIN - very unique old hand hewn log
beams sleeptng loft large stone fireplace mOdern
barn 14 acres woods located in the Wllyne N11ttonat
Forest 20'Ho dOWI1
PERRY TWP - 60 acres aboul 12 A llllable
bo1ence In timber stylish older 7 rm home wlm lot
of poulblllt•es barn outbuildings mineral rlghiS
traniS on State Rd Coli ror more lnlormallon

rn

388 9160

55 000 DOWN
1 '• FINANCING Bu y of he Year on th s 2 y r old 3
bedroom b ck ran ch locat ed n an ex
cellent e ghborhood off U S Rt 35 lp
c udes beaut f u k tchen arge fam IY
or d n ng r oom 1 2 bath w b f rep ace
2 car garage cen tr a a r &amp; loads at
storage space $57 900

vUJ- ------- .

426 DEBBY DRIVE - L Shaped ranch 4 BR 2 2
baths LR foyer large equ pped ko1chen nat gas
heat cen1 air full basemen1 2 car garage 16x32
heated pool &amp; large corner lot Shown bY appomt
ment

0

n A o

HOMESTEAD S53 000 - Forty ac es 20 pasture
20 t liable 4 BR frame home h as a urn s d ng new
ly remodeled ns de and out A I m neral r ghts sell
wtth proprty Very pr vate n e ghborhood Just
I sted

-~

GREEN TOWN•HIP- PASTURE FARM - 115 A
M L located on SR 141 approx 6 m west of towrr
Land s approx 60% cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; n
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a good barn Pr ced at $50(1 ner
acre

A

4 6 4241) Eve
446 4' 0 Ev~
~ S1 6

soo - EUREKA Cu1e as a butlon bungalow 3
rooms pl~.;,~s tg ut 1 tv room n ce carpet range ow
gas budget A r cond stora ge bldg

Real E state - General

RACCOON CREEK FARM - SO acres 38 A bot
tom 11 A pasture lovely modern br ck home wo1h 3
Brs 2 baths cathedral ce•longs f replace large
sun deck and lots of other extras new metal pole
barn crob oad ng chute appro• 1700 It creek
frontage located 4 ml from Me gs Mme No 3

1

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
lleW sem nR
Oa

GALLI POLIS- $20 000 - Buy 1h S 3 BR 2 Story on
and contract w th $2 500 down payment N ce tg
at Good cond I m med ate possess on
GALLIPOLIS- S22 000 - Cen foyer open star
way 3 BR 2 fu baths N ce porches Lg fenced
back yard garag e Needs handyman s touch

446
446
245
446

Houses for Rent

JLUE LAKE DRIVE - $31 900 - Qu el coun1ry
road near Raccoon Creek 69 acre at 2 BR frame
home w th a um s d n g Good cand Rural water c
ty schools

BMR 334 - 1 3 Acres of land owner ve y anx ous to
sell Call for deta Is

BMR 383 - New L sting - M II Creek Rd Small
home tha1 could be used as rental ncome property
S tuated on 1 24 acres more or less $15 900

MODERN mob e home n
c ty
cent
a r
heat
WE WI L L be ha v ng 2 park ng l or 2 adu ts on y
homes for rent or ease n Ca 446 0338
Each
the near future
requ re I month s ren n 3 BDR m ob le home on 3
advance plus a secur ty acr es 1 2 baths near V n
depos t
personal and ton $150 mo plu s dep Ca
cr edit references Strout W seman Realty 446 3643
Really 446 0008

41

!~~~~~---------------,

UPPER RIVER ROAD- $55 000 - Large 2 story
home with v ny! s d ng conven ently ocated on Rt
7 House has 4 bedrooms modern k tchen d n ng
room fam y oom 1 v ng room w th f rep ace 2
baths and nat gas F A furnace Pr ce also n
ciutles ex tra lot w th 3 car garage plus good storage
bu ld ng Owne would cons der trad ng for smai
farm Jus L sted
NORTHUP - 55J 500 - Bnck 3 BR 1 2 baths
Range refr g washer and dryer 2 car garage I m
press ve

Two bedroo m mob le home
at Brown s Tra er Park
992 3324
2 BDR and 3 bdr mob le
homes c~ ll446 0175

•..

GREEN ACRES - $56 000 Two brand new
homes 3 BR 21u 1 baths equ pped kitchen Attach
ed f n shed garage fu 1 basement Hea t pump
owner w co ns der mob e home or other property
as down payment

BMR 378 - 1 h storv frame home s tuated on 53
acres m/ Ct1Y schoo s Ca I for deta Is

BMR 380F - 100 acres MIL bare and mostly clear
frontage on Rodney Cora Rd Call for deta s

Houses for Rent

TWO
BEDROOM un
fu rn shed house a so fiNo
bedroom turn shed &amp; one
bedroom turn shed apart
m ents Call after 6 p m
992 2288

10 x 55 two bedroom m ob le
home nea r Rae: ne 992
5858

•nteres t

D&amp;W Estates, Inc.

~MR J66M -

bath

17%

lmmedtate F nancmg
Upto15Yrs

BMR: ]39F - 30 Acres n R o Grande w th 2 story
home n need of rep a r Call for compte e details

2

n

111

Paym ents as Low as

BMR 149 - 30 Acres on Clark Chapel Rd M nera
r ghts are ncluded 2 2m es from Porter $24 500

BMR 370 - Bu ldtng s te 2 33 acr es 1
Soulhwestern H gh Schoo $5 ooo

$40()1()()0

MOBILE HOMES

REALTY INC.

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SU RANCE
been
can
celled?
Lost
your
operator s I cense? Phone
992 2143

BMR 139 - Older two story home v:'l Second Ave 3
BR s LR FR k tchen Alum num s d n~ S29 900

EVENINGS
STEVE McGHEE ASSOC
DONA McGHEE ASSOC BETH NULL ASSOC
BUD McGHEE Broker Auchon~er

WOOD

M ~_!!!_

N
MEMORY
OF
CHR STOPHER Worn and
scuffed by one we oved
two bronzed boots s t e~ one
A tt e c owboy left th em
ay and rode h s pony off to
play
Sadly m ssed by
G randma and Grandpa

3-:_

PAY h ghest pr ces
pass ble for gold and s l ver
co ns r ngs tewel y etc
Contact Ed Burkett B arber
Shop M ddleport

AI.BUauE:RQU~

7€-LLSA

wow

---

( 121 26 28 29 3tc

Jl.U.ES H MARR

805~

A7 TH£
OFF.CG

LOST
hounds

Help wanted

NEED someone to take
c:are of a four year old Man
day thru Fr day from 7 30
a m to 5 00 p m Located
n Chesh re Wou d prefer
someone to come tnto
home but not necessary If
onterested call 367 0244 af
tor 5 00 p m Monday thru
Frl Anytime Sat and sun

BMR J36 - Home w lh 3 BR s LR w th f replace
DR eau coed k tchen FR w th t rP.nl.=.c:P ? h hMhc:.
6 acres more or less tn c ty school d str ct Call

-~-=

PRICES REDUCED used
mob le homes and I rave
TRISTATE
t r a ers
MOB LE HOME S CALL
446 7572

Over

Mobtle Homes
for R: ent

42

1973 Crown Haven 14 • 65
three bedJooms new car
pet 1971 Cameron u )( 64
two bedrooms new carpet
1972 Champ on 12 x 60 1Wo
bedrooms new carpet 1976
Cameron 12 x 60 two
bedrooms all e ectr c 197 1
Skyl ne
12sx 6)
two
bedrooms bath &amp; I:J new
c arpet
1970
PMC
12 x 60 two bedrooms new
carpet B x S Sa es Inc
2nd x VIand Street Po nt
Pleasan1 WV Phon e 675
4424

BMR 344 - Br ck ranch nc udes 3 BR s FR w th
f rep ace 1 Az baths central a r Locitted n Rodn ev

BMR 315 - Bnck ranch ncludes 3 Brs
equ pped k then New carpet Call

Lost and Found
11

1971 Daroan 12x65 3 bdr
1972CrownHaven l4x65w
hlO expando 3 bdr
1973 Utopoa 12x65 2 bdr
1977 Bend x 24x48 central
aor 3 bdr Hull baths
1973 Bonanza 24X46 3 bdr
B &amp; S SALES INC
2nd 8. V and St
Poont Pleasant WV
Phone 675 4424

The Sunda Tomes S

Mob te Homes
for Sale

32

--- ---

BMR 372 - F oral shoD ncludes bu ld ng eQu p
ment and tnventory plus rent a propert es Call

NEWLY Decorated seven
room rouse new carpet
throughout new gas fur
nace and water heater full
basement
off
street
parking at Pomeroy Will
take mobtle home auto or
tot as down payment
$18 500 ca
1 304 882 2466
anyt me

Dec 31 Jan 7

Mobtle Home~
for Sale

Broker Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Servtng 6 000
Communthes
428 Second Ave
Call446 0552 Any1 me

--- -

3 _ Announ~e n1s

f replace
woodburner
tota electr c carpeted 2
car garage
basement
l0x27 sundeck First house
past Memory Gardens S R
7 992 7741

-

los Ohoo-Poont Pleasant W Va

-Genera l

Real Estate- General
6

7 ROOM HOME 2'1' acres

NICE two bedroom country
home Vonyl sodmg full
basement $13 900 00 949
2801 No Sunday calls

CUSTOM
BEEF
PROCESSING to your
spectftcat ons ava able at
French C ty Meats
K
cut
grtnd
wrap and
freeze Call446 3472

Classified
Public Not ce

HomeslorSale- -

W

OJl!l!}

Pubhc No1tce
afforded tull opportun ty to
subm tt b ds tn response to
th s nv tat on and Wt/1 not
be d scr m nated aga nst
on th e grounas of race
co or or national eng n n
cons derat on
for
an
award
Mtn mum wage rates
tor th s protect have been
predeterm ned as requ red
by law and are set forth n
the b d proposal
The date set for com
piet on of th s work shall be
set forth n th e b dd ng
proposa
Each b dder shall be
requ red to f le w th h s b d
cneck or
a cerr t ec
cash er s check for an
amount equal to five per
cent of hts btd but n no
event more than f fly
thousand dollars or a bond
for ten per cent of hts btd
payable to t.he D rector
B dders mus1 apply on
the proper forms
for
Quat f cation at east ten
days pr or to the date set
for open n9 b ds n ac
cordance w th Chapter 5525
Oh o Rev sed Code
Plans and spec f cat ens
are on f e n the Depart
ment of Tran sportal on and
the off ce of the D str ct
Deputy 0 rector
The 0 rector reserves
the nght to re1ect any and
al b ds
DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR

oo

RUFF HOUSE
,
SHATTEAI!R OF WOIILDI
Humanlatsl ook at the development
ot the a tomlc bomb the how a
why a and what now a lnctuded In
thla program espectacular hletor
lcalfllmfootage muchofwhlchhaa
been recant y declualfled (80
min•)
®J li:BS NEWS
ffil SOUNDSTAGE George Bon
eon Chef A.tklna and Earl Klugh
(Closed Captioned U sA I {eo
m na)
11 15 (!) l't!A PULSE
11 30 CIIO MOVIE •(COMEDY) •'"•
Brother Rat 1938
(I) THE KING IS COMING
"
CII MOVIE -(SUSPENSE) •• P•
trick 197B
0D OPEN UP
BENNY HILL SltOW
NBC LATE NIGHT MOVIE •
(J] MOVIE !THRILLER) ••~
Anatomy Of Terror
FACE THE NATION
ABC NEWS
11 45
PTL CLUB-TALK AND
VARIETY
12 00 I]) 'MOVIE (MYSTERY) •• I m
no Girl Ho Wonto To Kill 11174
®I MOVIE ~COMEDY DRAMA)
••• The Comic 1969
12 30 I]) DATELINE CANADA
1 oo OD MOVIE (DRAMA) oo• The
Mon 1Love 11146
1 30 ; ABC NEWS
NEWS
145
01 NEWS
3 00
MOVIE ~COMEDY) •• Plll\&gt;w
to Post~ 1946
5 00 0D MAVERICK

I]) CUJ MASTERPIECE THEATRE
Teatament of Youth Episode V
Ni th World War I finally over Vera
retume to Oxford where she meets
W n fred Holtb)l There they launch
theirwr t ng careers together 111nd
become fe long fr ende (Closed
C!lp!!Qn~ u S A ) (60 mons I
II 30 Ill W (tQ) tHE JEFFERSON&amp;
George tells baby Jesa ca a bed
time atorv and all II transformed to
the fantaatic medteval emptre ot
Jefleraon where King George lutts
up for a battle aoamat the dark
~n ght In flat on and the late of the
entireemp rehanga nthebalance
10 00

I

PAVIDSUSSKINDSHQW

lFlOJl!&amp;l)

1

ffi

m

(l)•w CHIPaArockataronthe

run a pair of prot~ss1ona ath etas
lurnedthtevea andawhtp lashvtc
t m out to gel nch on maurance
money cause problems tor Panch
and Jon The cl max ofthle eptaode
a a fabulous rolerdtscopany rea
tu lng over 60 leading telev alan
at1ra inc vdlng Cindy Williams
Dick Van Patten Mike Farrell and
Kr sty MeN chol (Repeat 2 hra )
(II REX HUMBARD
(!)MOVIE ~COMEDY)" North
DaiO.a Forty 111711
(I)MOVIE~CDMEDY) 00 1&gt; Tho
0~· 1053
G OMNIBUS
®I ARCHIE BUNKER S
PLA_t:E
CIJ(jj) NON-FICTIONTELEVISION
Amenca lost and Found Thta
documentary by Tom Johnson and
Lance Btrd daa s w th the break
down and ull mate reb rth of Amer
lea 1harJ.!lP the 1930 s (flO m na )
B 30 .i])IW ONE DAY ATA TIMETho
folkaatthePark Utopta Ret rement
Hotel sweet ta k Ann Barbara

us ;6.)
ffil MEETING OF MINDS
(]) THINK ABOUT TOMORROW
OD MOVIE -(COMEDY) .. 'lo 30

6 00 tii OOiiJiliD~m NEWS
Cii MOVIE (COMEDY)"\\ Goi!!JIIn Style 1979
W
CHAMPIONSHIP
WRESTLING
I]) ABC NEWS
(!) INSIGHT
(]) FIRING liNE WhylsJazzNeg
!ectad ? Jazz g eats B ly Taylor
and D ck Wei stood JOn host W I
lamF Buckey J orsdscusaon
aboutthe rfavor tetop c azz Both
a I sts are featured at the p ana
perform ng n the r n m table
m es (60m ns)
l11J NOVA Red Dee o Ahum Thts
p ogramtol owsthewo kofaoroup
of scent stsasthey study the tves
of the dee otRhum an s andoffthe
waste n coast of Scotland
(C osed Capt onod U S A I (60
m ns.)
6 30 C1J 0 CD NBC NEWS
(]) ORAL ROBERTS AND YOU
[jJ NEWS
llJ I]) ®J CBS NEWS
iUJ ABC NEWS
7 00 (])0 (D DISNEY SWONDERFUL
WORLD The Ghosts Of Buxley
Ha Theghostsot heloundersofa
sta d old m tary academy wh ch
ecently
became
coeducat anal o Alha a1udaAtain
an all out eflor1 when the school s
ex stance a threatened (Conclu'
son 60m ns )(Closed Capt oned

W'ai

THOSE AMAZING
ANIIMLSAgaggleotgetiOiebred
apeclfical y for eating weeds
lamoua underwater explorer Jac
quea Couateau documents the
needleaa slaughter of whales and
Cathy lee Croaby r dea a ktller
whale ·~epeat 80 mine )
• (J) &lt;ml eo MINUTES
(I) (jJ) AN EVENING WITH DICK
RAN ATAMIAN Th • program pre
""'• Dickran Atam an a perfor
mance of Stan Raphllng a p ano
tranacr ptton of composer lgC!r
Stravlnaky a Rtte of Sp'i'lng
rtcorded tn Kerrvtlle T exes n Jan

Foot Bride Of Candy Rock
11159
I]) MOVIE (WESTERN) 00 Dll
tent Drums 1951
(f) KNOW YOUR SCHOOLS
5 00
WIDE WORLD OF TRUTH
THIS IS lifE LIFE
OPENING NIGHT MAKING OF
AN OPERA Th s documentary
reveals a I It e of whs goes on
before the cu r1a n goes up fo r the
San F ansc so Ope asp ed uct on
of LaG aconda (60 m ns )
(jj) SPORTS AMERICA
iUJ
11180 A YEAR THAT
WAS
5 30 (]) OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
(!) FAITH FOR TOOAY
(jj) DOLLAR STRETCHER

IUJ m

NEWS
12 55 ®I NFL FUNNIES
1 00 &lt;IJO CD AMERICAN FOOTBALL
CONFERENCE
WILDCARD
GAME The exa ct t me and teams
were unava lable et press t me
CD D JAMES KENNEDY
I]) COMMUNIQUE
llJ @ NATIONAL FOOTBALL
CONFERENCE
WILDCARD
GAME The exac t t me and teams
we e unava lab eat press t me
@ MATINEEATTHEBIJOU Gung
Ho Randolph Scott stars in th a
exc te ng true story of the Marine
ad on Mak n Is and dur ng the
Second Wo ld War Selected
shor1s nclude Chapte I oft he aer
al Don W nslow of the Navy (90
m ns)
®J THE NFL TODAY
ilZJ ABC WEEKEND SPECIAL
1 30 [jJ MOVIE (ADVENTURE)"\\
Cloak And Dagger 1946
®I
NATIONAL FOOTBALL
CONFERENCE
WILDCARD
GAME The exact t me and teams
were unava lable at press me
(jj) WALL STREET WEEK Gmwlh
Stocks IsS nal St I Beaut ful?
Host lou s Rukeyse
IUJCD 111 o
2 00 CD MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
(!) MOVIE (DRAMA) •n Grea
teat Story Ever Told 1965
(]) MOVIE !MUSICAL) ooo Bye
!!l'• Blrdlo 1963
(ll) BESTOFDICI\CAVETT
(H)
HOT FUDGE
2 30 CD THE DEAF HEAR
@ MOVIE (COMEDY) 00 French
Postcards 1979
@ SNEAK PREVIEWS Co hosts
Gene S ske and Rage Ebe t
ev ewthenewmov es Rag ngBull
and Nne o F ve
(jj) ISSUES OHIO
il2J CD TR~STATE TODAY AND

(I)

m

AFTERNOON
12 00 (Ii ib(Il MEETTHEPRE -S (]) TIME OF DELIVERANCE
[jJ iUJ G CHAMPIONSHIPS OF

J

00 LOSTIN SPACE

m

[jJ 1

USA)
~ JIMMY SWAGGAIIT

TOMORROW
3 00 ()) ATHOMEWITHllfEBIBLE
(I) VIKINGS!
r1
BODY ON OUESTION
shnb le Goods D Jonathan
ter wh le perfo m ng a post mar
I em shows that twas only alter
death tha t the secrets of the body
could be revealed th ough me
t cu lous detect ve work (Closed
CaP.! oned U S A) (60 moM )
il2J MOVIE -(DRAMA)" nat
Man Bolt
3 30 ()) METHODIST HOUR
[jJ SOLID GOLD Go hosls Glen
Ca mpbe 1 0 anne Warwi ck God
eco d w nne s perfo m the r h t
songs
(I) ANTIQUES
4 00 (]) 8 MOVIE (DRAMA) 000 A
Matter Of Humanities 1968
(]) HE LIVES
(!IMOVIE--(COMEOY)••Ifl Take
Down 1979
(!) GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
llJ I]) A TRIBUTE TO CHET AT
KINS FROM HIS FRIENDS Th 8
mus c a ty or anted celebrat on
~ alutes Chat Atk ns as one of the
world a greatest gu tans ts Among
theguestsschedu edtoappearare
F oyd Cramer Chari e Dan els
Roger M 1er J m Stafford and Ray
Stevens
(I) HERE S TO YOUR HEALTH
IJ tam ns
(Closed Capt oned

Television Vif wing
DEC 28 11180

Moddiepor Galhpolos Ohoo-Poont Pleasant W \Ia

t,..,

LOCATION SAYS IT ALL
Th Schar
m n g ranch style home s located on R t
141 n front oi Green Grade Sc oo In
eludes 2 bedrooms large k tchen bath
w /s hower laun dry room &amp; 2 2 c ar
ga age (could be used as 2 car gar age &amp;
ex a bedroom
Elec t h eat p us a
large ya d $38 000

ADDISON - 1 2 story 2 BR Ia ge bath and aun
dry LR and k tchen downsta rs 2 m s upsta rs un
f n shed par basement new carpe ask ng $19 000
CHESHIRE- ROUSH LANE - Lov el y 3 BR eanch
1 '2 baths 16x24 LR w th WB f rep ace compl etely
equ pped kttchen love y cerpet th roug hout full
basement (partly tm shed } nat gas hea t cent Q r
garage and pat o

18 ACRES Excellent Locatton
Quality Home - f you want c ty c onve
n ences and ve n a country I ke set
t nQ th s would be the p erfe ct spol t o
you 3 bedroo m br ck &amp; f a m e home
w th 2 f repla ces fam ly room d n ng
r.oom 2 baths equ pped kt chen full
basemen t nat gas heat &amp; garage 18
qu et sec uded wooded acres S60 s

NEW LISTING - Lovely redwoo d ran ch ffiust be
seen to apprec ate Very un que fam ly room s
f n shed n cedar Large LR k tchen bath 2 BR
laundry and over 1 acre of rot ng and Barga n
pr ced at S29 500
PRICE REDUCED TO 567 ?00 Brand new Tr level
features 3 BR s 2lfz baths arge LR equ pped k t
chen formal d ntng lar ge L shaped lam IY rm
ut 1 ty rm &amp; 2 car garage Located n C earv ew
Estates Call STROUT REALTY at 446 0008 for an
appo ntment

TWIN PLEX (L ve m On e Rent th e
Other) - A very good nvestm ent pr o
perfy loca ted n ow n Each un t has 2
bedrooms I v ng r oom k tchen bath
gas heat &amp; centra l a r Good s zed
rooms 2 storage bu d ngs block ex
ter or Good cond I on $37 500

OWN YOUR OWN CAMPSITE - In th e w lderness
of the W~yne Nat anal Forest 5 to B acr e tracts of
woodland now avatlab e ad a n ng thousands of
acres of government land Publ c hunt n g f sh ng
and camp ng perm tied Pr ces starl at $2500 w 1h
f nanc ng ava I able
RACCOON TOWNSHIP - Ex ce en1 bu ld ng s los
approx 10 acres on State Route 325 approx 2 m
south of R o Grande Rural water and Gall pol s C
tv Schools

S28 500 - N ce 2 bedroom home oc ated
7 m es east of Jackson off Rt 35 New
bath ut I tv room &amp; k tc hen Storm w n
dows &amp; nsulat on Ideal hom e &amp; to ea
t1on
VACATION HOME - Enooy those sum
mers or anyt me of the year n th s
10X50 Great Lakes tra ler or thts 12 acre
tree sett ng on Tycoon lake Equ pped
k tchen m os t all turn ture me: uded 2
bedrooms bath &amp; a r cond toner 3
moles N of 11 o Grande $11 500

GREEN ACRES - Lovely 3BR ranc h s covered
w th breck &amp; alummum &amp; offers such features as 3
BR s ba1h ~ tchen with range refr g &amp; d sp laun
dry rm weth washer &amp; dryer carpe t &amp; HW floors
cent a1r gas heat (ht b 1 $53) 2 car garage large
covered pat o &amp; ut I ty bu ld ng Call fo r an appo nt
ment
LAKE FOR SALE wl1h appro• 40 acres vacant
land Ideal recreation property Located n C ay
Twp near Eureka 1\sklng $26 900
MO~GAN

TOWNSHIP - Smal but n ce 2 BR home
Sonly 2 yrs old&amp; clean asap n Perfect for a small
famtly weekend retreat or hunt ng lodge Si1uated
on36 ecre•ot
Lane Rd

I

1129 ACRES VACANT LAND 534 900 Large highway frontage
11050 I on St R I 7 Several good hom e
Sttes Mostly wooded acreage Rural
water available Call for nforma t on

I

SPEND CHRISTMAS HERE
Your
tam ly w II ove you for buy ng th s 4
bedroom home for the r Chr stmas pre
sent Th s 1 h story home nc lldes a
cozy f replace (easy for Santa to come
down) eat nk tchen w•th range full
d1v ded basement garage &amp; city water
located approx 3m es from town I m
med ate possession $3ollo900

I

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WILLOW DRIVE
An exce ent
ne ghbo hood n town to rase your
tam y and an r~ tt ra c 1 vc b !eve the en
t r e fam y w I ove 3 bedrooms new
ca rpet ov e y H W t oars k tchen &amp;
d n ng oom 1 " tJa hS fam ly oom n
f repla ce o s at storage area Nat gas
centr a ~ r gar age &amp; new de ck N ce
an dscaped yard S50 5
J BEDROOM HOME IN TOWN - 1 2
story 6 room ho use at 62 L nco n St In
eludes k tchen w ange d n ng room
some new carpe gas I ea t &amp; n ce yard
w th stor age bldg $19 500
LAND CONTRACT - 2 2 ACRES MOBILE HOME - Excel en f ocat on
on Rt 35 betw een Holzer Hosp tal &amp;
Rodney nc lu des 1973 14x70 furn shed
mob l e hom e 3 bedr oom s 2 ba th s a r
Con d 1 oned A so has 2 extra M H pads
that ren1 for $65 00 eac h (could help
make your p ay men) Nat gas e ectr c
&amp; rura l water 800 900 frontage on R t
35 $32 500
135 000 - OWNER MUST SELL - A I
tra ct ve steels de d ranch ho me ust off
Rt 35 3 bedrooms equ pped eat n k t
chen ba h w / showe r lau nd y area
etectr c heat gara ge &amp; l ar ge yard
owner may sell furn ture also C ty
SC hOO s

1
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BUILDING LOTS LAND CON
TRACT- 20% DOWN - V ery n co flat
bu td ng lots n a new deve oment (at
tract ve cou ntry sett ng) 6- 2 ac lots
$5 900 ea
2- 5 ac l ots $15 000 ea 1 21
ac lot $5 500 Great ocat on n Green
Grade School area Call oday before
they are gone
HOME &amp; I ACRE - $30 000 - 3 or 41
bedroom tiome located on Rt 5'4 In
eludes a new bath arge k tchen d ning
room n,ew w r ng n most nsu ated
rural water 2 wells small2 room house
for storage plus l acre f at ground Can
uuy w th 2 acres for S39 000 and 8 acres
$49 000 W II tal&lt;e mob ehome n trade

I

1

1
I

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BRICK RANCH - l LOTS - Plenty Of
space for a poo
tenn s court for
whatever on th scorner lot The at1rec
tive br ick 'home has 3 bedrooms 1'~
baths fireplace n 1 vmg room heet
pumt:t equipped kitchen 2 car garage I.
fenced back yard l-ocated near Rt U

-----------560 &amp;

----~

�Ti m es·Sento
44

Apartm ent

"!_~ m en! !l&gt;r Rent_

for: Rent

Need a P.A System for a
day or week? We re nt them

NI CE SMALL furn. ef·
ficiency apart , for one gen·
tl eman only Ca ll 446·0338 .

\1lt~Nl001t

fi'lliATSCR-EDwoRoGMIE

~ ~ ~~ ·

111'--ondBoblae

Unscrlll1'lbkt these lou- Jul1'll*ls,
one letter 1o each square, 10 form
lour ordinary words

at : Tom's Stereo Center,
243 3rd Ave, Gallipolis, Oh
446·7886.

BDR vnf . apart, in
Crown C1ty, 1 c hild ac·
cepted Call 256 6474.

los, Ohio-

Po m e

\

2

A~PFEI'faDdiSe

LAY NE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chaJr, rocker, ot·
tomen, 3 tables, S500 Sof.a,
chair and iovesea:t, $275
Sofas and chairs pnced
from $275 to $550 Tables,
S33 S60 $75 and 185 H ide·
a beds,SJOO , queen size,
S325., &amp; UP Recli ners,
$125 , $150 , $160 , 1175. and
S225. Lamps from $18 to
$50. 5 pc. d1nettes from $79 ,
to 1335 7 pc ., 1149 and up
Wood table and 4 chat r s,
$235 Table, two leaves, 6
chairs, (h tgh backed), SJ75 .
Hut chlis, S300 and S350.,
mapl e or ptne f tn ts h
Bassett Oak , S550 , Bassett
Cher ry , 1675.
Bunk bed
complet e w1th mattr esses,
$175 ., $250 .. 1275 Capta in's
beds, $275 com plete Baby
Oeds, $85 Mattresses or
Cox spnngs , fu ll or twtn,
$55 , firm , $65 and S75
Queen se ts, $185 5 dr
chests, $49 Bed fr ames,
$20 and $25 , Gu n ca bmets,
$195, d1 nette chatrs Sl 5
and $20 Tappa n gas or
elect nc ranges, S285
USED Dressers., Ranges,
refngerators,, TV' s, head
boa r ds and beds.
3 mt les ou t Bul avt fle Rd
Open 9am ro 8pm, Man
rhru Frt , 9am to 5pm, Sat
446 0322

F U RN. EFFICIE NCY ·
$135 uti!. pd ., 1 person,
share bath Cal/446·44 16 af ·

ter 7 p.m .
3 AND~ RM furn ished ap
ts. Phone 992·5434 .

Furn1shed apartments, 992
3129, 992·5914, or 1 304 882
2566

Unfurnished one bedroom
apar tment for rent. Ren

ters ass1stance ava i lable
for senio r cit1zens Contact
Vi ll age Manor Apartmen t s
at 992 7787
Ap t

for re nt, 3 rooms &amp;

ba th . 992 5908.
FU RNI SHE D 4 room &amp;
ba th , adult5 on ly, no pets
M idd leport, 992 3874

45

---------Furnished Room s
--

--~----

SLEEPING ROOMS
r ent , Gall1a Hotel

for

SLEEPING ROOMS and
l•ght housekeep •ng apt ,
Par~ Cen tral Hotel

•

NCR cash registers,
100 bontl copier, two
l' &lt;ha•.u Walker fireproof
Illes, Burroughs,
NCR, calculators, Ollvem
0 1v1summa, 26 GT, Sen·
core TF151 transistor .
tester~ C.B. ba~ station
with antenna ana coax, call

KRYJE

FIREWOOD · all har·
dWOOd, split, delivered and
stacked. Call 4j6-04U after
&lt;p.m .

I I I

IINGARDj

I I

r

A50UND~E5

HEA~D-A5 I"'

A PRiSON.

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIA NCES
was hers,
dryers,
re f r 1gerato r s,
ra n ges
Skaggs
Ap
p11a nces , 1918 Eas t ern
Ave , 446 7398

Sleep1 ng rooms or Will
r oom &amp; boa r d Senior
C•t•zens 949 2591

USED F UR NI TURE Plat
f orm r oc ker , elec t r~c
ra nge , l tke new, br 1dge
f ables , dresser
Corb m
and Snyder Furn , 955
Second, Gall.polis, 446·
1171

_S_pace for_Ref!!_ _

COU NTRY MOBIL E Home
Park, Route 33, Nor th of
Pomeroy La r ge lot s Ca ll
992 7479
T RAIL ER spaces fo r rent.
So uthern Valley Mobtle
Home Park. , Chesh ~r e, Oh
992 3954

Support s Your
Posture Zone
Try th e Posture II

Off 1ce space on Sycamor e
Str ee t
in
do wn tow n
Pomer oy Al l uf tl!t tes p a1d
$125 00 a month 992 2259

&amp; SNYDER

FURNITURE

Off ice space on Sycamore
Street
tn
do w n t ow n
Pomeroy All utll tties patd.
$125 00 a month 992 2259

S4

-Misc. Merc-h~~;e-- ---- .

54-

•Misc. Mercha.!'dise

FIREWOOD S35. a truck
load, S60. a cord. All har·
dwood, split, &amp; deliver ed.
843- ~31 or 843 4734.

FIREWOOD for sate, cut,
split, and delivered $35. a
truck load, 24.1 · 931~ after~WOOD • BURNING add on
furnace. Auto thermostat,
fire brick ltned, air tight
unit, fan end water heater
col t ava ilable, holds 270 lb.
wOOd, Slt ll in factory car·
ton. SJSO. FIRM Call 256·
1216.

F i rewoo d fo r
r easonable r ates.
992·5776
F i rewoo d fo r
r easonable r ates
992·5776

sale ,
Phone
sale,
Phone

,

FRAME

CRAFT

MODIFY

16 E. Second Street

Sl

-~~-~-~--

E AR L y
AM E R t c AN
couch, 8 ft. long, 175. Ca ll
388 9306

Phone

Misc. M erchandise

Household Goods

Sloker and tump coa l, call
446 1408.
-------~-

Real Estate

--------·
CB,TV, Radio

Gene!:!L_

52

Equipment
TV's, 19" port able, black &amp;
w h1te, $49 each, W1fh base
446 3384
5_3 ___ Antiq~L -A T TE NTI O N
( IM ·
PO RTANT TO YOU I Will
pa y cash or certif1 ed check
for antiques and collec·
t1bles or ent ir e estates
Nothtng too large Al so,
guns, pocket watc hes and
co 1n collec t1 ons Call 614·
767 3167 or 557·3411
54
TH INKIN G OF WOOD
HE AT? I have a complete
l tne of stoves, furna ce s,
ftre place mser ts, at good
pn ces I al so 1ns1a11 stoves,
r eline ch1m ne ys, clea n
f irep laces Call the Ch im·
ney Sweep Call 373 6057.
COLORFtLM 12612or 20
Buy 1 at regul ar price and
get 1 FREE wh1l e supply
lasts Tawney Studt os, 424
2nd Ave ., Gal llpolt s.

CASSADY REALTY
BELPRE , OHIO
A· FRAME - Redwood
w itt! shale shtngles, 3
stories, 3 bdr m., 2112
baths, offt ce space 4
glass slider s, ftr eplace
plus woodburner and
barbec ue tn k1t Has 2
redwood decks an d 2 ce
ment pat•os Th1 s has
well water, total elec ,
and sits on 9 acres w1th
fru1t cellar, lg gar age
and storage bu1ldmg
Ma ny more features to
see Pnced in the 80's
TUPPERS PLAINS A rbau gh Add ., 3 bdrm
bnck Has full dry base
ment with woodbu r ner,
gar age, sits on 8 tenths
of an ac r e. Very well
kept home. P.r tced in the
50's
VIRGINIA HAYMAN
PH . 985·4197
r

955 Second A venue
Gallipoli s, Ohto
45631
PH . 614·446· 1171

Firewood for sale, Mixed
types Of WOOd. $35.00 per
plck·up loa d. Delivered,
w i lt stack for Sen i or
Clti t ens. 843-~951 or 843 .
2815.

BURROUGHS Bookkeep in·
g machi ne, S50. Call 446·
2342.
8XU ft . fl oat ing dock, new
floor , trap In center for li ve
bait . S100. Call 3 67·7 ~28 .

WHY wa i t t ill your out · or·
der now, you' ll be glad you
di d. Ash, cherry, mixed
locust, hic kor y, oak $25 .
pickup load. Ca ll 367·7180.

1·(614)·992· 3325

on

NEW the river, 2
bedrooms, bath, open
cathedral
ceding ,
carpeting, storage and
natural outside wood
finish.
NEW LISTING - l'i.J
acre trailer lot with sep·
tic tank, driiled well ,
Ohio Power on Rt. 124
near the coal mine. Only
LARGE
Country
home Of 10 rooms that a
family ought to enjoy 3
ac res of land for
pleasure. family room,
natural gas heat and
drifted well.
cozy - Linle easy to
heat 2 bedroom, 2 car
home . Natural gas fur·
nace, In town near
stores. Only S16,000
NEARLY NEW - Nice
neat 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths. dining
with
Slldtng glass door to
back patio. Garage and
large corner lot Just
$43,500
LISTINGS N.EEDED.
HAVE MORE .BUYERS
THAN WE CAN FIND
HOMES FOR. CALL
992·3325 or 992·,76.

992·2259
NEW LISTING In
Town - 3 bedroom, 1
story home with full
basement • Screened
porch, large entry, fore·
ed ·air gas heat Large
lot. $27,000.00.
' NEW LISTING - Mini
Farm with approx. 15
acres and two bedroom
home wtth range, patio
Electri c B . B
heat .
$24,000.00.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom home . 1112
baths on approx. 15
acres. House needs,
some work. $19,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT A
cozy 2 bedroom house,
close to• shopping. Half
basement, nice front
parch . Just $16,700.00.
BUILDING SITE - Ap·
prox. 1 acre in Chester.
Utilities
at
site.
$6,000.00.
SYRACUSE
3
bedroom
home
on
100' X100 ' lot. House
recent! y
in sulated .
washer and dry er .
Storage building.
$26,900.00.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusseii949·266D
Roger &amp; 001t1e Turner
. 992-5692
OFFICE 992·2259

•

;
8

62

~--=
Wa"'n"-te,_,d~l,_,o"B"'u~
y

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on larges1
end. $1 2 p·er ton. Bundled
slab. S10 per ton. Del overed
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt . 2,
Pomer oy 992 2689.

G"R ~ nge

SJSOOD

63

Used Relrlgcra lor
u sed XL12 Cftatn saw
UsN 12" Saw

Sl U.OO

LOST Cow, hereford, No.
16 tn ear , Kerr· Harrisb urg
Rd. ar ea. Ca tl446·9838.

S115.00
SI S 00
SI06.9S

REM TOR

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

- --

1\?,,_

~LANDMARK

Livestock

e. Main St.

55

71

Pomeroy

Ml LL run lumber for sale,
' house patterns, barn pat·
terns, 1 ·614· 533·08~
"56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Tavlor at 367·
7220
ORAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. C FA
Himalayan, Persian and
S1amese cals. Ca ll 446·3844
alter 3 p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
lndoor·outdoor facrllftes
Also AK C Reg Dober
mans . Call446·7795.

We would like to take this opportuni·
ty to thank our Clienls who have
patronized our company over the
past year. We appreci.ate
business very much. We wtsh you----...,
and the people of the community the
best in 1981.
'

BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS .
Board1ng
and
groommg . AKC Gordon
Setters, Engl tsh Cocker
Spaniels . Calt 446 4191
HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and pontes and riding
lessons .
Everything
1magmabte in horse equip·
ment . Blankets , belts,
boots, etc . English and
western. Ruth Reeves
1614) 698 3290 .

DILLON REAL ESTATE, INC.
HOBE DILLON, BROKER
BOB LANE, BROKER &amp; SALES MANAGER
SUE ROUSH, SALES REPREiSTATIVE
Sprong Valley Pla.za - Gallo poll s
446·7900 .

ReaiESiate-:..: Gener;, = =~

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

=====· ==--=

THE
MEIGS
Counly
Humane Sol(.iety pets of the
week are : Several adult
cats, 5 black 8. tan puppies,
black labrador, black Irish
setter ,
coli ie
type,
shepherd type, black 8.
tan; house broke medium
si ze dog ready to be loved,
lovable mix ed breed. 992·
6260.

~-= ~·~

Real Es- tateGener
- - . al

Autos tor Sale

1975 BU tCK
L eS abr e,
Custom Call 388 9694

Building Supplies

1975 BUI CK E lec tra 225,
gOOd condit1on, low miles,
many extras, $1675 4.46 1422 .
1977 MER CUR Y Marqui s,
ltke new, only 21 ,800 m iles,
ask1ng S3500 446·7198 .
1975

GRANADA , 6 cyl

1967 CAMERO, 350 4 speed,
am·f m cassette. 992 291 7

1970 Ford one half 'ton
pickup
with overload
spnngs &amp; good bed Good
condl tt on . V1ctor Bahr, 3
mtles north of Cheste r 985
4240.
1970 FORD &amp; ton pi ckup
overload spnngs, good bed ,
S495 V1ctor Bahr, 3 miles
north of Chester 985 4240

We, Cover Over
M 1l l1on M•l es to
Ftnd
Y ou
A
Hom e.

76

calor

bl ue

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

t .aUrn I mml~ ''( FH!Ilrf' lll ( , rmrln!f R1•H/ E~III IP ..1J.Wtll ~
'

.

PH. OFFICE 446-76'19

NICE TO COME HOME TO - 3 BR
r anch, F A n{l furat gas furna ce, new
vmy l S1ding , city water Green Twp
Centenar y
If 580

RESIDENTIAL

I
~
3 8 R., 2112 bath
home IS lUSt wait1ng for
the ac t•v e family Large
kitchen, dining area, llv
ing r oom , family room
andgam e roo m Central
air , 2 car ga r age with
autom ati c opener . C1ty
Schools. Close to shopp
ing area. Call for ap
pointm ent to see it . 1/ 463

A
3 bedr ooms
m to
lar ge, l lf2 baths, m odern
a nd
bea u 1 ' f u 11 y
decorated k•t chen &amp; d1n
1ng r oom Pat 1o rn r ear
a t home
Ca rp o rt
storage roo m Beau t tfUI
l a nd sc a pe d
l ot
100' :.::3400' A very lovel y
home on State H1ghway,
Ca ll fo r deta il s
11 423

DO RISING PRICES HAVE YOU DOWN ?
Now you ca n bu y a new three bed r oom bnck and
carefree sw 1d1 ng home wi th a lovely v iew at an 1n
flation fl ght tng pn ce 3 good S1Ze bedrooms, l1vi ng
room, d1nt ng roo m1 bath, eat 1n k •tc hen and garage
Pnce d to sel l at onl y $35,000 00
N454
62 ACRES M . OR L. VACANT LAND
Wooded and pasture land off old R t 7 on Horse
Creek •n Oh10 TownshiP Poss•bl e coal ve1n. Af ·
ford able in ves tm ent pr oper t y Ca ll for more in·
form at• on
/1 468
3BEDROOMS- 3ACRESM . ORL
Mobil e ho m e 14'x70' 1976 Freedom . 1112 batn s.
Under pmn 1ng, tots of built· in ca bmets, range,
r efr~g er ato r, d• nett e set. Ai r con diti oner and other
furn itur e. Rura l water, ni ce land for good ga rde :-~ .
Alloflnis foron l y l22.500,
N 42~

'

.
•

ASSUMABLE MORTGAGCO
$241.00 Month
7 r oom home, 3 bedroom s, fam ily room , F .0 . for ced
air furn ace, lots of nice built· in cabmets, s s. db
sink. Gentle rottmg lawn Must see th iSJ1 •Ce country
home.
# 426
28 ACRES VACANT LAND
Hunters Pa ra d tse. Lots of bu ilding s1tes alo.ng old 1
State Rt. 7 fa cing the Oh10 R•ver . Lots of t1mber
Lots of value for a low prite
N446
FANTASTIC BUY!
REDUCED FROM $35,900 to 528,900
OWNER SAYS, "SELL NOW"
Moi;l' .rn 8 roo m r anch tn I he co~nt~y Large li vt ng ~
room 16'x 18', fam•IY room 17' x12 w1th wood~u r n• n g
ti r P.place Rural water, central atr . Appro )( 2 ac r e
of clean land. Large concret e pat 10 carpor t See
lt11!. home now!
#323

SELLING REASONABLE
5 room house, bath, 4 r ooms are
carpeted All new W1rmg Has been
r emodeled and is bout aH InSulated
N1 ce se1ting, fron t porch , plenty shade
trees Close to T tm br e Lake All this ap·
prox one acre $25,000
N510
STOP LOOKING 1f you need a 3 BR
ranch, LR , bath, na t. gas heat at an
unbeatab le pr 1ce of $19,500. City
schools Close to Sil ver Bridge Shopp
mg Center
# 585
FOR A LL YOU BARGAIN HUNTERS
- Two bedroom hom e w tth new fuel oil
fu rn ace and 10xJ5 moblle hom e com·
pl etely turn1 shed Cell ar house, n ice
garden space 1 acr e, more or less.
$16,500
N607

F-ARMS

FARMS

FLORIDA BOUND - Owner wants
qurck sale of this 170 acre farm.
Morgan Townsh tp Some timber. 2
story remod eled 4 BR home. Farm
1S bellev,ed by owner to have four
vems of coal. 1
II 57S
SOUTHERN HILLS SPECIAL
115 acres, 50 acres tillable, 2 bar:ns,
t8x65 S1lo W1th root, 5,000 lbs. tobac·
co base th ts year. This was an ex·
cellent darry farm Mainly needs
m tlkrng parlor now Exc ellent farm
home, 7 or 8 large rooms, new deluxe
carpet throughout, ,central air,
every th tng modern for the lady of
the house. Drilling explorations tn
te h area , but all mtneral rights are
1ncluded. C'all today for appoint1 N 50'
ment
1

IT ' S WARM INSID E!

Lo w heat cos t s too! 3 bedr ooms, nice
k1tchen, T V room, ll v tng room Full
d1vi ded basement. Large deck A· l
view of th e r 1ver . Pnced tn the $30's
N605
MUST SEE TO BELIEVE th 1s t acre
lot 1'h mile from Holzer on bla c ~top
r oad City sc hool s. 3 BR , kitchen, living
room and bath Uf11tty room Rural
water. 10x 12 storage bl dg. t969 12x60
L1berty 2 bedr oom and 1968 12x60
Winston mobt le hom e, fu r nished.
$42,500
N525
WE NEED QUICK SALE. Owners
are bemg tr ansferred . Brtck ranch,
3 yrs. old, 3 BR, Jl;, baths, formal
DR , super kitchen, most all ap·
pliances t nclud~d Clean, excellent
condition
Over 2 acres land
overlooking the •Oh10 River This
must move, please call us now. NS95
SlS,OOO - Older ran ch styl e home in
need of repa1r L arge lot , Garage Shed .
Located at Addison
' N593
ROOM FOR LAUGHTER
This
should catch your eye Like new A·
fr ame, 3 BR , l iJ2 baths Hills ~ trees,
r ock garden No more crowded condi ·
t •ons. L1v e ou r feel1ngs This family
needs to r elpcate Ustmg price Is
reasona ble, $26,000.
I 614

NEEDS FIXIN ' - Route 218 area . 28.3
acres with 2 Older homes, One 5 room
with basement and porch. One 3 room
house used tor storage. Some outbldgs.
NS46

RESIDENTIAL
NEW LISTING
country liv1ng with flair in this smartly
decorated 5 bedroom bl ·fvel . Formal
dtn.ng&lt;, llvrng room , kite en complete
w1th appliances . Family oom, recrea·
tion room, utility area.1 Central air .
Eleclrtc heat. Garage. L rge lot. City
school diStrict.
1
1620
lfl% INTEREST, 524,900
willing to SE!II th is 2 BR
contract to qualifying b
gas heat Vinyl siding
Located next to town.

LAND CONTRACT
You'll teet cozy sitting in the living
room of this 3 bedroom home wrth a
lovely view of Raccoon Creek. Act now
and this beauttful landscaped lot with
plenty of blue sprUce and shade trees ~
can be yours .
N 610

- Owner Is
mean a land
yer. Natural
araen area

1 51'

SEE MOM'S llYES SHINE When she
sees the Inside Of this mOdern, clean 2
or 3 Bfl house. The season's greetings
Mid tn. leelln!i ~~ love will brlghtl~
- · Tn. bent! Its of a delu•e kitchen,
free st1nding stove. Money saving Mil
built fireplaCe. It also has lull bltse·
ment, welt Insulated, garden, l.lo ec. of
lend. W.. l kept, l35,000. It's vours ~ 611 , ·

70 ACRE DAIRY FARM located 1
mile from Green School Milkong
parlor, free stall barn, large frame·
barn 60x50, pond, rural water. If 567
. AND
CONTRACt - tO%
IN·
re·REST - Live in the country Raise everything you need on this 54
acrf. farm. Lots of fruit trees, large
vineyard, some timber and a par· 1
tlally remodeled 2 story farm house ~
Nice barn, large ch icken house, ap:'
prox. 20 ac. good pasture Priced at
$41 ,900
.
K60Q
FOR YOUR BOY AND HIS DOG - 115
acres range land, p1ne frees , small
creeks, wildlife. See l~e beauty of the
earth. Now, for Dad the rest of the fami ly. New log house built from teh farm .
very modern 3 BR, fireplace, deck~ng
patio, walks, chicke(l house, cellar,
wood shed, !pring development water
system, tobacco base Much more Call
us. We want to sell you, this farm
N627
HUNTER'S DELIGHT
.
82 acres with secluded 4 room modern
cabin. Ideal for hunting or just~ qui~t
retreat. Drilled well . Sime t•mber
Tobacco base. Approx. 11 mdes from
town. Priced in _the $30'~.
N626
39 ACRES PLUS 2 houses. One has
basement, dnlled well, central heat,
air, J BR . One Is 2 story, 2 BR. buolt
1n kllche. Money making farm . GOOd
fence. 2280 lbs. tobacco base.
# 578
SMALL FARM ....=4J acres~ 30X48 barn,
OOOd woven wire fence, 12421b. tobacco
base, pond, plus other outbutldlnos. 8
acres of bOttom end the farm is ready to
·pasture. l.OOk Quick!
1 602

RESIDENTIAL _
NICE TWO BEDROOM home Gas
heat. Laroe lot. Located mile from
Silver Bridge Shopping Center. Just off
State Rt.7.
uoa
COUNTRY DE~IGHT IS this quality
constructed 3 bedroom ranch. Super
sharP built-In kitchen with custom
made cabinets. Living room has ~"
tlreplece with blower system . Laroe
deck. 2 car garage Near Tycoon Lake.
City school system.
1 WI
HOUSE PINCHING? Look at this 8 yr
old home. Modern in every way . 3 BR,
1500 sq. ft., moat all and appliances are
Included. City sewer. Loan auumptlon
poulble. Price reduced-s.2,500.
I 472

-

BET YOU'LL LOVE IT TOO - Your
f1rst peek in the front door will conv tnce
you there is not~ng better on the
market. Lt ving room with frr ep!at:e,
family room, 3BR, 2'12 baths, 2 car
garage and MORE . Pn ced in the m1d
$50' s.
N601

YOU CAN ' T LOSE f rom buyi ng. th os In

come producing proper ty. L arge older
rem odeled home and a 1974 14)(70 and
1979 12x65 mobile home. 4 acres . Barn &amp;
storage b ldg. Rural water . For more
details g1ve us a call .
11 590
MOBILE HOME in Gallipolis 2 BR,
l2' x65' . Many benefits Converiient
location . $25.00 month gas budget.
10'~15' block ut1 l1 ty bldg City sewer. 32'
pat1o, underP1nned . Most furniture
icntuded. It is in good condition, should
sell fast. S17,000.
N606

-

COUNTRY AT ITS BEST In thiS completely furnished mobile home and 55
acres. Underpinned, patio and aWntng.
Rural water. Priced In lhe$20' s.
NS81 .
WOODED LOT
Seautiful decorated 3 BR! mobile home,
11h baths, delu)(e, c lean thr oughout
New FA circulattng firepl ace With com
bust1on air k1t. Patio overlooking
mature trees . Rural water 1'12 acres.
Call any ()four tra ined assocates. N630

'

·'
.·

TRUCK
TOPPER,
fiberglas, with sl iding win·
dow for 6112 ft. GMC or
Chevy truck , 1325. Call 388·
9334 after 6 p.m .

ex ·
call
ser·
that
free
1am

DOZER
backhoe, dump
tru ck . Call446·4537

STUCCO
PLA5 TE R ING,
plaster repa1r , comm er cial
and r es1dent1al·
Free
estimates , ca 11256·1182

DOZER work excava ti ng,
land cleanng Call446-0051

SAND E RS CA RPENTRY
SERVICE
Home im·
provement, •n terior and ex·
terior 15 yr s exper 1ence
Call446·2787

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER ·
VICE l iscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank installatton,
water &amp; gas ltnes. E x·
cavating work &amp; ~ransit
layout. 992·720 1.

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

.

.'

,,:t

,.•

84

20~6.

---~&amp;~R~e~
fr~,g~e~r~
~t~io
~n____

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER &amp; DOOR , INC
Overhead Garage Doors,
E lectric Door Operators,
Continuous no· leak
guttering
Day · 698·8205 · Night

.
'

{.'

'

·'r.

:;

j
v•

"•'

••
,.'·

•'.
"''

·-

'

.•'

"•
&gt;,

"
•'

BILL'S
Home 1mprovements
Nu· Prlme Replacement
Windows, Storm Win·
dows . 1o Doors. • PIIIo
Covers,
Carports .
Mobile Home Ac·
ceuorfes. Free Estl·

are p~nea p pl e oe11gn Use two
strand s ol bedspread cellon to
crochet tht s arl1s1tc owl
Pall01n 7308 d~rect10ns to• '----"'about 19 ~nch os long
S.w woth contoasl or all one
Pttnteo Pattetn 9374 .
Women's S11es ate 34 (38 tnfh
bust with 40-onch h1p), 36 (~0
bust, 42 h1p), 38 (42 bust , ~4
hip), 40 (44 bust. 46 hop), 42 (46
bust. 48 btp); 44 (48 bust. 150
hip); 46 (50 busl. 52 hop), 48 (52
bust, 54 hop)
,.

.....

'

~

C&amp;W

CONTRACTORS
Heme , Improvements,
exterior
Interior,
vinyl siding &amp; aofllt,
roofing &amp; '''"•r work,
resldenllet &amp; commer·
claf.
Work
fully t
gtlartnleed &amp; fnsurld,
C111 collect 1nytlme
367-Git4 or J67·0141 or

e.

play ball '" comfotl and slyl~ on
lhos good-lookone su11 [aspew
elastoc at watsl. wrist. ankle\
Pnnted Pattern 9024 Mo\ses
S11es S(8·10), M(l2-14), l(l6- 8)
Medtum takes J ~ yds 45-m. flap
fabuc. 518 yd conto All sizes 111
one pattern
,
11.75 to• each palletn Add bOI"
lor each pattern for lust class
a11maol handhnf Send to

QUICI 'o'

US~

v

PAMIIIS 170

Box

132W. I8St New York. NY t\]011

faslllon Calllol

llttW1,11!.

p~

311-75611

Electrical

RU SS AND MAX
ELLIOTT
Lenn ox heatt ng and air
condtfioning Rapco Foam
Jnsulation Electrical work,
call 446·8515 or 446·044S af·
ter 4:30.

Furniture Stripping
and Refinishina
35 court St.
Galhpolts, Ohio
Call446·3896
or 446·3080

Nu·Prlme
windows
Storm windows &amp; doors
Aluminum &amp; vinyl
siding
Howmet Patio Covers
.
screen rooms
Mobile home awnings
Aluminum
utility
buildings
691 Miller Drive

JIM 'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery . Call 256·
9368 anyt1m e.

SPECIAL
AVOid high heat ,bills
thts wtnter. ~· Insulate
your house now, and
check for heat loss .
Energy os too costly to
waste. ·
Fre.e¥Examtnation
Also we check and
repatr furnaces 1f need·
ed, and tnstau wood
burners, and c:heck elec·
tric wiring, the number
1 cause of house flrH.
Call. toclay, !he energy
vou save may be your
own!
Dlo F CONTRACTORS
446·3407 or 367·0389

1

L--------_.1

$1.00

•:.:,·:~~::::
11
Ul

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'J

___

·L - 16 · 18

''YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

- Addon s and
r emod eling
- Roof1ng ctnd gutter
work
- Concret e work
- Piumbmg and
el ectncal work
(Free Estimates)

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh .
Ph . 992·"6263
Anytime

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992 7314
Pom eroy , Oh.

12·17 1 mo.

SOLUTION

992· 5682
10· 7-tfc

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING
All rvpes of roof work ,
new or repa~r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and pa1nt1ng ~ 1
All work guaranteed.
Free Est1mates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949· 2862
949·2160
1·22-tfc

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 FrUit
1 Toothed
Items
12 Trades
11 Pla~lng card
21 Thin wood
coating
22 Welcome
23 Asian land
24 European
capital
25 Printer's
measure
26 Fruit cake
28 Eagle's nest
30 Almost
32 State: Abbr.
33 Uncooked
35 Cheer
37 Narrates
39 Exact
40 Evergreen
41 Preposition
43 Hind part
45 Molars
47 Army off.
48 Mountam
lake
49 Sharpened
52 Pierce
5-4 Besmirches
56 Le...,.
57 Commands
59 Walk
6t Trans~
greSS89
62 Domesticate
63 Sow
64 Tellunum
, symbol
66 Summer: Fr.
67 Born
68 Masculine
69 College deg
11 Lug
72 Welt
74 Chairs
76 Danish
Island
71 Rotl
78 Paid notice
79 Procession
811nlet

82 In addition
83 loiters
84 Pulle~ block
part
85 Sick
87 Fabled
dwarfs
89 Name
90 After
92 Abound
94 Ivy League
universtty
95 Flogger
96 Build
97 Phys1c1an
99 Tatter
100 Compelent
101 Contest
102 Male deer
103 Number
t05 Sewing
Implement
t07 Sforzando
(abbr l
109 Foot
110 Prohibits
111 Sum,
tt3 Faction
114 Pronoun
t t5 Compass
pl.
t16 Animal coat
117 Sailor
118 Fuel
120 Scale note
121 Turkish reglment
122 Assistant
123 Levantlne
ketch
124 Booty
Slang
126 Coma back
12Q Leafs
130 Coal feature
132 Mop
134 Lura
t35 war gOd
136 Teutonic
deity
137 Mine veins
139 Cook olowty
141 Spanish
(abbr.)

. . .. . . .~,.~

lllliptt CNiac .)6 '1.00
IRI "'"'' Calllec
:1.00
CUlT 100115 $1.75 Nth

I....,._
,.
,,._i .. - .......

12-8-1 mo.

~

ROOSifiAIIE

4~·ZHZ

Save 'n' Sew• Warm up, JOi

PH. 742·2328

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

sm~ !AtltiS
iXtiJNTl tllnRED

Free Estimates
388·9759

Hrs eyes are medall•ons w•n8_s

IF YOU NEED IT
FIXED,
WE CAN DO IT!

Ri. 3, Box 54
Rac.ne, Oh.
Ph . 614-843·2591
6·15-tfc

992· 7544

WA!U UNE IIOOl-UIS

Frank Rose Con st. Co.
RemOdeling repair,'new
constr~ctlon, all types.
Ftee"eillmales;aiiWOrk
8::1 --'-~"-:-:-=:c-'--'---'-"j:Jo'
Home
fully
1 guarenteed .
_1"-m'-"p"'r~o~ve~m
'+e~-- , , Resldenttal, c:ommer·
clal, lnll· stria I &amp; min·
FOR- BEST, In Carpet
Clean tng Call srneltzer"s • lng, electric work .
Sf~amwa_y . Call 614-446
MSHA Cert.
.

repair.

..·
. t'
,.•

Building &amp; Repair

Sizes
" From 3Dx30"
SMALL

W.tet-Srrwer&amp;ttrit.Ge liii-Ditches

GEORGE ' S ROOFING
Rooting, siding, gutter,
build-up roof, home

"'

'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Mortgage Bankers

Hrs. : Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30PM .

. AL TROMM

Sizes from 4X6 to 12x40

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.

83~ ---~E~x~c~a~
v~
at~i~
ng=-~­
WATER WELL Drt ll1 ng
and cleaning. Pumps sold
and installed, Call W.T .
Grant, 446 8508 .

Farm Buildings
Utility Buildings

12 41mo.

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

..'

NEW LISTING
BuHd to suit yourself. 2 lots. Bear Run
Road . 100 ft • 07 ft and 100 ft.x99 9 ft
Docking priv, eges to Raccoon Creek :
. Rural water ava1lable. Financ 1ng
possibilities th r ough land contra c t,~ 621
LOT FOR ' SALE - Almost an acre
located 6 miles from town on State
HIQhway. Suitable for building, mobile
home or lust about anything. Priced to
sell .
/1594

'amping
Equ1pment

FOR ALL yo ur
termtnating se r vtc e,
exterm1tal Term1t e
v1ce Your loca l man
lives tn th e cou nt y,
e st1mat es
W111
Thomas, 446·1801

ALL STEEL

• New Homes • extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992· 7583

SOUTHERN
SERVICE
CD. · Heating · mobile
home furnaces, electr ic hot
water tank repair Ca ll of ·
l ice, 446 · 3008 n tg ht,
emergency no. 367 ·7131.

.

197714x 70 MOBILE HOME FR , LR ,M
2 BR , bath, artt fi cial fire pl ace Total
electn c. Bx10 por e ~ Must be moved
N562

BUILDING LOTS - t6 total, one With
aerobtc sept1c tank. All underground
sewer lines . Located off Upper Rf. 7.•
#612
2 ACRES -- Already set for mobile
home County water, plus drilled well
Aerobtc septic tenk, block cellar h'ouse'
metal storage building, electric and
located In i nice clean neighborh OOd.
N613

BUD GET
CONSTRUCTION CO
All
type
hom e 1m
provements · extenor and
in terior Free est1 mates .
Mtke Marcum, 3 8~ 8636.

,..·

MOBILE HOMES

LOTS FOR SALE

Home
Improvement~ --

PAINT ING · Res idential
and comm ercial. Interior
and exterior, mobile home
roofs. Free est i mates . 17
yrs. exp. with references
cat I 367 ·7784 or 367·7160

34-48

..',,.

78

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208

~n~

9374

.

ROBERT S BROTHERS
GARAE . 24 hr wre cker
service. All types of repair
Upper Rt . 7 Call 446·2445
d ays and &lt;46 4792 n ights

81

SEFiiiEeS

Quick
SI'ACIOUS SOPHISTICATION can
be yours in this well planned
1marntenance free brtck ranch . For·
mal LR ahd DR, 2 baths, 3 BR, FR
with wb fireplace for those cool
winter days Formal entry, utility
area, bu1tt· lf1 kitchen, patio, 2 car
garage. front porc.h1 central air and
much, much more Located In a very
nice neighborhood.
#591

Auto Repair

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

STANDARD
Plumbing-Heating
215 Third Ave., 446·3782

1979 GMC Serrla ClaSSI C
4x4 - 6500 act. miles $6200.
256·6294 or 446·961!1 .

MUSICal
Instruments

Ou r Buyer s Come
From All Over
The world

77

Visttour showroom and see
the 19$1 Coachman Cam·
73
Vans&amp;4W. D.
pee, equtpment, Saturday
1980 JEEP CJ 5 · 6 cyl , 4· thru Fnda y, Ph Jackson
spd ., 6,700 miles, $6.500 286·5700.
Call446 1211 alter 5
2 USED 22 ft. Coachmen
1978 GM C Jimmy 4·W·D, mm1 homes, ltl&lt;e new, well
!t ke new, all power , low equtpped, mquire at Apple
miles. call 446·4517 or 446· City Aula Sales, R t 6 box
42, Jackson, OH 45640 . Tel
9278
286 5700

74
Motorcycles___
J978 KAWASAK I KZ 650

Business Services

VA loan sno money down
Federal Housmg 3% on $25 ,000
5% on balan (je,
ConventionaiLoans5%
down
Call tor lnform at1on
992-7544
12·21·1 mo

Trucks for Sale

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
1 Auto
parts, auto repai r,
•wrecker servi ce , buy
Lowery electrtc organ.
autOmobiles, ra dta tor s and
Teeny Genie , ltke new.
batteries. Call afte r 5, 4.46"$499.00 992·2044
7717.
57

'------------r-----...;.----1

MAKE your appo1ntment
now, for the holiday
1967 GMC c hurch bus, spec,a/, auto p atnting, san·
dtng and minor body
mechanJCatl'y good , 62
repa1r, Sl29 plus paint,
passenger, ti res good $750
Hammonds
Body Shop 379·
Call446·0822 or 446· 7225.
2782
72

motorcycle ,
Call 9&lt;9·2649

PUREBRED
Englis~
Shepherd puppies . Stock
and watch dogs. Phone 247·
2161 .

Improvements
'S
C A RPE T
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
1'-.' · "''"'NG. Deep str eam
_ _ __:::::..:;:.:::=..::::.:::::.::;:._
&lt;....:=O"-=;.;..;:;.;:....;.;;.,_&lt;-.___
nu ·look back in
, highly recom ·
finendled, r easonable rates,
guard .
Fre e
I
I
I
estimates. Gene Smith, call
now992·6309 or 7&lt;2·2211 .
By Pt••ld Jacoby
ly always with 13, often With
IIDd Alu Soata1
12 and occas10nally wtth 11.
Remember that the strengtb WILL do handyman w or k
This is our 52nd article on for. an opening bid does not in your home. Furn1ture
bidding We have concentrat- always justify ge tt mg in repair in my shop Jim
Bentz, 4th Sf , Sy racuse
ed on standard Amertcan as against an adverse opening.
that is the system used by the
2. The one-notrump opemng
great majority of players should show 16-1 8 or 15-17 82
Plumbing
HCP, but not 15-18
from champion to beginner.
&amp; Heating
3
Use
Blackwood
and
Stay~
There are other systems. In
man
QUALITY
MAIN ·
rae~ Alan Sontag uses a very
4 Tend to overb1d w1th TENANCE ~ Electr ica l,
complicated club system with
Peter Welcbsel, his favorite good hands and underbrd w1th plumbing, heat ing, and air
conditioning . Ca ll 388 ·9698.
partner. Such systems work bad ones.
5. Make sure tha t you and
well ir you can al!ord to Sp&lt;!nd
countless hours or study and your partners work to gether.
C:&lt;IRTER' S PLUMBING
Remember that H your partpracttse, but don't let anyone ner loses you do also
AND HEAT I NG
fool you and tell you that they
Cor
Fourth and Ptne
Suggestion:!! for sltghtly
are easter to use than stand- advanCed btdding
Phone 446·3888 or 446 4477
ard. They aren't. They are far
J. 'use weak two b1ds w1th
more complicated
two clubs a s th e only forc mg
DEWITT'S P L UMBING
In standard you can add as op&lt;!ning.
AND HEAT I NG
many gadgets as you wish
2. Use the Jacoby transfer Route 160 at Evergreen
Just bear m mind that a in one of its simpler forms
phone 446 2735
gadget ).S hne as Ion~ as you
It doesn't require much
and your partner don t forget study to Use one or both of
GENE PLANT S
1t or let it confuse you
these conventions that are
AND SONS
We recommend these basic almost as common m tournament play as Blackwood and Plumbing · Heating · Air
rules for b1dding
conditioning . 300 Fourth
1, Always open the bidding Stayman
(NF.W~PAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
Ave. Ph. 446·1637
w1th 14 high-card pomts, near-

automat1c
, ,a Exc
c. cond.
lo w r
mileage 52,300
992 7689.
t976 CH EVY Nova , 6
cyl automati c, a.c Aski ng
$1 ,900 992·7341.

Home

Bas·c b"dd"ng rules recap ·-

POMEROY

ALL TYPES Of bu 1tdmg
materials, block, br ick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin
tels, etc. Claude Wmters,
Rio Grande, 0 Call 2&lt;5
5121 after 5 p.m

m

Hous ing
Headquurters

----

ow At
Pomeroy
landmarl&lt;

:
..
:

May your home be
wreathed with the .-- •• ·
of holiday gladness ,
and filled with the fun
of this bright and
festive season,

POMEROY, 0 .

EMPIRE

Makes that ROME TAIP- aAd " brings bM'Jl
the goodi"I-''IMPORTEA''

-

Ne w BikeSAS LOI'\ As

Ho11smg

f-----------,r--------1 t~~~L~-~:.t Ji
I...,._.
Jum-

Misc.

Hotpoint MicrowaveOven
S324
Reg 1314
comfo r t G low Ke ro se ne
Hll'ltl!rs, E conomy 12• ·0163),
Now S12 9.t5
Rtg. S1 39.9S

Headquarters
Vesteraay s

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==========~======~T~he~S~u~n~d~a~T~i~~~~~~~~~~
i4
Merth~nise
BRIDGE

Misc. Merchandise

LENNOX · fUe l Oil furn .
$100. Call367·7690.

ANI ESIIte- General

[]

54

BOXED COAL, ~ LB
WEST
VIRGINIA
CHUNKS . Get more heat
for the money, 446-2783.

$6,500.

SLEEPING rooms or Will
r oom &amp; board Sen1or
Ci t 1zens 949 2491 .

46

Misc. MorchanGise

388 · 820~ .

s-,- -HOuSehO!d'GOodS-

HOUSEKEE P I NG room
fu r n ished, $135 utili t ies pd.
Share bath, SUitable for
one

54

ex-

OILLARD S
WATER
DELIVERY Service Call
446·7404.
JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE, call 367 ·7471 or
367-0591 .
AGRI · LIME spread tng ,
limestone and fill dirt
1 742
haul ing · Leo Morr s, · :
2455:
~
COAL, limestone, sand &amp;
gravel , reasonable Call
992·5510 .
-~
----8~7---::::Uphols~ -­
TRI STATE
UPHOLST!:RY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 4-16· 1833.

MASTE.RCRAFT UPHOL·
STERY SHOP · Com·
mercia! and residential. 32
years expenence. Call ~ 2301 or 446· .,71 .
BROTHERS UPHO~STE·
RY, Gallipolis, Ohio, 256·
1562, all work completely
auaranteed .

142 Cover
143 Beasts at
burden
~45 Ro~al
~47 Close

Soak up
t52 Behold!
153 Mend
155 Wise ones
157 Pack away
159 Pronoun
160 Greek peak
162 Staves
164 Tardier
t66 Eludes
168 Thoroughfare
169 H1re
110 Ancient
chanot
t71 Vacation
place

~49

DOWN
t Above
2 R-flsh
3 Arttcte
4 Seine
5 Equipment
6 Mistake
7 tenllgram
(abbr.)
8 Mouths
9 Encounter
10 Brimless
cap
11 Fenc&lt;1 steps
12 Ave.
13 Triumph
14 Encourege
15Gems

!6Walk pompously
17 Atlempt
18 Arllflclal
language
19 Realm
20 Longs !Of
27 Pedel digits
29 Rudiments~

ry
3 t French or!I·
cle

~~~=o.~

34

Astonis h~

ment
36 Makes lace
38 CUbiC
meters
40 Journ e~
lorth
42 Want
44 Evaluate
46 Rabbll
48 Clock
49 Old Testament book
50 Mountwn
nymph
51 Meet man
53 Wagers
55 Rupees
(abbr)
SG N1mbus
58 Looked
fixedly
60 Equal
62 Edible
rootstock
65 Guido's high
nota
68 Arm~ meal
69 Musical
mstrument
70 Goose

genus

72 Did not exist
73 Redactors
75 River ISland
76 Affirms
77 Wash oneself
79 Cost
80 Choose
82 Man's name
83 Fabric
84 Altentlon
getters
86 Rent ,
88 Paddle
89 Shelve
90 Storied
91 Expunge
93 Parades, of
asor1

95 Cttmblng
device
97 Nrr&gt;w

9B Soak

102 Healthy
104 .Henpecks
106 Goddess ot
heallng
107 Keen
108 Pretense
~ 10 Pallets
1 t 1 Clothesmaker
112 Ordmances
114 Declines
116 Cobblers
117 High
119 Adages
121 The sweetsop
122 Matured
123 Thu s
125 Sh1p channels
127 Lattn COO•
JUnction
~2 8 Paleness
129 In ana style
130 Fotd
131 Feast
133 Insects
136 Cast out
138 Epics
140 liQUid
t43 Faroe
Islands
whlr1wlnd
144 One of
Columbus's
ShipS
t46 Perm1ts
t48 AHect10n
150 Hebrew
measure
151 Nuisance
t53 Energy unit
154 Legal mattef s
156 Bishopric
158 Existed
t61 Continent:
Abbr

'.

t63 Compass
pt
165 Road (abbr l •
167 Note of
scale

�·--

.

- ..

.

~.

~P~·~•:•;;D~:I~T~h~e~S~u~n~da~y~T~i~m~e~s~S~en~t~in~e~l;:==;:=:;:====fP~om~er~o~y~M~i~dd~l~ep~o=rt==G;a;ll=ip~o=I~=·=O=h=i~~P=o~in~t;P~Ie=a=s~an~t~,w~.V~a~-~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:========D:ec:e;m:b~e=r=28:'=19:;80
-

""

"':"'

SUPPL~NT TO:
· 'oint "-aaant l.g1s,.r
Polftt PIH1attf....WY
Sunday nmea Sentinel

lh

• And all through the stores

MAKE ELBERFELD$

'twas the dav after Christmas. ·••

"'
'"

....
;
"
"'

••·
,
.•
'

.~..

Shoppers shrugged off their financlal worries and swarmed into
stores in a rush during the final days
before Christmas, an Associated
Press survey indicates. And
business the day after wasn't bad
either.
"It'sllkethedaybeforeChristmas
here," Jack ~ddy, manager of a
Sears store in suburban Kansas
City, said Friday.
"Shoppers are buying more today
than Wednesday. We're twice as
busy now as we were a week before

Christmas," said Sally Balandine,
sales clerk at a J .C. Penney .store in
Greenville, S.C. .
Before this week, the traditional
Christmas gift-buying season had
been a disappointment to many
retailers in part because of
backlash'from rising interest rates
andfean;ofrecession.
But the eleventh-hour shopping
surge lifted the spirits of many
retailers, the AP survey of
sh~keepen; indicated Friday.
What started out to be a

IN POMEROY
YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
FOR WEARING APPARR FOR YOU
AND YOUR FAMILY AND
FURNISHINGS.FOR YOUR HOME.

moderate December turned out to be Avenue. in suburban Philadelphia.
gang busten;," said a spokesman for Cosmetics sold espedally well, he
Lazarus department stores in added.
·
Columbus, Ohio.
"We had to throw people out when ·
The Lazarus spokesman, who we closed at 5. o'clock Christmas
asked not to be identified, said the Eve," said Sidney Feibus.
biggest sales surge came last SaturBut the rush was not universaL
day and Sunday. But many other
" In a · word, it's a disapretailen;reportedtheirbestgainson pointment," said Cavan Riley, a K
the final three days before Christ- ·mart lllllnpger in Cheyenoe, Wyo.,
mas.
where relatively warm weather was
"We sold to the walls in the last blamed for poor sales of warm
few days," said Michael Lauerman, clothes;, "People are being very
general manager at Saks Fifth frugaL__

Items &amp;Prices Good In
Silver Bridge &amp; Pomeroy

'

.
PQIMERQY
ELBERFELDS
IN
.
·

,
ADVERTISED ITEM POUCY

·

"" ********************* *********************************** *********************************** ***********************'

i..

Eect., of ~· adver1hed ""'' Is r...u~ 10 ..
r...tily ..
fer' sale In ....:h
Store ••cept
: tpeelffcelly note4 In this Dll. H· we. do run o~ of on
wertlsecl ftem, 'we 'Will oHer you your choiCe of • ·
comparabt. ltem ywhen awollahle, reflectlnt the ION
•avlr~~s or o relnch~k which will entitle you to
pu,..rchne the atlvertlted it•rn at th• adv•rtltecl prlc.

'

.~· ..

:..·: i,..

TOTAL SAJISFACTION GUARANTEE
. Everything fOu ~, ot Krot•r Ia guaranteed far yaur
total sotiafoctktn r..ord'-" of manufoctuter. ~ you
ore not sotlafled. Kroger will rap lace your Item with
the _some llf:oncl or a cornpor.bl• brand Or refund yovr
purdtaH pr~ce.
'

"

~.

..."''

COPYIIGHT 1910- THI KIIOGEI CO. ITEMS AND PIIICES
GOOD SUNDAY DEC. 21 . 1910 THIU 5ATUIDAY JAN. 3 ,
1911. WE IESEIVE !HI RIGHI 10 liMIT QUANTITIES .
NO.NE SOLD 10 DIALEIH .

"

·-

.
.

~·.

1980

1980

1980

PONTIAC
N

PONTIAC
GRAND
PRIX

BUICK
ELECTRA
LI~DEIMTO~D

'~"

" '
'"

•

.."

,.

0

-...
"

"'

In 30 dor•-

w

_,,.

~

t,...,

.a-we

0'

"DEMO"
Dark blue with
blue vinyl top.
Retail SOJlon
list
;JOtOU. 11

0

IS YOUR GAIN
On Jan. 1, we have to
pay penonal property
tax on all cars in inventory.
Rather than do this we
are closing out our
inventory and paulng t~

"DEMO"
White with carmine Mr. Smith's personal
Loaded. 9,036
Cloth ""+"''"'• car.
miles.
R~tail
Lost

SALE

S869() 30
•

SALE

R~tail
Lost

s12 997 5&amp;
'

1980

•

SALE

PONTIAC
GRAND
LE MANS

WAS

1980 CHEV.
CHEVETTE 4 DR.

'4995

IS

$4797

Pearl white, auto trans., only
1,563 miles.

1978 CHEV. PICKUP
•12 Ton, auto. trans ., two-tone
paint, only 35,000 miles, one locaJ

owner .

1976

'3797

'!if. REGAL

Medium brown with saddle vinyl
roof. a ir, tilt wheel , chrome
wheels, New Electra tr'ade.

Was $3495 SALE

'2997

1979 CHEV. NOVA 2 DR.
6-auto., power steer ing . . Only
U ,3 15 miles. Sharp!

SALE

·•41

SALE

4 cylinder, light blue, plenty of

Dark blue with white v1ny1 roof,

one owner.
full

power.

13,000

PONTIAC
FIREBIRD

Was$1895 SALE

1978 CHEV. PICKUP
'5995

$5297

economy here.

4·wheel drive, lock-out wheels,

auto. trans ., power steering .

·• 1297

PINTO
ST. WAGON
Dark blue, 4 cyl., N.A.D.A. Book
Price $2250.

CHOICE
Boneles$ Top
Round ·Steak ...... lb .

'5995'

1980 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO

WAS

Was $5495

U.S .
CUT I ftA~P£Q ~Ill
"LIAU ALLOW 5 DAYS

Was $3295

SALE

'2797

1974 OLDS CURASS
. SUPREME
Light blue exterior with matching cloth interior.

.

.

,

Wllole Boneless Beef Rib Eye ..... ....~ .... tb.
•
U.L ~-·- ·CNOta. 2-S UL AVO/ Mm a.·WI--5499

· 7." CUT BONE IN/

10111111 lletfTtldlrlaln .......... "' .... ' .

U.S. GOV'T

0 '

.. 0

!J.S. GO)P GIADED CHOICE. 170-190·LI. AVG.

u:s. GOV'T GIADED CHOJCE. 160·110-LB. AVI'·

.

$155

$5797

$239
-~.

lb.

7·9c

J-Ib. ·.
Pkg.

(6-2-0Z. PAmDI MODN ~ COMa!NATION fiSH,

.

atAa. a.AM AND-P

. . . ,.... S239
$1 39 ·.

i;;~~~ ~~~~:~:~~~:~B ~~~:. :

CHQICE , BEEF CHUCK
·
.
·
,

lloll~Rotl$t- .~-;

Meat Wieners

.

G~DED

lOfton

.. _.

$299

Rib Roast ....... ·.: lb.

A~ BO~ELEsS

$125

•••• erter of Beef .......................... lb.
Sid::.f'T

Be~f

"'·

. ......, ler of Beel. ...~, · : -- ........ :....,.,. lb.

8-

$379

OSCAR MAYER JUMBO,
CHEESE OR

0

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,
' ·

I

U.S. GOV'T GIADlD CHOICE, 11·13-li.' AVG.

$399

R1b ·Eye Steaks .......... lb. ·
'

.

1

;k;~·

Seafood Burgers ...

lb.

'

'

u.s.oonoaaDIDOtOfCiu.lvLa.AvG.WHQI.I

..... 0: .......... .......... lb.

IOIIIII•Top

I Pe.arll white, black, cloth trim,
·

GOV ~T

GRADED CHOICE,
BO~ELESS liEF .

,,

... £.. AIA110N TIMl.OM SIOI
01 QUAITII lllf 010Eit5

1979
MONTE CARLO '5995

·

IS

SALE

1976
GRAND PRIX

279

$

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.
BONELESS BOTTOM OR

New tires &amp; sport wheels, 4 wheel
dr ive.

Light blue with blue vinyl roof,
fully equipped, locally owned.

•

was $349.5 SALE

1978 DODGE
RAMCHARGER
srack, air conct ., -auto. tranS~.•

USDA

AII have power
tilt
windows,
wheel &amp; am·fm
stereo radios .
low miles.
Sale Priced

'4697
1979 PONT.
1974 PONTIAC
1977 JEEP WAGONEER
VENTURA
4 wheel drive, one local owner .
PRIX
Bright red, small V ·S, Rallye
Extra nice.
wheels, one owner. Sharp!
cruise, tilt, AM· FM,
Was $0495 SALE
'3790· WaS'$2295 SALE f
Rallye wheels.
Was 54495

1977 PONT. ASTRE
Black,
miles.

BUICKS &amp;.
PONTIACS
IN STOCK.
'BIG
DISCOUNTS
ON All

'6288

WaS$4195 SALE

1980 CHEV.
MALIBU
4 DR.

· MODEL

GM Factory
official's car.
Two-tone burgundy,
· rear defroster,
cruise control.

'7500 '7000 '9990

ONLY ''9''
1979 PONTIAC
BONNEVIllE
4 DR. SEDANS
LEFT .

OVER 50
NEW 1981

extra sharp. Only

INCLUDES:
2-lr•ut Quartan
W / lack Portions
2·l-v Quart•r•
W / lock 'ortlona
AttDChed , 2·Wine•
2 Nedta &amp;,

(J.i.
.

Frying
Chicken Thighs

00

00.

8-oz.
Pkg.

-~

OSCAR MAYER .

-

.OSCAR MAYER SLICED

Beef Bologna ...... .-. ~~;:

-... 1979 PONTIAC

Light blue, low m iles. "tew
radial tires.

Was $695

1974 MERCURY
· MONTEGO 2 DR.

"

,..,

LE MANS

'6495

• L.1nks ........
Smo k1e
OSCARMAYER

4 Dr ., Double sharp. Family

sized. Only 16,000 m iles.

~ !'

0

SALE

$5997

Auto.

trans ..

power

ClASSIC

steering,

small V -8, lanQ wide bed .

4 Or., wh ite with carmi ne top,
loaded with equipment.

Dark brown, small v~e. auto.
trans. .
·

1978 v.w.
RABBIT

4995

1

.'

'4995

Fully equipped, local ex·
ecutlve's car. Silver with car -

'5295

.
..••.
••
0'

$4997

•

,....,
0

'1297 · .·

~

4 DR..

Worth More .
was SB95.00

Beige with gold, vinyl top, one

,...

-.

1976 CHEV.
••
" MONTE CARLO

'3295

$279

.1972 FORD PICKUP
GOOd fire wood truck .
Was $895.00

Two-tone blue,

terior, air cond.
i'

.'"
,.
'

custom

Black .
Front wheel drive .

was $1795

'1

SALE

Rough, but ready.

SALE

SALE

'577

SALE

Transportation.

Runs good .

SALE

'177

Dark blue, 4 speed, plenty of
here. N.A.D.A. Loan

'899
1973 FORD LTD
1976
ST. WAGON
CATAUNA
Hunter 's Special
4 DR.
Was 1795
SALE
'377
1970 PLYMOUJH RJRY
4 DR.

w.,uu.oo

$195

ITH BUIC .p

A' BLEND OF BEEF. HYDRATED TEXTURED
· VEGETABLE 'PIIOTiiiN

$4497

SALE

1972 atEV. IMPAlA
STATION WAGON

·

In-

tilt wheel, new
•2187 V-6, air cond.,
radial tires. Nice. ·
1973 CHEV.
1979 CHEV.
'
IMPAlA 2 DR.
MONZA
.Dark brown/ beige vinyl top.

Was $2495

Was $1195

1974 CHEV. MALIBU
·2·DR•
was $695.00

owner, new Skylark trade.

•
•

'1180
1973 OI.DS TORNADO

WasS1495SALE

Air cond . Worth much more .

1973· BUICK ~RE
4 DR. .

.,....

.,
,.,

1974
MONTE CARLO
was $1995.00 •
SALE

~,

•

'870

Was $1295 SALE

SALE

'N -THE PIECE

$3197

ggc .

12·01

Pks.'

$189 :
•S

$119
'I
.
.
•
a
· .B••f Bo ogna......... Pk'g:
.

$2680

SEE BOB BRIQ(LES,
HARLAND ''WOODY" WOOD,
'
BILL GENE JOHNSON OR
G_R_IG SMITH POl AN .
IXD~ IPICIAL DIAL
'

'

~

'

.

I

I

.

'

'

.Ktog•r's· P;ro
Pa.,Y!Mix ...
'

r

Sausage .......

-

· KIOGIR SLICED11)LD FASHION, SPICID LUNCHEON, ·.' .
SAI.Aijll, OLIVE LOAF OR
. ·
'

Tl c

·

-K,.ger
. ·'. · .
Meat Bologna ...... ib. .

J

'2995

,

$4580

,,.,

,'.

$119

(BEEF BOLOGNA 12·0Z. PKG ... Sl.S5 .. J.l8. PKG ... $1.")

~295

..

99C

MEAT IOLOGNA 12·0Z. PKG .. .$1..S .. J.LB' PKG ... $0 .19

l·lb.
Beef Franks ......... . Pkg
.
OSCAR MAYER ROUND OR SQUARE
• t y pak .. ... .. .. . 12-oz.
·Var1e
Pkg.

o~.sgc

'lock

' "'-, CHICKEN
.
'-,
'

Meat BoIogna ..

..

les.

1979 CHEV.
CHEVETTE

OSCAR MAYER SLICED

~-

0

1-lb.

Pkg.

GOU~ET llANO SLICED

Cooked Ham........ ~~=:

C:O~NTIY CLUB

.

.!

.

Canned
Ham ...... ~ . da~
c-.-o

$2 49

$669
'='

-1-La. CAN ... OD.7t--l·ll. CAN ...SIUt

49
C
Wafer Meats ........ p~:~h
Sl
09
Hog JowL ..................

COUNTIY CLUI SLICED
ALL VAII~ES

3·oz.

.

I

'

AIMOUI SMOKED BONELESS

lb.

·THOIN APPLI VALLEY

cou:.. ~ ..con .... )...
..,,.

1·1b.
~k,.

ar 1•cursucu

S.obd Ham ............ lb.
SMOICID 9·11·LI. AVG. ·.

Boneless Hams ........ lb.
POITIOHS ... Ll. $Ut

·

$139
·•
$199·

$199 ,·.

CAIP'

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