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10 - Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 11, 1911)

1

I

.Area deaths.
GIUlJETl'A GIROLAMl

Mrs. Glulletta Glrolami, 84, 766
BrowneD Ave., Middleport, died

'111w'aday afternoon.
Mrs. Ghvlaml wu born Nov. 7,
181111 the dall3hler ol the late Domlnco and Marla Mariani Fabbri. She
wu allo preceded in death by her
huaband, Basilio Glrolaml, one infant daughter and two brothers.
Mrs. Glrolaml was a .member of
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church
and Catholic Wornens Club.
Sbe Ia survived by one son, Guido
Glrolaml, Pomeroy; two daughters,
Mrs. Paul (Gemma) Casci, Middleport, and Mrs. Jolm (Lily)
Strickland, Woodsville; two sisters,
Teresa Fabbri and Brenardina Nest!
both ol Lucca, Italy: 12 grandchlldren and four great grandchlldren, and several nieces and
nephews.

Funeral services will be held Monday at 10 a.m. at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church with the Rev.
Father Paul Welton officiating.
Burial will be in Sacred Heart
Catholic Cemetery. Roseary services will be held SWlday at 7:30
p.m. at Ewing FWleral Home. Friends may can at the fWleral home after 1p.m. on Saturday.
CARL W. KEARNS
Funeral services for Carl W. Kearns, 56, Mason, who died Wednesday
In Pleasant VaHey Hospital, will be
held Saturday, I p.m., at the Clifton

I

United Methodist Church, with the
Rev. Chester Steyer and Rev. 0. B.
Hatcher officiating. Burial will
foDow in the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
B9rn Jan. 16, 19%3, In Clifton, he
w88 the son of J-ph Kearns and
Mary Bass Kearns, Rt. 1, West
Colwnbla.
He w88 a retired coal miner,
veteran of World War II, and a member of the Clifton United Methodist
Church.
Surviving In addition to his parents are.hls wife, Pamela E. Kearns:
three sons, David L. Kearns, Clifton ; Brian W. and Chris c. Keams,
both of M&amp;!lon; seven sisters, Mrs.
Sarah Roush, Mrs. Rose Hall, both
of Hartford; Mrs. Phyllis Whltterkind, Marietta, Ohio; Mrs. Billia
Jones, Gallipolis: Mrs. Goldie OWlcan, Washington, W. Va. : Mrs.
Marion .Ohlinger, New Haven, and
Mrs. Linda Stewart, Clifton; five
brothers, Harry, KeMeth and
Charles, West Columbus; Thomas
and Danny, Clifton; and fo1JT grandchildren.
Friends may can at the Foglesong
Funeral Home Friday from 2 to 4
p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. The body will lie
in state at the church one hour prior
to services.
JAMESS.SNEAD
James S. Snead, 64, Pl. Pleasant,
died Thursday morning at Holzer
Medical Center . .
He was a retired carpenter and a

Outspoken laho·r leader, Meany expiree
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cigarchomping George Meany, the in·
domltable leader and sharp-tongued
symbol of the American labor
movement since the 1950s, Ia dead at
115.

Death came late Thursday at
George Washington University
Hospital, barely two months after.
deteriorating health forced hla
retirement as the only president in
the AFL-CJO's 24-year existence.
The fonner Bronx plwnber, who
became one of the nation's most inmember of Local No. 1159.
He Ia survived by his wife, Mary,
along with three sisters, Miss
Maggie Snead, Gallipolis; Mrs, Bea
Martin, Cincinnati; and Mrs. Kathy
Alishire, Printer, W.Va.
Funeral will be 2 p.m. Saturday at
the Crow-Russell Funeral Home, Pl.
Pleasant, with the Revs. Carl Creece
and Ralph Sager officiating. Burial
will, be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may can today from 2-4
and 7-9 p.m. at the fWleral home.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Charles Aelker,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--John Bohram,
Woodrow Hall, Eric Crump, Harold
Demoskey, Ada Keesee, Michael
Mitchell, Marie Dudding, Virgil
Yarbrough.

PLEASANT VAILEY HOSPITAL
DISCHARG~

James Fitzgerald, Mary SchUllng,
MeUnda Price, Diana Davis, Lota
Smith, EDen DePrae, Nola Jeffers,
Uoyd McMiiian, Bert Grimm,
Hester Roush, June Veers, Chris
'l'aylor, Ethel Walker, Stephanie Tltsenberger, Watsoo Upton, Mary
Goodwin, Edward Simpkins, Frances Moore.

ATTENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARG~ JAN. 10
Ella Altizer, Kimberly Beck, Arthur Cane, Mrs. Roy Canterbury and
son, Owen Cantrell, Louie Christian,
James Colburn, Ronald Davis,
Gabriel Downard, Thomas Dunsmore, Eric Durst, Debra Estep,
Weltha Greene, Bessie Hudson,
Crystal Hughes, Ethel Jayjohn,
Robin Layne, Marjorie Manuel,
Mrs. JU! McConahay and daughter,
Sandra McDaniel, Charles McLain,
John Morris, Ervin Potter, Cecil
Rice, Claudia Springer, Mary Stone,
James Thompson.
BIR1BSJAN. 10
· Mr. and Mrs. Joseph WUI.s,
daughter, Addison; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Leifheit, son, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel Spears, daughter,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. James HW,
son, McArthur; Mr. and Mrs~ David
Alwood, daughter, Pl. Pleaaant.

CALL 992-2156
BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp; 5 PM
NOW

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
OFFERS
BIG AND SMALL SAVERS
GUARANTEED
HIGH MONEY MARKET
INTEREST RATES
OUR BRAND NEW 2lfz-YEAR
CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT

THE 6-MONlH $10,000

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
11.858% effective rat!:!
through January 16 .
$10,000 minimum deposit

'

"'

10.15% rate this month
10.83% compounded yield
$100 minimum deposit

Here's the best short-term interest rate
available at our bank. Your investment is
guaranteed and insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation .
Th~ effective yield on U.S. Treasury Bills
Is higher than the quoted discount rate .

This is a big-money interest rate for
small saver funds insured by FDIC and
available in any amount from $100 up.

The rate is .75% below the average rate
on equivalentU .S. Treasury Securities.

There Is a substantial Interest penalty tor early withdrawa l.

pomeroy

' rutiC!~
tuppers plaans

pomeror ·
nationa
bank /

Member FDIC

to a wheelchair with arthritis since
fiuentlal private citizens during his
last spring, when he Injured his knee
57-year labor career, had been
In a golfing accident. The injury
hospitalized on Sunday for treatfrequently left him In severe pain
ment of a painful buildup ol fluid In
• and his health deteriorated rapidly
hislegs.
·
after that.
His condition worsened Thursday
Having outlived most ol hiiJ ·conafternoon and he was transferred to
temporaries,
he grew despondent
the hospitlil's intensive care unit, aclast
March
following
the death of his
cording to Meany's spokesman,
wife
of
59
years,
Eugenia,
and lost
Albert Zack.
ihe
drive
to
regain
his
strength,
said
Meany's three daughters were
close
friends
and
aides.
with him when he died at 9:55 p.m.
The son of a 19th century IrlahEST, Death was attributed to carAmerican union leader, Meany
diac arrest, said Zack.
President Carter called Meany . never finished high school. But he
used .his keen mind, IPICanny
"an American Institution" and "a
political Instinct and. domlnsting
patriot."
personaDty to unite a fractious labor
"He changed the shape of our
movement and hold most of It
nation for the better In h1mdreds of
together for a quarter century.
ways, great and small, through the
Using the 14 million-member
force of his character and the InAmerican Federation of Labor and
tegrity of his beliefs," said Carter,
Congress
of · Industrial
who had clashed often with Meany
Organizations
as
hla base, Meany
over economic poUcies.
became one ol the most effective
"A giant has fallen,'' Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall said. "He . lobbylsta In Congress, the selfappointed adviser to eight presidenleaves a legacy to all of us of a betts and a key broker In Democratic
ter, more decent and equitable
Party politics.
society."
With the merger of the AFL and
Massachusetts !!en. Edward KenCIO In December 195rl, he ruled 88
nedy, a long-time political ally of the
the ~mchallenged spokesman !or the
labor leader and candidate for the
American labor movemenL
1980 Democratic presidential
nomination, said Meany "w88 a
great American and all of us will
mlashim."
Mr. Labor, as Meany was known
for three decades, had been confined

'~----------College
M.tllmi ..••....•.. 47

NIU •••.••.•.••.. 45

He presided over the labor
movement during a period of
relative labor peace and unprecedented prosperity for
organized labor.

Indiana .......... 72
MSU ....... ..•.. 64

o

The Middleport Emeri!ency Squad
was caned to 159 S. Fourth Ave., at
8: ll a.m. Friday for Mn. Myrta
Schaefer who W8!l taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 7:59 p.m. Thursday, the unit
went to 929 Hysell St. for Mrs. Hazel
Board who W88 taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.and at 7:59p.m.
to the office of Dr. James Conde for
Mrs. Glulietla Glrolaml.

JANUARY
{SALE)
ESTABLISHES S~OLARSHJP PROGRAM - Dr. Edward W. W.
Lewis, Henniker, N. H., fonnerly of Middleport, is establishing a substantial college scholarship program for Meigs County student. The
program honors the late Dr. Raymond Boice, the late Art Lewis and
Pomeroy Attorney Fred W. Crow.

f4-!2 PRICE
ON

WINTER CLOTHING
FOR WOMEN -

MEN -

BOYS -

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Several hundred Elks from the 14
lodges comprising the South Central
District ol Ohio will participate In a
district meeting to be held in Athens
Saturday and Sunday, January 19 ,
and20.
Registrations will be accepted
Saturday IDOI'Iling. The &amp;Mual
District Ritualistic Contest will start
at 10 a.m. on Saturday morning and .
continue throughout the afternoon.
The club will offer an evening d!Mer
menu. The day will conclude with a
dance starting at 10 p.m.
District Activities Chairman, Ray
Noel of Athens, will preside over the
general business·meeting whi!;h will
convene at I p.m. on Sunday,
Dinner will be served 88 soon after
the meeting as possible. Factiltlea
will be available for thcee desiring to
watch the "Super Bowl" via
televtslon after the dinner.

FATHER'S NIGHT SIATI!jl)
The Pomeroy PTA will meet Monday at , 7:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Elementary.
Father's night will be observed
and a panel will be headed by Andy
Lyles, Nail Michael, Tim Fletcher,
· and Jim Rngen;
Mrl ..Mary Carol)'ll WUey will be
In charge ol the llunery, Hoeteuea
will be members of the fifth and sixth grades.

NCState ......... 64
Virginia ......... 56

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

VOL 13 NO. 50

'

'

the interest derived from the principal.
All of the money will be deposited
by April, 1960, and will be Invested
by the conunittee In early May, 1981,
so that each May, thereafter, the
scholarships may be awarded.
Details of applications, etc., will be
annoWlcedclater by I. Carson Crow,
who is heading the committee.
In a nostalgic conununicatlon to
Crow, Dr. Lewis has outlined the influence of Meigs County upon his life
· and his feelings in setting up the
scholarship program in honor of the
three Meigs Countians.
His letter reads:

degrees which include a bachelor's
degree, two master's degrees and a
doctorate.
Details of the scholarship
program will be annoWlced later.
However, I. Carson Crow, Rick
Crow, attorney and prosecuting attorney, Theodore T. Reed, Pomeroy
banker, and Mark A. Lewis, a son of
Dr. Lewis, will make up the committee in charge of selection of
Meigs County students who will
receive the scholarship. The amount
of money Involved has not been
disclosed but it is expected to be
sil:eable and will be deposited Wtth
the scholarhaip money to come from

Attorney I. Carson Crow
1 Tadpole Lane, R.D. 3
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 ,

Dear Mr. Crow:
" It iS a matter of public r ecord ,

and has been tor some years, that ·l
believe

deeply

ip

the

service,

character, and greatness of Meigs
Cou nty and he-r people, and that I am

ever so gratef ul to my home area tor

a ll the training and support that WlJ!

given to me and to my eight siblings
as well as Dad and Mother.

" Also it has been known for years

I

have felt that the local press and

radio were most ge nerous abOut
recog nizing

the

and

ad -

vancements

of native sons

works

and

daughters who left southeastern
Ohio

to

make

a

mark

in

life

elsewhere.
" Furthermore, for some time, 11

has been written that I believe that

the natives of Meigs County have

had the most powerlu I impact on my

Inside today.

• •

Area deaths •••. • .. ..... ...... . . •.••.• .. . . . ...•. . .. .. A-4

life i n particular. It is a fact that
starting in the 1930' s , I picked the ten
most i nflu entia l people in mv life .
Each five years I would r eview that
list , and have done so t o th e present.
We human · beings are sometimes
prone to think that ' the grass is
greener on the other side of the
fance', but in my life I have certain

proof that is not applicable, for my
ClassUied ads . • .••............•...•.••.....•.•••.• .. [).2-7 current
I ist of 'ten greatest people
Farm. news • • . • • • . • • • • . • • . • . . • • • • • • • • • • • . • • . • . . • . • • • • C-8 still has seven Meigs Countians after
alter all these decades of the chang·
lJfestyle ...
&amp; l..S ing list.
Before I list these individuals for
I.,ocal . • • • . • • • • . . • . . • . . . . • • . • . . • . . • . . • . . . • . • . . • . . • • A-2-8 "you,
let me state that 1 have had the
a

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

State and national •• .......... ..•...•..•..•.•..•..••.. 1).1

Sports ••.•..•.... . .....•..•..••••............•.....
nr guide o
e
e
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SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Hanover ......... 85
Defiance .. .. .. . . . 80

Minnesota . . • • . . . 79
Illinois .. .. . .. . . . 75

POMEROY - Dr. Edward W. W.
Lewis, formerly of Middleport, is
establishing a substantial college
scholarship fWld for Meigs County
students.
Esta blislunent of the fWld which
will honor Pomeroy Attorney Fred
W. Crow, the late Dr. R. E. Boice,
and the late Art "Pappy" Lewis,
who was a well-known football coach
and a brothet of Dr. Lewis, was announced Friday by Attorney L Carson Crow.
Dr. Lewis, it has been reported, is
one of those people who could be
taken out of Meigs Caunty but Meigs
Co~mty could not be taken out of him.
Although extremely busy In his
career over the years Dr. Lewis has
kept in constant touch with Meigs
Co~mty friends and has returned
here several timeS to speak at his
home church, the Middleport First
Baptist Church. Several years ago
he was honored for distinguished
service by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.
Dr. Lewis who has preached in
England, Scotland, Wales, Portugal,
Italy, France, Germany, Rhodesia,
Union of South Africa and other
countries has also spoken in 14
states. He is reported to be the only
native of Meigs County, born, reared
and educated through high school in
Meigs County, to hold four college

un:ba

GIRLS

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privil ege of meeting some of the

world's best known people like Dr.
C..l-7 Albert Sweitzer, Helen Keller, Mrs.
Franklin D. Roosevelt, like Ted
e D1
Williams, Joe Louis. Sam Hull, like
Continued on A4i

ttntS

tntint

SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1980

MIDOLE PORT-POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

Rio village gets
'$918,000 grant
his second tenn at Rio Grande. The
RIO GRANDE - Marlin W&amp;·
tank
was dedicated a year ago, the
:demeyer, mayor of Rio Grande,
money
coming from the EDA out of
bas received word from U. S.
Chicago.
senator John GleM and State Rep.
Ron James that the village of Rio
. Grande has been allotted nearly a
million dollars over a twc&gt;-year
period in a Small Cities Conununity
Dev~lopment Block Grant from the
- U.S. Department of Housing and Ur: ban Development for sewer improvement.
GALLIPOLIS - A Pl. Pleasant
The exact sum is $918,000, with
man, William C. Rogers, 22, was
$645,000 due the first year and the recited on charges of DWI and leaving
mainder the second year, Mayor
the scene of an accident Friday
Wedemeyer said.
· following a on&amp;-vehicle mishap on
Rep. James received ·a phone call
the 600 block of Fifth Avenue.
Friday from President Carter mak•
Gallipolis City Police report an
lng an annoWlcement through the of- auto operated by Rogers, who
flee of Jack Watson, and the state
claimed injury but was not imrepresentative said:
mediately treated, turned onto Fifth
"I am delighted that President
Avenue frolp Spruce Street, slid off
. Carter has given me the word that
the right side of the roadway and
Rio Grande will receive this major struck two traffic signs.
·
award that is so desperately needed.
In further action, the robbery of a
-I know that Mayor Wedemeyer and
gift shop near Eureka was inthe residents of Rio Grande will
vestigated Friday night by the
benefit greatly from these funds. ''
Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
Coupled with the $158,500 for a
According to incomplete in,water storage tank , Mayor fonnatlon obtained from that depsrWedemeyer has applied for more
tment, Richard Sims notified of·than a million dollars In federal
fic~rs at'9:58 p.m." that his business,
·.funds for village "improvements, all located below Bladden, had been
during the fourth year of his first
robbed.
term as mayor. He has just started

Man cited on
two

fEATURING THE NEW

Elks to meet

E.MlJ •••.......•. 66
WMlJ ••..•....... 55

.

The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call at 9:34 p.m. 'fhur.
sday for Dana Covert, who had fall
at hla home near Pomeroy- · He W88
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hoepltal.
At 2:54 p.m.· Thursday, the
Pomeroy Fire Depatbnent conducted a fire drill at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

'

(Continued from page I)
quarter.
Courtenay, M. Slater, the Commerce · Department's chief
economist, said earUer this week
that the nation's real gross national
product, the value of the nation's
goods and services adjusted for inflation, apparently grew at-an annual rate of 2 percent to 3 percent In
the final quarter of 1979.
In fact, Carter's advisers anticipate that unemployment will increase by more than 2 million people
this year because of the business
downturn.
In other economic news Thursday:
- The Labor Department reported
that wholesale prices for food and
other goods rose 12.5 percent In 1979,
the harshest Inflation since the 18.3
percent increase of 1974, which
followed the Middle East oil embargo.
There was some moderation In
food and fuel price Increases at the
end ol 1979, with the government's
Producer Price Index rising 0.8 percent In December. Prices in November had gone up 1.3 percent.
Energy prices rose 62.7 percenJ
last year, while food prices advanced 7,5 percent. COnsmner goods
other than food and energy rose 9.3
percent from Decembei: 1978 to
December 1979, the report Indicated.
- The Commerce Department
repOtted that u.s. businesses plan to
increaae spending on plant and
equipment 10.9 percerit in 19110 to
$195.7 billion. Capital spenlllng liild
increased 14.7 percent last year to
$176.4 bllllon.
After adjusting for Inflation, the
19110 Increase will be between 1 percent and 2 percent, compared with
about 5 percent In 1979, the report
said.

basketball scores

College scholarship fund to
be -established for students

Squads have busy day

ELBERFELD$

Nat Ions •••

,

•

1980 MODEL ROTAWAVE

AT
DRASTICALLy·
REDUCED PRICES!

..

·Man pleads

Your "CHANCE OF A LIFETIME" TO GET AN M~ANA
The Quality-Feature Line-at FANTASTIC SAVINGS.
'

no contest
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man,
Harold V. Coughenour, pleaded no
contest to .a charge of vehicular
homicide in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday.
Coughenour, who WBll charged in
coMection with the August 1976
death of Seldon M. Moore, 7,
Gallipolis; kllled during an accident
Involving a Gallla CoWlty Local
.~I bus operated by the accused,
W88 fined $100 plus a six month
suspended sentence.
Coughenour was placed on
probation for a period of one year.
9urlng that probationary period, he
Is restricted · from operating ,.
.passenger c.a trylng vehicles:
~ughenour's operator's .Ucenae was
suspendedforaperiodof30days.
·;

'

HURRY WH~~~i~EY
.

ANDRKDV~

$5()00

REBATE FROM AMANA
ON .MODEL !tR10

REG. PRICE
SAVE
SALE PRICE
AMII.NA REBATE

I

1499.95
50.00
U-49.95

50.00

. ONLY $599'5

TO END MARiUAGE
Flllns for dialolutiot'l Of n\arrlage .
were Bertha Deloris Simonds, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, and Samuel Harold '
SinloJids, Rt. 3, .P01!1froy; Gordoq .~,
Fabry, Pataakaka, and l.lnda· '
Fabq, Middleport. '

..••

..

• , ClTY COMMISSION TO MEET
• GALLIPOLIS - The ' Gallip&lt;ilis
•,pty ·. CommlSsion will lpeet i~
.SJIE'f:ial session Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
the Mlmiclpal Court Room, ·

.

'

ch~ges

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Monday tbrou~h Wednesday:
MDd with a c!Jance of showers or
rain each day. Highs ID the mid
40s to the mid 50s. Low In the mid
to upper 30s.
_
.
·:,:,:·:·:·:-:,:·:·:-:·:,:-:,:,:·:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:;-:,:,:·:,:-:-:-:,:-:,:·:·:,:,::;::::;:
FUNDS DlS'fRffiUTED
QALUPOLIS - State Auditor
Thomas ·E. Ferguson reported
Saturday the fourth quarter 1979
liquor pennit fees distribution of
$467.27 to Gallla County. Gallipolis
recelved$347.87.
The revenue is derived from liquor
licenses and delayed ·license
renewals.

ARTICLES FILED
GALLIPOLIS - Secretary of
. State Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr.
reported Saturday that al'tic)es of incorporation have been filed with his
officebytwolocalcompanles.
. '
Articles for profit were filed for
Pedto, ·Inc., Gallipolis, by Paul "J .
all!l Itv~lyn C. Knotts. ·
.,
Artlrhi3 fur profit were filed for
Vinton Cement r1oor CO!llpany,
Inc.; by Sherman A. Johnson and
Darryl D. Drwrunond.

SITE OF NEW GALLIPOLIS recreation area, or near this point on
the Gallipolis Golf Club linkB 011 the Gallipolis Developmental Center
grounds, is shown In this Time&amp;&amp;ntinel newsphoto by Larry Ewing. The
recreation area, to cost a total of $3.5 million, will include a swimming

Assistance available
for senior citizens

pool, baseball and softball diamonds, and tennis courts, and the target
time to put it Into ~ is two years from now, according to Christian P.
Morris, city manager. Financing will come from federal and state funds
with matching money from a votei!Ievy, Morris told Kiwanis Wednesday.

Leadingham finn now associated
with nation's larges~ compariy
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Realtor. Willis Leadingham
nounced Saturday that on Jan. 2, the
Leadingham Real Estate firm
became associated with Nationwide
Relocation Service, a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Coldwell, Banker and
Co., the nation's largest real estate
company.
The affiliation has far reaching
potential and implication, according ·
to Leadingham.
"Coldwell Banker not only owns
Nationwide, which has long been one
of the premiere residential
relocation services - they also
recently acquired a 50 percent Interest in Executrans, a national corporate home buyinjl coinpany owned
by Allstal!!, the manunolh Sears
subsidiary," Leadingham pointed
out.
Nationwide has nearly 600 members In local real estate companies,
such as Leading~Biil Real Estate.
With over 1,40() Offices, It services
virtually every markl!t of' C!lllse&lt;iuence In the CO!IIll!'Y.
Executrans ·· litotka Qn . contract
with corJ)Oratlons, 1\IU'Ch&amp;!lea ti'an,.
ijferrlng employee hOmes ·and aids
the, employees In finding homes In -

an-

and aptitude for volunteer tax work
GALUPOLIS - Assistance in fillas well as experience In filing their
ing out income tax fonns will be free
to senior citizens under a program · own personal returns. They must be
able to communicate effectively and
which will get Its start in a four-day
accurately with the persons they are
training program at the end of this
serving
and cqnduct all counseling
month at the Gallla CoWlty Senior
in the strictest confidence.
Citizens Cent_er.
Additional information is
Announcement was made Saturavailable by telephoning 446-7000,
day by Forrest_~ . Borden, president
or, toll-free ; at Cincinnati,
oftheCenter,andJeanNiday,direc!-800-582-1700, and at Cleveland,
tor, that the Internal Revenue Service will provide Instructors for
l-801Hl62-9050'
volunteers who will train as Tax
· Aide counselors Jan. 28, 29, 30, and
31.
PRAISES EFFORT
After training, volWl~rs will
WASHJNGTON
' (AP) The
serve four hours a week at their conNalional Governors' Association· Is
venience in February, March, and
praising the Carter admlnistratiOI\
until April 15, at sites throughout
Gallla County. Tax Aide is a free na· . for Its swift action In implementing
the lpw \ncon'le energy aaslstance
tlonwide income tax counsellng·prc&gt;j)rogram approved by Congress.
gram.
The statement· made on behalf ol
While clients will be older people,
the
association· ·by ~~ ,Island
· it Is possible, according to the anGov
..
Joseph Ga!'rahy (ollowed the
nounceme!lt, that high school and
administration's
annoWlcement lasl
college age youth adull,s of. working
week
that
checks
totaling $400
ages, or adults of reth'ement situsmillion
have
been
mailed
jQ nearly 4
tlons may t!lke the training.
million
Supplemel)tal
Security
In·
Qualific~tlloru; are that volul)teer
come
recipients.
COWISe!ors m u_•t have an interest in

t

'I

their new location.
"Nationwide offers a fantastic ~
portunity for those in the real estate.
business,'' Leadingham said.
"We can stay Independent
business people, respo!18ible tq our
pwn constituency and for our own
fortunes - 'yet provide a professional
service on a national scope that is
not equalled."
•
Leadingham Real Estate is'
located In the recently completed
new office at 512 Second Ave., and
has both a residential and com. inercial division and a special
Relocation Department.
Leadingham Real Estate has five
sales people and a total staff rL
seven.
PLEADSGUR.TY
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- A 16-yearold girl bas pleaded guilty to seconildegree manslaughter in ConneCtion
wit~! the death ot a newborn boy
found in a Mlimeapolls ylird on Nov.

\1.

. ' ':

. •

•

'

The girl, whose name wu not
·released, entered tile'plea Friclaf hi

a.pretl-ilil heartng lierore

Hennepfll

Dlatrll!t Juvenile
.
. Court Jlidge Allen
,,
Olisky
e .
. . ~

i

�•
A-2-The Swxlay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1900

.

Collier tells .of dangerous times for Americans in Iran
of the Ayatollah Khomeini . Islam is
the font of present day Iranian
society and · although the communisL'l on one extreme and the
secular capitalists led by the Shah
on the other are trying to replace
Islam with their own ideologies, still
Islam is the master of the people.
And now the Iranians had declared
that Khomeini was the master of
Islam -the Imam.
The history of Islam is a bloody affair . The prophet Mohammed was
not only the founder of the religion
but a military genius as well. He victoriously led his followers into battle
after battle and asserted his claim
as the man through whom Allah
made his will known . Consequently
no great leap of the imagination was
required to understand why the
followers of such a man would
likewise be willing to take up arms
in any cause they they deemed holy .
The fighting in Iran intensified.
Tehrao battle
On February 15 we listened ex·
citedly to the radio as we heard of a
decisive battle being waged in
Teh111n. By day's end the Air Force
had mutinied and joined the side of
Khomeinl and had distributed large
numbers of weapons to the general
populace. A running battie was
being fought in the streeL'l between
the army and the followers &lt;i
Khomeini until finally the startling
order was given that the army
troops should return to barracks.
The army generals had decided
they were no longer going to be involved in government affairs.
The building which mused the
parliament was sacked, the residen·
ce of the prime minister was
overrun and, what most excited us,
the main prison in Tehran was attacked, overthrown and. all
prisoners released.
Our guards seemed uncommonly nervous the following day
an~ by noon a white banner with
cryptic writing was run up the flag
pole to show that the guards were
now on Khomeini 's side. We waited
in impatient expectation throughout
the day in doubtful anticipation of
some momentous event.
Abaodooed hope
By sunset we had abandoned hope.
As the red sunset blazed, however,
we began to hear a low chanting
arising from without the prison
walls followed by a muffled response
from within. We listened tensely for

(Editor's note- This is the second
&lt;i three · articles by Steve Collier,
who spent more than a year in Iran
before· and during the Islamic
revolution, which culminated a year
ago in the departure of the Shah.
Last February Khomeini arrived
fr001 Paris, and Nov. 4 the rebi,ts
stonned the U. S. embassy in
Tehran, capturing 63 Americans,
some qf whom were guests.
CoWer, born at old Holzer
Hospital Nov. al, 1962, in downtown
Gallipolis, was in prison at Tabriz in
northern Iran for eight months. His
step-grandfather, Claren ce R.
Stephens, has given him a tract of
land on his farm on Symmes Creek
Road in Greenfield Twp., and Steve
·has lllilt a log cabin on that property
:~make his home -at Rt. 2, Patriot
;~.Steve is a graduate of CBdmus
;High School.
• Leroy Collier, Portsmouth, a former Methodist minister who now is a
realtor and insurance agent, is
·Steve's father.
: · (The first article, in last Sunday's
:Times -Sentinel, discribed his prison
)llld told &lt;i the efforts of the U. S.
:tonsul, Michael Metrir*o, to get him
and other Americans out of prison.
: The last of the three articles will
;appear in next Sunday's Times~tinel) .

I

.
BYSfEVECOU.IER
; . GALLIPOUS - Metrinko visited
us Christmas bringing cakes , mail
and good cheer, but all the news was
gim. His · cmsulate ·had reen at(acked twice and he was the only
American left in Tabriz of the one
hundred who had originally been
!here. Ahhough he never said it, I
)iad the feeling that if it weren't for
ljS being there he would have left
also. It was a dangerous time for
~ericans. Mter Christmas
Metrinko was unable to visit us
again although he did reach us by
phone several times.
:: Metrinko had brought us a radio
tlith which we were to follow the
Course of the revolution by listening
to Voice of America. In January a
momentous event occurred - the
Shah left Iran. Shortly thereafter in
February the Ayatollah Khomeini
J'elurned from his fifteen year exile
tO greet the-jubilant crowds in Iran.
.
Kbomeinl: 1118liter
: We knew by that time a great deal
GOLD IUTS RECORD
.• HONG KONG (AP) -Gold prices
shot to a record $674.54 in active
trading Saturday on the Hong Kong
~change, but slipped back to close
111 $655.29, a gain of $54.33 from
Prtday's close.
; Gold prices peaked shortly after
the market opened but fell back un!_ler pressure from profit-takers,
i!ealers said. Hong Kong's previous
fecord high trading price, $673.16,
~posted last Monday.
:: Traders said HoJI8 Kong gold
prices were following the soaring
tpiral posted on the New York and
f:uropean markets 011 Friday. Hong
Kong is the only major gold market
ilpened on Saturdays, when it does
1\usiness for a half day.

INNOCENT PLEA
UlS ANGElES' (AP) - Angelo
Buono, charged in the Hillside
Strangler slayings, has pleaded in·
nocent to five new charges bringing
~~ total accusations afl8lnst him to
The new counts, ranging from
unlawful sexual intercourse to conspiracy to commit kidriapping and
murder, involve two young women
who were not killed and are ex·
pectedtotestifyagainstBuono.
The 4fryear-old Buono sat beside
his lawyers in.a high-security glassenclosed courtroom Friday and did
not rise to enter his plea.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

•

A FIW BARE FACTS
ABOUT
FIRM MAnRESSES.
to"'" •
[Or, how

bundlt 011 Medl·Rett Mattren Stts by Bcmco.)

~1 1 H' li~r·

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"~ )~ ':",U"·::·
f "·~ "-' ~• ~~.~f•.:~
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. ..........,........,, . . . ..,....., .. 1

$4995
II 110 111 llo 1111

\lo dr

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1

11

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\ l,ntn.,. S.·h l1111·r· ,, llonu r , '"'''~'~~' ' '"'''"' ,,.lokrl

•ILIHI Im•" ,nul

~

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I'

'&gt;ollnr·ll~r ·

:.

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.

S89

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

DAN

Seven new patients
receive assistance

. THEY WANT

YOU TO DOUBLE

FOR DEAN
MARTIN
ON H IS

ROY WISEMAN
WISEMAN RETIRED- Roy Wiseman, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was honored
: Friday night with a retirement party sponsored by the Gallipolis Federal:; Mogul Plant.

federal Mogul honors retiree

-

'--....l~&amp;..o&amp;;;:: Dan Meadows

.: POMEROY - Roy Wiseman of
=lwute 4, Pomeroy, became the first
:P.rson to retire under the hourly em·
:j)loyee's retirement plan from ·the
:Gallipolis plant of the Federal:f11ogul Corporation.
: Roy, a Tool and Ole Maker. was
'81110ng the first employees hired by
)ederal-Mogul when the manufacl'uring facWty was established in
DaWpolls in 1969. Roy actually star·
;r,d work before the plant was in
:production, in that he made tools to
~used in the production start up.
- December 31 was the last w11rk
:Uy for Roy at Federal-Mogul: He
iaid he would like for his last day to

"The most important thing we'll
do today is fill your prescription!''
SENIOR CITIZENS
Remember every Thursday is Double
Discount Day. 10% +another 10% off on
every prescription.

Fr)

Open 9 Tll7 Dally
Closed Sunday

.!t'Sc

The Medical Shoppc
Pharmacy

'§i'f
~

s

~ Crow

A

v

v

CHAIRS
Y2 PRICE

2FOR

HOOVER
CLEANERS

,TABLES
3 '299
'69..
BAKER FURNITURE
llatue•To$159ea.

Selor

LAMPS

FLEXSTEE\.
SOFA SLEEPERS

Several Styles All Wood

$79

BEDROOM

SUITES

Call 992-3307

ANNUAL RATE

~----------------------------~---------- ·

PLUS I

HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE

applicable to

0

hou•• trailer not

locaTed in thi' •tate on the lirst dtly -of Janu ary , th~ lOlii i1 determined by multiply~t•g thru
dollors by the numb•r of full months re maining to the follo wi ng thirty -lint of Ouember

AND PAYABLE-

Suoday Tlmes-&amp;!olluel

~,~~·--=· -

·, " "'

PubUslted evuy SWiday by The Oho VaUey
PubU.hlng eo.. Multimedia, Inc.

·~·-" ..,.,.,.

Oueni'u t!I:H.tOpcr~Ct
.~ ' · Klnt Slw
• 119.90 pc1Mt

DELINQUENT
TAXES-

GAU.IPOLIB

Q Third Ave., GolllpoU., Ohio .a1.
Publlsbod every woeltday evt111ng except

S.Iurday. Sf&lt;ood Claas
Galllpollt, Ohio 11631.

..

Poelage

l'ald ot

TIII:DAU.YSI!NTJNEL
Ill Court SI., Pmuroy, 0 . '17111. Ptobllshocl
over, week day ......., ..,._ S.lunlly.
Entered u Je«&lt;nd clul maWna: matter 1t
Pomeroy , Oblo Pool Olllc:e.
By con1er doll: and 8unday tOo
Mot&lt;r....,tei!.IOpermoolh.
, per - ·
, ,
MAIL

.·
SUBSCRIPTION liATES ·
T1te GaUIP."U Polly 1)ibua0 In Ohio 1114
Wat. Virprill one yoar 133.00; Ill 117.10; lhrto monlhl 111.110. EloeWhore ...lit
,per yeor; Ill ID4IIIhl D);OO; lllreo mqnthi

RESPONSIBILITY
OF HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER-

OPERATOR OF

A HOUSE- TRAiLER
COURT-

If the payment of the taa i1 not mode 01 pr~•ided aba•e a penalty of five dollars
or ten percent of the taaea due, whichever it greater, 1h~ll be i.:W,pa!ed and
collected in addition to the taX due and owing.

..

The Count~ Treasurer, in .addition to .any othe~ remcd~ pro~ided b~ l.a~ for
the collectton of tues .and penalties , shall enforce collection' of such t ,u es
.tnd penalties by civil 1ction .in the n.ame of such treasurer .ag.ainlt the owner
for the reconry of the unpaid tues .

•

ALSO I

138.00; .UmonlliaDJ.OO: I!ireefll010..!11.110.
The Asaoclao.d Preao ~ ad,.lvely enUUod
tD the use for publlcltion otaU newa dilpltcbet
credlled to tile
and alao tile
_newspubllsltedh&lt;rtln.

"'""""II'"

local

,,

Call

GAlliA
ROLUR MILLS

&lt;IOC .MCOOID ..., . _ o - WEMBE~ - - CIEIIIOCIITV

446.0146

WHAfS BETfER THAN SUPERBOWL
TICKETS AND $40000 OFF?

$10,000 MINIMUM

ANNUAJ,. RATE

•

No penon who It i h~ o,.,ner of •' ho1.n1: t r•iler and who is req\lired to regiu•r •
~ous• t~o~iler sho~ll hil to displ1y on tl'le hoPlt of s uck tr1il"r the certiflc 1 te o r " Deu i''
111\led b.,. ,.... County Tr tu~rer ,

·. hery,opentor of a hou~e tr~i_l~r court or p.ark _.or. evety Qwne.r of property usld:
fo' .''-'ch p~rpose when there 11 no opu.ator sh•ll kcip • ·recistet of .all ~oust
tratlers whtch. m.a~e "" of the court. p•rk, or prOperty.
·

.·
HOWARD E. FRANK
'
COUNTY AUDITOR

MEIG_S Cl'ltlt•HY, OHIO

'I

LIST: '3695.00

3.

:r
•
:

"'

. (

}'.

.

.

•
I'

.•
I

fled tune r and a rev olutiona ry low-profile lo ok : The Model 7i&gt;ll
The Model 7(,0 projccb a hrighl, clear SIX -FOOT ' pic lurc from
~ n i.lltra~tJvc ~·o .nso k: ah ~ ul

the sit.c of ~~ t:o llcc ta hk \less th; 11 1 IK

onchcs lug h). 1 h" new Sl)i ing allows Lhc 760 t&lt;&gt; hlcnd easily inlo cx i, .
t1ng r oo m ~ and decor . 1\nd its cornrutcrizcd tunc:r and digil;.11 rc molc control allow you to change Lhc siU iions and volume from anywhere ill yo ur room .

. The model 760 will _leL you see things on TV you 've never seen he:
lore. Sports and movoes co me Iu lofe . .

'

1

SAVE $40000
FREE DELIVERY AND
INSTALlATION•

CALL OR S:TOP IN RIGHT . AWAY AND WHEN YOUR VIDEOBEAM IS INSTALLED YOU'LL AOTOMATICALL Y GET ALL
THE 50 YRD LINE TICKETS YOU NEED FOR THE SUPER·
BOWL.

SUPER

BOWL~

. '
·

Four locatkt.nt Jo tt.lve you better
• ~eft!ber: FDIC
'·
'

,

$329500

ANNUAL YIELD

. ~hio Valley &amp;.nk
"' ,

NOW YOURS
FOR ONLY. ·••

. Allll tllm th q have a nC\\ g1an t -snccn tclc\iision \\ith u l.:(llllput~.:r+

.,

L,k\Expect moll: hom

-..
•
•

Advent dw.nged television when Ihey inLrodu.:cd theor life -sit ·
VideoBcaon TV in 19 7.1 . Th ey put an end Io liitle people 11 1 Iiili~
bo'c'.

Paving an Interest rate related lo tlie average 2'1:1 year yield of
lreuury ••curitles. Minimum deposit UOO.OO. Interest must remain
on deposit • full year to earn annual yield. Substantial interest penalty
UJIC!l' early withdrawal.
.

•\

..
••

'-----~---~~~-~~
-- ~~~~~=

. •'

A.NEW Ph . YEAR CERTIFICATE
.
JAN.UARY RATE

10.15=
10.84
.

All gwneu '? f h o~se trlilflrs h1~t ing 1 situs in the Sto~ta of Ohio uti l ubt ttt to the
ll:~t U pro\'u.lc d .&gt; hov e MUST register t\lct, ' tr •i l ~r wdl1 , t l1e County Auditor on or
prio r to the d1te the lu it d\le o111d p .1y1ble .

~I.OO;_rnolnrrouto 13.10.-bty.

. The uolly Sen~l)ol, """ yeor I*S.qGi 1111.thtl $l7.50; th~e months , 120.00. Elaewhere

conviction of
person and/ or persons
in c:onnection w~h
the theft of a
fertilizer spreader.

ANNUAL YlE'-0*

Each Depositor Insured Up· To
$40,00G By The FDIC, An
Agency of the Fed. Gov't.

PLUS I

When a house trailer has a situs in this slate, as provided in this section, 011 the
1st day of January the lull amount of the pro rate tu ls.due and payable on or
before the 31st day of January, 1980.

DAU.YTRIIIVNE

~

The :nora! of our story is simp.le ...
don'I judge a cloamond by size alone. Qualit y nol
quantity de cid es th e va lu e of a diamond.
We can show you how cu llin g, clarily and color
delermi ne the worlh of a diam ond . You 'll
dazzle wi th pride kn owing yo u've chosen Ihe best
like Ihe experts do .. . and that 's no fabl e.

County Trusurer '\ Office , Court Hou.H

W11en 1 h~HIHI trlliler ~~~qvir•" , silul In +h i, 1h le ol$ pro v ide d in thil ltottion, o~fte :
1he fh 11 d.ay nf , J o~nun y a nd on or prior to +hf' list day of De tember the full
1mnunt nf ~~~ ptO rAt1 1~11 ii _due 111d poi)' oJ ble im rnedi111t~ly upon tt,e u~ir•ticH"I of
" JU ~:by P•""d tomrn"!,., o ng w1th thp do~te the s i tu~ i, a&lt;quired .

PENALTY -

arrest and

T_he actual return to investors on Treasury Bills is higher than the
d1sco unt rate offered . Federal regulations require a substantial in ·
terest penalty for premature withdrawal of certificate funds.

comm enco ng with t he datllt of ocqvisition or l!'nlrcmce into thi1 Udt p

PAYABLE AT -

THE BIGGER .•. THE BETIERJ A DIAMOND FABLE

11.~~.~~ ~:~.~~D.,

((lU nty Auditor b y multipl yi ng thP D!\f'UOb le value _g! the f\ouu trailer by ~the to• rote of
i1

For information
leading to the

6-Month Certificate

ALSO!

the ta x o t~g di1tri.ct in wh o, h the hovu t rail ~r hcu its ,;'"''· The minimv"' lox ;1 Sl&amp; 00 per

yea r How ever , •f the mi, i m~o~m leu of _thirty · 1i• dollars

$250 REWARD

Bank Safety and Security
For Your Savings

I

Rev i&lt;ed Code Se crions 4503.06 o nd 4503.061 • • am e nrl e d by
Sub. H.B. No. 330 &gt;nd _E ffecrive August 26 , 1969

COMPUTED AND
ASSESSED BY-

WlLLPAYPARENTS
STREETSBORO, Ohio (AP)
The Streetsboro school board will
pay parents 11kents a mile if they
drive their children to school for the
duration of a strike by public school
teachers.
The board, acting on the recommendation of Superintendent James
Sikler, voted Thursday night to
make the payments, retroactive to
Jan. 2, the day the strike began.
A total of 126. teachers, members
of the Streetsboro Education
Association, abandoned their
classrooms over non-economic
issues, such as binding arbitration
for grievances, dismissal policies
for teachers and reduction in
teacller numbers as student numbers decreases.

5.25=5.46

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Evenings by Appt.

objectives which stress the
economic and industrial advantages
of this area as well as its esthetic
beauty and chann as a place to live
and work.
Business people in the area interested in affiliating with OOVIC
are invited to attend. For reserva'
lions, call (1106) 324-9S39.

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

NOW I

ALL WOOD

For

cerned with flood control and · ARMCO as treasurer, and Richard
navigation of the Ohio River .
Roush of E. H. Hutton as secretary.
The meeting, scheduled for 6:30
COVIC is an organization composp.m. at the Hoiiday Inn - South
ed of business people from Ohio,
Point, also will include the installaWest Virginia and Kentucky comtion d. officc:-s for COVIC for 1980.
munities along the Ohio River
T. Bartley Hagerman of Ashland
Valley from Portsmouth to
Oil will be installed as president,
Parkersburg, W. Va. The members
Stan Demski of USS Chemicals as
are committed to promoting those
vice president, John T. Dryden of

€}hio Valley Bank

$100 OFF

Full Size Complete with Tool•.

Open 9 til 5 M-Sat.

Walker, president, was given.
In charge of the program was Lee
jacobs who gave a background on
magical posters and shows. Twenty·
five persons attended.
The meeting was held at the Heath
United Methoclist Church with the
ladies of the church serving the dinner.

POMEROY -Seven new patients
were assisted by the local unit in the
past two weeks, Teresa Collins, local
service chairman, reported when
the executive board of the Meigs
Unit, American Cancer Society, met
Thursday night at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mary O'Brien, crusade chainnan,
reported that some work on special
events will be done and that new
methodls will be used to help public
education through the door to door
crusade.
Erma Smith reported that the
I«!v. W. H. Perrin will make a post
which will be used each year to compare townships, number of workers,
!'fld money received during the
crusade.
It was announced that Ginger
Cullwns, Miss Hope of Meiga Coun·
ty, is available for scheduled
engagements and that she will head
the annual "send a mouse to
college" project.
Delores Frank, executive direc·tor, announced that a free cancer
clinic will be postponed to a later
time and that a stop smoking clinic
will be held in the spring. A -chairman will be needed for the clinic
Mrs. Frank reported.
'
The next meeting was set for 8
p.m. m Feb. 28 at Veterans
Memorial H011pltal.
Present for the session were
Teresa Collins, Delores Frank,
Harliss Frank, Erma Smith, Clara
Lochary, Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
Mary O'Brien, JoAnn Anderson and
Sharon Michael.·

BEAUTIFUL

NEW SELECTION

Some famous brands incluGin
Flexsteel.

joins Rotary club

MIDDLEPORT - Danny Crow
·was accepted as a new member of
:the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
l:lub at Its regular weekly meeting
:Friday night.
: Mrs. Crow, also in attendance,
::was presented a corsage.
: A report on the board of directors
~. held at the home of Jack

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE'S JANUARY SALE

'100 OFF

he just the same as all others and
that he would just quietly leave at
the end of his shift. Instead, he was
visited throughout the day by his coworkers who congratulated him on
the eve of his retirement.
Roy and his wife Wilda were
honored by the company on Friday
night. In recognition of his years of
service and performance, a dinner
in his behalf was held at the Meigs
Inn in Pomeroy. Federal-Mogul
Plant Manager Fugate presented
Roy with an eJ18raved watch and a
plaque to commemorate his service
at Federal-Mogul.

~

E

E

ODD LOT

ASHLAND, Ky . - William W.
Worrell, executive director of the
Ohio Valley Improvement Association, Inc., will be the speaker at the
Jan. 17 meeting of the Ohio Valley
Industrial Council (COVIC).
Worrell will outline ways the two
organizations may complement
each other to promote the economic
growth of the Ohio River Valley.
Now located in Cincinnati, Worrell
is a former resident of Ashland, Ky.
He took early retirement last
September from his sales position
with General Refractories and accepted the poet with OVIA in October.
· The organization is primarily con-

them men were enemies of tOO:
revolution and would soon be:
executed. At am~her corner IC
woman was wailing pitifully - the'
wife of one of the men to ~
executEd.
•
On another side we recognized on&amp;:
rJ the ·madmen from our sectim iri:
the jail. He sliD carried his bed:
chained to his ankle.
(To be concludedoextSliDIIay)

' •(

ll II IIIII ''' flrnr•n•\lo-r lt llr •• l 1 l.r"ll

95 r.oou..

religious leader of the city.
In !he courtyard we were surroun·
ded by a throng . To one side we saw
about ten men handcuffed to each
other in aline.
Slaled for exeeuUoo
Among them we recognized one of
our former guards, ' who just
shrugged his shoulders upon seeing
11!1 . We listened with ashen faces as
another young fellow told us that

WE'RE HOLDING

$

Europe's highest railroad climbs
to 11,333 feet + nearly to the top of
the Jungfrau, a peak in Switzerland .

IJJUOpenet

"''I'I' ,,

thenaway
boardedthrough
his car and
whisked
us
thehebrilliant,
raucous streets of Tabriz. As we
p'roceeded, three more Iranian
prisoners were crammed into his
compact car. We were unprepared
for the myriad lights and sounds
which greeted us. We were unspeakably happy to be free, yet
deliriously terrified lest we should
he recaptured and sent back - or
worse.
"We want to go to the American
cmsulate." We half laughed half
cried.
'
"But the American consulate is no
more," he responded . "The people
burnt it to the grqund last night. "
Coofereote beld
His words startled us. Had
Metrinko been killed? Had he
escaped? What could we do now?
The Turkish border seemed to be our
best alternative although it was a
htmdred kilometers a way across
jaggoo snow-decked mountains. We
anxiously conferred amongst our·
selves what our next move should
be.
"I take you to someone who can
help you," our friendly driver chir- ·
ped.
•
Mter deposlting the three Iranian
prisoners at their hiJiles in varirus
parts of the city, our driver took us
to the headquarters of the chief

\ j

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walking beside me and he began
asking me questions . He was a
young fellow perloaps my'llge and I
began to explain to him that we had
just escapea from that inferno.
He took command of the situation
and told us to follow him quickly. He
led us to a car parked nearby and
told us to discard our prison clothes.
Since we had-our own shirts we could
discard the prisoo shirts but had to
·keep the prison pants on. We four

TAX DUE

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\ 1,111 II ' " ~ ·1• dt'111' ·r· • l11· rtl .r\lnu ""

lm• ll rwn h

feet
on the were
risingjust
smoke.
sure
the guards
goingI towas
herd
us
into some place elsewhere, but then
I saw that a large door in an exterior
wall had been opened through which
the prisoners were not hastening. I
ran through.
Outside I was surprised to find no
soldiers in sight. The hillside over
which we were running was peoploo
by townsfolk. OIU' group split into
two parts of four each and each part
quickly lost itself in the throng.
The horns of cars rasped oyr
ears. Looking back at the IX'ison I
saw what could have been a perfect
shot for a Frankenstein movie when
the villagers attacked the castle and
burned it. The sky was alive with
danctng flames as black and white
smoke hid the stars. I shuddered in
apprehel\'live delight.
Questioner helps
I then noticed that someone was

:s"l.'.•".".·.·.: ..
· ,,

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seve111l .minutes as the echo~ike
dlant:? steadily grew louder.
Suddenly, the shattering sound of
gunfire exploded. Screams from
various parts of the prisoo greeted
the gtms and then a loud, steady
thudding of f{letal against metal,
boos being pounded against doors
broke through the clamor.
The guards in the towers opened
up with automatic weapons and
began 111cing frenetically through
tiE prison streets. Tear gas flooded
into our section and we began bur·
ning papers to get rid of it. Poking
our nosesouL'lide we were startled to
see large clouds of black smoke
billowing from several parts of the
far sections of th~ prison. Darkness
fell as machine gun fire roaroo.
Discarded lllllforms
Amidst the confusion I hadn'
noticed th,at several guards had slip·
ped into our section. Finally
becoming award of their presence, I
was startled to see that they had
discarded their guard uniforms and
were now wearing grey prison
uniforms.
They told us that we were all going
to be set free but we were highly in·
credulous. They had been telling us
that for eight months. Nevertheless,
we began to pack · what few
belongings we wanted to save into
pillowcases. By then it was dark, except for the fire that was leaping
. twenty meters into the air directly
outside our section. The smashing m
windows in the doors of oilr section
intensified our misgivings about the
whole event. Prisoners had already
broken out of their sections and were
now trying to break into ours. The
guards who were in our section and
had locked the metal doors seemed
more frightened than we.
Pain aod aoger
The question racing through our
minds was why would the prisoners
want in our section unless they wanted to kill the foreigners. As sud·
denly as it had begun the shooting
stopped, but the sound of metal
pounding metal, breaking glass , and
shouL'l of pain and anger were still
thundering. On the wall of our sec.
lion we now discerned silhouetted
against the flames the figures of
many prisoners, some wielding
handmade knives , others grisly
clubs.
It looked as if the 'prisoners were
making good their escape. No shots
were being fired . I grabbed my
pillow case and cautiously edged my
way up to the double doors to see
what was happening.
I was surprised to find that the
prisoners had broken our doors ~en
and then simply left.! looked outside
into the prison street and saw running amidst t~ flames a steady
stream of prisoners. A guard whom I
knew well screamoo at me.
"What are you waiting for? Go!"
I screamed back at the others,
"Let's go!" and having ascertained
that they were behind me jumped in·
to the stream of grey-clad prisoners
and raced through the narrow
streets &lt;i the prison.
Red lights eerie
Fire trucks had been brought in
and their red lights cast an eerie ef.

Worrell January · COVIC speaker

•

•

'I

10

.,.

•t.~inlmum depaslt S5.00. Interest mu•t
retain 011 deposit a· IIi II year to ear11 an· "'
nual yield . ·

·.TOM'S SlE~EO CENTER' ·' :
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~43 ltd. A~~ ,
Jfnan~ryg Available "'

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•.• ...,..............

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"" ~ . · ·: GaiHpolis, Ohio .

rmancing Available

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�•
A-2-The Swxlay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1900

.

Collier tells .of dangerous times for Americans in Iran
of the Ayatollah Khomeini . Islam is
the font of present day Iranian
society and · although the communisL'l on one extreme and the
secular capitalists led by the Shah
on the other are trying to replace
Islam with their own ideologies, still
Islam is the master of the people.
And now the Iranians had declared
that Khomeini was the master of
Islam -the Imam.
The history of Islam is a bloody affair . The prophet Mohammed was
not only the founder of the religion
but a military genius as well. He victoriously led his followers into battle
after battle and asserted his claim
as the man through whom Allah
made his will known . Consequently
no great leap of the imagination was
required to understand why the
followers of such a man would
likewise be willing to take up arms
in any cause they they deemed holy .
The fighting in Iran intensified.
Tehrao battle
On February 15 we listened ex·
citedly to the radio as we heard of a
decisive battle being waged in
Teh111n. By day's end the Air Force
had mutinied and joined the side of
Khomeinl and had distributed large
numbers of weapons to the general
populace. A running battie was
being fought in the streeL'l between
the army and the followers &lt;i
Khomeini until finally the startling
order was given that the army
troops should return to barracks.
The army generals had decided
they were no longer going to be involved in government affairs.
The building which mused the
parliament was sacked, the residen·
ce of the prime minister was
overrun and, what most excited us,
the main prison in Tehran was attacked, overthrown and. all
prisoners released.
Our guards seemed uncommonly nervous the following day
an~ by noon a white banner with
cryptic writing was run up the flag
pole to show that the guards were
now on Khomeini 's side. We waited
in impatient expectation throughout
the day in doubtful anticipation of
some momentous event.
Abaodooed hope
By sunset we had abandoned hope.
As the red sunset blazed, however,
we began to hear a low chanting
arising from without the prison
walls followed by a muffled response
from within. We listened tensely for

(Editor's note- This is the second
&lt;i three · articles by Steve Collier,
who spent more than a year in Iran
before· and during the Islamic
revolution, which culminated a year
ago in the departure of the Shah.
Last February Khomeini arrived
fr001 Paris, and Nov. 4 the rebi,ts
stonned the U. S. embassy in
Tehran, capturing 63 Americans,
some qf whom were guests.
CoWer, born at old Holzer
Hospital Nov. al, 1962, in downtown
Gallipolis, was in prison at Tabriz in
northern Iran for eight months. His
step-grandfather, Claren ce R.
Stephens, has given him a tract of
land on his farm on Symmes Creek
Road in Greenfield Twp., and Steve
·has lllilt a log cabin on that property
:~make his home -at Rt. 2, Patriot
;~.Steve is a graduate of CBdmus
;High School.
• Leroy Collier, Portsmouth, a former Methodist minister who now is a
realtor and insurance agent, is
·Steve's father.
: · (The first article, in last Sunday's
:Times -Sentinel, discribed his prison
)llld told &lt;i the efforts of the U. S.
:tonsul, Michael Metrir*o, to get him
and other Americans out of prison.
: The last of the three articles will
;appear in next Sunday's Times~tinel) .

I

.
BYSfEVECOU.IER
; . GALLIPOUS - Metrinko visited
us Christmas bringing cakes , mail
and good cheer, but all the news was
gim. His · cmsulate ·had reen at(acked twice and he was the only
American left in Tabriz of the one
hundred who had originally been
!here. Ahhough he never said it, I
)iad the feeling that if it weren't for
ljS being there he would have left
also. It was a dangerous time for
~ericans. Mter Christmas
Metrinko was unable to visit us
again although he did reach us by
phone several times.
:: Metrinko had brought us a radio
tlith which we were to follow the
Course of the revolution by listening
to Voice of America. In January a
momentous event occurred - the
Shah left Iran. Shortly thereafter in
February the Ayatollah Khomeini
J'elurned from his fifteen year exile
tO greet the-jubilant crowds in Iran.
.
Kbomeinl: 1118liter
: We knew by that time a great deal
GOLD IUTS RECORD
.• HONG KONG (AP) -Gold prices
shot to a record $674.54 in active
trading Saturday on the Hong Kong
~change, but slipped back to close
111 $655.29, a gain of $54.33 from
Prtday's close.
; Gold prices peaked shortly after
the market opened but fell back un!_ler pressure from profit-takers,
i!ealers said. Hong Kong's previous
fecord high trading price, $673.16,
~posted last Monday.
:: Traders said HoJI8 Kong gold
prices were following the soaring
tpiral posted on the New York and
f:uropean markets 011 Friday. Hong
Kong is the only major gold market
ilpened on Saturdays, when it does
1\usiness for a half day.

INNOCENT PLEA
UlS ANGElES' (AP) - Angelo
Buono, charged in the Hillside
Strangler slayings, has pleaded in·
nocent to five new charges bringing
~~ total accusations afl8lnst him to
The new counts, ranging from
unlawful sexual intercourse to conspiracy to commit kidriapping and
murder, involve two young women
who were not killed and are ex·
pectedtotestifyagainstBuono.
The 4fryear-old Buono sat beside
his lawyers in.a high-security glassenclosed courtroom Friday and did
not rise to enter his plea.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

•

A FIW BARE FACTS
ABOUT
FIRM MAnRESSES.
to"'" •
[Or, how

bundlt 011 Medl·Rett Mattren Stts by Bcmco.)

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$4995
II 110 111 llo 1111

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DAN

Seven new patients
receive assistance

. THEY WANT

YOU TO DOUBLE

FOR DEAN
MARTIN
ON H IS

ROY WISEMAN
WISEMAN RETIRED- Roy Wiseman, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, was honored
: Friday night with a retirement party sponsored by the Gallipolis Federal:; Mogul Plant.

federal Mogul honors retiree

-

'--....l~&amp;..o&amp;;;:: Dan Meadows

.: POMEROY - Roy Wiseman of
=lwute 4, Pomeroy, became the first
:P.rson to retire under the hourly em·
:j)loyee's retirement plan from ·the
:Gallipolis plant of the Federal:f11ogul Corporation.
: Roy, a Tool and Ole Maker. was
'81110ng the first employees hired by
)ederal-Mogul when the manufacl'uring facWty was established in
DaWpolls in 1969. Roy actually star·
;r,d work before the plant was in
:production, in that he made tools to
~used in the production start up.
- December 31 was the last w11rk
:Uy for Roy at Federal-Mogul: He
iaid he would like for his last day to

"The most important thing we'll
do today is fill your prescription!''
SENIOR CITIZENS
Remember every Thursday is Double
Discount Day. 10% +another 10% off on
every prescription.

Fr)

Open 9 Tll7 Dally
Closed Sunday

.!t'Sc

The Medical Shoppc
Pharmacy

'§i'f
~

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~ Crow

A

v

v

CHAIRS
Y2 PRICE

2FOR

HOOVER
CLEANERS

,TABLES
3 '299
'69..
BAKER FURNITURE
llatue•To$159ea.

Selor

LAMPS

FLEXSTEE\.
SOFA SLEEPERS

Several Styles All Wood

$79

BEDROOM

SUITES

Call 992-3307

ANNUAL RATE

~----------------------------~---------- ·

PLUS I

HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER'S
TAX PAYMENT CHARGE

applicable to

0

hou•• trailer not

locaTed in thi' •tate on the lirst dtly -of Janu ary , th~ lOlii i1 determined by multiply~t•g thru
dollors by the numb•r of full months re maining to the follo wi ng thirty -lint of Ouember

AND PAYABLE-

Suoday Tlmes-&amp;!olluel

~,~~·--=· -

·, " "'

PubUslted evuy SWiday by The Oho VaUey
PubU.hlng eo.. Multimedia, Inc.

·~·-" ..,.,.,.

Oueni'u t!I:H.tOpcr~Ct
.~ ' · Klnt Slw
• 119.90 pc1Mt

DELINQUENT
TAXES-

GAU.IPOLIB

Q Third Ave., GolllpoU., Ohio .a1.
Publlsbod every woeltday evt111ng except

S.Iurday. Sf&lt;ood Claas
Galllpollt, Ohio 11631.

..

Poelage

l'ald ot

TIII:DAU.YSI!NTJNEL
Ill Court SI., Pmuroy, 0 . '17111. Ptobllshocl
over, week day ......., ..,._ S.lunlly.
Entered u Je«&lt;nd clul maWna: matter 1t
Pomeroy , Oblo Pool Olllc:e.
By con1er doll: and 8unday tOo
Mot&lt;r....,tei!.IOpermoolh.
, per - ·
, ,
MAIL

.·
SUBSCRIPTION liATES ·
T1te GaUIP."U Polly 1)ibua0 In Ohio 1114
Wat. Virprill one yoar 133.00; Ill 117.10; lhrto monlhl 111.110. EloeWhore ...lit
,per yeor; Ill ID4IIIhl D);OO; lllreo mqnthi

RESPONSIBILITY
OF HOUSE TRAILER
OWNER-

OPERATOR OF

A HOUSE- TRAiLER
COURT-

If the payment of the taa i1 not mode 01 pr~•ided aba•e a penalty of five dollars
or ten percent of the taaea due, whichever it greater, 1h~ll be i.:W,pa!ed and
collected in addition to the taX due and owing.

..

The Count~ Treasurer, in .addition to .any othe~ remcd~ pro~ided b~ l.a~ for
the collectton of tues .and penalties , shall enforce collection' of such t ,u es
.tnd penalties by civil 1ction .in the n.ame of such treasurer .ag.ainlt the owner
for the reconry of the unpaid tues .

•

ALSO I

138.00; .UmonlliaDJ.OO: I!ireefll010..!11.110.
The Asaoclao.d Preao ~ ad,.lvely enUUod
tD the use for publlcltion otaU newa dilpltcbet
credlled to tile
and alao tile
_newspubllsltedh&lt;rtln.

"'""""II'"

local

,,

Call

GAlliA
ROLUR MILLS

&lt;IOC .MCOOID ..., . _ o - WEMBE~ - - CIEIIIOCIITV

446.0146

WHAfS BETfER THAN SUPERBOWL
TICKETS AND $40000 OFF?

$10,000 MINIMUM

ANNUAJ,. RATE

•

No penon who It i h~ o,.,ner of •' ho1.n1: t r•iler and who is req\lired to regiu•r •
~ous• t~o~iler sho~ll hil to displ1y on tl'le hoPlt of s uck tr1il"r the certiflc 1 te o r " Deu i''
111\led b.,. ,.... County Tr tu~rer ,

·. hery,opentor of a hou~e tr~i_l~r court or p.ark _.or. evety Qwne.r of property usld:
fo' .''-'ch p~rpose when there 11 no opu.ator sh•ll kcip • ·recistet of .all ~oust
tratlers whtch. m.a~e "" of the court. p•rk, or prOperty.
·

.·
HOWARD E. FRANK
'
COUNTY AUDITOR

MEIG_S Cl'ltlt•HY, OHIO

'I

LIST: '3695.00

3.

:r
•
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I

fled tune r and a rev olutiona ry low-profile lo ok : The Model 7i&gt;ll
The Model 7(,0 projccb a hrighl, clear SIX -FOOT ' pic lurc from
~ n i.lltra~tJvc ~·o .nso k: ah ~ ul

the sit.c of ~~ t:o llcc ta hk \less th; 11 1 IK

onchcs lug h). 1 h" new Sl)i ing allows Lhc 760 t&lt;&gt; hlcnd easily inlo cx i, .
t1ng r oo m ~ and decor . 1\nd its cornrutcrizcd tunc:r and digil;.11 rc molc control allow you to change Lhc siU iions and volume from anywhere ill yo ur room .

. The model 760 will _leL you see things on TV you 've never seen he:
lore. Sports and movoes co me Iu lofe . .

'

1

SAVE $40000
FREE DELIVERY AND
INSTALlATION•

CALL OR S:TOP IN RIGHT . AWAY AND WHEN YOUR VIDEOBEAM IS INSTALLED YOU'LL AOTOMATICALL Y GET ALL
THE 50 YRD LINE TICKETS YOU NEED FOR THE SUPER·
BOWL.

SUPER

BOWL~

. '
·

Four locatkt.nt Jo tt.lve you better
• ~eft!ber: FDIC
'·
'

,

$329500

ANNUAL YIELD

. ~hio Valley &amp;.nk
"' ,

NOW YOURS
FOR ONLY. ·••

. Allll tllm th q have a nC\\ g1an t -snccn tclc\iision \\ith u l.:(llllput~.:r+

.,

L,k\Expect moll: hom

-..
•
•

Advent dw.nged television when Ihey inLrodu.:cd theor life -sit ·
VideoBcaon TV in 19 7.1 . Th ey put an end Io liitle people 11 1 Iiili~
bo'c'.

Paving an Interest rate related lo tlie average 2'1:1 year yield of
lreuury ••curitles. Minimum deposit UOO.OO. Interest must remain
on deposit • full year to earn annual yield. Substantial interest penalty
UJIC!l' early withdrawal.
.

•\

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••

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-- ~~~~~=

. •'

A.NEW Ph . YEAR CERTIFICATE
.
JAN.UARY RATE

10.15=
10.84
.

All gwneu '? f h o~se trlilflrs h1~t ing 1 situs in the Sto~ta of Ohio uti l ubt ttt to the
ll:~t U pro\'u.lc d .&gt; hov e MUST register t\lct, ' tr •i l ~r wdl1 , t l1e County Auditor on or
prio r to the d1te the lu it d\le o111d p .1y1ble .

~I.OO;_rnolnrrouto 13.10.-bty.

. The uolly Sen~l)ol, """ yeor I*S.qGi 1111.thtl $l7.50; th~e months , 120.00. Elaewhere

conviction of
person and/ or persons
in c:onnection w~h
the theft of a
fertilizer spreader.

ANNUAL YlE'-0*

Each Depositor Insured Up· To
$40,00G By The FDIC, An
Agency of the Fed. Gov't.

PLUS I

When a house trailer has a situs in this slate, as provided in this section, 011 the
1st day of January the lull amount of the pro rate tu ls.due and payable on or
before the 31st day of January, 1980.

DAU.YTRIIIVNE

~

The :nora! of our story is simp.le ...
don'I judge a cloamond by size alone. Qualit y nol
quantity de cid es th e va lu e of a diamond.
We can show you how cu llin g, clarily and color
delermi ne the worlh of a diam ond . You 'll
dazzle wi th pride kn owing yo u've chosen Ihe best
like Ihe experts do .. . and that 's no fabl e.

County Trusurer '\ Office , Court Hou.H

W11en 1 h~HIHI trlliler ~~~qvir•" , silul In +h i, 1h le ol$ pro v ide d in thil ltottion, o~fte :
1he fh 11 d.ay nf , J o~nun y a nd on or prior to +hf' list day of De tember the full
1mnunt nf ~~~ ptO rAt1 1~11 ii _due 111d poi)' oJ ble im rnedi111t~ly upon tt,e u~ir•ticH"I of
" JU ~:by P•""d tomrn"!,., o ng w1th thp do~te the s i tu~ i, a&lt;quired .

PENALTY -

arrest and

T_he actual return to investors on Treasury Bills is higher than the
d1sco unt rate offered . Federal regulations require a substantial in ·
terest penalty for premature withdrawal of certificate funds.

comm enco ng with t he datllt of ocqvisition or l!'nlrcmce into thi1 Udt p

PAYABLE AT -

THE BIGGER .•. THE BETIERJ A DIAMOND FABLE

11.~~.~~ ~:~.~~D.,

((lU nty Auditor b y multipl yi ng thP D!\f'UOb le value _g! the f\ouu trailer by ~the to• rote of
i1

For information
leading to the

6-Month Certificate

ALSO!

the ta x o t~g di1tri.ct in wh o, h the hovu t rail ~r hcu its ,;'"''· The minimv"' lox ;1 Sl&amp; 00 per

yea r How ever , •f the mi, i m~o~m leu of _thirty · 1i• dollars

$250 REWARD

Bank Safety and Security
For Your Savings

I

Rev i&lt;ed Code Se crions 4503.06 o nd 4503.061 • • am e nrl e d by
Sub. H.B. No. 330 &gt;nd _E ffecrive August 26 , 1969

COMPUTED AND
ASSESSED BY-

WlLLPAYPARENTS
STREETSBORO, Ohio (AP)
The Streetsboro school board will
pay parents 11kents a mile if they
drive their children to school for the
duration of a strike by public school
teachers.
The board, acting on the recommendation of Superintendent James
Sikler, voted Thursday night to
make the payments, retroactive to
Jan. 2, the day the strike began.
A total of 126. teachers, members
of the Streetsboro Education
Association, abandoned their
classrooms over non-economic
issues, such as binding arbitration
for grievances, dismissal policies
for teachers and reduction in
teacller numbers as student numbers decreases.

5.25=5.46

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Evenings by Appt.

objectives which stress the
economic and industrial advantages
of this area as well as its esthetic
beauty and chann as a place to live
and work.
Business people in the area interested in affiliating with OOVIC
are invited to attend. For reserva'
lions, call (1106) 324-9S39.

More Interest On Your
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

NOW I

ALL WOOD

For

cerned with flood control and · ARMCO as treasurer, and Richard
navigation of the Ohio River .
Roush of E. H. Hutton as secretary.
The meeting, scheduled for 6:30
COVIC is an organization composp.m. at the Hoiiday Inn - South
ed of business people from Ohio,
Point, also will include the installaWest Virginia and Kentucky comtion d. officc:-s for COVIC for 1980.
munities along the Ohio River
T. Bartley Hagerman of Ashland
Valley from Portsmouth to
Oil will be installed as president,
Parkersburg, W. Va. The members
Stan Demski of USS Chemicals as
are committed to promoting those
vice president, John T. Dryden of

€}hio Valley Bank

$100 OFF

Full Size Complete with Tool•.

Open 9 til 5 M-Sat.

Walker, president, was given.
In charge of the program was Lee
jacobs who gave a background on
magical posters and shows. Twenty·
five persons attended.
The meeting was held at the Heath
United Methoclist Church with the
ladies of the church serving the dinner.

POMEROY -Seven new patients
were assisted by the local unit in the
past two weeks, Teresa Collins, local
service chairman, reported when
the executive board of the Meigs
Unit, American Cancer Society, met
Thursday night at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mary O'Brien, crusade chainnan,
reported that some work on special
events will be done and that new
methodls will be used to help public
education through the door to door
crusade.
Erma Smith reported that the
I«!v. W. H. Perrin will make a post
which will be used each year to compare townships, number of workers,
!'fld money received during the
crusade.
It was announced that Ginger
Cullwns, Miss Hope of Meiga Coun·
ty, is available for scheduled
engagements and that she will head
the annual "send a mouse to
college" project.
Delores Frank, executive direc·tor, announced that a free cancer
clinic will be postponed to a later
time and that a stop smoking clinic
will be held in the spring. A -chairman will be needed for the clinic
Mrs. Frank reported.
'
The next meeting was set for 8
p.m. m Feb. 28 at Veterans
Memorial H011pltal.
Present for the session were
Teresa Collins, Delores Frank,
Harliss Frank, Erma Smith, Clara
Lochary, Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
Mary O'Brien, JoAnn Anderson and
Sharon Michael.·

BEAUTIFUL

NEW SELECTION

Some famous brands incluGin
Flexsteel.

joins Rotary club

MIDDLEPORT - Danny Crow
·was accepted as a new member of
:the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
l:lub at Its regular weekly meeting
:Friday night.
: Mrs. Crow, also in attendance,
::was presented a corsage.
: A report on the board of directors
~. held at the home of Jack

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE'S JANUARY SALE

'100 OFF

he just the same as all others and
that he would just quietly leave at
the end of his shift. Instead, he was
visited throughout the day by his coworkers who congratulated him on
the eve of his retirement.
Roy and his wife Wilda were
honored by the company on Friday
night. In recognition of his years of
service and performance, a dinner
in his behalf was held at the Meigs
Inn in Pomeroy. Federal-Mogul
Plant Manager Fugate presented
Roy with an eJ18raved watch and a
plaque to commemorate his service
at Federal-Mogul.

~

E

E

ODD LOT

ASHLAND, Ky . - William W.
Worrell, executive director of the
Ohio Valley Improvement Association, Inc., will be the speaker at the
Jan. 17 meeting of the Ohio Valley
Industrial Council (COVIC).
Worrell will outline ways the two
organizations may complement
each other to promote the economic
growth of the Ohio River Valley.
Now located in Cincinnati, Worrell
is a former resident of Ashland, Ky.
He took early retirement last
September from his sales position
with General Refractories and accepted the poet with OVIA in October.
· The organization is primarily con-

them men were enemies of tOO:
revolution and would soon be:
executed. At am~her corner IC
woman was wailing pitifully - the'
wife of one of the men to ~
executEd.
•
On another side we recognized on&amp;:
rJ the ·madmen from our sectim iri:
the jail. He sliD carried his bed:
chained to his ankle.
(To be concludedoextSliDIIay)

' •(

ll II IIIII ''' flrnr•n•\lo-r lt llr •• l 1 l.r"ll

95 r.oou..

religious leader of the city.
In !he courtyard we were surroun·
ded by a throng . To one side we saw
about ten men handcuffed to each
other in aline.
Slaled for exeeuUoo
Among them we recognized one of
our former guards, ' who just
shrugged his shoulders upon seeing
11!1 . We listened with ashen faces as
another young fellow told us that

WE'RE HOLDING

$

Europe's highest railroad climbs
to 11,333 feet + nearly to the top of
the Jungfrau, a peak in Switzerland .

IJJUOpenet

"''I'I' ,,

thenaway
boardedthrough
his car and
whisked
us
thehebrilliant,
raucous streets of Tabriz. As we
p'roceeded, three more Iranian
prisoners were crammed into his
compact car. We were unprepared
for the myriad lights and sounds
which greeted us. We were unspeakably happy to be free, yet
deliriously terrified lest we should
he recaptured and sent back - or
worse.
"We want to go to the American
cmsulate." We half laughed half
cried.
'
"But the American consulate is no
more," he responded . "The people
burnt it to the grqund last night. "
Coofereote beld
His words startled us. Had
Metrinko been killed? Had he
escaped? What could we do now?
The Turkish border seemed to be our
best alternative although it was a
htmdred kilometers a way across
jaggoo snow-decked mountains. We
anxiously conferred amongst our·
selves what our next move should
be.
"I take you to someone who can
help you," our friendly driver chir- ·
ped.
•
Mter deposlting the three Iranian
prisoners at their hiJiles in varirus
parts of the city, our driver took us
to the headquarters of the chief

\ j

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walking beside me and he began
asking me questions . He was a
young fellow perloaps my'llge and I
began to explain to him that we had
just escapea from that inferno.
He took command of the situation
and told us to follow him quickly. He
led us to a car parked nearby and
told us to discard our prison clothes.
Since we had-our own shirts we could
discard the prisoo shirts but had to
·keep the prison pants on. We four

TAX DUE

~"!.~SOu::::::~..

\ 1,111 II ' " ~ ·1• dt'111' ·r· • l11· rtl .r\lnu ""

lm• ll rwn h

feet
on the were
risingjust
smoke.
sure
the guards
goingI towas
herd
us
into some place elsewhere, but then
I saw that a large door in an exterior
wall had been opened through which
the prisoners were not hastening. I
ran through.
Outside I was surprised to find no
soldiers in sight. The hillside over
which we were running was peoploo
by townsfolk. OIU' group split into
two parts of four each and each part
quickly lost itself in the throng.
The horns of cars rasped oyr
ears. Looking back at the IX'ison I
saw what could have been a perfect
shot for a Frankenstein movie when
the villagers attacked the castle and
burned it. The sky was alive with
danctng flames as black and white
smoke hid the stars. I shuddered in
apprehel\'live delight.
Questioner helps
I then noticed that someone was

:s"l.'.•".".·.·.: ..
· ,,

••

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seve111l .minutes as the echo~ike
dlant:? steadily grew louder.
Suddenly, the shattering sound of
gunfire exploded. Screams from
various parts of the prisoo greeted
the gtms and then a loud, steady
thudding of f{letal against metal,
boos being pounded against doors
broke through the clamor.
The guards in the towers opened
up with automatic weapons and
began 111cing frenetically through
tiE prison streets. Tear gas flooded
into our section and we began bur·
ning papers to get rid of it. Poking
our nosesouL'lide we were startled to
see large clouds of black smoke
billowing from several parts of the
far sections of th~ prison. Darkness
fell as machine gun fire roaroo.
Discarded lllllforms
Amidst the confusion I hadn'
noticed th,at several guards had slip·
ped into our section. Finally
becoming award of their presence, I
was startled to see that they had
discarded their guard uniforms and
were now wearing grey prison
uniforms.
They told us that we were all going
to be set free but we were highly in·
credulous. They had been telling us
that for eight months. Nevertheless,
we began to pack · what few
belongings we wanted to save into
pillowcases. By then it was dark, except for the fire that was leaping
. twenty meters into the air directly
outside our section. The smashing m
windows in the doors of oilr section
intensified our misgivings about the
whole event. Prisoners had already
broken out of their sections and were
now trying to break into ours. The
guards who were in our section and
had locked the metal doors seemed
more frightened than we.
Pain aod aoger
The question racing through our
minds was why would the prisoners
want in our section unless they wanted to kill the foreigners. As sud·
denly as it had begun the shooting
stopped, but the sound of metal
pounding metal, breaking glass , and
shouL'l of pain and anger were still
thundering. On the wall of our sec.
lion we now discerned silhouetted
against the flames the figures of
many prisoners, some wielding
handmade knives , others grisly
clubs.
It looked as if the 'prisoners were
making good their escape. No shots
were being fired . I grabbed my
pillow case and cautiously edged my
way up to the double doors to see
what was happening.
I was surprised to find that the
prisoners had broken our doors ~en
and then simply left.! looked outside
into the prison street and saw running amidst t~ flames a steady
stream of prisoners. A guard whom I
knew well screamoo at me.
"What are you waiting for? Go!"
I screamed back at the others,
"Let's go!" and having ascertained
that they were behind me jumped in·
to the stream of grey-clad prisoners
and raced through the narrow
streets &lt;i the prison.
Red lights eerie
Fire trucks had been brought in
and their red lights cast an eerie ef.

Worrell January · COVIC speaker

•

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10

.,.

•t.~inlmum depaslt S5.00. Interest mu•t
retain 011 deposit a· IIi II year to ear11 an· "'
nual yield . ·

·.TOM'S SlE~EO CENTER' ·' :
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~43 ltd. A~~ ,
Jfnan~ryg Available "'

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.

•.• ...,..............

.J· •.

"" ~ . · ·: GaiHpolis, Ohio .

rmancing Available

..

~

�\-4-The Swulay TJmes..Sentlnel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

One strike over'
another continuing .
-

-.

stltutes were hired to Instruct the 550

About 3,000 students &amp;nl enrolled In :

students who showed up fOI' class.

thedlatrlct.

~

By 1be Ala~lated Preaa
Striking teachers in the Cleveland

HO!Itottle, Waverly, W. Va., and one
Helghb-Universlty flelghts school
step- daughter, Mrs. Thelma
district &lt;WerwheJmlngly ratified a
Queen, Newark.
new three-year contract Friday and
One sister, Mrs. Ollie Travis,
will return to classrooms Monday,
Blandville, W. Va., and one brother,
said Glenn Altschuld, president of
Jack, Kansas City, Mo., also surthe Cleveland Heights Teacbel'l!
vive.
Union ..
He ill also survived by 12 grandMeanwhile, teachers in the Port
children and five great-grandClinton city school district walked
children; 11 steP1JI'andchlldren and
off their jobs Friday and a teachers
four step-greatgrandchlldren.
strike In Streetsboro continued.
He was preceded In death In death
About 500 educators in Cleveland
by his first wife, Marie Ford Sutton,
Heights struck Thiii'Sday even
In 1964, along with a sister, brother, ... though a tentative agreement had
and step-son.
been reached hoUI'l! before the strike
Funeral services will be Monday 2
deadline.
p.m. at the White Funeral Home,
Schools remained open Thursday
Coolville, with the Roy Rose In
an\1 Friday, but only about a quarter
charge. Burial will follow In the
of the district's 9,300 pupils showed
Coolville Cemetery.
up for Instruction from supervisory
Friends my call at the funeral
pel'l!onnel.
home after noon on Sunday.
Altschuld said the contract

provides for a 9 percent raise in each
of the three years, with a provision
to re-open salary negotiations In the
final year. Another 2 percent In
fringe benefits was also provided,
andlhe school board agreed to withdraw requests for either extra duties
or reduced benefits for teachers, he
said.
A request that all teachers pay a
fee to the union, regardless of their
union membership, was not Included
in the pact.
Prior to the new contract,
teachel'l! bad a starting salary of
•10,300 a year.
Members of the Port Clinton
Federation of Teachers went 011
strike after contract negotiations
falled to resolve.a contract dispute
over wages.
School officials said 32 of the 176
teachel'l! in the system crossed
picket lines to go to work and 32 sub-

Penngfare

-·4&gt;-

by Carol W. Manley.
-•

"

AS THE PENNYFARE "TOTAL DOWN PRICE" LIST CONTINU~S
LOWER. THAT'S WHY PENNYFARE SHOPPERS KEEP·
PRICES ON THOSE ITEMS YOU BUY EACH WEEK WILL HELP YOU IN THE

DOWN PRICES

PenngTare

tO GROW, YOUR CHECK OUT TOTAL WILL GET LOWER AND
COMING BACK WEEK AnER WEEK. LOW TOTAL DOWN
~IGHT AGAINST INFLATION EVERY TIME YOU SHOP ALL YEAR ROUND.
ARMOUR ft STAR- Veri Best Pork

RETAILS EFFECTIVE SUN., JAN. 13 THRU SAT., JAN. 19, 1910
W t r - l~rlfhttollllllll ~tltlete~~olll..,.. kllhl1-'· ..._ .. 111111•*' ....' · ,._, r...-AI~ few lyptt.,~lt•l..,ron.

Zo/o MiiJr.
RIB
PORTION"

BOUNCE

Fabric Softener ••• 20·cl. Pkg.

98

C

88

WELCH'S

Grape Jelly or Jam •• 3·1b. Jar
35-oz. Jar

C

88C
Windshield Washer Fluid.,,., •.••• ,Gallon lot.

CluCirt Jar

Vlasic Kosher Dills
WEIGHT WATCHER · PINT BOT.
a

SaIad Dressmg

e e •l.OOOISLAND

Spaghetti a.,. or n11" , , , , • , • , , •• , , , , , , , • , l·lb.tox

C~o~E;h.Sy~~ For Children

.
20C
Purr Tuna Flavored Cat Food .•.• , .•.•..•••.

~

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.
I

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t I

I

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I

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$1 ·29'

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5 ac

I

JIJ.

40-ot.

f

t t • t • t t t t

t

t t t t t t I t I t •

CUT FREE INTO: CHOPS OR ROASTS

$~ 79

•CUT UP TURKEYS•

WHOLE TURKEY BREASTS, ••• , •• , . , • , • , 11. '1.6 9
HALFTURKEY BREASTS ............... 11. 'Ia 79
THIGHS.
79'
DRUMSTICKS •••••••••
1~.
I
WINGS., , , • , • , , , , , , • , , , , , , , 1, i, •• ,,, ~- 69c
t t •••••••• I I

•ARMOURtrSTAR•
1

I.. I.'.. II... ,4
,

•• I ' •••••••

t

·

HOT DOGS ...................., ....., 1,25 •·•·"•· 11,55
JUMB9 BEEF FRANKS ••••• , , .... , • ; , ·•·•·"•· 11.69
DINNER FRANKS •••• • •••••.•••••••• ,,.,.,.,. 1a,2t
GENUINE KULBASSY •••••••••••••••• 1. , ,,. 11,tf
SMOKED HAM SLICES •.••• • •• ,, .. ,,, ,, ..,,,.,,ll,tf

t . t • • • tilt.

....

~.~~~~.~~~~)LOGNA or PICKLE LOAF',',,, ~~~:· 5 1.49\
SALAMI or

FASHION LOAF

•• '

TASTEOSEA

SAV120'

l

Jb.

39

W H OLE 5 TO 5.5-LB . AVG
5111 LO IN L A M B CHO PS .... lb. •uq

$1 !i
Peter Pan Peanut Butter .'~·::·
:.
JACK •
Pl&lt;g.
$168
Instant Mashed Potatoes
~
.
$1
18
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. • ·,
Imperial Margarine
7~~

THOROFARE

$1

COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS •.. ,. ·.•••. 11.$1,19
C,.,.YE~ CUT PORK ROAST, •. , •••••••• 11.: 1.69
BACK RIBS ••• ''' I.' I I''.' •• '.' •• I I. l.. 1.59

Leg-0 Lamb

1-ltl. Quarteu PI!: g .

Old El Paso Taco Dinner

..

IMPO A11 0 FROM "IW ZEALAND

PILLSBURY HUNGRY

10.25-cn:. Pkg.

VARIETY PORK CHOPS

INCLUDES: 1111 &amp;LOIN CINIII CHOPS,
.
ISinOINCHOfll AND UUEIICNOPS • , , , , • • , , • , • It,

GENU I NE SPRING · FROZ EN

CAEAMYOACRUNCHY

a·ac

. ....... c.n

C

.,

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•CRIAMY ITALIAN

59c

Lavorls Mouthwash.

.... 88c
88

MUILLER'S

C~~. .t·;dina Tomato Sauce

,

28ilz. Bonus Bottle

AUSTIN'S

..

:

Thorofare Applesauce • •

.

PORK LOIN ROAST ••••••••• lb.
PORK LOIN ROAST - RIB HALF •••.•...• ~~ $1.2 3

$ oi

1

$119

FROZEN FISH

PERCH FILLETS •••••••••• ,l·lb. Pile. $1.79

WIENERS lfO. trlUUIIll • • • •
1.1 • . ,., . ' ' · ' '
BEEF .WIINERS no. ~nuo"u •••• , •• ,., •••• I·"·"•· '1.69
RING BOLOGNA · PLAIN or GARLIC •••.••• " 1 l,lt

HADDOCK DINNER ••••••••• , ...,....,. 89c

RING
. LIVER ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t~. '1,59

APIG.t

0

BATTER DIPT FISH STICKS ••• ·'"''·"'•· 99c
SCROD DINNER •••• , •••• l.ll·o•. Pkv. $.1, 09

•

••

•

•••••

•••

~

· •DINNER BELL•

BANqUET· Frozen ·

FRIED CHICKEN •••••••••••

~o~•....,.

$II!

Sl.ICED LUNCH MEATS"''· ••• ••••• •••• "''"' 11,6t
DELl 4 PACK • 4 VARIETIES •••••••••••• o " · "•· '2, 1t
SLICED BACON """'""''"&lt;• .... , ... , ... '"·"•· 11,St

THOROFARE

Yogurt

$Qiad 011 .

'..

5-FLAVCORS
8-oz. tn.

24-oz. Bottle

.,

Sug~r Substitute •• IDe·~~· Pkg.

BIRDSEYtfROZEN

Corn On The Cob •.•• 4·cl. Pka.

Lhl,. Room I Mall
or F•mll)l Room
"Hall

88C
88

.

York Peppermint Patties

78~

$1 08
. ~efty ~rash Bags • • • • • • . or
$1 II
RIOUUR

.........

$ .

~1.68

WITH MARSHMALLOWS

Carnation Hot Cocoa Mix ••••••••u.......

PENNYFARE EXCLUSIVE FILM DEVELOPING
OFFERS YOU BONUS PRINTS : TWO FULL SIZE

10-CI. Box

Hershey Syrup .•..••..••••.••• u .o•. aor. $1.18
:16·0%. •OTTLI
.
Libby's Deep Brown Beans •, • , • , , , • ,..,.. eon 28c Golden Griddle Pancake Svr1ua

•

• FAMILY KITCHEN ·FROZEN •

PRINTS FOR ONE LOW TOTAL DOWN PRICE!

12EXPOSURE ROLL

20 EXPOSURE ROLL

YOUOIT1

YOUOlf1

2.4 .

$

PULLiiZI

, ltRINTS only

3 58. 4 0
-

PULLIIU

$

P•INTS only

CharBroil
Entrees

5· 21
-

• SAUSIIIIY n!AIIN 0111011 GIAVY
•lllf PArnES IIIIOWN GIAVY
•·CIIIcilll PAnlU IN 110 SAua

,.•.

1~1.

Sunkistatl
•·
110M AN Mi.AL ·GOLDIN DEL Ill
"No 001 Knows MOll About

Your Clrpetl"
"
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Haffelt. Brothers
:.

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.

· Grtlpefruit Juice.

eu·stom Carpet
• -- • •

C

Frozen
Waffles ••• ~ 12·or.Pkg.
f .
IIIOIIOfAIIE •.

I

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58

· A::.

1
•

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J.oz

.

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ASSOmDOID!COIATED

Hel~z
Worchestershlre Sauce .•••• ••••••• • 38 · Viva T"wels·
·
,...,,_Jar
.
c ·
. "
~ • • • • • JumboRoll
Thorofare Coffee Creamer ............... • 98
' · · 7FLAVORS-4PACK •
: l(·r;;~"Gu~rd Furnf.ture Polish ....... 98' Hunts Snack:Pe~ck Puddings

, .

9

J•OZ. • 111-C'I. PKO.

·

'8

J"eri" · ID·Cf.PKO.

446-2107 .

, 'NifNIYLVANIAOUfCH '

"

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Vetenu ~Qolpltal
Admiaalons - Noel DaWIOII, New;
Haven; Myrta Scbaefer, Pomeroy;\
warren flole, Radnei Pa~
Newtqn;, ·Hartf~; Carl · Ralrden~

llaiUCII'd

C
,

·

.

ROME' BEAUTY APPLES ••• ,.

,.

3·l~ 98~
•·~ .

49 .
~UCCHINISQUASH • ••••••• ; ·• lb. .

fltiH TINOII

·

We Cordial I, Redeem U.S. Govt. Food Stamps
1.

'

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U,f,;ANCY .!IID

'
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~

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ENDIY.E, ·~ ,
ESCAROLE or
ROMAINE

.M,u,~roOIIIs • Pieces &amp; Stems •.•••••••• •·••· "'•

,,

Got a little time for a good cause?
The Pomeroy Health Care Center !
during the past week has admitted.'
19 residents, which ill a pretty fast•l
clip.
•·
;t
SOI'ne volunteer help ill needed and·I
the job illn 't really strenuollll. As a :
volunteer you would read to a paUent, maybe write a letter, just chat
or wbatever to be a friend. U you feel
that you are willing to be of service
do give Mrs. Helene Zidian, social
director, a ring at 99U6011. She'll belo
110 pleased to hear from you. Sci far, 1
there is only one volunteer.
The residents at the new center at:
this point include May Bird, GerJ!
trude Kloos, Myrtle Pollard, Dora
Roush, Lillian Bumgardner,'!
Mildred Wolfe, Louise Hawkins, :
Grace GJ&amp;ckner, Gladys Taylor; l
Henry Cunningham, Gladys•
CUckler, Eva Bibbee, Eva Bailey/
HaWe Frederick, Blanche Gibbs,
Maude Ross, Bertha Spencer, Lucy '
Spencer and Jane Vining.
\
SOI'ne of the people are former
Meigs residents who have been·!
transferred to the Pomeroy Iocationi
so tloey'U be hack home.
For instance Gladys Taylor has I
been at the Christian Anchorage
NUI'l!ing Home in Marietta. She's ·:
really looking forward to seeing and
hearing from her local friends. Her l
roomnwnber ill110.
•
By the way, visiting hoUI'l! at the 1
center are from 11:30 a.m. to 8:30
p.m. each day.

keep smiling.

;,.

38i
St•rCoHee Filter Discs ••••.••••••••••••••
48'

I,

LA ..GE.IISiil

JliJl'el orang

71:·~

· R:i$;~1-Swectt Chocolate Morsels .~~~· $1,49
• Dixie liefllllathroorl! Cups , ••••••••••••••

'I

Last Saturday was disaster time:·
with snow and ice, but most of us Uv- ,
ed through I~ 'lbe week's weather;
cleared the ground 10 now we're .
ready for the next batch. IIJJ you're I
sUdlng 011 the roada with abolutely '
no control over your car, do try to f

,-......., CALifOIINIA

I

Mrs. Smith enjoys good health,-·
reads a lot and does much needle
work. She gets around well 'and just •
vi.!lited her granddaughter, Suella•;
Walter in Bloomington, Ind. Suella,•
by the way, is working on her doc- I
!orate at Indiana University.
Ml'l!. Smith will be observing ber :
90th birthday and would love to hear;
fr(lfl Meigs residents. She makes
her hoine with a daughter, Eleanor
Smith Walter In the winter. The addreas Is 1655 Oregon Road, Toledo,
Ohio 43605.
·.:

'•

4-Ct. Pllg.

C

wlllbeMrs.EtheiSmith,tbeformeri
Ethel Pullins, who will be l
remembered by many as a school I
teacher for many years in Pomeroy •
andintheco~cy~bools.

Linda King Is heading the January 1
March of Dimes program which will
include a mothel'l!' mareh on Jan. 30. ·
Uncia says she's getting a Jot of· ·
great cooperation and help, Uke;
from Susie Pullins and Susie Karr
who are really In there pitching. :
Groups, of C0111'!!41, are needed for the
march and any oi'ganizaUons willing .
to help should contact Linda at:
985-3830.
.
i
The Rutland Friendly Gardners·
will be doing the Rutland area and;
tlil.s ia an addition , to an original;
group ol organizations helping.

'•.

SWIETNLOW

.

Also marking a birthday 011 Jan. 2l l

1

Pork.
Loins

11

LOIN PORTION

Ml'l!. Ada Root, fonner resident of
Middleport, will be observing her :
IOlsl birthday on Jan. 15. Cards may·:
be sent to her at the Pinecrest Nurs- 1
ing Home, GaWpoUs. Mrs. Root has 1
one daughter, Mrs. Faye Richards, 1
Columbus.
·
.

Congratulations to Patricia Suel
Fields, daughter of Mr. and Ml'l!. Joe
Fields of Middleport. Pat has work:
ed full time ln the nUI'l!ing field at the'!
Kaiser Alwninwn Co. at Rave~'
wood following graduation from thel
Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing. She now has completed her'
work for her bachelor's degree In ·
science and nruslng from Ohin •
Univei'sity.
''
BNestdes working full time, sh~
graduated cum laude. Now, that..
takes ambition.
l

FRESH WHOLE

.•

Know what happened? No - it •
wasn't demolished. It .was stolen.:
Seems Uke It would bave been easier
to create a new one than wmove one ·
already made. ApparenUy, it's a
case of wbatev~r turns you on.
'

---

THOROFARE

--.•

l

I

Name ·Lester fn-·e officers

Plastic Gallon

i

Of the Bend

VERI -BEST PORk

Sutton.

Mr. Sutton was a member of the
ilaJem Seventh Day Baptist Church,
Salem, W. Va.; a member Barrlcks
no. 458 mWWI; and a member of the
Archeologists Society II Ohio· and
WestVlrglnla.
.
He also publlshed articles on archeology in the Parkersburg and
Athens newspapers.
Mr. Sutton was a professor at
Salem College and school principal
In both Ohio and West Virginia.
He was a fonner chemist for Wiertoo Steel Corporation.
He was a veteran of .WWI, a
second lieutenant.
SurvivorS Include wife, Edna,
Coolville; three sons, Clayton E.,
Covina, Ca.; Ernest Jr. of San Jose,
Ca.; Thomas of Bend, Oregon.
One daughter, Ml'l!. Rosaline
Carlson, also of Bend, also survive,
along with two step-sons Roy
llostettle, Detroit; and Everett

..
..
.•
..

I

"A Cut Above the Rest"

Wet Ones•••••••• 40·ct.Box

R. Sutton, 116, Coolville,
. died Saturday morning at Arcadia
Nursing Horne, Coolville.
He was born in Blandville, W.Va.,
1o the late Willie and Blanch Bonnet

.
.•
•

· GAWPOUS - Some local men- and Evaluation Director at the CenKaufman.
.
tal health workel'l! are participaling ter, is coordinating the project here. • Two school counselors, Sally
10 C8.111pUS
inawOI'ldwldestudythisweek.
Interviewees are Center staff Ceal
Orebaugh and Deanna Cook, ~md
RIO GRANDE - The Reverend
A University of Nebraska resear- Thompson, MSW; David Krasner,
Steve Giles, Ph.D1, the Center's forHeory FJ~tcher, Ashland, Ky., will ·
cher, Mark Anagnostopulos, is ACSW ; David Hough, MS,W;
mer Research and Evaluation
be featured speaker at a diMer I
By Bob Hoeflich
visiting here to talk to psychologists, Thomas Cassidy, M.D. and r&gt;r
Director are also participating.
tribute of Martin Luther King's
social workel'l!, a psychiatrist and
birthday .
schoolcounselof's.
•
I
Thedlnner,ontheRtoGrandeCoiOtber sites being used for the sur\....dl
lege and Conununlty College camI don't really enjoy spreading bad
10
·
Ca
da
N
Zeal
d
news
up
However,
vey are
na ' ew
an •
CHESTER - Adrninilltrative and Norton, lieutenant and assistant
pus Jan. 1~; sponsored by the Rio
1
ti to tbe maxlmwn.
d
da
and lirban and rural areas all over
k 2
Grande Black Student Union, la open
men oned gra uation te thia
line officers for 1980 were elected Ueutanant, respectively, true John;
year to a Meigs High senior and she
the United States. The research is in·
to the campusandconunuru'tyalike.
when the Chester Volunteer Fire Bruce Allan Myel'!! and
wasn't aware that the date had been
tended to identify sources of job
Department met Wednesday night.
Wickham, lieutenant and asaistant
Price of the meal, which begins at
changed from May.
satlsfactlofon and dlssaMatillfactlon and
Administrative officel'l! named In- lieutenant, respectively, on truck 3;
5:30p.m. In the college's cafeteria,
Well, it has. The Meigs seniors will
sources stress. " ybe we have ' elude Kirk Chevalier, president·, Russell wells and Dorsal Miller,
ill$2. 95 .
ot
d te til the
n1ng f
0
something to learn from New
te
t
Rev.
Fletcher,
who
has
been
a~
n
gra
ua
un
eve
Dorsal Miller, vice president·, lieutenant and asailltant lieu nan •
,.
June 17 and baccalaureate and cornZealand or Canada and maybe they
·
tive
In
concern
and
effort
for
hwnan
Elmer Young, secretary ; John respectively, truck 4.
John
mencement will be combined at that
have something 00 fearn from us,"
Wickham, treasurer, and Virgil Wickham and Bob Woods were
righls, will compare the efforts of
time. The date - much later than
explained Anagnostopulos.
Taylor, public relations.
named al'l!on investigators.
the 60's to recent efforts and speak to
the original Ma gr d tl . the
GaWpolia was chosen as a site for
cks
directions for the
.
future.
Y a ua on 10
Une officel'l! named are Roy
Total mileage for the four tru
f;""' calendar
~·y well throw
the study In part bec•use
the ComAlso included.in the evening's pr~
"•• plans Into-turnwil.
.._ Sorry 'bout
~
Christy, chief; John Ridneour, first
for 1979 was 975 miles with a total of
~
some
munlty Mental Health Center offel'l!
assistant chief; Bruce D. Myel'!!, 19 fire calls being answered, Ahyone
gram will be two short fl.lm.!! dealing
thal Don't look at me, I didn't do tl
such comprehensive mental health
second assistant chief; Larry interested in joining the department
with the accompllslunents of Dr.
services. The Center's Acting
Cleland, captain; Larry Lee and iswelcometoattendmeetlngswhich
King.
·
Eight-year old LesUe Carr got a
Clinical Director, Harriet Kaufman,
Virgil Taylor, lieutenant !lnd are held the second !llld fourth WedFor more lnfonnation call the Rio
jolt the other morning. She bad
Ph.D., expedited \he research
assistant Ueutenant,respectively, on nesdayofeachmonthat8p.m.
Grande Community Counseling
labored to make a snowman when
project coming here.
truck I; Pearl Edward• anti '1'"'1&lt;1
Centerat245-95?5.
thesnowwasjustrlght.
__
Pa_ul~T-ay~hi_o_r,~Actln
__g~~---re-h_______________________________________________________________________________________,

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JAN. 19, 1980

FOR BABIES

Ernest

Mental health
workers participate
.

'fl't , ..,,., rht rl;~rto timl r qutftt ll!u en olll ttmtln •hit IIIII. Nun 1ol~ todeg!.,, , Wt " ' ~~ tt1p0111llolt
lor typogrophlttltr ron

anytime.

ERNEST R. SUTI'ON

;
.•
•.
...•
•

~: l,QOO TOT A~

SUPER MARKETS

MYRTA V. SCHAEFER
POMEROY - Mrs. Myrta V.
Schaefer, 75, Pomeroy, died Friday
evening at Veterans Memorial
&amp;spital.
Mrs. Scbaefer was a daughter of
the late Martin and Nora B. Eblin
Slace. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Elmer, three
brothers and a sister.
Surviving are three daughters,
· Olarlotte Hysell, Dorothy McCloud
alld Nora Nitz, all of Middleport, 26
1randchildren, 14 great.-andchlldren; three sisters, Grace
ben, Mll1field; Catherine Turafer, Sbawnee, and ·Mary Kestel'l!On,
Columbus, and a brother, John
Slace, Akron.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Clyde Hendei'SOII officiating. Burial will be In
lleech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home

The $25,000 Reward
for information that would cause
the arrest and conviction of the
person or persons who shot and
killed· Danita (Dee) Ann Manley
and (Dude) Elias C. Howard Jr.
is being officially withdrawn

r~--·--·-·

King tribute
to be held on
R'

.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ =

•
CAROLINE E. BROWN
Caroline· Eva Brown, 82, Letart,
!lied Friday In Pleasant Valley
hospital.
Born Dec. 23, 1897 at Ada, Ohio,
lhe was a daughter of the late James
W. and Clara Clingier StonehUI. She
was a member of Graham Baptist
Church.
Survivors include her husband,
Homer C. Brown; three daughtel'l!,
Mrs. Ralph (Helen) Wears,
Hurricane, Mrs. Roy (Mary)
Rickard, Denver, Colo., and Mrs.
Bill (Eileen) McDaniel, Stony Point,
N.Y.; three sisters, Mrs. Falrle S.
Stager, Buffington, Ohio, Ml'l!. Helen
Inman and Mrs. Minnie Gaskins,
both of Bradenton, Fla.; one
Stonehill,
brother,
George
Bradenton; and nine grandchildren
and 13 great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by a
liOn, George W. Brown.
· Services will be held Monday at I
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral Home
at Mason with the Rev. Hennan
Jones officiating. Burial will be in
Longdale Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home· Sunday 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m.

A4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. 13, 1980

'
lfii!OOTN · -

-

.
PARS"IPS , , •••• ;•' ·•••
, , •• . 1-1t • .._

6''
..

·~~~~p'O~~;ol~ .......... 5 ~~.a.; 89'

.
' Dlld\aries- Anctl Pruncy, Jolur

~u.

Darlene

J--.,

Hazt~

Roy: Lewia Harper, Mary Pauliile,

Derenberger; Chari~ Ae~er,

. :

'
SQVADRUN

RUTLAND - The Rutland ER
Squad wu Cliled Sltui'day at 8:53:
a.m. to Rl325 for Jom Caldwell who
was &amp;allen to Holzer Medical Center. :

�\-4-The Swulay TJmes..Sentlnel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

One strike over'
another continuing .
-

-.

stltutes were hired to Instruct the 550

About 3,000 students &amp;nl enrolled In :

students who showed up fOI' class.

thedlatrlct.

~

By 1be Ala~lated Preaa
Striking teachers in the Cleveland

HO!Itottle, Waverly, W. Va., and one
Helghb-Universlty flelghts school
step- daughter, Mrs. Thelma
district &lt;WerwheJmlngly ratified a
Queen, Newark.
new three-year contract Friday and
One sister, Mrs. Ollie Travis,
will return to classrooms Monday,
Blandville, W. Va., and one brother,
said Glenn Altschuld, president of
Jack, Kansas City, Mo., also surthe Cleveland Heights Teacbel'l!
vive.
Union ..
He ill also survived by 12 grandMeanwhile, teachers in the Port
children and five great-grandClinton city school district walked
children; 11 steP1JI'andchlldren and
off their jobs Friday and a teachers
four step-greatgrandchlldren.
strike In Streetsboro continued.
He was preceded In death In death
About 500 educators in Cleveland
by his first wife, Marie Ford Sutton,
Heights struck Thiii'Sday even
In 1964, along with a sister, brother, ... though a tentative agreement had
and step-son.
been reached hoUI'l! before the strike
Funeral services will be Monday 2
deadline.
p.m. at the White Funeral Home,
Schools remained open Thursday
Coolville, with the Roy Rose In
an\1 Friday, but only about a quarter
charge. Burial will follow In the
of the district's 9,300 pupils showed
Coolville Cemetery.
up for Instruction from supervisory
Friends my call at the funeral
pel'l!onnel.
home after noon on Sunday.
Altschuld said the contract

provides for a 9 percent raise in each
of the three years, with a provision
to re-open salary negotiations In the
final year. Another 2 percent In
fringe benefits was also provided,
andlhe school board agreed to withdraw requests for either extra duties
or reduced benefits for teachers, he
said.
A request that all teachers pay a
fee to the union, regardless of their
union membership, was not Included
in the pact.
Prior to the new contract,
teachel'l! bad a starting salary of
•10,300 a year.
Members of the Port Clinton
Federation of Teachers went 011
strike after contract negotiations
falled to resolve.a contract dispute
over wages.
School officials said 32 of the 176
teachel'l! in the system crossed
picket lines to go to work and 32 sub-

Penngfare

-·4&gt;-

by Carol W. Manley.
-•

"

AS THE PENNYFARE "TOTAL DOWN PRICE" LIST CONTINU~S
LOWER. THAT'S WHY PENNYFARE SHOPPERS KEEP·
PRICES ON THOSE ITEMS YOU BUY EACH WEEK WILL HELP YOU IN THE

DOWN PRICES

PenngTare

tO GROW, YOUR CHECK OUT TOTAL WILL GET LOWER AND
COMING BACK WEEK AnER WEEK. LOW TOTAL DOWN
~IGHT AGAINST INFLATION EVERY TIME YOU SHOP ALL YEAR ROUND.
ARMOUR ft STAR- Veri Best Pork

RETAILS EFFECTIVE SUN., JAN. 13 THRU SAT., JAN. 19, 1910
W t r - l~rlfhttollllllll ~tltlete~~olll..,.. kllhl1-'· ..._ .. 111111•*' ....' · ,._, r...-AI~ few lyptt.,~lt•l..,ron.

Zo/o MiiJr.
RIB
PORTION"

BOUNCE

Fabric Softener ••• 20·cl. Pkg.

98

C

88

WELCH'S

Grape Jelly or Jam •• 3·1b. Jar
35-oz. Jar

C

88C
Windshield Washer Fluid.,,., •.••• ,Gallon lot.

CluCirt Jar

Vlasic Kosher Dills
WEIGHT WATCHER · PINT BOT.
a

SaIad Dressmg

e e •l.OOOISLAND

Spaghetti a.,. or n11" , , , , • , • , , •• , , , , , , , • , l·lb.tox

C~o~E;h.Sy~~ For Children

.
20C
Purr Tuna Flavored Cat Food .•.• , .•.•..•••.

~

I

I

.
I

I I

t I

I

I

I

I

I

I I

I

I

I

t I

$1 ·29'

..

•

'

5 ac

I

JIJ.

40-ot.

f

t t • t • t t t t

t

t t t t t t I t I t •

CUT FREE INTO: CHOPS OR ROASTS

$~ 79

•CUT UP TURKEYS•

WHOLE TURKEY BREASTS, ••• , •• , . , • , • , 11. '1.6 9
HALFTURKEY BREASTS ............... 11. 'Ia 79
THIGHS.
79'
DRUMSTICKS •••••••••
1~.
I
WINGS., , , • , • , , , , , , • , , , , , , , 1, i, •• ,,, ~- 69c
t t •••••••• I I

•ARMOURtrSTAR•
1

I.. I.'.. II... ,4
,

•• I ' •••••••

t

·

HOT DOGS ...................., ....., 1,25 •·•·"•· 11,55
JUMB9 BEEF FRANKS ••••• , , .... , • ; , ·•·•·"•· 11.69
DINNER FRANKS •••• • •••••.•••••••• ,,.,.,.,. 1a,2t
GENUINE KULBASSY •••••••••••••••• 1. , ,,. 11,tf
SMOKED HAM SLICES •.••• • •• ,, .. ,,, ,, ..,,,.,,ll,tf

t . t • • • tilt.

....

~.~~~~.~~~~)LOGNA or PICKLE LOAF',',,, ~~~:· 5 1.49\
SALAMI or

FASHION LOAF

•• '

TASTEOSEA

SAV120'

l

Jb.

39

W H OLE 5 TO 5.5-LB . AVG
5111 LO IN L A M B CHO PS .... lb. •uq

$1 !i
Peter Pan Peanut Butter .'~·::·
:.
JACK •
Pl&lt;g.
$168
Instant Mashed Potatoes
~
.
$1
18
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. • ·,
Imperial Margarine
7~~

THOROFARE

$1

COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS •.. ,. ·.•••. 11.$1,19
C,.,.YE~ CUT PORK ROAST, •. , •••••••• 11.: 1.69
BACK RIBS ••• ''' I.' I I''.' •• '.' •• I I. l.. 1.59

Leg-0 Lamb

1-ltl. Quarteu PI!: g .

Old El Paso Taco Dinner

..

IMPO A11 0 FROM "IW ZEALAND

PILLSBURY HUNGRY

10.25-cn:. Pkg.

VARIETY PORK CHOPS

INCLUDES: 1111 &amp;LOIN CINIII CHOPS,
.
ISinOINCHOfll AND UUEIICNOPS • , , , , • • , , • , • It,

GENU I NE SPRING · FROZ EN

CAEAMYOACRUNCHY

a·ac

. ....... c.n

C

.,

C

•CRIAMY ITALIAN

59c

Lavorls Mouthwash.

.... 88c
88

MUILLER'S

C~~. .t·;dina Tomato Sauce

,

28ilz. Bonus Bottle

AUSTIN'S

..

:

Thorofare Applesauce • •

.

PORK LOIN ROAST ••••••••• lb.
PORK LOIN ROAST - RIB HALF •••.•...• ~~ $1.2 3

$ oi

1

$119

FROZEN FISH

PERCH FILLETS •••••••••• ,l·lb. Pile. $1.79

WIENERS lfO. trlUUIIll • • • •
1.1 • . ,., . ' ' · ' '
BEEF .WIINERS no. ~nuo"u •••• , •• ,., •••• I·"·"•· '1.69
RING BOLOGNA · PLAIN or GARLIC •••.••• " 1 l,lt

HADDOCK DINNER ••••••••• , ...,....,. 89c

RING
. LIVER ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t~. '1,59

APIG.t

0

BATTER DIPT FISH STICKS ••• ·'"''·"'•· 99c
SCROD DINNER •••• , •••• l.ll·o•. Pkv. $.1, 09

•

••

•

•••••

•••

~

· •DINNER BELL•

BANqUET· Frozen ·

FRIED CHICKEN •••••••••••

~o~•....,.

$II!

Sl.ICED LUNCH MEATS"''· ••• ••••• •••• "''"' 11,6t
DELl 4 PACK • 4 VARIETIES •••••••••••• o " · "•· '2, 1t
SLICED BACON """'""''"&lt;• .... , ... , ... '"·"•· 11,St

THOROFARE

Yogurt

$Qiad 011 .

'..

5-FLAVCORS
8-oz. tn.

24-oz. Bottle

.,

Sug~r Substitute •• IDe·~~· Pkg.

BIRDSEYtfROZEN

Corn On The Cob •.•• 4·cl. Pka.

Lhl,. Room I Mall
or F•mll)l Room
"Hall

88C
88

.

York Peppermint Patties

78~

$1 08
. ~efty ~rash Bags • • • • • • . or
$1 II
RIOUUR

.........

$ .

~1.68

WITH MARSHMALLOWS

Carnation Hot Cocoa Mix ••••••••u.......

PENNYFARE EXCLUSIVE FILM DEVELOPING
OFFERS YOU BONUS PRINTS : TWO FULL SIZE

10-CI. Box

Hershey Syrup .•..••..••••.••• u .o•. aor. $1.18
:16·0%. •OTTLI
.
Libby's Deep Brown Beans •, • , • , , , • ,..,.. eon 28c Golden Griddle Pancake Svr1ua

•

• FAMILY KITCHEN ·FROZEN •

PRINTS FOR ONE LOW TOTAL DOWN PRICE!

12EXPOSURE ROLL

20 EXPOSURE ROLL

YOUOIT1

YOUOlf1

2.4 .

$

PULLiiZI

, ltRINTS only

3 58. 4 0
-

PULLIIU

$

P•INTS only

CharBroil
Entrees

5· 21
-

• SAUSIIIIY n!AIIN 0111011 GIAVY
•lllf PArnES IIIIOWN GIAVY
•·CIIIcilll PAnlU IN 110 SAua

,.•.

1~1.

Sunkistatl
•·
110M AN Mi.AL ·GOLDIN DEL Ill
"No 001 Knows MOll About

Your Clrpetl"
"
I

I

.I

Haffelt. Brothers
:.

i.

.

· Grtlpefruit Juice.

eu·stom Carpet
• -- • •

C

Frozen
Waffles ••• ~ 12·or.Pkg.
f .
IIIOIIOfAIIE •.

I

.·
58

· A::.

1
•

.

'• •.

J.oz

.

.

c

ASSOmDOID!COIATED

Hel~z
Worchestershlre Sauce .•••• ••••••• • 38 · Viva T"wels·
·
,...,,_Jar
.
c ·
. "
~ • • • • • JumboRoll
Thorofare Coffee Creamer ............... • 98
' · · 7FLAVORS-4PACK •
: l(·r;;~"Gu~rd Furnf.ture Polish ....... 98' Hunts Snack:Pe~ck Puddings

, .

9

J•OZ. • 111-C'I. PKO.

·

'8

J"eri" · ID·Cf.PKO.

446-2107 .

, 'NifNIYLVANIAOUfCH '

"

·

'

.

8~

Vetenu ~Qolpltal
Admiaalons - Noel DaWIOII, New;
Haven; Myrta Scbaefer, Pomeroy;\
warren flole, Radnei Pa~
Newtqn;, ·Hartf~; Carl · Ralrden~

llaiUCII'd

C
,

·

.

ROME' BEAUTY APPLES ••• ,.

,.

3·l~ 98~
•·~ .

49 .
~UCCHINISQUASH • ••••••• ; ·• lb. .

fltiH TINOII

·

We Cordial I, Redeem U.S. Govt. Food Stamps
1.

'

I

U,f,;ANCY .!IID

'
, J\

.•

~

"

.

~

•

•'

ENDIY.E, ·~ ,
ESCAROLE or
ROMAINE

.M,u,~roOIIIs • Pieces &amp; Stems •.•••••••• •·••· "'•

,,

Got a little time for a good cause?
The Pomeroy Health Care Center !
during the past week has admitted.'
19 residents, which ill a pretty fast•l
clip.
•·
;t
SOI'ne volunteer help ill needed and·I
the job illn 't really strenuollll. As a :
volunteer you would read to a paUent, maybe write a letter, just chat
or wbatever to be a friend. U you feel
that you are willing to be of service
do give Mrs. Helene Zidian, social
director, a ring at 99U6011. She'll belo
110 pleased to hear from you. Sci far, 1
there is only one volunteer.
The residents at the new center at:
this point include May Bird, GerJ!
trude Kloos, Myrtle Pollard, Dora
Roush, Lillian Bumgardner,'!
Mildred Wolfe, Louise Hawkins, :
Grace GJ&amp;ckner, Gladys Taylor; l
Henry Cunningham, Gladys•
CUckler, Eva Bibbee, Eva Bailey/
HaWe Frederick, Blanche Gibbs,
Maude Ross, Bertha Spencer, Lucy '
Spencer and Jane Vining.
\
SOI'ne of the people are former
Meigs residents who have been·!
transferred to the Pomeroy Iocationi
so tloey'U be hack home.
For instance Gladys Taylor has I
been at the Christian Anchorage
NUI'l!ing Home in Marietta. She's ·:
really looking forward to seeing and
hearing from her local friends. Her l
roomnwnber ill110.
•
By the way, visiting hoUI'l! at the 1
center are from 11:30 a.m. to 8:30
p.m. each day.

keep smiling.

;,.

38i
St•rCoHee Filter Discs ••••.••••••••••••••
48'

I,

LA ..GE.IISiil

JliJl'el orang

71:·~

· R:i$;~1-Swectt Chocolate Morsels .~~~· $1,49
• Dixie liefllllathroorl! Cups , ••••••••••••••

'I

Last Saturday was disaster time:·
with snow and ice, but most of us Uv- ,
ed through I~ 'lbe week's weather;
cleared the ground 10 now we're .
ready for the next batch. IIJJ you're I
sUdlng 011 the roada with abolutely '
no control over your car, do try to f

,-......., CALifOIINIA

I

Mrs. Smith enjoys good health,-·
reads a lot and does much needle
work. She gets around well 'and just •
vi.!lited her granddaughter, Suella•;
Walter in Bloomington, Ind. Suella,•
by the way, is working on her doc- I
!orate at Indiana University.
Ml'l!. Smith will be observing ber :
90th birthday and would love to hear;
fr(lfl Meigs residents. She makes
her hoine with a daughter, Eleanor
Smith Walter In the winter. The addreas Is 1655 Oregon Road, Toledo,
Ohio 43605.
·.:

'•

4-Ct. Pllg.

C

wlllbeMrs.EtheiSmith,tbeformeri
Ethel Pullins, who will be l
remembered by many as a school I
teacher for many years in Pomeroy •
andintheco~cy~bools.

Linda King Is heading the January 1
March of Dimes program which will
include a mothel'l!' mareh on Jan. 30. ·
Uncia says she's getting a Jot of· ·
great cooperation and help, Uke;
from Susie Pullins and Susie Karr
who are really In there pitching. :
Groups, of C0111'!!41, are needed for the
march and any oi'ganizaUons willing .
to help should contact Linda at:
985-3830.
.
i
The Rutland Friendly Gardners·
will be doing the Rutland area and;
tlil.s ia an addition , to an original;
group ol organizations helping.

'•.

SWIETNLOW

.

Also marking a birthday 011 Jan. 2l l

1

Pork.
Loins

11

LOIN PORTION

Ml'l!. Ada Root, fonner resident of
Middleport, will be observing her :
IOlsl birthday on Jan. 15. Cards may·:
be sent to her at the Pinecrest Nurs- 1
ing Home, GaWpoUs. Mrs. Root has 1
one daughter, Mrs. Faye Richards, 1
Columbus.
·
.

Congratulations to Patricia Suel
Fields, daughter of Mr. and Ml'l!. Joe
Fields of Middleport. Pat has work:
ed full time ln the nUI'l!ing field at the'!
Kaiser Alwninwn Co. at Rave~'
wood following graduation from thel
Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing. She now has completed her'
work for her bachelor's degree In ·
science and nruslng from Ohin •
Univei'sity.
''
BNestdes working full time, sh~
graduated cum laude. Now, that..
takes ambition.
l

FRESH WHOLE

.•

Know what happened? No - it •
wasn't demolished. It .was stolen.:
Seems Uke It would bave been easier
to create a new one than wmove one ·
already made. ApparenUy, it's a
case of wbatev~r turns you on.
'

---

THOROFARE

--.•

l

I

Name ·Lester fn-·e officers

Plastic Gallon

i

Of the Bend

VERI -BEST PORk

Sutton.

Mr. Sutton was a member of the
ilaJem Seventh Day Baptist Church,
Salem, W. Va.; a member Barrlcks
no. 458 mWWI; and a member of the
Archeologists Society II Ohio· and
WestVlrglnla.
.
He also publlshed articles on archeology in the Parkersburg and
Athens newspapers.
Mr. Sutton was a professor at
Salem College and school principal
In both Ohio and West Virginia.
He was a fonner chemist for Wiertoo Steel Corporation.
He was a veteran of .WWI, a
second lieutenant.
SurvivorS Include wife, Edna,
Coolville; three sons, Clayton E.,
Covina, Ca.; Ernest Jr. of San Jose,
Ca.; Thomas of Bend, Oregon.
One daughter, Ml'l!. Rosaline
Carlson, also of Bend, also survive,
along with two step-sons Roy
llostettle, Detroit; and Everett

..
..
.•
..

I

"A Cut Above the Rest"

Wet Ones•••••••• 40·ct.Box

R. Sutton, 116, Coolville,
. died Saturday morning at Arcadia
Nursing Horne, Coolville.
He was born in Blandville, W.Va.,
1o the late Willie and Blanch Bonnet

.
.•
•

· GAWPOUS - Some local men- and Evaluation Director at the CenKaufman.
.
tal health workel'l! are participaling ter, is coordinating the project here. • Two school counselors, Sally
10 C8.111pUS
inawOI'ldwldestudythisweek.
Interviewees are Center staff Ceal
Orebaugh and Deanna Cook, ~md
RIO GRANDE - The Reverend
A University of Nebraska resear- Thompson, MSW; David Krasner,
Steve Giles, Ph.D1, the Center's forHeory FJ~tcher, Ashland, Ky., will ·
cher, Mark Anagnostopulos, is ACSW ; David Hough, MS,W;
mer Research and Evaluation
be featured speaker at a diMer I
By Bob Hoeflich
visiting here to talk to psychologists, Thomas Cassidy, M.D. and r&gt;r
Director are also participating.
tribute of Martin Luther King's
social workel'l!, a psychiatrist and
birthday .
schoolcounselof's.
•
I
Thedlnner,ontheRtoGrandeCoiOtber sites being used for the sur\....dl
lege and Conununlty College camI don't really enjoy spreading bad
10
·
Ca
da
N
Zeal
d
news
up
However,
vey are
na ' ew
an •
CHESTER - Adrninilltrative and Norton, lieutenant and assistant
pus Jan. 1~; sponsored by the Rio
1
ti to tbe maxlmwn.
d
da
and lirban and rural areas all over
k 2
Grande Black Student Union, la open
men oned gra uation te thia
line officers for 1980 were elected Ueutanant, respectively, true John;
year to a Meigs High senior and she
the United States. The research is in·
to the campusandconunuru'tyalike.
when the Chester Volunteer Fire Bruce Allan Myel'!! and
wasn't aware that the date had been
tended to identify sources of job
Department met Wednesday night.
Wickham, lieutenant and asaistant
Price of the meal, which begins at
changed from May.
satlsfactlofon and dlssaMatillfactlon and
Administrative officel'l! named In- lieutenant, respectively, on truck 3;
5:30p.m. In the college's cafeteria,
Well, it has. The Meigs seniors will
sources stress. " ybe we have ' elude Kirk Chevalier, president·, Russell wells and Dorsal Miller,
ill$2. 95 .
ot
d te til the
n1ng f
0
something to learn from New
te
t
Rev.
Fletcher,
who
has
been
a~
n
gra
ua
un
eve
Dorsal Miller, vice president·, lieutenant and asailltant lieu nan •
,.
June 17 and baccalaureate and cornZealand or Canada and maybe they
·
tive
In
concern
and
effort
for
hwnan
Elmer Young, secretary ; John respectively, truck 4.
John
mencement will be combined at that
have something 00 fearn from us,"
Wickham, treasurer, and Virgil Wickham and Bob Woods were
righls, will compare the efforts of
time. The date - much later than
explained Anagnostopulos.
Taylor, public relations.
named al'l!on investigators.
the 60's to recent efforts and speak to
the original Ma gr d tl . the
GaWpolia was chosen as a site for
cks
directions for the
.
future.
Y a ua on 10
Une officel'l! named are Roy
Total mileage for the four tru
f;""' calendar
~·y well throw
the study In part bec•use
the ComAlso included.in the evening's pr~
"•• plans Into-turnwil.
.._ Sorry 'bout
~
Christy, chief; John Ridneour, first
for 1979 was 975 miles with a total of
~
some
munlty Mental Health Center offel'l!
assistant chief; Bruce D. Myel'!!, 19 fire calls being answered, Ahyone
gram will be two short fl.lm.!! dealing
thal Don't look at me, I didn't do tl
such comprehensive mental health
second assistant chief; Larry interested in joining the department
with the accompllslunents of Dr.
services. The Center's Acting
Cleland, captain; Larry Lee and iswelcometoattendmeetlngswhich
King.
·
Eight-year old LesUe Carr got a
Clinical Director, Harriet Kaufman,
Virgil Taylor, lieutenant !lnd are held the second !llld fourth WedFor more lnfonnation call the Rio
jolt the other morning. She bad
Ph.D., expedited \he research
assistant Ueutenant,respectively, on nesdayofeachmonthat8p.m.
Grande Community Counseling
labored to make a snowman when
project coming here.
truck I; Pearl Edward• anti '1'"'1&lt;1
Centerat245-95?5.
thesnowwasjustrlght.
__
Pa_ul~T-ay~hi_o_r,~Actln
__g~~---re-h_______________________________________________________________________________________,

RETAILS EFFECTIVE THRU SAT. JAN. 19, 1980

FOR BABIES

Ernest

Mental health
workers participate
.

'fl't , ..,,., rht rl;~rto timl r qutftt ll!u en olll ttmtln •hit IIIII. Nun 1ol~ todeg!.,, , Wt " ' ~~ tt1p0111llolt
lor typogrophlttltr ron

anytime.

ERNEST R. SUTI'ON

;
.•
•.
...•
•

~: l,QOO TOT A~

SUPER MARKETS

MYRTA V. SCHAEFER
POMEROY - Mrs. Myrta V.
Schaefer, 75, Pomeroy, died Friday
evening at Veterans Memorial
&amp;spital.
Mrs. Scbaefer was a daughter of
the late Martin and Nora B. Eblin
Slace. She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Elmer, three
brothers and a sister.
Surviving are three daughters,
· Olarlotte Hysell, Dorothy McCloud
alld Nora Nitz, all of Middleport, 26
1randchildren, 14 great.-andchlldren; three sisters, Grace
ben, Mll1field; Catherine Turafer, Sbawnee, and ·Mary Kestel'l!On,
Columbus, and a brother, John
Slace, Akron.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Clyde Hendei'SOII officiating. Burial will be In
lleech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home

The $25,000 Reward
for information that would cause
the arrest and conviction of the
person or persons who shot and
killed· Danita (Dee) Ann Manley
and (Dude) Elias C. Howard Jr.
is being officially withdrawn

r~--·--·-·

King tribute
to be held on
R'

.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ =

•
CAROLINE E. BROWN
Caroline· Eva Brown, 82, Letart,
!lied Friday In Pleasant Valley
hospital.
Born Dec. 23, 1897 at Ada, Ohio,
lhe was a daughter of the late James
W. and Clara Clingier StonehUI. She
was a member of Graham Baptist
Church.
Survivors include her husband,
Homer C. Brown; three daughtel'l!,
Mrs. Ralph (Helen) Wears,
Hurricane, Mrs. Roy (Mary)
Rickard, Denver, Colo., and Mrs.
Bill (Eileen) McDaniel, Stony Point,
N.Y.; three sisters, Mrs. Falrle S.
Stager, Buffington, Ohio, Ml'l!. Helen
Inman and Mrs. Minnie Gaskins,
both of Bradenton, Fla.; one
Stonehill,
brother,
George
Bradenton; and nine grandchildren
and 13 great-grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by a
liOn, George W. Brown.
· Services will be held Monday at I
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral Home
at Mason with the Rev. Hennan
Jones officiating. Burial will be in
Longdale Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home· Sunday 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m.

A4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. Jan. 13, 1980

'
lfii!OOTN · -

-

.
PARS"IPS , , •••• ;•' ·•••
, , •• . 1-1t • .._

6''
..

·~~~~p'O~~;ol~ .......... 5 ~~.a.; 89'

.
' Dlld\aries- Anctl Pruncy, Jolur

~u.

Darlene

J--.,

Hazt~

Roy: Lewia Harper, Mary Pauliile,

Derenberger; Chari~ Ae~er,

. :

'
SQVADRUN

RUTLAND - The Rutland ER
Squad wu Cliled Sltui'day at 8:53:
a.m. to Rl325 for Jom Caldwell who
was &amp;allen to Holzer Medical Center. :

�College ..•
IContinued from page A· I 1

REVIEW BROCHURES - Linda Krasner, left, Conununity Mental
Health Alternatives Program and Josette Baker, right, 0. 0. Mcintyre
Park District review brochures on White Water Rafting for the fi rst
meeting of the Gallia County Adventure Club to be held at 7:30 p.m. on
Jan. 17, at the Gallia Cow1ty Courthouse.

Adventure club organizes
GALU POUS - Have you ever
tried orienteering, hiking an uncut
trail in the snow, participated in a
bird count, white water rafting,
canoemg, cross country sking' If
you would like to plan to become a
charter member of the newly forming Outing Club in Gallia County,
year-round adventure activities will
be planned by club members, who
must be age 18 and ove r, residents of
Gallia County, and opt for some extra "pizazz" in their leisure activities.
The first meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. on J an . 17, at the Gallia
CountY Courthouse, Probate Court
room to prepare a calendar of events .
Bring any ideas on trips, training,
:::::::::::::::-:::::::·:-:·:·:·:·:·:

.·::.;.·.·.·.":.·:-:

Cage standings
TEAM
Athens

SEOAL VAR SIT Y
W

6
4
4
3

Ga lli poli s
We llston

Logan

::::

:~

POP
460 35 1
439 347
463 42 1
475 432
341 353
404 385
268 382

L

6 I

1ro nton

.. ·.·.

1
3
3
3

3 4
1 5
0 7 330 SOB

Waver ly

J ackson
M eigs

27 27 3179 3179

TOTALS

SE OAL RESE RVE
TEAM
W L
~-

Ga lli polis
Ironton

Waverly
Logan
Athens
Meigs
Well ston
Jackson
TOTALS

P

OP

5 2 292 241
5 '1 274 249

5 2 272 257

4
4
3
1

2
3
4
6

248 224
346 315
221 264
277 337
0 6 208 251
27 27 2138 21 38

f" nda y' s resu lts:
L oga n 51 A th ens 45

Ga lli poli s 67 Well ston 40
Waver ly 31 Iron t on 29

Me igs 35 Jac kson 32

..

January 15 games :
Lancaster at Chilli cothe
M il ton at Pt. Pleasant
Cour t House at H i llsbor o
Alex ande r at Wellston
Ja nu ar y 18 ga m es : '"
Athens at Gallipolis
Mei gs at Logan
Wave r ly at Jackson
Well ston at Iront on
Pt . Pl easan t at Parker sburg South
Chi ll icothe at Westerville Nor th
'
Janu ary 19 gam es :
Logan at Ga ll ipoli s
wa ve rl y at Ath ens
Meigs at Well st on
Jackson at 1ron ton
Whee le r sburg at South Po int
Por tsmou th at Court House

guest spea kers and film.s for
discussion . Refreshments will be
served.
The adventu re clu b is cosponsored by the 0. 0. Mcintyre
Pa rk District and the Alternative
Program of the Community Mental
Health Center.
If you cannot attend but wish to
participate contact, Josette Baker,
Director Parks and Recreation 4464612, ext. 45 or Linda Krasner, 446~ to get on the club roster.

$63,723
budget
approved
. RACINE - Village Council here
during a recent organizational
meeting approved a $63,723 budget
and named Albert Hill as coWlcil
president.
Council also named Frank Porter
as village solicitor for 1980 at a fee of
$50.
In other matters, council passed a
resolution submitted by the
Syracuse-Racine Regional Sewage
District enabling the sewage district
to bo!Tow $21,450 to be used in construction of the sewage system.
Meeting with council were Jimmy
Deem, Dale Hart and Dallas Cleland
regarding properties available for
building of low income homes
A request by Carl Gheen to secure
a penni! to carry a gun was denied.
It was reported that TV Cable will
not be placed in Racine due to FCC
regulations and the fact' that a tower
would have to be ere~ted .
Glenn Rizer was named street
commissioner for 1980 with an increase in salary of $11 a month
making a total of$800 for the year.
It was reported that the village
truck had been repaired for trash
pick up.
The following committees were
named: Finance - Clarence Bradford, Albert Hill and Ben Petrel.
Stret - Henry Wiillord, Earl
Cleland and Jeanette Lawrence.
Attending were Mayor Cbarles
Pyles, Mae Cleland, clerk, Albert
Hill, Earl Cleland, Ben Petrel,
Clar4111ce Bradford and Jeanette
Lawrence.

Rober t T d tt , H a rr.~ 5 Tr umal"}. Udly
Gr aham Th ese peore and other s
have m ade tr emendou s conrr ibu
l ions i n va rious f ields, but not one at
th em is on m y ten gr ea test because
m i ne ar e the ones w ho have bee n
mos t influent ial in my per so na l l ite.
" Rather inter esti ng it is t o note
th at· not one of m y ten gave m e any
money to help me thro ugh co llegt
(the only money ever given to help
me a t college came from my mother
wh o once sent me a single dollar
b i U), but they gave me that whi ch
wa s far m ore signif icant in m y life;
they m ade me feel that my life was
wor thwhi le, that my life had mean·
ing, t ha t there was purpose in the e)!: ·
istenc e of Ed Lewi s. So t o th em antJ
to those of you not on the Ji st but who
have encouraged m e in ye ar s and
decades past, I expr ess my prof ound
r espect and grat itude .
" Of my ten gr eatest four (now
deceased l from M eigs Coun t y are
Ear l E . Fr ench, Rev . Frank
Kr eager (was M ei gs Countia n in my
l ife) , Har ley Sa nbor n, and M rs. Dee
(our only daugher is named ' Dee'
aft er her ) Ward . Three others are
Dr . J . Mace Andr ess (deceased). the
Rev. Dr . R ic hrd H. Cr aw f ord of
California, and H. Burde tte Gray of
M ichiga n. Cr aw ford and Gr ay are
very much alive. The res t are three
names wel l known not onl y in Ohio
but w ider ar eas.
" Beca use 1 am so deepl y th ankful
to these in particular and to so ma ny
M ei gs Countia ns in genera l, 1 am
est ablishing an ed ucationa l scholar ·
ship fu nd.
" T he purpose of thi s fund is to give
encouragement to you ng peopl e to
go beyo nd high school in thei r t r ain·
ing for th eir l ife 's goals.
" Earl ier I m ent ioned native sons
and daughter s of M eigs Coun ty who
made
cer t ain
ach i eve m ents
elsewhe re . Now, let me r epea t wh at
I have sa id so often in the last 20
years th at cou ntless M eigs Coun·
ti ans have rece ived their education
at home (and some wen t to coll ege)
and th en sta yed in Meigs County to
live, ser ve, and hel p ou r county g r ow
and advance in educa tion, com mer ce, cultur e and character .
" Wh en our son, M ar k Lew is, ca me
ro Ohi o two yea r s ago at the tim e a
native son was honored, h is Uncle
La wrence Lewi s and I show ed him
ar ound our county . Mark spoke :
' The peop le of this area h.!!ve done a

good job; the homes are well cared

for ; the com m unity looks prosperous; the sc hools ar e f i ne. THe
reside nts take pr ide in Me igs Coun -

ty.'

" Yes, our county has m ade
tremendous progress in educati on ,
busi ness, industr y an d growth , and
we ar e justifi ably proud. The r eason
M eigs County is so advanced in
num erous fi el ds i s that m en and
wom en who wer e born in M eigs
sta yed after their educationa l trai ning, worked w el l wi th keen foresight ,
and hel ped (with some w ho ca m e in
from oth er town s) to make M eigs
Coun ty one wh ich we ad mire so
mu ch.
" Above, I spok e of th e four Meigs
Countians and the three non·M elgs
Counti an s; now, let me speak with
joy, apprec iation, respect and love
of the three oth er r ema r kably
outstanding native soils of Meigs
Co unty . Two of th ese great men
r ece ived their training in Meigs,
went on to college and graduate
sch ool , then returned to ser ve our
neighbors, our state and our nation

well . The other went from .college to

several cities where he became
noted ·for f)(Ce llence in hi s fi eld
throughout the nation. It is in
speci fi c ' honor·memory of these

three

Meigs

County

giants

Support System.

of

M eigs

Cou ntv ."

· Bo)( 313 Fre nc h Pond Road
Hen niker. New Hampsh ire 03242

~

as

'Tri·&amp;ate
'Waterprooftllt

CLOCK PRESENTED - Sheriff Jeunes Montgomery, center, presented John BeaUe, G.D.C., a
clock from the Gallia County Police Academy. The
clock was presented to BeaUe and Director of
OperaUon John Ambrecht in appreclaUon for the use of
the conference .room of the new cafeteria at the G.D.C.

J

\~\J..IJI~

God would aga in call me to preach

His word, and 1 would want to reply

()I~ '1,111~

again, ' Her e am I; send me'
wherever you want. ' Wher e He leads'
me, · I will follow' . Thats wh at we

)I()N'l,ll

were singing at the Church, with

Frank Wilson standing ne)( t t o me,
when Christ called me to fol low Him
and preach His word· on sunday
evening, January 15, 1933.

Master

MECHANIC •.

" Because the peopl• of Meigs

County have been so good to me and
to mv parents, Mr . and M rs . George
H. Lew is, and to m y three brother s

While
Supplies
Lasl

now

2.69~

Saw up to J!3

on HolllftJW1ICI'fj

6-PC. Magnetic Screwdriver Set

inSIII'iJllre

Magnetized to plcl&lt; up and hold screws. 6 sizes: 4 slotted
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If your home is less than
; years old , you may save

precision cross-ground and made of the finest tool steel
fo r Jasti ng perfo rmance. Shock-proof, unb reakable

handles. With P?uch.
Quantilies limiled

TI66M

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Gallipolil, 0 .
Phone 44&amp;-4290

O'DELL 7illl.~ LUMBER

1',:::,.-::.. ~••::
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..

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I

·- - --. --:.' . ::;= ::=:::::::::-,.-

- -~

,i

STUDDING~
FOR TRACTION
ON ICE

DRIVE Wlf tNSTOCK

'l!J.Zl1't

.' -

OF WINTER TIRES TO SATISFY

ching red vinyl trim , radio, air
cond ., automati c traRs., power
steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels.

.'

•xPR8SS
CHARGI!

I

I

4 Door, dark· red, color with mat -

lncludes42" Snow Blade.

11 lnclud&amp;s ~2 · 1 sno.w Bla~

'

WE HAVE A FULL STOCK

t10ning , ' lean interior, green .

16 h.p·., Wllh 118" Mower
lnctudes 42" snow blade.

. 8 h.p.' with 36" Mower · .

THERE'S A LOT OF WINTER AHEAD

power steer ing , power brakes:

1

'

Vo• Mow o.o,IIIY ~.,.

BE. PREPARED I

1

Cl61 WHEEL HORSE .............. LIST 356J
SALE $2795
. . LIST ~3310
C}141 WHEEL HORSE·.............
SALE $2595
ClOl ·WHEEL HORSE................. LisT 2633
T·- J:' . $21·
• 95 ·
C181 WHEEL .HORSE .............. .
14 h.p. wtth 4ll" Mower

'

lHE BLACK HOLE

Local 1 owner , 350 V-8 engine,

Oil distilled from the two aromatic
resin~ frankincense and myrrh goes
mosUy into perfumes. Somalia and
Ethiopia furnish most of tbe frankineense that reaches the lJnited
States. Saudi Arabia and Somalia
supply the myrrh, according to
National Geographic.

persons to serve on the E~tecutlve
Committee on Crinoe Preventio~
under the W.Va . Office of Crime
Prevention.
Local police were encouraged to
meet and talk with local groups to
explain the crime prevention
program and ur ge the appointment
of group representatives.
Caldwell also went over a list of
films and literature which police
departments can make available to
clubs and other groups.
Prosecutor Dan Roll said,
"Everyone at the meeting was
~ncour aged. While they admitted
this program will be time con·
suming, they all seemed to feel it
was worth the effort."

Coming Friday, Jan. 25
Walt Disney' s Production

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

WHEEL HORSE
SALE

5 pc. Bedroom

ion

5 pc. Bedroom
'

5 PC. Be.droom

CONNALLY PLEASED
WASHINGTON (AP)
Republican presidential hopeful
John Connally says he is pleased
with the willingness of Israeli Deferise Minister Ezer Welzman to accept
the idea of Americans using Egyptian air bases.
Connally said he endorses the
defense minister's Jan. 7 statement
to the Israeli Parliament, in which
Weizman said use of the bases by the
United States would help Israel in
the longrun.
In a telegram that Connally sent to
Weizman on Friday, the former
Texas governor reiterated the need
for a strong U.S. presence in the
Middle East, saying lte existence
would have far-reaching effects on
regional stability and security. · ·

POMEROY- Paul David Mitchell, 25, Langsville, will be
transported to the Ohio Penal
Reception and Medical Center Monday to begin his six mooth to five
year sentence for WJButhorized use
of a motor vehicle.
Mitcbell was arrested in connecting with operating a 1979
Plymouth Trail Duster without the
owner's Tom Rue's consent.
RecenUy he entered guilty-pleas in
Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court
on charges of trespassing an Wloccupied structure, and unauthorized
use of a motor vehicle.
Meigs County sheriff's depuUes
will transfer Mitchell to Colwnbus.
In other department activity,
depuUes are investlgaUng vandallsm to a 1975 Oldsmobile owned
by George Kuhn of Syracuse and a·
mobile home owned by Leona Ebershach of Racine. Kuhn said his car
was damaged while parked at Arnold's. Trailer Park at Syracuse.
KulJn reported someone"slash~ his
car's headliner, dash and seatbelts
and the dash glass was broken.
Mrs. Ebersbach said someone
broke two storm windows. on her
mobile home.
Paul Buckley, Calaway Ridge, .
Route 2, Coolvllle, reported someone
ldlled his two-year old Black Angus
and dragged it to an awaiting
vehicle.
Richard Williamson,23, Rt.l,
Minersville, was charged with OWl
following an accident Thursday

4 door, small V-8, automati c

LexU5

'488.88
Bassett

tention. It's very sad.
Now then, if there are a few of you
readers who have not enjoyed the
presence of a pet in your home or
haven't had .one for some time- why
don't you call us and come out and
look at some of the cute puppies we
have at the moment. Or we have a
few adulte that are already " broken
in" and want someone to love agam.
For instance, we have several
really cute fluffy seven week old
Shepherd - Huskey - ElkhoWid puppies that will melt your heart real
fast, and equally cute and lovable
are several sweet little black and
white English Setter-Border Collie
type puppies about seven weeks old,
male.
We guarantee you that if you want
a pup, you won't go away empty handed If you'll call us at 99U260 and
find out the location of which animal
sounds Uke "what you always wante£1:"
"
Now then, it is not real simple to
get one of the animals. You must be
prepared to answer a few questions
that are important to us and to that
pet. We must be positive that the
animal is going to responsible folks
who can afford to provide it with the
necessities of life for "its" LifeUme.
OK?

Prisoner
transfer
scheduled

1977 CHEVROLET

'598.88

Pine Reg. S699. 95
'

By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs C01111ty
_Humane Society
POMEROY - Picture If you will ""
a woman sitting on a couch in a
living room, with her feet up on a•
footstool, enjoying the fireplace and
TV. She is not alone.
Lying fulll_ength along her legs is
a stretched out, sleeping, beauUftll
black and white cat named Reveille.
Under her right.arm, curled up, and
also sound asleep (and snoring) is a
black and white Boston Terrier - a
boy named Rip. On this woman 's left
side, one with her head on the cat,
are two girl Boston Terriers, named
Tidie and Tymmie. Holding a
notebook propped against her
stomach over one of the dog's heada
and the rear end of the cat, the"
woman attempts to draft an article
she must prepare for the newspaper.
Is this an WIUSU8l position for such
work' Not for ,this woman.
SomeUmes It's more awkward -like
trying to write on the desk with a cat
sitting on the paper trying to swat
the pencil out &lt;if her hand, ete. Oh,
yes, being a pet owner l.s a barrel fl.
iaughs- tbose of you who don't have
any are missing a fun Ume in your
life (some frustration too). But those
of us who own them and love them
Wouldn't part with them for a million
dollars.
For those qf us whQ had no
children, they are "our children"
a. ..: we love and care for them ...:
sOilletlmes better thjln some folks •
care for their own offspring
(terrible, but so true ). For the senior
ciUzen whose children have grown
up and gone away, they are the
loving dependents who need them
and make them feel sUll necessary
in this blg someUmes very cold
world we live in .. . wbere people
don't always have time for people.
For young children a pet also has a
place ... It Is his or her playmate,
friend, and confidant. It is their first
real responsibility, and through
their pet they learn to be kind, considerate, and reliable.
Being the above described type
pet owner, I really do feel sorry for
the pete that are let nm the countryflille or sit tied to a dog bouse with
the dnly contact from the owner
being someUmes once a day having
food brought to them.
All I've written In previous arUcles, these animals are lonely. I've
seen those poor type dogs just go
crazy when they see their masters
coming - jwnping up and down,
crying, barking, just so happy -then
the food Is dropped and the person
walks away to leave a disappointed
dog -; ·who just wanted some at-

Fruttwood Reg. $1'99.95

'498.88

'

'· PineReg . S2399 .96 '

6 pc. Bedroom

Qak Reg , S699.9S

*666.66

•888•88,
''
.
'

Singer ~768

Bassett 1014

1161

Main House 7470

for a classroom for the Gallia County Police Academy
in 1976-79. Sheriff Montgomery and Chief J ohn Taylor,
Gallipolis Police Department in cooperation with
Buckeye Hills Career Center, set up classes which
have trained 60 men and women in police related oocupaUons.

I Hoofs and Paws

God th is is true. I would ·have it no

conunon goal- crime prevenUon.
The meeting was held at the
· Mason County Courthouse under the
direction of Cpl. Don M. Caldwell~
director ofthe W.Va . Office1of Crime
Prevention, and Dan Roll , Mason
County Prosecuting Attorney.
Caldwell showed and explamed a
flow chart outlining how civic clubs,
churches, labor, senior citizens,
youth groups, business groups and
other organizations could select
BODY DISCOVERED
representatives who in turn would
AKRON, Ohio (AP)
appoint a county chairperson to
Firefighters discovered the body of work with law enforcement officers.
a man indentifed
Earl Warning,
County chairpersons from the local
00 , of 'Akron, in the rubble of a burdist rict, which includes Mason ,
ned-out surplus store on the city's
Jackson a nd Putnam counties,
west side Saturday mornipg.
would then appoint section chair·
Officials said Waring, the owner of
Chief Jack's surplus store, lived in
the building.
Damage to the one-story structure
was estimated at $100,000 .• Officials
esUmated that $20,000 danuige was
caused to an adjoining building.
WOLVERINE "
10" WATERPROOF
WELLINGTON
morning on SJH , at CR 26.
According to the report, Williamson, making a right tum , lost control
of his vehicle which sUd off the roadway into a ditch. There was
moderate damage.

POINT PLEASANT - The heads
of the county's two major law enforcement agencies and other police
representatives showed their concern for "Locking Out Crinne in West
Virginia" Friday by attending a
meeting called for the purpose of
organizing a working relationship
between police and the public in a

CALL TOLL FREE 1--800-354--8919

We at Empire Furniture
have pledge
.
.

'
FruiiWOOd Reg . $799.95

Home .Oxygen

son

Rev . Dr. Edward W. W. Lewis

T roubles With A Wet Basement
·or Bowed Walls?

· other way . In fa ct, if there w ere a
way in whi ch I could live ag ain in
th is world, 1 would hope that t should
be born in Meigs County, and that

highs from the mid 30s to the low 40s.

6 pc. Bedroom

Marx

mool pleesed and proud to be - A

native

Our Tracie Record S-T-R·E·T·C·H·E-$
overS yrs.

was absolutely ri ght, and I thank

C. K. SNOWDEN

5 pc. Bedroom

with the

Fred W. Crow, Jr ., and Coa ch Art
Lew1::. "jc ~u.)larship ' .
" Wit h deep personal satisfac:tion
and thanksgi"Ving, I am he who is

Meigs County out of Ed Lewis.' He

Weather
Increasing cloudiness Sunday,

Law enforcem ent officers
dis·c uss crime prevention

'The Dr. Ravmond Boice. Allorney

does wi th Fred ) face life with
un se lf j s h
m ot i ves
see kin g
knowled ge, w isdom and love in thei r
growth and at ta inmen ts in their
r espective f ields of endeavor so th at
th ey could better ser v e their
fel lowmen, their country and 1heir
God. Shakespea r e once said , 'To be
honest as this worl d goes is t o be one
man p icked out of ten thou sand.' I
firmly believe that we shall see
multitudes of honest men befor e we
ever see again three such nobl e sons
of Ohio as Raym ond Boice, Fr ed
Crow and Art Lewi s!
" When son M ark gave hi s m ov ing
speech in M eigs two years ag o, he
said , 'you ca n·ta ke Ed Lew is out of
M eigs County , but you cah 't tak e

money. Find out how
much, ca ll:

SQUAD CAU.ED
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
ER Squad was called Saturday at
4: 19 a.m. for Marie Dudding who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

and because 1 think. under God so
highly o( these three noble sons of
Meigs Coun t y, 1 hereby establish

and t1ve S•s ters, oecause t a m s,o
gratefu l that I w ~1s prov1ded w ith a
solid grammar and h igh educ ation
in M eigs th at e n aht~ rl m e to compete
on a h igh le"V el wi th stu dent s fr om
larger communities : beca use I have
th e utmost r espect tor the youth of
Me igs Count y and th eir desire for
co llege E-ducations; because I am
thankful tor the inspiration given by
the peop le of our County, by the
fellowsh ip ot our Church , and
espec ially of our L or d Jesus Christ,

and judgment made them {and still

figurat ively that I am establ ishing
th is part of the educational sc hol ar -.

Si nger .~601

No bottles •••
No returns •••

·• st"l•P t u nrl Two of lhc·sc men, 1 say
fl ll &lt;'&lt; t•onately
dl"t.: w -·r" "9i c1nls"
I iler c.'l ll y
'· 1 he thr ee w ho1n 1 w•sh to honor
memona li ze wi th this scholarship,
wh •c h will enab le so me M eigs Hi gh
Sc hool grad ua re eclCh year t o
recei ve the suppor t and enco uragement of the inter (.\S t dividen ds from
the fund (the princi pal w i ll r emai n
1ntac tL are th e tate Or . Raymond
Boi ce, who dPrli ca ted hi s whole life
to th e hea l th and well being of the.
people of our Meigs area , wno was
se lfle;;s in his devotion and servi r:P , :~
ma rvelous e)(ample of one who li ved
for the good of his com m unity ; At ·
rorney Fred W. Crow, Jr ., who also
r eturned to M eigs Coun ty af1er his
graduate study, who has served wi th
dignity ,
respect,
eff iciency ,
character and leadership these last
four decades, an d conti nues to do so
with m agn ificent pr oficie ncy , con sec ra ti on and service .
" Fred Crow i s a re markable ex ·
prPSSion of lif e ren der ed on l he
hi ghest p lain for his count y, sta te
anQ nation , and Art "Pappy " Lewis,
who l ike Fred was an ou t sta ndi ng
ath lete in M ei gs Coun ty and in col·
lege w-here both reached All·
Amer ica n r ecogn ition. Art was the
one of the t hree who chose to re nder
lead er hsip in many ar eas outside of
our county . He became one of th e
coac hes
•n
mos t
pr o min ent
America , and was se vera l times
vo ted 'Coac h of the Year' in h is con ·
terence .
" Dr. Boi ce, A ttorney Crow and
Coac h L e wi s form a n oble
three:some wh ose abilitv , integrity ,

'

1818 EA·STERN

I

1\VE..

PHONE 446-1113

GALLIPOLIS

~--~----~--~~--------~. ·
,I

'

•'

�College ..•
IContinued from page A· I 1

REVIEW BROCHURES - Linda Krasner, left, Conununity Mental
Health Alternatives Program and Josette Baker, right, 0. 0. Mcintyre
Park District review brochures on White Water Rafting for the fi rst
meeting of the Gallia County Adventure Club to be held at 7:30 p.m. on
Jan. 17, at the Gallia Cow1ty Courthouse.

Adventure club organizes
GALU POUS - Have you ever
tried orienteering, hiking an uncut
trail in the snow, participated in a
bird count, white water rafting,
canoemg, cross country sking' If
you would like to plan to become a
charter member of the newly forming Outing Club in Gallia County,
year-round adventure activities will
be planned by club members, who
must be age 18 and ove r, residents of
Gallia County, and opt for some extra "pizazz" in their leisure activities.
The first meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. on J an . 17, at the Gallia
CountY Courthouse, Probate Court
room to prepare a calendar of events .
Bring any ideas on trips, training,
:::::::::::::::-:::::::·:-:·:·:·:·:·:

.·::.;.·.·.·.":.·:-:

Cage standings
TEAM
Athens

SEOAL VAR SIT Y
W

6
4
4
3

Ga lli poli s
We llston

Logan

::::

:~

POP
460 35 1
439 347
463 42 1
475 432
341 353
404 385
268 382

L

6 I

1ro nton

.. ·.·.

1
3
3
3

3 4
1 5
0 7 330 SOB

Waver ly

J ackson
M eigs

27 27 3179 3179

TOTALS

SE OAL RESE RVE
TEAM
W L
~-

Ga lli polis
Ironton

Waverly
Logan
Athens
Meigs
Well ston
Jackson
TOTALS

P

OP

5 2 292 241
5 '1 274 249

5 2 272 257

4
4
3
1

2
3
4
6

248 224
346 315
221 264
277 337
0 6 208 251
27 27 2138 21 38

f" nda y' s resu lts:
L oga n 51 A th ens 45

Ga lli poli s 67 Well ston 40
Waver ly 31 Iron t on 29

Me igs 35 Jac kson 32

..

January 15 games :
Lancaster at Chilli cothe
M il ton at Pt. Pleasant
Cour t House at H i llsbor o
Alex ande r at Wellston
Ja nu ar y 18 ga m es : '"
Athens at Gallipolis
Mei gs at Logan
Wave r ly at Jackson
Well ston at Iront on
Pt . Pl easan t at Parker sburg South
Chi ll icothe at Westerville Nor th
'
Janu ary 19 gam es :
Logan at Ga ll ipoli s
wa ve rl y at Ath ens
Meigs at Well st on
Jackson at 1ron ton
Whee le r sburg at South Po int
Por tsmou th at Court House

guest spea kers and film.s for
discussion . Refreshments will be
served.
The adventu re clu b is cosponsored by the 0. 0. Mcintyre
Pa rk District and the Alternative
Program of the Community Mental
Health Center.
If you cannot attend but wish to
participate contact, Josette Baker,
Director Parks and Recreation 4464612, ext. 45 or Linda Krasner, 446~ to get on the club roster.

$63,723
budget
approved
. RACINE - Village Council here
during a recent organizational
meeting approved a $63,723 budget
and named Albert Hill as coWlcil
president.
Council also named Frank Porter
as village solicitor for 1980 at a fee of
$50.
In other matters, council passed a
resolution submitted by the
Syracuse-Racine Regional Sewage
District enabling the sewage district
to bo!Tow $21,450 to be used in construction of the sewage system.
Meeting with council were Jimmy
Deem, Dale Hart and Dallas Cleland
regarding properties available for
building of low income homes
A request by Carl Gheen to secure
a penni! to carry a gun was denied.
It was reported that TV Cable will
not be placed in Racine due to FCC
regulations and the fact' that a tower
would have to be ere~ted .
Glenn Rizer was named street
commissioner for 1980 with an increase in salary of $11 a month
making a total of$800 for the year.
It was reported that the village
truck had been repaired for trash
pick up.
The following committees were
named: Finance - Clarence Bradford, Albert Hill and Ben Petrel.
Stret - Henry Wiillord, Earl
Cleland and Jeanette Lawrence.
Attending were Mayor Cbarles
Pyles, Mae Cleland, clerk, Albert
Hill, Earl Cleland, Ben Petrel,
Clar4111ce Bradford and Jeanette
Lawrence.

Rober t T d tt , H a rr.~ 5 Tr umal"}. Udly
Gr aham Th ese peore and other s
have m ade tr emendou s conrr ibu
l ions i n va rious f ields, but not one at
th em is on m y ten gr ea test because
m i ne ar e the ones w ho have bee n
mos t influent ial in my per so na l l ite.
" Rather inter esti ng it is t o note
th at· not one of m y ten gave m e any
money to help me thro ugh co llegt
(the only money ever given to help
me a t college came from my mother
wh o once sent me a single dollar
b i U), but they gave me that whi ch
wa s far m ore signif icant in m y life;
they m ade me feel that my life was
wor thwhi le, that my life had mean·
ing, t ha t there was purpose in the e)!: ·
istenc e of Ed Lewi s. So t o th em antJ
to those of you not on the Ji st but who
have encouraged m e in ye ar s and
decades past, I expr ess my prof ound
r espect and grat itude .
" Of my ten gr eatest four (now
deceased l from M eigs Coun t y are
Ear l E . Fr ench, Rev . Frank
Kr eager (was M ei gs Countia n in my
l ife) , Har ley Sa nbor n, and M rs. Dee
(our only daugher is named ' Dee'
aft er her ) Ward . Three others are
Dr . J . Mace Andr ess (deceased). the
Rev. Dr . R ic hrd H. Cr aw f ord of
California, and H. Burde tte Gray of
M ichiga n. Cr aw ford and Gr ay are
very much alive. The res t are three
names wel l known not onl y in Ohio
but w ider ar eas.
" Beca use 1 am so deepl y th ankful
to these in particular and to so ma ny
M ei gs Countia ns in genera l, 1 am
est ablishing an ed ucationa l scholar ·
ship fu nd.
" T he purpose of thi s fund is to give
encouragement to you ng peopl e to
go beyo nd high school in thei r t r ain·
ing for th eir l ife 's goals.
" Earl ier I m ent ioned native sons
and daughter s of M eigs Coun ty who
made
cer t ain
ach i eve m ents
elsewhe re . Now, let me r epea t wh at
I have sa id so often in the last 20
years th at cou ntless M eigs Coun·
ti ans have rece ived their education
at home (and some wen t to coll ege)
and th en sta yed in Meigs County to
live, ser ve, and hel p ou r county g r ow
and advance in educa tion, com mer ce, cultur e and character .
" Wh en our son, M ar k Lew is, ca me
ro Ohi o two yea r s ago at the tim e a
native son was honored, h is Uncle
La wrence Lewi s and I show ed him
ar ound our county . Mark spoke :
' The peop le of this area h.!!ve done a

good job; the homes are well cared

for ; the com m unity looks prosperous; the sc hools ar e f i ne. THe
reside nts take pr ide in Me igs Coun -

ty.'

" Yes, our county has m ade
tremendous progress in educati on ,
busi ness, industr y an d growth , and
we ar e justifi ably proud. The r eason
M eigs County is so advanced in
num erous fi el ds i s that m en and
wom en who wer e born in M eigs
sta yed after their educationa l trai ning, worked w el l wi th keen foresight ,
and hel ped (with some w ho ca m e in
from oth er town s) to make M eigs
Coun ty one wh ich we ad mire so
mu ch.
" Above, I spok e of th e four Meigs
Countians and the three non·M elgs
Counti an s; now, let me speak with
joy, apprec iation, respect and love
of the three oth er r ema r kably
outstanding native soils of Meigs
Co unty . Two of th ese great men
r ece ived their training in Meigs,
went on to college and graduate
sch ool , then returned to ser ve our
neighbors, our state and our nation

well . The other went from .college to

several cities where he became
noted ·for f)(Ce llence in hi s fi eld
throughout the nation. It is in
speci fi c ' honor·memory of these

three

Meigs

County

giants

Support System.

of

M eigs

Cou ntv ."

· Bo)( 313 Fre nc h Pond Road
Hen niker. New Hampsh ire 03242

~

as

'Tri·&amp;ate
'Waterprooftllt

CLOCK PRESENTED - Sheriff Jeunes Montgomery, center, presented John BeaUe, G.D.C., a
clock from the Gallia County Police Academy. The
clock was presented to BeaUe and Director of
OperaUon John Ambrecht in appreclaUon for the use of
the conference .room of the new cafeteria at the G.D.C.

J

\~\J..IJI~

God would aga in call me to preach

His word, and 1 would want to reply

()I~ '1,111~

again, ' Her e am I; send me'
wherever you want. ' Wher e He leads'
me, · I will follow' . Thats wh at we

)I()N'l,ll

were singing at the Church, with

Frank Wilson standing ne)( t t o me,
when Christ called me to fol low Him
and preach His word· on sunday
evening, January 15, 1933.

Master

MECHANIC •.

" Because the peopl• of Meigs

County have been so good to me and
to mv parents, Mr . and M rs . George
H. Lew is, and to m y three brother s

While
Supplies
Lasl

now

2.69~

Saw up to J!3

on HolllftJW1ICI'fj

6-PC. Magnetic Screwdriver Set

inSIII'iJllre

Magnetized to plcl&lt; up and hold screws. 6 sizes: 4 slotted
heads, 2 Phillips heads for most household uses. All tips

If your home is less than
; years old , you may save

precision cross-ground and made of the finest tool steel
fo r Jasti ng perfo rmance. Shock-proof, unb reakable

handles. With P?uch.
Quantilies limiled

TI66M

417 Second Ave.

Gallipolil, 0 .
Phone 44&amp;-4290

O'DELL 7illl.~ LUMBER

1',:::,.-::.. ~••::
••~ SLate t"arm Fire
....A...

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..

Home Office:

Vlr\o st..ol·ot Third Awonuo,

Galllpollo. Ohio

Bloomington, Illi no is

(614) 446- · 127~

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p 78806

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'
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K ·S 790

5 pc. Bedroom

Oak Reg. 5799 .9s

Watnui Reg. 5349.95

'598.98

*222.22

Singer Nn8

E d Selt

20'10

5 pc. Bedroom .
Oak Reg. sl 199.95

·'598.88

. •777.77

N-o 7776

5 pc. Bedroom

5 pc. Bedroom

Qak Reg. S899.f5

'

.6 pc. King Size.
Bedroom

5 pc. Bedroom

Bassett 2060

Bassett 1161

6 pc. Bedroom ·

5 pc. Bedroom

oak Reg . $1499 .95

Pecan Reg. 5649 .96

..

Pine Reg , $599.95

Pine Reg. S899 .96

'588.88

.

O.k Reg. 5699.95

L•nlf 61'

$1.000 .
INSTANT.
CREDIT
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(I You HtYt
VI SAt AMERICAN

EVERY DRIVING NEED

•TRUCK •RV

auto., P .S., P .B., air c:ond ., gOOd
ti res, landau model , sol id white
color.
1

3695
1975 FORD BRONCO 4X4

•RADIAL •ALL SEASON

V-8 Auto
'2995
1972 FORD MAVERICK 2 DR

•4-PLY POLYESTER

Auto. trans ., good !Ires. Lots of

service in thi s one .

895
'3895

RETREADS

1977 DODGE MONACO '2695

lncludes42" Snow Blade

P.B., air, locall owner ca r &amp; real

sharp.

1914 CHEV. lfz T. PICKUP
1
1495
.
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1969 CHEVROLET 1fz T.
'949

'

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·SAli

'TIRE

4 Dr. Brougham, V-B, auto., P .S.,

1

10 h.~ .• 42" Mower

-· FOR ECONOMY

locking differential , air condi ·

TIRE CHAINS..

REDUCED 30%
FOR CLEARANCE
.

NEW '80 atEVIES
_ .AVAilABLE
Immediate Delivery
Chi!Vette 2Dr. &amp; 4 Dr .
Monza Cpe 2 +2
Cita.tion 2.Dr. &amp; 4 Or. V-6

_,•"'

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OPEN MON. THRU. FRI. 8 AM TO 5:30 PM: SAT. 8 AM-2 PM

.
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- -~

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STUDDING~
FOR TRACTION
ON ICE

DRIVE Wlf tNSTOCK

'l!J.Zl1't

.' -

OF WINTER TIRES TO SATISFY

ching red vinyl trim , radio, air
cond ., automati c traRs., power
steering &amp; brakes. Rally wheels.

.'

•xPR8SS
CHARGI!

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4 Door, dark· red, color with mat -

lncludes42" Snow Blade.

11 lnclud&amp;s ~2 · 1 sno.w Bla~

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WE HAVE A FULL STOCK

t10ning , ' lean interior, green .

16 h.p·., Wllh 118" Mower
lnctudes 42" snow blade.

. 8 h.p.' with 36" Mower · .

THERE'S A LOT OF WINTER AHEAD

power steer ing , power brakes:

1

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Vo• Mow o.o,IIIY ~.,.

BE. PREPARED I

1

Cl61 WHEEL HORSE .............. LIST 356J
SALE $2795
. . LIST ~3310
C}141 WHEEL HORSE·.............
SALE $2595
ClOl ·WHEEL HORSE................. LisT 2633
T·- J:' . $21·
• 95 ·
C181 WHEEL .HORSE .............. .
14 h.p. wtth 4ll" Mower

'

lHE BLACK HOLE

Local 1 owner , 350 V-8 engine,

Oil distilled from the two aromatic
resin~ frankincense and myrrh goes
mosUy into perfumes. Somalia and
Ethiopia furnish most of tbe frankineense that reaches the lJnited
States. Saudi Arabia and Somalia
supply the myrrh, according to
National Geographic.

persons to serve on the E~tecutlve
Committee on Crinoe Preventio~
under the W.Va . Office of Crime
Prevention.
Local police were encouraged to
meet and talk with local groups to
explain the crime prevention
program and ur ge the appointment
of group representatives.
Caldwell also went over a list of
films and literature which police
departments can make available to
clubs and other groups.
Prosecutor Dan Roll said,
"Everyone at the meeting was
~ncour aged. While they admitted
this program will be time con·
suming, they all seemed to feel it
was worth the effort."

Coming Friday, Jan. 25
Walt Disney' s Production

1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

WHEEL HORSE
SALE

5 pc. Bedroom

ion

5 pc. Bedroom
'

5 PC. Be.droom

CONNALLY PLEASED
WASHINGTON (AP)
Republican presidential hopeful
John Connally says he is pleased
with the willingness of Israeli Deferise Minister Ezer Welzman to accept
the idea of Americans using Egyptian air bases.
Connally said he endorses the
defense minister's Jan. 7 statement
to the Israeli Parliament, in which
Weizman said use of the bases by the
United States would help Israel in
the longrun.
In a telegram that Connally sent to
Weizman on Friday, the former
Texas governor reiterated the need
for a strong U.S. presence in the
Middle East, saying lte existence
would have far-reaching effects on
regional stability and security. · ·

POMEROY- Paul David Mitchell, 25, Langsville, will be
transported to the Ohio Penal
Reception and Medical Center Monday to begin his six mooth to five
year sentence for WJButhorized use
of a motor vehicle.
Mitcbell was arrested in connecting with operating a 1979
Plymouth Trail Duster without the
owner's Tom Rue's consent.
RecenUy he entered guilty-pleas in
Meigs County Conunon Pleas Court
on charges of trespassing an Wloccupied structure, and unauthorized
use of a motor vehicle.
Meigs County sheriff's depuUes
will transfer Mitchell to Colwnbus.
In other department activity,
depuUes are investlgaUng vandallsm to a 1975 Oldsmobile owned
by George Kuhn of Syracuse and a·
mobile home owned by Leona Ebershach of Racine. Kuhn said his car
was damaged while parked at Arnold's. Trailer Park at Syracuse.
KulJn reported someone"slash~ his
car's headliner, dash and seatbelts
and the dash glass was broken.
Mrs. Ebersbach said someone
broke two storm windows. on her
mobile home.
Paul Buckley, Calaway Ridge, .
Route 2, Coolvllle, reported someone
ldlled his two-year old Black Angus
and dragged it to an awaiting
vehicle.
Richard Williamson,23, Rt.l,
Minersville, was charged with OWl
following an accident Thursday

4 door, small V-8, automati c

LexU5

'488.88
Bassett

tention. It's very sad.
Now then, if there are a few of you
readers who have not enjoyed the
presence of a pet in your home or
haven't had .one for some time- why
don't you call us and come out and
look at some of the cute puppies we
have at the moment. Or we have a
few adulte that are already " broken
in" and want someone to love agam.
For instance, we have several
really cute fluffy seven week old
Shepherd - Huskey - ElkhoWid puppies that will melt your heart real
fast, and equally cute and lovable
are several sweet little black and
white English Setter-Border Collie
type puppies about seven weeks old,
male.
We guarantee you that if you want
a pup, you won't go away empty handed If you'll call us at 99U260 and
find out the location of which animal
sounds Uke "what you always wante£1:"
"
Now then, it is not real simple to
get one of the animals. You must be
prepared to answer a few questions
that are important to us and to that
pet. We must be positive that the
animal is going to responsible folks
who can afford to provide it with the
necessities of life for "its" LifeUme.
OK?

Prisoner
transfer
scheduled

1977 CHEVROLET

'598.88

Pine Reg. S699. 95
'

By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs C01111ty
_Humane Society
POMEROY - Picture If you will ""
a woman sitting on a couch in a
living room, with her feet up on a•
footstool, enjoying the fireplace and
TV. She is not alone.
Lying fulll_ength along her legs is
a stretched out, sleeping, beauUftll
black and white cat named Reveille.
Under her right.arm, curled up, and
also sound asleep (and snoring) is a
black and white Boston Terrier - a
boy named Rip. On this woman 's left
side, one with her head on the cat,
are two girl Boston Terriers, named
Tidie and Tymmie. Holding a
notebook propped against her
stomach over one of the dog's heada
and the rear end of the cat, the"
woman attempts to draft an article
she must prepare for the newspaper.
Is this an WIUSU8l position for such
work' Not for ,this woman.
SomeUmes It's more awkward -like
trying to write on the desk with a cat
sitting on the paper trying to swat
the pencil out &lt;if her hand, ete. Oh,
yes, being a pet owner l.s a barrel fl.
iaughs- tbose of you who don't have
any are missing a fun Ume in your
life (some frustration too). But those
of us who own them and love them
Wouldn't part with them for a million
dollars.
For those qf us whQ had no
children, they are "our children"
a. ..: we love and care for them ...:
sOilletlmes better thjln some folks •
care for their own offspring
(terrible, but so true ). For the senior
ciUzen whose children have grown
up and gone away, they are the
loving dependents who need them
and make them feel sUll necessary
in this blg someUmes very cold
world we live in .. . wbere people
don't always have time for people.
For young children a pet also has a
place ... It Is his or her playmate,
friend, and confidant. It is their first
real responsibility, and through
their pet they learn to be kind, considerate, and reliable.
Being the above described type
pet owner, I really do feel sorry for
the pete that are let nm the countryflille or sit tied to a dog bouse with
the dnly contact from the owner
being someUmes once a day having
food brought to them.
All I've written In previous arUcles, these animals are lonely. I've
seen those poor type dogs just go
crazy when they see their masters
coming - jwnping up and down,
crying, barking, just so happy -then
the food Is dropped and the person
walks away to leave a disappointed
dog -; ·who just wanted some at-

Fruttwood Reg. $1'99.95

'498.88

'

'· PineReg . S2399 .96 '

6 pc. Bedroom

Qak Reg , S699.9S

*666.66

•888•88,
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'

Singer ~768

Bassett 1014

1161

Main House 7470

for a classroom for the Gallia County Police Academy
in 1976-79. Sheriff Montgomery and Chief J ohn Taylor,
Gallipolis Police Department in cooperation with
Buckeye Hills Career Center, set up classes which
have trained 60 men and women in police related oocupaUons.

I Hoofs and Paws

God th is is true. I would ·have it no

conunon goal- crime prevenUon.
The meeting was held at the
· Mason County Courthouse under the
direction of Cpl. Don M. Caldwell~
director ofthe W.Va . Office1of Crime
Prevention, and Dan Roll , Mason
County Prosecuting Attorney.
Caldwell showed and explamed a
flow chart outlining how civic clubs,
churches, labor, senior citizens,
youth groups, business groups and
other organizations could select
BODY DISCOVERED
representatives who in turn would
AKRON, Ohio (AP)
appoint a county chairperson to
Firefighters discovered the body of work with law enforcement officers.
a man indentifed
Earl Warning,
County chairpersons from the local
00 , of 'Akron, in the rubble of a burdist rict, which includes Mason ,
ned-out surplus store on the city's
Jackson a nd Putnam counties,
west side Saturday mornipg.
would then appoint section chair·
Officials said Waring, the owner of
Chief Jack's surplus store, lived in
the building.
Damage to the one-story structure
was estimated at $100,000 .• Officials
esUmated that $20,000 danuige was
caused to an adjoining building.
WOLVERINE "
10" WATERPROOF
WELLINGTON
morning on SJH , at CR 26.
According to the report, Williamson, making a right tum , lost control
of his vehicle which sUd off the roadway into a ditch. There was
moderate damage.

POINT PLEASANT - The heads
of the county's two major law enforcement agencies and other police
representatives showed their concern for "Locking Out Crinne in West
Virginia" Friday by attending a
meeting called for the purpose of
organizing a working relationship
between police and the public in a

CALL TOLL FREE 1--800-354--8919

We at Empire Furniture
have pledge
.
.

'
FruiiWOOd Reg . $799.95

Home .Oxygen

son

Rev . Dr. Edward W. W. Lewis

T roubles With A Wet Basement
·or Bowed Walls?

· other way . In fa ct, if there w ere a
way in whi ch I could live ag ain in
th is world, 1 would hope that t should
be born in Meigs County, and that

highs from the mid 30s to the low 40s.

6 pc. Bedroom

Marx

mool pleesed and proud to be - A

native

Our Tracie Record S-T-R·E·T·C·H·E-$
overS yrs.

was absolutely ri ght, and I thank

C. K. SNOWDEN

5 pc. Bedroom

with the

Fred W. Crow, Jr ., and Coa ch Art
Lew1::. "jc ~u.)larship ' .
" Wit h deep personal satisfac:tion
and thanksgi"Ving, I am he who is

Meigs County out of Ed Lewis.' He

Weather
Increasing cloudiness Sunday,

Law enforcem ent officers
dis·c uss crime prevention

'The Dr. Ravmond Boice. Allorney

does wi th Fred ) face life with
un se lf j s h
m ot i ves
see kin g
knowled ge, w isdom and love in thei r
growth and at ta inmen ts in their
r espective f ields of endeavor so th at
th ey could better ser v e their
fel lowmen, their country and 1heir
God. Shakespea r e once said , 'To be
honest as this worl d goes is t o be one
man p icked out of ten thou sand.' I
firmly believe that we shall see
multitudes of honest men befor e we
ever see again three such nobl e sons
of Ohio as Raym ond Boice, Fr ed
Crow and Art Lewi s!
" When son M ark gave hi s m ov ing
speech in M eigs two years ag o, he
said , 'you ca n·ta ke Ed Lew is out of
M eigs County , but you cah 't tak e

money. Find out how
much, ca ll:

SQUAD CAU.ED
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
ER Squad was called Saturday at
4: 19 a.m. for Marie Dudding who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

and because 1 think. under God so
highly o( these three noble sons of
Meigs Coun t y, 1 hereby establish

and t1ve S•s ters, oecause t a m s,o
gratefu l that I w ~1s prov1ded w ith a
solid grammar and h igh educ ation
in M eigs th at e n aht~ rl m e to compete
on a h igh le"V el wi th stu dent s fr om
larger communities : beca use I have
th e utmost r espect tor the youth of
Me igs Count y and th eir desire for
co llege E-ducations; because I am
thankful tor the inspiration given by
the peop le of our County, by the
fellowsh ip ot our Church , and
espec ially of our L or d Jesus Christ,

and judgment made them {and still

figurat ively that I am establ ishing
th is part of the educational sc hol ar -.

Si nger .~601

No bottles •••
No returns •••

·• st"l•P t u nrl Two of lhc·sc men, 1 say
fl ll &lt;'&lt; t•onately
dl"t.: w -·r" "9i c1nls"
I iler c.'l ll y
'· 1 he thr ee w ho1n 1 w•sh to honor
memona li ze wi th this scholarship,
wh •c h will enab le so me M eigs Hi gh
Sc hool grad ua re eclCh year t o
recei ve the suppor t and enco uragement of the inter (.\S t dividen ds from
the fund (the princi pal w i ll r emai n
1ntac tL are th e tate Or . Raymond
Boi ce, who dPrli ca ted hi s whole life
to th e hea l th and well being of the.
people of our Meigs area , wno was
se lfle;;s in his devotion and servi r:P , :~
ma rvelous e)(ample of one who li ved
for the good of his com m unity ; At ·
rorney Fred W. Crow, Jr ., who also
r eturned to M eigs Coun ty af1er his
graduate study, who has served wi th
dignity ,
respect,
eff iciency ,
character and leadership these last
four decades, an d conti nues to do so
with m agn ificent pr oficie ncy , con sec ra ti on and service .
" Fred Crow i s a re markable ex ·
prPSSion of lif e ren der ed on l he
hi ghest p lain for his count y, sta te
anQ nation , and Art "Pappy " Lewis,
who l ike Fred was an ou t sta ndi ng
ath lete in M ei gs Coun ty and in col·
lege w-here both reached All·
Amer ica n r ecogn ition. Art was the
one of the t hree who chose to re nder
lead er hsip in many ar eas outside of
our county . He became one of th e
coac hes
•n
mos t
pr o min ent
America , and was se vera l times
vo ted 'Coac h of the Year' in h is con ·
terence .
" Dr. Boi ce, A ttorney Crow and
Coac h L e wi s form a n oble
three:some wh ose abilitv , integrity ,

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1818 EA·STERN

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1\VE..

PHONE 446-1113

GALLIPOLIS

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B-1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13.1980

A-8--The Sunday Times.SCntinel. Sunday . Jan. 13. 1980

Peeps.

.O SP charges Gallipolis man with DWI

• •

A Gallipolis Diary
BY J. SAM\JEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLI&amp;-Mary Allison, the
curator of Our House musewn, has a
big (324 pp) blue book adorned with
a silver fleur.de tis : French Imprint
oa the Heart of America. It is
autographed by the author: "May
you enjoy this book-Mary Elizabeth
Wood," who is associate professor of
foreign languages at Ball State
University.
This book is full of photographs.
There's a picture of the plaque in the
big rock on the river bank at the
Public Square, placed there to honor
Lafayette and the French 500 by the
Ohlo Society of the DAR May 20,
1940. Under it on page 291 is a picture
of the bandstand.
First reference to Gallipolis is on
page 6, where it reads that merchants, artisans, tailors, hatters,
and archiects came to Gallipolis in
17110. Then, on page 45, in the
description of Centerville, lnd', it
reads that "the town would remind
one li Gallipolis, Ohio." On page 264
in the last paragraph of an article on

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COURT NEWS
GALLIPOLIS- Three cases were
continued in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday.
James P. Halley, 61, Gallipolis,
pleaded not guilty to charges of DWI
and driving while under suspension.
, Bond was set at $1,000.
Entering a plea of not guilty to a
charge of no operator's license, bond
for Jack Shaffer, 27, Gallipolis, was
setat$500.
Dwight Campbell, Gallipolis,
pleaded not guilty to a charge of
trespassing.

Paris, Ky. , the book reads that "a
group of well-born Parisians arrived
in 1798 from 'The City of the Gauls'
(Gallipolis, Ohio) ." On page 274 in
the vignette on Belpre, there's a
paragraph which read, "Another
settlement;· to be known as
'Gallipolis,' was readied for the arrival of 500 Parisians in 1790 by
craftsmen who modeled it after
Belpre. Four blockhouses and 96
cabins were constructed on that
Ohio Company tract, several miles
farther down the 'Belle Riviere'
(Ohio River)."
Then the vignette on Gallipolis
starts on page m under a photo of
the highway sign, identifying
Gallipolis as the City of the Gauls,
historice French settlement,1790.
It tells the well-known story of the
fraud worked by William Playfair on
the Frenchmen who came here; it
quotes verbatim from a brochure of
the Ohio Historical Society, the
laborers requiring 31 days to complete the job; date of the arrival of
the French ts is given wrongly by the
historical society and therefore by
this book : it should be Oct. 17, 1790.

GALLIPOLIS - Three drivers
were cited following three Friday
accidents investigated by the GalliaMeigs Post, Highway Patrol.
A Gallipolis man, David Rhodes,
27, was cited on a charge of DWI
following a one-vehicle mishap 011
Georges Creek Rd. , four-tenths of a
mile west of SR 7.
Called to the scene at 11 :20 p.m.,
officers report a west bound pickup
truck drive11 by Rhodes passed off
the right side of the roadway and
struck a utility pole.
Rhodes displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment. There
'

ancient times, smoldering
frankincense was used to honor the
gods. Myrrh was used to anoint the
dead, supposedly cured the sick, and
perfumed the body.
In

was severe damage to the vehicle.
The patrol investigated a twovehicle accident ~n U.S. 35, just east
of Rio Grande, at !2:25p.m.
Officers rePOrt a west bound auto
operated by Garnett E. Wood, 68,
Rio Grande, had stopped in. traffic to
turn right. A west bound tractortrailer operated by Frank Christian,
52, Lewisburg, Va., failed to stop and
struck the Wood auto in the rear.
Christian was cited on a charge of
failure to maintain an assured clear
distance. There was severe damage
to the Wood auto, slight damage to
the tractor-trailer.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle mishap on BidwellRodney Rd., two and seven-tentha
miles w'estofU.S. 35, at 3:50p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Tamara Phillips,
18, Bidwell, 'slid left of center and
struck a north bound vehicle driven

left of center. Both vehicles incurred
severe damage.

by John Holley, JO, Bidwell .
Phillips was cited on a charge of

Enters seventh year

Center offers warm hands, heart.
,.

~

Faye Duolavy II

1

..

oae seolor citizen_

-~

(aod sbe admlll
to belog 80 plaa I
who comet to lbe

Center everyday.
Sbe aays sbe eoJoys lbe people
and doesn't Ute to
1tay home alooe.
Sbe consider•
wolting an lap
robes ber Job at

K mart's Advertised
Merchandise Polley

. ..,......_

•-1 ..,,..,,....

...

o ... IN"' loo*&gt;- lo 10 ..., ..
-~~~--~~
II,..,
lo ..,,
\ll'llofttftft 101-, l .. ltl ItO ... I 111111

•••iltlllo ... ......_ -

Ot&gt;K~

..... _ . ''" ... _

........... "' ...

..-cNMOII""'OIIt PtM;• - • • . ai'-Dit
., wl~ Mil J6'oO •
""olllr - •• •
, C-I.Oitrtt~IIO~ IIIPI IC t O~&lt;PMI:WIIIO

c_p.,•-"

lbeCeater•

, ...... ~ ~•-..• ··..Kotocu.,. -•r• ..

'

GRANDMAGWOOD's diary: Jan.
" Ira Pope tame down on the 7
a.m. train, had to walk to the river
and come across in a skiff, an awful
trip. March 6, 1906-My little grandson left for home (Louisville) at 11
tonight on the Henry M. Stanley.
Cousin George Hamilton is pilot and
will see that our little boy has every
attention. March 31, 1906-We 'have
moved back to Gallipolis. The Henry
M. Stanley took our household goods
up and by noon they were in the
house. Ali moving expense was $30.
Oct. 28, 1906-There was a street
fair along the park front all last
week. Dec. 10, 1906-I bought velvet
pieces from the Gephart girls, the
milliners. They are selling out to
start anew in Charleston.

nora BlackWood 1called
the sweetheartl by tile Center staff)
bave been regnlan at the Center sJo.
ce the doon oPeDed In 1973. You

DeaD and

22!~8.97 .

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oever see one without the other.
They play lo the kitchen band, slog
lo lbe chorus and join In many other
aeUviUes.

50-Roll
Plastic
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Liners

20-Exp . Slide Film
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GAlliPOLIS ICE CO.

51 Party
Cups For
Hot, Cold
Beverages

~--

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-. .!) ;:·~

Everyone loves a
good game. At
the
Senior
Cltlzem Center,
Wednesday h

''game'' day.

Our Reg .. 48 .. Dis·
posab le piastre-foam
cups . 6.4-oz . s ize .
Party perfect. ideal
for hot or cold drrnks

9!?

Steam-Dry Iron

Mon .-Thurs. 8 a.m. -11 p.m.
Fri.-Sat 8 a.m.-midnight

25 vents distribute steam. Handy centered

Men's
or
Women's

68 ~
94'

FritoLay's '
Potato
ChipS"'-

SAVE DURING
THE MONTH ·
OF JANUARY

crisp. delicious party. lunch . or snacktime treat fresh packed in 7'1&gt;·oz.'
bag . Prrced to save !

ALL PRICES
ARE

"Net wt.

CASH &amp; CARRY

REGULAR

2

$69

26" 3 Speed

'

c
88
.

UL rated
for klichen;
garage, car

5!1~

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING .
&amp; BUILDING SUPPLIES
·•
Gallipolis

Latex Wall Paint

•

I
'

1 Galpn · Winter Summer · glass cleaner,
antl·free2e · bug remover.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS ..

·5-yr. durability. White and

-

Sale
Price

•

Our 8.96

Our Reg .
" '1..97

·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;::::::::::::::::

Windshield
Washer

'

and boat
fires

'7.50 SQ. YD.•••••••••••••••• '5.50 SQ. YD.

,,

I

Tbe
Seolor
CIUzeos' kitchen
band prefers tbe
oldies and wllb
Margaret Neu~~~~­
o at lbe plano, lbe
group really
makes mule wllb
their washboards
aod tiD plns or
whatever "In·
atnunent" they
happeD to play.

Sq.

'8.95 SQ. YD •••••••• ••••••••• '6.95 SQ. YD.

.

I
by Charkne Hoeflich

'Fl. oa.

20" TRAINER BIKE.. ...................146

•

'6.50 SQ. YD .•••••• •••• •• •••• '4.50 SQ. YD.

t

\I

Hard·working cleaning power on dishes ,
gentle · on your
hands . In choice of
lemon. pink . green.

our Reg .
83.97

. '6.00 SQ. YD .•••••• •••• •• •••• '4.00 SQ. YD.

·749 Third

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

32-0unce·
Kitchen
Plus " Dish
Detergent

SALE PRICE

446· 1995

Sale
Price

Lightweight, Reflective package

Extra Special
Reg. ~ ,
$6.00~0

-s zc
.

c~stom

tlnts.
98

1' ' •'

-~

.

.
,.

' I

POMEROY-There's a listerung
ear, an understanding heart and a
helping hand at the Senior Citizens
·Center.
And many older residents have
found it's the place to experience
that good feeling of being needed
and wanted. They can entertain or
be entertained, enjoy nutritious food
in a family type atmosphere, learn a
new skill from another, or share a
talent, as well as get assistance with
personal problems ~ Information
on social services. '
For many it has meant finding a
niche In life or solving a problem of
loneliness.
Marking Its seventh year of operation, the Center has expanded from
potluck dillners and a few gettogethers with a handful of people in
1973, to a comprehensive program of
services to hundreds of Meigs County's senlor citizen In 1980.
·
And the year is just beginning.
Anticipation and expectation of
new programs and services run high
with Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, Center
director, and her staff, as they eon·
template the move into the new
headquarters on Mulberry Heights
in April.
The facility will be spacious.
There will be a ceramic and craft
center, a workworking shop, in addi·
lion to rooms for educational programs and health related activities.
The staff plans an expansion of infonnational programs, pertinent to
older Americans, such as talks on

changes in legislation. They also
look forward to getting the senior
citizens more involved in the actual
operation of the Center and planning
for activities and ~oeclal events.
Already the Center Is anticipating
the need for additional transportation. A third van Ia expected in the
spring and already new routeS in the
county are being arranged and addi·
tiona! days Into some areas are being put into the schedules of the two
vans In operation for several years
now.
For Meigs County's older population - 18.5 percent of the residents
are more than 60 years of age - the
Center provides an unusually high
number of mulU~ces.
During October, November and
December, a total of 6,653 persons
j,arttcipated in some phase of the
programs offered by the Center health and educaUonal activities,
recreational opportunities, noon
meals, transportation, home
maintenance, chore service,
outreach efforts, legal and public
benefits assistance, and protective,
escort and counseling services.
The Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) participants have
provided a multitude of services n~
only to other senor citizens but to
schools, libraries, the hospital and
the community in general.
A total IX 280-plWI RSVP members
contributed 60,000 hours of volunteer
work this past year.

An important part of the overall
program of the Center came in 1974
when the Senior Nutrition Program
was started under the sponsorship of
the Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency. The home-delivered {llea]s,
with senior volunteers making those
deliveries, has become an important
part of the nutrition program and
one which assures the aged and infinn of one well·balanaced meal a
day.
Funding for the Center operatlona
hasn't always been easy, ~~J~d it's
taken a combination of federal, state
and local monies. The Center and
RSVP programs are· operated on an
approximately 50 percent federal, 50
percent local funding basis.
Several hundred senior citizens
donate on a regular basis, organlza·
tlons and churches contribute, there
are bake sales and bazaars, pancake
suppers and pop machine sales,
festivals and Meigs County fair
sales.
But for the senior citizens, It's eel'
talnly not all work and no play.
Quilting, cara games, craft work,
just socializing are everyday a~
tivities at the Center.
And the senior cltizeDB come,
many day after day.
Thelma Ashworth pretty well
described the feeling with her comment: "'There's no use staying
home twiddling your thwnbs when .
you can come here and enjoy
yourself."
And she's right you know!

:;:;::::=::::::; :;:;:;::: :~::::;:::;:::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:: :;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::; :; :;:::: :; :;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:; :; :;:;:: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;::: :=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::

cord and contoured handle. Save now.

Pho~e

, ,

3, 1906-RBining hard.

Nine other cases were terminated
in Judge James A. BeMelt's court
Friday.,
Charles E. Howard, 2ll, Salyersville, Ky., pleaded guilty to a
charge of DWI and was fined $300
plWI a sill month sentence, all but 10
days sW!pended.
Entering a plea of guilty to a r - - -- - - - - - - - charge d. driving while under
suspension, Harold L. Smith, 38, Bidwell, was fined $100 plWI a sill month
suspended sentence. Smith was further fined $15 on a charge of failure
toyleld. ·
Calvin E. Geiger, 22, Bidwell, was
fined $15 on a charge of no operator's
6% BEER, WINE
license.
·
Walving ~ on a charge of
AND POP
WI8Uthorized use of license plates
'was Richard .L. Taylor, 19,
This Week's Special
Gallipolis.
Martin Miller, 78, Patriot, waived
$30 on a charge of left of center.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
8-1601. $}29
charges of excessive speed were
Blls.
Rickie L. Long, 29, Bidwell, $32;
David K. Smith, 23, Vinton, $20; and
+Tax &amp; Dep.
Lawrence Theiss, 39, Vinton, $34.

Swedes may be the world's
leading apartment dwellers. Two of
every three of Sweden's 8,273,000
people live in apartments, says
National Geographic.

0

-

,

~I

'

'&lt;,1

..
.J

-

�..

~

~

....

, ,

B-1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13.1980

A-8--The Sunday Times.SCntinel. Sunday . Jan. 13. 1980

Peeps.

.O SP charges Gallipolis man with DWI

• •

A Gallipolis Diary
BY J. SAM\JEL PEEPS
GALLIPOLI&amp;-Mary Allison, the
curator of Our House musewn, has a
big (324 pp) blue book adorned with
a silver fleur.de tis : French Imprint
oa the Heart of America. It is
autographed by the author: "May
you enjoy this book-Mary Elizabeth
Wood," who is associate professor of
foreign languages at Ball State
University.
This book is full of photographs.
There's a picture of the plaque in the
big rock on the river bank at the
Public Square, placed there to honor
Lafayette and the French 500 by the
Ohlo Society of the DAR May 20,
1940. Under it on page 291 is a picture
of the bandstand.
First reference to Gallipolis is on
page 6, where it reads that merchants, artisans, tailors, hatters,
and archiects came to Gallipolis in
17110. Then, on page 45, in the
description of Centerville, lnd', it
reads that "the town would remind
one li Gallipolis, Ohio." On page 264
in the last paragraph of an article on

I,

I
I'

'I'
I
I'
I.

i:
I
I
I

I 1
I .

I.

COURT NEWS
GALLIPOLIS- Three cases were
continued in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Friday.
James P. Halley, 61, Gallipolis,
pleaded not guilty to charges of DWI
and driving while under suspension.
, Bond was set at $1,000.
Entering a plea of not guilty to a
charge of no operator's license, bond
for Jack Shaffer, 27, Gallipolis, was
setat$500.
Dwight Campbell, Gallipolis,
pleaded not guilty to a charge of
trespassing.

Paris, Ky. , the book reads that "a
group of well-born Parisians arrived
in 1798 from 'The City of the Gauls'
(Gallipolis, Ohio) ." On page 274 in
the vignette on Belpre, there's a
paragraph which read, "Another
settlement;· to be known as
'Gallipolis,' was readied for the arrival of 500 Parisians in 1790 by
craftsmen who modeled it after
Belpre. Four blockhouses and 96
cabins were constructed on that
Ohio Company tract, several miles
farther down the 'Belle Riviere'
(Ohio River)."
Then the vignette on Gallipolis
starts on page m under a photo of
the highway sign, identifying
Gallipolis as the City of the Gauls,
historice French settlement,1790.
It tells the well-known story of the
fraud worked by William Playfair on
the Frenchmen who came here; it
quotes verbatim from a brochure of
the Ohio Historical Society, the
laborers requiring 31 days to complete the job; date of the arrival of
the French ts is given wrongly by the
historical society and therefore by
this book : it should be Oct. 17, 1790.

GALLIPOLIS - Three drivers
were cited following three Friday
accidents investigated by the GalliaMeigs Post, Highway Patrol.
A Gallipolis man, David Rhodes,
27, was cited on a charge of DWI
following a one-vehicle mishap 011
Georges Creek Rd. , four-tenths of a
mile west of SR 7.
Called to the scene at 11 :20 p.m.,
officers report a west bound pickup
truck drive11 by Rhodes passed off
the right side of the roadway and
struck a utility pole.
Rhodes displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported to Holzer
Medical Center for treatment. There
'

ancient times, smoldering
frankincense was used to honor the
gods. Myrrh was used to anoint the
dead, supposedly cured the sick, and
perfumed the body.
In

was severe damage to the vehicle.
The patrol investigated a twovehicle accident ~n U.S. 35, just east
of Rio Grande, at !2:25p.m.
Officers rePOrt a west bound auto
operated by Garnett E. Wood, 68,
Rio Grande, had stopped in. traffic to
turn right. A west bound tractortrailer operated by Frank Christian,
52, Lewisburg, Va., failed to stop and
struck the Wood auto in the rear.
Christian was cited on a charge of
failure to maintain an assured clear
distance. There was severe damage
to the Wood auto, slight damage to
the tractor-trailer.
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle mishap on BidwellRodney Rd., two and seven-tentha
miles w'estofU.S. 35, at 3:50p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Tamara Phillips,
18, Bidwell, 'slid left of center and
struck a north bound vehicle driven

left of center. Both vehicles incurred
severe damage.

by John Holley, JO, Bidwell .
Phillips was cited on a charge of

Enters seventh year

Center offers warm hands, heart.
,.

~

Faye Duolavy II

1

..

oae seolor citizen_

-~

(aod sbe admlll
to belog 80 plaa I
who comet to lbe

Center everyday.
Sbe aays sbe eoJoys lbe people
and doesn't Ute to
1tay home alooe.
Sbe consider•
wolting an lap
robes ber Job at

K mart's Advertised
Merchandise Polley

. ..,......_

•-1 ..,,..,,....

...

o ... IN"' loo*&gt;- lo 10 ..., ..
-~~~--~~
II,..,
lo ..,,
\ll'llofttftft 101-, l .. ltl ItO ... I 111111

•••iltlllo ... ......_ -

Ot&gt;K~

..... _ . ''" ... _

........... "' ...

..-cNMOII""'OIIt PtM;• - • • . ai'-Dit
., wl~ Mil J6'oO •
""olllr - •• •
, C-I.Oitrtt~IIO~ IIIPI IC t O~&lt;PMI:WIIIO

c_p.,•-"

lbeCeater•

, ...... ~ ~•-..• ··..Kotocu.,. -•r• ..

'

GRANDMAGWOOD's diary: Jan.
" Ira Pope tame down on the 7
a.m. train, had to walk to the river
and come across in a skiff, an awful
trip. March 6, 1906-My little grandson left for home (Louisville) at 11
tonight on the Henry M. Stanley.
Cousin George Hamilton is pilot and
will see that our little boy has every
attention. March 31, 1906-We 'have
moved back to Gallipolis. The Henry
M. Stanley took our household goods
up and by noon they were in the
house. Ali moving expense was $30.
Oct. 28, 1906-There was a street
fair along the park front all last
week. Dec. 10, 1906-I bought velvet
pieces from the Gephart girls, the
milliners. They are selling out to
start anew in Charleston.

nora BlackWood 1called
the sweetheartl by tile Center staff)
bave been regnlan at the Center sJo.
ce the doon oPeDed In 1973. You

DeaD and

22!~8.97 .

PHOTOFINISHING
SPECIAL

1% HP 71/4'"
Circular Saw
Double -i nsu Ia ted
motor delivers 5300
RPM's . Complete
with 7'1•" combina ·
tion blade . Save
now .

99 (:

Developing
Per Roll
Develop Focal"' or Kodak"' 20 exp.
slide
.
or 8-MM movie film . Pnced to save.

CARRY OUT

~;0.
··:',~

ROCK SALTS
10 lb.
69~
Bag

)

Save Now!
Bundle of
3 Cannon "
Dishcloths

DISH CLOTHS

I• ' •, '"- - - •

........~,·.:-:- · - ·&gt;·
._.,.,.

- ~
--~-~-.-

.,, . •..,.
--~

'

+Tax

Dishwashing help ers' Durable cotton
in absorbent waHie·
weave. Bundle of 3
drshcloths , ea. 14x
t 5·•nch size.

Heavy·duty, 30x37"
liners fit 20- to 30·
gallon trash cans.
Roll of 50 with tape
ties . Stock up now .
'

'

.!.78c

$ ' O u r t57

RC or DIET RITE

2!~

oever see one without the other.
They play lo the kitchen band, slog
lo lbe chorus and join In many other
aeUviUes.

50-Roll
Plastic
Trash Can
Liners

20-Exp . Slide Film
Gf- 8 mm Movie Film

GAlliPOLIS ICE CO.

51 Party
Cups For
Hot, Cold
Beverages

~--

. ~-:'
-. .!) ;:·~

Everyone loves a
good game. At
the
Senior
Cltlzem Center,
Wednesday h

''game'' day.

Our Reg .. 48 .. Dis·
posab le piastre-foam
cups . 6.4-oz . s ize .
Party perfect. ideal
for hot or cold drrnks

9!?

Steam-Dry Iron

Mon .-Thurs. 8 a.m. -11 p.m.
Fri.-Sat 8 a.m.-midnight

25 vents distribute steam. Handy centered

Men's
or
Women's

68 ~
94'

FritoLay's '
Potato
ChipS"'-

SAVE DURING
THE MONTH ·
OF JANUARY

crisp. delicious party. lunch . or snacktime treat fresh packed in 7'1&gt;·oz.'
bag . Prrced to save !

ALL PRICES
ARE

"Net wt.

CASH &amp; CARRY

REGULAR

2

$69

26" 3 Speed

'

c
88
.

UL rated
for klichen;
garage, car

5!1~

GALLIPOLIS FLOOR COVERING .
&amp; BUILDING SUPPLIES
·•
Gallipolis

Latex Wall Paint

•

I
'

1 Galpn · Winter Summer · glass cleaner,
antl·free2e · bug remover.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS ..

·5-yr. durability. White and

-

Sale
Price

•

Our 8.96

Our Reg .
" '1..97

·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;::::::::::::::::

Windshield
Washer

'

and boat
fires

'7.50 SQ. YD.•••••••••••••••• '5.50 SQ. YD.

,,

I

Tbe
Seolor
CIUzeos' kitchen
band prefers tbe
oldies and wllb
Margaret Neu~~~~­
o at lbe plano, lbe
group really
makes mule wllb
their washboards
aod tiD plns or
whatever "In·
atnunent" they
happeD to play.

Sq.

'8.95 SQ. YD •••••••• ••••••••• '6.95 SQ. YD.

.

I
by Charkne Hoeflich

'Fl. oa.

20" TRAINER BIKE.. ...................146

•

'6.50 SQ. YD .•••••• •••• •• •••• '4.50 SQ. YD.

t

\I

Hard·working cleaning power on dishes ,
gentle · on your
hands . In choice of
lemon. pink . green.

our Reg .
83.97

. '6.00 SQ. YD .•••••• •••• •• •••• '4.00 SQ. YD.

·749 Third

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

32-0unce·
Kitchen
Plus " Dish
Detergent

SALE PRICE

446· 1995

Sale
Price

Lightweight, Reflective package

Extra Special
Reg. ~ ,
$6.00~0

-s zc
.

c~stom

tlnts.
98

1' ' •'

-~

.

.
,.

' I

POMEROY-There's a listerung
ear, an understanding heart and a
helping hand at the Senior Citizens
·Center.
And many older residents have
found it's the place to experience
that good feeling of being needed
and wanted. They can entertain or
be entertained, enjoy nutritious food
in a family type atmosphere, learn a
new skill from another, or share a
talent, as well as get assistance with
personal problems ~ Information
on social services. '
For many it has meant finding a
niche In life or solving a problem of
loneliness.
Marking Its seventh year of operation, the Center has expanded from
potluck dillners and a few gettogethers with a handful of people in
1973, to a comprehensive program of
services to hundreds of Meigs County's senlor citizen In 1980.
·
And the year is just beginning.
Anticipation and expectation of
new programs and services run high
with Mrs. Eleanor Thomas, Center
director, and her staff, as they eon·
template the move into the new
headquarters on Mulberry Heights
in April.
The facility will be spacious.
There will be a ceramic and craft
center, a workworking shop, in addi·
lion to rooms for educational programs and health related activities.
The staff plans an expansion of infonnational programs, pertinent to
older Americans, such as talks on

changes in legislation. They also
look forward to getting the senior
citizens more involved in the actual
operation of the Center and planning
for activities and ~oeclal events.
Already the Center Is anticipating
the need for additional transportation. A third van Ia expected in the
spring and already new routeS in the
county are being arranged and addi·
tiona! days Into some areas are being put into the schedules of the two
vans In operation for several years
now.
For Meigs County's older population - 18.5 percent of the residents
are more than 60 years of age - the
Center provides an unusually high
number of mulU~ces.
During October, November and
December, a total of 6,653 persons
j,arttcipated in some phase of the
programs offered by the Center health and educaUonal activities,
recreational opportunities, noon
meals, transportation, home
maintenance, chore service,
outreach efforts, legal and public
benefits assistance, and protective,
escort and counseling services.
The Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) participants have
provided a multitude of services n~
only to other senor citizens but to
schools, libraries, the hospital and
the community in general.
A total IX 280-plWI RSVP members
contributed 60,000 hours of volunteer
work this past year.

An important part of the overall
program of the Center came in 1974
when the Senior Nutrition Program
was started under the sponsorship of
the Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency. The home-delivered {llea]s,
with senior volunteers making those
deliveries, has become an important
part of the nutrition program and
one which assures the aged and infinn of one well·balanaced meal a
day.
Funding for the Center operatlona
hasn't always been easy, ~~J~d it's
taken a combination of federal, state
and local monies. The Center and
RSVP programs are· operated on an
approximately 50 percent federal, 50
percent local funding basis.
Several hundred senior citizens
donate on a regular basis, organlza·
tlons and churches contribute, there
are bake sales and bazaars, pancake
suppers and pop machine sales,
festivals and Meigs County fair
sales.
But for the senior citizens, It's eel'
talnly not all work and no play.
Quilting, cara games, craft work,
just socializing are everyday a~
tivities at the Center.
And the senior cltizeDB come,
many day after day.
Thelma Ashworth pretty well
described the feeling with her comment: "'There's no use staying
home twiddling your thwnbs when .
you can come here and enjoy
yourself."
And she's right you know!

:;:;::::=::::::; :;:;:;::: :~::::;:::;:::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:: :;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::; :; :;:::: :; :;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;:;:; :; :;:;:: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;::: :=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::

cord and contoured handle. Save now.

Pho~e

, ,

3, 1906-RBining hard.

Nine other cases were terminated
in Judge James A. BeMelt's court
Friday.,
Charles E. Howard, 2ll, Salyersville, Ky., pleaded guilty to a
charge of DWI and was fined $300
plWI a sill month sentence, all but 10
days sW!pended.
Entering a plea of guilty to a r - - -- - - - - - - - charge d. driving while under
suspension, Harold L. Smith, 38, Bidwell, was fined $100 plWI a sill month
suspended sentence. Smith was further fined $15 on a charge of failure
toyleld. ·
Calvin E. Geiger, 22, Bidwell, was
fined $15 on a charge of no operator's
6% BEER, WINE
license.
·
Walving ~ on a charge of
AND POP
WI8Uthorized use of license plates
'was Richard .L. Taylor, 19,
This Week's Special
Gallipolis.
Martin Miller, 78, Patriot, waived
$30 on a charge of left of center.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
8-1601. $}29
charges of excessive speed were
Blls.
Rickie L. Long, 29, Bidwell, $32;
David K. Smith, 23, Vinton, $20; and
+Tax &amp; Dep.
Lawrence Theiss, 39, Vinton, $34.

Swedes may be the world's
leading apartment dwellers. Two of
every three of Sweden's 8,273,000
people live in apartments, says
National Geographic.

0

-

,

~I

'

'&lt;,1

..
.J

-

�H - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1980

Philomathean Club closes for winter

·:Double exhibit displayed at Riverby
GALLIPO!.JS - Visitors to the two Galleries at
Riverby, home of the French Art Colony al &gt;30 First
Avenue In Gallipolis, will see two unique exhibits. One
consists of '!I panels, prepared by David Reiser Architects of Athens, showing in watercolor sketches on
each, the proposed restoration and renovation of a lull
eight block area in downtown Gallipolis. On the bottom
. , half of each panel is a photograph of the present appearance of the various sections of the downtown area,
•.
and the upper half depicts the proposed plan. ..
'·
A most unusual photography exhibit is also at River·
by, this one by Steven P. Keller, Art Therapist at the
Community Mental Health Center in Gallipolis.
Keller's exhibit is entiUed "Willie Sleeps," and consists of 30 black and white photographs of tombstones,
mainly from the Victorian period, with a great number
from upstate New York, Massachusetts and N~w Hampshire. All were photographed during the daytime.
Included in the '!I panels by Reiser, entitled the
"Renovation Study," to make up the eight block area
proposed for renovation and restoration, are Second
.-· • Avenue starting at Grape Street and including Tope
C Furniture, going North past Locust Street; Third
Avenue from Grape Street past State Street; State
"" Street from First Avenue to Third Avenue' 21'. Atley
and areas on Court and Loclll!t Streets. Over .too

businesses In downtown Gallipolis are included in the
Study.
Among the matted and framed photographs of tombstones in Keller's exhibit, "Willie Sleeps," are some
because of who they
tombstones of famous people,~!
were, but rather to illustrate
their tombstone was
designed and executed. His ~ goal was a study
in design, some very formal and academic, while
others were non-traditional. His secondary goal was to
take the photographs of the tombstones for their
historical value, primarily with emphasis on stone cutting.
Keller is from Wellston. He holda' both his Bachelors
and MasterS, degrees In Fine Arts from Ohio University. He spent 10 years in New York as a traveling
photographer for General Electric, before returning to
Jackson County three years ago. He became Art
Therapist for the Conunwlity Mental Health Center in
1978.

Area residents are urged to enjoy the double exhibit
of the "Renovation Study" for downtown Gallipolis,
prepared by David Reiser Architects of Athens, and
"Willie Sleeps," Keller's black and white photographs
of tombstone, now at Riverby. The Galleries are open
on Saturdays and Sundays from I p.m. until5 p.m. and
on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 a.m. untll3 p.m.

...,.

-'•

GALLIPOLIS - The December
meelingofPhilomatheanCiubatthe
home of the vice president, Joyce
Thaler, closed the winter season for
the ·club meetings, which will
resume on Thursday evening, March 13.
Following a delightful holiday buflet dinner, the program featured

worthy cause in keeping with the
holiday season. Two separate
projects were supported with this
year's contribution by the club
members.
The committee in charge of the
December meeting, in addition to
the hostess, were Betty McGinness,
Beverly Gettles, Mary Ellia, Phyllia

tivated the
readlnga
by members
Mary Ellia.with
She three
cap- .
beautiful stories relating to the
Chri!rtmas holiday season. The first
described how Handel wrote the
Messiah, entitled "Handel's Christ·
mas Masterpiece" by Marie King.
The second was a story based on the
famous Nonnan Rockwell painting,
"The Toymaker," written by Dr.
Donald R. Stoltz, the president of the
Norman Rockwell Museum in
Philadelphia. She closed with "The
Inn Keeper" by Oliver M. Keve.
Zelma Northcutt then led the entire
group In singing a number of
favorite carols of the season,
following the readings by Mrs. Ellia.
Preceding the program, Shirleen
Wiseman, president, announced that
the book, "History of the Ar·
menians" by Moses Khorenaps'l has
been placed in the Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library in
memory of Berc Tap, M.C.
As Is the custom of the
Philomathean Club, a donation is
given by the membership to go to a

.••
.'
~

.J

••'
••
&gt;

•
•

..•

Any Living Room With Connecting Hall .............. '19.9r
Limll250sq . 11 . All whi le and lighl pastel carpet, 25&lt; sq . lt .

Any Living and Dining Room with Hall...... ........ 137.95
Limit 350 sq. ft.

.•
...

-

Any Other Room When Cleaned With
Living and Dining Room ................................ '15.00
Limjl180sq . lt .
M INIM UM CHARGE $19 .95 FOR ANY CLEANING

satisfaction Guaranteed

: r----7,)------------,
""

;;_ I
1:, 1
.. I
~·'.·:' 11 .
_

•I

I

~·

0J
___.-

. ~~

//

I

(

,

'dt,n.L..

0

-7

_ ,..,. . - 0 /

I
1
1

1
1
1

Exhlbitfor themonthofJanuary .:.
!:: A Two Part Exhibit. "Willie Sleeps"

E
and other photography by Steven P.
.._ Keller. " Renovation Study" - a
r

"' series of watercolors of the proposed
!&lt;j restoration of downtown Gallipolis.
"· Twenty-seven panels contain a
''·
~ photograph of the present buildings
:. with a watercolor c sketch of the
·: proposed renovation above, for an
~ eight block area in downtown
~ G lli lis Th
·
b
,,· a po · esc were prepare&lt;1 y
: David Reiser Architects of Athens,
, . Ohio.
: Gallery Hours _ Saturdays and
,.

Sundays, 1 p.m. unW 5 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m.
unti!Jp.m.
January 22, 7:30p.m.- F.A.C. In·
terdepartmental Meeting, Rlverby.
9p.m.-F.A.C. Trustees Meeting.
February Exhibit - Watercolor
Ahatractions by Brenda Richardson
of Cincinnati. Also will include a few
pieces of her work in sculpture.
February 16 , 8 p.m. _Third In the
series of Old Time Movie Classics.
This one considered to be one of the
funniest Marx Brothers movies ever
made.
February 28 - Annual Dinner and
Meeting of the French Art Colony.
March 3, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - First of
the series of seven Creative Writing
Seminar classes, taught by Wayne
Dodd, Professor of English at Ohio ·
University .

C ----------------------------~--------------__,
I--

t

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

:'

FOR

..~,.

Th1• perfr('l u'II!J lo .~ IIIJII' uou r
il '.., fur hi' JM.

Past Councilors meet
CHESTER - The Past Councilors' Club of Chester Council No.
323, Daughters of America, met at
the home of Ethel Orr with Inzy
Newell as c!Hlostess.
Inzy Newell, vice president,
presided. She read the first through
the sixth verses from the book of St.
Matthew. The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the American Flag were
given in unison. Charlotte Grant, a
new member, was welcomed to the
club.
Mrs. Newell installed the
following officers for six months of
1980- Pauline Ridenour, president;
Margaret Tuttle, vice president;

Keepsake"
Rqistettd Diamond Rinp

SUPERIORS

On Nov. 23, Brenda Fife, daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fife, Jr.,
Cheshire, became the bride of Bill
Hood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
. Hood, AddisQn.
The wedding took place at Old
Kyger Freewill Baptist Church with
Rev. Miles Trout officiating at the
double ring ceremony. Music was
played by Mrs. Miles Trout. Gloria
Amos served as maid of honor, Bobhi Hood was the bridesmaid and the
best man, Jay Thompson, cousin of
thegroom.
·
After the ceremony, a reception

FULLY COOKED, READY
TO EAT, LEAN NO WASTE

59
iJz OR

WHOLE
BY THE PIECE

SMOKED

JOWL BACON •••••••••••••••• ~~;. 59
.

ALLISON

e

LARGE EGGS •••••••••••••~~~~- 79e
·

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK

JEWELRY STORE
Second
Gallipols, OH.
342

$}79

GALLON
PLASTIC JUG

'sUNDAY

~~sou P. ...........4CAN~

00

8-16

oz. somEs.

Lots of beauties, plus some oldies but goodies. Quali ·
ty name brand fabrics ... . Burlington/Kiopman,
Milliken, Skinner, Pendleton and others at prices you
won't believe. Something for everyone. Hurry in to·
day - you'll be glad you did. · ·

Ladies Diamond Solitaire

Vs ct.
1/6 ct.
l/ 4 ct.
1
13 ct.

$225.00
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$410.00
$700.00

ALL WEIGHTS
APPROXIMATE
ENLARGED TO SHOW
EXQUISITE DETAIL

417
0

DERIFIELD
JEWELRY
Second Ave. Gallipolis,

"Across from
the
Theater"
Slilr Q( Africa Diamonds

CORDUROY
Prin, Solid, All Wales

e60" FAKE FURS
$398

Reg. To

YD.

$11.99 Yd .

• ALL TRIMS
Vz OFF
• 45 BRIDAL WHITES
Reg. To

$10.99

$298YD.

45" DISCO SATIN ....................... 98' YD.
45" PRINTED SHEERS. .................. 98' YO~
45'1 JERSEY PRINTS... ..... ............. 98' Y~.
45" PLAID TAFFETA .. : ................... 98' Yo;

ALL WINTER STOCK
NOW

Plus Deposit

.

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60". PENDLETON WOOLS &amp; WOOL KNITS .................................. .. %OFJ:

45"
WHIP

-

QUART
JAR

THE AMAZING !lUCK STOVE

WITH A•

ll'wcfli.Air Hut
U.._,.,,. tut """-" y.v
Tht lUCk Stove htl t . .. ltciVH ftlt luck
forctd hOt-tlr (II'ICI COOl · Stoye burna
VflfY tf.
tlr ·lnttkt) &amp;VIttm IPiat tlcltntly ltxtrKtlng ••
tt\t Mit frOM uMI ttn powtr then 1 l'tlueh "
•~ ot "''
wood ·or COli ,
lOO·wttt IIVhfbulb .
6Ytlltblt "*tY from t
COr'nPited to 1ot n Mlh your
...., PI~ at WOOd) , • ak\gtt
for I tlr~IKI.
houM', 1¥...1'1·
fire Wlll Nfl from 6 to lt
ha&amp;.ra, wl"*'t 11n'y •'~ ·

•H:.. ;.. ,tHHI
Tht luck Stov
n:trec:tl 'If. to IG

· tentklr. trom

I
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L-----------------------------·
U. S. HO. 1
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20 LB.· ,
69
POTATOES•... ~:··~··~~~...... 1 ,

II.. Hqt
Tht l~c!t S.0¥1
meet1 or ~
all t tftf't' stan .
Gtrdt HI IIV ·The
Net1on11
Flrt

we

Prottdlon

45'' POLYESTER SILK PRINTS ............................................... 11.98 YO~
54" CHRISTMAS PRINTS ..................................................... 11.98 Yo.
,60" POLYESTER PRINTS .••..... .•.. .. ..•..•.........•.... .•.••. •...•...•..•.• 12.98 YD;
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45" WOOL JERSEY SOLIDS •. :.................. ............................ .. '1.98 YO:
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45" DOUBLE FACE SUEDE.. ............ ....................................... '2.98 Yo;
108" LINGERIE FABRICS.........................................................lf.J Ofi
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45" METALLIC KNITS........ :.. ...... ............... 45" ............... '19'
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the right
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SKI WEAR QUILTS
. 45 "

•DRESSES
•SUITS
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.SWEAT.ERS
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' •BLOU$ES

•WOOL COATS
. .SKI JACKETS
.. •SKIRTS

•PANTS

Many More Interesting Items Not Liste"d On Sale!

•

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~

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'

.

'

Gallipolis,
. Singe-r Approved, Dealer
,

' 1-

· Mon. &amp; Fri . till p.m .
rues., WO(ed •• sat. 111s
Thur•d•v 11112 noon

.'

'JAN. AND FEB. STORE HOURS: 9:30.5:30 MON. 11-IRU SAT.

;,

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Don 't
M iss
Th is
One !

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GLOVE$
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SCARVES - .ttATS .-

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G,allipOIIs, Ohio

PRINTS
5lrvo.

58 Court'

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25% OFF

l1tlon .

ALL MODELS IN STOGK -READY. 'TODELIVE~

405 Second AYe.
Pll . 446· 7017

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Good Only at Barr's Expires 1-16·801

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DRESSING

SWEATSUIT FABRIC
RIBBED POLY KNITS
T-SHIRT TOP KNITS

QUILTED PRINTS
Hustle in
ea rly for the
widest selection .
All-natural dogs
by Spalding.

54" . 60"

300 ~nd Ave.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

'$}29

FUEL

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Beauty.

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PEPSI OR
DIET PEPSI

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was held at the bridegroom's paren·
tshome.

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HEATING YOUR HOME

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HEAT YOUR
ENTIRE HOME

~~~'V~~·

i:r'·················R.~-;n~:n6~=;==···=·=···'·' =:r
EPISCOP AI.. CHurch, 2:30 p.m.
annual meeting of Churchwomen
United. Election and installation of
1911) officers.
REVJV-AL, Church of God of
Prophecy, 0 . J. White Rd., Jan. 1320. Evangelist Rev. J. M. Donahue,
Columbus . 7:30p.m.
PWP, Bowling, Skyline lJmes , 3
p.m.
ROBERT Grubb will be guest
speaker at Northup Baptist Church,
7:30p.m. All welcome.
.MONDAY
- .
REVTVAL, . Church of God of
Holiness, Lecta, begins Jan. 14
through week ; with Rev. Glenn
Seymour. 7 p.m. Special singers.
MERCERVILLE Grange, regular
meet, 7:30p.m . .
WASHINGTON PTA meeting with
John Groth, M.D. ; 7:00 p.m. in
school library.
OAPSE me.!ting, at Centerville
Elementary, 7:30p.m.
WASIDNGTON PTA, 7:30 p.m. in
school library; guest speaker, Dr.
Groth, Holzer Clinic. Everyone is
welcome. Refreshments afterward.

C.DA

CUT YOUR COST NOW!

~·
....

MEIGS 992-5554

Fife, Hood united

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HAM

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Catch Clog Fever.

~~

Mr. and Mrs. Hill Hood

SAVE 20c

§

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
· GALLIA 446-5554
~~~

1-----------------------

KffPIW~'f'.
IIJI'I', whf'll

POMEROY - Several Sabbath
School members of the Pomeroy
Sabbath-day Adventist Church
gathered in the fellowship room of
the church for a Christmas party
Thursday evening, Dec. 20.
Games were played ·and prizes
won by Mary Butcher and Pat Dit·
tes. The door prize was awarded to
Wilma Weiman.
Refreshments consisted of various
kinds of cookies, cup cakes, potato

Smeltzer, Owner

Select a Keepsake diamond
ri n~ to C)( press
your I 0\11' Keepsake ee nter
diamonds are lo\'Uarantced in
writi ng, fo rever . for fi ne
white co lo r , correc!._modcrn
cu t a nd pe·rrect d~y .

project. Alao on display is the photography show,
"Willie Sleeps," not shown, due to a space problem in
the "Times-Sentinel."

Christmas jare /Je ld

Phone 614-446·1096
Paul

engage m ent

RENOVATION STUDY- These are just two of the

Conley Cole, Sarah Drake, Tom and
Laura Nice, Christopher Staats,
Darlene , Richard .anct' David
Stewart, Sandy, Mary and Misty
Butcher, Wilma Weimanr. and Rita
White.

PAUL'S STEAMWAY

MOARI SEV

'1:1 panels now on display at Riverby, home of the French Art Colony, of the Downtown Gallipolis Renovation

was centered with a floral arran~e­
ment aud candles. Mrs. Morris
presided at the eoffee service. Tea
sandwiches, cookies, coffee and
punch were ser.ed by Mrs. June
Freed and Mrs. Velma Rue.

chips and dip, nuts, mints and punch. Agift exchange was held.
Among those attending were AI,
Pat, Jim and Julie Dittes, Burdell
and Effie Black, Bob, Rohen and
William Upacomb, Clara Mcintyre,

For the bes1 in worry·free cleaning, ca ll the E .:perienced
Professionals. We have cleaned over 20 million sq uare teet of carpet.

~----&lt;0&gt;·«?&gt;~

Keepsake ...
The perfect way to
show your love

POMEROY-Mrs. Grace Eich was
installed as sponsor of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority in ceremonies held
Thursday night at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Mary Morris, president, was
assisted with the ritual by other offleers ~f the chapter. Reinstated into
mcp1bership was Dorma Jones.
Perla Averion of the Philippines
was guest speaker for the meeting
which continued the theme of
"Around the World with Beta Sigma
Phi." Mrs. Averion talked about the
customs and history of the Philippines. She noted that the Christmas
celebration there begins on Dec. 16
with a .Mass at 4:30 a.m. and continues for l)l.n.. days ending on
ChristmasEvewithmldnightMass.
Mrs. Maidie Mora, social chairman' arranged the tea table which

WINTER .CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS

Frederick , treasurer; Thelma
White, Sentinel; flower coounittee,
EIJIIB Cleland; Mary K. Holter,
news reporter.
Games were conducted by Pauline
Ridenour and Betty Roush. Refreshments were served by the hostesses.
Betty Roush won the door prize.
Those present in addition to those
named were, Marcia Keller, Laura
Mae Nice, Mabel Van Meter, Opal
Hollon and Ada BlsseU. Guests were
Opal Eichinger, Margaret Amberger, and Loretta Weber, Ft.
Wayne, Indiana, cousin of Mrs .
Keller.

..

Thomas, Virginia Davies, Shirleen
Wiseman, Mary Jo Thaler and Jan
Thaler.
~t the Thursday evening, March
13 meeting of the members of
Philomathean at the home of
Shirleen Wiseman, a special
program will be presented by Betty
McGinness.

r;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;,

Betty Roll8h, secretary; Goldie

.•'

htch installed as sponsor

.,.

'

0-

••

.•••
J
••'

••"•
•

�H - The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1980

Philomathean Club closes for winter

·:Double exhibit displayed at Riverby
GALLIPO!.JS - Visitors to the two Galleries at
Riverby, home of the French Art Colony al &gt;30 First
Avenue In Gallipolis, will see two unique exhibits. One
consists of '!I panels, prepared by David Reiser Architects of Athens, showing in watercolor sketches on
each, the proposed restoration and renovation of a lull
eight block area in downtown Gallipolis. On the bottom
. , half of each panel is a photograph of the present appearance of the various sections of the downtown area,
•.
and the upper half depicts the proposed plan. ..
'·
A most unusual photography exhibit is also at River·
by, this one by Steven P. Keller, Art Therapist at the
Community Mental Health Center in Gallipolis.
Keller's exhibit is entiUed "Willie Sleeps," and consists of 30 black and white photographs of tombstones,
mainly from the Victorian period, with a great number
from upstate New York, Massachusetts and N~w Hampshire. All were photographed during the daytime.
Included in the '!I panels by Reiser, entitled the
"Renovation Study," to make up the eight block area
proposed for renovation and restoration, are Second
.-· • Avenue starting at Grape Street and including Tope
C Furniture, going North past Locust Street; Third
Avenue from Grape Street past State Street; State
"" Street from First Avenue to Third Avenue' 21'. Atley
and areas on Court and Loclll!t Streets. Over .too

businesses In downtown Gallipolis are included in the
Study.
Among the matted and framed photographs of tombstones in Keller's exhibit, "Willie Sleeps," are some
because of who they
tombstones of famous people,~!
were, but rather to illustrate
their tombstone was
designed and executed. His ~ goal was a study
in design, some very formal and academic, while
others were non-traditional. His secondary goal was to
take the photographs of the tombstones for their
historical value, primarily with emphasis on stone cutting.
Keller is from Wellston. He holda' both his Bachelors
and MasterS, degrees In Fine Arts from Ohio University. He spent 10 years in New York as a traveling
photographer for General Electric, before returning to
Jackson County three years ago. He became Art
Therapist for the Conunwlity Mental Health Center in
1978.

Area residents are urged to enjoy the double exhibit
of the "Renovation Study" for downtown Gallipolis,
prepared by David Reiser Architects of Athens, and
"Willie Sleeps," Keller's black and white photographs
of tombstone, now at Riverby. The Galleries are open
on Saturdays and Sundays from I p.m. until5 p.m. and
on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10 a.m. untll3 p.m.

...,.

-'•

GALLIPOLIS - The December
meelingofPhilomatheanCiubatthe
home of the vice president, Joyce
Thaler, closed the winter season for
the ·club meetings, which will
resume on Thursday evening, March 13.
Following a delightful holiday buflet dinner, the program featured

worthy cause in keeping with the
holiday season. Two separate
projects were supported with this
year's contribution by the club
members.
The committee in charge of the
December meeting, in addition to
the hostess, were Betty McGinness,
Beverly Gettles, Mary Ellia, Phyllia

tivated the
readlnga
by members
Mary Ellia.with
She three
cap- .
beautiful stories relating to the
Chri!rtmas holiday season. The first
described how Handel wrote the
Messiah, entitled "Handel's Christ·
mas Masterpiece" by Marie King.
The second was a story based on the
famous Nonnan Rockwell painting,
"The Toymaker," written by Dr.
Donald R. Stoltz, the president of the
Norman Rockwell Museum in
Philadelphia. She closed with "The
Inn Keeper" by Oliver M. Keve.
Zelma Northcutt then led the entire
group In singing a number of
favorite carols of the season,
following the readings by Mrs. Ellia.
Preceding the program, Shirleen
Wiseman, president, announced that
the book, "History of the Ar·
menians" by Moses Khorenaps'l has
been placed in the Samuel L.
Bossard Memorial Library in
memory of Berc Tap, M.C.
As Is the custom of the
Philomathean Club, a donation is
given by the membership to go to a

.••
.'
~

.J

••'
••
&gt;

•
•

..•

Any Living Room With Connecting Hall .............. '19.9r
Limll250sq . 11 . All whi le and lighl pastel carpet, 25&lt; sq . lt .

Any Living and Dining Room with Hall...... ........ 137.95
Limit 350 sq. ft.

.•
...

-

Any Other Room When Cleaned With
Living and Dining Room ................................ '15.00
Limjl180sq . lt .
M INIM UM CHARGE $19 .95 FOR ANY CLEANING

satisfaction Guaranteed

: r----7,)------------,
""

;;_ I
1:, 1
.. I
~·'.·:' 11 .
_

•I

I

~·

0J
___.-

. ~~

//

I

(

,

'dt,n.L..

0

-7

_ ,..,. . - 0 /

I
1
1

1
1
1

Exhlbitfor themonthofJanuary .:.
!:: A Two Part Exhibit. "Willie Sleeps"

E
and other photography by Steven P.
.._ Keller. " Renovation Study" - a
r

"' series of watercolors of the proposed
!&lt;j restoration of downtown Gallipolis.
"· Twenty-seven panels contain a
''·
~ photograph of the present buildings
:. with a watercolor c sketch of the
·: proposed renovation above, for an
~ eight block area in downtown
~ G lli lis Th
·
b
,,· a po · esc were prepare&lt;1 y
: David Reiser Architects of Athens,
, . Ohio.
: Gallery Hours _ Saturdays and
,.

Sundays, 1 p.m. unW 5 p.m.
Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 a.m.
unti!Jp.m.
January 22, 7:30p.m.- F.A.C. In·
terdepartmental Meeting, Rlverby.
9p.m.-F.A.C. Trustees Meeting.
February Exhibit - Watercolor
Ahatractions by Brenda Richardson
of Cincinnati. Also will include a few
pieces of her work in sculpture.
February 16 , 8 p.m. _Third In the
series of Old Time Movie Classics.
This one considered to be one of the
funniest Marx Brothers movies ever
made.
February 28 - Annual Dinner and
Meeting of the French Art Colony.
March 3, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - First of
the series of seven Creative Writing
Seminar classes, taught by Wayne
Dodd, Professor of English at Ohio ·
University .

C ----------------------------~--------------__,
I--

t

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

:'

FOR

..~,.

Th1• perfr('l u'II!J lo .~ IIIJII' uou r
il '.., fur hi' JM.

Past Councilors meet
CHESTER - The Past Councilors' Club of Chester Council No.
323, Daughters of America, met at
the home of Ethel Orr with Inzy
Newell as c!Hlostess.
Inzy Newell, vice president,
presided. She read the first through
the sixth verses from the book of St.
Matthew. The Lord's Prayer and
pledge to the American Flag were
given in unison. Charlotte Grant, a
new member, was welcomed to the
club.
Mrs. Newell installed the
following officers for six months of
1980- Pauline Ridenour, president;
Margaret Tuttle, vice president;

Keepsake"
Rqistettd Diamond Rinp

SUPERIORS

On Nov. 23, Brenda Fife, daughter

of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Fife, Jr.,
Cheshire, became the bride of Bill
Hood, son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
. Hood, AddisQn.
The wedding took place at Old
Kyger Freewill Baptist Church with
Rev. Miles Trout officiating at the
double ring ceremony. Music was
played by Mrs. Miles Trout. Gloria
Amos served as maid of honor, Bobhi Hood was the bridesmaid and the
best man, Jay Thompson, cousin of
thegroom.
·
After the ceremony, a reception

FULLY COOKED, READY
TO EAT, LEAN NO WASTE

59
iJz OR

WHOLE
BY THE PIECE

SMOKED

JOWL BACON •••••••••••••••• ~~;. 59
.

ALLISON

e

LARGE EGGS •••••••••••••~~~~- 79e
·

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK

JEWELRY STORE
Second
Gallipols, OH.
342

$}79

GALLON
PLASTIC JUG

'sUNDAY

~~sou P. ...........4CAN~

00

8-16

oz. somEs.

Lots of beauties, plus some oldies but goodies. Quali ·
ty name brand fabrics ... . Burlington/Kiopman,
Milliken, Skinner, Pendleton and others at prices you
won't believe. Something for everyone. Hurry in to·
day - you'll be glad you did. · ·

Ladies Diamond Solitaire

Vs ct.
1/6 ct.
l/ 4 ct.
1
13 ct.

$225.00
$299.00
$410.00
$700.00

ALL WEIGHTS
APPROXIMATE
ENLARGED TO SHOW
EXQUISITE DETAIL

417
0

DERIFIELD
JEWELRY
Second Ave. Gallipolis,

"Across from
the
Theater"
Slilr Q( Africa Diamonds

CORDUROY
Prin, Solid, All Wales

e60" FAKE FURS
$398

Reg. To

YD.

$11.99 Yd .

• ALL TRIMS
Vz OFF
• 45 BRIDAL WHITES
Reg. To

$10.99

$298YD.

45" DISCO SATIN ....................... 98' YD.
45" PRINTED SHEERS. .................. 98' YO~
45'1 JERSEY PRINTS... ..... ............. 98' Y~.
45" PLAID TAFFETA .. : ................... 98' Yo;

ALL WINTER STOCK
NOW

Plus Deposit

.

.

60". PENDLETON WOOLS &amp; WOOL KNITS .................................. .. %OFJ:

45"
WHIP

-

QUART
JAR

THE AMAZING !lUCK STOVE

WITH A•

ll'wcfli.Air Hut
U.._,.,,. tut """-" y.v
Tht lUCk Stove htl t . .. ltciVH ftlt luck
forctd hOt-tlr (II'ICI COOl · Stoye burna
VflfY tf.
tlr ·lnttkt) &amp;VIttm IPiat tlcltntly ltxtrKtlng ••
tt\t Mit frOM uMI ttn powtr then 1 l'tlueh "
•~ ot "''
wood ·or COli ,
lOO·wttt IIVhfbulb .
6Ytlltblt "*tY from t
COr'nPited to 1ot n Mlh your
...., PI~ at WOOd) , • ak\gtt
for I tlr~IKI.
houM', 1¥...1'1·
fire Wlll Nfl from 6 to lt
ha&amp;.ra, wl"*'t 11n'y •'~ ·

•H:.. ;.. ,tHHI
Tht luck Stov
n:trec:tl 'If. to IG

· tentklr. trom

I
I
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I
I
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L-----------------------------·
U. S. HO. 1
.
,
20 LB.· ,
69
POTATOES•... ~:··~··~~~...... 1 ,

II.. Hqt
Tht l~c!t S.0¥1
meet1 or ~
all t tftf't' stan .
Gtrdt HI IIV ·The
Net1on11
Flrt

we

Prottdlon

45'' POLYESTER SILK PRINTS ............................................... 11.98 YO~
54" CHRISTMAS PRINTS ..................................................... 11.98 Yo.
,60" POLYESTER PRINTS .••..... .•.. .. ..•..•.........•.... .•.••. •...•...•..•.• 12.98 YD;
•
45" WOOL JERSEY SOLIDS •. :.................. ............................ .. '1.98 YO:
•
45" DOUBLE FACE SUEDE.. ............ ....................................... '2.98 Yo;
108" LINGERIE FABRICS.........................................................lf.J Ofi
:I
45" METALLIC KNITS........ :.. ...... ............... 45" ............... '19'
• 8 vo;

reseJYe

the right
·to. limit quamitiei.
.
'
.

lfl OFF

SKI WEAR QUILTS
. 45 "

•DRESSES
•SUITS
' '
.SWEAT.ERS
. .
' •BLOU$ES

•WOOL COATS
. .SKI JACKETS
.. •SKIRTS

•PANTS

Many More Interesting Items Not Liste"d On Sale!

•

.

•

.

~

'

.

'

.

'

Gallipolis,
. Singe-r Approved, Dealer
,

' 1-

· Mon. &amp; Fri . till p.m .
rues., WO(ed •• sat. 111s
Thur•d•v 11112 noon

.'

'JAN. AND FEB. STORE HOURS: 9:30.5:30 MON. 11-IRU SAT.

;,

\·

I.

Don 't
M iss
Th is
One !

.French City Fabric·Shoppe

GLOVE$
.'
.;'; -., LEATHER HANDBAGS
SCARVES - .ttATS .-

. BUCK STOVE &amp;·BRASS SHOP
G,allipOIIs, Ohio

PRINTS
5lrvo.

58 Court'

.

..•

TIE

25% OFF

l1tlon .

ALL MODELS IN STOGK -READY. 'TODELIVE~

405 Second AYe.
Pll . 446· 7017

·'1 -~:!.Coupon

Good Only at Barr's Expires 1-16·801

.

u.

.

DRESSING

SWEATSUIT FABRIC
RIBBED POLY KNITS
T-SHIRT TOP KNITS

QUILTED PRINTS
Hustle in
ea rly for the
widest selection .
All-natural dogs
by Spalding.

54" . 60"

300 ~nd Ave.
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

'$}29

FUEL

..
Beauty.

tt...es~T

PEPSI OR
DIET PEPSI

HEAT Wlni WOOD

..Classic·

SIST~ft'S

SAVE 60c

8'uy A BUCK STOVE

was held at the bridegroom's paren·
tshome.

"y

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN NOODLE

HEATING YOUR HOME

Free standing Models Also Available

JACKSON .286-5554

·:::

SAVE 32c

HEAT YOUR
ENTIRE HOME

~~~'V~~·

i:r'·················R.~-;n~:n6~=;==···=·=···'·' =:r
EPISCOP AI.. CHurch, 2:30 p.m.
annual meeting of Churchwomen
United. Election and installation of
1911) officers.
REVJV-AL, Church of God of
Prophecy, 0 . J. White Rd., Jan. 1320. Evangelist Rev. J. M. Donahue,
Columbus . 7:30p.m.
PWP, Bowling, Skyline lJmes , 3
p.m.
ROBERT Grubb will be guest
speaker at Northup Baptist Church,
7:30p.m. All welcome.
.MONDAY
- .
REVTVAL, . Church of God of
Holiness, Lecta, begins Jan. 14
through week ; with Rev. Glenn
Seymour. 7 p.m. Special singers.
MERCERVILLE Grange, regular
meet, 7:30p.m . .
WASHINGTON PTA meeting with
John Groth, M.D. ; 7:00 p.m. in
school library.
OAPSE me.!ting, at Centerville
Elementary, 7:30p.m.
WASIDNGTON PTA, 7:30 p.m. in
school library; guest speaker, Dr.
Groth, Holzer Clinic. Everyone is
welcome. Refreshments afterward.

C.DA

CUT YOUR COST NOW!

~·
....

MEIGS 992-5554

Fife, Hood united

TAVERN
HAM

CLARK'S

Catch Clog Fever.

~~

Mr. and Mrs. Hill Hood

SAVE 20c

§

HAVE A PROBLEM?
NEED TO TALK IT OUT?
· GALLIA 446-5554
~~~

1-----------------------

KffPIW~'f'.
IIJI'I', whf'll

POMEROY - Several Sabbath
School members of the Pomeroy
Sabbath-day Adventist Church
gathered in the fellowship room of
the church for a Christmas party
Thursday evening, Dec. 20.
Games were played ·and prizes
won by Mary Butcher and Pat Dit·
tes. The door prize was awarded to
Wilma Weiman.
Refreshments consisted of various
kinds of cookies, cup cakes, potato

Smeltzer, Owner

Select a Keepsake diamond
ri n~ to C)( press
your I 0\11' Keepsake ee nter
diamonds are lo\'Uarantced in
writi ng, fo rever . for fi ne
white co lo r , correc!._modcrn
cu t a nd pe·rrect d~y .

project. Alao on display is the photography show,
"Willie Sleeps," not shown, due to a space problem in
the "Times-Sentinel."

Christmas jare /Je ld

Phone 614-446·1096
Paul

engage m ent

RENOVATION STUDY- These are just two of the

Conley Cole, Sarah Drake, Tom and
Laura Nice, Christopher Staats,
Darlene , Richard .anct' David
Stewart, Sandy, Mary and Misty
Butcher, Wilma Weimanr. and Rita
White.

PAUL'S STEAMWAY

MOARI SEV

'1:1 panels now on display at Riverby, home of the French Art Colony, of the Downtown Gallipolis Renovation

was centered with a floral arran~e­
ment aud candles. Mrs. Morris
presided at the eoffee service. Tea
sandwiches, cookies, coffee and
punch were ser.ed by Mrs. June
Freed and Mrs. Velma Rue.

chips and dip, nuts, mints and punch. Agift exchange was held.
Among those attending were AI,
Pat, Jim and Julie Dittes, Burdell
and Effie Black, Bob, Rohen and
William Upacomb, Clara Mcintyre,

For the bes1 in worry·free cleaning, ca ll the E .:perienced
Professionals. We have cleaned over 20 million sq uare teet of carpet.

~----&lt;0&gt;·«?&gt;~

Keepsake ...
The perfect way to
show your love

POMEROY-Mrs. Grace Eich was
installed as sponsor of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority in ceremonies held
Thursday night at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Mary Morris, president, was
assisted with the ritual by other offleers ~f the chapter. Reinstated into
mcp1bership was Dorma Jones.
Perla Averion of the Philippines
was guest speaker for the meeting
which continued the theme of
"Around the World with Beta Sigma
Phi." Mrs. Averion talked about the
customs and history of the Philippines. She noted that the Christmas
celebration there begins on Dec. 16
with a .Mass at 4:30 a.m. and continues for l)l.n.. days ending on
ChristmasEvewithmldnightMass.
Mrs. Maidie Mora, social chairman' arranged the tea table which

WINTER .CARPET CLEANING SPECIALS

Frederick , treasurer; Thelma
White, Sentinel; flower coounittee,
EIJIIB Cleland; Mary K. Holter,
news reporter.
Games were conducted by Pauline
Ridenour and Betty Roush. Refreshments were served by the hostesses.
Betty Roush won the door prize.
Those present in addition to those
named were, Marcia Keller, Laura
Mae Nice, Mabel Van Meter, Opal
Hollon and Ada BlsseU. Guests were
Opal Eichinger, Margaret Amberger, and Loretta Weber, Ft.
Wayne, Indiana, cousin of Mrs .
Keller.

..

Thomas, Virginia Davies, Shirleen
Wiseman, Mary Jo Thaler and Jan
Thaler.
~t the Thursday evening, March
13 meeting of the members of
Philomathean at the home of
Shirleen Wiseman, a special
program will be presented by Betty
McGinness.

r;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;,

Betty Roll8h, secretary; Goldie

.•'

htch installed as sponsor

.,.

'

0-

••

.•••
J
••'

••"•
•

�Mrs. Wilson Carpenter speaks to UMW locally

Diana Henedurn Walker

Marriage announced ·
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Francis Benedwn, Route I, Reedsville,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walker, Colwnbus, are announcing the mar·
riage of their children, Diana Lyne
and Michael Joseph.
Both are employed at Colwnbia

Gas of Ohio.
The wedding took place on Nov. 25
in Whitehall at St. Edward
Episcopal Church. Mr. and Mrs.
Walker make their home in Colwn·
bus with his four-year-old daughter,
Heidi Jo.

LETART F AL1.5-Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter was guest speaker at the
Wednesday night meeting of the ·
United Methodist Women of the
Letart Falls Church held at the
. home of Mrs. Ernest Shuler.
Usir.g "Needed" as her theme,
Mrs. Carpenter outlined the many
ways in which members are needed
to make the women's group strong
and beneficial listing such things as
increased membe_rship, cooperation, program variety , and
understanding.
She likened the association to a
tree, the trunk representing the
committees, the leaves, the officers
and the chairmen, and the roots, all
the members who keep the "tree" or
association strong by feeding the entire plant.
She also said that the presence of
the various members at the
meetings gives strength and solidity
to the associaton. Mrs. Andrew
Cross had the prayer. Readings on
the topic were given by Mrs. Eula
Wolfe, Mrs. Nora Cross, and Mrs.
Shuler.
There was a discussion on the subject by Mrs. Shuler, Mrs. Jolu! Hill,
Mrs. Harold Roush, Mrs. David Har·
lis, Mrs. Andrew CrosS, Mrs. Bert
Giimm, Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Mrs.
Inez Hill.
Mrs. Giimm presented Mrs.
Carpenter with a gift from the UMW
after thanking her for being there.
To open the meeting, Mrs. Grimm
bad an inspirational reading. Dever
lions by Mrs. John Hill included

•

scripture from Matthew and' a month. Several communica!lon5
were read and It was noted that the
prayer.
thank
you containers with their prcr
It was reported that 16 shut-in ·
ceedB
wa&amp;a
worthwhile project.
visits had been made during the

MARCH OF DIMES
SET TO BEGIN
POMEROY - The Mothers March
of Dimes, to collect money to fight
birth defects, will be held in Meigs
County on Sunday, January 20 and
during the week that follows until
January 31. Many wonderful
mothers and interested young
women have volunteered to march .
from house to house in local communities to ask people to donate to
the war on birth defects, Unda King,
chairperson, reports.
In Pomeroy, Kaye Walker is
organizing the members of the Ohio
Eta Phi Sorority to collect from
house to house. The sorority sisters
in Xi Gamma Mu will march in Middleport and Bradbury. They are
being led by Charlotte Hanning this
year. JoAnn Smith ill once again in
charge Qf&gt;the~rs Plains marching mothers. In ester the marchers will include
ie Kart, Jane
Ann Kart, and Nancy Morrissey.
Anyone who is not visited by a
marching mother and would like to
contribute to the March of Dimes
may do so by sending a donation to
Joanne Williams at the Farmers
Bank in Pomeroy. She is the
treasurer of the local chapter and
handles all of the Meigs County contributions.

Mrs. Shuler and T~ Shuler
served refreslunents. Next meeting
will feature a program -oo prayer
and self-denial.

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30
VINE STI!Iti, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PORK CHOPS

'159

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

'17~
KAHN'S BIG RED
SMOKEYS
POUND
PKG.

$179

TA$TEE

BOLOGNA

20~FF
Regular Pri ce

20lFF

All Fashion Fabrics

All Decorator Fabrics

\ lfn jl h

jll l'\1' !11 l••u•

1 1'11 11&lt; J l,.HI

COKE
&amp; SPR

20lFF 20lFF

..·•.

..",,

Regular Price

All Sewing Notions
Trims &amp; Accessories

All Patterns

SWEET PEAS
. 17 OZ. CAN

•·

CAN

WCKY
APP~
F

&lt;:Art Carved
Owned and Ope rat~d b ~ F~bJI · GeR tera of Americ1, tnr;.

''

Silver Bridge·Shopping·Plaza-Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohio
Chillicothe, Ohio

/'

Hurricane, W.Va.

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4.
You're an Instant
winner if you get 3, or 5
4

Sevens. 3, 4 or 5 of the
Same Number.

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IF THIS COMBINATION
APPEARS ON YOUR
JAC KPOT TICKET

YOU WIN
INSTANTLY

.

nw~ww::~: $777. 77
il~~~~:~:r s77.77

like this one
every time you
visit johnson's Market--....

~n~ww r~::..

~TIN!

oz.

GAL

Putnam Village
Shopping Center

•'

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88i88:: IP·"'

arr

More brides and groo ms
se lect A rt Carved wedding nngs th an any othe r
b•and. Because or Art Carved's slylrng . See
o ur co mplete collec ti on
of ArtCarved rings .

111 6Th Ave.

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IV ll'] l '\ r J !l \ IIO I.. t•l !11)1 1 1'1,111' \ 'd lht 1 lto '- ~ I t ·~·· ·•·,11 1 , ",UI" &lt;'Io

2.
You'll get a
Jackpot ticket just

Ls.1 ·9e

'GREEN BEANS

Huntington, W.Va .

••·,

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3•

Before you
leave, get your
ticket stamped
with number_s. '
by inserting
it in our big
game machine•

up to

iJWWHHffi:~,
w~~~~ ;~::DA~lRII

3 EXTRA
TICKETS

5•win
The amount you
depends on
the combination
you get.

15 oz.
CAN

HALF

218 Grand Central Mall ·
Parkersbu_rg, W. Va.

p,l•t'

ARGO SPINACH

.•

Zane Plaza

""''"\~ '1llo·1

p, '•:o
• ''&lt; •'
ol .. tol&lt;( w •·•l P&lt; murd.n-&lt;1 "'""I"' '' .Il l' ''"·'1•.1 1.:-~t• •· .,., ,, ,.,•

There's a new game in town! It's su1~r
easy to play- there's nothing to save, and
lots of chances to win! We call it Super
Jackpot. But don't look for it eve!rvv~he1re--l
it's only being offered at Johnsons stores,
like the one in your neighborhood. And it's
just one more reason for you to come in and
diE ""er all the special buys, speci~l service:; and special offers waiting for you, just'
down the street- at Johnson's Market.

Regular Price

Reg ular Price

Her room number is411-N.

lt's.tlle simplest game you've e\'er played!

'1PI~·

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

w 1th

l it l..t•lo • " }"I ol IJ "lpl t o·d \\Ill•

'179
8-16 OZ. BTLS

~

Chili

P !l{ l '' Ill ~-- -- "' 11\tl'o• '"IT h t

GALLON PLASTIC

''
,,.,

. tor over 40 Yt:arf'
424 Second.Ave ~
Gallipolis

Now, one more great
reas.on to shop Johnson's Market.

2% ·MILK

...-;==========;!
•
..-••.
--,,
.-•

. TAWNEY
JEWELERS
"Fine Jewelery

25

9 9

1.

.

'
The open church wedding will be
: an event of Feb. 2 at the Mt. Hermon
--: United Brethren Church, Pomeroy.

.

Jan.

Be an instant winner!
winner! Play new

FRESH YAMS

te

LB.

,. ton.

~

Friday ,

crackers , tossed salad, bread, butter. ice cream and one-half p int
milk .

Feelin' lucky? Come on in! You could be
an instant winner in our new Super 7 Jackpot
game!
LB.

BAG

,..

potato chips, and one -half p int mitk .

CHUCK ROAST

29

APPLES

("

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. David
:~ Holter, Pomery are announcirig the
: : engagement and approaching mar•.....· riage of their daughter, Lucy Jean,
~ to Larcy L. Keller, son of Mr. and
,.. Mrs. Dale Keller, Massillon.
_,.
Miss Holter is a 1973 graduate of
::; Eastern High School and a 1977
;:;. graduate of Ohio University. She ill a
; · member of the American Dietel!~
.• Association and is employed as a
. clinical dietitian at Barberton
: Ci~ens Hospital in Barberton.
'
Her fiance graduated from Perry
t.. High School in 1971 and received
-. both bachelor and master of science
•: degrees from Akron University . A
, ; member of the National Society of
. ·: Professional Engineers, he is an
~- engineer at Timken Research, Can-

$

ROME .

Lucy jean Holter

&gt;::

44

U
CHOICE
BONELESS

LB.

20 LB.
BAG

;: engagement

bun. buttered corn , sli&lt;(!od pea che~.

SURGICAL PATIENT
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Freeman
(Lee ) Enoch, Syracuse, is a surgical
patient at the Camden Clark
. Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va .

V.INiiiEii.iiSTiiii·E·EJ·,.iiGiliAIILiliLI.IIPO-LIIIS.i,.IO•H•I•O~----•P•H•O•N•E•••6•-•5••3_..

::. . .

WHITE POTATOES

r

Sloppy Joe on

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

UNCLASSIFIED

.;1 Holter

Thursday, Jan . 2-4

p.in.

'11~

"'·•!

noodles, green beans, apple sau ce.
bread. butter. and one-hat• o int

SPECIAL DINNER
POMEROY - The PomeroyMiddleport Li
Club will hold a
special dinner ~7 p.m. Thursday at
the Meigs Inn in observance of
ladies nighl Entertainment will
follow the dinner.

milk .

'We Reserw the Right to timit QlaanliiJ''

SPARE RIBS

...'

buller, and one·half pint milk.
Thursday. Jan . 17 .. Oven fr ied
chicken. mashed potatoes with
gravy, iellosalad. bread , buller, and
one-hall pint m i lk.
·Friday, Jan. 18 ·· Ham and beans.
. cole slaw, bread, buller, tee cream

and one-halt pint mine
Monday, Jan. 21 -- No School.
Tuesoay , Jan. 22 ·· Hot dog with
meat sauce. buttered carrQts . fruit
salad, and one· hall pint milk.
Wednesday, Jan. 23 ·· Chicken and

PHONE Q6-95911_ _

COUNTRY STYLE

~

..

Wednesday, Jan. · 16 ·· Lasagna,
tosSed salad, sliced peaches, bread,

Prices Effective Sunday, Jan. 13 thru Saturday., Jan. 19

•1·~

..,

Gallipolis City Schools
LUNCH MENU
Monday, Jan. •• .. Blue Devil
bur~r wllh pickles, candled swo..t
potatoes, buffered peas potato
chips, andon&amp;·half pint milk.
T\Jfldav, Jan. 15 ·· Corn dog, but·
tered potatoos, green beans, pud·
di"IJ, andone·hallplntmllk.

JOHn$On$

RIB
PORK CHOPS

~••

8-5--TbeSundayTime&amp;-SenUnel, Sunday, Jan. J3,1980

'

.

'

HB. •
CAN ·

4 ROll
PAK

te

Odds are .••
you'll love to play!

�Mrs. Wilson Carpenter speaks to UMW locally

Diana Henedurn Walker

Marriage announced ·
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Francis Benedwn, Route I, Reedsville,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walker, Colwnbus, are announcing the mar·
riage of their children, Diana Lyne
and Michael Joseph.
Both are employed at Colwnbia

Gas of Ohio.
The wedding took place on Nov. 25
in Whitehall at St. Edward
Episcopal Church. Mr. and Mrs.
Walker make their home in Colwn·
bus with his four-year-old daughter,
Heidi Jo.

LETART F AL1.5-Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter was guest speaker at the
Wednesday night meeting of the ·
United Methodist Women of the
Letart Falls Church held at the
. home of Mrs. Ernest Shuler.
Usir.g "Needed" as her theme,
Mrs. Carpenter outlined the many
ways in which members are needed
to make the women's group strong
and beneficial listing such things as
increased membe_rship, cooperation, program variety , and
understanding.
She likened the association to a
tree, the trunk representing the
committees, the leaves, the officers
and the chairmen, and the roots, all
the members who keep the "tree" or
association strong by feeding the entire plant.
She also said that the presence of
the various members at the
meetings gives strength and solidity
to the associaton. Mrs. Andrew
Cross had the prayer. Readings on
the topic were given by Mrs. Eula
Wolfe, Mrs. Nora Cross, and Mrs.
Shuler.
There was a discussion on the subject by Mrs. Shuler, Mrs. Jolu! Hill,
Mrs. Harold Roush, Mrs. David Har·
lis, Mrs. Andrew CrosS, Mrs. Bert
Giimm, Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Mrs.
Inez Hill.
Mrs. Giimm presented Mrs.
Carpenter with a gift from the UMW
after thanking her for being there.
To open the meeting, Mrs. Grimm
bad an inspirational reading. Dever
lions by Mrs. John Hill included

•

scripture from Matthew and' a month. Several communica!lon5
were read and It was noted that the
prayer.
thank
you containers with their prcr
It was reported that 16 shut-in ·
ceedB
wa&amp;a
worthwhile project.
visits had been made during the

MARCH OF DIMES
SET TO BEGIN
POMEROY - The Mothers March
of Dimes, to collect money to fight
birth defects, will be held in Meigs
County on Sunday, January 20 and
during the week that follows until
January 31. Many wonderful
mothers and interested young
women have volunteered to march .
from house to house in local communities to ask people to donate to
the war on birth defects, Unda King,
chairperson, reports.
In Pomeroy, Kaye Walker is
organizing the members of the Ohio
Eta Phi Sorority to collect from
house to house. The sorority sisters
in Xi Gamma Mu will march in Middleport and Bradbury. They are
being led by Charlotte Hanning this
year. JoAnn Smith ill once again in
charge Qf&gt;the~rs Plains marching mothers. In ester the marchers will include
ie Kart, Jane
Ann Kart, and Nancy Morrissey.
Anyone who is not visited by a
marching mother and would like to
contribute to the March of Dimes
may do so by sending a donation to
Joanne Williams at the Farmers
Bank in Pomeroy. She is the
treasurer of the local chapter and
handles all of the Meigs County contributions.

Mrs. Shuler and T~ Shuler
served refreslunents. Next meeting
will feature a program -oo prayer
and self-denial.

SUPER MARKET-OPEN DAILY &amp; SUN. 9 to 9:30
VINE STI!Iti, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PORK CHOPS

'159

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

'17~
KAHN'S BIG RED
SMOKEYS
POUND
PKG.

$179

TA$TEE

BOLOGNA

20~FF
Regular Pri ce

20lFF

All Fashion Fabrics

All Decorator Fabrics

\ lfn jl h

jll l'\1' !11 l••u•

1 1'11 11&lt; J l,.HI

COKE
&amp; SPR

20lFF 20lFF

..·•.

..",,

Regular Price

All Sewing Notions
Trims &amp; Accessories

All Patterns

SWEET PEAS
. 17 OZ. CAN

•·

CAN

WCKY
APP~
F

&lt;:Art Carved
Owned and Ope rat~d b ~ F~bJI · GeR tera of Americ1, tnr;.

''

Silver Bridge·Shopping·Plaza-Route 7, Gallipolis, Ohio
Chillicothe, Ohio

/'

Hurricane, W.Va.

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You're an Instant
winner if you get 3, or 5
4

Sevens. 3, 4 or 5 of the
Same Number.

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IF THIS COMBINATION
APPEARS ON YOUR
JAC KPOT TICKET

YOU WIN
INSTANTLY

.

nw~ww::~: $777. 77
il~~~~:~:r s77.77

like this one
every time you
visit johnson's Market--....

~n~ww r~::..

~TIN!

oz.

GAL

Putnam Village
Shopping Center

•'

s7.n

88i88:: IP·"'

arr

More brides and groo ms
se lect A rt Carved wedding nngs th an any othe r
b•and. Because or Art Carved's slylrng . See
o ur co mplete collec ti on
of ArtCarved rings .

111 6Th Ave.

•,,.,

'•, &gt; -•"•

IV ll'] l '\ r J !l \ IIO I.. t•l !11)1 1 1'1,111' \ 'd lht 1 lto '- ~ I t ·~·· ·•·,11 1 , ",UI" &lt;'Io

2.
You'll get a
Jackpot ticket just

Ls.1 ·9e

'GREEN BEANS

Huntington, W.Va .

••·,

!•

3•

Before you
leave, get your
ticket stamped
with number_s. '
by inserting
it in our big
game machine•

up to

iJWWHHffi:~,
w~~~~ ;~::DA~lRII

3 EXTRA
TICKETS

5•win
The amount you
depends on
the combination
you get.

15 oz.
CAN

HALF

218 Grand Central Mall ·
Parkersbu_rg, W. Va.

p,l•t'

ARGO SPINACH

.•

Zane Plaza

""''"\~ '1llo·1

p, '•:o
• ''&lt; •'
ol .. tol&lt;( w •·•l P&lt; murd.n-&lt;1 "'""I"' '' .Il l' ''"·'1•.1 1.:-~t• •· .,., ,, ,.,•

There's a new game in town! It's su1~r
easy to play- there's nothing to save, and
lots of chances to win! We call it Super
Jackpot. But don't look for it eve!rvv~he1re--l
it's only being offered at Johnsons stores,
like the one in your neighborhood. And it's
just one more reason for you to come in and
diE ""er all the special buys, speci~l service:; and special offers waiting for you, just'
down the street- at Johnson's Market.

Regular Price

Reg ular Price

Her room number is411-N.

lt's.tlle simplest game you've e\'er played!

'1PI~·

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

w 1th

l it l..t•lo • " }"I ol IJ "lpl t o·d \\Ill•

'179
8-16 OZ. BTLS

~

Chili

P !l{ l '' Ill ~-- -- "' 11\tl'o• '"IT h t

GALLON PLASTIC

''
,,.,

. tor over 40 Yt:arf'
424 Second.Ave ~
Gallipolis

Now, one more great
reas.on to shop Johnson's Market.

2% ·MILK

...-;==========;!
•
..-••.
--,,
.-•

. TAWNEY
JEWELERS
"Fine Jewelery

25

9 9

1.

.

'
The open church wedding will be
: an event of Feb. 2 at the Mt. Hermon
--: United Brethren Church, Pomeroy.

.

Jan.

Be an instant winner!
winner! Play new

FRESH YAMS

te

LB.

,. ton.

~

Friday ,

crackers , tossed salad, bread, butter. ice cream and one-half p int
milk .

Feelin' lucky? Come on in! You could be
an instant winner in our new Super 7 Jackpot
game!
LB.

BAG

,..

potato chips, and one -half p int mitk .

CHUCK ROAST

29

APPLES

("

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. David
:~ Holter, Pomery are announcirig the
: : engagement and approaching mar•.....· riage of their daughter, Lucy Jean,
~ to Larcy L. Keller, son of Mr. and
,.. Mrs. Dale Keller, Massillon.
_,.
Miss Holter is a 1973 graduate of
::; Eastern High School and a 1977
;:;. graduate of Ohio University. She ill a
; · member of the American Dietel!~
.• Association and is employed as a
. clinical dietitian at Barberton
: Ci~ens Hospital in Barberton.
'
Her fiance graduated from Perry
t.. High School in 1971 and received
-. both bachelor and master of science
•: degrees from Akron University . A
, ; member of the National Society of
. ·: Professional Engineers, he is an
~- engineer at Timken Research, Can-

$

ROME .

Lucy jean Holter

&gt;::

44

U
CHOICE
BONELESS

LB.

20 LB.
BAG

;: engagement

bun. buttered corn , sli&lt;(!od pea che~.

SURGICAL PATIENT
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Freeman
(Lee ) Enoch, Syracuse, is a surgical
patient at the Camden Clark
. Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va .

V.INiiiEii.iiSTiiii·E·EJ·,.iiGiliAIILiliLI.IIPO-LIIIS.i,.IO•H•I•O~----•P•H•O•N•E•••6•-•5••3_..

::. . .

WHITE POTATOES

r

Sloppy Joe on

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

UNCLASSIFIED

.;1 Holter

Thursday, Jan . 2-4

p.in.

'11~

"'·•!

noodles, green beans, apple sau ce.
bread. butter. and one-hat• o int

SPECIAL DINNER
POMEROY - The PomeroyMiddleport Li
Club will hold a
special dinner ~7 p.m. Thursday at
the Meigs Inn in observance of
ladies nighl Entertainment will
follow the dinner.

milk .

'We Reserw the Right to timit QlaanliiJ''

SPARE RIBS

...'

buller, and one·half pint milk.
Thursday. Jan . 17 .. Oven fr ied
chicken. mashed potatoes with
gravy, iellosalad. bread , buller, and
one-hall pint m i lk.
·Friday, Jan. 18 ·· Ham and beans.
. cole slaw, bread, buller, tee cream

and one-halt pint mine
Monday, Jan. 21 -- No School.
Tuesoay , Jan. 22 ·· Hot dog with
meat sauce. buttered carrQts . fruit
salad, and one· hall pint milk.
Wednesday, Jan. 23 ·· Chicken and

PHONE Q6-95911_ _

COUNTRY STYLE

~

..

Wednesday, Jan. · 16 ·· Lasagna,
tosSed salad, sliced peaches, bread,

Prices Effective Sunday, Jan. 13 thru Saturday., Jan. 19

•1·~

..,

Gallipolis City Schools
LUNCH MENU
Monday, Jan. •• .. Blue Devil
bur~r wllh pickles, candled swo..t
potatoes, buffered peas potato
chips, andon&amp;·half pint milk.
T\Jfldav, Jan. 15 ·· Corn dog, but·
tered potatoos, green beans, pud·
di"IJ, andone·hallplntmllk.

JOHn$On$

RIB
PORK CHOPS

~••

8-5--TbeSundayTime&amp;-SenUnel, Sunday, Jan. J3,1980

'

.

'

HB. •
CAN ·

4 ROll
PAK

te

Odds are .••
you'll love to play!

�0.:7-The Sunday Timea-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

Baptists present program at GDC .

Wedding

Katb)l Adkins

Miss Adkins becomes engaged
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Ran dall H. Adkins , Syracuse, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Kathy Ann Adkins, to
Brian Timothy Halstead, soo of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel E. Habtead, Sr.,
FourihSt., New Haven, W. Va.

~

'

GAWPOIJS - On Dec.J4 in a
double-ring ceremony performed by
the Honorable Judge Jerrell of Princeton, W. Va., Ms. Carol Frazier and
Kenneth Farmer exchanged wedding vows.
Standing up with the brade was
Ms. Ann Packer, teacher of the
visually impaired at Rip Grande
Elementary School. The best man
was Dr. Quentin Korfhage, a practicing opthalmologist at Holzer
Medical Center Clinic.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mr8. Arthur E. Hill of Gallipolis.
The groom is the son of Mrs.
Margaret Slay of Bridgeport, W.
Va. ililnd the late ErruniUFarmer.
The new Mrs. Farmer attended
Hocking Technical College, Nelsonville, OH and is a recent honor
graduate of The Practical Nursing
School of Buckeye Hills Career Center. She plans to further pursue her
nursing career.
Farmer received his B.S. degree
from the University of Southern
California and his M.S. degree in
special education from Marshall
Univers(!Y. He is presenUy employed as principal of the Rio Grande Elementary School.
After a brief honeymoon, the
couple returned to their home to
receive their friends at 641 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis.

~

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

GALLIPOLIS
_
An
organizational meeting for the
Mason, Gallia, and Meigs Ski Club
was held January 7 at the Gallia,
Jackson, and Meigs community
Mental Health Center.
After a short program conducted
by Stuart Coronel and Bob Brenneman, an election of officers was
held. Bill Gouckenourwas elected as
president; Stuart Coronel as vice
president; Kim Wray as secretary
and Carolyn Dean as treasurer.
Mem~rship fees were decided
upon as $10 per single person; $20
per family (two adults and all
children) or $7 for anyone 18 years
old or younger who joins without
their family. Included in the mem·
bership fees are discounts on Iransportation, lifts and rentam; ooe
hour free group lesson to anyone, not
just beginners; and all expenses incurred in running the club.
The next meeting will be held at 7
p.m., Monday, January 14 at Tara

-

-:: Birth announced
&lt;

··· Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Thornton of
... Patriot are proud to announce the
~ birth of their son, Jeremy Dean
: Tl1ornton, born IRe. 19 at the Holzer
: Medical Center.
• He weighed six pounds, five oun : ces andwas20incheslong.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
: Ellis Thornton of Patri~ and Mr.
.. and Mrs. Jessie Jeffers of Scottown.
: Great~randparents are Mr. and
: Mrs. Jehu Jackson ri Patriot.
Jeremy is being welcomed by his
~ three sisters, Angie, Sabrina arxl
- Charlene .

'

'

"'

ln1980...

.

Mr. and Mrs. james Barrett

·AthenS COUnty

Effective January 1980
Monday
10:00-1:00
2:00 -S:OOP.M.

Tuesday, No Office
Wednesday ·9:00-11:30
2:00-7:30 P.M.

Thursday

Clubhouse. The purpose of this
meeting is to make ~in~l
arrangements for a one-day sk1 trip
to Canaan Valley onJ~uar 1~.
Anyone interested 10 joining the
club should ~ttend the next meeting
or contact Kim Wray at 446-2522.

The bride wore a gown of light
blue with white Bowen in chiffon
over light blue taffeta. Sbe carried a
bouquet of blue and white dabies
and baby's breath with blue
streamers tied in lover's knots.
The altar of the church featured
an archway decorated in blue and
white with white doves and ribbon
streamers. Mrs. Teresa Shaffer was
at the organ for a Pf01!1111Il of weddlng music.
Mr8. Esther Bacon of Middleport
served as matron of honor. She wore
a gown fl. eggshell white with matching shaw, with a blue dalay 111111
baby's breath In her hair. She carrled a blue satin daisy with blue
streamers. Her bridesmaid was her
sister, Gloria Lynn Grover, Rutland,
and she was In a light blue gown c1
dotter swiss. She wore a blue satin
l'lltle with baby's breath In her hair
and canied a blue satin daby with

'.

Office Schedule of

9: 00 -11:30
2:00-7:30 P .M.
Friday
10 : 00-1:00
2:00-5:00

streamers. The bride's other attendant was Mrs. Bernice McKinney,
Mlddleporl who wore agown identical to the one worn by the matron
of honor and she, too, had a daisy in
her hair, and carried a blue daisy.
Stephanie Gail Whaley, daughter
c1 the bride was the flower girl. He
gown was blue and white dotted
swisa and she carried a basket filled
with blue daisy petals. Neil Edward
Whaley, son of the bride, was the
ring bearer and wore a three piece
blue vested suit. He carried a lace
covered white satin heart with gold
matching wedding bands.
The groom was attired in a three
piece light gray pin-striped vested
suit and his boutonniere was a blue
and white carnation. Roger D. Hall,
cousin of the groom, Delbarton, W.
Va. was the best man and wore navy
blue with a white carnation bou.tonniere.
Mrs. Patti Neal, New Haven, W.
Va., registered the guests. She wore
a light green gown with a green
daby corsage. The bride's mother
was in a peach and white gown and
woreapeachandwhitecorsage. The
groom's mother was in a two piece
green and white ensemble and also
wore a white carnation corsage.
Following tl1e ceremony, a reception was held in the church social
room. Mrs. Carl

ceremony.

'

Dr. Mateo P. Oayo. Jr.
306 N. 2nd Ave .,
Middleport, Ohio

-Tri-county skiers unite

MIDDLEPORT-On Nov. 17 at 4 .
p.m., Virginia Gall Whaley,
daughterofMr.andMrs. DougtasD.
Grover ' Rutland, beeame the bride
o1 J~ David Barrett, son o1 Mr.
and Mrs. James Barrett, Ragland,
W.Va.
The wedding took place at the
United Pentecostal Church in Middleport with the Rev. William Knit·
tel officiating at the double ring

· J
Bo "
b Mrs
several illll8trations where we need
Uttle esus Y was stmg Y
•
u t. Jt:Sus Christ came into the
Genev~. TIU'ner. Rea~ were · w'f::ld to give Ught. Scripture was
given, Be of~ Cheer, Helep
based on John 1:6-11. He referred to
. &amp;;emer Rice, and Wba~ ~ you do
the song "You Ught Up My Ufe."
wt~!! this year 80 New . , by Mrs.
JesusCbristlightsupmyllfeandHe
Goldie Hogan. Carom sung were
llf ,
..
....... _ F'-t Noel" and "Hark the
can light up your e.
.,,. ""
,
Theclosingsongwas"Joytothe
Herald AngebSing: Remarks were
World" with benediction by Rev.
g1ven by Supermtendent Mrs.
•
Mi t
of
Lucille Saunder8
Grover Turner .
s ress
· b
ceremonies was Mrs Dorothy GorThe message was Y Rev. Grover
·
Go
G· Turner ' who said • "It was
don
. good to
don and song leader,. ., Bobby D. rshare this time of year With you. We
~~~~ were distributed by Ruth
can rejoice to kno~ w~ can get
Cha 1 tt Griffith and
together. No one can live alone. I am
Brown,
r0 e
Dorothy
Gordon.
concerned about Ught . He used

GALUPOIJS - "Rejoice" was
the theme of the program presented
attheGallipolis,Develop~ental Center by Paint Creek Baptist Sunday
School on December 30 at 2:30p.m.
Prelude wa• played by Mrs. Esther
·
Gilmore. Greetings were given by
Mrs. Patricia Craig. Carom were
sung " 0 Come AU Ye Faithful" and
.. .
· ..
Silent N1ght.
Scripture John 1:1 and John 2:1
wasrea d by Mrs. Ruth Brownwt"th
comments; prayer was offered by
Mrs. Ruth Brown, and concluded
with the Lord's Prayer repeated in
unison by everyone. 1&lt; solo, "Sweet

Announcin9 the Revised

The bride-elect is a a 1979
graduate ri Southern High School.
Her fiance is a 1978 graduate of
Wahama High School and is
employed at The Dlily Sentinel as
an advertising salesman.
Wedding plans are incomplete .

1VotJember 17 ceremony unites Whaley, Barrett ·
Pomeroy, arranged the reception
and Mr:$. _Peggy King, Rutland, and
Mrs. Nottinghamservedtheguests.
. The three-tiered wedding cake
was trtnuned wi~ blue and white
daisies, and topped with the tradi·
tiona! miniature bring and groom.
The groom is a graduate of Mar·

shall

U1tve~ty ~~~at~~=~

~~ ; S.:~uJon maintenance
~- The new Mrs Barrett
:lo ed for
mec
c.
::Spastfo"7ly fo= 1
P!meroy
Bo our Y
.Iones ys.
.
. new
The couple reside~
home on 124, Route I,
e.

It:!"

-· "If you Block people
make an error, you pay the .
interest and penalty?
I shoulda come here last year."

(

MEETING PLANNED
GAIJ..IPOIJS - The Gallts County Board of Commissioners will hold
a meeting concerning se'wage waste
problems in the Bidwell-Porter area
on January 17, at 7 p.m., at the Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
.;·Representatives from the
~ineering firm Barrett-Cargcr
Withers will be present, along with
the County Commissioners, to answer questions concerning the
problem situation.
All area residents are invited"!O attend.

'-

If we should make an error that costs you additional ta!C , you pay .
only the tax. Block pays any penalty ~nd interest. We stand
behind our work.
2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W. VA .
OPEN TUES.
THURS . &amp; SAT.
9A.M-S P. M.
· PHONE 773-9128

618 E. MAIN ST .
POMEROY, 0 .
Open 9 A.M. to
6 P.M . Weekdays,
9·5 Saturday '
PHONE99l-J795

H&amp;R Bl ·OCW.

~

...

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second
Gallipot is, Ohio

Open 9 am-6 pm Weekdays, 9·5 Sat.

Phone 446·0303

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Saturday
9:00-5:00

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY, JAN. 14TH
THRU
SATURDAY, JAN. 19TH

Except the last Satur-

day of the month.

That's a lot of money! And. every dollar you save means more
interest for you. At Athens Savings, we pay the highest rates
allowed by law on all our savings plans.
•·

ATTENTION:

.PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED Itt THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

Interest

Type of

Account

Rate

Regular Accoun1
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposi1
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposit

5112%
6.00%

30

Month Money

Market Certificate
6 Month Money
Market Certificate

6Yz 01&lt;~

6¥•%
7Y,%

7¥•%
8%
Varies
Monthly
Varies
Weekly

Annual
Yield

Maturlly

5.62%
6.14%
6.66%
6.92%
7.71 %
7.98%
8.24%

90 days
1 year
2Y• years
4 years
6 ye--s ·
· 8 years

None

. •'

CUT UP FRYERS.............. ~!·.59~
LEGS &amp;THIGHS ............... ~·. 79¢
MEATY BREASTS .............~~.89~
Su ----rior Dart B.acon.... :~.~~!~~·.69¢

30 mo .

182 days

A substantial interest penalty is required for early withdrawal ol time deposits . No
compounding of interest on 6 Monlh Money Markel Cer1ilicates.

(!)

a-~~mur.

.

UltOCII

-~

CALL 992-2156

Athens • 592·6681

- Pomeroy • 992-6655

Is theyearof the saver.

BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp; 5 PM

PRODUCE
PINK MEAT

RY

'GRAPEFRUIT........... 5~l1

CEI

CLE

APPLES .................... 5~ 1.·
FRESH FOR SUCING OR SALADS

TOMATOES..........~ ...... H!·. 59¢

'

CRISP SOLID HEADS

CLEARANCE
PRICED

------~·COU'PON · -------,

.'

(PRICES APPLY TO MERCHANDISE ON !:lAND)

lANDMARk

STORE HOURS: 8:30 to 5:30

,,

'

'' · .

.SUPERIOR

. .

.

·~~~ 79~

'

'

'

Exp~es :Sat~. ~n 19, :1980

~ : Serving Meigs/ Gallia and Ma$011 , Count~

'

Twin

~,..,.."'-!!

,,

GateWay

¢

·

·CABBAGEi ...................
~
..
19
.
'

. r--------COUPON---------., ,--------COUPON·•-------

II

I

FRANKIE WIENERS .c.i

POMEROY L'A N:D M""I{.. . .....
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR. ,

$ OO

WESTERN RED DEUCIOUS

•HOTPOINT REFRIGERATORS
•HOTPOINTWASHERS
&amp;DRYERS
.
•GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVISIONS

MAIN ST.

°

0

·IJ

BROUGHTON

2% M.ILK

=: sl 79

r
ExiJ~ Sai.~ Jan.
1.1 · · · Twin Gateway
I

'

--------"1

' ··

'
1

·-----------.,-----~.---------~

.'
I•

. WHITE

!-.

GRAPEFRUIT

I :

19, 1980

City

I

I

.I .

gg~ . ·

Qpires Sat, ~an. 19, 1980
Twi.n City Gateway

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

~-~------COUPON·-----1

GATEWAY

I
I

BREAD.

II

3·

!

16 oz.

LOAVES

I
I

~p.

1
I

•

79~
•

~

Sat., Jan. 19, 1980
Twin City Gateway

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~-~----~---~---------~
''l

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\

�0.:7-The Sunday Timea-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

Baptists present program at GDC .

Wedding

Katb)l Adkins

Miss Adkins becomes engaged
SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs. Ran dall H. Adkins , Syracuse, are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Kathy Ann Adkins, to
Brian Timothy Halstead, soo of Mr.
and Mrs. Samuel E. Habtead, Sr.,
FourihSt., New Haven, W. Va.

~

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GAWPOIJS - On Dec.J4 in a
double-ring ceremony performed by
the Honorable Judge Jerrell of Princeton, W. Va., Ms. Carol Frazier and
Kenneth Farmer exchanged wedding vows.
Standing up with the brade was
Ms. Ann Packer, teacher of the
visually impaired at Rip Grande
Elementary School. The best man
was Dr. Quentin Korfhage, a practicing opthalmologist at Holzer
Medical Center Clinic.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mr8. Arthur E. Hill of Gallipolis.
The groom is the son of Mrs.
Margaret Slay of Bridgeport, W.
Va. ililnd the late ErruniUFarmer.
The new Mrs. Farmer attended
Hocking Technical College, Nelsonville, OH and is a recent honor
graduate of The Practical Nursing
School of Buckeye Hills Career Center. She plans to further pursue her
nursing career.
Farmer received his B.S. degree
from the University of Southern
California and his M.S. degree in
special education from Marshall
Univers(!Y. He is presenUy employed as principal of the Rio Grande Elementary School.
After a brief honeymoon, the
couple returned to their home to
receive their friends at 641 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis.

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GALLIPOLIS
_
An
organizational meeting for the
Mason, Gallia, and Meigs Ski Club
was held January 7 at the Gallia,
Jackson, and Meigs community
Mental Health Center.
After a short program conducted
by Stuart Coronel and Bob Brenneman, an election of officers was
held. Bill Gouckenourwas elected as
president; Stuart Coronel as vice
president; Kim Wray as secretary
and Carolyn Dean as treasurer.
Mem~rship fees were decided
upon as $10 per single person; $20
per family (two adults and all
children) or $7 for anyone 18 years
old or younger who joins without
their family. Included in the mem·
bership fees are discounts on Iransportation, lifts and rentam; ooe
hour free group lesson to anyone, not
just beginners; and all expenses incurred in running the club.
The next meeting will be held at 7
p.m., Monday, January 14 at Tara

-

-:: Birth announced
&lt;

··· Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Thornton of
... Patriot are proud to announce the
~ birth of their son, Jeremy Dean
: Tl1ornton, born IRe. 19 at the Holzer
: Medical Center.
• He weighed six pounds, five oun : ces andwas20incheslong.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
: Ellis Thornton of Patri~ and Mr.
.. and Mrs. Jessie Jeffers of Scottown.
: Great~randparents are Mr. and
: Mrs. Jehu Jackson ri Patriot.
Jeremy is being welcomed by his
~ three sisters, Angie, Sabrina arxl
- Charlene .

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ln1980...

.

Mr. and Mrs. james Barrett

·AthenS COUnty

Effective January 1980
Monday
10:00-1:00
2:00 -S:OOP.M.

Tuesday, No Office
Wednesday ·9:00-11:30
2:00-7:30 P.M.

Thursday

Clubhouse. The purpose of this
meeting is to make ~in~l
arrangements for a one-day sk1 trip
to Canaan Valley onJ~uar 1~.
Anyone interested 10 joining the
club should ~ttend the next meeting
or contact Kim Wray at 446-2522.

The bride wore a gown of light
blue with white Bowen in chiffon
over light blue taffeta. Sbe carried a
bouquet of blue and white dabies
and baby's breath with blue
streamers tied in lover's knots.
The altar of the church featured
an archway decorated in blue and
white with white doves and ribbon
streamers. Mrs. Teresa Shaffer was
at the organ for a Pf01!1111Il of weddlng music.
Mr8. Esther Bacon of Middleport
served as matron of honor. She wore
a gown fl. eggshell white with matching shaw, with a blue dalay 111111
baby's breath In her hair. She carrled a blue satin daisy with blue
streamers. Her bridesmaid was her
sister, Gloria Lynn Grover, Rutland,
and she was In a light blue gown c1
dotter swiss. She wore a blue satin
l'lltle with baby's breath In her hair
and canied a blue satin daby with

'.

Office Schedule of

9: 00 -11:30
2:00-7:30 P .M.
Friday
10 : 00-1:00
2:00-5:00

streamers. The bride's other attendant was Mrs. Bernice McKinney,
Mlddleporl who wore agown identical to the one worn by the matron
of honor and she, too, had a daisy in
her hair, and carried a blue daisy.
Stephanie Gail Whaley, daughter
c1 the bride was the flower girl. He
gown was blue and white dotted
swisa and she carried a basket filled
with blue daisy petals. Neil Edward
Whaley, son of the bride, was the
ring bearer and wore a three piece
blue vested suit. He carried a lace
covered white satin heart with gold
matching wedding bands.
The groom was attired in a three
piece light gray pin-striped vested
suit and his boutonniere was a blue
and white carnation. Roger D. Hall,
cousin of the groom, Delbarton, W.
Va. was the best man and wore navy
blue with a white carnation bou.tonniere.
Mrs. Patti Neal, New Haven, W.
Va., registered the guests. She wore
a light green gown with a green
daby corsage. The bride's mother
was in a peach and white gown and
woreapeachandwhitecorsage. The
groom's mother was in a two piece
green and white ensemble and also
wore a white carnation corsage.
Following tl1e ceremony, a reception was held in the church social
room. Mrs. Carl

ceremony.

'

Dr. Mateo P. Oayo. Jr.
306 N. 2nd Ave .,
Middleport, Ohio

-Tri-county skiers unite

MIDDLEPORT-On Nov. 17 at 4 .
p.m., Virginia Gall Whaley,
daughterofMr.andMrs. DougtasD.
Grover ' Rutland, beeame the bride
o1 J~ David Barrett, son o1 Mr.
and Mrs. James Barrett, Ragland,
W.Va.
The wedding took place at the
United Pentecostal Church in Middleport with the Rev. William Knit·
tel officiating at the double ring

· J
Bo "
b Mrs
several illll8trations where we need
Uttle esus Y was stmg Y
•
u t. Jt:Sus Christ came into the
Genev~. TIU'ner. Rea~ were · w'f::ld to give Ught. Scripture was
given, Be of~ Cheer, Helep
based on John 1:6-11. He referred to
. &amp;;emer Rice, and Wba~ ~ you do
the song "You Ught Up My Ufe."
wt~!! this year 80 New . , by Mrs.
JesusCbristlightsupmyllfeandHe
Goldie Hogan. Carom sung were
llf ,
..
....... _ F'-t Noel" and "Hark the
can light up your e.
.,,. ""
,
Theclosingsongwas"Joytothe
Herald AngebSing: Remarks were
World" with benediction by Rev.
g1ven by Supermtendent Mrs.
•
Mi t
of
Lucille Saunder8
Grover Turner .
s ress
· b
ceremonies was Mrs Dorothy GorThe message was Y Rev. Grover
·
Go
G· Turner ' who said • "It was
don
. good to
don and song leader,. ., Bobby D. rshare this time of year With you. We
~~~~ were distributed by Ruth
can rejoice to kno~ w~ can get
Cha 1 tt Griffith and
together. No one can live alone. I am
Brown,
r0 e
Dorothy
Gordon.
concerned about Ught . He used

GALUPOIJS - "Rejoice" was
the theme of the program presented
attheGallipolis,Develop~ental Center by Paint Creek Baptist Sunday
School on December 30 at 2:30p.m.
Prelude wa• played by Mrs. Esther
·
Gilmore. Greetings were given by
Mrs. Patricia Craig. Carom were
sung " 0 Come AU Ye Faithful" and
.. .
· ..
Silent N1ght.
Scripture John 1:1 and John 2:1
wasrea d by Mrs. Ruth Brownwt"th
comments; prayer was offered by
Mrs. Ruth Brown, and concluded
with the Lord's Prayer repeated in
unison by everyone. 1&lt; solo, "Sweet

Announcin9 the Revised

The bride-elect is a a 1979
graduate ri Southern High School.
Her fiance is a 1978 graduate of
Wahama High School and is
employed at The Dlily Sentinel as
an advertising salesman.
Wedding plans are incomplete .

1VotJember 17 ceremony unites Whaley, Barrett ·
Pomeroy, arranged the reception
and Mr:$. _Peggy King, Rutland, and
Mrs. Nottinghamservedtheguests.
. The three-tiered wedding cake
was trtnuned wi~ blue and white
daisies, and topped with the tradi·
tiona! miniature bring and groom.
The groom is a graduate of Mar·

shall

U1tve~ty ~~~at~~=~

~~ ; S.:~uJon maintenance
~- The new Mrs Barrett
:lo ed for
mec
c.
::Spastfo"7ly fo= 1
P!meroy
Bo our Y
.Iones ys.
.
. new
The couple reside~
home on 124, Route I,
e.

It:!"

-· "If you Block people
make an error, you pay the .
interest and penalty?
I shoulda come here last year."

(

MEETING PLANNED
GAIJ..IPOIJS - The Gallts County Board of Commissioners will hold
a meeting concerning se'wage waste
problems in the Bidwell-Porter area
on January 17, at 7 p.m., at the Bidwell-Porter Elementary School.
.;·Representatives from the
~ineering firm Barrett-Cargcr
Withers will be present, along with
the County Commissioners, to answer questions concerning the
problem situation.
All area residents are invited"!O attend.

'-

If we should make an error that costs you additional ta!C , you pay .
only the tax. Block pays any penalty ~nd interest. We stand
behind our work.
2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W. VA .
OPEN TUES.
THURS . &amp; SAT.
9A.M-S P. M.
· PHONE 773-9128

618 E. MAIN ST .
POMEROY, 0 .
Open 9 A.M. to
6 P.M . Weekdays,
9·5 Saturday '
PHONE99l-J795

H&amp;R Bl ·OCW.

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...

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second
Gallipot is, Ohio

Open 9 am-6 pm Weekdays, 9·5 Sat.

Phone 446·0303

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Saturday
9:00-5:00

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY, JAN. 14TH
THRU
SATURDAY, JAN. 19TH

Except the last Satur-

day of the month.

That's a lot of money! And. every dollar you save means more
interest for you. At Athens Savings, we pay the highest rates
allowed by law on all our savings plans.
•·

ATTENTION:

.PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED Itt THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

Interest

Type of

Account

Rate

Regular Accoun1
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposi1
Certificate of Deposit
Certificate of Deposit

5112%
6.00%

30

Month Money

Market Certificate
6 Month Money
Market Certificate

6Yz 01&lt;~

6¥•%
7Y,%

7¥•%
8%
Varies
Monthly
Varies
Weekly

Annual
Yield

Maturlly

5.62%
6.14%
6.66%
6.92%
7.71 %
7.98%
8.24%

90 days
1 year
2Y• years
4 years
6 ye--s ·
· 8 years

None

. •'

CUT UP FRYERS.............. ~!·.59~
LEGS &amp;THIGHS ............... ~·. 79¢
MEATY BREASTS .............~~.89~
Su ----rior Dart B.acon.... :~.~~!~~·.69¢

30 mo .

182 days

A substantial interest penalty is required for early withdrawal ol time deposits . No
compounding of interest on 6 Monlh Money Markel Cer1ilicates.

(!)

a-~~mur.

.

UltOCII

-~

CALL 992-2156

Athens • 592·6681

- Pomeroy • 992-6655

Is theyearof the saver.

BETWEEN 8:30 AM &amp; 5 PM

PRODUCE
PINK MEAT

RY

'GRAPEFRUIT........... 5~l1

CEI

CLE

APPLES .................... 5~ 1.·
FRESH FOR SUCING OR SALADS

TOMATOES..........~ ...... H!·. 59¢

'

CRISP SOLID HEADS

CLEARANCE
PRICED

------~·COU'PON · -------,

.'

(PRICES APPLY TO MERCHANDISE ON !:lAND)

lANDMARk

STORE HOURS: 8:30 to 5:30

,,

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.SUPERIOR

. .

.

·~~~ 79~

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Exp~es :Sat~. ~n 19, :1980

~ : Serving Meigs/ Gallia and Ma$011 , Count~

'

Twin

~,..,.."'-!!

,,

GateWay

¢

·

·CABBAGEi ...................
~
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19
.
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. r--------COUPON---------., ,--------COUPON·•-------

II

I

FRANKIE WIENERS .c.i

POMEROY L'A N:D M""I{.. . .....
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR. ,

$ OO

WESTERN RED DEUCIOUS

•HOTPOINT REFRIGERATORS
•HOTPOINTWASHERS
&amp;DRYERS
.
•GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVISIONS

MAIN ST.

°

0

·IJ

BROUGHTON

2% M.ILK

=: sl 79

r
ExiJ~ Sai.~ Jan.
1.1 · · · Twin Gateway
I

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. WHITE

!-.

GRAPEFRUIT

I :

19, 1980

City

I

I

.I .

gg~ . ·

Qpires Sat, ~an. 19, 1980
Twi.n City Gateway

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

~-~------COUPON·-----1

GATEWAY

I
I

BREAD.

II

3·

!

16 oz.

LOAVES

I
I

~p.

1
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79~
•

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Sat., Jan. 19, 1980
Twin City Gateway

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\.3--The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Jan. 13, 1980

J

Homemaker Extension Council meets

Theatre 35 now located in jackson

GAWPOLIS - Theatre 35, of
Gallipolis and Jackson, has announced that it has started work
renovating the upper floor or the
Carlisle Building (above the Sport
About) In Jackson, which will house
the theatre's new base of opertions.
Theatre 35 will use the space

above the Sport About as a rehearsal
hall and performanc-e area. Office
space for the theatre will be located
at the new site, along with areas for
costumes, classroms, and a
workshop.
Former homehase for Theatre 35

NEW THEATRE LOCATION - Signing the lease agreement are
Michael Corbin, president of Theatre 35, and Harold Howe, proprietor of
the Sport About. Theatre 35 will use the space above the Sport About for a
rehearsal hall and performance area.

was The Little Theatre, housed m
the lower level of the Lafayette Mall
in downtown Gallipolis. Plans for
construction of a restaurant at The
Little Theatre site called for the
relocation of Theatre 35. Although
the theatre group has moved outside
of the immediate Gallipolis environs, it will continue to perform as
before in the Gallipolis area.
Theatre 35, once called the Gallia
Dramatic Arts ~iety, is a regional
theatre which brings many facets of
the performing arts to Southeastern
Ohio. Its seasons of regular productions, children's theatre, and radio
plays were augmented in 1979 with
the development of the dinner
theatre concept. Dinner theatre
productions were performed to sold
out audiences at .The UWe Theatre
in Gallipolis, The J oily Lanes
Bowling Center in Jackson, and the
Sportsman Inn in Athens. Plans are
.under way to expand the project in
191!0. Upcoming shows include: The
Odd Couple, Vanities., The Goodbye
People, and the musical Side by Side
by Sondheim. No definite schedule
has been made as of yet, depending
upon how much time the new theatre
renovation lakes.
Another featilre of Theatre 35 iB
the Readers Theatre program which
performs for local organizations and
service clubs. Presentations rl
dramatic readings are drawn from
newspaper and magazine articles,
and humor, poetry and prose collections to suit the particular
organization's wishes and needs.
Renovation work is just now
beginning under the direction of
Mak Nichols, theatre manager.
Work will be done on Saturday and
Sunday afternoons from U p.m.
Persons Interested in helping work
are encouraged to report at those
times.
Theatre 35 is actively involved
with community theatre on the state
and national level. With · membership in the Ohio Community
Theatre Association, its members
are able to participate in statewide
workshops, seminars, and competitions.
Anyone interested In becoming a
member of Theatre 35; donating
labor, money or supplies for the
renovation of the new theatre; or
would like the Readers Theatre to
perform for their organization
should contact Michelle or Michael
. Corbin at 446-1818, or 446-1171.

Birth
announced

QALLIPOlJS - The GaUia County Homemakers Extension Council
met Jan. 9 at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Blectric meeting
room for regular meeting. Dawn
Walker, prebldent, was In cha rge of
meeting. She asked each person to
introduce her 'closest friend sitting
next to her as a means of getting
acquainted. Arlene Tracy read the·
devotions from Mark 14 and a
reading by Harry Emerson Fosdick
and Hope by Norman Vincent Peale.
The Pledge to Flag was led by
Maude Persinger.
Beatrice Clark, membership
chairman, gave some new ideas on
increasing the membership. It was
decided to teach some craft at each

AMANON CLUB MEETS
GALIJPOLIS - The Emanon met
Jan. 3 at the home of Ellen White.
Mrs. Harry Mills, program chairman, introduced Sgt. Bert Christian,
Army recruiter. He spoke about job
training offered withtoday'sArmy.
The next meeting will be Jan. 17 at
the borne of Mrs. Howard B.
Saunders, 8 p.m.
RE'I1.JRNSHOME
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs have returned home after
spending the New Year's holiday in
Endicott, New York, with their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Barrie Phillips and their daughters,
Jill, Michelle and Heather.

meeting. The Gage-NOl'thup group program and &amp;bowed slides of llei
wt11 be lri charge of February · recent tnp to China and some m-·
meeting with Route 35 group having teresting souvenirs fnxn China':
"She gave a very Interesting talk 01!
devolions. Faye Rowland read the
secretary's report and Helen Wood her trip and ·It made everyon-:
the treasurer's report. · Bernice present feel as though they had ~
Wood gave an Interesting report on on a trip to China," reported mem~~.
;
Houalng, Energy and Environment.
The
ne:d
meetiing
will
b4!
The potluck lunch was served at
noon by Maude Persinger, Elaine February 13. U anyone would like t4
George, Irene Smeltzer, Gladys know m()l'l! about the meeting, ~
the Gallta Cowlty Extemlon Offl~
Watts and Louise Dennis.
or
Mrs. Wayne Amsbary at 448-0239.,
Ruby Jenkins had the afternoon

&amp;all Ia

Ja

Ml?ls

.,

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, INC.
The Gifts of Speech &amp;Hearing
Unlock the Doors to Communication

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Musser, Hysell Run Road,

r---

Social

Cale~

MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL, OF
MINISTRIES, 7:30 Monday night at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Representatives ' and
ministers from the Zl churches of
the county to attend.
POMEROY PTA Monday 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary.
Father's night will be observed.
Panel made up of Andy Lyles, Nan
Michael, Tim Fletcher and Jim
Rogers. Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley
will be In charge of nursery . .
Hostesses wtll be members of fifth
and siith grades.
TIJESDAY

SOUTHERN Junior High Athletic
Boosters Tuesday 7:30p.m. at junior
bigh. All parents of athletes and
cheerleaders are urged to attend.
RACINE LODGE 461 F and AM
Tuesday: Work in the entered apprentice degree.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80 RAM Wed-

nesday. Work in mark master and
past master degrees.

SQUARE DANCE PLANNED
GALUPOWS · - The Gallla
TWirlers are 'planning a westernltyle square dance next Saturday,
Jan. 19, in the Activity Center of
'aoc, heginning at 8 p.m. For more
Information, call :167-7473 or 446-11108.
:J'he information In Frjd.1y's
HTribune" was in error.

.,.,

'69 95

Osborne praises team effort
in 83-66 Blue Devil triumph
GAUJPOLIS- Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils climbed
Into a third place tie with Wellston In
the Southeastern Ohio League
basketball standings following an
impressive 113-06 victory over Coach
Garrett Powers' Golden Rockets
before a packeq house here Friday
night.
"Armstrong (Big John) was
super.lt was a great team effort. We
pressured their guarda and forced
them to shoot over us," remarked
Osborne as the 1979-80 campaign
reached its halfway point.
"Team plat' better
"We played more as a team
tonight than any other game this
year," Osborne continued.
Armstrong, :HI senior guard, pumped in a season-high 32 points for the
Blue Devils, now 6-4 overall and 4-3
in the conference. Armstrong also
had four assists.
Kent Price, 6-5 junior forward, once again came off the bench to spark
the Gallipolitans. Price tossed In a
career high 20 points and picked off
eight rebounds for the winners.
Todd Nibert, &amp;-3 junior forward,
turned In his beat effort of the
season, scoring nine points and
picking-, off seven rebounds for

eSCHULT •HOLLY PARK •BARRON •LINCOLN PARK
•PARKWOOD

GAHS~ )
J Harrington Toogb

No payment for 60 days &amp; if you qualify no payment for 90 days. Homes available
with single baths, bath &amp; 'rl, 2 full baths.

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME SAtES
.,.
.

3411 Jackson Ave.

675-3000

Point Pleasant

C. ENTER~

INC.

"HOME OF BEAUTIFUL KITCHENS" '
675-2318

POINT PLEASANT

286-3786

JACKSON, OHIO

FACTORY REBATE

JUMP.JN(J' 4ACK "" :Oallii!s 'Billlllii'.John) ~- ·
mstrong proved he could jump with the beat of them
Friday night as he leaps high for ball during Blue
Devils ~ victory over visiting Wellston. Armstrong
enjoyed the best night of his three-year v_arsity career

wtUr 32 pblniB. On Jeft·iB Gallia'a Kent Price (:13) wh&lt;l
tallied 20 markers for GAHS. Others in this Brenda
Wilson photo are Mark Weaver (15), Todd Nibert (43)
and Wellston's spunky Jeff Montgomery ( 10).

Late Ironton explosion
dumps Waverly, 61 to 46

'50 ON RR-lOA • '40 ON RR-9TA

A rotating shower of power that cooks
more evenly and cooks most foods faster
than ever before!

Reg. $89.95

Price combine for 52 points

Choose From Brand Names Like

GallipOlis

Special This Week

~

Armstr~ng,

ArotaUng antenna

beams microwave

IRONTON - Three players
scored In double figures Friday
night as the Ironton Tigers downed
the vislllng Waverly Tigers 61-46 in a
key SEOAL contest.
The ·victory enabled Coach Phil
Rice's !-Tigers to remain tied with
Athens for first place as both teams
finished first round play with 6-1
league recorda.
Friday's contest was a thriller for
three quarters before Ironton ex. ploded for seven quick points early
In the fourth period to grab a 12-point

advantage (49-37 ) and force
Wayerly into fouling to stop the
clock.
Ironton broke on top 1!&gt;-12 after
one quarter and still led 32-30 at intennission as some long-range
shooting by Woverly kept it close.
The winners turned to defense in
the third period which resulted in
high scoring Onno Steger held
without a point as Ironton's lead
widened to41.J'i after three stanzas.
Ironton opened the fourth quarter
with a pair of quick field goals,

foUowed by a technical foul against
the Waverly bench that saw Joe
Fletcher hit both free throws. Then
Tommy Gordon drilled another
fielder for a 49-37lead with6:28left.

~r tallied all nine points for
Waverly In the final period but Ironton cashed in at the foul line, converting 10 of 13 down the stretch.
WAVERLY (46) .. Onno Steger 7·3·
17 ; Randy Johnson 5·5·15; Bo Arnett
3·H ; Darby Moore 3-0-6; Rick
Teeters 1·0·2. TOTALS 19·8·46.
IRONTON (62) .. Joe Fletcher 5·5·
15; Tommy Gordon S-4-14; Tim
Hodges 2-8-12 ; Carlos Gleichauf 2·1·

energy directly at
food In a uniform,
ro~llng

5; Gabe Lewis J-0-6; Jlmmv Morris

2·0-.t ; Chris Barnes 0-3-3; Terry

Royal1 ·0·2. TOTALS 20·21 ·61.

pa!lern . .

Score by quarters :

waverly
Ironton

19only )
Just arrived, a Ship·
ment of Miracle Ferns.

12 16 7 7--46
IS 17 9 20 --61

Bulldog box:
ATHENS t46) -- Scott Burson 4·3·
Brian Lavery 4·0·8; Mike
Bruning 2·5·9; Dave Mathews 3-9-15;
Fred Ross 1·1·3. TOTAL$14·18·46.
LOGAN (43) -- Bill McDaniell-0·2;
Bob Fisk 2·0·4; Rich Bell 4·5·13 ;
Mark Ruggles 2·2·6; Dave Berry 0·4·
4; Duane Lovsey 4·0·8; Dave Bell 3·
0-6. TOTAL$17·9·43.
11 ;

~·-

WINTER
CLEARANCE

Score by quarters:

Athens
Logan
45.

SAVE 20%-50%

Cage standings

ON
tJ,IIIIIIa

0

'

~Ga!'!ipall~ ,

Ohio

12 12 13 9·· 46
12 13 8 10-- 43

Resaerve score: Logan 51. Athens

\

•COATS
•SLEEPWEAR
•GLOVES &amp;
•.BLOUSES
MITTENS
•HANDBAGS
•DRESSES
•SPORTSWEAR •SCARVES &amp;HATS
-

'

~bMATIC II.• ·Model RR-10A

· • Cooks by time or cooks tb lem~tature. Even holds at
temperature to tenderize economy cuts of meat.
. • A wide range of Cookmaticr... r power levels because
diHerent roods cook best at different speeds .
. . 700 watts of cooking power at "full power."
• Alfv~nced memory. Remembers to: defrost , hold,
·start cooking by time, then cook to temperature at
.the same or a diHerent Cookmatic. setting.
•. Even remembers the time of day.
• Automatic·start time .
• Separat~ limer you can use anytime. .

TEAM

'

~ looll as he cornea down with a rebound In Friday's SVAC game against
"· North Oalllli. Other TIXI!Ildo In his Greg Bailey photo·is Jolul Davis (10).
= Southern, defending SVAC cage champ, iook another !tap-toward a third
• ~gilt conference chalnPiollllhip with an ~ victory. See game detail:i
• on~today.
· ..

,4,•••• 'roi~DMATic
IJ,.
•

.
'· '

f
"'

wL

p
OP
9 1 637 526
9 1 535 458
7 3 702 628
6 3 645 533
6 4 592 536
7 5 768 674
6 5 696
5 '4 507

5J

•

606

517

5 6 546 584
5 6 626 570

.

1 3 223 252
1 8 432 :629
1 9 4.51 647

Fr,ld~y's resul.ts: .
r
Ravens~ 6~ Pt. F!leaJant 54
House 54 Gree~flel~ 39
Ll~den · McKinlev 73 Portsmouth

caurt

• ' 0ETER¥!NED LOOK - Southe~'s Steve Fitch has a qetein)llied

See a demonstration today of the energy saving, time saving

-- &amp;'CC.

ALL GAMES

Ironton
Chillicothe
Wellston
Wheelersburg
Gallipolis
Athens
Portsmouth
Logan
Court House
Waverly
Pt. Pleasant
Meigs
Jackson
.
.

c

•

On All 1980 Mobile Homes On Sales Lot

HANGING CHAIRS

Pomeroy, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Anita
Diane, to John Edward Umbarger,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Fohn Umbarger, Sr., Shade.
Misa Musser is a senior at Meigs
High School. Her fiance is presenUy
employed by the Ohio Pallet Co.
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

'

January Specials

THE WICKER HOUSE
41 Court St.

~~~lf'~~

TA .KE ADVANTAGE OF K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES

A nita Musser

Musser betrothal announced

-

'

The Speech Hearing Department has these -services available for the hearing impaired in- "
dividual.
,..
Hearing Evaluation
Hearing Aid Check tor damaged hearing
aids
Hearing Aid Selection to find best aid for
the client's hearing
Hearing Aid Fitting
,
Hearing Aid Sales starting at $215.00
Hearing Aid Orientation and Lip Reading
Complete Follow-up Services
For more information, call 446-5500 in Gallia,
286-1626 in Jackson, in Meigs 992-2192.

DALE.,S KITCHEN

GALIJPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
John L. Oliver II, the formerSharon
Sheela of Erlanger, Ky., are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, christened John
Lawrence Oliver III, on Jan. 3 at St.
ELizabeth Medical Center,
Covington, Ky.
He weighed seven pounds, four
ounces, and measured 22 inches
long. He was welcomed home by a
half-sister, Vanessa, 11.
·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Sheets, Centenary,
and paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Carrie Oliver, Frankfort, Ky. Maternal great- grandmother is Mrs. Nettie Sheets, Hamden.

•
,,
~

c-1- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1980

~

I

I

·· Groveport 56 Chllllcoihe 38
Wheel ersburg 85 Northwest 62 '
Athens 46 L01111n 43 ·
. .Gallipolis 83 Wellston 66
Ironton 61 Waverly 46
Jackson 44 Meigs 40 (oil

Greg Harrington, s-8 senior guard,
played flawlessly. He tallied seven
markers and the lefty was credited
with four assists.
Jeff Cameron,~ senior center, in
foul trouble early, sat out several
minutes but still managed to lead
the Ga1llans on the boarda with nine
rebounds. He had three assists and
scored five points.
Mark (Boo) Weaver, 6-2 senior
forward, scored five pointa, grabbed
three rebounds and was c~ted
with one assist: ' - ' '
•. . .
Wellston baWed GAHS on even
tenns during the first half. The
score was tied four times and the
lead exchanged hands three times.
GAHS led 17-13 after one period.
Gallipolis increBied its lead to six
pointa, 23-17, with6:01leftin the first
half. Wellston, behind the foul
shooting of Ted Williams and Steve
Benson, knotted the count at 23-all
with4:47left in the half.
'J'uralng Polat
During the final four minutes of
the first half and first two minutes of
the third period, Galllpolis outscored
the Rockets 18-8. The visitors never
recovered.
Gallipolis led 54-40 going into the
final period. Biggest Blue Devil advantage was 19 points, 62-43, on a
foul shot by Weaver with 5:34 left
and 64-45 on a long jumper by Armstrong with 5:10 remaining in the
game.
Gallipolis connected on 28 of 57
field goal attempts for 49 percent.
The Blue Devils were Zl of 41 at the
foul line for 65 percent. Three
Rocket&amp;, Marion Spires, the loop's
top scorer going into Friday's game,
Mll&lt;e Massie and John Jeffers fouled
out. Wellston comrnitted.26 personal
fouls.
GAHS picked off 33 rebounds, had
15 assists and committed eight turnovers.
Roeteta SbooUng !)ff
Wellston, now 7.J overall and 4-3
inside the league, hit 20 of 58 field
goal attempts for 34 percent. It was
only the !;eeond time this winter
WHS has shot below 40 percent from
the fi~ld. The Rockets were 26 of 36
from the foul line for 72 percent.
GAHS also had 26 personals, losing
Cameron and Price on. fouls in the
final period.
.:
Wellston had 33 rebounds, 14 by
Benson, The Rockela had 12 turnovers.
Spires finished the game with 13
pointa. Four other Rockets finished
In double figures. John Jeffers added 13, Jeff Montgomery 12, Ted
Williams 11 and steve Benson 10:
AlbenaNe:d
Both the Blue Devils and Golden
Rockets will see action twice this
weekend. On Friday, Galllpolis will
host Athens, the SEOAL's co-leader
atter one round 9f play. Satllf11ay,
GAHS will bost Logan.
"Wellston will tackle ,a ·tough
Alexander team at hom,e Tuesday.
Friday, the Rockets.face SEOAL coleader Ironton at Ironton. Qn Saturday, Wellston will Ito$! Meigs.
WE.LLSTON t66)
Player
Fg Ft PI Rb Tp
Montgomery 6·13 0·0 4 1 12
Spires
4·14 5·6 5 2 13
. Be~son
'·
2·5 6·9 1 ,14 10
Massje
2·8 0·0 5 7 4

' .

.

TWO of the Southeastern Ohio League's finest athletes, Wellston's
Jeff Montgomery, left, and Gallipolis' Greg Harrington (with ball) meet
face-to-face in this action photo during Friday's basketball game on the
GAHS boards. Montgomery tallied 12 pointa for the Rockets. Harrington
played another outstanding floor game for Gallia. He scored seven timely
points, had four assists and picked off three rebounds.

•

Meigs zn 44-40
overtime defeat
By Greg Bailey
column were Dave Kennedy with
JACKSON - · The Me.lgs eight points and Kevin Smith with
MaraUders and host Jackson Iron- four.
men played on even tenns Friday
The Marauders hit on 16 of 44 floor
night for four quarters, but 'in the fir- attempt&amp; for 36 percent and sank 8 of
st overtime of the year for Meigs, 13 free throws. The teams had 35
thelronmensqueezedouta-vfc- rebounds, lod by~BOb .t.bjey!s lf;
tory.
Each team was whistled for 13 fouls.
In the end, the lack of a balanced
Mark Sydow had a good night for
scoring attack proved to be Meigs' the winners, popping in 22 points. No
downfall as only three Meigs players other lronman hit double figures.
entered the scoring column. Meigs The team was cold from the floor,
dropped to 1-ll overall and ().7 in hitting just 19 d. 65 shots-for 29 perleague play. Jackson snapped a 22- centandsinktng5ofll free throws.
gamedI !osingl streakla and is 1-9 overall
The ne:d league game for Meigs
an .,m oopp y.
·
F 'da t Lo
On Satur
Meigs actually led most of the first . will be . n Y a
gan.
•
half IU at the first bUZ2er and 23-!8 day, the locals head for Wellston.
at i~termisslon. The score then was
MHS played host to Wahama last
tied 2!1-811 after three quarters and
night.
36-allat the end of regulation time.
Box score: .
all
the
tied
'
MEIGS (40)
'
All m
•
score was
SUI
Player
Fg Ft Rb PI Tp
timesinthesecondhalfandthelead Ohlinger
10-16 8·12 8 2 28
changed banda six times. Steve Ashley
0·8 0-1 14 2 o
Ohlinger was the only Marauder to Smith
2-B o-o 8 3 4
'od h tted D. Kennedy
H
0·0 J 5 8
. th third
score m e
pen as e ne
Swann
0-4 0-0 2 1 o
six points.
Judge
0·0 o-o 0 o o
Meigs trailed 36-34 with just · 30 to Totals
16-44 8-lJ 35 1J 40
.
.
.
"
JACKSON (44)
go m regulation. Junior Dave Ken- Player
Fg Ft Rb PI Tp
nedy then hit a 17-footer to send the Bonzo
J 10 0-2 3 1 6
contest into overtime. In the over- Morrow
2-13 0·0 o 2 4
·
·
f ld Sydow
9-21
4·7 16 J 22
time, Jackson hit on two oftwo 1e
Ghearing
1_4 o-o 4 · o 2
goal tries and four of four free Milbourne
2-8 2·2 10 4 6
throws for the margin of victory. Williams
1-1 o-o o o 2
Barnette
1-2 0-0 1 0 2
Meigs hit one fie ld goal and two free Hale
O·O o-o o 1 o
throws.
Neal
0-0 0-0 o 1 o
Ohlinger took scoring honors for soude~s
o-o o-o o o o
19-65 6·11 38 13 44
the night, poppmg' in 28 polnta ' his Totals
Score by quarters :
best performance. The only other Meigs
12 11 6 7 4--40
Meigs players to hit the scoring Jackson
6 12 11 7 8--44

•
rema1n
Bulldogs
. tied for first
LOGAN - A field goal by Scott
Burson and a free throw by Fred
Ross In the final two minutes carried
the Athens· Bulldogs to a 46-43
thriller over the Logan Chieftains
Friday night.
In a crucial SEOAL contest that
saw the score tied eight times and
the lead change five times late in the
Williams

2-8

7-9

4

4 11

Jeffers
4-6 5-5 5 4 13
Lockhart
0·3 2·2 2 1 T
· Dever
0-1 1·5 0 0 1
TOTALS
20·58 26-36 26 33 66
GALLIPOLIS (83)
Player
Fg Fl PI Ab Tp
Nibert
4-B
1·2 2 7 9
Weaver
1-7 3·4 3 3 5
Cameron
2-3 1·1 5 9 5
Armstrong
10·21 12·18 4 3 32
Harrington
2·5 3-4 3 1 · 7
Price
7·9 6·10 " S 8 20·
~oggess
1-1 1-2 1 0 3
Robinson
0·1 0·0 2 0 0
Roberts
0.1
0·0 1 1 0
Skidmore
1·2 0·0 0 0 2
Wei her
0·0 0·0 0 0 0
Martin
0·0 0·0 0 1 0
TOTALS
28-57 27·41 26 33 13
Score by quarters :

Wellston
13 18 9 26--66
Gallipolis
17 19 18 29 --8~
OFFICIALS - Dick Doty and Bill
Haynes.

game, the Bulldogs broke out of a 4343 deadlock with 1:56 left on a goal·
by Burson, and Logan missed no less
than six chances to tie or win tbe.
game.
By virtue · of the victory, Athens
remains tied with Ironton for the:
league leadership with identical 6-1.
recorda.
Friday night at Logan the two·
rivals haWed to a 12-12 first period
tie before the Chiefs broke on lop 2624 at halftime.
' .
The Bulld0£S fought back In the•
third period to get a 34-29lead before.·
Logan closed It to 37-33 as the quartet ended. ..
In the hectic fourth quarter the
score was ti~ at 37, 39, 41, and '43
before Burson and Ross teamed lor
the three point margin of victory. ,
In the final 10 seconds the Chief·
had three good shots, but missed·
them in the heartbreaking loss.
MatheWll led the Winners with I~
IDI!rkers with Burson adding 11
while Rich Bell's 13 polnta topped
the Chiefs,

�•

•

\.3--The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Sunday. Jan. 13, 1980

J

Homemaker Extension Council meets

Theatre 35 now located in jackson

GAWPOLIS - Theatre 35, of
Gallipolis and Jackson, has announced that it has started work
renovating the upper floor or the
Carlisle Building (above the Sport
About) In Jackson, which will house
the theatre's new base of opertions.
Theatre 35 will use the space

above the Sport About as a rehearsal
hall and performanc-e area. Office
space for the theatre will be located
at the new site, along with areas for
costumes, classroms, and a
workshop.
Former homehase for Theatre 35

NEW THEATRE LOCATION - Signing the lease agreement are
Michael Corbin, president of Theatre 35, and Harold Howe, proprietor of
the Sport About. Theatre 35 will use the space above the Sport About for a
rehearsal hall and performance area.

was The Little Theatre, housed m
the lower level of the Lafayette Mall
in downtown Gallipolis. Plans for
construction of a restaurant at The
Little Theatre site called for the
relocation of Theatre 35. Although
the theatre group has moved outside
of the immediate Gallipolis environs, it will continue to perform as
before in the Gallipolis area.
Theatre 35, once called the Gallia
Dramatic Arts ~iety, is a regional
theatre which brings many facets of
the performing arts to Southeastern
Ohio. Its seasons of regular productions, children's theatre, and radio
plays were augmented in 1979 with
the development of the dinner
theatre concept. Dinner theatre
productions were performed to sold
out audiences at .The UWe Theatre
in Gallipolis, The J oily Lanes
Bowling Center in Jackson, and the
Sportsman Inn in Athens. Plans are
.under way to expand the project in
191!0. Upcoming shows include: The
Odd Couple, Vanities., The Goodbye
People, and the musical Side by Side
by Sondheim. No definite schedule
has been made as of yet, depending
upon how much time the new theatre
renovation lakes.
Another featilre of Theatre 35 iB
the Readers Theatre program which
performs for local organizations and
service clubs. Presentations rl
dramatic readings are drawn from
newspaper and magazine articles,
and humor, poetry and prose collections to suit the particular
organization's wishes and needs.
Renovation work is just now
beginning under the direction of
Mak Nichols, theatre manager.
Work will be done on Saturday and
Sunday afternoons from U p.m.
Persons Interested in helping work
are encouraged to report at those
times.
Theatre 35 is actively involved
with community theatre on the state
and national level. With · membership in the Ohio Community
Theatre Association, its members
are able to participate in statewide
workshops, seminars, and competitions.
Anyone interested In becoming a
member of Theatre 35; donating
labor, money or supplies for the
renovation of the new theatre; or
would like the Readers Theatre to
perform for their organization
should contact Michelle or Michael
. Corbin at 446-1818, or 446-1171.

Birth
announced

QALLIPOlJS - The GaUia County Homemakers Extension Council
met Jan. 9 at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Blectric meeting
room for regular meeting. Dawn
Walker, prebldent, was In cha rge of
meeting. She asked each person to
introduce her 'closest friend sitting
next to her as a means of getting
acquainted. Arlene Tracy read the·
devotions from Mark 14 and a
reading by Harry Emerson Fosdick
and Hope by Norman Vincent Peale.
The Pledge to Flag was led by
Maude Persinger.
Beatrice Clark, membership
chairman, gave some new ideas on
increasing the membership. It was
decided to teach some craft at each

AMANON CLUB MEETS
GALIJPOLIS - The Emanon met
Jan. 3 at the home of Ellen White.
Mrs. Harry Mills, program chairman, introduced Sgt. Bert Christian,
Army recruiter. He spoke about job
training offered withtoday'sArmy.
The next meeting will be Jan. 17 at
the borne of Mrs. Howard B.
Saunders, 8 p.m.
RE'I1.JRNSHOME
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
Bearhs have returned home after
spending the New Year's holiday in
Endicott, New York, with their sonin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Barrie Phillips and their daughters,
Jill, Michelle and Heather.

meeting. The Gage-NOl'thup group program and &amp;bowed slides of llei
wt11 be lri charge of February · recent tnp to China and some m-·
meeting with Route 35 group having teresting souvenirs fnxn China':
"She gave a very Interesting talk 01!
devolions. Faye Rowland read the
secretary's report and Helen Wood her trip and ·It made everyon-:
the treasurer's report. · Bernice present feel as though they had ~
Wood gave an Interesting report on on a trip to China," reported mem~~.
;
Houalng, Energy and Environment.
The
ne:d
meetiing
will
b4!
The potluck lunch was served at
noon by Maude Persinger, Elaine February 13. U anyone would like t4
George, Irene Smeltzer, Gladys know m()l'l! about the meeting, ~
the Gallta Cowlty Extemlon Offl~
Watts and Louise Dennis.
or
Mrs. Wayne Amsbary at 448-0239.,
Ruby Jenkins had the afternoon

&amp;all Ia

Ja

Ml?ls

.,

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, INC.
The Gifts of Speech &amp;Hearing
Unlock the Doors to Communication

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Musser, Hysell Run Road,

r---

Social

Cale~

MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL, OF
MINISTRIES, 7:30 Monday night at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church. Representatives ' and
ministers from the Zl churches of
the county to attend.
POMEROY PTA Monday 7:30
p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary.
Father's night will be observed.
Panel made up of Andy Lyles, Nan
Michael, Tim Fletcher and Jim
Rogers. Mrs. Mary Carolyn Wiley
will be In charge of nursery . .
Hostesses wtll be members of fifth
and siith grades.
TIJESDAY

SOUTHERN Junior High Athletic
Boosters Tuesday 7:30p.m. at junior
bigh. All parents of athletes and
cheerleaders are urged to attend.
RACINE LODGE 461 F and AM
Tuesday: Work in the entered apprentice degree.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80 RAM Wed-

nesday. Work in mark master and
past master degrees.

SQUARE DANCE PLANNED
GALUPOWS · - The Gallla
TWirlers are 'planning a westernltyle square dance next Saturday,
Jan. 19, in the Activity Center of
'aoc, heginning at 8 p.m. For more
Information, call :167-7473 or 446-11108.
:J'he information In Frjd.1y's
HTribune" was in error.

.,.,

'69 95

Osborne praises team effort
in 83-66 Blue Devil triumph
GAUJPOLIS- Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils climbed
Into a third place tie with Wellston In
the Southeastern Ohio League
basketball standings following an
impressive 113-06 victory over Coach
Garrett Powers' Golden Rockets
before a packeq house here Friday
night.
"Armstrong (Big John) was
super.lt was a great team effort. We
pressured their guarda and forced
them to shoot over us," remarked
Osborne as the 1979-80 campaign
reached its halfway point.
"Team plat' better
"We played more as a team
tonight than any other game this
year," Osborne continued.
Armstrong, :HI senior guard, pumped in a season-high 32 points for the
Blue Devils, now 6-4 overall and 4-3
in the conference. Armstrong also
had four assists.
Kent Price, 6-5 junior forward, once again came off the bench to spark
the Gallipolitans. Price tossed In a
career high 20 points and picked off
eight rebounds for the winners.
Todd Nibert, &amp;-3 junior forward,
turned In his beat effort of the
season, scoring nine points and
picking-, off seven rebounds for

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•PARKWOOD

GAHS~ )
J Harrington Toogb

No payment for 60 days &amp; if you qualify no payment for 90 days. Homes available
with single baths, bath &amp; 'rl, 2 full baths.

K&amp;K MOBILE HOME SAtES
.,.
.

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675-3000

Point Pleasant

C. ENTER~

INC.

"HOME OF BEAUTIFUL KITCHENS" '
675-2318

POINT PLEASANT

286-3786

JACKSON, OHIO

FACTORY REBATE

JUMP.JN(J' 4ACK "" :Oallii!s 'Billlllii'.John) ~- ·
mstrong proved he could jump with the beat of them
Friday night as he leaps high for ball during Blue
Devils ~ victory over visiting Wellston. Armstrong
enjoyed the best night of his three-year v_arsity career

wtUr 32 pblniB. On Jeft·iB Gallia'a Kent Price (:13) wh&lt;l
tallied 20 markers for GAHS. Others in this Brenda
Wilson photo are Mark Weaver (15), Todd Nibert (43)
and Wellston's spunky Jeff Montgomery ( 10).

Late Ironton explosion
dumps Waverly, 61 to 46

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Reg. $89.95

Price combine for 52 points

Choose From Brand Names Like

GallipOlis

Special This Week

~

Armstr~ng,

ArotaUng antenna

beams microwave

IRONTON - Three players
scored In double figures Friday
night as the Ironton Tigers downed
the vislllng Waverly Tigers 61-46 in a
key SEOAL contest.
The ·victory enabled Coach Phil
Rice's !-Tigers to remain tied with
Athens for first place as both teams
finished first round play with 6-1
league recorda.
Friday's contest was a thriller for
three quarters before Ironton ex. ploded for seven quick points early
In the fourth period to grab a 12-point

advantage (49-37 ) and force
Wayerly into fouling to stop the
clock.
Ironton broke on top 1!&gt;-12 after
one quarter and still led 32-30 at intennission as some long-range
shooting by Woverly kept it close.
The winners turned to defense in
the third period which resulted in
high scoring Onno Steger held
without a point as Ironton's lead
widened to41.J'i after three stanzas.
Ironton opened the fourth quarter
with a pair of quick field goals,

foUowed by a technical foul against
the Waverly bench that saw Joe
Fletcher hit both free throws. Then
Tommy Gordon drilled another
fielder for a 49-37lead with6:28left.

~r tallied all nine points for
Waverly In the final period but Ironton cashed in at the foul line, converting 10 of 13 down the stretch.
WAVERLY (46) .. Onno Steger 7·3·
17 ; Randy Johnson 5·5·15; Bo Arnett
3·H ; Darby Moore 3-0-6; Rick
Teeters 1·0·2. TOTALS 19·8·46.
IRONTON (62) .. Joe Fletcher 5·5·
15; Tommy Gordon S-4-14; Tim
Hodges 2-8-12 ; Carlos Gleichauf 2·1·

energy directly at
food In a uniform,
ro~llng

5; Gabe Lewis J-0-6; Jlmmv Morris

2·0-.t ; Chris Barnes 0-3-3; Terry

Royal1 ·0·2. TOTALS 20·21 ·61.

pa!lern . .

Score by quarters :

waverly
Ironton

19only )
Just arrived, a Ship·
ment of Miracle Ferns.

12 16 7 7--46
IS 17 9 20 --61

Bulldog box:
ATHENS t46) -- Scott Burson 4·3·
Brian Lavery 4·0·8; Mike
Bruning 2·5·9; Dave Mathews 3-9-15;
Fred Ross 1·1·3. TOTAL$14·18·46.
LOGAN (43) -- Bill McDaniell-0·2;
Bob Fisk 2·0·4; Rich Bell 4·5·13 ;
Mark Ruggles 2·2·6; Dave Berry 0·4·
4; Duane Lovsey 4·0·8; Dave Bell 3·
0-6. TOTAL$17·9·43.
11 ;

~·-

WINTER
CLEARANCE

Score by quarters:

Athens
Logan
45.

SAVE 20%-50%

Cage standings

ON
tJ,IIIIIIa

0

'

~Ga!'!ipall~ ,

Ohio

12 12 13 9·· 46
12 13 8 10-- 43

Resaerve score: Logan 51. Athens

\

•COATS
•SLEEPWEAR
•GLOVES &amp;
•.BLOUSES
MITTENS
•HANDBAGS
•DRESSES
•SPORTSWEAR •SCARVES &amp;HATS
-

'

~bMATIC II.• ·Model RR-10A

· • Cooks by time or cooks tb lem~tature. Even holds at
temperature to tenderize economy cuts of meat.
. • A wide range of Cookmaticr... r power levels because
diHerent roods cook best at different speeds .
. . 700 watts of cooking power at "full power."
• Alfv~nced memory. Remembers to: defrost , hold,
·start cooking by time, then cook to temperature at
.the same or a diHerent Cookmatic. setting.
•. Even remembers the time of day.
• Automatic·start time .
• Separat~ limer you can use anytime. .

TEAM

'

~ looll as he cornea down with a rebound In Friday's SVAC game against
"· North Oalllli. Other TIXI!Ildo In his Greg Bailey photo·is Jolul Davis (10).
= Southern, defending SVAC cage champ, iook another !tap-toward a third
• ~gilt conference chalnPiollllhip with an ~ victory. See game detail:i
• on~today.
· ..

,4,•••• 'roi~DMATic
IJ,.
•

.
'· '

f
"'

wL

p
OP
9 1 637 526
9 1 535 458
7 3 702 628
6 3 645 533
6 4 592 536
7 5 768 674
6 5 696
5 '4 507

5J

•

606

517

5 6 546 584
5 6 626 570

.

1 3 223 252
1 8 432 :629
1 9 4.51 647

Fr,ld~y's resul.ts: .
r
Ravens~ 6~ Pt. F!leaJant 54
House 54 Gree~flel~ 39
Ll~den · McKinlev 73 Portsmouth

caurt

• ' 0ETER¥!NED LOOK - Southe~'s Steve Fitch has a qetein)llied

See a demonstration today of the energy saving, time saving

-- &amp;'CC.

ALL GAMES

Ironton
Chillicothe
Wellston
Wheelersburg
Gallipolis
Athens
Portsmouth
Logan
Court House
Waverly
Pt. Pleasant
Meigs
Jackson
.
.

c

•

On All 1980 Mobile Homes On Sales Lot

HANGING CHAIRS

Pomeroy, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Anita
Diane, to John Edward Umbarger,
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Fohn Umbarger, Sr., Shade.
Misa Musser is a senior at Meigs
High School. Her fiance is presenUy
employed by the Ohio Pallet Co.
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

'

January Specials

THE WICKER HOUSE
41 Court St.

~~~lf'~~

TA .KE ADVANTAGE OF K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES

A nita Musser

Musser betrothal announced

-

'

The Speech Hearing Department has these -services available for the hearing impaired in- "
dividual.
,..
Hearing Evaluation
Hearing Aid Check tor damaged hearing
aids
Hearing Aid Selection to find best aid for
the client's hearing
Hearing Aid Fitting
,
Hearing Aid Sales starting at $215.00
Hearing Aid Orientation and Lip Reading
Complete Follow-up Services
For more information, call 446-5500 in Gallia,
286-1626 in Jackson, in Meigs 992-2192.

DALE.,S KITCHEN

GALIJPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
John L. Oliver II, the formerSharon
Sheela of Erlanger, Ky., are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, christened John
Lawrence Oliver III, on Jan. 3 at St.
ELizabeth Medical Center,
Covington, Ky.
He weighed seven pounds, four
ounces, and measured 22 inches
long. He was welcomed home by a
half-sister, Vanessa, 11.
·
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Melvin Sheets, Centenary,
and paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Carrie Oliver, Frankfort, Ky. Maternal great- grandmother is Mrs. Nettie Sheets, Hamden.

•
,,
~

c-1- The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1980

~

I

I

·· Groveport 56 Chllllcoihe 38
Wheel ersburg 85 Northwest 62 '
Athens 46 L01111n 43 ·
. .Gallipolis 83 Wellston 66
Ironton 61 Waverly 46
Jackson 44 Meigs 40 (oil

Greg Harrington, s-8 senior guard,
played flawlessly. He tallied seven
markers and the lefty was credited
with four assists.
Jeff Cameron,~ senior center, in
foul trouble early, sat out several
minutes but still managed to lead
the Ga1llans on the boarda with nine
rebounds. He had three assists and
scored five points.
Mark (Boo) Weaver, 6-2 senior
forward, scored five pointa, grabbed
three rebounds and was c~ted
with one assist: ' - ' '
•. . .
Wellston baWed GAHS on even
tenns during the first half. The
score was tied four times and the
lead exchanged hands three times.
GAHS led 17-13 after one period.
Gallipolis increBied its lead to six
pointa, 23-17, with6:01leftin the first
half. Wellston, behind the foul
shooting of Ted Williams and Steve
Benson, knotted the count at 23-all
with4:47left in the half.
'J'uralng Polat
During the final four minutes of
the first half and first two minutes of
the third period, Galllpolis outscored
the Rockets 18-8. The visitors never
recovered.
Gallipolis led 54-40 going into the
final period. Biggest Blue Devil advantage was 19 points, 62-43, on a
foul shot by Weaver with 5:34 left
and 64-45 on a long jumper by Armstrong with 5:10 remaining in the
game.
Gallipolis connected on 28 of 57
field goal attempts for 49 percent.
The Blue Devils were Zl of 41 at the
foul line for 65 percent. Three
Rocket&amp;, Marion Spires, the loop's
top scorer going into Friday's game,
Mll&lt;e Massie and John Jeffers fouled
out. Wellston comrnitted.26 personal
fouls.
GAHS picked off 33 rebounds, had
15 assists and committed eight turnovers.
Roeteta SbooUng !)ff
Wellston, now 7.J overall and 4-3
inside the league, hit 20 of 58 field
goal attempts for 34 percent. It was
only the !;eeond time this winter
WHS has shot below 40 percent from
the fi~ld. The Rockets were 26 of 36
from the foul line for 72 percent.
GAHS also had 26 personals, losing
Cameron and Price on. fouls in the
final period.
.:
Wellston had 33 rebounds, 14 by
Benson, The Rockela had 12 turnovers.
Spires finished the game with 13
pointa. Four other Rockets finished
In double figures. John Jeffers added 13, Jeff Montgomery 12, Ted
Williams 11 and steve Benson 10:
AlbenaNe:d
Both the Blue Devils and Golden
Rockets will see action twice this
weekend. On Friday, Galllpolis will
host Athens, the SEOAL's co-leader
atter one round 9f play. Satllf11ay,
GAHS will bost Logan.
"Wellston will tackle ,a ·tough
Alexander team at hom,e Tuesday.
Friday, the Rockets.face SEOAL coleader Ironton at Ironton. Qn Saturday, Wellston will Ito$! Meigs.
WE.LLSTON t66)
Player
Fg Ft PI Rb Tp
Montgomery 6·13 0·0 4 1 12
Spires
4·14 5·6 5 2 13
. Be~son
'·
2·5 6·9 1 ,14 10
Massje
2·8 0·0 5 7 4

' .

.

TWO of the Southeastern Ohio League's finest athletes, Wellston's
Jeff Montgomery, left, and Gallipolis' Greg Harrington (with ball) meet
face-to-face in this action photo during Friday's basketball game on the
GAHS boards. Montgomery tallied 12 pointa for the Rockets. Harrington
played another outstanding floor game for Gallia. He scored seven timely
points, had four assists and picked off three rebounds.

•

Meigs zn 44-40
overtime defeat
By Greg Bailey
column were Dave Kennedy with
JACKSON - · The Me.lgs eight points and Kevin Smith with
MaraUders and host Jackson Iron- four.
men played on even tenns Friday
The Marauders hit on 16 of 44 floor
night for four quarters, but 'in the fir- attempt&amp; for 36 percent and sank 8 of
st overtime of the year for Meigs, 13 free throws. The teams had 35
thelronmensqueezedouta-vfc- rebounds, lod by~BOb .t.bjey!s lf;
tory.
Each team was whistled for 13 fouls.
In the end, the lack of a balanced
Mark Sydow had a good night for
scoring attack proved to be Meigs' the winners, popping in 22 points. No
downfall as only three Meigs players other lronman hit double figures.
entered the scoring column. Meigs The team was cold from the floor,
dropped to 1-ll overall and ().7 in hitting just 19 d. 65 shots-for 29 perleague play. Jackson snapped a 22- centandsinktng5ofll free throws.
gamedI !osingl streakla and is 1-9 overall
The ne:d league game for Meigs
an .,m oopp y.
·
F 'da t Lo
On Satur
Meigs actually led most of the first . will be . n Y a
gan.
•
half IU at the first bUZ2er and 23-!8 day, the locals head for Wellston.
at i~termisslon. The score then was
MHS played host to Wahama last
tied 2!1-811 after three quarters and
night.
36-allat the end of regulation time.
Box score: .
all
the
tied
'
MEIGS (40)
'
All m
•
score was
SUI
Player
Fg Ft Rb PI Tp
timesinthesecondhalfandthelead Ohlinger
10-16 8·12 8 2 28
changed banda six times. Steve Ashley
0·8 0-1 14 2 o
Ohlinger was the only Marauder to Smith
2-B o-o 8 3 4
'od h tted D. Kennedy
H
0·0 J 5 8
. th third
score m e
pen as e ne
Swann
0-4 0-0 2 1 o
six points.
Judge
0·0 o-o 0 o o
Meigs trailed 36-34 with just · 30 to Totals
16-44 8-lJ 35 1J 40
.
.
.
"
JACKSON (44)
go m regulation. Junior Dave Ken- Player
Fg Ft Rb PI Tp
nedy then hit a 17-footer to send the Bonzo
J 10 0-2 3 1 6
contest into overtime. In the over- Morrow
2-13 0·0 o 2 4
·
·
f ld Sydow
9-21
4·7 16 J 22
time, Jackson hit on two oftwo 1e
Ghearing
1_4 o-o 4 · o 2
goal tries and four of four free Milbourne
2-8 2·2 10 4 6
throws for the margin of victory. Williams
1-1 o-o o o 2
Barnette
1-2 0-0 1 0 2
Meigs hit one fie ld goal and two free Hale
O·O o-o o 1 o
throws.
Neal
0-0 0-0 o 1 o
Ohlinger took scoring honors for soude~s
o-o o-o o o o
19-65 6·11 38 13 44
the night, poppmg' in 28 polnta ' his Totals
Score by quarters :
best performance. The only other Meigs
12 11 6 7 4--40
Meigs players to hit the scoring Jackson
6 12 11 7 8--44

•
rema1n
Bulldogs
. tied for first
LOGAN - A field goal by Scott
Burson and a free throw by Fred
Ross In the final two minutes carried
the Athens· Bulldogs to a 46-43
thriller over the Logan Chieftains
Friday night.
In a crucial SEOAL contest that
saw the score tied eight times and
the lead change five times late in the
Williams

2-8

7-9

4

4 11

Jeffers
4-6 5-5 5 4 13
Lockhart
0·3 2·2 2 1 T
· Dever
0-1 1·5 0 0 1
TOTALS
20·58 26-36 26 33 66
GALLIPOLIS (83)
Player
Fg Fl PI Ab Tp
Nibert
4-B
1·2 2 7 9
Weaver
1-7 3·4 3 3 5
Cameron
2-3 1·1 5 9 5
Armstrong
10·21 12·18 4 3 32
Harrington
2·5 3-4 3 1 · 7
Price
7·9 6·10 " S 8 20·
~oggess
1-1 1-2 1 0 3
Robinson
0·1 0·0 2 0 0
Roberts
0.1
0·0 1 1 0
Skidmore
1·2 0·0 0 0 2
Wei her
0·0 0·0 0 0 0
Martin
0·0 0·0 0 1 0
TOTALS
28-57 27·41 26 33 13
Score by quarters :

Wellston
13 18 9 26--66
Gallipolis
17 19 18 29 --8~
OFFICIALS - Dick Doty and Bill
Haynes.

game, the Bulldogs broke out of a 4343 deadlock with 1:56 left on a goal·
by Burson, and Logan missed no less
than six chances to tie or win tbe.
game.
By virtue · of the victory, Athens
remains tied with Ironton for the:
league leadership with identical 6-1.
recorda.
Friday night at Logan the two·
rivals haWed to a 12-12 first period
tie before the Chiefs broke on lop 2624 at halftime.
' .
The Bulld0£S fought back In the•
third period to get a 34-29lead before.·
Logan closed It to 37-33 as the quartet ended. ..
In the hectic fourth quarter the
score was ti~ at 37, 39, 41, and '43
before Burson and Ross teamed lor
the three point margin of victory. ,
In the final 10 seconds the Chief·
had three good shots, but missed·
them in the heartbreaking loss.
MatheWll led the Winners with I~
IDI!rkers with Burson adding 11
while Rich Bell's 13 polnta topped
the Chiefs,

�,j_)

Kyger Crl'ch :u mped into a

first perio&lt;l lt~ ad ,1;,\1 remained Five

points or more ahead the rest of the
way.
· Pacing the Bobcat attack before
fouling out in the fourth stanza was
senior guard John Westfall with 13
points. Senior guard Greg Smith was
the only other Bobcat hitting double

Lyne Center Schedule
Date-Gymnasium
Jan . 13 2·_. p.m .-Open Recreat ion
7·9 p .m .-Open Recreation
Jan . 14 8 p .m .- 12 M ·lntramurals

Pool

2·4p.m .·OpenSwim
79

p.m.·Open Swim
·

Jan . 15 Closed· Basketball

5 : 15 p.m .· Redwomen vs . Lees Jr . College
7:30 p .m.·Redmen vs . Mt . Vernon Nt~zaren e
Jan. 16 7·9 p.m .·lf2 gym · Karate Class
lf2 gym-Open Recreation
Jan. 17 8 p .m. -12 M -lntramur,als
Jan. 18 7·9 p.m.- Family Night

Jan . 19 Closed Basketball

5: 15 p .m. -Redwomen vs . Wright State
Jan . 20 2-4 p.m . -Open Recreation
8· 11 p .m .-l ntramurals

SHOT BLOCKED- Dale Teaford, (42) blocks a jump shot by North
GaWa's Tim Howell (31) during Friday night's SVAC contest at Southern.
Teaford flnii 'led the game with 14 po)nts in helping Southern to its seventh win in eight games, 83-61i. Inside the SV AC, the Tornadoes own a 5-0
record.

MAY BUY RACE TRACK
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - George
Steinbre!Uler, owner of the New
York Yankees, said Friday he was
negotiating to buy half interest in
Florida Downs, a thoroughbred race
track outside Tampa which had a
$25.7 million handle last year.
A proposal would bave to be approved by the state's pari-mutuel
regulatory board.

were three of the first traveling
basketbaU teams m America.
Olson's won the first game played at
Jackson but Portsmouth won the
next night 42.,'14 with Walter Doll
scoring 10.
Ex .OSU cagers sign
At the beginning ol the 19Z7-28
seasoo, Portsmouth signed former
OSU players Mel Shaw, Pete Stinchcomb, and Andy Nemecek as well
as Ohio Wesleyan's top scorer
George Shea . In the first two gatlles
the Selects beat by large scores two
Columbus teams, ooe of which was
led by the top big man in Ohio,
KegelmeyerofXavier.
Next came victories over the Flint
Buicks, Beloit, Wisconsin,
Delaware, and the defending Ohio
champs -- Marion. The outside
shooting of Shea, who was adept at
shooting over the rafters in the Dance Studio, and the inside play of
BaesrnanandShaw led the way. Rec
Roll of Nebraska and Dempsey of
OSU were added at midseason. In a

Kyger Creek took the reserve
game, 3&amp;-28. Roger Stroud led thC
winners with 14 points. Rossiter hac!
10 points for Hannan Trace.
:
Kyger Creek hosts Hannan
Tuesday night and Southwestem
Friday. Hannan Trace play{ ·
Wahama Tuesday night and travel(
to Southern Friday.
"
:
HANNAN TRACE (41) --,Beever3-0'
6; Campbell 3-0-6; Jones 7·6·20i
Webb 2-1·5; Petrie 1-H . Totals 16-9'
41.
:
Kyger creek (56) -- Smith J.S· ll •
Westfall 5·3·13; Sands 3-0·6:
Spri nger.:l-0·4; Price 4-1 -9; Porter 2'
0·4; Gilmore J.1 -7 and Moore 1-0·2:
Totals23-10-56.
·
By Quarters:
H. Trace
6 12 8 15.. 4l
K. Creek
14 15 14 13.. 56

rematch with Flint, Portsmouth lost riO;;;h;;;io;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
their first game as Flint had the two
top scorers in the Big Ten from 1m5.
Bristow big
Portsmouth bounced back to beat
the Charleston Senators whose center, Gaines, had teamed with · Art
Loeb to bring an NCAA cham• 36 month guarantee
pionship to Princeton. Next the
• Heavy duty service batSelects embarrassed the Buffalo
Lincolns 43-28. The Lincolns
tery
featured one of the fine big men ci
• For most auto. and
the age- Sheldoo Bristow.
trucks .
In late February, 1928, the high
flying Cleveland Rosenblums of the
Less $10.00
ABL came to southern Ohio and in
Trade in
perhaps the ID&lt;lll e.citing game
ever played in Portsmouth, the
Selects took a two point lead with
two minutes to go. Cleveland elected
Batteries for heavy duty
to play for the last shot and at the
trucks and heavy equipbuzzer Ely tied the game .
ment.
Cleveland's coach was Marty Friedman whom Nat Holman called one ol
the best early pros.
Strategy backfires
SALES-&amp; SERVICE
In o~ertime Cleveland took a three
Ph. 446-8640
point lead but Portsmouth tied it.
1st &amp; Sycamore
Kerr sent aeveland up by two but
See (';a I ~red or Dale
baskets by Shaw and Lynch sent the

SANDERS

__

._

for top spot
'·

tinuing termite or powder post

beetle protection is made with a
corporation. A contract with an
individual can become void for
many· reasons, including death .
Extermital is a corporation - not
an individual. A contract made
with Extermital is ndt affected by

The victory, coupled with
Waverly's 31-29 loss at Ironton and
Athens' 51-45 setback at Logan,
pushed the GAHS reserves back into
a tie for first place with Waverly and
Ironton with identical 1&gt;-2 conference
records .

OFFER ENDS JAN. 19, 1980

THE FITNESS CENTER

or any of the many other condi tions which may affect the individual.

-

Gallipolis, Ohio

417 Second Ave.

We are pleased to announce that Bryce L.
Smith is a member of The Ohio Company's
1979 President's Club. The Ohio Company is
proud to acknowledge Mr. Smith's
·
outstanding level of professional achievement
in investment counseling to individuals and
institutions in his community.

Bryce L Smith
The Ohio Company
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

lhc
Ohio

.

SNAGS REBOUND - Although missing several minutes of aciton,
due to foul trouble, Gallia's Jeff Cameron still managed to lead GAHS on
the boards Friday with nine rebounds. Rocket defenders are Ted
williams (20) and Steve Benson (44). The latter led all rebounders with

Compan)r

1979

...

Investments • Securit1es
Me mber S .I.P.C .

you ain't heard a thing
llaYI beard oar deals on tbese ued

THALER
"IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE TO TRADE"

1979 PINTO
Wagon, w..auto.
One owner.

Was1U9S
Now

Autom . &amp; Air.
New Car Trade

Was 12495

Now

1978 ZEPHYR
4 Dr., autom., air.
One Owner

Was $4595

'4595

1974 MONTE CARLO

'2095

'4295

Now

1976 MARQUIS
4 or., air &amp; all .

Local Owner

was $2995

'2495 .

Now

1976 MAVERICK

1976 PIN10

4 Dr .. autom.
Good Car

Cpe., autom.

2 Mustangs

2 Fairmonts

4 LTDs
1 T -Bird

1979 FORD lh TON
6c_yl., Jspd,
Low, Low miles.
1

5195.

The new 6-month CD will really get your money go ... ~
And your interest rate is guaranteed .

1968 FORD lh

Whatever the 6-month Treasury Bi ll auction rafe is the
week you purchase your cer tifi cate of deposit, that' s l he
interest rate you are guaranteed for its maturity .

t~\.\).

1977 GRANADA

1978 BUICK
Cent,Ury W•gon
Air, like new.

was $5595
Now

2 Dr., autom., air.

.

'2495

1978 CHEV. lh.'ION
6 cvl .. 3spd.
W/Topper

'4595

NOW

1978 DODGE VAN
6cyl.
Ntw trad.e-in

Wasi4SI) ;

•4295.
NEW 1979 MERCURIES
Now

4-Mirq~l~

2-Zepllyrs

2:-coua•rs
r .

Good Mileage

was ll995

'4895

Now

'3595

1975 MUSTANG

1975 CUTlASS

2 Dr., 4spd ., radio.

Supreme w/air.
one owner

' Economical

was 131tS

Wuii59S

Now

Now

1975 LTD

1976 LTD

2 Dr., w/alr

~w

4 Dr., w/air.
One Owner

car Tr~de-l n

Was$2595

Now

Was S499S

SAVE A LOT

was S4395

economy
wassm5

'2995
NEW 1979 FORDS

NOW

Now

21

WasS299S

0

.1979 DODGE lh 'ION
ADV. PKG.
6 cvl .. 3 spd.
Now

NEW 1979 TRUCKS
2-1 so 1f2 Tons
2-250 :JYa Tons
2--4"JC41", 4 WD

'5495

BIG SAVINGS

1979 FORD' %

1978 fORD lh

van.Autom.

V-8,4spd.,O.D.
A'CJood One

Bit sovlnt•
Was $5195

Now

. '5495

NEW 1980 HEAVI~
1'-&lt;-600w/dumpbed
1-c-100 wtdump btd.

.'3995
. 1:

1974 GMC %
H.D., auto.

CJood Work
WIU1tt5

:: The two National Basketball
1ssoclaUon giants went at it Friday
::Dight during the first period of the
:f.eltics' 108-93 victory game over
l'U&amp;nta. Both were ejected after ex~ solld punches.
;: "He wu racliJi 4o!m the Jane IIDd
:jjave me an elbow," said Cowens,
Jlrho had a cut over an eye. "I
:l)ouldn't let him get away with that."
: The man who really hurt the
;tlawks, was Rick Robey, Cowens'
ollackup, who scored 22 points as the
~!tics boosted their home record to
ll-1 and avenged their only setback
in Boston Garden, a 1~ rout at the
hands of the Hawks last month. The
~!tics' overall 32-10 mark is the
tr5t In the NBA.
•"It was a good challenge,
eipeclally against the only team that
lis beaten us here this year," said
JWbey, who also pulled down 10
t!bounds. "When Dave went, I knew
itwas going to be along night.
•"For a coui&gt;le of minutes in the
mnd haH, the legs got a litue rubbery. 'Then I got my second wind. AU
il:amounted to was 10 guys playing
tAgether, and with confidence."

'""'&amp;1...,

Basketball Association
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
Placed Earl Tatum, guard, on the in·
list.

Signed

Willie

:
•••
•
:
:
•

•
•

Passport
Photos

• instantly- no wailing
• in color
• no appointment
necessary
• approved by State
• Department Portrait
Studio

:•
•
:•

:
•
••
••
:
:
•

424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Mason, Gallia, Or Meigs Counties
WE INVITE YOU TO
COME &amp; PLAY GOLF WITH
Limited Membership

Open I

*200 00
COUPLE MEMBERSHIP • *250oo
FAMILY MEMBERSHI~ - *275 00
Half of the club membership must be
paid on or before Feb. 29th, 1980
Balance due April 1st, 1980
For Further Information Contact

BOB ADKINS
President
675·1211

•

! TAWNEY STUDIOS !
:
••

lf You Live In

SINGLE MEMBERSHIP -

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
:
from Tawney's
:
••
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:•
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•

19 of his 25 pomts m tne second half
as Columbia broke open a close
game to defeat Harvard 1(5.63_
Reserve Guard Steve Mills poured in
a career-high 19 points to lead Princeton to a 61&gt;-57 decisioo over Yale.
Also, Paul LitUe scored 16 points
as PelUI whipped Brown 64-S7 for the
Quakers' fifth straight victory. Cleo
Robertson scored '!I points, including five in the second overtime
period, to pace Dartmouth past Cornell 63-61. Andre BatUe tossed in 18
points to power Cleveland State past
George Mason 96-69. Micl)ael Burns
scored 29 points, including a pair of
free throws that snapped an 8U6 tie
with 1:26 remaining, as Nevada-Las
Vegas nipped San Diego State 8lh'lll.

:
••

OR

ALICE ICARD
Secretary
675-2208

· HIDDEN VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB
Located 15 Minutes from Point Pleasant And
Only 25 Minutes From New Haven .

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.

NEW WONDERCOAL HEATER
SAVES ON ENERGY BILLS

RIO GRANDE
COu.EGE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

National

iured

have to.''
Syracuse will have to do it again
Sunday. The Orangemen continue
their hectic schedule when they play

No. 10 Purdue in a nationally
televised game.
, Rhode Island's man-to-man defense initially gave Syracuse trouble,
forcing 13 turnovers in the first half
and helping the Rams to a 32-31 lead
at intennission. The deficit marked
only the third time this season that
the Orangemen have started the
second half of a game trailing .
Orr, a 6-foot-8 forward, scored 20
points to lead all scorers. The 6-11
Bouie had 17 points.
For Rhode Island, Jilruny Wright
and Phil Kydd each had 11 points.
The fifth-ranked Orangemen were
the only Top Twenty team in action
Friday night.
Elsewhere, Curt Mahoney scored

South,

guard, to a 10-day contract.
HOCKEY
.
National Hockey League
NHL - Suspended Ed Hospodar.

Offers

Manufacturing
Technology

right wing, New YorK Rangers, tor
three games and fined him $500 for
"physical abuse" of linesman Kevin
COllins during a game lasf week .

...__,;,.._........_,........

WINNIPEG JETS - Recalled
John Markell and Pat Daley, lor·

Rio G r aride, Ohio

wards, from Tulsa of the Central

Hockey League.

.
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Get top int•rest
on.your savings

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•••
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;]
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from

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With optional 2-speed blower
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Maximum fuel utilizationcombustion is virtually 100% .
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Newly .designed grates
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with equal efficiency.
Unique shaker will not dump
wood coals , as will competitive
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Irs efficient. economicaiWondercoal, the coal-burning
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Firebrick
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33 " H)( 19" W

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Wonder coal
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BETTER BANKING SERVICE, THAI 'S THE Ct.NTRAL IDEA

J

Transactions

Syra,.use t" a ;4 11 record the po&gt;1
three 'Oasons. an average of nearly
25 victc ries a year.
,
Anoth1r 25-victory season at
SyracUS&lt; is~ strong possibility now
that the 1980s have started. The
Orangemen are one of the few
remaining undefeated teams in the
country with a 13-0 record following
Friday night's 64-54 victory over ·
Rhode Island.
Roosevelt Bouie and Louis Orr
combined lor 37 points to lead a
superior but obviously tired
Syracuse team that was playing its
fifth game in eight days .
·.
"Our' offense got us in trouble the
first half, but we came back," said
Boeheim. "We didn't have the
energy. Our zone (defense) was effective, but this was the best Rhode
Island team we've seen in the four
years we've been playing here (in
ProvidenCe.)"
Boeheim praised the dependability of Orr, who was bothered by
stomach cramps before the game.
"If he needs to score, he scores,"
said Boeheim. "He could score on
almost anyone. He seems to feel as if
he's got a limited number (of .points)
and he's saving them until we need
them.''
Added Bouie: "We do it when we

•
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than the discount rale olfered.

,I

Scott Harrington tossed In 13 points for GAHS as Coach VanMatre
played 12 boys in the contest.
GAHS hit '!I of 56 field goal attempts for 48 percent and 3 of 18 free
throws for 72 percent. The Imps had
25 rebounds, seven by Steve Thompson. The winners had 14 steals and
13assisb.

"Robey and 1 talked about a
situation like that just this week,"
said Coach Bill Fitch. "The responsibilities of the guy coming in are (I)
rebound, (2) play defense and (3)
score, in that order_''
John Derrow paced the Little
In other action, the Philadelphia
Rockets with 19 points.
76ers trirruned the Washington
'Box score:
Bulleb 119-106, the SeatUe Super·
WELLSTON RESERVES (401 -Sonlcs downed the Utah Jazz 100-90,
Massie 0·1·1; Erwin 0·0·0; Derrow 7·
the Uls Angeles Lakers crushed the·' 5-19; Allison 1-2-4; Patrick 0-2-2;
Manning 0·0·0; Bush 0-0-0; Benson 0Detroit Pistons i23-100, the Indiana
0-0; Lambert 1-0-2; Dever 1-1-3; Par Pacers shaded the Chicago BulLs
son 1.-1-3. TOTALS 11-14-40.
11~105, the San Antonio Spurs beat
GALLIPOLIS RESERVES (671 -Glenn 3-0·6; King 6-6·18; Lanier 1·0the Cleveland Cavaliers 116-109, the
2; Plymale 4·0-8; Lane 2-0-4;
~ City,,. .Kinp flattened the
Bergdofl 2-1-5;. Dolley 2 · H ;
Denver Nuggets 112-99, the
Harrington 5-3·13; Thompson 2-0· 4;
Allen 0-0-0; Dunn 0-2-2; Duncan 0-0·
MilwaUkee Bucks nipped the New
TOTALS27-t3-67.
York Knicks 109-107, the PorUand .0. Score
by quarters:
Trail Blazers whipped the New JerWellston 'B'
6 10 9 15--40
Blue Imps·
17 17 17 16--67
sey Nets 128-107 and the San Diego
Clippers edged the Golden Slate
Warriors 116-112.

.

.•

Now

Low, Low _MIIel

was SS59S

•
By Tbe Associated Pres8
: If the World Boxing Association
lnd World Boxing Council can't
)gree on a heavyweight champion,
J)Uiybe they ought to match Dave
:fowen5 of the Bostoo Celtics (6-foot·
.-t, 225 pounds) and Wayne "Tree"
ltolitns of the AU&amp;nta Hawks (7-1,

The actual return to investors on Treasury Bills is higher

SOUTHERN OHIU DIVISION

The Blue Imps improved their
season record to 7-3. Wellston dropped to 1-6 In league play and U on
the season.
Gallipolis jumped off to a 17-6 first
period lead. The Imps led 34-16 at
halftime and 51-25 after three
periods of play.

~ Celts outslug Hawks
-~108-93
in NBA bout
-

l'ls).

r)residenLS Club

(614) 446-2125

Was SS79S

MEMBER : FDIC

'

'3750

death, sickness, family problems

Now

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY,

GALLIPOI.JS - Phil King, fr-8
sophomore guard, scored !8 points,
picked off five rebounds, had three
steals and was credited with three
assists as Coach Rick VanMatre's
Gallipolis Blue Impa downed visiti(lg
Wellston, 67-40, in Friday's
Southeastern Ohio League reserve
contest.

~ '

--' '.

FOR TWO PEOPLE

should see that a contract for con -

WU$3295

Federal regulations require a substantial 1nterest penalty
for premature withdrawal of cer tificate fund s.
,

back in tie

ONE MONTH MEMBERSHIP

FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW
A CONTRACT IS NO BETTER
THAN ITS MAKER ....
To be sale. a property owner

'46.50
$10.00
SJ6.50

Earning this kind of interest used to mean tying your
money up from one to even eight years.
No longer . Our 6-month certificat e of deposit gets you in,
and ouf, in any six months.

Blue Imps

SPECIAl.

fifW
BATTERIES

There are big things going on in the money marke1. Now,
we can help you be a part of them .
Every week , th e u .s . Treasury a nnounc e~. the average
auction discount rate being pa id on 6-month Treasury
Bills . The figure i s arrived at thr ough th e weekly mon e~,
market auction.

Color the decade of the 1970s
bright Orange for Syracuse basketball : nine consecutive post-season
bids, including two in the National
Invitation Tournament and seven in
the NCAA playoffs.
Jim Boeheim was a big part of
that shining success, coaching

:

Selects ahead by two with one
minute to play. Again Friedman'
tried the unusual strategy of playing
for the last shot while down by two.
This time it bad&lt;fired as Partsmouth won. The next year the
Rosenblums would reign as champs
ol the ABL being led by future St.
John's coach Joe Lapchick and
future great · CCNY CO!lch Nat
Holman as well as Dutch Dehnert,
Dave Kerr, and Sox Husta.
The giant killing Selects had one
more dragoo to slay when the
reigning ABL champs, the
WashingtonPalaceGuards,cameto
call. Washington's owner was
George Marshall who became more
famous as the controversial owner
ol the Washingtoo Redskins football
team. Before an overflow southern
Ohio crowd Washington won by
seven points. The next year the
Selects' manager, coach, and center, Jude Baesman, was signed by
Washington, thus ending three great
years of pro basketball in southern

GET YOUR MONEY
IN THE GOING RATE

ll) 1\k,l'l KAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer

e p.m.- lntramurals
lntertube Water Polo
play.
--------------'---~
Hp.m.· FamilyClosed
Night _ 4 in
_.._conference
_ _ _..:,__:_~Closed
2-4 p.m .- Open Swim

•

Syracuse still unbeaten in ~13 starts

:; 14. GAHSwon.~.

•

"

Closed

Closed

(

........

0

figures with II points. Sophomore
center Tim Price finished with nine
points including a couple of clutch
baskets.
Richard Jones led Coach Don
Saunders' Wildcats with 20 points on
seven baskets and sU&lt; free throws.
According to the charts, Kyger
Creek sank 23 of 52 floor attempts for
44percentandjustl0of22atthefoul
cirlces.
·
Hannan Trace hit 16 of 51 shots for
31 percent and nine of 21 a the
charitystripes.
The Wildcats owned a 43-29
reboWJdingedge.
The loss left HTHS with an !i-9
slate this season. The Wildcats are()-

WILLIAM THOMAS
446-2801
Pd. Ad .

First pro cage league set up in
1925: American Basketball
BYJAMESSANDS
GALLIPOLIS The first
;professional basketball league in the
·United States was fonned in 1925
:and was given the name American
:Basketball League. For a decade
;this ABL was the only pro league in
the United States, but in many other
:places independent pro teams were
:being organized.
Pro basketball came to southern
:ohio in the 1920s with the
·organization of the Portsmouth
Selects. The team's best years were
·1926 to 1928, but they competed
earlier than that in both Portsmouth
and Ironton. The Selects also played
Slllle of their games in other
southern Ohio cities.
Games in Por~outh were played
in the Baesman Dance Studio at Nin.th and Chillicothe Streets with big
man (~) Jude Baesman as coach
a,.d center. One of the stronger oppments of the Selects in 1926-27 was
the ·eolumbus Kinnears, who were
:O..ganized by Joe Carr; Carr also
happened to be the C(lllmissioner of
:the Natimal Football League. The
roster of the Kinnears team read a
litUe like a football r&lt;l!ter with former football All-Americans and for:mer Chicago Bea'rs backs, Pete Stinchcomb and Olic Harley. Also on the
:Kinnears' roster were John Miner,
Mel Shaw and An4Y Memecek off
()hio State's Western Conference
championship team of 1925.
Heck Arnold good
: Portsmouth lost two games to
Columbus (both times by 12 points).
The Selects also played that year the
Delaware Moellars, Canton
·Bulldogs, and "Oisoo 's Terrible
Swedes." The Canton team was led
by two players who had played for
Washington in the ABL. One, Heck
Arnold, had a reputation for defense,
having held his opponent to two field
goals or fewer for 1011 coosecutive
games. The Selects did not break
this streak as Schwab, an AllAmerican from Dayton, led the
Bulldogs to a 52..:14 win.
The "Terrible Swedes" were from
Kansas and aloog with the New York
Wrens and the "Original Celtics"

I~

.

C-3--The Sunday Times-&amp; 1tinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

Kyger Creek cops fourth league win
CHESHIRE - Coach Keith Carter's Kyger Creek Bobcats, playing
a steady floor game, captured their
fourth victory this season, 56-41 here
Friday night against Hannan Trace.
The win pushed KC's overall
recor&lt;l to 4-9 and elevated the team
out ol the SVAC basement with a 1-3
mark .

.

·' .

N.A.

4 CONVENIENT
LOCA~I'fS
.
"

The Commerclq,Jar .savings Bank

, .r ,.-.

..'

.

• ,

.• .

. 25 Court Stro:et

-~

.

. '

~

,

'

,

Silver Bridge Plaza _ Spring Vall~y

.

Member FDIC ·

•

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,,

�,j_)

Kyger Crl'ch :u mped into a

first perio&lt;l lt~ ad ,1;,\1 remained Five

points or more ahead the rest of the
way.
· Pacing the Bobcat attack before
fouling out in the fourth stanza was
senior guard John Westfall with 13
points. Senior guard Greg Smith was
the only other Bobcat hitting double

Lyne Center Schedule
Date-Gymnasium
Jan . 13 2·_. p.m .-Open Recreat ion
7·9 p .m .-Open Recreation
Jan . 14 8 p .m .- 12 M ·lntramurals

Pool

2·4p.m .·OpenSwim
79

p.m.·Open Swim
·

Jan . 15 Closed· Basketball

5 : 15 p.m .· Redwomen vs . Lees Jr . College
7:30 p .m.·Redmen vs . Mt . Vernon Nt~zaren e
Jan. 16 7·9 p.m .·lf2 gym · Karate Class
lf2 gym-Open Recreation
Jan. 17 8 p .m. -12 M -lntramur,als
Jan. 18 7·9 p.m.- Family Night

Jan . 19 Closed Basketball

5: 15 p .m. -Redwomen vs . Wright State
Jan . 20 2-4 p.m . -Open Recreation
8· 11 p .m .-l ntramurals

SHOT BLOCKED- Dale Teaford, (42) blocks a jump shot by North
GaWa's Tim Howell (31) during Friday night's SVAC contest at Southern.
Teaford flnii 'led the game with 14 po)nts in helping Southern to its seventh win in eight games, 83-61i. Inside the SV AC, the Tornadoes own a 5-0
record.

MAY BUY RACE TRACK
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - George
Steinbre!Uler, owner of the New
York Yankees, said Friday he was
negotiating to buy half interest in
Florida Downs, a thoroughbred race
track outside Tampa which had a
$25.7 million handle last year.
A proposal would bave to be approved by the state's pari-mutuel
regulatory board.

were three of the first traveling
basketbaU teams m America.
Olson's won the first game played at
Jackson but Portsmouth won the
next night 42.,'14 with Walter Doll
scoring 10.
Ex .OSU cagers sign
At the beginning ol the 19Z7-28
seasoo, Portsmouth signed former
OSU players Mel Shaw, Pete Stinchcomb, and Andy Nemecek as well
as Ohio Wesleyan's top scorer
George Shea . In the first two gatlles
the Selects beat by large scores two
Columbus teams, ooe of which was
led by the top big man in Ohio,
KegelmeyerofXavier.
Next came victories over the Flint
Buicks, Beloit, Wisconsin,
Delaware, and the defending Ohio
champs -- Marion. The outside
shooting of Shea, who was adept at
shooting over the rafters in the Dance Studio, and the inside play of
BaesrnanandShaw led the way. Rec
Roll of Nebraska and Dempsey of
OSU were added at midseason. In a

Kyger Creek took the reserve
game, 3&amp;-28. Roger Stroud led thC
winners with 14 points. Rossiter hac!
10 points for Hannan Trace.
:
Kyger Creek hosts Hannan
Tuesday night and Southwestem
Friday. Hannan Trace play{ ·
Wahama Tuesday night and travel(
to Southern Friday.
"
:
HANNAN TRACE (41) --,Beever3-0'
6; Campbell 3-0-6; Jones 7·6·20i
Webb 2-1·5; Petrie 1-H . Totals 16-9'
41.
:
Kyger creek (56) -- Smith J.S· ll •
Westfall 5·3·13; Sands 3-0·6:
Spri nger.:l-0·4; Price 4-1 -9; Porter 2'
0·4; Gilmore J.1 -7 and Moore 1-0·2:
Totals23-10-56.
·
By Quarters:
H. Trace
6 12 8 15.. 4l
K. Creek
14 15 14 13.. 56

rematch with Flint, Portsmouth lost riO;;;h;;;io;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
their first game as Flint had the two
top scorers in the Big Ten from 1m5.
Bristow big
Portsmouth bounced back to beat
the Charleston Senators whose center, Gaines, had teamed with · Art
Loeb to bring an NCAA cham• 36 month guarantee
pionship to Princeton. Next the
• Heavy duty service batSelects embarrassed the Buffalo
Lincolns 43-28. The Lincolns
tery
featured one of the fine big men ci
• For most auto. and
the age- Sheldoo Bristow.
trucks .
In late February, 1928, the high
flying Cleveland Rosenblums of the
Less $10.00
ABL came to southern Ohio and in
Trade in
perhaps the ID&lt;lll e.citing game
ever played in Portsmouth, the
Selects took a two point lead with
two minutes to go. Cleveland elected
Batteries for heavy duty
to play for the last shot and at the
trucks and heavy equipbuzzer Ely tied the game .
ment.
Cleveland's coach was Marty Friedman whom Nat Holman called one ol
the best early pros.
Strategy backfires
SALES-&amp; SERVICE
In o~ertime Cleveland took a three
Ph. 446-8640
point lead but Portsmouth tied it.
1st &amp; Sycamore
Kerr sent aeveland up by two but
See (';a I ~red or Dale
baskets by Shaw and Lynch sent the

SANDERS

__

._

for top spot
'·

tinuing termite or powder post

beetle protection is made with a
corporation. A contract with an
individual can become void for
many· reasons, including death .
Extermital is a corporation - not
an individual. A contract made
with Extermital is ndt affected by

The victory, coupled with
Waverly's 31-29 loss at Ironton and
Athens' 51-45 setback at Logan,
pushed the GAHS reserves back into
a tie for first place with Waverly and
Ironton with identical 1&gt;-2 conference
records .

OFFER ENDS JAN. 19, 1980

THE FITNESS CENTER

or any of the many other condi tions which may affect the individual.

-

Gallipolis, Ohio

417 Second Ave.

We are pleased to announce that Bryce L.
Smith is a member of The Ohio Company's
1979 President's Club. The Ohio Company is
proud to acknowledge Mr. Smith's
·
outstanding level of professional achievement
in investment counseling to individuals and
institutions in his community.

Bryce L Smith
The Ohio Company
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

lhc
Ohio

.

SNAGS REBOUND - Although missing several minutes of aciton,
due to foul trouble, Gallia's Jeff Cameron still managed to lead GAHS on
the boards Friday with nine rebounds. Rocket defenders are Ted
williams (20) and Steve Benson (44). The latter led all rebounders with

Compan)r

1979

...

Investments • Securit1es
Me mber S .I.P.C .

you ain't heard a thing
llaYI beard oar deals on tbese ued

THALER
"IT ONLY TAKES A MINUTE TO TRADE"

1979 PINTO
Wagon, w..auto.
One owner.

Was1U9S
Now

Autom . &amp; Air.
New Car Trade

Was 12495

Now

1978 ZEPHYR
4 Dr., autom., air.
One Owner

Was $4595

'4595

1974 MONTE CARLO

'2095

'4295

Now

1976 MARQUIS
4 or., air &amp; all .

Local Owner

was $2995

'2495 .

Now

1976 MAVERICK

1976 PIN10

4 Dr .. autom.
Good Car

Cpe., autom.

2 Mustangs

2 Fairmonts

4 LTDs
1 T -Bird

1979 FORD lh TON
6c_yl., Jspd,
Low, Low miles.
1

5195.

The new 6-month CD will really get your money go ... ~
And your interest rate is guaranteed .

1968 FORD lh

Whatever the 6-month Treasury Bi ll auction rafe is the
week you purchase your cer tifi cate of deposit, that' s l he
interest rate you are guaranteed for its maturity .

t~\.\).

1977 GRANADA

1978 BUICK
Cent,Ury W•gon
Air, like new.

was $5595
Now

2 Dr., autom., air.

.

'2495

1978 CHEV. lh.'ION
6 cvl .. 3spd.
W/Topper

'4595

NOW

1978 DODGE VAN
6cyl.
Ntw trad.e-in

Wasi4SI) ;

•4295.
NEW 1979 MERCURIES
Now

4-Mirq~l~

2-Zepllyrs

2:-coua•rs
r .

Good Mileage

was ll995

'4895

Now

'3595

1975 MUSTANG

1975 CUTlASS

2 Dr., 4spd ., radio.

Supreme w/air.
one owner

' Economical

was 131tS

Wuii59S

Now

Now

1975 LTD

1976 LTD

2 Dr., w/alr

~w

4 Dr., w/air.
One Owner

car Tr~de-l n

Was$2595

Now

Was S499S

SAVE A LOT

was S4395

economy
wassm5

'2995
NEW 1979 FORDS

NOW

Now

21

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0

.1979 DODGE lh 'ION
ADV. PKG.
6 cvl .. 3 spd.
Now

NEW 1979 TRUCKS
2-1 so 1f2 Tons
2-250 :JYa Tons
2--4"JC41", 4 WD

'5495

BIG SAVINGS

1979 FORD' %

1978 fORD lh

van.Autom.

V-8,4spd.,O.D.
A'CJood One

Bit sovlnt•
Was $5195

Now

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NEW 1980 HEAVI~
1'-&lt;-600w/dumpbed
1-c-100 wtdump btd.

.'3995
. 1:

1974 GMC %
H.D., auto.

CJood Work
WIU1tt5

:: The two National Basketball
1ssoclaUon giants went at it Friday
::Dight during the first period of the
:f.eltics' 108-93 victory game over
l'U&amp;nta. Both were ejected after ex~ solld punches.
;: "He wu racliJi 4o!m the Jane IIDd
:jjave me an elbow," said Cowens,
Jlrho had a cut over an eye. "I
:l)ouldn't let him get away with that."
: The man who really hurt the
;tlawks, was Rick Robey, Cowens'
ollackup, who scored 22 points as the
~!tics boosted their home record to
ll-1 and avenged their only setback
in Boston Garden, a 1~ rout at the
hands of the Hawks last month. The
~!tics' overall 32-10 mark is the
tr5t In the NBA.
•"It was a good challenge,
eipeclally against the only team that
lis beaten us here this year," said
JWbey, who also pulled down 10
t!bounds. "When Dave went, I knew
itwas going to be along night.
•"For a coui&gt;le of minutes in the
mnd haH, the legs got a litue rubbery. 'Then I got my second wind. AU
il:amounted to was 10 guys playing
tAgether, and with confidence."

'""'&amp;1...,

Basketball Association
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
Placed Earl Tatum, guard, on the in·
list.

Signed

Willie

:
•••
•
:
:
•

•
•

Passport
Photos

• instantly- no wailing
• in color
• no appointment
necessary
• approved by State
• Department Portrait
Studio

:•
•
:•

:
•
••
••
:
:
•

424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Mason, Gallia, Or Meigs Counties
WE INVITE YOU TO
COME &amp; PLAY GOLF WITH
Limited Membership

Open I

*200 00
COUPLE MEMBERSHIP • *250oo
FAMILY MEMBERSHI~ - *275 00
Half of the club membership must be
paid on or before Feb. 29th, 1980
Balance due April 1st, 1980
For Further Information Contact

BOB ADKINS
President
675·1211

•

! TAWNEY STUDIOS !
:
••

lf You Live In

SINGLE MEMBERSHIP -

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
:
from Tawney's
:
••
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:•
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•

19 of his 25 pomts m tne second half
as Columbia broke open a close
game to defeat Harvard 1(5.63_
Reserve Guard Steve Mills poured in
a career-high 19 points to lead Princeton to a 61&gt;-57 decisioo over Yale.
Also, Paul LitUe scored 16 points
as PelUI whipped Brown 64-S7 for the
Quakers' fifth straight victory. Cleo
Robertson scored '!I points, including five in the second overtime
period, to pace Dartmouth past Cornell 63-61. Andre BatUe tossed in 18
points to power Cleveland State past
George Mason 96-69. Micl)ael Burns
scored 29 points, including a pair of
free throws that snapped an 8U6 tie
with 1:26 remaining, as Nevada-Las
Vegas nipped San Diego State 8lh'lll.

:
••

OR

ALICE ICARD
Secretary
675-2208

· HIDDEN VALLEY COUNTRY CLUB
Located 15 Minutes from Point Pleasant And
Only 25 Minutes From New Haven .

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.

NEW WONDERCOAL HEATER
SAVES ON ENERGY BILLS

RIO GRANDE
COu.EGE
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

National

iured

have to.''
Syracuse will have to do it again
Sunday. The Orangemen continue
their hectic schedule when they play

No. 10 Purdue in a nationally
televised game.
, Rhode Island's man-to-man defense initially gave Syracuse trouble,
forcing 13 turnovers in the first half
and helping the Rams to a 32-31 lead
at intennission. The deficit marked
only the third time this season that
the Orangemen have started the
second half of a game trailing .
Orr, a 6-foot-8 forward, scored 20
points to lead all scorers. The 6-11
Bouie had 17 points.
For Rhode Island, Jilruny Wright
and Phil Kydd each had 11 points.
The fifth-ranked Orangemen were
the only Top Twenty team in action
Friday night.
Elsewhere, Curt Mahoney scored

South,

guard, to a 10-day contract.
HOCKEY
.
National Hockey League
NHL - Suspended Ed Hospodar.

Offers

Manufacturing
Technology

right wing, New YorK Rangers, tor
three games and fined him $500 for
"physical abuse" of linesman Kevin
COllins during a game lasf week .

...__,;,.._........_,........

WINNIPEG JETS - Recalled
John Markell and Pat Daley, lor·

Rio G r aride, Ohio

wards, from Tulsa of the Central

Hockey League.

.
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Get top int•rest
on.your savings

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•••
••
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;]
•

from

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Transactions

Syra,.use t" a ;4 11 record the po&gt;1
three 'Oasons. an average of nearly
25 victc ries a year.
,
Anoth1r 25-victory season at
SyracUS&lt; is~ strong possibility now
that the 1980s have started. The
Orangemen are one of the few
remaining undefeated teams in the
country with a 13-0 record following
Friday night's 64-54 victory over ·
Rhode Island.
Roosevelt Bouie and Louis Orr
combined lor 37 points to lead a
superior but obviously tired
Syracuse team that was playing its
fifth game in eight days .
·.
"Our' offense got us in trouble the
first half, but we came back," said
Boeheim. "We didn't have the
energy. Our zone (defense) was effective, but this was the best Rhode
Island team we've seen in the four
years we've been playing here (in
ProvidenCe.)"
Boeheim praised the dependability of Orr, who was bothered by
stomach cramps before the game.
"If he needs to score, he scores,"
said Boeheim. "He could score on
almost anyone. He seems to feel as if
he's got a limited number (of .points)
and he's saving them until we need
them.''
Added Bouie: "We do it when we

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than the discount rale olfered.

,I

Scott Harrington tossed In 13 points for GAHS as Coach VanMatre
played 12 boys in the contest.
GAHS hit '!I of 56 field goal attempts for 48 percent and 3 of 18 free
throws for 72 percent. The Imps had
25 rebounds, seven by Steve Thompson. The winners had 14 steals and
13assisb.

"Robey and 1 talked about a
situation like that just this week,"
said Coach Bill Fitch. "The responsibilities of the guy coming in are (I)
rebound, (2) play defense and (3)
score, in that order_''
John Derrow paced the Little
In other action, the Philadelphia
Rockets with 19 points.
76ers trirruned the Washington
'Box score:
Bulleb 119-106, the SeatUe Super·
WELLSTON RESERVES (401 -Sonlcs downed the Utah Jazz 100-90,
Massie 0·1·1; Erwin 0·0·0; Derrow 7·
the Uls Angeles Lakers crushed the·' 5-19; Allison 1-2-4; Patrick 0-2-2;
Manning 0·0·0; Bush 0-0-0; Benson 0Detroit Pistons i23-100, the Indiana
0-0; Lambert 1-0-2; Dever 1-1-3; Par Pacers shaded the Chicago BulLs
son 1.-1-3. TOTALS 11-14-40.
11~105, the San Antonio Spurs beat
GALLIPOLIS RESERVES (671 -Glenn 3-0·6; King 6-6·18; Lanier 1·0the Cleveland Cavaliers 116-109, the
2; Plymale 4·0-8; Lane 2-0-4;
~ City,,. .Kinp flattened the
Bergdofl 2-1-5;. Dolley 2 · H ;
Denver Nuggets 112-99, the
Harrington 5-3·13; Thompson 2-0· 4;
Allen 0-0-0; Dunn 0-2-2; Duncan 0-0·
MilwaUkee Bucks nipped the New
TOTALS27-t3-67.
York Knicks 109-107, the PorUand .0. Score
by quarters:
Trail Blazers whipped the New JerWellston 'B'
6 10 9 15--40
Blue Imps·
17 17 17 16--67
sey Nets 128-107 and the San Diego
Clippers edged the Golden Slate
Warriors 116-112.

.

.•

Now

Low, Low _MIIel

was SS59S

•
By Tbe Associated Pres8
: If the World Boxing Association
lnd World Boxing Council can't
)gree on a heavyweight champion,
J)Uiybe they ought to match Dave
:fowen5 of the Bostoo Celtics (6-foot·
.-t, 225 pounds) and Wayne "Tree"
ltolitns of the AU&amp;nta Hawks (7-1,

The actual return to investors on Treasury Bills is higher

SOUTHERN OHIU DIVISION

The Blue Imps improved their
season record to 7-3. Wellston dropped to 1-6 In league play and U on
the season.
Gallipolis jumped off to a 17-6 first
period lead. The Imps led 34-16 at
halftime and 51-25 after three
periods of play.

~ Celts outslug Hawks
-~108-93
in NBA bout
-

l'ls).

r)residenLS Club

(614) 446-2125

Was SS79S

MEMBER : FDIC

'

'3750

death, sickness, family problems

Now

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY,

GALLIPOI.JS - Phil King, fr-8
sophomore guard, scored !8 points,
picked off five rebounds, had three
steals and was credited with three
assists as Coach Rick VanMatre's
Gallipolis Blue Impa downed visiti(lg
Wellston, 67-40, in Friday's
Southeastern Ohio League reserve
contest.

~ '

--' '.

FOR TWO PEOPLE

should see that a contract for con -

WU$3295

Federal regulations require a substantial 1nterest penalty
for premature withdrawal of cer tificate fund s.
,

back in tie

ONE MONTH MEMBERSHIP

FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW
A CONTRACT IS NO BETTER
THAN ITS MAKER ....
To be sale. a property owner

'46.50
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SJ6.50

Earning this kind of interest used to mean tying your
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No longer . Our 6-month certificat e of deposit gets you in,
and ouf, in any six months.

Blue Imps

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we can help you be a part of them .
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market auction.

Color the decade of the 1970s
bright Orange for Syracuse basketball : nine consecutive post-season
bids, including two in the National
Invitation Tournament and seven in
the NCAA playoffs.
Jim Boeheim was a big part of
that shining success, coaching

:

Selects ahead by two with one
minute to play. Again Friedman'
tried the unusual strategy of playing
for the last shot while down by two.
This time it bad&lt;fired as Partsmouth won. The next year the
Rosenblums would reign as champs
ol the ABL being led by future St.
John's coach Joe Lapchick and
future great · CCNY CO!lch Nat
Holman as well as Dutch Dehnert,
Dave Kerr, and Sox Husta.
The giant killing Selects had one
more dragoo to slay when the
reigning ABL champs, the
WashingtonPalaceGuards,cameto
call. Washington's owner was
George Marshall who became more
famous as the controversial owner
ol the Washingtoo Redskins football
team. Before an overflow southern
Ohio crowd Washington won by
seven points. The next year the
Selects' manager, coach, and center, Jude Baesman, was signed by
Washington, thus ending three great
years of pro basketball in southern

GET YOUR MONEY
IN THE GOING RATE

ll) 1\k,l'l KAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer

e p.m.- lntramurals
lntertube Water Polo
play.
--------------'---~
Hp.m.· FamilyClosed
Night _ 4 in
_.._conference
_ _ _..:,__:_~Closed
2-4 p.m .- Open Swim

•

Syracuse still unbeaten in ~13 starts

:; 14. GAHSwon.~.

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Closed

Closed

(

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0

figures with II points. Sophomore
center Tim Price finished with nine
points including a couple of clutch
baskets.
Richard Jones led Coach Don
Saunders' Wildcats with 20 points on
seven baskets and sU&lt; free throws.
According to the charts, Kyger
Creek sank 23 of 52 floor attempts for
44percentandjustl0of22atthefoul
cirlces.
·
Hannan Trace hit 16 of 51 shots for
31 percent and nine of 21 a the
charitystripes.
The Wildcats owned a 43-29
reboWJdingedge.
The loss left HTHS with an !i-9
slate this season. The Wildcats are()-

WILLIAM THOMAS
446-2801
Pd. Ad .

First pro cage league set up in
1925: American Basketball
BYJAMESSANDS
GALLIPOLIS The first
;professional basketball league in the
·United States was fonned in 1925
:and was given the name American
:Basketball League. For a decade
;this ABL was the only pro league in
the United States, but in many other
:places independent pro teams were
:being organized.
Pro basketball came to southern
:ohio in the 1920s with the
·organization of the Portsmouth
Selects. The team's best years were
·1926 to 1928, but they competed
earlier than that in both Portsmouth
and Ironton. The Selects also played
Slllle of their games in other
southern Ohio cities.
Games in Por~outh were played
in the Baesman Dance Studio at Nin.th and Chillicothe Streets with big
man (~) Jude Baesman as coach
a,.d center. One of the stronger oppments of the Selects in 1926-27 was
the ·eolumbus Kinnears, who were
:O..ganized by Joe Carr; Carr also
happened to be the C(lllmissioner of
:the Natimal Football League. The
roster of the Kinnears team read a
litUe like a football r&lt;l!ter with former football All-Americans and for:mer Chicago Bea'rs backs, Pete Stinchcomb and Olic Harley. Also on the
:Kinnears' roster were John Miner,
Mel Shaw and An4Y Memecek off
()hio State's Western Conference
championship team of 1925.
Heck Arnold good
: Portsmouth lost two games to
Columbus (both times by 12 points).
The Selects also played that year the
Delaware Moellars, Canton
·Bulldogs, and "Oisoo 's Terrible
Swedes." The Canton team was led
by two players who had played for
Washington in the ABL. One, Heck
Arnold, had a reputation for defense,
having held his opponent to two field
goals or fewer for 1011 coosecutive
games. The Selects did not break
this streak as Schwab, an AllAmerican from Dayton, led the
Bulldogs to a 52..:14 win.
The "Terrible Swedes" were from
Kansas and aloog with the New York
Wrens and the "Original Celtics"

I~

.

C-3--The Sunday Times-&amp; 1tinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

Kyger Creek cops fourth league win
CHESHIRE - Coach Keith Carter's Kyger Creek Bobcats, playing
a steady floor game, captured their
fourth victory this season, 56-41 here
Friday night against Hannan Trace.
The win pushed KC's overall
recor&lt;l to 4-9 and elevated the team
out ol the SVAC basement with a 1-3
mark .

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N.A.

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LOCA~I'fS
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Member FDIC ·

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C+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sw11lay. Jan. 13. 1980

"

Mrs. Austin plays supportive role
CINCINNATI (AP )
Jeanne
Austin says she always tries to put
on a ''poker face" when she watches
her daughter Trecy play tennis.
"I'm afraid if I smile, she'll think ,
'Why is she smiling?' Or If I give her
a 'why-are-you-doing-that' look,
.she'll worry more about what I'm
doing than the match," said Mrs.
Austin, who is here watching her
daughter compete in a $150,000 tournament.
"I never try to move because
every time I do she notices it and I'm

afraid she'll wonder why."
people and things get tense, I need io
Her IS-year-old daughter Tracy is concentrate on some~."
currently one of the best players 011
Tracy's losses affect her mother.
"I feel sorry for her," she said.
the women's tennis circuit. But
when she gets into a close match,
"When she's losing, you feel so ·
Mrs. Austin admits it gets tough to helpless. That's the hardest part of
keep her "poker face."
being a spectator. There's nothing
When she geta nervous, Mrs. you can do.
Austin resorts to fiddling with the ,' "You get nervous if it's a close
several gold bracelets she wears. - · match, but that's aU you can do."
" I call them my worry beads;" she
Mrs. Austin has been traveling
said. "It's just something to con· with Trecy since she joined the pro .
centrale my mind on. When you're ranks three years ago.
sitting there in an arena fuJi of
When the pig-tailed player was at
various junior tournaments, she
traveled by herself.
"With the juniors, you put them on
a plane, someone pickS them up at
the airport, takes them to a private
Spilman, 25, was with the Reds the home, houses them, feeda them last half the 1979 season, earning a just like they were members of the
midseason promotion from In- family," Mrs. Austin said. "On the
dianapolis where he was bitting .288. circuit, they're expected to be
Spilman started games at both first adults.
base and third base for the Reds, but
"From the airport, you take a cab.
was used prtmarily as a pincbbitter, go to the hotel, all alone. I think she's
batting .214 in 43 games.
a little young for that."
Oester, 23 and a Cincinnati native,
She sees her role in Tracy's career
will be in the battle for the regular as being mostly supportive.
second base job In 1980 after three
"As far as her playing goes, I can
years at Indianapolis where he was observe and maybe detect
an outstanding shortatop. He Jed the weaknesses in a player - but she's
Reds ' top minor league farm club in pretty good at that herself. As far as
bitting in 1979 with a .281 average.
helping the emotional or mental side

Oester, Spilman sign '80 pacts
CINCINNATI, (AP) - Ron Oester
and Harry Spilman, two of the top
young infielders in the Cincinnati
Reds organization, have signed their
1980 contracts, Reds President Dick
Wagner announced Saturday.
I

BLOCKING OUT- It appearsNorthGallia's tall Dan Barry (23) has
the edge in this rebounding effort against Southern's Dale Teaford ('12) .
The Tornadoes continue to roll against SV AC opposition Friday night with
a convincing 83-1i6 win over the second place Pirates.

'
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:r
I

NAMED BACKFIELD COACH
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Gene
DeFI!lppo, asalstant football coach
at Youngstown State, Ohio, was appointed Friday as offensive backfield coach at Vanderbilt University.
DeFilippo, 29, has been an
assistant coach at Youngstown for
five seasons. At Vanderbilt, he succeeds Art Zeleznik, who resigned in
December to pursue business opportunities.
DeFlligpo · was a graduate
assistant at the University of Tennessee in 1973 and a part-time coach
in 1974.

'

of her game, I don't do much otbeit
t1un being s0meone there wbo's s~·
portlve.
"If she wins, I tell •her
congratulations. I always try to ~
constructive. Whether she wins ·cr
loses, I'm constructive about the
The two are often at the f81J1ily
home in Rolling Hils, Calif. , a montb
at a time between tournaments.
That gives Tracy time to get caught
up on her high school work and Mrs,
Austin time to play tennis herself. :
The other four Austin cblldren are
on their own, so only George;
Tracy's dad, Is left home durlni!
tournaments.
Whlle Tracy was still playing In
junior tournaments, Mrs. Austin
didn't think about her daughter
becoming one of the top tennis
p1ayers In the world. "I felt she was
really developing faster than most
kids do," Mrs. Austin said. " It waa
just a question of whether she'd
plateau out or continue to develop."

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father, Bengals General Manager
Paul ·Brown. Perry told a service
club luncheon Wednesday that the
team was upset about the Browns'
emphasis on image and economics.
Perry said none of the players
liked Mike Brown. He also ·said
players who spoke out were traded
away and there were a lot of early
retirments because the players
"just don't like it here."
· "II makes you wonder - a guy

making a good living who bites the
hand that feeds him," said Mike
Brown.
"He seems bent on taking a
critical stance, not just about the
Bimgals' managment, but of pro
football in general. "

Silver plateS 1.50

Brown said he sees such speaking
engagemens as a conflict with the
current collective barganing
agreement
between
the
Management Council and the
National FootbaU League Players
Association.

Athens, Ohio

Top of hill, Rl. 33 South

Brown cited Article 3( Section 5:
"The NFLPA and The Management
Council agree that each will use its
best efforts to curtail public comments by club persoMei or players
which express criticism of any club,
Its coach or Its operation and policy,
or which tend to cast discredit upon
a club, a player or any other person
involved tn the operation of a club,
the NFL, the Management Council
or the NFLPA."

1--------------------- -- --L----------......:..

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•
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GP. MEN'S

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GP. MEN'S &amp; YOUNG MEN'S

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weekly. Federal r~uletlone prohlbll c .om·
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0·0; McClellan 2+5 ; Jones 0·0·0;
David O·CI-0; Barnete O·G-0; Stewart
O·CI-0 ; McDermitt Cl-0·0. Totots 24-6·
54.
.
'"
. .RAVENSWO.OD ' (67) .. C. Easter .
, 3·3·9; Varne~ 5·0 · 10; R. Easter 0·00 ;
Pannell 7·7·21 ; Comer 5-8·18; Her·
mon 0·0·0; Watson 2-3·7; McClure I·
•
·
0·2. Totlls 23·21-67,
Score by qu1r.ten:
10 17 9 18--54
Big Blacks
Ravenswood
18 19 15 15--67
Reserve score : Pt . F'leasant 72
RavenswQ9d 62.'

( .
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SPENCER (57) -- Borker 9-5-23;
Miller 5·3·13; Fisher 3·5·11; Kincaid
3·0.6; Scoll1·02; Rice 1·02; Buck 0·
00. TotaiS22·11-S7.
WAHAMA (71) - V. Weaver 8·3· ,
19; s. Bornltz H-18; Gibbs 8·0·16; R.
Barnltz 2-H; Fowler 0+3 ; T. Roush
1·2·4; Richards 1·0·2; Ingels 0·1 ·1;

Struthers ID0-6-4.
6 .. Miami Trace, 101 , beat
Wilmington 39·26.
7 .. Dayton Chamlnade·Jullenne,
12·1, beat Dayton Meadowdale 54·53.
8 .. Dresden Tri·Valley, 8·0, beat
Thornville Sheridan 78·55.
9 Ole) .. Ironton, 9·1, beat Waverly
61 ·46 and Akron St. VIncent-St. ·
Mary, 4-3, was Idle.
CLASS A
1 .. St. Henry, 9-1, beat New
Bremen 71·54.
· 2 .. Gnadenhutten Indian Valley
South, 8·2, beat Jeweii·Sclo 49·38.
3 .. Zanesville Rosecrans. 9·0, beat
Guernsey Catholic 64-39.
4 ·• Mogadore, 11 ·0, beat Garret·
Is ville Garfield 81·53.
5 .. Cincinnati Summit Country
Day, 8·0, beat Seven Hills 90·42.
6 .. Arcanum, 100, beat Ansonia
81-69.
7 ·· Jackson Center, 12·0, beat
Russia 79-71 . .
'
·· ··
. 8 .. Strasburg , 10· I, beat
Newcomerstown 71 ·64.
, 9 .. Ottawa Hills, 9-1, beat North
Baltimore 75-50.
10 .. Sondusky St. Mary's, 9·0, was
idle.

WINTER CLEARANCE
.

.
~riday •

o: ..

P~tlnt Pleaunt ·

"

13 14 11 19 .. 57
16 10 20 25·· 71
RESERVE GAME
SPENCER 132) .. Buck 4·1-9;
Taylor 1·1·3; Cronin 2-0·4; Titus O·CI0; Nicholas 2·0·4; Greenleaf O·CI-0;
Couk 1·1·3; Love 0·00; Hunt 2·0·4;
Smith 0·0·0; Conner Cl-00; Swartz O·
00; Wine2·H . TatalslH-32.
WAHAMA (56) .. Gray 4·0·8; Kit·
chen 1·0·2; Roush 0·0·0; Lavender 2·
0·4; Ingels 5·0 10; K. Weaver 3·0·6;
Slsk I·H ; Paugh 5·0·10; Powell 3·0·
6; M. Weaver OCI-0; Allensworth 3·0·
6. Totals 27-4· 56.
Scare by Quorters:
Spencer
9 4 3 16.. 32
Wahama
14 14 12 18·56

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homeOWDerS

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9924615

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985-3308

ATTENTION DOG OWNERS
980 Dog Ucenses Are Now On Sale
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1980 DOG LICENSE
IS JANUARY 20th . TWO DOLLAR ($2.00) PENALTY
IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY AP ·
PLICATION BLANK AND 'MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THELCOURT HOUSE NOW .. FEES ARE
TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR
FEMALE .
To obtain llceR!e by mall send this form to: Howard E.
Frank, County Auditor, Meigs County , Pomeroy, Ohio
45169. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and
·price of license.
Male Dog $2.00 Female Dog $2.00 Kennel License $10.00
OWNER OF DOG _________,~~.-----------ADDRESS---- - . . . . - - - - - - - - - - -

SALE
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Score by Qu1rters :

Spencer
Wahama

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675-68t0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) .. How the
top·ranked Ohio high school basket·
ball teams In The Assoc iated Press
poll fared In Friday night action :
.
Class AAA
1 .. Columbus Linden·McKinley, 9·
1, beat Portsmoulh 73·57 .
2 .. Cincinnati Elder, 7·2, lost to
Cincinnati Moeller « ·41.
3 ·• Columbus South, 9·0, beat
Columbus Marion· Franklin 73'55.
4 .. Barberton, 11-1, beat Niles
McKinley 100·70.
5 ·· Akron Central· Hower, 9·0, beat
Akron South 90·50.
6 . .. Findlay, 12·1. beat Marion
Harding 78·53 .
7 .. Chillicothe, 9·1, lost to
Groveporl56·38.
8 ·· Warren Western Reserve, 9·0,
beat Youngstown Ul'$ullne 99·"·
9 .. Canton McKinley, 8·3, beat
Canton Glen Oak 60·51 .
10 .. Toledo Scott, lG-0, was Idle.
CLASSAA
1 .. Dayton Jefferson, 8·2 , was idle.
2 .. Napleon, 11·0, beat Oregon
Clay 83·A6.
3 (lie) .. Williard, 10·0, beat Upper
Sandusky 71·45, and Steubenville, 9·
1, best Brooke, W. Va., 79·63.
.
5 .. Warren Kennedy, 10·0, beat

PT. PL.EASANT (54) -- Minton 2·0·

.
a.m. · 6:00 p.m. Monday •

· 2t24 Jukson An.

"TWO'S BETTER THAN' GNE"
!

.

How top teams fared

4; Ralke 9·0·18 ; Thomas 3·1-7; Noll
4· 1-7; Cremeans 4·3·11; ChamberS'CI-

FAMILY
CLINIC
.

'

·

the Yellow Jackets as Bamltz and
Weaver continued on their slzzilng
scoring spree to help give the bend
area cagers their bl11gest advlnlage
of the night at 67-42 with jfiSI1:35 to
play: Substitutes flooded the ~e
as Spencer's full court press cut the
lead to 71 ~7, which Is how it ended.
The shooting percentages show
Wahama with a 54 percent mark
from the floor and 68 percent from
the line. The locals committed 20
turnovers and hauled down 30
rebounds.
Spencer hit on 46 percent O'f their
field goal attempts and 68 percent at
the free throw stripe. The Yellow
Jackets commltteed 15 turnovers
and managed just 1&amp; rebomul.11.
In the reserve game, Coach Keith
Sayre's junior vars"y had an easy
time in claiming a 56-32 win over the
visiting YeUow Jackets.
York Ingels and Shawn Paugh
paced the winners with 10 markers
each with Paugh betng the defenaive
mainstay with his hustling and
divlnl! for loose balls. Spencer was
led by Randy Buck with nine points.
With the victories, both the
Wabama varsity and the JV squads
sport a 4-2 slate.
Wahama played at Meigs Saturday night.

Pro standings

. . DAVID CARR. D.

'

'

GA
120

threatened to blow the game wide
opening after jumping to a quick 7-2
lead. Turnovers hampered the
Falcons hopes, however, as Spencer,
behind Barker, rallied to knot the
score at 9-9. Wahama outscored the
visitors, 7-4, during the remainder
of the Initial quarter to hold a 16-13
-edge alter eight minutes.
The second canto proved to be
disastrous for the locals because of
turnovers. After Increasing their
lead to ~13 they let the Yellow
Jackets reel oft nine unanswered
points to take the lead tur'the first
time In tbe game, Larry Gibbs
Qucket at the buzzer made it 2'1·26 at
fntennlssion with Spencer holding a
slight one point lead.
Coach Lewis Hall made a change
at intennission which probably was
the deciding factor tn the White
Falcons victory when he went from
a zone to a man to man defense. The
end result was a superior second
lia1f 'perforrruince,' especl.iil!y from
Weaver who held the high scoring
Barker to just four points before
exiting late In the final period.
It was Weaver and Gibbs who
folind !be hot hands in that third
stanza by making eight straight
buckets to vault the locals from a
one point deficit Into a eight point
lead at 4&amp;-38 going Into the final eight
minutes.
Unlike the Ravenswood contest. ·
the' tocats retused to fold against

Minton 4, although Jay also fouled
out with4:40stiil togo.
Glenn McClellan, retumiJii from a
broken wrist sojoll"l, 'got his feet
wet in the·second qua~r, helped the
rebounding with hls 6-3 frame , and
got himself 5 tallies.
In tbe second period Ravenswood
raced Into a 26-13 spread, only to see
the Big Blacks, led by Raike's four
goals, rip off 12 unanswered points.
McClellan hit his first bucket to tie
the score at 2'1-all- tbe last time the
Big Blacks looked the Devils
squarely in the eye. Ravenswood
came back With elght straight points
and went into the dressing room with
a ten-point bulge, 37·'n.
The Red Devils spread was sixteen, 52-36, at the third pole. Fact Is,
Coach Mlck Price's hustling Scarlet
Demons twice opened the gap to
eighteen In the final heat, 56-38, then
fiG-42, before the Big Blacks
regrouped for a mild charge of their
own, cutting the final deficit to thirteen, 67-54.
National
San Diego 116, Golden State 112
The Big Blacks actually outBasketball Assoclollon
Seattle 100, Utah 90
AlA Glance
Sundoy's Gomes
goaled their hosts, 24 fielders to 23,
By The Assocliled Press
Los Angeles at Boston
but last lt with miserable work at the
Chicago at Detroit
Eastern Conference
foul tine. Tbey managed only 6 of 23
Houston at Milwaukee
Atlantic Division
New York at PHiladelphia
W. L.. Pet. GB
free throws whlle Ravenswood was
Portland
at washington
Boston
32
10
.762
lilting in 21 of23.
New Jersey at Kansas City
Philadelphia
31 II .738 I
PPHS also had a thin edge In
Atlanta at San Antonio
New York
22 24 .478 12
Washington
19 21 .475. 12
Utah ot Ph""nlx
rebo)llldlng, hauling down 30 to 29.
Golden State at Seattle
New Jersey
te 26 .-109 15
Greg Tbomas cleared the boards 11
Monday's Gemes
Central Division
times to lead In that department
No games scheduled
26· 18 •.5'11
Atlanta
23 21 .523 3
whlle Steve Garner was snatching 9 San Antonio
20 22 .476 5
caroms for the Devils. Ravenswood Houston
lndlona
19 25 ..132 7
shot 47 percent from the floor, the ·cleveland
19 26 .422 7'h
Big Blacks 44 ptrcent.
. Detroit
10 23 .227 16
Western(;onference
The prelim ·contest was as wild InMidwest DIVISion · .
doors as the weather was outdoors.
Kan . City
28 19 .596
Barry Barnette led the.Uttle Blacks
Milwaukee
26 20 .565 ·1\h
Friday's College
Denver
16 30 .:US ll!h .
third victoq wilbout a loss with 17
8askelbe II Scores
14
28
.333
ll'h
Chicago
counters, . wbile Mark Blll'l'iB was
ly The Associated Press
Utah
13 31 .295 13!h
toesing In 14. Mike Groves whanged
E,AST
.
Pacific DIVISion
,
Columbia 85, Harvard 63
seattle
31 i3 .7p5 ·
borne. 20 points for tbe losers, who
Partmouth 61, Cornell61, 2 ot
Ang,
30 15 .667 l'h
are now 2 and 3, and Gary Sheppard LOS
Pennsylvania 64, Brown 47
Phoenl~
21 16 .628 3!h
netted!&amp;,
Princeton 65, Yale 57
San Diego
25 23 .521 8
'
. SOUTH
F'ortland
24 23 .511 811•
The big hero had to be John David
Delaware St. 91, West Chester St.
13 30 .302 17'12
with ~ · desperate last second Golden st.Friday's G1mes
77 ,
bucket that sent It Into overtime. In
Syracuse 6-4, Rhode Island 54
Boston lOS, Atlanta 93
Vermont a.., New Hampshire 70
Los Angeles 123, Delroit100
that overtime, the Utile Bl!lcks
·
MIDWEST
Portlond 128, New Jersey 107
scored 10 potnta to none, getting 8 of
Cleveland St. 90, George Mason 69
Phlladelphia119, Washington 106
them at the foul line.
N. Colorado 72, N. Dakota67
· 1n111ana.11o, Chicago 105
SOUTHWEST
Pl. Pleasant battled Southern last
San Antonio 11( Cleveland 109
Texas Southern 87, Wis. ·
Mllwauk~ 1091.New York 107
night In a make~p gaine.
Milwaukee 75
Kansas City 112, Denver 99
Box score:

·Ailergy and Der~citol0gy

REG. Sll! . .. NOW

$1530

'

Noflonol Hockey League
AlA Glance
By The" uoclofed Press
Campbe ;l Conference
Potrlck Division
W. L. T. Pis GF
Phlla.
27 2 10 64 168
NY Rangel'$
19 17 7 45 164
NY Islanders 16 17 6 38 133
Atlanta
16 18 5 37 131
Washington
11 23 6 28 125
Smythe Division
Chicago
15 14 12 -12 116
St. L.ouls
16 19 6 38 127
Vancouver . 15 21 7 37 135
Winnipeg ·
12 25 5 29 111
Colorado
12 24 4 28 130
Edmonton
9 22 9 21 133
Wales Conference
Adams DIVISion
Buffalo
28 11 3 59 159
Minnesota.
21 9 8 50 162
Boston
21 12 6 48 1«
Quebec
17 18 6 40 130
Toronto
17 19 4 38 I«
Norris Division
Montreal
20 16 6 46 157
L.osAng.
19 '13 8 46 172
Pitts.
17 13 11 o15 1«
Detroit
14 18 7 35 129
Hartford
9 20 10 28 122
Sunday's Games
Colorado at·Boston
St. ·Louis at Phllodelphla
Detroit ill Chicago
!;OS Angeles at Winnipeg ·
Buffalo at Edmonton
MOI!doy's Gomes
Atlanta ot 1';\'ontreal
Colorado at "'ew York Rangers

$10625

'

OPEN FRIDAY. &amp;

So, it you want the best for your savings dollar,
. Talk to us at Point Pleasant Federal

50

MEN'S

5

*

,
'40

MEN 'S

REG . $17 ....... : NOW

monthly. Interest compounded cJelly from
dey ol depo11t through meturlft.
The Annu~l Yield on 2V, Year Cerfiflcofes of Deposit is
achieved through dally compounding on a yearly !h.sis. ·
Federal law prohibits compounding Money Market

24

MEN 'S

90
REG. S20 ... .... NOW$15

Annual Yield ()f 10.96.
Effective Jan. 1 Thru, Jan. 31st, 1980

~:s~.'. :..... ...... NOW '75
MEN 'S WINTER

68

(.

NOW

MEN'S

1
REG. S8S ... ..... .. .. NOW
REG. j 120 .. ... ·" .. · NOW 1

10.40%.
*

SPORT COATS
REG .

RAVENSWOOD - Host Ravenswood inflicted a 67-M · hardwood
defeat on visiting Pt Pleasant
Friday night.
The defeat left Coach Lennie Barnett's lads with a 1-3 season mark.
The Red Devils. upped tbeir season
record to~2.
The game opened as if It would be
a bam burner, the lead. changing
five times, · with three ties. But
finally the Red Devils moved Into an
tMO first quarter lead.
.
H anything, Ravenswood's starUng unit was even a bit shorter than
Point Pieaaant'il and It was apparent
that the outcome would go to the
swiftest and to the most accuralll
shooting eyes.
. Rorinle Pannell, a 1&gt;-11 seitlor,
paced all scorers witb 21 points,
followed by 1&gt;-11 junior Jim Comer
who pwnped In 18 before fouling out.
Senior Steve Varner, a lefthanded
baseball pitcher, contributed 10 and
s.8 Craig Easter zipped In 9 before
alao drawing five personals.
The Big Blacks' top scorer was
again David Ralke with nine buckets
for 18 before he left tbe game with
4:08 remaining in tbe fourth period
wltb a sprained ankle. Ron
Cremeans, who was having horrid
luck early, cut iooae tn the final beat
and wound up with 11 markers.
David Nott, a surprise starter, contributed 9, Greg Thomas 7, and Jay

STANDINGS

SUITS

Reg. mo-sao

·_SHIRTS

Ravenswood stops
Big Blacks, 67-54

$10,000 minimum depoalt. Ne,. .retea. aet

Selected Group

SPORT &amp; KNIT

WEAVER PLAYS WITHOUT MASK- For the first time this winter,
Gallia's Mark (Boo) Weaver (right) played without a special protective
face mask he bad to wear nearly three montbs following injuries received
tn an auto accident. Weaver had an off-night from tbe field (one for
seven) but played outatanding defense, picked otf three rebounds and had
one assist tn Gallia's IJ3.M win over Wellston. He scored five points.
Wellston's John Jeffers (40) looks on.

'

TREASURE CHEST
COIN SHOP

MASON- Treiling at the half, the
Wahama White Falcona put on an
almost flawless basketball per·
formance Friday night In gaining
11-67 win over the Spencer Yellow
Jackets.
Vince Weave r, Wahama's six-footthree sports star, was the man of the
hour for the local cagers with 19
points on the evening and a
tremendous defensive effort which
stopped Spencer's leading scorer
during the second half of actlon.
Weaver dropped in 15 of bls 19 total
points In the final two quarters.
Joining Weaver tn the limelight
were Scott Barnitz and Rainbow
Gibbs with 18 and 18 points
respectively. Barnitz has been a
pleasant surprise for head coach
Lewis Hall with his second consecutive·· impressive performarice.
The junior guard hit on 7 of9 shots on
the night from the field.
Gibbs, In addition to scoring In
double flgtires, was the games
ieadlng reboundfer with 10 whlle
Weaver followed with 7.
Spencer was. paced by talented
Brian Barker whO' finished the
contest with 23 markers for game
high honors. Tony Miller added 13
and Roland Fisher chipped tn with
11 . Fisher was the Yellow Jackets
top rebounder with 8 with Barker,
notching 7.
From the opening tip, Wahama

a

QUYING U. S.
SILVER COINS
We pay 51.60 for Dimes;

HAVE A WET BASEMENT?

-,.
CINClNNATI (AP) - Mike
Brown, assistant general manager
:of the Cincinnati Bengals, aaid he
··was upset but not devastated by
·:statements made by defensive back
:Scott Perry about the team
:management.
: "We haven't made any decision
·about Scott.~· Brown said Friday, "I
.would say that his criticism violates
:the collective bargaining
:agreement, but it doesn't bother me
as much as you might think, because
l know better and I understand the
)lature rJ. the fellow talking.
: "Maybe it aays more about him
than it does about us," Brown said.
. Perry, a fourth-year defensive
'player who admitted to a had
JleliSOn, criticized Brown and his

BY GARY CLARK

matCti."

r----------------·---------l

Mike Brown upset by statements

I

Wahama posts fOw·th
victory of campaign

Arnold O·O·O; J . Roush 0·0·0; K.
WeaverO·O·O. Totals 27-17-71.

'

'

'

'

... BAHR:CLOTHIERS '
2nd Ave.

0.

· OPI!N M·S 9: 3o titS

"'~ARD . E. FRANK
·Meigs Cc:~unty Auditor
'

,.
I'•,

'

'

992-2698
'License must ~ Obtained no later than J.an. 20, 1980 to
avoid paying penalty: After this date pehaity will be
lli2.'Wt•or single t411g and ss.oo for kennel license.
·

..

�-

C+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sw11lay. Jan. 13. 1980

"

Mrs. Austin plays supportive role
CINCINNATI (AP )
Jeanne
Austin says she always tries to put
on a ''poker face" when she watches
her daughter Trecy play tennis.
"I'm afraid if I smile, she'll think ,
'Why is she smiling?' Or If I give her
a 'why-are-you-doing-that' look,
.she'll worry more about what I'm
doing than the match," said Mrs.
Austin, who is here watching her
daughter compete in a $150,000 tournament.
"I never try to move because
every time I do she notices it and I'm

afraid she'll wonder why."
people and things get tense, I need io
Her IS-year-old daughter Tracy is concentrate on some~."
currently one of the best players 011
Tracy's losses affect her mother.
"I feel sorry for her," she said.
the women's tennis circuit. But
when she gets into a close match,
"When she's losing, you feel so ·
Mrs. Austin admits it gets tough to helpless. That's the hardest part of
keep her "poker face."
being a spectator. There's nothing
When she geta nervous, Mrs. you can do.
Austin resorts to fiddling with the ,' "You get nervous if it's a close
several gold bracelets she wears. - · match, but that's aU you can do."
" I call them my worry beads;" she
Mrs. Austin has been traveling
said. "It's just something to con· with Trecy since she joined the pro .
centrale my mind on. When you're ranks three years ago.
sitting there in an arena fuJi of
When the pig-tailed player was at
various junior tournaments, she
traveled by herself.
"With the juniors, you put them on
a plane, someone pickS them up at
the airport, takes them to a private
Spilman, 25, was with the Reds the home, houses them, feeda them last half the 1979 season, earning a just like they were members of the
midseason promotion from In- family," Mrs. Austin said. "On the
dianapolis where he was bitting .288. circuit, they're expected to be
Spilman started games at both first adults.
base and third base for the Reds, but
"From the airport, you take a cab.
was used prtmarily as a pincbbitter, go to the hotel, all alone. I think she's
batting .214 in 43 games.
a little young for that."
Oester, 23 and a Cincinnati native,
She sees her role in Tracy's career
will be in the battle for the regular as being mostly supportive.
second base job In 1980 after three
"As far as her playing goes, I can
years at Indianapolis where he was observe and maybe detect
an outstanding shortatop. He Jed the weaknesses in a player - but she's
Reds ' top minor league farm club in pretty good at that herself. As far as
bitting in 1979 with a .281 average.
helping the emotional or mental side

Oester, Spilman sign '80 pacts
CINCINNATI, (AP) - Ron Oester
and Harry Spilman, two of the top
young infielders in the Cincinnati
Reds organization, have signed their
1980 contracts, Reds President Dick
Wagner announced Saturday.
I

BLOCKING OUT- It appearsNorthGallia's tall Dan Barry (23) has
the edge in this rebounding effort against Southern's Dale Teaford ('12) .
The Tornadoes continue to roll against SV AC opposition Friday night with
a convincing 83-1i6 win over the second place Pirates.

'
I

:r
I

NAMED BACKFIELD COACH
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Gene
DeFI!lppo, asalstant football coach
at Youngstown State, Ohio, was appointed Friday as offensive backfield coach at Vanderbilt University.
DeFilippo, 29, has been an
assistant coach at Youngstown for
five seasons. At Vanderbilt, he succeeds Art Zeleznik, who resigned in
December to pursue business opportunities.
DeFlligpo · was a graduate
assistant at the University of Tennessee in 1973 and a part-time coach
in 1974.

'

of her game, I don't do much otbeit
t1un being s0meone there wbo's s~·
portlve.
"If she wins, I tell •her
congratulations. I always try to ~
constructive. Whether she wins ·cr
loses, I'm constructive about the
The two are often at the f81J1ily
home in Rolling Hils, Calif. , a montb
at a time between tournaments.
That gives Tracy time to get caught
up on her high school work and Mrs,
Austin time to play tennis herself. :
The other four Austin cblldren are
on their own, so only George;
Tracy's dad, Is left home durlni!
tournaments.
Whlle Tracy was still playing In
junior tournaments, Mrs. Austin
didn't think about her daughter
becoming one of the top tennis
p1ayers In the world. "I felt she was
really developing faster than most
kids do," Mrs. Austin said. " It waa
just a question of whether she'd
plateau out or continue to develop."

$16.00 per dollar which is
1964 and Older
S4.00 for Quarters ;

S8.00 for Half Dollars;
$17.00 for Silver Dollars

Call the Area's Oldest and Most
Proven Company At 1-800-354-8915
/'
The Problem Solvers

66c Piece for War Nickels
S2.l0 for Sterling

n .so ea . for Half Dates 196S to .
1969.
Also Gold wedding bands, class
rings, dental gold, platinum, gold
filled jewelry.

father, Bengals General Manager
Paul ·Brown. Perry told a service
club luncheon Wednesday that the
team was upset about the Browns'
emphasis on image and economics.
Perry said none of the players
liked Mike Brown. He also ·said
players who spoke out were traded
away and there were a lot of early
retirments because the players
"just don't like it here."
· "II makes you wonder - a guy

making a good living who bites the
hand that feeds him," said Mike
Brown.
"He seems bent on taking a
critical stance, not just about the
Bimgals' managment, but of pro
football in general. "

Silver plateS 1.50

Brown said he sees such speaking
engagemens as a conflict with the
current collective barganing
agreement
between
the
Management Council and the
National FootbaU League Players
Association.

Athens, Ohio

Top of hill, Rl. 33 South

Brown cited Article 3( Section 5:
"The NFLPA and The Management
Council agree that each will use its
best efforts to curtail public comments by club persoMei or players
which express criticism of any club,
Its coach or Its operation and policy,
or which tend to cast discredit upon
a club, a player or any other person
involved tn the operation of a club,
the NFL, the Management Council
or the NFLPA."

1--------------------- -- --L----------......:..

Point Pleasant Federal
IS NOW EVEN BETTERI
•
Now, you can choose from two floating rate certificates
at Point Pleasant Federal! Our short-term, high yielding 6month money market certificate has a new partner ••• a new
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the average 21f2 . year yield for U.S. Treasury Securities.

6·MONTH
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GP. MEN'S &amp; YOUNG MEN'S

DRESS SHIRTS

DRESS ·sLACKS

VALUES

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GP. MEN'S

•9••

Effective Jan. 10th 1hru Jan. 16th, 1980
weekly. Federal r~uletlone prohlbll c .om·
pounding of Interest during term of ecc-ounL

From Reg . Stock

lf2

Rog . SliG-$120

OFF

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Reg . S210-f140
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very Fine Selection to Choose From

REG .

•

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NOW '120
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S60 . ...... .... .....

•

48

$1,000 minimum depoelt. N.e w retet 1et

ALL WEATHER COATS
REG. $70 .. .......... ~OW *56

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REG. S29.9S ........ NOW
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MONDAY TIL 8 PM
••

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9:0~
"')

.....

156

130
139
151
121
139
145

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113
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''
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I

675·2500

..

415, Main Street

0·0; McClellan 2+5 ; Jones 0·0·0;
David O·CI-0; Barnete O·G-0; Stewart
O·CI-0 ; McDermitt Cl-0·0. Totots 24-6·
54.
.
'"
. .RAVENSWO.OD ' (67) .. C. Easter .
, 3·3·9; Varne~ 5·0 · 10; R. Easter 0·00 ;
Pannell 7·7·21 ; Comer 5-8·18; Her·
mon 0·0·0; Watson 2-3·7; McClure I·
•
·
0·2. Totlls 23·21-67,
Score by qu1r.ten:
10 17 9 18--54
Big Blacks
Ravenswood
18 19 15 15--67
Reserve score : Pt . F'leasant 72
RavenswQ9d 62.'

( .
--~---------------------------------------------~
"
•

~

.

I

SPENCER (57) -- Borker 9-5-23;
Miller 5·3·13; Fisher 3·5·11; Kincaid
3·0.6; Scoll1·02; Rice 1·02; Buck 0·
00. TotaiS22·11-S7.
WAHAMA (71) - V. Weaver 8·3· ,
19; s. Bornltz H-18; Gibbs 8·0·16; R.
Barnltz 2-H; Fowler 0+3 ; T. Roush
1·2·4; Richards 1·0·2; Ingels 0·1 ·1;

Struthers ID0-6-4.
6 .. Miami Trace, 101 , beat
Wilmington 39·26.
7 .. Dayton Chamlnade·Jullenne,
12·1, beat Dayton Meadowdale 54·53.
8 .. Dresden Tri·Valley, 8·0, beat
Thornville Sheridan 78·55.
9 Ole) .. Ironton, 9·1, beat Waverly
61 ·46 and Akron St. VIncent-St. ·
Mary, 4-3, was Idle.
CLASS A
1 .. St. Henry, 9-1, beat New
Bremen 71·54.
· 2 .. Gnadenhutten Indian Valley
South, 8·2, beat Jeweii·Sclo 49·38.
3 .. Zanesville Rosecrans. 9·0, beat
Guernsey Catholic 64-39.
4 ·• Mogadore, 11 ·0, beat Garret·
Is ville Garfield 81·53.
5 .. Cincinnati Summit Country
Day, 8·0, beat Seven Hills 90·42.
6 .. Arcanum, 100, beat Ansonia
81-69.
7 ·· Jackson Center, 12·0, beat
Russia 79-71 . .
'
·· ··
. 8 .. Strasburg , 10· I, beat
Newcomerstown 71 ·64.
, 9 .. Ottawa Hills, 9-1, beat North
Baltimore 75-50.
10 .. Sondusky St. Mary's, 9·0, was
idle.

WINTER CLEARANCE
.

.
~riday •

o: ..

P~tlnt Pleaunt ·

"

13 14 11 19 .. 57
16 10 20 25·· 71
RESERVE GAME
SPENCER 132) .. Buck 4·1-9;
Taylor 1·1·3; Cronin 2-0·4; Titus O·CI0; Nicholas 2·0·4; Greenleaf O·CI-0;
Couk 1·1·3; Love 0·00; Hunt 2·0·4;
Smith 0·0·0; Conner Cl-00; Swartz O·
00; Wine2·H . TatalslH-32.
WAHAMA (56) .. Gray 4·0·8; Kit·
chen 1·0·2; Roush 0·0·0; Lavender 2·
0·4; Ingels 5·0 10; K. Weaver 3·0·6;
Slsk I·H ; Paugh 5·0·10; Powell 3·0·
6; M. Weaver OCI-0; Allensworth 3·0·
6. Totals 27-4· 56.
Scare by Quorters:
Spencer
9 4 3 16.. 32
Wahama
14 14 12 18·56

"Aiotol
homeOWDerS

:r~-

theycansaw
with State Far-n•
insuranCe!'

come see me You may

be pleased, too.

Mike Swiger
9924615

149 S. Third St.
Middleport, 0 .

Ukeacood

netchbor,

!itakF.um

udaere.

UAU fAIIII

A

STATE FARM FIRE
ltND CASUALTY COMPANY
Home Qffw;:&lt;&gt;

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Features simple triple option with compression release for easy starting.- 16" power tip
buide bar to put the power to the wood. -With
automatic or manual chain oiling pump for
various cutting conditions.

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SEE ONE TODAY

985-3308

ATTENTION DOG OWNERS
980 Dog Ucenses Are Now On Sale
DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1980 DOG LICENSE
IS JANUARY 20th . TWO DOLLAR ($2.00) PENALTY
IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY AP ·
PLICATION BLANK AND 'MAIL TO THE COUNTY
AUDITOR AT THELCOURT HOUSE NOW .. FEES ARE
TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR
FEMALE .
To obtain llceR!e by mall send this form to: Howard E.
Frank, County Auditor, Meigs County , Pomeroy, Ohio
45169. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and
·price of license.
Male Dog $2.00 Female Dog $2.00 Kennel License $10.00
OWNER OF DOG _________,~~.-----------ADDRESS---- - . . . . - - - - - - - - - - -

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Score by Qu1rters :

Spencer
Wahama

HOME LITE'S

.

'

',

'

.

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' '

ON FINE W·~RINd ~PPAREL
, . ·FOR ~~~· ~MD ew()ME~
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FOR APPOINTMENT CALL 675-6171

675-68t0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) .. How the
top·ranked Ohio high school basket·
ball teams In The Assoc iated Press
poll fared In Friday night action :
.
Class AAA
1 .. Columbus Linden·McKinley, 9·
1, beat Portsmoulh 73·57 .
2 .. Cincinnati Elder, 7·2, lost to
Cincinnati Moeller « ·41.
3 ·• Columbus South, 9·0, beat
Columbus Marion· Franklin 73'55.
4 .. Barberton, 11-1, beat Niles
McKinley 100·70.
5 ·· Akron Central· Hower, 9·0, beat
Akron South 90·50.
6 . .. Findlay, 12·1. beat Marion
Harding 78·53 .
7 .. Chillicothe, 9·1, lost to
Groveporl56·38.
8 ·· Warren Western Reserve, 9·0,
beat Youngstown Ul'$ullne 99·"·
9 .. Canton McKinley, 8·3, beat
Canton Glen Oak 60·51 .
10 .. Toledo Scott, lG-0, was Idle.
CLASSAA
1 .. Dayton Jefferson, 8·2 , was idle.
2 .. Napleon, 11·0, beat Oregon
Clay 83·A6.
3 (lie) .. Williard, 10·0, beat Upper
Sandusky 71·45, and Steubenville, 9·
1, best Brooke, W. Va., 79·63.
.
5 .. Warren Kennedy, 10·0, beat

PT. PL.EASANT (54) -- Minton 2·0·

.
a.m. · 6:00 p.m. Monday •

· 2t24 Jukson An.

"TWO'S BETTER THAN' GNE"
!

.

How top teams fared

4; Ralke 9·0·18 ; Thomas 3·1-7; Noll
4· 1-7; Cremeans 4·3·11; ChamberS'CI-

FAMILY
CLINIC
.

'

·

the Yellow Jackets as Bamltz and
Weaver continued on their slzzilng
scoring spree to help give the bend
area cagers their bl11gest advlnlage
of the night at 67-42 with jfiSI1:35 to
play: Substitutes flooded the ~e
as Spencer's full court press cut the
lead to 71 ~7, which Is how it ended.
The shooting percentages show
Wahama with a 54 percent mark
from the floor and 68 percent from
the line. The locals committed 20
turnovers and hauled down 30
rebounds.
Spencer hit on 46 percent O'f their
field goal attempts and 68 percent at
the free throw stripe. The Yellow
Jackets commltteed 15 turnovers
and managed just 1&amp; rebomul.11.
In the reserve game, Coach Keith
Sayre's junior vars"y had an easy
time in claiming a 56-32 win over the
visiting YeUow Jackets.
York Ingels and Shawn Paugh
paced the winners with 10 markers
each with Paugh betng the defenaive
mainstay with his hustling and
divlnl! for loose balls. Spencer was
led by Randy Buck with nine points.
With the victories, both the
Wabama varsity and the JV squads
sport a 4-2 slate.
Wahama played at Meigs Saturday night.

Pro standings

. . DAVID CARR. D.

'

'

GA
120

threatened to blow the game wide
opening after jumping to a quick 7-2
lead. Turnovers hampered the
Falcons hopes, however, as Spencer,
behind Barker, rallied to knot the
score at 9-9. Wahama outscored the
visitors, 7-4, during the remainder
of the Initial quarter to hold a 16-13
-edge alter eight minutes.
The second canto proved to be
disastrous for the locals because of
turnovers. After Increasing their
lead to ~13 they let the Yellow
Jackets reel oft nine unanswered
points to take the lead tur'the first
time In tbe game, Larry Gibbs
Qucket at the buzzer made it 2'1·26 at
fntennlssion with Spencer holding a
slight one point lead.
Coach Lewis Hall made a change
at intennission which probably was
the deciding factor tn the White
Falcons victory when he went from
a zone to a man to man defense. The
end result was a superior second
lia1f 'perforrruince,' especl.iil!y from
Weaver who held the high scoring
Barker to just four points before
exiting late In the final period.
It was Weaver and Gibbs who
folind !be hot hands in that third
stanza by making eight straight
buckets to vault the locals from a
one point deficit Into a eight point
lead at 4&amp;-38 going Into the final eight
minutes.
Unlike the Ravenswood contest. ·
the' tocats retused to fold against

Minton 4, although Jay also fouled
out with4:40stiil togo.
Glenn McClellan, retumiJii from a
broken wrist sojoll"l, 'got his feet
wet in the·second qua~r, helped the
rebounding with hls 6-3 frame , and
got himself 5 tallies.
In tbe second period Ravenswood
raced Into a 26-13 spread, only to see
the Big Blacks, led by Raike's four
goals, rip off 12 unanswered points.
McClellan hit his first bucket to tie
the score at 2'1-all- tbe last time the
Big Blacks looked the Devils
squarely in the eye. Ravenswood
came back With elght straight points
and went into the dressing room with
a ten-point bulge, 37·'n.
The Red Devils spread was sixteen, 52-36, at the third pole. Fact Is,
Coach Mlck Price's hustling Scarlet
Demons twice opened the gap to
eighteen In the final heat, 56-38, then
fiG-42, before the Big Blacks
regrouped for a mild charge of their
own, cutting the final deficit to thirteen, 67-54.
National
San Diego 116, Golden State 112
The Big Blacks actually outBasketball Assoclollon
Seattle 100, Utah 90
AlA Glance
Sundoy's Gomes
goaled their hosts, 24 fielders to 23,
By The Assocliled Press
Los Angeles at Boston
but last lt with miserable work at the
Chicago at Detroit
Eastern Conference
foul tine. Tbey managed only 6 of 23
Houston at Milwaukee
Atlantic Division
New York at PHiladelphia
W. L.. Pet. GB
free throws whlle Ravenswood was
Portland
at washington
Boston
32
10
.762
lilting in 21 of23.
New Jersey at Kansas City
Philadelphia
31 II .738 I
PPHS also had a thin edge In
Atlanta at San Antonio
New York
22 24 .478 12
Washington
19 21 .475. 12
Utah ot Ph""nlx
rebo)llldlng, hauling down 30 to 29.
Golden State at Seattle
New Jersey
te 26 .-109 15
Greg Tbomas cleared the boards 11
Monday's Gemes
Central Division
times to lead In that department
No games scheduled
26· 18 •.5'11
Atlanta
23 21 .523 3
whlle Steve Garner was snatching 9 San Antonio
20 22 .476 5
caroms for the Devils. Ravenswood Houston
lndlona
19 25 ..132 7
shot 47 percent from the floor, the ·cleveland
19 26 .422 7'h
Big Blacks 44 ptrcent.
. Detroit
10 23 .227 16
Western(;onference
The prelim ·contest was as wild InMidwest DIVISion · .
doors as the weather was outdoors.
Kan . City
28 19 .596
Barry Barnette led the.Uttle Blacks
Milwaukee
26 20 .565 ·1\h
Friday's College
Denver
16 30 .:US ll!h .
third victoq wilbout a loss with 17
8askelbe II Scores
14
28
.333
ll'h
Chicago
counters, . wbile Mark Blll'l'iB was
ly The Associated Press
Utah
13 31 .295 13!h
toesing In 14. Mike Groves whanged
E,AST
.
Pacific DIVISion
,
Columbia 85, Harvard 63
seattle
31 i3 .7p5 ·
borne. 20 points for tbe losers, who
Partmouth 61, Cornell61, 2 ot
Ang,
30 15 .667 l'h
are now 2 and 3, and Gary Sheppard LOS
Pennsylvania 64, Brown 47
Phoenl~
21 16 .628 3!h
netted!&amp;,
Princeton 65, Yale 57
San Diego
25 23 .521 8
'
. SOUTH
F'ortland
24 23 .511 811•
The big hero had to be John David
Delaware St. 91, West Chester St.
13 30 .302 17'12
with ~ · desperate last second Golden st.Friday's G1mes
77 ,
bucket that sent It Into overtime. In
Syracuse 6-4, Rhode Island 54
Boston lOS, Atlanta 93
Vermont a.., New Hampshire 70
Los Angeles 123, Delroit100
that overtime, the Utile Bl!lcks
·
MIDWEST
Portlond 128, New Jersey 107
scored 10 potnta to none, getting 8 of
Cleveland St. 90, George Mason 69
Phlladelphia119, Washington 106
them at the foul line.
N. Colorado 72, N. Dakota67
· 1n111ana.11o, Chicago 105
SOUTHWEST
Pl. Pleasant battled Southern last
San Antonio 11( Cleveland 109
Texas Southern 87, Wis. ·
Mllwauk~ 1091.New York 107
night In a make~p gaine.
Milwaukee 75
Kansas City 112, Denver 99
Box score:

·Ailergy and Der~citol0gy

REG. Sll! . .. NOW

$1530

'

Noflonol Hockey League
AlA Glance
By The" uoclofed Press
Campbe ;l Conference
Potrlck Division
W. L. T. Pis GF
Phlla.
27 2 10 64 168
NY Rangel'$
19 17 7 45 164
NY Islanders 16 17 6 38 133
Atlanta
16 18 5 37 131
Washington
11 23 6 28 125
Smythe Division
Chicago
15 14 12 -12 116
St. L.ouls
16 19 6 38 127
Vancouver . 15 21 7 37 135
Winnipeg ·
12 25 5 29 111
Colorado
12 24 4 28 130
Edmonton
9 22 9 21 133
Wales Conference
Adams DIVISion
Buffalo
28 11 3 59 159
Minnesota.
21 9 8 50 162
Boston
21 12 6 48 1«
Quebec
17 18 6 40 130
Toronto
17 19 4 38 I«
Norris Division
Montreal
20 16 6 46 157
L.osAng.
19 '13 8 46 172
Pitts.
17 13 11 o15 1«
Detroit
14 18 7 35 129
Hartford
9 20 10 28 122
Sunday's Games
Colorado at·Boston
St. ·Louis at Phllodelphla
Detroit ill Chicago
!;OS Angeles at Winnipeg ·
Buffalo at Edmonton
MOI!doy's Gomes
Atlanta ot 1';\'ontreal
Colorado at "'ew York Rangers

$10625

'

OPEN FRIDAY. &amp;

So, it you want the best for your savings dollar,
. Talk to us at Point Pleasant Federal

50

MEN'S

5

*

,
'40

MEN 'S

REG . $17 ....... : NOW

monthly. Interest compounded cJelly from
dey ol depo11t through meturlft.
The Annu~l Yield on 2V, Year Cerfiflcofes of Deposit is
achieved through dally compounding on a yearly !h.sis. ·
Federal law prohibits compounding Money Market

24

MEN 'S

90
REG. S20 ... .... NOW$15

Annual Yield ()f 10.96.
Effective Jan. 1 Thru, Jan. 31st, 1980

~:s~.'. :..... ...... NOW '75
MEN 'S WINTER

68

(.

NOW

MEN'S

1
REG. S8S ... ..... .. .. NOW
REG. j 120 .. ... ·" .. · NOW 1

10.40%.
*

SPORT COATS
REG .

RAVENSWOOD - Host Ravenswood inflicted a 67-M · hardwood
defeat on visiting Pt Pleasant
Friday night.
The defeat left Coach Lennie Barnett's lads with a 1-3 season mark.
The Red Devils. upped tbeir season
record to~2.
The game opened as if It would be
a bam burner, the lead. changing
five times, · with three ties. But
finally the Red Devils moved Into an
tMO first quarter lead.
.
H anything, Ravenswood's starUng unit was even a bit shorter than
Point Pieaaant'il and It was apparent
that the outcome would go to the
swiftest and to the most accuralll
shooting eyes.
. Rorinle Pannell, a 1&gt;-11 seitlor,
paced all scorers witb 21 points,
followed by 1&gt;-11 junior Jim Comer
who pwnped In 18 before fouling out.
Senior Steve Varner, a lefthanded
baseball pitcher, contributed 10 and
s.8 Craig Easter zipped In 9 before
alao drawing five personals.
The Big Blacks' top scorer was
again David Ralke with nine buckets
for 18 before he left tbe game with
4:08 remaining in tbe fourth period
wltb a sprained ankle. Ron
Cremeans, who was having horrid
luck early, cut iooae tn the final beat
and wound up with 11 markers.
David Nott, a surprise starter, contributed 9, Greg Thomas 7, and Jay

STANDINGS

SUITS

Reg. mo-sao

·_SHIRTS

Ravenswood stops
Big Blacks, 67-54

$10,000 minimum depoalt. Ne,. .retea. aet

Selected Group

SPORT &amp; KNIT

WEAVER PLAYS WITHOUT MASK- For the first time this winter,
Gallia's Mark (Boo) Weaver (right) played without a special protective
face mask he bad to wear nearly three montbs following injuries received
tn an auto accident. Weaver had an off-night from tbe field (one for
seven) but played outatanding defense, picked otf three rebounds and had
one assist tn Gallia's IJ3.M win over Wellston. He scored five points.
Wellston's John Jeffers (40) looks on.

'

TREASURE CHEST
COIN SHOP

MASON- Treiling at the half, the
Wahama White Falcona put on an
almost flawless basketball per·
formance Friday night In gaining
11-67 win over the Spencer Yellow
Jackets.
Vince Weave r, Wahama's six-footthree sports star, was the man of the
hour for the local cagers with 19
points on the evening and a
tremendous defensive effort which
stopped Spencer's leading scorer
during the second half of actlon.
Weaver dropped in 15 of bls 19 total
points In the final two quarters.
Joining Weaver tn the limelight
were Scott Barnitz and Rainbow
Gibbs with 18 and 18 points
respectively. Barnitz has been a
pleasant surprise for head coach
Lewis Hall with his second consecutive·· impressive performarice.
The junior guard hit on 7 of9 shots on
the night from the field.
Gibbs, In addition to scoring In
double flgtires, was the games
ieadlng reboundfer with 10 whlle
Weaver followed with 7.
Spencer was. paced by talented
Brian Barker whO' finished the
contest with 23 markers for game
high honors. Tony Miller added 13
and Roland Fisher chipped tn with
11 . Fisher was the Yellow Jackets
top rebounder with 8 with Barker,
notching 7.
From the opening tip, Wahama

a

QUYING U. S.
SILVER COINS
We pay 51.60 for Dimes;

HAVE A WET BASEMENT?

-,.
CINClNNATI (AP) - Mike
Brown, assistant general manager
:of the Cincinnati Bengals, aaid he
··was upset but not devastated by
·:statements made by defensive back
:Scott Perry about the team
:management.
: "We haven't made any decision
·about Scott.~· Brown said Friday, "I
.would say that his criticism violates
:the collective bargaining
:agreement, but it doesn't bother me
as much as you might think, because
l know better and I understand the
)lature rJ. the fellow talking.
: "Maybe it aays more about him
than it does about us," Brown said.
. Perry, a fourth-year defensive
'player who admitted to a had
JleliSOn, criticized Brown and his

BY GARY CLARK

matCti."

r----------------·---------l

Mike Brown upset by statements

I

Wahama posts fOw·th
victory of campaign

Arnold O·O·O; J . Roush 0·0·0; K.
WeaverO·O·O. Totals 27-17-71.

'

'

'

'

... BAHR:CLOTHIERS '
2nd Ave.

0.

· OPI!N M·S 9: 3o titS

"'~ARD . E. FRANK
·Meigs Cc:~unty Auditor
'

,.
I'•,

'

'

992-2698
'License must ~ Obtained no later than J.an. 20, 1980 to
avoid paying penalty: After this date pehaity will be
lli2.'Wt•or single t411g and ss.oo for kennel license.
·

..

�.~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swl&lt;lay, Jan. 13,

().7-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday ,.Jan. 13,1980

1980

Southern in impressive win
over North Gallia, 83 to 6 7

· CHESHIRE - Hann8n Trace's
junior high girls ' team edged Kyger
Creek's girls' squad, ~16 in an
overtime Thursilily night. Johnson
led the winners with 10 points. She
had a basket during the overtime.
Stitt had two foul shots in the overtime.
Kyger Creek's seventh grade
boys' team defeated Hannan Trace,

•

PATRIOT - Southwestern eru[)ted for 23 points in the third quarter
here Fridy night to score a comefrom-behind~ SVAC victory over
Eastern ol Meigs Couilty.
The victory, coupled with
Southern's win over North Gallia,
vaults the Highlanders into second
place in the SV AC with a 3-lleague

1

!'REPARED TO SHOOT - North Gallia 's Scott
HoweU (41) prepares to shoot a jwnper over the out-

stretched anns of Dale Teaford (42 ) in Friday's SVAC
game at Southern. The Pirates' Jim Barnes is shown at
the bottom of the photo.

Southwestern rally gives
flighlanders 55-50 victory
By Greg Bailey
: RACINE - The Southern Tor(lildoes seem to be on their way to
their fourth consecutive SV AC cage
i:rown after posting a convincing 83~7 win over the visiting North Gallia
Pirates Friday night. Senior Jack·
Duffy poured in 28 points and the
tornadoes shot a hot 51 percent from
(he floor, canning 36 of 71 attempts.
· Senior Dave Foreman had a fine
Right for the Tornadoes by clearing
the glass for nine of his team's 33
rebOUnds and netting 19 points. The
.in!y other Tornado to hit double
{.igures was junior Dale Teaford with
14 points. Each of those points came
in the third period when the hosts
were pulling away to put the game
on ice.
Duffy hit two baskets in the first
minute of the contest to give his
team a W lead before the Pirates
got on the lxlard with a tw~&gt;-pointer
by Tim Howell. With Southern
leading 8-4, the Pirates exploded for
unanswered points to take a I~
lead with3 :25 togo in the first period
on a bucket by Keith Payne.
; With 2:40 stiU remaining, Joe

six

Peck hit for two to give the Pirates
of Coach Ted Lehew their biggest
and last lead of the night, 14-10.
Southern then got two baskets from
Teaford, two from Duffy, and one
from the big center Foreman to take
a ~14lead shortly before the end of
the opening stanza.
North Gallia stayed within four to
eleven points through the first half,
but Southern seemeq to have control. The intermission showed
Southern on top, 3&amp;-27, and going
strong . Duffy pumped in 16 points in
that opening half to set the pace.
Southern had a strong third quarter that· ended 66-46, but in the
opening minutes of the final stanza,
the visitors cut the lead to 14 points.
But then the Tornadoes of Coach
Carl Wolfe took off and opened the
spread to 22 points to put the game
away.

Besides good field goal percentage, Southern hit II of 18 foul
shots, but had 19 turnovers. Kent
Wolfe had five assists in the game.
North Gallia put five men in doublt
figures, but no one could seem to
take cbarge. Jim Barnes, Payne,
and Peck each netted 12 markers

(

4 8 10 IJ .. 35

539 Upper River Rd.
In Kanauga

CAMERON SHOOTS- Gallia's Jeff Cameron (in center) flips in two
of his five points in this action photo Friday night. Blue Devil forward ·
Kent Price, left, ducks in order to avoid being hit by his teanunate. On left
is Wellston's Mike Massie (42). On right is Marion Spires (12) who tallied
13 po.lnts forWeUston, GAHS won, 83-66.

WINTER SPECIALI

Friday's high
school cage scores

50 Akron
"' . Coventry 69, Medina
Highland 61
Akron E Ilet 73, Akron Garfield 61
Akron Kenmore 69, Can. Cath. 58

Sunshine•s Kracklin
Dog Food Chunks
50 LB.................$9.00 ............ 61r DISCOUNT
25 LSS................$4.69 ............ 30' DISCOUNT

' Beavercreek 57, Centerville 54

AT

r~al mt o

70
ll

• Sizes from 148 to 313 cu._ft. (rated heaped boxes).
·
A-frames extend back to wheels. preventing box twistin g and jerking.

• Corrosion· resistant steel box sides on 4 small&amp;r mod- - -

els guaranteed for the lite of the spreader.
• High-quality , high- ~trenglh pintle chain used on
aprons on severa l made Is.
o

Slurry pans ano hydraulic endgates available lor liquid-type manures.
·

See

.

3RO

'

Ul

lor delo/11 . Finance plan• ilvallobte.

M~IGS EQUIPMENT
.,

PH: 992-2176

POMEROY, OHIO

Can. McKinley 60, Can. Glen Oak

Fairless35, W. Holmes33
Farmington 69, Bloomfield 66
Findlay 78, Marion Harding 53
Fireiands 77, Cuyahoga His. 57

Fori Frye93,

60

Frontier 65 Woodsfield 47
Geneva 61, conneaut 54

Georgetown 53, Cin. Country Day

38.

Girard 52, Canfield 48

Glenn 65, Philo 58
Goshen 74, WI II iamsburg 52
Graham 53, Spring·. Calh . 52
Grandview 58, Bexley 54
Granville 55, Utica 54, ot
Greenvi lie 76, Brookvi lie 59
Groveport 56, Chillicothe 38
t:tamilton Ross 52 , Lockland 50
Harrison 52, Cin. Wyoming ~9
Hebron Lakewood 80, Northr idge

50

69 SYCAMORE

'

Hillsboro 58, Circlevi lie 52
Holland Spring. 62, Mllbury Lake

59

ol

Cin .

75
Cin. Oak Hills 73, Cin. Anderson 44
Cln, Reading 74, Taylor 41
Cin. St. Rita 61 , St. Fr~ncis57
Cln. Summit 90, Cln. Seven Hills 42
Cln. Tall 56, Cln. WUhrow 52
Clear Fork 59, Loudonville 44
Cleve. Adams 63, Cleve. Marshall

SpecIall

$475

56

Cleve. Baptist Christ. 73, Elyria
Christ. 65
CleVe: Benedictine 77, Cleve. Lin·
coln-Wesl63·
Cleve. Collinwood 66, Cleve. East

Price Special
117. 60
83.50
129.18
109.00
So.98
43.20
. 76.75
64.35
105.59
89. 50
. 32.56
22.50 '
13.17
1 h20
16.42
13.90
• 18.97
16:25
45.00
37. 50
235.81
'199.00
281.64
240.00
396.27 ,335.00 .
790.00 660.00 ' .
95.37
79.50

.

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59 ,

Sug.
Price Specla 1
42.91
36.00
58.88
49.90
110.70 93.80
166.32 133.25
. 282.89 239.7 5

Cleve. Glenville 81, Cleve. Hayes
51 .
Cleve. Hay 90, Cleve. w. Tech 63 .
Cleve. Kenn&lt;'dy 72, Cleve. E. Tech
11
Cleve. Orange 82, Aurora 63
Cleile. Rhodes61, Cleve. South 54
Cleve. St. Ignatius 59, Cleve. St.
Jo..,ph58
Coldwater 56, Minster 49
Columbian. Crestview 45, Sebring
39
Col. Brookhliven 87, Col. East 58
Col. Centennial 60, Col. Briggs 47
Col. Central 81, Col. Franklin His .

24"

Nelson Bowl

SUG.

~~E

CENTRAL .SOYA 'Of
.l'

Franklin 72, Edgewood 59

Franklin Monroe 70, Twin Valley
N. 53
Fredericktown 87, Crestline 73

Hudson 71 , Re\'ere 53
lndependence62 , Columbia 61
Indian Hill76, Deer Park 57

·,

GALLIPOLIS

39

Col. Jndependence 61, Col. East·
moor49
Col. Mifflin 58, Col. 8eechcr0fl40
col, ·Northland 58 Col. Whetstone
41
Col. St. Charles 78, &lt;;ol. OeSales S3
Cot : South 73, Col. Marion·
Franklln 55
Col. Watterson 55, Col. Harlley 411
Col. Wehrle 68, Col. Ready 55
col. Wesl55, Col.-Walnut.Ridge 48
Col. Westland .54, Gaharina 53 .
convoy crestview 70, pauld ing 64
Copley 67, Green 53
Cortland Lakeview 60, Badger 46
covington $2, Miami E. 44 ' .
Cuvllhqge Falls f/, Stow 53
.D~y.le11110nt85, Dey. F alrvltw67
, Day. Duilbar.59, Day. t&lt;1ser f1
Day. Northmont 56, w. Carrollton

SPECIAL

'118
R9P

Rotary Feeder
SPECIAL

'114

, INC.
446-7672
·r·-

Atlantic Coast Conference championship.

HARD-WORKIN'
FUN-LOVIN'
GAS-SAVIN'
PICKUP.

""

RAM TOUGH

SEE IT SOON!
8 IN

1980 DODGED-50

STOCK ~

... and it's Ram Tough!
lf'ICLUDII'IG:
I

• Tinted glus
• Tubular tie-down b•n
In pickup bo•
• AM radio
• Cargo lamp

• Power front disc brakes

2-lit~r 4-cylinder

MCA-JET

• Whitewall bias-ply tires
• Adjustable steering column
• Right and left black racing
type mlrron

Silent Shaft Engine
• 4-speed manual transmission
• 15.1 gallon fuel tank

BuUt In Japan by fOUtsublshl, Imported by Cbrysler, and sold
exclusively through a nationwide group of Dodge Dealers.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

assistant coach under Dietzel at
South Carolina, would be given a
four-year contract and would retain
all ol Rein's assistants.
Dietzel had promised the ninemember executive conunittee a
status report on moves to find a successor to Rein, a passenger on a
private plane which veered 1,500
miles df course and crashed
mysteriously into the Atlantic
Ocean.
There were several different
nunors on a successor, ranging
from Stovall to Dietzel himself, the
coach of l.SU's 1958 national championship team.
Some reports said whoever is
given the difficult task would be a[)pointed only on an interim basis probably through the 1980 season while Dietzel again tries to get an
established major college coach.
Regardless ol the choice, it I!BS
expected that the ll·man sW!
assembled in the last stx weeks by
Rein would be retained .at least
through the 1980 season.
Dietzel said little about his plans
'Friday and refused to speculate on
who might be called in to replace
Rein, Jlired Nov. 30after a year·long
search conducted by Dietzel. ·
University olficials said they
would try to move quickly to appoint
a successor in order to retain continuity in the program, which is in
the midst of recruiting.
Hired to replace Charlie McClendon, Rein had assembled a staff
- mostly assistants he had at North
Carolina State - and had signed 19
prep players to Southeastern Conference letters ol intent.
Rein, a 34-year-old former
wingback at Ohio State, came to

Jonathon Alder 74, Big Walnut 71
Kenston41, Chagrin FaJIS39
Kenton Ridge 37, Spring . NE 35

c

AUnt ORI ZED OEAI.fR

CHRYSLER
C ORPORATION

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

WANTS TO DRIVE YOU HAPPY!
AND WE CAN WITH ANEW BUICK OR NEW PONTIAC, OR NEW GMC'
TRUCK. COME IN AND WE WILl FIGURE APRICE FOR YOU THAT CAN
SAVE YOU MONEY.

A 1979 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR
STICKER PRICE '8443.65
SALE PRICE '6825.00
DISCOUNT OF '1618.65
TAX &amp; TITLE FEES NOT I'NCLUDED

A 1979 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR
STICKER PRICE 18238.00
SALE PRICE '6650.00
DISCOUNT OF '1588.00

\

JACK ROUSH
MOTOR CAR, INC.
-

Keystone 71, Medina Buckeye 61

THI LAIIGfST USID CAll DfAUII, IN THI Till-COUNTY A lilA ••• OVER $300,000 IN STOCK · LA Tf MODEL USID CARS, TRUCKS,
VANS AND 4X4's, AlL SfiiVICfD PIIIOII 'tO DfLIVfiiT.

Lexington 72, Ontario 46

Licking Val. 16, Newark Cath. 59
lisbon 56 , Stanton 45
Lorain 58, Elyria 53

1977 CHEVROLET

Lorain Clearview85, Brookside 55
Lorain King 66, Fremont Ross 60

1977 IIERCURY

OOIIET

CAPRICE ClASSIC

Lorain Southview62, Akron Hoban

4 door, whi tt!. lOS \1'·1. •utom•tic,
p.s ., p. b., ••r . 111 1 wheel, s-peed
control , AM r•Oio, body Skit'
molding\

Lucas87, E . Knox 56
Madison 60, Paines\'ille Riverside

Sedan · lUIOO miles.. :m
v 1, .;,uto. P .$ . P . B., air, T U
lone pelnl, vllffl root. tape
s lrlpn, rc.d .,._., WSW
4.dr

48
Madison Butler 55, Blanchester SO
Mans .

Malabar

70,

Fenwick

68,

Wh llt!. 7000 miiH . \l'.fi qtne.
.Julo. P.S. AM Radle, WSW,
de l u~ e whee l cowr . Bod,stdl!!

ll,DOO miles. • C'l'l

•·'P"d

P S AM rltdio, rm~d whetll ,
viny l bol:fyslcM mold l ~. cloth

motdi~,

lr.l erlor

2 • 1979
FORO LTD'S

Prl!m let W•oon ll ' V-1, autc.
P.S. P.B. ai r , rocl rack, spill
ben ch sea1. spud ((lnl rcl
AN, .FM s t ereo l ·lrat.,, wlre
whe.:ls,
r e~~r
window

1978 CHEVROLET
CAMARO

2·Df' . Blue 01 cr-e•rne. J02 V.I .
IUIC, P .S. P . B. •lr bodyt.lde
mo ldings, AM Radio , full
w'-1 rovers. 1flftd control,
tape stripes, W5W Rildlals.

.Jtuo. P.S. P . B. AM F M,
buc.,e t sl!•t, contole tape

'5995 .

1979 OIEVROLET
BLAZER

New

con!loi:Me, buckcl M•l ,
. . _ . (XJIVII!I",

1

Maroon l ll Auto. P.S. P .R.

.,.._,:t.

roll bar. 11MJ9K. mud &amp; snow

llrH, whl te spolle
swing lock , mirrors

delu~e

slr lpn , 11lr , rOIId whee il.
bQ(tysitte moldif19 1.

·~~5 . lo• '5195

4995

1979 PLYMOUTH
TRAIL' DUST£R

K-$, Wh ite &amp;- Yellow tu.Jone
Dllinl Che:venne~ g . •l r auto.
P .S. P .8 . 11•ugu. pcwer
windows, power 6oor lockl.

ReG . 11.000 miles, JOS V.I .

Your Choice

Was

JACK ROUSH, 0£1 HAMMACK, IOBIY ROUSH. GARY RUDOLPH ,
JEFF CLARK, JIMMY SPENCER , I TOMMY RAYBURN .

4· '?r . Autc, P :i. P · B. a lr &amp;ql ns CID ttn(Ji~. 11 .000
mtln , vinyl rcot . boct Vllcle moldings, WSW, bh.e
mel. AM Radio

Must Seel

SHARP!

Morgan 57, Crooksville 53
Mt. Healthy 58, Cln. Turpin 52 .
Mt. Vernon 39, Delaware 37
Napoleon 83, Oregon Clay 46
l&gt;lallonal Trial 58, PrebJe Shawnee
56
l&gt;leisonvllle York 51, Federal
Hocking34
l&gt;lewark 65, Lancaster 48
. !&gt;Iewton Falls 60, Vienna Mathews

1977 FORD

197~

FORJ
BRONCO

BRONCO
Yel~ JJ.QQCI

1n11es.

~02

mud
~

srmw ilrO!'!l. de!u•e
coYei'S, toe .. OtiT hUb ! ,

&amp;.

.

Go. In ~ha Snow
I
.

A3 . . '

t.,.

11 ........ n.-.mlle Hntict
~«f

• .,.............
CM'I. ti we 'dc!fl 't
Nw ,...c.ar« trwdi Itt sf«k
..... ,... "filii fwt

....-. v.-

(,

~" · c~

, •.

Ok _ J11dl! , 1,.

IJ .I

!Mi lo, P .S. P .B. AM Redlo,

"*'t. ,,
2 t. u

'

H&gt;f . Bllll or Copper me t. Alite f' ·S p . 8, elr 6 cy i
ns C IO engine. vil'lyl roo l. bod.,.:stne motdingl.
. WSW, AM R!ldlo

You1 Choice

Was

'6495.Now

'589 5 ·

8 1..,. met U.OOO. l02. Auto,
• P s . P .8 . 8odystde motctingl.
cloth in t..,.lor, AM radio.
•

·~N5 Now 15895

2 -1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE'S
Was '57J5

White, 11.000 . l05 V 1. auto,
P. S... P 8 . air. bOdySide'
mol04ng, road whftls .

1978 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

~. 000 mllfl, 4 cyl . Auto. P .S.
Air. floor .nm. boc:t•t Mats.
1apt
llrlpel,
bodyslde,
molctJngs, AM Radio.

Now 14695

Was '5795.

all lernlln l ir••·

1979 OIEVROLET
CAMARO

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE

tlnhld glan. lull cafJ)el.

.

"

1980 CHEVROLET
CITATION

CITATION

1978 PLYMOUTH
VOLARE

defroster.

Middletown Madison 55, Blan·
chester SO
Midpark 43, Berea 42
Mineral Ridge 51, Lowellville 47
Mingo 18, Buckeye N . 54
Mississinawa Val. 64 , Tri·Village ·
53

1980 CHEVROLET

eOIL. CHANGE - ALL FILTERS, LUBE
•IRAKE5 INSPECTED. WORN PARTS REPAIRED OR REPLACED
eEXHAU5T INSPECTED FO. LEAKS . 8ROKIEN HANGER S
Rf:PU.CED
•FROIIIT EJIIID COMPLETELY CHECKED OUT, BALL JOINTS. TIE
ROO ENDS, PITMAN .t.RM, IDLER ARM
eSHOCKS CHECKED &amp; litEPLACED IF NEEDED.
eCHECK OPERATION OF .(LL LIGHTS

New

Philadelphia 69
Maple His. 69, Bedford 52
Mapleton 62 , Collins W. Reserve 55
Maplewood 66, Lordstown 55
Mariemonl62, Loveland 61
Marysville 50, Col. Academy 47
Massillon Perry 54, Marllngton 52,
ot
Mayfield 68, Willoughby 5. 47
Maysville 75, New Lexington 58
McComb 80, Llberly Benton 59
McDonald 51, Columbiana 43, ot
Medina 66, Olmsted Falls 59
Mentor 17, Euclld 66
Miami Trace 39, Wilmington 26
Middletown 80, Hamilton Taft 59
Middletown
Miami #I

CARS THOROI.I,GHLY INSPE CTED BY SERVICE TE CH NICIANS
- JEFF CLARK - ROGER CLARK I JIMMY SPENCER

·fl~s•••'3395

Madison Plains 59, Teays Val. 58
Mansfield 73 , sandusky 63

l&gt;lorctonla 52, Roo5evel148
1&gt;1. C'anton 66, Ma!SSillon J'acksoh 54
, 1&gt;1. Rldgevlll&lt;t56, Welllnglpn 51
·
Sl
'
Day. l&gt;larthridge 106, T.lpp City 70 , •. l&gt;lorthview 58, Fostoria 53 . •
!&gt;lorton 92, Field 6~
Day. ROlli 74, Day. While62 ..
NQrwayne82, HJI!sdale59
Day. Stebbins 72, Fairll)ontw. 60 t
Oberlin 60, Mldvlew 57
oar.· Wrlght67, Day. Sllv·Pat57
Olentengy 79, 1&gt;1 . union 66'
Delphos St. John's 59, Otrawa
Orrville 63, Trlway·55 ·
·
Glandorf 52 '

'

A '(~·,~· ~

Gallipolis Ally. William
Eacbus was a roommate ol
Loulstaoa State UDivenlty Football Coacb Bo Rein wbeo the lwo
played football for Coach Woody
Hayes at Oblo Stale lo 19114 and
IH5.

LeBrae 73, Youngs . Liberty 51

60

in four season, taking his teams to
two Low! games and winning an

Indian Valley 1&gt;1 . 50, Hiland 58
Indian ValleyS . 49, Jeweii·Scio 38
Jefferson 56, Fairport Harding 55,

Cin. Norwood 89, Cin. Northwest

1 Door Hog f:eeder
2 Door Hog Feeder
4 Door Hog Feeder
8 Door Hqg Feeder
16 Ooor Hog Ffleder

E812 2 Door Electric Hog Walerer
CSE Calf &amp; Sheep Waterer
RE224 100 Gal. Stock Tank
RE2526 180 Gal. Stock Tank
RE3428 320 Gal. Stock Tank
H408 Stock Tank Heater
C-2 Pig Creep Feeder
C-3 Pig Creep Feeder
C·4 Pig Creep Feeder
. 3406. All Purpose Rolind Hog Feeder
CC-50 Calf Creep Feeder •
CC·lOO Calf Creep Feeder
CC-200 Calf Creeper Feeder
CF-130
Feeder

Fort Loramie 62, Botkins .44
Fort Reco'IJery 91, Mendon Union

40

Greenhills47, ol
Cln; LaSalle 66, Cin. Purcell 50
Cin. Moeller 44, Cin. eJder 41
Cln: 1&gt;1. College Hill 71, Cin. St.
Bernard49

HS 1

Beall~ville63

Fort Jennings 70, Columbus Grove

Can . South 58 , Louisville37
Can. Timken 15, Aquinas 60

Chrdon 65, Twinsburg 47
Cin .
Finneytown
.49 ,

-'

o

Brooklyn 86, S. Amherst 43
Brunswick l7, Strongsville 53
Buckeye Val. 78, New Albany 47
Buckeye W. 80, Bishop Donahue 70
canal Fullen I&gt;IW 55, Minerva 411
canal Winchester 72. Millersport

Cardington61, MI. Gilead 61
Carllsle68, Day. Oakwood 54
Carrollton 62, Claymont 57
Chanel65, Warrensville His. 53

SUG.
PRICE
1
571.47

the pattern you prefer.

64

Berne Union 76, Fisher Cath: 69
BlOOM Carroll 56, Amanda ·
Clearer eek 51
Bridgeport 69, Cadiz 53

4TH &amp; GRAPE IN

10 23 · 13 .. 55

You 're su re to lind th e spreader you nee d ·in this big In te rnational line-up of 6 high -performance models. The
sing le- b ~ate r unit has high-strength spring-steel paddles
with stagg e red cutting "bear claws" Ia lear and shred
packed and froze n chunk s thoroughly, then spread mate- ·

Fairfield 69, Cin. Printeton 54
Fairfield Union 73, Liberty Union

63

GALLIA ROLLER MILLS

9 17 11 13 .. 50

. International·
500 Series Spreaders

Name 411

Bellefontaine 70, Spring. Shawnee

Sizemore 1-1-3.- Totals. 20-IS·SS.
Bv Quarters :
9

E. Clinton65, Clinton Massie 54
E . Palestine 74, Beaver Local49
Elyria Cath . 50, Parma Holy

Akron Manchester 60, Tuscarawas

Val. 52
Akron Spring . 55, United Local 50
Alexander 66, Belpre 59
Allen East 64, Delphos Jefferson
41
Aller 79, Lima Calh. 56
Amherst 1l, Vermilion 70, ot
Anna 72, Fairlawn 10
Arcanum 81, Ansonia 69
Arlington 62, Hardin Northern 54
Ashtabula
Edgewood 54.
Ashtabula 53
Ashtabula Harbor 73, Ashtabula
. St. John 67
·Barberton 100, !&gt;Illes McKinley 70

Newberry 8·5 21; Baker 4·5·13;
Potter 3·4·10; Russell 1·0·2 and

S. Western

Dublin 60, W. Jefferson 53

Friday's Results

Ada61 , Lima Perry 53
Akron Buchtel61, Akron North 46
Akron Cen· Hower 90, Akron South

6;

Eastern

Dixie 87, Valley View 55
Dover 47, Ashland 45
Doylestown 63, Dalton 53

Ohio High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press

PIA
P2A
DL2
DL4
DL8

Adkins 0-0·0; Cremea ns 0·0·0; I an· '

1 8 6 11 ·J2

SWISHER IMPLEMENT

-----.

as

Meigs
Jackson

We're offering from Jan. 12 - Feb. 1
the factory -suggested prices of our TROY · BIL T111 Roto
Tillers, immediate delivery on all models and a very
special Lay-Away plan for those Who prefer to take
delivery later this Spring. Under the plan, only 10%
down is required at this time; balance due on del ivery .
•Offer expires midnight, Feb . 1, 1080.

Southwestern (55) -- Burleson 3·0-

Bear claw paddles
assure fine
shredding,
even spreading

: JACKSON - The Meigs Marauder
Reserves, just like the varsity, seem
io be a steadily improving baU Club
4s they nailed host Jackson Friday
night for a ~32 SEOAL win.
; Jeff Wayland poured in 14 points
and Randy Murray added 12 to lead
(he Meigs atta.:k. Meigs is now 3-4
inside the SEOAL this season.
: In the opening minutes, Jackson
· fook a iHl lead as Meigs missed their
lirst eight shots. But the scrappy
Marauders fought back to a 1~10 tie
the second period began and
6-aUed just 1!&gt;-12 at intermission. At
(he end of three periods, Meigs had a
22-21 edge and opened a five point
lead early in the final stanza.
Jackson knotted the score, but in the
9losing minutes Meigs broke back on
lop·to squeeze out the ivin.
: Meigs hit on 16 of 41 shots for 39
~rcent and earned 3 ci' 6 free
IJ!rows. Jackson hit 12 ol27 shots.for
~ percent and made good on 8 of 14
loU! shots.
~ Box score:
' MEIGS RESERVES Ill) ..
Wayland , 7·0·14; Edwards 2·0·4;
Murray 6-0·12; Miller 0·1·1;
f(oval chik 1·1·3; Whaley 0·1·1;&lt;

• Score by Quarters :

Trailing 26-19 at the hall, Coach
Wayne Bergdoll's Highlanders
changed defense and took the baU inside offensively to score 23 points in
the third quarter comeback.
Offensively, Todd Baker and Dale
Newberry each combined to have a
good quarter in pacing the SoutbweStem raUy. Baker scored nine
points, Newberry add six and Jay
Burleson scored four.
Defensively, Southwestern switched from a zone to man-t1&gt;-man
then back to zone.
Newberry was the Highlanders'
leading point producer with 21.
Baker finished the night ·with 13
points and Shennan Potter had 10.
Leading Coach John Boston's
Eagles were Brian BlsseU and Steve
Dill with 16 and 12 points respectively.
Shooting-wise, Eastern hit 18 of 58
floor attempts for 31 percent asnd If
of 23 at the foul lines.
Southwestern sank 20 of 46 foor attempts for 43 percent and 15 of 27
free throws.
The Highlanders held a 42-31
rebounding edge.
Eastern won the preliminary tilt,
38-20. No game details were
available.
The win pushed Southwestern's
season record to 4-4 while Eastern
dropped toJ-7.
Southwestern hosts Eastern ol
Pike County Tuesday night then
goes to Kyger Creek Friday.
Eastern played Federal Hocking
Saturday night.
SOUTHER !&gt;I (8J) ·· Duffy 14·0·28;
Wolfe 1·0.2; Teaford 7·0·14; Fitch I·
0·2; Foreman 8·3·19; Wolfe 1·2-4;
Curfman 1·0·2; ReesO·I-1; Wolfe 2·2·
6: Mcl&gt;lickle 1·3-5. Totals 36-11-83.
I&gt;IORTH GALLI A (66) .. T. Howell
2·0·4; Miller 2-1-5; S. Howell 5·1•11;
Barnes 6·0·12; Payne 4-4-12; Peck 6·
0·12; Berry 5·1·11. TolalsJ0-7-67.
Score by quarters:
N. Galli a
16 II 19 21 .. 67 '
Southern
20 16 30 17.. 83

h

BATON ROUGE, La . (AP) - An
executive committee of the
Louisiana State University Board of
Supervisors was to meet Saturday·to
p0511ibly hear a recommendation for
a new footbaU coach.
•
The conunittee was to meet at 10
a.m. on the LSU campus as the
university was expected to move
quickly to find a successor to Bo
Rein, apparently kJlled in a plane
crash Friday. Officials continued
their search Saturday for the
missing LSU mentor.
Most of the speculation centered
on Jerry StovaU, a ~year-old former Tiger great and star defensive
back with the National FootbaU
League's St. Louis Cardinals.
Stovall was an assistant on the
LSU staff for five years before
becoming a top assistant to Tiger
Athletic Director Paul Dietzel.
One report said Stovall, the 1962
HeUun8n Trophy runnerup and an

Monday night.

HOG SCALE

'

narell i 0·0·0; Jew ell 0·0·0; Wamsley
Q'O·O. Tolals 16·3·Sl.
1 JACKSOI&gt;I RESERVES (J2J ..
Morris 3·9·6; Meadows 0·0.0; Collins
4·1-9.; Davis 4·4·12; fenick 1·1·3;
$1ggs 0·2·2. Tolals 12-8·32.

Thejunlorhigh~playSou!Jiem

SPRING FORA
NEW TILLER
NOW!

while' Scott HoweU and Dan Berry
each added 11. Peck bad 11 af. his
team's 25 rebounds, and the team
had a grand total of 28 turnovers.
Otsego 75, Genoa 65
Ottawa Hills 75 ~ N . Baltimore 50
Payne and HoweU both had seven
Ottoville 75, Continental 51
assists. The Pimtes hit on 37 of 67
Oxford Talawanda 56, Lebanon 47
shots for 45 percent and sank 7 of 16
Paint Val . 54, Westfall 53
Parkway 62, l&gt;lew Knoxville 55
free throws.
Parmal1 , Lakewood 46
The Southern Reserves also kept
Patriot SW 55, Reedsville Eastern
on top in the SV AC race with a hard- · 50
Peebles64, Lynchburg Clay 35
fought ~ overtime win over the
Perry 59, Ledgemonl47
Baby Pirates. The game was tied 46Perrysburg 74, Bowling Green 43
all at the end of regulation time.
Petersburg Spring . 59, Berlin w.
Reserve 48
Southern actlially won the game at
Pic kerington 48, Logan Elm •s
the foul circle as North Gallia had
Piqua 52, Park Hills 46
more field goals, 22-18. Southern
Pymatuning Val. 64, Grand Val . 56
sank a fine 18 of 22 free throws while
Ravenna 691 Tallmadge 61. ot
Reynoldsburg a•, Whitehall73
North Gallia earned just 6 ol15.
Richard Wolfe paced the winners
with 14 points while Alan Pape added nine. Greg Dee! and Bruce
Shriver had 14 and II points, respectively, for the Pirates.
EASTERI&gt;I (lOl .. Bissell 8·0·16;
Cole 3·2·8; Mathews 1·5·7; Dill 4·4·12
and Sprague2·3·7. Tolals18·14-SO.

.tittle Marauders

.
irlp Jackson 35-32

36-19. VOilt!l, Waugh and Napier had
10 points each. Swain led Hannan
Trace with 10. In the eighth grade
Wt, Barnes dumped in 17 points to
lead Hannan Trace to a 32-30 victory. J . D. Bradbury led KC with 16
points.
The loss left KC with a 4-2 record.

Vegetable Gardeners!

mark.

i.'&gt;U from North Carolina State
where he compiled a 27-17-1 record

Continue
search for
mentor

HT girls junior high team tri;umphs

1974 VOLKSWAGEN
KARMANN GHIA

'4695

m iles, lS l V .l ,

P.S. P .8 . •·'f.INCI, 111r , AM-FM
llracl&lt; . roll b,V, rear !.1!11.
white spoka wlil!eiL mud &amp;
1now lire1, gu~s: locll out
hubs, li.,e ~ . Tinte-d~ Glass

1978 PLYMOUTH VOLARE'

:U ,OOO m lll!s. • · Jp~cl . AM
R•dlo, u lr• , ll'larp . l.OCtl
Dwl'lllr .

4·Dr . Blue met AulD P:S. P.B, Air . JU C ID V·l vl n~i

pa~Mnptr ,

riCMo.

•

spMd . AM

r u.tone , .Int .

roo t. body s ide moldings. WSW tires. AM radio,
iJ,OOD moles.

NICE I

r

Was '4695 . .

Was

'3695 . No• 13 15

low 13795

O

Wls
'1600),
'2l95.11ow

See · Deb Hammack. Gary Rudolph. Bobby Roush, Jack Ro.ush or Oll1e Aikins

,. J_ACK RQUSH MOTOR CAR, INC •
675-5045

., •

·

ltan4anon, -w. Yo.

�.~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swl&lt;lay, Jan. 13,

().7-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday ,.Jan. 13,1980

1980

Southern in impressive win
over North Gallia, 83 to 6 7

· CHESHIRE - Hann8n Trace's
junior high girls ' team edged Kyger
Creek's girls' squad, ~16 in an
overtime Thursilily night. Johnson
led the winners with 10 points. She
had a basket during the overtime.
Stitt had two foul shots in the overtime.
Kyger Creek's seventh grade
boys' team defeated Hannan Trace,

•

PATRIOT - Southwestern eru[)ted for 23 points in the third quarter
here Fridy night to score a comefrom-behind~ SVAC victory over
Eastern ol Meigs Couilty.
The victory, coupled with
Southern's win over North Gallia,
vaults the Highlanders into second
place in the SV AC with a 3-lleague

1

!'REPARED TO SHOOT - North Gallia 's Scott
HoweU (41) prepares to shoot a jwnper over the out-

stretched anns of Dale Teaford (42 ) in Friday's SVAC
game at Southern. The Pirates' Jim Barnes is shown at
the bottom of the photo.

Southwestern rally gives
flighlanders 55-50 victory
By Greg Bailey
: RACINE - The Southern Tor(lildoes seem to be on their way to
their fourth consecutive SV AC cage
i:rown after posting a convincing 83~7 win over the visiting North Gallia
Pirates Friday night. Senior Jack·
Duffy poured in 28 points and the
tornadoes shot a hot 51 percent from
(he floor, canning 36 of 71 attempts.
· Senior Dave Foreman had a fine
Right for the Tornadoes by clearing
the glass for nine of his team's 33
rebOUnds and netting 19 points. The
.in!y other Tornado to hit double
{.igures was junior Dale Teaford with
14 points. Each of those points came
in the third period when the hosts
were pulling away to put the game
on ice.
Duffy hit two baskets in the first
minute of the contest to give his
team a W lead before the Pirates
got on the lxlard with a tw~&gt;-pointer
by Tim Howell. With Southern
leading 8-4, the Pirates exploded for
unanswered points to take a I~
lead with3 :25 togo in the first period
on a bucket by Keith Payne.
; With 2:40 stiU remaining, Joe

six

Peck hit for two to give the Pirates
of Coach Ted Lehew their biggest
and last lead of the night, 14-10.
Southern then got two baskets from
Teaford, two from Duffy, and one
from the big center Foreman to take
a ~14lead shortly before the end of
the opening stanza.
North Gallia stayed within four to
eleven points through the first half,
but Southern seemeq to have control. The intermission showed
Southern on top, 3&amp;-27, and going
strong . Duffy pumped in 16 points in
that opening half to set the pace.
Southern had a strong third quarter that· ended 66-46, but in the
opening minutes of the final stanza,
the visitors cut the lead to 14 points.
But then the Tornadoes of Coach
Carl Wolfe took off and opened the
spread to 22 points to put the game
away.

Besides good field goal percentage, Southern hit II of 18 foul
shots, but had 19 turnovers. Kent
Wolfe had five assists in the game.
North Gallia put five men in doublt
figures, but no one could seem to
take cbarge. Jim Barnes, Payne,
and Peck each netted 12 markers

(

4 8 10 IJ .. 35

539 Upper River Rd.
In Kanauga

CAMERON SHOOTS- Gallia's Jeff Cameron (in center) flips in two
of his five points in this action photo Friday night. Blue Devil forward ·
Kent Price, left, ducks in order to avoid being hit by his teanunate. On left
is Wellston's Mike Massie (42). On right is Marion Spires (12) who tallied
13 po.lnts forWeUston, GAHS won, 83-66.

WINTER SPECIALI

Friday's high
school cage scores

50 Akron
"' . Coventry 69, Medina
Highland 61
Akron E Ilet 73, Akron Garfield 61
Akron Kenmore 69, Can. Cath. 58

Sunshine•s Kracklin
Dog Food Chunks
50 LB.................$9.00 ............ 61r DISCOUNT
25 LSS................$4.69 ............ 30' DISCOUNT

' Beavercreek 57, Centerville 54

AT

r~al mt o

70
ll

• Sizes from 148 to 313 cu._ft. (rated heaped boxes).
·
A-frames extend back to wheels. preventing box twistin g and jerking.

• Corrosion· resistant steel box sides on 4 small&amp;r mod- - -

els guaranteed for the lite of the spreader.
• High-quality , high- ~trenglh pintle chain used on
aprons on severa l made Is.
o

Slurry pans ano hydraulic endgates available lor liquid-type manures.
·

See

.

3RO

'

Ul

lor delo/11 . Finance plan• ilvallobte.

M~IGS EQUIPMENT
.,

PH: 992-2176

POMEROY, OHIO

Can. McKinley 60, Can. Glen Oak

Fairless35, W. Holmes33
Farmington 69, Bloomfield 66
Findlay 78, Marion Harding 53
Fireiands 77, Cuyahoga His. 57

Fori Frye93,

60

Frontier 65 Woodsfield 47
Geneva 61, conneaut 54

Georgetown 53, Cin. Country Day

38.

Girard 52, Canfield 48

Glenn 65, Philo 58
Goshen 74, WI II iamsburg 52
Graham 53, Spring·. Calh . 52
Grandview 58, Bexley 54
Granville 55, Utica 54, ot
Greenvi lie 76, Brookvi lie 59
Groveport 56, Chillicothe 38
t:tamilton Ross 52 , Lockland 50
Harrison 52, Cin. Wyoming ~9
Hebron Lakewood 80, Northr idge

50

69 SYCAMORE

'

Hillsboro 58, Circlevi lie 52
Holland Spring. 62, Mllbury Lake

59

ol

Cin .

75
Cin. Oak Hills 73, Cin. Anderson 44
Cln, Reading 74, Taylor 41
Cin. St. Rita 61 , St. Fr~ncis57
Cln. Summit 90, Cln. Seven Hills 42
Cln. Tall 56, Cln. WUhrow 52
Clear Fork 59, Loudonville 44
Cleve. Adams 63, Cleve. Marshall

SpecIall

$475

56

Cleve. Baptist Christ. 73, Elyria
Christ. 65
CleVe: Benedictine 77, Cleve. Lin·
coln-Wesl63·
Cleve. Collinwood 66, Cleve. East

Price Special
117. 60
83.50
129.18
109.00
So.98
43.20
. 76.75
64.35
105.59
89. 50
. 32.56
22.50 '
13.17
1 h20
16.42
13.90
• 18.97
16:25
45.00
37. 50
235.81
'199.00
281.64
240.00
396.27 ,335.00 .
790.00 660.00 ' .
95.37
79.50

.

"

t

59 ,

Sug.
Price Specla 1
42.91
36.00
58.88
49.90
110.70 93.80
166.32 133.25
. 282.89 239.7 5

Cleve. Glenville 81, Cleve. Hayes
51 .
Cleve. Hay 90, Cleve. w. Tech 63 .
Cleve. Kenn&lt;'dy 72, Cleve. E. Tech
11
Cleve. Orange 82, Aurora 63
Cleile. Rhodes61, Cleve. South 54
Cleve. St. Ignatius 59, Cleve. St.
Jo..,ph58
Coldwater 56, Minster 49
Columbian. Crestview 45, Sebring
39
Col. Brookhliven 87, Col. East 58
Col. Centennial 60, Col. Briggs 47
Col. Central 81, Col. Franklin His .

24"

Nelson Bowl

SUG.

~~E

CENTRAL .SOYA 'Of
.l'

Franklin 72, Edgewood 59

Franklin Monroe 70, Twin Valley
N. 53
Fredericktown 87, Crestline 73

Hudson 71 , Re\'ere 53
lndependence62 , Columbia 61
Indian Hill76, Deer Park 57

·,

GALLIPOLIS

39

Col. Jndependence 61, Col. East·
moor49
Col. Mifflin 58, Col. 8eechcr0fl40
col, ·Northland 58 Col. Whetstone
41
Col. St. Charles 78, &lt;;ol. OeSales S3
Cot : South 73, Col. Marion·
Franklln 55
Col. Watterson 55, Col. Harlley 411
Col. Wehrle 68, Col. Ready 55
col. Wesl55, Col.-Walnut.Ridge 48
Col. Westland .54, Gaharina 53 .
convoy crestview 70, pauld ing 64
Copley 67, Green 53
Cortland Lakeview 60, Badger 46
covington $2, Miami E. 44 ' .
Cuvllhqge Falls f/, Stow 53
.D~y.le11110nt85, Dey. F alrvltw67
, Day. Duilbar.59, Day. t&lt;1ser f1
Day. Northmont 56, w. Carrollton

SPECIAL

'118
R9P

Rotary Feeder
SPECIAL

'114

, INC.
446-7672
·r·-

Atlantic Coast Conference championship.

HARD-WORKIN'
FUN-LOVIN'
GAS-SAVIN'
PICKUP.

""

RAM TOUGH

SEE IT SOON!
8 IN

1980 DODGED-50

STOCK ~

... and it's Ram Tough!
lf'ICLUDII'IG:
I

• Tinted glus
• Tubular tie-down b•n
In pickup bo•
• AM radio
• Cargo lamp

• Power front disc brakes

2-lit~r 4-cylinder

MCA-JET

• Whitewall bias-ply tires
• Adjustable steering column
• Right and left black racing
type mlrron

Silent Shaft Engine
• 4-speed manual transmission
• 15.1 gallon fuel tank

BuUt In Japan by fOUtsublshl, Imported by Cbrysler, and sold
exclusively through a nationwide group of Dodge Dealers.

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

assistant coach under Dietzel at
South Carolina, would be given a
four-year contract and would retain
all ol Rein's assistants.
Dietzel had promised the ninemember executive conunittee a
status report on moves to find a successor to Rein, a passenger on a
private plane which veered 1,500
miles df course and crashed
mysteriously into the Atlantic
Ocean.
There were several different
nunors on a successor, ranging
from Stovall to Dietzel himself, the
coach of l.SU's 1958 national championship team.
Some reports said whoever is
given the difficult task would be a[)pointed only on an interim basis probably through the 1980 season while Dietzel again tries to get an
established major college coach.
Regardless ol the choice, it I!BS
expected that the ll·man sW!
assembled in the last stx weeks by
Rein would be retained .at least
through the 1980 season.
Dietzel said little about his plans
'Friday and refused to speculate on
who might be called in to replace
Rein, Jlired Nov. 30after a year·long
search conducted by Dietzel. ·
University olficials said they
would try to move quickly to appoint
a successor in order to retain continuity in the program, which is in
the midst of recruiting.
Hired to replace Charlie McClendon, Rein had assembled a staff
- mostly assistants he had at North
Carolina State - and had signed 19
prep players to Southeastern Conference letters ol intent.
Rein, a 34-year-old former
wingback at Ohio State, came to

Jonathon Alder 74, Big Walnut 71
Kenston41, Chagrin FaJIS39
Kenton Ridge 37, Spring . NE 35

c

AUnt ORI ZED OEAI.fR

CHRYSLER
C ORPORATION

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

WANTS TO DRIVE YOU HAPPY!
AND WE CAN WITH ANEW BUICK OR NEW PONTIAC, OR NEW GMC'
TRUCK. COME IN AND WE WILl FIGURE APRICE FOR YOU THAT CAN
SAVE YOU MONEY.

A 1979 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR
STICKER PRICE '8443.65
SALE PRICE '6825.00
DISCOUNT OF '1618.65
TAX &amp; TITLE FEES NOT I'NCLUDED

A 1979 BUICK LESABRE 2 DR
STICKER PRICE 18238.00
SALE PRICE '6650.00
DISCOUNT OF '1588.00

\

JACK ROUSH
MOTOR CAR, INC.
-

Keystone 71, Medina Buckeye 61

THI LAIIGfST USID CAll DfAUII, IN THI Till-COUNTY A lilA ••• OVER $300,000 IN STOCK · LA Tf MODEL USID CARS, TRUCKS,
VANS AND 4X4's, AlL SfiiVICfD PIIIOII 'tO DfLIVfiiT.

Lexington 72, Ontario 46

Licking Val. 16, Newark Cath. 59
lisbon 56 , Stanton 45
Lorain 58, Elyria 53

1977 CHEVROLET

Lorain Clearview85, Brookside 55
Lorain King 66, Fremont Ross 60

1977 IIERCURY

OOIIET

CAPRICE ClASSIC

Lorain Southview62, Akron Hoban

4 door, whi tt!. lOS \1'·1. •utom•tic,
p.s ., p. b., ••r . 111 1 wheel, s-peed
control , AM r•Oio, body Skit'
molding\

Lucas87, E . Knox 56
Madison 60, Paines\'ille Riverside

Sedan · lUIOO miles.. :m
v 1, .;,uto. P .$ . P . B., air, T U
lone pelnl, vllffl root. tape
s lrlpn, rc.d .,._., WSW
4.dr

48
Madison Butler 55, Blanchester SO
Mans .

Malabar

70,

Fenwick

68,

Wh llt!. 7000 miiH . \l'.fi qtne.
.Julo. P.S. AM Radle, WSW,
de l u~ e whee l cowr . Bod,stdl!!

ll,DOO miles. • C'l'l

•·'P"d

P S AM rltdio, rm~d whetll ,
viny l bol:fyslcM mold l ~. cloth

motdi~,

lr.l erlor

2 • 1979
FORO LTD'S

Prl!m let W•oon ll ' V-1, autc.
P.S. P.B. ai r , rocl rack, spill
ben ch sea1. spud ((lnl rcl
AN, .FM s t ereo l ·lrat.,, wlre
whe.:ls,
r e~~r
window

1978 CHEVROLET
CAMARO

2·Df' . Blue 01 cr-e•rne. J02 V.I .
IUIC, P .S. P . B. •lr bodyt.lde
mo ldings, AM Radio , full
w'-1 rovers. 1flftd control,
tape stripes, W5W Rildlals.

.Jtuo. P.S. P . B. AM F M,
buc.,e t sl!•t, contole tape

'5995 .

1979 OIEVROLET
BLAZER

New

con!loi:Me, buckcl M•l ,
. . _ . (XJIVII!I",

1

Maroon l ll Auto. P.S. P .R.

.,.._,:t.

roll bar. 11MJ9K. mud &amp; snow

llrH, whl te spolle
swing lock , mirrors

delu~e

slr lpn , 11lr , rOIId whee il.
bQ(tysitte moldif19 1.

·~~5 . lo• '5195

4995

1979 PLYMOUTH
TRAIL' DUST£R

K-$, Wh ite &amp;- Yellow tu.Jone
Dllinl Che:venne~ g . •l r auto.
P .S. P .8 . 11•ugu. pcwer
windows, power 6oor lockl.

ReG . 11.000 miles, JOS V.I .

Your Choice

Was

JACK ROUSH, 0£1 HAMMACK, IOBIY ROUSH. GARY RUDOLPH ,
JEFF CLARK, JIMMY SPENCER , I TOMMY RAYBURN .

4· '?r . Autc, P :i. P · B. a lr &amp;ql ns CID ttn(Ji~. 11 .000
mtln , vinyl rcot . boct Vllcle moldings, WSW, bh.e
mel. AM Radio

Must Seel

SHARP!

Morgan 57, Crooksville 53
Mt. Healthy 58, Cln. Turpin 52 .
Mt. Vernon 39, Delaware 37
Napoleon 83, Oregon Clay 46
l&gt;lallonal Trial 58, PrebJe Shawnee
56
l&gt;leisonvllle York 51, Federal
Hocking34
l&gt;lewark 65, Lancaster 48
. !&gt;Iewton Falls 60, Vienna Mathews

1977 FORD

197~

FORJ
BRONCO

BRONCO
Yel~ JJ.QQCI

1n11es.

~02

mud
~

srmw ilrO!'!l. de!u•e
coYei'S, toe .. OtiT hUb ! ,

&amp;.

.

Go. In ~ha Snow
I
.

A3 . . '

t.,.

11 ........ n.-.mlle Hntict
~«f

• .,.............
CM'I. ti we 'dc!fl 't
Nw ,...c.ar« trwdi Itt sf«k
..... ,... "filii fwt

....-. v.-

(,

~" · c~

, •.

Ok _ J11dl! , 1,.

IJ .I

!Mi lo, P .S. P .B. AM Redlo,

"*'t. ,,
2 t. u

'

H&gt;f . Bllll or Copper me t. Alite f' ·S p . 8, elr 6 cy i
ns C IO engine. vil'lyl roo l. bod.,.:stne motdingl.
. WSW, AM R!ldlo

You1 Choice

Was

'6495.Now

'589 5 ·

8 1..,. met U.OOO. l02. Auto,
• P s . P .8 . 8odystde motctingl.
cloth in t..,.lor, AM radio.
•

·~N5 Now 15895

2 -1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE'S
Was '57J5

White, 11.000 . l05 V 1. auto,
P. S... P 8 . air. bOdySide'
mol04ng, road whftls .

1978 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

~. 000 mllfl, 4 cyl . Auto. P .S.
Air. floor .nm. boc:t•t Mats.
1apt
llrlpel,
bodyslde,
molctJngs, AM Radio.

Now 14695

Was '5795.

all lernlln l ir••·

1979 OIEVROLET
CAMARO

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

1979 PLYMOUTH VOLARE

tlnhld glan. lull cafJ)el.

.

"

1980 CHEVROLET
CITATION

CITATION

1978 PLYMOUTH
VOLARE

defroster.

Middletown Madison 55, Blan·
chester SO
Midpark 43, Berea 42
Mineral Ridge 51, Lowellville 47
Mingo 18, Buckeye N . 54
Mississinawa Val. 64 , Tri·Village ·
53

1980 CHEVROLET

eOIL. CHANGE - ALL FILTERS, LUBE
•IRAKE5 INSPECTED. WORN PARTS REPAIRED OR REPLACED
eEXHAU5T INSPECTED FO. LEAKS . 8ROKIEN HANGER S
Rf:PU.CED
•FROIIIT EJIIID COMPLETELY CHECKED OUT, BALL JOINTS. TIE
ROO ENDS, PITMAN .t.RM, IDLER ARM
eSHOCKS CHECKED &amp; litEPLACED IF NEEDED.
eCHECK OPERATION OF .(LL LIGHTS

New

Philadelphia 69
Maple His. 69, Bedford 52
Mapleton 62 , Collins W. Reserve 55
Maplewood 66, Lordstown 55
Mariemonl62, Loveland 61
Marysville 50, Col. Academy 47
Massillon Perry 54, Marllngton 52,
ot
Mayfield 68, Willoughby 5. 47
Maysville 75, New Lexington 58
McComb 80, Llberly Benton 59
McDonald 51, Columbiana 43, ot
Medina 66, Olmsted Falls 59
Mentor 17, Euclld 66
Miami Trace 39, Wilmington 26
Middletown 80, Hamilton Taft 59
Middletown
Miami #I

CARS THOROI.I,GHLY INSPE CTED BY SERVICE TE CH NICIANS
- JEFF CLARK - ROGER CLARK I JIMMY SPENCER

·fl~s•••'3395

Madison Plains 59, Teays Val. 58
Mansfield 73 , sandusky 63

l&gt;lorctonla 52, Roo5evel148
1&gt;1. C'anton 66, Ma!SSillon J'acksoh 54
, 1&gt;1. Rldgevlll&lt;t56, Welllnglpn 51
·
Sl
'
Day. l&gt;larthridge 106, T.lpp City 70 , •. l&gt;lorthview 58, Fostoria 53 . •
!&gt;lorton 92, Field 6~
Day. ROlli 74, Day. While62 ..
NQrwayne82, HJI!sdale59
Day. Stebbins 72, Fairll)ontw. 60 t
Oberlin 60, Mldvlew 57
oar.· Wrlght67, Day. Sllv·Pat57
Olentengy 79, 1&gt;1 . union 66'
Delphos St. John's 59, Otrawa
Orrville 63, Trlway·55 ·
·
Glandorf 52 '

'

A '(~·,~· ~

Gallipolis Ally. William
Eacbus was a roommate ol
Loulstaoa State UDivenlty Football Coacb Bo Rein wbeo the lwo
played football for Coach Woody
Hayes at Oblo Stale lo 19114 and
IH5.

LeBrae 73, Youngs . Liberty 51

60

in four season, taking his teams to
two Low! games and winning an

Indian Valley 1&gt;1 . 50, Hiland 58
Indian ValleyS . 49, Jeweii·Scio 38
Jefferson 56, Fairport Harding 55,

Cin. Norwood 89, Cin. Northwest

1 Door Hog f:eeder
2 Door Hog Feeder
4 Door Hog Feeder
8 Door Hqg Feeder
16 Ooor Hog Ffleder

E812 2 Door Electric Hog Walerer
CSE Calf &amp; Sheep Waterer
RE224 100 Gal. Stock Tank
RE2526 180 Gal. Stock Tank
RE3428 320 Gal. Stock Tank
H408 Stock Tank Heater
C-2 Pig Creep Feeder
C-3 Pig Creep Feeder
C·4 Pig Creep Feeder
. 3406. All Purpose Rolind Hog Feeder
CC-50 Calf Creep Feeder •
CC·lOO Calf Creep Feeder
CC-200 Calf Creeper Feeder
CF-130
Feeder

Fort Loramie 62, Botkins .44
Fort Reco'IJery 91, Mendon Union

40

Greenhills47, ol
Cln; LaSalle 66, Cin. Purcell 50
Cin. Moeller 44, Cin. eJder 41
Cln: 1&gt;1. College Hill 71, Cin. St.
Bernard49

HS 1

Beall~ville63

Fort Jennings 70, Columbus Grove

Can . South 58 , Louisville37
Can. Timken 15, Aquinas 60

Chrdon 65, Twinsburg 47
Cin .
Finneytown
.49 ,

-'

o

Brooklyn 86, S. Amherst 43
Brunswick l7, Strongsville 53
Buckeye Val. 78, New Albany 47
Buckeye W. 80, Bishop Donahue 70
canal Fullen I&gt;IW 55, Minerva 411
canal Winchester 72. Millersport

Cardington61, MI. Gilead 61
Carllsle68, Day. Oakwood 54
Carrollton 62, Claymont 57
Chanel65, Warrensville His. 53

SUG.
PRICE
1
571.47

the pattern you prefer.

64

Berne Union 76, Fisher Cath: 69
BlOOM Carroll 56, Amanda ·
Clearer eek 51
Bridgeport 69, Cadiz 53

4TH &amp; GRAPE IN

10 23 · 13 .. 55

You 're su re to lind th e spreader you nee d ·in this big In te rnational line-up of 6 high -performance models. The
sing le- b ~ate r unit has high-strength spring-steel paddles
with stagg e red cutting "bear claws" Ia lear and shred
packed and froze n chunk s thoroughly, then spread mate- ·

Fairfield 69, Cin. Printeton 54
Fairfield Union 73, Liberty Union

63

GALLIA ROLLER MILLS

9 17 11 13 .. 50

. International·
500 Series Spreaders

Name 411

Bellefontaine 70, Spring. Shawnee

Sizemore 1-1-3.- Totals. 20-IS·SS.
Bv Quarters :
9

E. Clinton65, Clinton Massie 54
E . Palestine 74, Beaver Local49
Elyria Cath . 50, Parma Holy

Akron Manchester 60, Tuscarawas

Val. 52
Akron Spring . 55, United Local 50
Alexander 66, Belpre 59
Allen East 64, Delphos Jefferson
41
Aller 79, Lima Calh. 56
Amherst 1l, Vermilion 70, ot
Anna 72, Fairlawn 10
Arcanum 81, Ansonia 69
Arlington 62, Hardin Northern 54
Ashtabula
Edgewood 54.
Ashtabula 53
Ashtabula Harbor 73, Ashtabula
. St. John 67
·Barberton 100, !&gt;Illes McKinley 70

Newberry 8·5 21; Baker 4·5·13;
Potter 3·4·10; Russell 1·0·2 and

S. Western

Dublin 60, W. Jefferson 53

Friday's Results

Ada61 , Lima Perry 53
Akron Buchtel61, Akron North 46
Akron Cen· Hower 90, Akron South

6;

Eastern

Dixie 87, Valley View 55
Dover 47, Ashland 45
Doylestown 63, Dalton 53

Ohio High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press

PIA
P2A
DL2
DL4
DL8

Adkins 0-0·0; Cremea ns 0·0·0; I an· '

1 8 6 11 ·J2

SWISHER IMPLEMENT

-----.

as

Meigs
Jackson

We're offering from Jan. 12 - Feb. 1
the factory -suggested prices of our TROY · BIL T111 Roto
Tillers, immediate delivery on all models and a very
special Lay-Away plan for those Who prefer to take
delivery later this Spring. Under the plan, only 10%
down is required at this time; balance due on del ivery .
•Offer expires midnight, Feb . 1, 1080.

Southwestern (55) -- Burleson 3·0-

Bear claw paddles
assure fine
shredding,
even spreading

: JACKSON - The Meigs Marauder
Reserves, just like the varsity, seem
io be a steadily improving baU Club
4s they nailed host Jackson Friday
night for a ~32 SEOAL win.
; Jeff Wayland poured in 14 points
and Randy Murray added 12 to lead
(he Meigs atta.:k. Meigs is now 3-4
inside the SEOAL this season.
: In the opening minutes, Jackson
· fook a iHl lead as Meigs missed their
lirst eight shots. But the scrappy
Marauders fought back to a 1~10 tie
the second period began and
6-aUed just 1!&gt;-12 at intermission. At
(he end of three periods, Meigs had a
22-21 edge and opened a five point
lead early in the final stanza.
Jackson knotted the score, but in the
9losing minutes Meigs broke back on
lop·to squeeze out the ivin.
: Meigs hit on 16 of 41 shots for 39
~rcent and earned 3 ci' 6 free
IJ!rows. Jackson hit 12 ol27 shots.for
~ percent and made good on 8 of 14
loU! shots.
~ Box score:
' MEIGS RESERVES Ill) ..
Wayland , 7·0·14; Edwards 2·0·4;
Murray 6-0·12; Miller 0·1·1;
f(oval chik 1·1·3; Whaley 0·1·1;&lt;

• Score by Quarters :

Trailing 26-19 at the hall, Coach
Wayne Bergdoll's Highlanders
changed defense and took the baU inside offensively to score 23 points in
the third quarter comeback.
Offensively, Todd Baker and Dale
Newberry each combined to have a
good quarter in pacing the SoutbweStem raUy. Baker scored nine
points, Newberry add six and Jay
Burleson scored four.
Defensively, Southwestern switched from a zone to man-t1&gt;-man
then back to zone.
Newberry was the Highlanders'
leading point producer with 21.
Baker finished the night ·with 13
points and Shennan Potter had 10.
Leading Coach John Boston's
Eagles were Brian BlsseU and Steve
Dill with 16 and 12 points respectively.
Shooting-wise, Eastern hit 18 of 58
floor attempts for 31 percent asnd If
of 23 at the foul lines.
Southwestern sank 20 of 46 foor attempts for 43 percent and 15 of 27
free throws.
The Highlanders held a 42-31
rebounding edge.
Eastern won the preliminary tilt,
38-20. No game details were
available.
The win pushed Southwestern's
season record to 4-4 while Eastern
dropped toJ-7.
Southwestern hosts Eastern ol
Pike County Tuesday night then
goes to Kyger Creek Friday.
Eastern played Federal Hocking
Saturday night.
SOUTHER !&gt;I (8J) ·· Duffy 14·0·28;
Wolfe 1·0.2; Teaford 7·0·14; Fitch I·
0·2; Foreman 8·3·19; Wolfe 1·2-4;
Curfman 1·0·2; ReesO·I-1; Wolfe 2·2·
6: Mcl&gt;lickle 1·3-5. Totals 36-11-83.
I&gt;IORTH GALLI A (66) .. T. Howell
2·0·4; Miller 2-1-5; S. Howell 5·1•11;
Barnes 6·0·12; Payne 4-4-12; Peck 6·
0·12; Berry 5·1·11. TolalsJ0-7-67.
Score by quarters:
N. Galli a
16 II 19 21 .. 67 '
Southern
20 16 30 17.. 83

h

BATON ROUGE, La . (AP) - An
executive committee of the
Louisiana State University Board of
Supervisors was to meet Saturday·to
p0511ibly hear a recommendation for
a new footbaU coach.
•
The conunittee was to meet at 10
a.m. on the LSU campus as the
university was expected to move
quickly to find a successor to Bo
Rein, apparently kJlled in a plane
crash Friday. Officials continued
their search Saturday for the
missing LSU mentor.
Most of the speculation centered
on Jerry StovaU, a ~year-old former Tiger great and star defensive
back with the National FootbaU
League's St. Louis Cardinals.
Stovall was an assistant on the
LSU staff for five years before
becoming a top assistant to Tiger
Athletic Director Paul Dietzel.
One report said Stovall, the 1962
HeUun8n Trophy runnerup and an

Monday night.

HOG SCALE

'

narell i 0·0·0; Jew ell 0·0·0; Wamsley
Q'O·O. Tolals 16·3·Sl.
1 JACKSOI&gt;I RESERVES (J2J ..
Morris 3·9·6; Meadows 0·0.0; Collins
4·1-9.; Davis 4·4·12; fenick 1·1·3;
$1ggs 0·2·2. Tolals 12-8·32.

Thejunlorhigh~playSou!Jiem

SPRING FORA
NEW TILLER
NOW!

while' Scott HoweU and Dan Berry
each added 11. Peck bad 11 af. his
team's 25 rebounds, and the team
had a grand total of 28 turnovers.
Otsego 75, Genoa 65
Ottawa Hills 75 ~ N . Baltimore 50
Payne and HoweU both had seven
Ottoville 75, Continental 51
assists. The Pimtes hit on 37 of 67
Oxford Talawanda 56, Lebanon 47
shots for 45 percent and sank 7 of 16
Paint Val . 54, Westfall 53
Parkway 62, l&gt;lew Knoxville 55
free throws.
Parmal1 , Lakewood 46
The Southern Reserves also kept
Patriot SW 55, Reedsville Eastern
on top in the SV AC race with a hard- · 50
Peebles64, Lynchburg Clay 35
fought ~ overtime win over the
Perry 59, Ledgemonl47
Baby Pirates. The game was tied 46Perrysburg 74, Bowling Green 43
all at the end of regulation time.
Petersburg Spring . 59, Berlin w.
Reserve 48
Southern actlially won the game at
Pic kerington 48, Logan Elm •s
the foul circle as North Gallia had
Piqua 52, Park Hills 46
more field goals, 22-18. Southern
Pymatuning Val. 64, Grand Val . 56
sank a fine 18 of 22 free throws while
Ravenna 691 Tallmadge 61. ot
Reynoldsburg a•, Whitehall73
North Gallia earned just 6 ol15.
Richard Wolfe paced the winners
with 14 points while Alan Pape added nine. Greg Dee! and Bruce
Shriver had 14 and II points, respectively, for the Pirates.
EASTERI&gt;I (lOl .. Bissell 8·0·16;
Cole 3·2·8; Mathews 1·5·7; Dill 4·4·12
and Sprague2·3·7. Tolals18·14-SO.

.tittle Marauders

.
irlp Jackson 35-32

36-19. VOilt!l, Waugh and Napier had
10 points each. Swain led Hannan
Trace with 10. In the eighth grade
Wt, Barnes dumped in 17 points to
lead Hannan Trace to a 32-30 victory. J . D. Bradbury led KC with 16
points.
The loss left KC with a 4-2 record.

Vegetable Gardeners!

mark.

i.'&gt;U from North Carolina State
where he compiled a 27-17-1 record

Continue
search for
mentor

HT girls junior high team tri;umphs

1974 VOLKSWAGEN
KARMANN GHIA

'4695

m iles, lS l V .l ,

P.S. P .8 . •·'f.INCI, 111r , AM-FM
llracl&lt; . roll b,V, rear !.1!11.
white spoka wlil!eiL mud &amp;
1now lire1, gu~s: locll out
hubs, li.,e ~ . Tinte-d~ Glass

1978 PLYMOUTH VOLARE'

:U ,OOO m lll!s. • · Jp~cl . AM
R•dlo, u lr• , ll'larp . l.OCtl
Dwl'lllr .

4·Dr . Blue met AulD P:S. P.B, Air . JU C ID V·l vl n~i

pa~Mnptr ,

riCMo.

•

spMd . AM

r u.tone , .Int .

roo t. body s ide moldings. WSW tires. AM radio,
iJ,OOD moles.

NICE I

r

Was '4695 . .

Was

'3695 . No• 13 15

low 13795

O

Wls
'1600),
'2l95.11ow

See · Deb Hammack. Gary Rudolph. Bobby Roush, Jack Ro.ush or Oll1e Aikins

,. J_ACK RQUSH MOTOR CAR, INC •
675-5045

., •

·

ltan4anon, -w. Yo.

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13,

~county

191W

.

agent's corner
you must take what is called a "Core
Examination" whlch is on safety,
reading labels, etc. , . and an
examination for each of the areas
you wish to become certified in and
pass these examinations. This license is good for three years. To get
recertified after your three years
are up you must rect!ive a minimum
of three hours of training. One hour
of this must be on the "Core" part
(safety, etc.) and two hours of
training in your appropriate areas.
MULTI-FWRA ROSE - To purchase Tordon (restricted) you must
pass the "Core" epmination plus
the Forage Crops examination.
The recertification programs to be
covered in tbe January Zl and
February 27 schools will be Core,
Grain and Cereal Crops, Forage
Crops, and Livestock and Livestock
Buildings. If you need tp be recertified, which is good for three years,
you have a two-year period to do
this. For example, if your card expires in February, 1981, you can
receive recertification for three
more years in 1980 or 1981.
On February '1:1 a man will be here
from The Ohio Department of
Agriculture to adnninister tests. This
will penni! those already certified to
add new categories and those

By John C. Rice
ExleDBlou Agent
Agrleullure

Meigs County
POMEROY - As mentioned
earlier, pesticide training is
~scheduled for January Zl and
' February 'J:I. Pesticide training and
recertification can become ·rather
involved. I will attempt to try and
exp1atn what is required. I am going
to confine my remarks to the private
applicator. A private applicator is a
producer who is applying pesticides
for himself whether it i.s on his
property or rented ground. If a
private applicator applies chemicals
for someont else and receives pay,
he Ls no longer a private applicator.
Only those chemicals which are
restricted require a license to purchase them. The private applicator
can be certified in imy one or all of
twelve areas : (1) Grain and cereal
crops; (2) Forage Crops; {3) Field
Vegetables and Specialty Crops
(Tobacco); (4) Fruit Crops; (5) Ornamentals and Turf Crops ; (6)
Greenhouse Crops; (7) Forest
Crops; (8) Livestock and Livestock
Buildings; (9) Non.Crop Land; (10)
Stored Grain and Food; (11)
Aquatic; and (12) Seed'Treatrnent.
To become certified or licensed

wishing to become certified for the
first time to take exams.
I hope I have not confused enyone
but if so please call me at ~96 .
The January Zl and February '1:1
meetings will be from I to 4 and 7 to
10 p.m. (four sessions). You need

By Fred J. Deel,
ExleDBloo Agent, 4-H
Gallla County
GAWPOLIS - Gallia County 4-H
and FF A members are reminded
that Tuesday, Jan. 15 is the last day
that Steer Projects may be
registered for the Gallia County
Junior Fair.
4-H Steers must be registered with
the Gallia County Extension Office
while FF A members must register
their steers with their FFA teacher.
Listed below are the 4-H and FFA
members who have registered their
Steers with the Gallia County Exlellllion Office as of Jan. II:
Allen Waugh, Buckeye Hills FFA;
Harold Burdell, Raccoon Valley
Beef Club; Tamli Woodward,
Buckeye Hills FFA; Brad Burdell,
Raccoon Valley Beef Club; Dana
Green, ,North Gallia FF A; Sean Coil,

. i'

USING V.um::TY MEATS
POMEROY - After the holidays,
you may finil that your food budget
ts very limited. Your family also
.may be tired of eating some of the
traditional foods used at the
holidays. For these reaso!lll, you
may wish to include some variety
meats in your menus.
Low-east variety meats that can
be incorporated into the weekly
menu include liver, kidney, tongue,
heart, and tripe. These foods are
ailled variety meats because they
add variety to the menu. The flavor
and tenure of these meats are different from those of muscle meats,
but if they're prepared properly,
they ~ be delicious. The negative
connotations associated with variety
meats can be overcome if you're
willing to try .Orne of these meats
prepared in imaginative ways.
- It seems that some of the variety
meats have a reputation for having a
blgh nutritive value. Let's look at
how many nutrients they contribute
and how to prepare these variety
meats properly. Let's start with
liver and kidney.
· Uver is an excellent source of
many nutrients including iron,
vitamins A and C, thiamine, niacin
and riboflavin. And pork liver is
especlally high in nutritive value.
Let me give you some preparation
tips. Cube leftovers and put them in
t:asseroles or grind leftover liver
and use it in sandwich fillings or

30 staff members
get certificates

GALLIPOLIS - On Tuesday,
January 8, 3D staff members of
Gallipolis Developmental Center
received certificates of achievement
upon completion of programming
meat loaf, hash, or spaghetti sauce.
and supervisory courses.
Kidney is another variety meat your
These classes were demonstrative
family might enjoy. Kidney is a good
of
the initiative shown by the State of
source of iron, vitamin A and
Ohio
and G.D.C. to further the
thiamine. Remember that beef kidof its employees through
education
neys are less tender than pork, lamb
weekly
inservices.
Graduates from
or veal and should be cooked in
each
course
received
information
moist heat. How about trying kidney
and
techniques
invaluable
in their
slew or beef and kidney pie for supdaily
work
routines.
.
per one night next week?
Robert
Zinunennan,
G.D.C.'s
Tongus ie similar to muscle meat
Program Director, spoke to the
in nutritive value. And beef and veal
graduating
class of their
tongue are very available in difachievement
and
what it means to
ferent forms, including fresh,
the clients and staff within their care
pickled, corned, or smoked. Tongue
and
supervision.
can be served hot or cold and is very
Persons
receiving the Programtasty in a spicy or fruit sauce. Heart
ming
certificate
for completion of
is very lean: it's about 94 percent
Behavior
Modification
skills were:
edible. And this means that the yield
Rebecca
Caldwell,
Virginia
carr,
is higher per pound than other meats
.
Uoyd
Corter,
Ethel
DeWitt,
Virginia
with bone and a higher percentage of
Dunfee, Barbara Ferrell, Hazel
fat. Heart is a good source of
thiamine as well ail protein, and it Fisher, Gladys Flowers, Charles
Hatfield, Ruthie Johnson, Geraldine
needs to be cooked slowly for a long
Nelville, Susan Nibers, Nina
time in moist heat. Cutting up
Hollis Rupe and Charles
Petroiff,
cooked heart strips and inTaylor.
corporating that into a chop suey
Supervisory class graduates learcan be very favorable. Tripe can be
ned
criteria such as interpersonal
purchased fresh, pickled, or caMed
and after it's pre-cooked in moist communications, counseting of employees and other supervisory
heat, you can serve it with tomato
techniques.
G.D.C. staff receiving
sauce, spread dressing and bake it in
this
award
were : Brenda Banks,
the oven, brush it with margarine
Maude
Brookins,
Esther DeMoss,
and broil it, or try deep-fat frying.
t\qa
Fry,
Glen
Haskins,
Chauncey
Variety meats are very nutritious,
Houck,
Patricia
James,
Bill
Kuhn,
economical, and can be appetizing if
WarrenSalesbury,
Paul
Shoemaker,
care is taken in preparing them with
Garnet Smeltzer, Mary Swisher, Joe
imagination. Try preparing one dish
Voreh, Sharon Wallis and Francis
including a variety meat the next
Wood.
time you plan your weekly menu.

. TME GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTli CENTf:R
Is now offering complete Speech - Language
and Hearing services for adults.
Those adults with · problems such as:
stroke, laryngectomy, neurological rela!ed
problems, head traumas, de_afness, he~r!ng
impairment, stuttering, readmg_ and wr1t10~
problems, articulation problem and language
problems.
. If you have any questions about the
evaluation and/or treatment of such com ·
munication problems &lt;Please call 446-5500 in
Gallipolis, 992-2192 in Meigs, 286-1626 in
Jackson.

Here in GaJJia County

Allstate can save you 10%

on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

W

For years, you've
seen and heard
® advertising aho ut
Allstate Homeowners insurance.
And now, it's available here, a t our
age ncy. But, did you know that if
your house is 5 years old or less, you
may qualify for Allstate's "New
House 10 Percent Discount" on your
basic premium?
Allstate has found 1t costs less
to insure newer homes, a nd they're
passing thi s savings on to you .
Give us a call and get in on the
savings !

Nick Johnson, Accountant EMecutive
Gallipolis
452 2nd Ave .
Phone·446 -1761

INVENTORY

llEDtJcnoN

--~

SALE

'~

48 MONTH

.

FlNANCI~G

AVAILABLE

All ELECTRA LIMITED
DIES "S
%OFF

1980 GRAND PRIX'S
Ou = WCQXL!Jffi3~~[L[f~[ffi~
HEADQUARTERS FOR
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UP
TO

=

I

'1100

BIG

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VANITIES
Come in and take a look

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- .I

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CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 Sixth Street
'

675·1160

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Mon .-Fri. 8 am. - 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. · 12 noon

1980
MODELS

·oFF

GOOD COLOR SELECTIO~.
'79 BUICK ELECTRA SEDAN
FULLY EQUIPPED
Retail
Discount
SALE

10,306.15
2,307 .1·5

Fire bird Trans Am

'79 BUICK REGAL DEMO
MRS. SMITH'S CAR
List
Discount

SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1980

PAGE 1-D

·Deadlock continues
on Rhodes' proposal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Lo~
bylsts have been aa thick as fleas
during the drawn out bickering over
Gov. James A. Rhodes' fl75 million
capital improvements bill.
The huge stale construction plali is
deadlocked in a Joint conference

for research in medicine and for a variety of testing and development
· programs throughout the world .
The Ohio facility, located between Piketon and Portsmouth near U.S
Route Zl, is also the only one pr.oducing uraniwn enriched to a tigh enough
degree to be used to power the country's nu clear Navy and for nuclear
weapons.
In addition to criticism of its immense consumption of electrical energy,
Goodyear Atomic has also been the target of other issues.
During a sevenoffiOnth long strike at the plant last year, Local ~9 of the
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union alleged numerous health and
safety violations . But they were never serious issues at the bargaining table.
'The corporation has repeatedly refused requests for exposure information, " said Dennis Bloanfield, union president. ''We want to know
what chemicals we 're working with and what we 'reelqlOBed to."
"I feel this plant is as site , if not safer than most tndll'!trial plants, "counters James Yocum, Goodyear's manager ri industrial relations . He explained ~teach employee undergoes a thorough training program and that
, employees are made aware of the types of materials with which they work.
The concerns for health and safety aren' necessarily echoed by area
residents. Many feel safe living and working near the plant. .
.
"I never thought much a bout it until that Three Mile Island (Pennsylvania) thing," said Jerry Curtis, who works at a local servicestation .
"Actually, I wasn 't really sure what wa s going on at the plant. But, I really
don' think there 's moch danger."
,
Until recenUy, the energy department resisted any attempt by "outaide"
agencies to conduct independent investigations of the health and safet;y
allegations, contending only it was properly equipped and knowledgeable
enough to determine health and sa fecy standards.

By Tbe AAoclaled Pre&amp;•

Moslem rebels reportedly hatUed
Soviet troops in eastern Mghanistan
as Soviet and Mghan soldiers stamped out an attempt by more thsn 800
Mghan civillans to free relatives
held as pollUcal prisoners at a jail
near Kabul Saturday.
Heavy fighting rontinued aroWJd
the eastern Afghan city of
Jalalabad, 50 miles from the border
with Pakistan, according to reports
reaching the Pakistani city of
Karachi on Friday. A leader of the
anti-coqununlst rebels told Pakistan
Press International that 50 Soviet
soldiers died in the fightinfl there
Thursday, and a Soviet bomber was
downed by the guerrillas.
A Pakistani news report Saturday
said Soviet pa'ratroopers were reinforeing ground troops · in. the northeaatem province ci Nuriatan in
preparation for a strike at guerrilla
strongholds in the region. The report
said heavy Soviet bombing of rebel
positions killed a "large number of

SB,440.00
'1,675.00

'6,765.00

None of the batUefleld accounts
could be lndependenUy confirmed.
In Washington, a senior Carte~ ad·
mlniatraUoo official said the Soviets
have mounted an "e:~tremely
brutal" military campaign in
Mghanlstan designed to "extennlnate those who oppose them."
· ·· .. - · .. ·' lbiHifficial, who declined to be
identified, said about 300 Afghan
political, religious and military
leaders have been eitecuted In the
Soviet campaign. He estimated
Soviet casualties at !IOo-1,:100 ldUed
or wOWided and said there were
"very heavy" Mghan clvlljan

los8e8.
Beginning with a Christmas Day
alrUft, the Soviets have sent an
·estimated 1110,000· troops into .
Afghaniltan to help put down a holy
war mounted by Moalem rebels
against the three aucc.'ealve Marmt
govemmenta that fl~ took power in
April 1978. The ltremllii cialms It
was relpondlng to an appeal for aid
by Prelldent Babrak Kannal, lnlltalled in a Soviet-backed coup Dec.
'rl. .
' ..
.
ABC News quoted Amerlciln ·tntelllgeilce -.rta as · ll8)'ing . the
ScMe\4 ·may rie!)d ' troops acr0111
· ~·· eastern ·border into
Faklstan ,ndiln a month to atHke al
· rebel forces taking sanctwiry tl)ere.
· According to . IKime lntalU«ence
IIOIIJ'Cil!lin WashlngWn, the Ru.~sl8nS

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran today
said it would halt oil sales to any
country that supports the United
States in imposing economic sanetions against it.
In the northwest city of Tabriz,
meanwhile, the . government's
execution of 11 disstdenta lgnil#d a
series of riots by hundreds of
enraged dissident ~ympathizers,
who ransacked shops and set fire to
bank offices in the capital of
rebellion-tom Azerbaijan.
"Our policy Ls quite clear," Oil
Minister Ali Akbar Moinfar was
quoted as telling Tehran radio. "We
will surely cut o,ur oil flow to countries who lend their support to U.S.
economic sanctio!lll imposed on our
country·"
Moinfar, a member of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini's ruling
Revolutionary CoWlcil, made no
direct reference to the U.S.- sponsored resolution before the U.N.
Securlcy COtiilcil that wouli:l iJriii&lt;ije
sanctions on Iran in an effort to force
it to free the American hostages held
at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.
Nor did he mention reports at the
United Nations Friday that Iran was
preparing some sort of compromise
plan to stave off sanctions.
-The Soviet Union has pledged to
veto a ·sanctions resolution, but
America has said it would try to
enlist its allies in an independent
'sanctions plan if the U.N. measure
fails.
·
The United States cut off its purchases of Iranian oil shortly after
the embassy was seized by Iranian
militants nearly II weeks ago.

Moinfar said Iran's oil revenues
are running well above $1.8 billion a
month,despiteanalmost50percent
cut in production since the peak of
more than 6 milllon barrels a &lt;jay
put out during the deposed shah's
regime.
In Tabriz, meanwhile, an Iranian
revolutionary court Saturday
executed 11 dissidents after finding
them guilty of murder in a revolt
against Khomeini's Islamic regime,
the official Pars news agency said.
HELD 70 DAYS
Meanwhile as the anti-American
perfonnan~ at the gate of the U.S.
Embassy on Taleghani Avenue run
into their 11th week, the
manipulators of the melodrama
remain backstage and as shadowy
as when the show first opened.
Beyond the banners on the trees
and surrounding buildings, beyond
the gruesome atrocity pictures
lining the sidewalks and the slogans
plastered on walls, beyond the
chain-locked iron gates, the barking
loudspeakers on the walls and the
garbage-littered courlyar'd inside behind all these Ls a mysterious
block-sized world generally accessible only to a favored,
anonymous few.
That world is peopled by a tightlipped, fanatical blind of young
people who have held 50 Americans
hostage since Nov. 4 - 70 days as of
today.
To many in the United States, they
are the most notorious bunch of
college dropouta ever to .gather in
one place. ·
To the Iranian masses, they are

getting the panel, over Senate
protests, to retore major cuts made
in the House version by the upper
chamber.
The ranks of the regular lobbyists
around the Statehouse, such as contractors, engineers, and manufacturers, and o\hers who might wind
up with state contracts, !lave been
swelled by reluctant college
pr~ents and other members of the
higher education conununity with a
lot at stake.
Add to this the fact that members
of the Legislature themselves, on
what is often referred to as the
"pork barrel" bill, are the biggest
are leaving the brunt of the current lobbyists of all.
Rhodes did his spade work well on
fighting to Afghan army troops. But
it took both Afghan and Soviet troops the record high spending bill, putto put doWil the rebellion Friday at a ting at least one project in every
prison at Pui-I-Cbarki, 15 miles east lawmaker's district. The lion's
sl)are of his proposal, or about $480
of Kabul.
More than 800 Afghans stormed million, is eannarked for colleges
the prison and tore down the doors to and universities.
Veteran House Speaker Vernal G.
two cellblocks to free about 12 inRiffe
Jr., D-NewBoston, avoided the
mates. The trouble erupted when the
in the House when
lobbying
Karmal's regime failed to make
introduced the bill for
Shoemaker
good on its pledge of a Friday
Rhodes last September.
release of. all political prisoners
The chairman's committee apjaDed by previous regimes.
proved it after two prompt hearings
At the U.N. General Assembly
Friday, a stream of speakers con- and the House zipped it on to the
demned the Soviet intervention in Senate, all within three days.
"You don't let a bill like that lie
Afghanistan while the Sovleta acaround,"
said the speaker. " The
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Car- its military intervention in
cused the United States and Chins of
it
does,
the
bigger
it
gets.
"
ter
administration is lining up
Afghanistan. But he said supplies
longer
returned to Cold War diplomacy.
Across
the
Statehouse,
Senate
behind
a
program
that
would
suboriginally
intended for .Russia
A group of 17 Moslem and Third
remain in the nation's supply,
President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, stitule " gasohol" for 10 percent of
World countries presented a draft
the nation's unleaded gasoline sup- available for purchase by dlstlllers.
resolution deploring the "armed in- took the other tack. "We're not going
ply by 1981, using millions of tollll of
EizenBtat said Corter's gasohol
tervention in Afghanistan" and . to rubber stamp it in two days," he
proclaimed, as the Senate Finance
surplus-grain in the process.
policies were developed over the
calling for the "immediate, WlThat would be a sixfold increase in past 18 months and would have been
condiUonal and total withdrawal of Conunittee opened jam-packed
production of gasohol, a mixture of announced aboqt now regardless of
foreign troops" from the country. hearings which turned into a beehive
that lasted almost to the end of
90 percent unleaded gasoline and 10 events in Mghanistan.
U.N. officials said the resolution
November.
percent ethyl alcohol- or ethanol A number of measures have
might come to a vote Saturday.
. Ocasek an\1 Finance Chainnan
a pojsonous, undrinkable liquid.
already been adopted or proposed to
Harry Mesbel, D-Young&amp;town, and
In addition to providing power stimulate gasohol production .
when it burns, the alcohol increases Perhaps the most important is the
other members of the Senate
the anti-knock properties of exemption, until 1984, of gasohol
majority decided to cut the House
version by abQut $200 million, most
unleaded gasoline.
from the federal gasoline excise tax
of which, incidentally, now has been
Gasohol generally costa 5 or 6 cen- of 4cents a gallon.
restored.
ts per gallon more than' unleaded
Eizenstat said Corter proposes to
With Ohio's economy shaky, and
gasoline, but Its cost may' decline make that a~on pennanent as
M9SCOW '(AP) - Soviet
with the state short of cash, it would
with production improvements.
a significant Inducement to inPresident Leonid I. Brezhnev acbe
"fiscally
responsible
to
cut
some
The
$3
billion
program
outlined
vestment in new dLstillery capacity,
cused the · United States today of
of
the
fat
from
this
bill,"
the
Senate
Friday
by
President
Carter's
aides
now the bOttleneck limiting alcohol
deliberately straining the world
leader
said.
stakes
out
a
middle
grouild
between
production.
situation and declared that Soviet
Before
the
cuts
were
made,
a$5
billion
gasohol
program
ap"We will quadruple current
foreign policy - sharply criticized
Meahel
called
in
department
heada
proved
by
the
Senate
and
~
abgasohol
production capacity by the
by Washington- is "Unshakeable."
·
and
·
college
officials
for
grilling
sence
of
any
such
program
in
Houseend
of
tbis
year,·' Corter said in a
In.a defiantly worded intervi~w with
. - - - - statement issued by the White
about some of the-projects Rhodes- -paasect·eneFgy-!eglalation•.the newspaper Pravda; read over
apparently inserted without asking
Stuart Eizenstat, the president's Houae. "Duling 1981'l we should be
Soviet te1evision, Brezhnev denouncanyone.
domestic policy advisel', said the ad- capable of producing 'ethanol at an
ed the "shameless antl.sov!et cam·
Meshel
said
the
bill
ministration was not submitting new &amp;nllual rate of 500 million gallons +
For
instance,
paign" in the West over the Soviet
contained
a
day
care
center
on
each
legislation for the program, but was more than. six times the current
military presence in Afghanistan.
of
17
canipuses,
although
only
one
insupporting
the $3 billion figure in a rate."
He said it was "absurd" to claim
stitutlonhadaskedforacenter.
congressional
conference · comIt would take about 5 milllon tons
U.S. ll!terests Wllfl! - threatened in
Meshel
found
many
of
the
mlttee
already
considering
of
grain to produce 500 million
Afghanistan. Striking out at Western
presidents
reluctant
to
testify,
aplegislation
that
includes
the
Senate's
gallons
of ethanol. This year's
8S8el'tions that MoscOw has .oc- .
parently
because
they
&lt;!liln't
want
to
15
billion
version.
ethanol
production
Ls estimated at 80
cupied the coUntry, he 118id, "The
embarrass
the
governor.
"We
had
to
The
IG-yelll'
progiam
backf;ld
by
million
gallons.
politics and psycholiJgy of colonizers
rope them in,' 1he said.
. Corter woul&lt;l provide loans and loan
Eizenstat said the loan programs
are allen to us."
'
guarantees for c~tructloo of outlined by Carter might encourage
. Bre~hnev also denounced
Riffe
fumed
over
the Senate's
medilim-sized diatillerles construction ol some 2,000 smaJI
small-and
~can measure~ to punish the
of
·
ll
natatoriuffi..student
deletion
to
proouce
·additiOnal alcohol that fuel..aJoohol distilleries on fanns,
So\tiet Union for its Afghan lnunion
at
Shawnee
·
Community
woul&lt;l
be
blen.
ded with g~~sollne.
' where plalit or animal wastes could
volvement,.lncluding President CarCollege,
in
his
dlstrict,-ilelllng
it
as
a
Eizenstat
told
reporte~
the
ad·
be ·uai!d as well as ~cess crOps. An
ter's cteeislllil !o withbold 17 mllUon '
per89Ml
affront..
.
minlstratlon
was
not
''eai'!Jlllrking"
additional
500 small-Or mediwn- '
Wn8nfgrainfromMOICOW. ,
'
He
also·
deplored
Senate
rem•)val
for
the
11rogram
the
,
17
million
sized
·
commerCial
distilleries
said Soviet Citizens-will not Jose
of
a,
$25
million
Gam,er'hospiiP!
at
metric
toils
in
grain
being
withileld
producing
30
mllllon
gallons
or less a
"a single _gram of bread" because oi '
OhioStateUm,·crslty.
. .
from
the
SoViet
Union
in
reprisal
for
·year
might
be·bullt,
he
said.
the American move. ·

committee now, and the SenateHouse struggle is such that there
might
not
even
be a bill, some are saying.
. Chairman Myrl H. Shoemaker,!).
Bourneville, recessed deliberations
last week until later this month after

·Free·d·o m atte~pt
foiled by troops

gue~. "

PONTIAC'S HOT ONE -TRANS AM

Ca'hinets

I
1I

OFF

SELECTION

Medicine

then enriched and shipped to a fabri cation plant before being used ina power
reactor.
" The entire fuel cycle, with the exception of the uranium enriching portion, is an operation of private industry," ftange said . "What we're doing at
these plants is taking privately-owned uranium, either from domestic
utilities or companies, or from abroad" and charging a fee for performing
the process. The government, however, is prohibited by law from turning a
profit.
·
"Under the law, we have to recover all our costs." he said, admitting that
is an extensive, long-term process. The enrichment of uranium, according to
Range "is returning to the government oomething on the order of $1 billion
this fiscal year"
In reality, however, the energy department provides enrichment at cost to
the electric utilities operating nucl ear power plants. In other words, since
the govenunent makes no profit on its sale of enriched uranium , it is
providi!lg an _i,!ldirect subsidy to nuclear power - a subsidy not readily
available to other energy sources .
The uraniwn enrichm!nt conunitment, the largest single activity under
Oak Ridge Operatioos, carries a $9~million budget!or the 1979 fiscal year.
Range said "a large amount of this is for electrical power." The 1979 electric bill for all three enrichment plants will total about $700million.
The power for Goodyear Atomic is supplied by lhe Ohio Valley Electric
Corp., created in 1002 by 15 investor-owned utility companies throughoot the
Ohio River Valley . The contract the federal energy department has with the
electric corporation provides for the largest single block of electric power
ever supplied in the country.
The hundreds of stages in the enrichment process rely on thousands of
electrical motors to operate compressors.
In addition to fueling nuClear power plants, the enriched uranium is used

At the Statehouse

McGINNESS.ST AN LEY AGENCY, INC.

GM

PIKE:l'ON, Ohio (AP) - In the sparsely popula~d hills of southern Ohio,
enough electricity is being used each year to light up the city of lJJs Angeles
for the same amount of time.
But concurrenUy, a substance is produced bere that is capable of
generating 25 times the amoont of power consumed.
That substance is enriched uranium for nuclear power.plants and it comes
from the Goodyear Atomic Corp.'s plant Pike County.
The plant consumes 16.5 billion kilowatt hours of electricity a year. Its
monthly electric bill runs between $12 million and $20 million.
Asubsidiary of Goodyear Corp. in Akron, Goodyear Atomic is one of three
government-owned gaseous diffusion facilities producing enriched uranium
for use in nuclear reactors in this country and abroad. The other two plants
are located at Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Paducah, Ky., and are operated by
Union carbide Corp.
All three plants are owned and fully financed by the U.S. Department of
Energy, but operated under contracts with private industry. Neither
Goodyear nor Union Carbide have any money invested in the cosily project.
The government buys the land and builds and maintains the sprawling complexes andarrangesforthe companies to operate them oo a cost-plus basis.
''What we have done, in e111ence, is to go into the market place and hire the
management and the know-how ~! existing large corporations that can
provide a basic number of people on which you can build an organization,"
explained Wayne Range of the energy depsrtment 's O!k Ridge (Tenn.)
Opera dons .
Under their contracts, Goodyear and Union carbide receive a negotiable
annual fee. In Goodyear's case, the company can also earn an incentive
award after it ''is rated to see how good a job it has done,"said Range.
Enriching uranium is among six stages necessary to produce nuclear fuel .
First, uranium must be mined and milled and then converted to a gas; it i.s

VOL. 13 NO. 50

Now Availabie Through The -- --

-

Pike County plant providing nuclear power

• itlttitttl Oil sale halt threat~ned

Alhol o .... lr.. ~r.R&lt;~ I '""'!'""'.
!llo"l'l'"''' II

~ MITH -1
'-

D

classified

SPEECH AND HEARING DEPARTMENT

Rebels 4-H Club; April Graham,
Triangle 4-H Club; Sonja Call,
Rebels 4-H Club; Scott Roush,
Hillbillies 4-H Club; Billy Davis,
Ohio River Ranchers; Tande Pope,
Hilltoppers 4-H Club; Liaa Russell,
Hillbillies; J eMy Louden, Rio
Friendship 4-H Club; Will Louden,
Rio Friendship 4-H Club; Dianna
Jenkins, Ohio River Ranchers ;
Darlene Jenkins, Ohio River Ranchers; KeMeth Jenkins, Ohio River
Ranchers; Natalie Shong, Rio Silver
Thimbles; Roberia Hamilton, Rio
Silver Thimbles; Kim Jividen,
Thivener Pioneers; Kent Walker,
Centerville Young Farmers; Gregg
Deel, Raccoon Valley; Todd Deel,
Raccoon Valley; Tammy Elliott,
Rodney Rangers ; Tim · Green,
Hillbillies; Dana Green, North
Gallia FFA; Terry Elliott, Rodney
Rangers; Kim Bickers, Hillbillies ;
Kelly Hamilton, Thivener Pioneers;
Tim Beaver, Thivener Pioneers;
Teresa Skeen, Ohio River Ranchers;
Susan Skeen, Ohio River Ranchers;
Scott Elliott, · Cadmus Redskins, ·
Susan Elliott, Codmus Redskins;
Angela Hudson, Country Bwnpkins;
Linda Waugh, Rebels; Mike Waugh,
Hannan Trace FFA; Mike Kemper,
Hillbillies;
Matt , Kemper,
Hillbillies; Richard Meadows, Han,
nan Trace FF A; Carol Meadows,
Hannan Trace FF A; J. C.
Glassburn, Hillbillies; Alan Harris,
Buckeye Hills PTA; Edie Duncan;
Triangle; Gregory Glassburn,
Jackie Glassburn, Shane Glassburn,
all Hillbillies ; Therill Clagg, Jan
Collins and Charles C&lt;&gt;rwin, all
Gallipolis FFA. ~

Buick
PontiaC

D-1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1910

'

Deadline Tuesday for
fair steer projects

'
BY :
DIANA S. EBERTS
1
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

only attend one session. Th~
meetings will be held here at the Extension Office. The examinations
will be given only on February '1:1 at
both sessions.
Those taking examinations should
ca ll our office and ask for study
materials.
·
If would help if we knew ahead of
time if you will be attending and
what categories you will need
training in.

Gasohol pr~gram
being prepared

Soviet policy
'unshakeable'

'. He

I

.I

·'

the thrilling, threatening sword r1.
revolutionary leader Ayatollah
RUhollah Khomeini. The sword
slashes at the United States wblch
remains Iran's declared No.1' enemy
despite the Soviet Union's massive
military intervention in Moslem
Afghanistan next door.
Neither the Urilted States nor the
Iranian masses know much about
the villain-heroes.
Just wbo are they? Are they really
students?
No one is sure, but the concensua
here is that they come from the
ranks of the politically active at the
universities, though now they have
abandoned their schooling.
Their numbers are estimated at
400 tp 500. About 100 are believed on
hand at all times in the embassy,
with the inner circle never leaving
the '1:1-acre compound. When off duty
most others go home to their
families in Tehran or to their univer!lty donnitories .
Their expenses are known to be
borne by the office of Ayatollah
Khomeini who meets all requests for
cash and equipment. Food Is
brought in daily from Revolutionary
Committee kitchens in embassy
trucks driven by the militants.
The holltages eat food from the
embassy commissary prepared by a
Pakistani cook who used to work for
the America!lll and volunteered to
staywiththem.
President Carter's press
secretary, Jody Powell, recenUy
characterized the militants as
"Marxists who may be beyond the
control of the Ayatollah Khomeini."
When telephoned for comment on
that, a militants' spokeswoman said,
"We can't respond right now, we're
at prayers."
The few students wllllni! to talk
outalde their bastion denied they are
Marxists. ln Iran's Islamic
revolution, Marxism is a damnable
creed.
The consensus of infonned foreign
and local opinion in Tehran,
however, is that the embasiJy occupation force reflects political
views ranging from Trotskyite 19th
century anachists to crusading
Moolems. Their rhetoric.Ls peppered
with leftist jargon.
For a while, members ci the
Palestlnlan Liberation Organization
(PWJ were believed to be .among
the embasiJy militants. Some youth$
appeared in the black and wblte
checked scarf popularized by
Yasser Arafat's Al-Fatah guyrrlllaa.
However, this Ls now seen aa an
emulation of the PW.
About 30 percent of the youths are
thought to be women who like the
men range in age from about 20 to
28,
Most are drawn !rem Tehran's
four major universities and the Qom
Theological &amp;eminary, baatlon of the
teachings of Khomelni. One ci tbrrl
few identifiable figures in the em.
bassy Ls Ayatollah Mohammacl
Khoelnl, a bearded dignitary rarely
seen who represents Khomelni.
'
The rest of the group act out an
elaborate charade rl. ~!'i
giVing names that are 1enera111.

rega~aa~~

their features in public aa steml,y Ill(
they write their rbetoric, and U8llll1.
giving reporters and ' otbe11:
queslmeruhortahrlft.
·~
One rl. the few. students to ella(
casually t9 reporter In recent clayi
gave her nim)e as Fahiml Moall and
her age aa 20.. She lillld she met
recenUy With a bostage she lliiii8Cl
as "Elizabeth" who "Is leading tbt
Bible each day and Is a bit .nervlllll!
but we try to l'MUW'e her. I read the
Koran sometiiDea With her."

a

'1

.

'

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13,

~county

191W

.

agent's corner
you must take what is called a "Core
Examination" whlch is on safety,
reading labels, etc. , . and an
examination for each of the areas
you wish to become certified in and
pass these examinations. This license is good for three years. To get
recertified after your three years
are up you must rect!ive a minimum
of three hours of training. One hour
of this must be on the "Core" part
(safety, etc.) and two hours of
training in your appropriate areas.
MULTI-FWRA ROSE - To purchase Tordon (restricted) you must
pass the "Core" epmination plus
the Forage Crops examination.
The recertification programs to be
covered in tbe January Zl and
February 27 schools will be Core,
Grain and Cereal Crops, Forage
Crops, and Livestock and Livestock
Buildings. If you need tp be recertified, which is good for three years,
you have a two-year period to do
this. For example, if your card expires in February, 1981, you can
receive recertification for three
more years in 1980 or 1981.
On February '1:1 a man will be here
from The Ohio Department of
Agriculture to adnninister tests. This
will penni! those already certified to
add new categories and those

By John C. Rice
ExleDBlou Agent
Agrleullure

Meigs County
POMEROY - As mentioned
earlier, pesticide training is
~scheduled for January Zl and
' February 'J:I. Pesticide training and
recertification can become ·rather
involved. I will attempt to try and
exp1atn what is required. I am going
to confine my remarks to the private
applicator. A private applicator is a
producer who is applying pesticides
for himself whether it i.s on his
property or rented ground. If a
private applicator applies chemicals
for someont else and receives pay,
he Ls no longer a private applicator.
Only those chemicals which are
restricted require a license to purchase them. The private applicator
can be certified in imy one or all of
twelve areas : (1) Grain and cereal
crops; (2) Forage Crops; {3) Field
Vegetables and Specialty Crops
(Tobacco); (4) Fruit Crops; (5) Ornamentals and Turf Crops ; (6)
Greenhouse Crops; (7) Forest
Crops; (8) Livestock and Livestock
Buildings; (9) Non.Crop Land; (10)
Stored Grain and Food; (11)
Aquatic; and (12) Seed'Treatrnent.
To become certified or licensed

wishing to become certified for the
first time to take exams.
I hope I have not confused enyone
but if so please call me at ~96 .
The January Zl and February '1:1
meetings will be from I to 4 and 7 to
10 p.m. (four sessions). You need

By Fred J. Deel,
ExleDBloo Agent, 4-H
Gallla County
GAWPOLIS - Gallia County 4-H
and FF A members are reminded
that Tuesday, Jan. 15 is the last day
that Steer Projects may be
registered for the Gallia County
Junior Fair.
4-H Steers must be registered with
the Gallia County Extension Office
while FF A members must register
their steers with their FFA teacher.
Listed below are the 4-H and FFA
members who have registered their
Steers with the Gallia County Exlellllion Office as of Jan. II:
Allen Waugh, Buckeye Hills FFA;
Harold Burdell, Raccoon Valley
Beef Club; Tamli Woodward,
Buckeye Hills FFA; Brad Burdell,
Raccoon Valley Beef Club; Dana
Green, ,North Gallia FF A; Sean Coil,

. i'

USING V.um::TY MEATS
POMEROY - After the holidays,
you may finil that your food budget
ts very limited. Your family also
.may be tired of eating some of the
traditional foods used at the
holidays. For these reaso!lll, you
may wish to include some variety
meats in your menus.
Low-east variety meats that can
be incorporated into the weekly
menu include liver, kidney, tongue,
heart, and tripe. These foods are
ailled variety meats because they
add variety to the menu. The flavor
and tenure of these meats are different from those of muscle meats,
but if they're prepared properly,
they ~ be delicious. The negative
connotations associated with variety
meats can be overcome if you're
willing to try .Orne of these meats
prepared in imaginative ways.
- It seems that some of the variety
meats have a reputation for having a
blgh nutritive value. Let's look at
how many nutrients they contribute
and how to prepare these variety
meats properly. Let's start with
liver and kidney.
· Uver is an excellent source of
many nutrients including iron,
vitamins A and C, thiamine, niacin
and riboflavin. And pork liver is
especlally high in nutritive value.
Let me give you some preparation
tips. Cube leftovers and put them in
t:asseroles or grind leftover liver
and use it in sandwich fillings or

30 staff members
get certificates

GALLIPOLIS - On Tuesday,
January 8, 3D staff members of
Gallipolis Developmental Center
received certificates of achievement
upon completion of programming
meat loaf, hash, or spaghetti sauce.
and supervisory courses.
Kidney is another variety meat your
These classes were demonstrative
family might enjoy. Kidney is a good
of
the initiative shown by the State of
source of iron, vitamin A and
Ohio
and G.D.C. to further the
thiamine. Remember that beef kidof its employees through
education
neys are less tender than pork, lamb
weekly
inservices.
Graduates from
or veal and should be cooked in
each
course
received
information
moist heat. How about trying kidney
and
techniques
invaluable
in their
slew or beef and kidney pie for supdaily
work
routines.
.
per one night next week?
Robert
Zinunennan,
G.D.C.'s
Tongus ie similar to muscle meat
Program Director, spoke to the
in nutritive value. And beef and veal
graduating
class of their
tongue are very available in difachievement
and
what it means to
ferent forms, including fresh,
the clients and staff within their care
pickled, corned, or smoked. Tongue
and
supervision.
can be served hot or cold and is very
Persons
receiving the Programtasty in a spicy or fruit sauce. Heart
ming
certificate
for completion of
is very lean: it's about 94 percent
Behavior
Modification
skills were:
edible. And this means that the yield
Rebecca
Caldwell,
Virginia
carr,
is higher per pound than other meats
.
Uoyd
Corter,
Ethel
DeWitt,
Virginia
with bone and a higher percentage of
Dunfee, Barbara Ferrell, Hazel
fat. Heart is a good source of
thiamine as well ail protein, and it Fisher, Gladys Flowers, Charles
Hatfield, Ruthie Johnson, Geraldine
needs to be cooked slowly for a long
Nelville, Susan Nibers, Nina
time in moist heat. Cutting up
Hollis Rupe and Charles
Petroiff,
cooked heart strips and inTaylor.
corporating that into a chop suey
Supervisory class graduates learcan be very favorable. Tripe can be
ned
criteria such as interpersonal
purchased fresh, pickled, or caMed
and after it's pre-cooked in moist communications, counseting of employees and other supervisory
heat, you can serve it with tomato
techniques.
G.D.C. staff receiving
sauce, spread dressing and bake it in
this
award
were : Brenda Banks,
the oven, brush it with margarine
Maude
Brookins,
Esther DeMoss,
and broil it, or try deep-fat frying.
t\qa
Fry,
Glen
Haskins,
Chauncey
Variety meats are very nutritious,
Houck,
Patricia
James,
Bill
Kuhn,
economical, and can be appetizing if
WarrenSalesbury,
Paul
Shoemaker,
care is taken in preparing them with
Garnet Smeltzer, Mary Swisher, Joe
imagination. Try preparing one dish
Voreh, Sharon Wallis and Francis
including a variety meat the next
Wood.
time you plan your weekly menu.

. TME GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTli CENTf:R
Is now offering complete Speech - Language
and Hearing services for adults.
Those adults with · problems such as:
stroke, laryngectomy, neurological rela!ed
problems, head traumas, de_afness, he~r!ng
impairment, stuttering, readmg_ and wr1t10~
problems, articulation problem and language
problems.
. If you have any questions about the
evaluation and/or treatment of such com ·
munication problems &lt;Please call 446-5500 in
Gallipolis, 992-2192 in Meigs, 286-1626 in
Jackson.

Here in GaJJia County

Allstate can save you 10%

on "Good Hands" insurance
for your new home.

W

For years, you've
seen and heard
® advertising aho ut
Allstate Homeowners insurance.
And now, it's available here, a t our
age ncy. But, did you know that if
your house is 5 years old or less, you
may qualify for Allstate's "New
House 10 Percent Discount" on your
basic premium?
Allstate has found 1t costs less
to insure newer homes, a nd they're
passing thi s savings on to you .
Give us a call and get in on the
savings !

Nick Johnson, Accountant EMecutive
Gallipolis
452 2nd Ave .
Phone·446 -1761

INVENTORY

llEDtJcnoN

--~

SALE

'~

48 MONTH

.

FlNANCI~G

AVAILABLE

All ELECTRA LIMITED
DIES "S
%OFF

1980 GRAND PRIX'S
Ou = WCQXL!Jffi3~~[L[f~[ffi~
HEADQUARTERS FOR
BATHROOM CABINETS

UP
TO

=

I

'1100

BIG

'600

Flush Mount Or Recessed

VANITIES
Come in and take a look

I~----------------------------·
VALUABLE COUPON .
- .I

I
I
~edlclne Cabinet With Coupon.
I
I
Expires 1/26/80
I
L---•------~ -----------------10%

Discount On Any Vanity Or

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
312 Sixth Street
'

675·1160

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Mon .-Fri. 8 am. - 5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m. · 12 noon

1980
MODELS

·oFF

GOOD COLOR SELECTIO~.
'79 BUICK ELECTRA SEDAN
FULLY EQUIPPED
Retail
Discount
SALE

10,306.15
2,307 .1·5

Fire bird Trans Am

'79 BUICK REGAL DEMO
MRS. SMITH'S CAR
List
Discount

SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1980

PAGE 1-D

·Deadlock continues
on Rhodes' proposal
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Lo~
bylsts have been aa thick as fleas
during the drawn out bickering over
Gov. James A. Rhodes' fl75 million
capital improvements bill.
The huge stale construction plali is
deadlocked in a Joint conference

for research in medicine and for a variety of testing and development
· programs throughout the world .
The Ohio facility, located between Piketon and Portsmouth near U.S
Route Zl, is also the only one pr.oducing uraniwn enriched to a tigh enough
degree to be used to power the country's nu clear Navy and for nuclear
weapons.
In addition to criticism of its immense consumption of electrical energy,
Goodyear Atomic has also been the target of other issues.
During a sevenoffiOnth long strike at the plant last year, Local ~9 of the
Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union alleged numerous health and
safety violations . But they were never serious issues at the bargaining table.
'The corporation has repeatedly refused requests for exposure information, " said Dennis Bloanfield, union president. ''We want to know
what chemicals we 're working with and what we 'reelqlOBed to."
"I feel this plant is as site , if not safer than most tndll'!trial plants, "counters James Yocum, Goodyear's manager ri industrial relations . He explained ~teach employee undergoes a thorough training program and that
, employees are made aware of the types of materials with which they work.
The concerns for health and safety aren' necessarily echoed by area
residents. Many feel safe living and working near the plant. .
.
"I never thought much a bout it until that Three Mile Island (Pennsylvania) thing," said Jerry Curtis, who works at a local servicestation .
"Actually, I wasn 't really sure what wa s going on at the plant. But, I really
don' think there 's moch danger."
,
Until recenUy, the energy department resisted any attempt by "outaide"
agencies to conduct independent investigations of the health and safet;y
allegations, contending only it was properly equipped and knowledgeable
enough to determine health and sa fecy standards.

By Tbe AAoclaled Pre&amp;•

Moslem rebels reportedly hatUed
Soviet troops in eastern Mghanistan
as Soviet and Mghan soldiers stamped out an attempt by more thsn 800
Mghan civillans to free relatives
held as pollUcal prisoners at a jail
near Kabul Saturday.
Heavy fighting rontinued aroWJd
the eastern Afghan city of
Jalalabad, 50 miles from the border
with Pakistan, according to reports
reaching the Pakistani city of
Karachi on Friday. A leader of the
anti-coqununlst rebels told Pakistan
Press International that 50 Soviet
soldiers died in the fightinfl there
Thursday, and a Soviet bomber was
downed by the guerrillas.
A Pakistani news report Saturday
said Soviet pa'ratroopers were reinforeing ground troops · in. the northeaatem province ci Nuriatan in
preparation for a strike at guerrilla
strongholds in the region. The report
said heavy Soviet bombing of rebel
positions killed a "large number of

SB,440.00
'1,675.00

'6,765.00

None of the batUefleld accounts
could be lndependenUy confirmed.
In Washington, a senior Carte~ ad·
mlniatraUoo official said the Soviets
have mounted an "e:~tremely
brutal" military campaign in
Mghanlstan designed to "extennlnate those who oppose them."
· ·· .. - · .. ·' lbiHifficial, who declined to be
identified, said about 300 Afghan
political, religious and military
leaders have been eitecuted In the
Soviet campaign. He estimated
Soviet casualties at !IOo-1,:100 ldUed
or wOWided and said there were
"very heavy" Mghan clvlljan

los8e8.
Beginning with a Christmas Day
alrUft, the Soviets have sent an
·estimated 1110,000· troops into .
Afghaniltan to help put down a holy
war mounted by Moalem rebels
against the three aucc.'ealve Marmt
govemmenta that fl~ took power in
April 1978. The ltremllii cialms It
was relpondlng to an appeal for aid
by Prelldent Babrak Kannal, lnlltalled in a Soviet-backed coup Dec.
'rl. .
' ..
.
ABC News quoted Amerlciln ·tntelllgeilce -.rta as · ll8)'ing . the
ScMe\4 ·may rie!)d ' troops acr0111
· ~·· eastern ·border into
Faklstan ,ndiln a month to atHke al
· rebel forces taking sanctwiry tl)ere.
· According to . IKime lntalU«ence
IIOIIJ'Cil!lin WashlngWn, the Ru.~sl8nS

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iran today
said it would halt oil sales to any
country that supports the United
States in imposing economic sanetions against it.
In the northwest city of Tabriz,
meanwhile, the . government's
execution of 11 disstdenta lgnil#d a
series of riots by hundreds of
enraged dissident ~ympathizers,
who ransacked shops and set fire to
bank offices in the capital of
rebellion-tom Azerbaijan.
"Our policy Ls quite clear," Oil
Minister Ali Akbar Moinfar was
quoted as telling Tehran radio. "We
will surely cut o,ur oil flow to countries who lend their support to U.S.
economic sanctio!lll imposed on our
country·"
Moinfar, a member of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini's ruling
Revolutionary CoWlcil, made no
direct reference to the U.S.- sponsored resolution before the U.N.
Securlcy COtiilcil that wouli:l iJriii&lt;ije
sanctions on Iran in an effort to force
it to free the American hostages held
at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.
Nor did he mention reports at the
United Nations Friday that Iran was
preparing some sort of compromise
plan to stave off sanctions.
-The Soviet Union has pledged to
veto a ·sanctions resolution, but
America has said it would try to
enlist its allies in an independent
'sanctions plan if the U.N. measure
fails.
·
The United States cut off its purchases of Iranian oil shortly after
the embassy was seized by Iranian
militants nearly II weeks ago.

Moinfar said Iran's oil revenues
are running well above $1.8 billion a
month,despiteanalmost50percent
cut in production since the peak of
more than 6 milllon barrels a &lt;jay
put out during the deposed shah's
regime.
In Tabriz, meanwhile, an Iranian
revolutionary court Saturday
executed 11 dissidents after finding
them guilty of murder in a revolt
against Khomeini's Islamic regime,
the official Pars news agency said.
HELD 70 DAYS
Meanwhile as the anti-American
perfonnan~ at the gate of the U.S.
Embassy on Taleghani Avenue run
into their 11th week, the
manipulators of the melodrama
remain backstage and as shadowy
as when the show first opened.
Beyond the banners on the trees
and surrounding buildings, beyond
the gruesome atrocity pictures
lining the sidewalks and the slogans
plastered on walls, beyond the
chain-locked iron gates, the barking
loudspeakers on the walls and the
garbage-littered courlyar'd inside behind all these Ls a mysterious
block-sized world generally accessible only to a favored,
anonymous few.
That world is peopled by a tightlipped, fanatical blind of young
people who have held 50 Americans
hostage since Nov. 4 - 70 days as of
today.
To many in the United States, they
are the most notorious bunch of
college dropouta ever to .gather in
one place. ·
To the Iranian masses, they are

getting the panel, over Senate
protests, to retore major cuts made
in the House version by the upper
chamber.
The ranks of the regular lobbyists
around the Statehouse, such as contractors, engineers, and manufacturers, and o\hers who might wind
up with state contracts, !lave been
swelled by reluctant college
pr~ents and other members of the
higher education conununity with a
lot at stake.
Add to this the fact that members
of the Legislature themselves, on
what is often referred to as the
"pork barrel" bill, are the biggest
are leaving the brunt of the current lobbyists of all.
Rhodes did his spade work well on
fighting to Afghan army troops. But
it took both Afghan and Soviet troops the record high spending bill, putto put doWil the rebellion Friday at a ting at least one project in every
prison at Pui-I-Cbarki, 15 miles east lawmaker's district. The lion's
sl)are of his proposal, or about $480
of Kabul.
More than 800 Afghans stormed million, is eannarked for colleges
the prison and tore down the doors to and universities.
Veteran House Speaker Vernal G.
two cellblocks to free about 12 inRiffe
Jr., D-NewBoston, avoided the
mates. The trouble erupted when the
in the House when
lobbying
Karmal's regime failed to make
introduced the bill for
Shoemaker
good on its pledge of a Friday
Rhodes last September.
release of. all political prisoners
The chairman's committee apjaDed by previous regimes.
proved it after two prompt hearings
At the U.N. General Assembly
Friday, a stream of speakers con- and the House zipped it on to the
demned the Soviet intervention in Senate, all within three days.
"You don't let a bill like that lie
Afghanistan while the Sovleta acaround,"
said the speaker. " The
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Car- its military intervention in
cused the United States and Chins of
it
does,
the
bigger
it
gets.
"
ter
administration is lining up
Afghanistan. But he said supplies
longer
returned to Cold War diplomacy.
Across
the
Statehouse,
Senate
behind
a
program
that
would
suboriginally
intended for .Russia
A group of 17 Moslem and Third
remain in the nation's supply,
President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, stitule " gasohol" for 10 percent of
World countries presented a draft
the nation's unleaded gasoline sup- available for purchase by dlstlllers.
resolution deploring the "armed in- took the other tack. "We're not going
ply by 1981, using millions of tollll of
EizenBtat said Corter's gasohol
tervention in Afghanistan" and . to rubber stamp it in two days," he
proclaimed, as the Senate Finance
surplus-grain in the process.
policies were developed over the
calling for the "immediate, WlThat would be a sixfold increase in past 18 months and would have been
condiUonal and total withdrawal of Conunittee opened jam-packed
production of gasohol, a mixture of announced aboqt now regardless of
foreign troops" from the country. hearings which turned into a beehive
that lasted almost to the end of
90 percent unleaded gasoline and 10 events in Mghanistan.
U.N. officials said the resolution
November.
percent ethyl alcohol- or ethanol A number of measures have
might come to a vote Saturday.
. Ocasek an\1 Finance Chainnan
a pojsonous, undrinkable liquid.
already been adopted or proposed to
Harry Mesbel, D-Young&amp;town, and
In addition to providing power stimulate gasohol production .
when it burns, the alcohol increases Perhaps the most important is the
other members of the Senate
the anti-knock properties of exemption, until 1984, of gasohol
majority decided to cut the House
version by abQut $200 million, most
unleaded gasoline.
from the federal gasoline excise tax
of which, incidentally, now has been
Gasohol generally costa 5 or 6 cen- of 4cents a gallon.
restored.
ts per gallon more than' unleaded
Eizenstat said Corter proposes to
With Ohio's economy shaky, and
gasoline, but Its cost may' decline make that a~on pennanent as
M9SCOW '(AP) - Soviet
with the state short of cash, it would
with production improvements.
a significant Inducement to inPresident Leonid I. Brezhnev acbe
"fiscally
responsible
to
cut
some
The
$3
billion
program
outlined
vestment in new dLstillery capacity,
cused the · United States today of
of
the
fat
from
this
bill,"
the
Senate
Friday
by
President
Carter's
aides
now the bOttleneck limiting alcohol
deliberately straining the world
leader
said.
stakes
out
a
middle
grouild
between
production.
situation and declared that Soviet
Before
the
cuts
were
made,
a$5
billion
gasohol
program
ap"We will quadruple current
foreign policy - sharply criticized
Meahel
called
in
department
heada
proved
by
the
Senate
and
~
abgasohol
production capacity by the
by Washington- is "Unshakeable."
·
and
·
college
officials
for
grilling
sence
of
any
such
program
in
Houseend
of
tbis
year,·' Corter said in a
In.a defiantly worded intervi~w with
. - - - - statement issued by the White
about some of the-projects Rhodes- -paasect·eneFgy-!eglalation•.the newspaper Pravda; read over
apparently inserted without asking
Stuart Eizenstat, the president's Houae. "Duling 1981'l we should be
Soviet te1evision, Brezhnev denouncanyone.
domestic policy advisel', said the ad- capable of producing 'ethanol at an
ed the "shameless antl.sov!et cam·
Meshel
said
the
bill
ministration was not submitting new &amp;nllual rate of 500 million gallons +
For
instance,
paign" in the West over the Soviet
contained
a
day
care
center
on
each
legislation for the program, but was more than. six times the current
military presence in Afghanistan.
of
17
canipuses,
although
only
one
insupporting
the $3 billion figure in a rate."
He said it was "absurd" to claim
stitutlonhadaskedforacenter.
congressional
conference · comIt would take about 5 milllon tons
U.S. ll!terests Wllfl! - threatened in
Meshel
found
many
of
the
mlttee
already
considering
of
grain to produce 500 million
Afghanistan. Striking out at Western
presidents
reluctant
to
testify,
aplegislation
that
includes
the
Senate's
gallons
of ethanol. This year's
8S8el'tions that MoscOw has .oc- .
parently
because
they
&lt;!liln't
want
to
15
billion
version.
ethanol
production
Ls estimated at 80
cupied the coUntry, he 118id, "The
embarrass
the
governor.
"We
had
to
The
IG-yelll'
progiam
backf;ld
by
million
gallons.
politics and psycholiJgy of colonizers
rope them in,' 1he said.
. Corter woul&lt;l provide loans and loan
Eizenstat said the loan programs
are allen to us."
'
guarantees for c~tructloo of outlined by Carter might encourage
. Bre~hnev also denounced
Riffe
fumed
over
the Senate's
medilim-sized diatillerles construction ol some 2,000 smaJI
small-and
~can measure~ to punish the
of
·
ll
natatoriuffi..student
deletion
to
proouce
·additiOnal alcohol that fuel..aJoohol distilleries on fanns,
So\tiet Union for its Afghan lnunion
at
Shawnee
·
Community
woul&lt;l
be
blen.
ded with g~~sollne.
' where plalit or animal wastes could
volvement,.lncluding President CarCollege,
in
his
dlstrict,-ilelllng
it
as
a
Eizenstat
told
reporte~
the
ad·
be ·uai!d as well as ~cess crOps. An
ter's cteeislllil !o withbold 17 mllUon '
per89Ml
affront..
.
minlstratlon
was
not
''eai'!Jlllrking"
additional
500 small-Or mediwn- '
Wn8nfgrainfromMOICOW. ,
'
He
also·
deplored
Senate
rem•)val
for
the
11rogram
the
,
17
million
sized
·
commerCial
distilleries
said Soviet Citizens-will not Jose
of
a,
$25
million
Gam,er'hospiiP!
at
metric
toils
in
grain
being
withileld
producing
30
mllllon
gallons
or less a
"a single _gram of bread" because oi '
OhioStateUm,·crslty.
. .
from
the
SoViet
Union
in
reprisal
for
·year
might
be·bullt,
he
said.
the American move. ·

committee now, and the SenateHouse struggle is such that there
might
not
even
be a bill, some are saying.
. Chairman Myrl H. Shoemaker,!).
Bourneville, recessed deliberations
last week until later this month after

·Free·d·o m atte~pt
foiled by troops

gue~. "

PONTIAC'S HOT ONE -TRANS AM

Ca'hinets

I
1I

OFF

SELECTION

Medicine

then enriched and shipped to a fabri cation plant before being used ina power
reactor.
" The entire fuel cycle, with the exception of the uranium enriching portion, is an operation of private industry," ftange said . "What we're doing at
these plants is taking privately-owned uranium, either from domestic
utilities or companies, or from abroad" and charging a fee for performing
the process. The government, however, is prohibited by law from turning a
profit.
·
"Under the law, we have to recover all our costs." he said, admitting that
is an extensive, long-term process. The enrichment of uranium, according to
Range "is returning to the government oomething on the order of $1 billion
this fiscal year"
In reality, however, the energy department provides enrichment at cost to
the electric utilities operating nucl ear power plants. In other words, since
the govenunent makes no profit on its sale of enriched uranium , it is
providi!lg an _i,!ldirect subsidy to nuclear power - a subsidy not readily
available to other energy sources .
The uraniwn enrichm!nt conunitment, the largest single activity under
Oak Ridge Operatioos, carries a $9~million budget!or the 1979 fiscal year.
Range said "a large amount of this is for electrical power." The 1979 electric bill for all three enrichment plants will total about $700million.
The power for Goodyear Atomic is supplied by lhe Ohio Valley Electric
Corp., created in 1002 by 15 investor-owned utility companies throughoot the
Ohio River Valley . The contract the federal energy department has with the
electric corporation provides for the largest single block of electric power
ever supplied in the country.
The hundreds of stages in the enrichment process rely on thousands of
electrical motors to operate compressors.
In addition to fueling nuClear power plants, the enriched uranium is used

At the Statehouse

McGINNESS.ST AN LEY AGENCY, INC.

GM

PIKE:l'ON, Ohio (AP) - In the sparsely popula~d hills of southern Ohio,
enough electricity is being used each year to light up the city of lJJs Angeles
for the same amount of time.
But concurrenUy, a substance is produced bere that is capable of
generating 25 times the amoont of power consumed.
That substance is enriched uranium for nuclear power.plants and it comes
from the Goodyear Atomic Corp.'s plant Pike County.
The plant consumes 16.5 billion kilowatt hours of electricity a year. Its
monthly electric bill runs between $12 million and $20 million.
Asubsidiary of Goodyear Corp. in Akron, Goodyear Atomic is one of three
government-owned gaseous diffusion facilities producing enriched uranium
for use in nuclear reactors in this country and abroad. The other two plants
are located at Oak Ridge, Tenn., and Paducah, Ky., and are operated by
Union carbide Corp.
All three plants are owned and fully financed by the U.S. Department of
Energy, but operated under contracts with private industry. Neither
Goodyear nor Union Carbide have any money invested in the cosily project.
The government buys the land and builds and maintains the sprawling complexes andarrangesforthe companies to operate them oo a cost-plus basis.
''What we have done, in e111ence, is to go into the market place and hire the
management and the know-how ~! existing large corporations that can
provide a basic number of people on which you can build an organization,"
explained Wayne Range of the energy depsrtment 's O!k Ridge (Tenn.)
Opera dons .
Under their contracts, Goodyear and Union carbide receive a negotiable
annual fee. In Goodyear's case, the company can also earn an incentive
award after it ''is rated to see how good a job it has done,"said Range.
Enriching uranium is among six stages necessary to produce nuclear fuel .
First, uranium must be mined and milled and then converted to a gas; it i.s

VOL. 13 NO. 50

Now Availabie Through The -- --

-

Pike County plant providing nuclear power

• itlttitttl Oil sale halt threat~ned

Alhol o .... lr.. ~r.R&lt;~ I '""'!'""'.
!llo"l'l'"''' II

~ MITH -1
'-

D

classified

SPEECH AND HEARING DEPARTMENT

Rebels 4-H Club; April Graham,
Triangle 4-H Club; Sonja Call,
Rebels 4-H Club; Scott Roush,
Hillbillies 4-H Club; Billy Davis,
Ohio River Ranchers; Tande Pope,
Hilltoppers 4-H Club; Liaa Russell,
Hillbillies; J eMy Louden, Rio
Friendship 4-H Club; Will Louden,
Rio Friendship 4-H Club; Dianna
Jenkins, Ohio River Ranchers ;
Darlene Jenkins, Ohio River Ranchers; KeMeth Jenkins, Ohio River
Ranchers; Natalie Shong, Rio Silver
Thimbles; Roberia Hamilton, Rio
Silver Thimbles; Kim Jividen,
Thivener Pioneers; Kent Walker,
Centerville Young Farmers; Gregg
Deel, Raccoon Valley; Todd Deel,
Raccoon Valley; Tammy Elliott,
Rodney Rangers ; Tim · Green,
Hillbillies; Dana Green, North
Gallia FFA; Terry Elliott, Rodney
Rangers; Kim Bickers, Hillbillies ;
Kelly Hamilton, Thivener Pioneers;
Tim Beaver, Thivener Pioneers;
Teresa Skeen, Ohio River Ranchers;
Susan Skeen, Ohio River Ranchers;
Scott Elliott, · Cadmus Redskins, ·
Susan Elliott, Codmus Redskins;
Angela Hudson, Country Bwnpkins;
Linda Waugh, Rebels; Mike Waugh,
Hannan Trace FFA; Mike Kemper,
Hillbillies;
Matt , Kemper,
Hillbillies; Richard Meadows, Han,
nan Trace FF A; Carol Meadows,
Hannan Trace FF A; J. C.
Glassburn, Hillbillies; Alan Harris,
Buckeye Hills PTA; Edie Duncan;
Triangle; Gregory Glassburn,
Jackie Glassburn, Shane Glassburn,
all Hillbillies ; Therill Clagg, Jan
Collins and Charles C&lt;&gt;rwin, all
Gallipolis FFA. ~

Buick
PontiaC

D-1- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1910

'

Deadline Tuesday for
fair steer projects

'
BY :
DIANA S. EBERTS
1
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

only attend one session. Th~
meetings will be held here at the Extension Office. The examinations
will be given only on February '1:1 at
both sessions.
Those taking examinations should
ca ll our office and ask for study
materials.
·
If would help if we knew ahead of
time if you will be attending and
what categories you will need
training in.

Gasohol pr~gram
being prepared

Soviet policy
'unshakeable'

'. He

I

.I

·'

the thrilling, threatening sword r1.
revolutionary leader Ayatollah
RUhollah Khomeini. The sword
slashes at the United States wblch
remains Iran's declared No.1' enemy
despite the Soviet Union's massive
military intervention in Moslem
Afghanistan next door.
Neither the Urilted States nor the
Iranian masses know much about
the villain-heroes.
Just wbo are they? Are they really
students?
No one is sure, but the concensua
here is that they come from the
ranks of the politically active at the
universities, though now they have
abandoned their schooling.
Their numbers are estimated at
400 tp 500. About 100 are believed on
hand at all times in the embassy,
with the inner circle never leaving
the '1:1-acre compound. When off duty
most others go home to their
families in Tehran or to their univer!lty donnitories .
Their expenses are known to be
borne by the office of Ayatollah
Khomeini who meets all requests for
cash and equipment. Food Is
brought in daily from Revolutionary
Committee kitchens in embassy
trucks driven by the militants.
The holltages eat food from the
embassy commissary prepared by a
Pakistani cook who used to work for
the America!lll and volunteered to
staywiththem.
President Carter's press
secretary, Jody Powell, recenUy
characterized the militants as
"Marxists who may be beyond the
control of the Ayatollah Khomeini."
When telephoned for comment on
that, a militants' spokeswoman said,
"We can't respond right now, we're
at prayers."
The few students wllllni! to talk
outalde their bastion denied they are
Marxists. ln Iran's Islamic
revolution, Marxism is a damnable
creed.
The consensus of infonned foreign
and local opinion in Tehran,
however, is that the embasiJy occupation force reflects political
views ranging from Trotskyite 19th
century anachists to crusading
Moolems. Their rhetoric.Ls peppered
with leftist jargon.
For a while, members ci the
Palestlnlan Liberation Organization
(PWJ were believed to be .among
the embasiJy militants. Some youth$
appeared in the black and wblte
checked scarf popularized by
Yasser Arafat's Al-Fatah guyrrlllaa.
However, this Ls now seen aa an
emulation of the PW.
About 30 percent of the youths are
thought to be women who like the
men range in age from about 20 to
28,
Most are drawn !rem Tehran's
four major universities and the Qom
Theological &amp;eminary, baatlon of the
teachings of Khomelni. One ci tbrrl
few identifiable figures in the em.
bassy Ls Ayatollah Mohammacl
Khoelnl, a bearded dignitary rarely
seen who represents Khomelni.
'
The rest of the group act out an
elaborate charade rl. ~!'i
giVing names that are 1enera111.

rega~aa~~

their features in public aa steml,y Ill(
they write their rbetoric, and U8llll1.
giving reporters and ' otbe11:
queslmeruhortahrlft.
·~
One rl. the few. students to ella(
casually t9 reporter In recent clayi
gave her nim)e as Fahiml Moall and
her age aa 20.. She lillld she met
recenUy With a bostage she lliiii8Cl
as "Elizabeth" who "Is leading tbt
Bible each day and Is a bit .nervlllll!
but we try to l'MUW'e her. I read the
Koran sometiiDea With her."

a

'1

.

'

�'I

•2- TheSWlday Times-&amp;nllncl, Sunda)·, Jan . l3. 1980

.

p-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

For Best Results Use Sunday Tintes-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memorl' .
IN MEMORY
o t Mrs
L.ydia
B. Bee~ c h . who
passed awav one vear ago
on January 11. 1979 .

What is a Mother

It takes a mettler 's tove to
make i'l house a h ome
A place to be rem embered ,
no matter where we roam
It takes a mother ' s patien
ce to bring a c·hild vp right

And her courage and her
cheerfulness to make a

dark day bright

It
takes a
molh er·s
thoughtfu l ness to mend the
heart's deep "hu rt s"
And her skill and her en

durance to mend littl e
socks and shirts
It takes a mother's kind
ness to forgi ve us when we

err

To sympathize in trouble
and bow her head in prayer

It takes a mot her 's wisdom
to recogniz e our needs
And to give us reassurance
by her lovi ng words and
deeds
It takes a mother 's endless
1
fai th , her confi dence and
trust
To guide us thro u g h the pit·
falls of selfishness and lust
And that is why in all this
world there co u ld not be
another
Who could lutfi 11 God's pur
pose as completely as
mother !
Sadly missed
by her
ch ildren , Mrs . Mildred
Jacobs, Mrs . Clyda Bing ,
Mrs. Oma N e lson . Mrs
Freda va.n 1nwagen an d
Mr. R ic hard Beach

THE FAMILY of Isaac l
Shupe would l•k.c to e); press
fhe•r s•ncere thanks and
app recia tion to our fnends
and relatives for th e many
beaut dul flow ers . the car
ds, food, Gallia Coun ty
Highway
Dept
and
trustees tor th eir part in
clea ring the ,roads, I hose
opening and c losing the
grave, and for all other ex
press ions ot sym pathy.
Specia l !hanks To the Doc
tors. and Nurses at Holzer
Hospital and at th e H ous ton
Nursing Home at Hamden.
the M cC oy ·Moore Funeral
Home , th e singe r s, the
Rev 's O.H. Cart and Bob
Madison tor Their co nso ling
wo r ds . May God Bless each
of
YOU.
Wif e
Sallie,
Childre n, Gra n dchi ld ren
and Great Grandc h ildren .

LOST : envelope con taining
large sum of money on
Kroger's Parking Lot . II
found . call 992 5596 .

.o.r.mt An ybrld)'

I!ETTIE fl..MU{

FOUND

FLUFFY eared shepherd
type male, black
and
b,..own. Blue tick hound,
male . Humane Society, 992·

Oil distilled from the two
aromatic resins frankincense and myrrh goes
mostly into perfumes.
Somalia and .Ethiopia furnish most of the frankincense that reaches the
United States . Saudi
Arabia and Somalia supply
the myrrh , according to
National Geographic .

In ancient times,
smoldering frankincense
was used to honor the gods.
Myrrh was used to aooint
the dead, supposedly cured
the sick, and perfumed the
body.

•

Med . size black.

and brown dog w ith pup·
pies. by Church oi the
Nazarene ., Call between 6
p. m . and 7 p.m . Call 446

1343.

GALLIPO!JS - We now have
copies of the "Fanner's Tax Guide"
for use in preparing 1979 Fann Income Tax Returns. If you'd like your
free copy please call us at the Gallia
County Extension Office, 446-4612
ext. 32, or write us at P. 0. Box 72,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631. You're also
welcome to stop by the office either way we'd be glad to furnish
you a copy.
We also have copies of the "Ohio
Commercial Fann Account Book"
and if you need fillers for your
current book, then stop by and get
your supplies. Also, if you've never
used this accoWlt system before,
then ask our ·secretaries to see a
copy. We think that it is a real good
system.
If the expiration date on your
private pesticide applicator card
says that your card expires at the
end of either February of 1980 or 1981
then you should be making plans to
get recertified for another three (3)
years.
I have scheduled one recertification meeting for January 22 at
the Grace United Methodist Church
in Gallipolis. You may attend either
a H p.m. or 7-10 p.m. session to get
the required three hours recertification training that you will need.
You'll need three (3) hours of
retraining even if you're just certified in one category . If you took
some training last year then this will
count towards the hours you'U need.
If you 're certified for more than four
(4) different categories, then you'll
need an additional one-half hour
(beyhond the minimwn three (3)
hours for each category.
We'll have a second recertification
training sessi.on on Tuesday 1
February 26, at the Hannan Trace
High School. Here, again, the times
are from 1-4 p.m. and 7-10 p.m. and
you may attend either session.
Exams will be given here at the
Ha1man Trace session for those who
want to take them or who are new
people wanting to become certified

.r,.
.

'

•

FOUND · Gently Shephard
trained. For

information

ca ll 256·6783.
LOST · 5 mo . old, Bull
Terrier · white with brown
spots. In v ic inity of Cen ·
tenary area . Ca ll 446· 7504 .

Wanted to Do
WILL DO NOTARY WORK

to Babysit i n her . home.

Rodney area . Call245·5688.
WOULD

Ll KE

for the first time.
If you have questions about recertificallon training or getting licensed
for the first time, then feel free to
call my office.
We 're having a Corn-&amp;ybean
Production Meeting on Wednesday,
January 30, 9:45a.m. to3 p.m. at the
Holiday lrut here in Gallipolis. The
meeting is for Gallia and neighboring county fanners in Ohio and
West Virginia. Lunch will be
provided by cooperating chemical
companies and agribusiness !inns.
The meeting is about growing
corn, the conventional or customary
way (plow, disk,- plant, etc.) and
since severaj people are now raising
soybeans we decided t9 devote some
attention to that crop, too.
Dr. Ed Stroube, OSU Extension
Weed Specialist, will lead a "Weed
Roundtable" (emphasis on Johnsongrass) in the morning and after
lunch Dr. Don Eckert, OSU Extension Agronomist, Energy Conservation, will talk about "New Com
Varieties that Will Dry Down," and
"Using Nitrogen Most Effectively."
We'll be happy to have you join us
for this crop production meeting.
Please have your lunch reservation
into our office by January 26.

TO

do

babysitting in my home for
one or two small children .
1928'12
Chestnut
St .

8444.

home,

reasonab le

In

my
pr ice,

love chi ldren . Calll45·5422.
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away lmd

does not offer or altempt to
Dffer any other thing for
sate m_ay place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

2 YR. OLD DOG · to good
home. Call446·4315 after 5.
2 KITTENS ~ Real cute but
not real tame . Caii24S·5804 .

3 PT. HIMALAYAN kil·
tens, 10 wks . old. Call 245·
5800.
PUPP IES · Approximately
12 wks. old. Call367-068l.

homes . TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES . CA LL
446·7572.

1971 Fleelwood t4X65, 3
bdr.
1970 Vindale 12X63, w. ex

B&amp;S

HOME · 2 miles from town

jazz, and

ballet,

tap,

adult exercise

;azz ctasses. Call Shirley
Carpenter,

Dance Studio, 949·2710
before January 30th.
INCOME

TAX

1979 l4X70 3 bedroom, l
bath , rented

lot

in

ci ty

Bradbury.

992

This week only, any 2 Cushion Sofa for
Only $90 Labor Plus 10% Discount on
fabric, plus Free armcaps &amp; head flaps.
Free pick-~p &amp; deli~ery.

district. 446·7247.
Notices
GUN

SHOOT .

AKC Gordon

Sellers, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446·4191.

Racine

Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6 : 30p.m .
At their buildingin Bashan.
Factory c hoke guns only ,

Our tabor price includes tightening &amp;
reglueing Ira me where needed, relying
springs, tone finish wood, extra padding
where necessary.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

Call now for your free estimate. No job
too small or too large.

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will

harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 61"'·

bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,

Riding Lessons and Horse

Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592,

698·3290 .
Care

Bordlng

and

products. Western

boots.

Children' s

Adults $29.00.

$15 ..501

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, a it breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also

AKC

registered

Doberrnans . 61~·«6· 7795 .
POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

service,

Federal and State. Wallace

Russell,
7226.

grooming.

Carpenter's

UPHOLSTERY SPECIAL

details. 446-3142 .

ches, class rings, weddlno
7"'2· 2331.

Treasure

Chest

6462.

GIVE A CUTE loveable
pup a future. Adopt an or·
phan from your Humane

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA

and

one

flame

pt

Himalayan cat . Orders for
spring puppies and kittens

are being accepted . Call
· 446 ~ 3~44 after 6 p.m.

Society.

Shots, wormed.

Donations

appreciated .

992-6260.

MARTIN ' S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about
to tose money? Over 25

wprk. Send resumes, Box

years experience in buying

HOME
ADDRESSERS
wanted . $500 per week
possible. No experience
required. A.S .D., PO

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on

CENTENARY WOODS Pet
Grooming
Professional

Facil i ties .
services of -

fered. All breeds, all styles.
Call «6·0231 .
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor fa ci lities .

largest

end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
stab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .• Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 9'/2·2689.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete

households.

Write

M.D.

Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call4&lt;16·7795.

Miller. Rt. ,.., Pomeroy or

DOGS OBEDIENCE
TRAINED · and boarded,
S35. wk.. dogs boarded
only, $20. wk. free pick-up
and· delivery , Red Brush
Kennels. Call1·286·2939 .

ANTIQUES,

FUR·

NITURE,

china,

call9'/2~

new, used Qr antique fur·
niture.. One piece or com·

plete

7760.
glass,

anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 9'12·
3161.

f9r antiques and col lec·
fibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . . A lso,

household.

Gold,

silver and other old coins,
china, olass, old toys, dolls,
Iron banks•. tools, antique

clothing, razors. po&lt;:ket
knives and other old Items.
Call 992·6370.

752U.
as a young business person

and earn good money plus

January 13, 1980
This coming year you will put to
beneficial uses knowledg e
you 've gained academ •cally and
througll expenence. II will be
used in areas where you can
make remarkab le progress
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)
Do not deviate one 1ota today
!rom doing thai wh1ch you
believe to be right and proper
Let your high standards gUide all
your ac1ions. Travel. re sources .
romance. luck. possible pitfalls
and career lor I he months ahead
are all discussed in your new
Astro-Grapll letter which begins
with your birthday .Mail ·$1 lor
each to Astro-G raph . Bo,. 489 .
Radio City Station. N.Y. 10019
Be sure to spacily birth date

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)

Matters which mean something
to you malerlally should be
attended to today. postponed
unlit tomorrow. Delays may not
work to your ad&gt;wanlage.
PISCES (Feb. 20· M•rch 20)
Because you're a person of your
word you will '!)'in admiration
today. Others know that when
you make a promise you'll live up
to it to I he letter.
ARIES (M•rch 21-April 19)
Ratner than request favors of
friends today, put yourself at
their disposal. You 'll get more
joy !rom doing tt1an receiving .

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver coins,
silverware, other gotd and
silver Items, jewelry, old

glass frames and antiQue
Will

buy

one

piece or household. Call
992·6370.
SILVER DOLLARS AIIID
SILVER
CHANGE
BEFORE
1964
AT
RECORD HIGH PRICES. •
ALSO, GOLD COINS,
RINGS, JEWELRY AND
MISC. ITE!MSAT HONEST
UP ·TO· DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT,
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
992·3476.
LIMITED TIME ONLY.
Yellow brass, JOe lb., Junk
balterles $3 ea. , No. 1 and
No. 2 caper, 60c and 70c lb.
Radiators, ,.OC lb. Clean
aluminum 20c lb . 2 fl. short
Iron, $1 .75 hd. Stove cas! $2
hd. Motors cast $3.25 hd.
Long 1ron $1.25 hd. Rider's
Salvage, SR 124, Pomeroy.
992- ~-

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list al 992·
2156or992·2157.
EXPERIENCED
TAX
PREPARERS wanted .
Hourly rate and bonus
plan. Full or part-time
hours. Capital Fnance Ser·
vices. Phone 992·2111
today. Equal Opportunity
Employers. M·F.

All work completely guaranteed.
, Sale Ends Saturday, Jan. 19 ·

GEMINI (Mor 21-June 20) To

keep the peace at home today
you'll lind it worthwhile to make
some compromises or concessions . Be cooperative, not
demanding.

CANCER tJuno 21-July 22)

Steer clear of siluationa loday
where you are looking lor something for nothing . Rewards can
be realized , but only il you're
prepared to work tor them .

LEO (.luly n.Aug, 22) Be roolls-

tlc today in matters whtch could
Bither cost or eave you money.
Sharpen your penc:ll and your
wits to figure everything oul ta
the laat detail.

VIR(JQ (AUt. 21-lopl. 22)

Arrange your schedule today so
that time devoted to pleasurable
pursuits won't take precedence
over lime you should be devoting
to your responslbilllles.

23) Witb·

out causing the olher party
embarrassment, you mlghl lind
the right opportunity today to
remind this person of an old debt
owed you whiCh snould be
repaid .
SCORPIO (Oct 21-Nov. 22) This
• Is a good day to get in touch wl'h
old friends so they know they'te
still important to you. Make
arrangements tor a fuiUre get,. tOQe1her.
IAQtTT ARtUStNov. 21·0111:. 21)
Your ambi.l lon~ Wllltbe mont.eas.
ily lultl!led today II you go about
doing what nteija doing without
calling too much attentlofl to
yo~rHif. Tread sollly.
!NEW SPAPEA E~lE!'IItAIS! AS, N 1

'

In 1800, J . w, llkar k took
the first aerial photograph
!root-a ball con over Boston.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~t!!!l~ ~

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

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

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
Yeah , sure!

t

,_.,"""'-'''"'"... N' ~-· • · ... ,,..

LUFTO

WHAI

J

0

I

I BOPISHb

r

I I

Print answer here:
Yesleodav 5

I

~HIE

5AW

WHE.N HER HU6"AND
CAME. HON\E
"~E.AR I N6 61FT5. ' 1
Now arrange the circt&amp;d letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above canaan .

KI I XI XX) r XXJ

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles ITCHY EVOKE . 'EMPIRE MATURE
Answer: How ne p1cked h1 s way thr ough the

A POCK ET AT I. TIME

c rowd ~

Jumble Book No. 13,C onlainlng 110 puules,lsav•llablelor$1 .75 p011pald
from Jumble, c/o this newtpaper, Bo~t 34, Norwood, N.J.07648.1ncludeyour
nama, addreu, tip code and make checks payable to Newapaperbooks.

Saturday, Jan. 12

1 Started
6 Pen
1I Snared
18 Gladden
19 Longlegged bird
20 Simplest
21 Fairy
23 Keen ·
24 Scottish cap
26 Deposits
27 Spanish
(abbr.)
29 Box
30 Electrical
unit
31 Speech
Impediment
32 Age
33 As written:
Mus.
34 Nerve net work
35 Face part
36 Caviled
38 Scheduled
40 Imitate
41 Fooiwear
42 Femur, e.g .
43 Female ruH
45 Watched
secretly
46 Ma's mate
47 Unruffled
48 Flower
49 Vital organ
51 Narrate
52 Teutonic
deity
53 Possess
54 Shock
55 Amend
57 Diocese
58 Vends
60 Musical
instrument

61 State: Abbr.
62 Burn with
ho.t water
64 Rupees

BRIDGE

(abbr.)
65 Near
66 Food fish
67 Yearns
69 Handle
7-1 John: Scot.
73 Arabs, e.g.
74 Emmets
76.Brlsttellke
79 Head part
81 Luau fare
82 Grog
84 Beguiles
85 Measuring
devices
87 Rostur
90 Fat
92 AHirmatlve
vote
93 Growing out
of
95 Famed
97 Amount
owed
98 Pronoun
99 Exist
101 Beef animal
103 Edible seed
104 Possessive
pronoun
105 Perch
108 Anglo-Saxon money
110 Mexican
shawls
112 Prohibits
113 Torrid
114 Hebrew letter
115 Danish
Island
111 Citrus fruit:
Pl.
118 Man's nicknamne

119 Kind of
bean
120 Printer's
measure
121 Odor
123 Goddess of
healing

merchandising , etc. Must

complete application at
Moore's. An equal opportunity employer.
Wanted to Buy
DIAMONDS, old coins,
gold bands, estate jewelry,
class rings, TAWNEY
JEWELERS, 422 Second
Ave.

124 Flesh
125 Additional
126 Latin conjunction
127 Touchwood
129 Regard
131 Dull one
132 Persian
133 Greek tetter
134 River Island
136 Bard
13 7 Assistant
138 More
revealing
139 Down: PreIii
140 Egyptian lizard
141 Writing fluid
142 Monster
143 Hindu tribe:
Pl.
144 More precipitous
146 Finished
148 Eagle's nest
149 Tell
150 Highways
151 Tibetan
priests
DOW !It
1 Chastise
2 Choice part
3 Portal
4 Devoured
5 Compass
pt.
6 Color
7 Lease
B Anger
9 Preposition
10 All
11 Annealed
12 Sun god
13 Thecaama
14 Docks
15 Flower parts
16 Worm
17 Delirium
tremens

(abbr.)
21 Predicaments
22 Make ready
23 Swift
25 Snake
27 Pittsburgh
football
player
28 Oars
30 Kind of tabric
31 Path
33 Pigpens
35 Midday
36 Expense
37 Loved ones
39 Likely
41 Nods
42 Tree trunk
44 Build
47 Young horse
48 Revolution
49 Girt's name
50 Nicholas
and Ivan
54 Senior 's son
55 Rockfish
56 Jacket part
59 Woolly
SO Wad
61 Roman
gods
63 Facts
66 Tellurlum
symbol
67 Letter abbr.
68 Harshsounding
70 Salad
Ingredient
71 Doctrine
72 High card
73 Aat fish : Pl.
75 Opera
extras
77 Secret
agent
78 Compass
pt.
eo Eye part
83 Crowds

PRO-

BABYSITTER

Call «6·4605.

86.Metai
88 Drinks heavily
89 The sweetsop
90 Paid notice
91 Ave.
94 Weird
96 Babylonian
deity
98 Greek letter
99 Bragged
100 Hermit
102 Fiber plant
104 Male deer
105 European
city ·
106 Racer
107 OHers
109 Combat
place
111 Sweat
1 t2 Ray
113 Lease
116 Ancient
118 Vegetable
119 Learning
122 Chief
124 More timid
125 Fashion
126 Sequence
128 One borne
130 Cargo unit
131 Flying creatures
132 Italian
secret SOCIety
135 Bark cloth
137 Matured
138 Brewer's
yeast
140 Indonesian
142 Harem room
143 New Zealand parrot
144 Tin symbol
145 Latin conjunction
147 Negative
148 Man's nickname

sand,
gravel , calcium
ch loride. fertilizer. dog
food. and all types of salt.
Excelsior Slllt Works, Inc .,

E Ma in St., Pomeroy, 9'12·

3891 .

APPLES
Cl DER '·
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard,
Phone

State Route
Wilkesville,

inch alum . complete
storm entry door. Call 446·

2281 .

APPLES - ROME beauty ·
apples at $.4 per bu . Best for ·
apple buller. Call 669·3785,
Fi tzpatrick

Orchard,

LADIES lovely size 12 X 16
dresses, worn only once or
twice. New size 14 full

manufacturer

length salmon color leather

coat . Catl992·3263.
HUNT'S

balm,

requires

incentives. Call

ROUTE SERVICEMAN
Approximately 75 per cent
travel, W.VA., Penn., NY,

Virginia, must have depen·
dable van, sta . wagon or

full size car, 25 or over.
Bondable,
National
Sanitary Labs. Call «6·
0090, rm. 239.
LOROBI'S PIZZA Silver
Bridge Plaza, apply in per·
son only . Help wanted.
SALES MANAGEMENT
Sa les person needed lm·
mediately for Gallia and
Meigs Co. $20,000. pes. lst.
yr. Must have proven sue·
cessful sales background.
Call collect person to per·
son for John Pettigrew at 1·
533·3817. Mon. Jan. 14, 9

a.m.to4p.m .

three

minute

Whitmet

Black

Diamond
Liniment,
Rawleigh products, Across
street from Smith Buick

Garage . 1924 Eastern Ave.
Gall ipolls, OH Call 446·
9516.

For Sale
ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
tels, etc. Claude Winters_
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245·

.

NICE PIGS for sale. Wor·
med, castrated. 949·2857 .
CURED

firewood, ·

reasonab ly

priced.

H2·

ZENIT"f CONSOLE stereo.

5 years old . Very gOOd con-

HAY FOR SALE. $1 per
bole, 80c by truckload.
Delivery can be arranged. ·

843·2795.
EMERGE IIICY
alternators -

power

own the best

- buy Winpower. Call 513·
788·2589.
17

CUBIC

FOOT

refrigerator,

good

GE .
con·

dillon. $100. Cati992·27S9.

1----------HOTPOINT
GENERAL
E..ECTRIC

IRON BED and springs. Oil
furnace~

PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY . $20. plus tax
and old battery. We buy old

trailer

$50. Two bedroom
furnished, $8,000.

Headquarters

9'/H341 .

4ooliances

sates &amp; Service

batteries. Repair batteries .

HS.N Day old or started
leghorn pullets, both floor

Ca tt 388·8596.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

or cage grown available.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES.
Washers,

Poultry

Housing

Automation,

and

c;(J,.,_Jack w, Carsey

Modern

Poultry, 399 W. Main,
Pomeroy. Phone 992· 216~ .

refridgerators,

ranges.
Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern Av·
ce., «6·7396.

AFRICAN VIOLETS. Er·
ma Roush, 32502 Miner·
sville Rd., Minersville.

LUMP, stoker 8. egg coal,
4&lt;16·1408.

AFRICAN VIOLETS. Er·

ECHO CHAIN SAWS,
hydraulic wood spl itters.

rna Roush, 32502 Minersville Rd ., Minersv ille.

saw chain, bars, and all
wood cutting supp lies.

So,tadtemp
USED TRUMPET. 9'12·
5702.

Charles McKean, Fairfield
Centenary Road, «6·9&lt;142.

VALENTINE'S DAY : for

FIREWOOD, seasoned
oak, ash and hickory, Ph
4-16·9442 .
FIREWOOD

~

and

5121afler 5pm.

dryers,

SR

dition . After S, 992-5085.

38 SPECIAL · 6 inch barrel,
new cond .. S91J. cash. Call
367·0202.

RETIREMENT

689 .
669·

3785.

25&lt;14.

36

wanted .

BE HONEST with yourself .
If your present Job stifles
your creativity 8. limits
your development- - we're
your ticket. Established

DRYER

Good working cond., $40.

If you have management potential
and would like to arrange an interview,
Number 175 in care of Gallipolis Daily
Tribune.

PART·TtME GIRL to work

· sale, crocheted roses. scen-

ted or unscented. 992·5240.

~
Mgr.
, .....~ . Phone 992-2111

1---------TRY THE NEW
"PILLOW SOFT"
SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER
THE ULTIMATE IN
SLEEPING COMFORT

CORBIN and SNYDER:
FURNITURE
955 Second A~enue
Gallipolis, Ohio

GOOD MIXED hay, $1

Spilt,

bale.

seasoned oak &amp; hickory ,

Raymond Cotterill,

45631
F'HONE 614·446·1171

Harrisonvlle, 742·2082.

cross tie ends. Cali.W. ~&lt;ISJ4
or «6·2329.
40 LB Box of West Virginia

USED FURNITURE

Chunks, low ash, low sulfur

Foster Coal co .. «6·2783.

WASHER &amp; DRYER, G.E .
DINETTE SET WITH 6CHAIRS
3 PC. BDR. SUITE, MAPLE
3 PC. BDR. SUITE, MAHOGANY
BLACK&amp;. WHITE TELEVISION
CONSOLE STEREO
SWIVEL CHAIR

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
SERVICES · Transitional · LAYNE'S FURNITURE
facility, is offering em· Sofa, chair, rocker, ofloman, 3 !abies, SSOO. Sofa,
ployment as par1·time
chair and loveseat, $275.
community
services
worker for group home for · Sofas and chairs priced
from 5275. to $550. Tables,
adults with mental retar·
dation and developmental $33. ·$60·$70 and $85.
disabilities. 16 hours on Sofabed and choir, $150.
weekend. Responsible tor Hide·a·bed, $225., Queen
dally -living program and size, $325. Recliners, $125.,
$150., $160., $175., and $225.
weekend recreation and
Gallipolis
leisure time activities. Ap· Lamps from $18. to $50. 5
ply with David Mlllihen pc . dine11es from $69. to
facility director. P.O. box S325. Wood tab Ie and 4
906 Gallipolis or call «6· chairs, $235. Table, two 1
leaves, 6 chairs. (high
1642, ext. 332 .
backed), $400. Hutches,
and $350., maple or
HOME
SERVICES S300.
pine
finish. Bedroom
WORKER to work with suites, $175.,
(white),
persons who are develop- S325. (pecan),$275.
$350.
(oakJ.
mentally disabled through Bassett Oak, $550., Bassett
placement In worker's Cherry,
$625.
Bunk' bed
home.
H"ome services
complete
with
maltresses,
workers will be responsible
$250., $275. Captain's
tor providing training, $175.,
beds, S250. complete. Baby
social services end home
$75. Mattresses or
care for adults and beds,
box springs, full or twin,
children . Room and board SSO.,
$60. and $70.
rate and salary will be Queenfirm,
sets,
$175. 4 dr.
paid : Room and board Is
S-42. 5 dr . chests, S-49.
$5.50 per day , sa lary chest,
Bed frames, $20 . En·
ranges from $3,016 to 8,000. terlalnment
centers, $.40.
Contact Marie B. Hobbs
S50. Desks, $38.
9'12·6025 or write P.O. box and
906, Gallipolis, OH . EQUAL USED
Ranges, refrldgerators,
OPPORTUNITY EM · dresser
s, TV's, stereo,
1
PLOVER.
headboards and beds. Por·
table dryers, cold heater, ·
RN OR LPN
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Ideal part·tlme job tor Open 9am to 6pm, Mon.
Gallla · resident, not thru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
working full time. No
446·0322
pallenl . ere, flexible hrs.
exc. pay, call (304) 3-16·5916 FIREWOOD
Hickory,
or write lnsurex P.O. box red,
white 8. black Oak.
6571 St. Charles W.Va.
Sugar Maple, $30. truck
25303.
load, we also have apple
wood. Call 446·7106 after 6.
PART · TIME PIECE
WORK
Webster, SILVER DOLLARS and
Amerlca•s foremost die· gold
coins. For investment
IIOnary company needs or collection.
MTS Coin
Home workers to update Shop. Call 446·1842
or 446·
IO&lt;:ol mailing lists . All 0690.
ages,
experience
unnecessary . Send name. ad·
dress, phone number to HAY FOR SALE. 245·5457.
Webster, 175 5th. Ave.,
suite 1101·747-F, New York, F'RACTICE spinet plano
NY 10010.
sacrifice at $2,j9 or terms
arranged, Ph 245·9559.•

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER .FURN~ CO.
446:1171

955 Second Ave.

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

INVENTORY SAI.E
LOOK OVER THESE
GOOD BUYS

1969 CHEV. C10 ••.•••• $395

1973 FORD LTD •••••••• !595
1974 FORD
MAVERICK ••••••••••••• !1295
1975 FORD
MAVERICK ••••••••••••• !1995
1976 PACER ••••••••••• ~1995

14 HCP Always open bidding
or more

13 HCP 95 percenl of hands
should be opened

12 HCP 75 percent should
be opened
11 HCP 25 percent shOuld
be opened
10 HCP Do not open
Two Words to tbe Wise
· There is a lot of bal~~rdash
about the weaker standards in
third or fourth seat. Your
bridge life will be sweeter and
easier if/ou,just consideNhat
if a han is worth .an opening
bid it 'is worth It in any, JlOSi:

Elec welder 100 amp, 110
volt, brand new, Franklin
fireplace complete with
barbeQue grill, new grate,
tire screen and 22 auto rlf·
fie with telescope, call 367·
0317.

hop. ,

,.

TRAINING

SHARING

675·19S..

PIONEER Under·dosh 8·
track car ster~. model T!'·
252 wtm mounting bracket,
S!O. KRACO 40 walt power
booster, under-dash model
PB ·13l, $25. eoth new and I
ready to hook up .. Call 446'
.9595.
.
.

NOI1010S,
.
.
.

(

ePROFIT
PLAN

Benefits,

high-card points which we
will call HCP from now on.
Here a~e minimum standards:

This is the corner stone of
The fact.that a hand' meets
both ·attack and defense . all requirements lor an openthere are all sorts of guide- ing bid does not mean that you
lines here, but we will. try to
must bid with It after an oppogive-the simplest poSsible set,
nent has opened lbe bidding:
temporarily omitting preINEWSPARER ENTERPRISE ASSN) '
emptive openings llased on .a
.
.
long suit , a stout heat! and a ' • ; (For ll ·copy · Of JJ190BY
,:,•sire to make thil)gs difficult
MODERN, "nd .$ 1 to: "Win' at
lor your ,opp9nents who preBridge, " care of thlil MWIPB·
sumably hav~ more high
pe~. P._q , Box 489, Radio 'r;lty
cards than you .
Station, · Nsw Y,ork, N. Y.
The yrst requirement is
10019.)
'
'
.

TWO 14 inch snow tires,
slightly used, $25. Call 379·
2
4
0
9

e EXCELLENT SALARY
eHEALTH -LIFE INSURANCE
ePAIDVACATION

5:30 . .w, 1526.

Basic bidding principles
The {irst and most ifl\j)Or·
tant principle is that each bid
or pass places a top and bottom limit on your strength.
Subsequent action tends to
define your llmits more closely, but never increases them.
The second principle Is
prep~redness . When you have
choice of act,ion you should
choose the one that is most
likely to make future action
slinpler.
.t
The third is that or risk
versus again. Before you tak~
any action, balance the risk of
1os_s against the prospect of
gam .. Before you take any
action balance the risk .of loss
against the prospect of gain.
Tbe Opening Bid

and telephOne stand. Call
«6·1970.

HOTPOINT
eMANAGEMENT
GRAM

Prefer in my home, 8 to

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

TUPPERWARE · 1h price,
antique oval table, couch,

We offer selected candidates:

evenings.

ACROSS

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin·
g machine, $50. Cal l «6·
2342.

eUNIT PROFIT BONUS PROGRAM
assist customers. Must be
willing to work Friday
evenings. General duties
Include stocking, pricing,

if

Call367·7180.

RETAIL CLERK. Seeking
aggressive sales person to

splii

For Safe
COAl.., LIMESTONE,

689.

In concession at the Colony

Commercial &amp; Residential
Finest quality at the lowest possible
prices.

FIREWOOD

needed. $20 . load, ac ·
cordi .no to where delivered .

We are a growth oriented, fl.lll service
restaurant chain, seeking aggressive Individuals with management experience
to become manager or assistant manager
for our restaurant in the Gallipolis area.

Tl)eoter. Apply in person

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) In

co mmercial deaiLngs to~. ~y .
don't be overly influenced by initial appearances. A hard second
look will help you determine their
real worth.

RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT

some great gifts as a Sen·

767·3167 or 557·3411 .
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON ' T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S.

· like new, 16 gal. output
per day . Caii388·8U6.

GET VALUABLE training

SUNDAY PUZZLER

256-1562

coin collections. Call 614·

1 CONSOLE HUMIDIFIER

-166. Racine, OH .

Drawer 1.60069, Dallas, TX

For Sale

Help Wanted

energetic 8. ambitious persons who enjoys an at·
mosphere of challenge plus
high earnings potential.

GALLI POpS, OHIO ·

guns, pO&lt;:ket watches and

Help Wanted

WORK white children are
In school. Educotlat soles

furniture .

AKC
REGISTERED
Cocker Spaniel. 6 wks. old.
446·0109 .
'·

· Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in
the Middleport and
Pomeroy areas. Call the
Dally Sentinel between 8:30
and 5:00p.m., 992·2156.

BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY

pay cash or certified check

.'Birthday

L

pre -school,

ATTENTION!

MOBILE:

~q'our

1
'

in ballet, tap a_nd jazz now
open. Classes offered art

Pets for Sate
BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS.
Boarding and

Himalayan , Persian and
Siamese cats. Available
now, Chow Chow puppies,

on Rt . 568 . Call eve nings for

Bernice Bede Osol ·

2~0ct.

2ND SEMESTER classes

Pt. Pleasant W.VA .
675·4424.

VINDALE

Wanted to Buy
OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

and selling . . Will appraise

Mobile Home Sa les

ASTRO·GRAPH

(fllpl.

prices

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

Shop, Middleport.

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
(;UN CLUB .

1971 Camron 14X64, 2 bdr.
1971 Shakespeare 12X65, 2
bdr.

h i ghest

Mobile Homes- Sale
197-2 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex ·
panda, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 J bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
S'ALE5, PT. PLEASANT ,
wv . 304·675·4424.

Contact Ed Burkett Barber

6260. Pets available tor
adoption and information
service .
I nvestigative
Agent ,

all el ec t .

PAY

possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 992·

1972 Crown 12)(65, 3 bdr.,

I:;J

LIBR~ ·

1

ANTIQUES APPRAI St;: D.
Ph 245·5050.

'iflfflrut m'if

KILLING JUS'tiF'IED
EFFINGHAM, lll. (API - A
coroner's jury has ruled that the
shooting death of a Kentucky man
wanted for the murder of a state
police trooper was justifiable
homicide.
The ruling came at an inquest
Friday into the death of Clyde
Daniel
Graham,
22,
of
Elizabethtown, Ky., shot by a Kentucky state trooper Dec. 8, 1979 at
the Villa Inn Motel in Effingham.
Kentucky State Police Sgt.
Eugene Coffey, who shot Graham,
told the jury that he and Special
Agent John Roberts of the Illinois
State Police had confronted Graham
at the door of his room in an effort to
"grab and subdue" him.

AIJ \1..1 :O JRF. ~ JE N - Tho; , '' l'i:ir r;rim;tcad, left, treasur~ r ,,f thr
!'lew llaven Fire llepartmer.t. lt • ·e~pts a $500 donation on behalf of his
fe ll fl w ftremcn rrom Dick Ord. executiv e vice president of the Mason

FOR THE BEST buy in
diamonds, go to Tawney
Jewelers ,
422 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis . Com ·
pare prfc es anywhere.

Gallipolis. OH .

WILL TEAR down house
and .haul away. Call 366·

wi II be prepared by ap·
pointment~ 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cllll
Rd ., Pomeroy .

WINTER SALE · Pri ces
reduced on used mobile

Call256·1969.

MOTHER OF 2 would like

INCOME TAX SERVICE .
Quarterly , Federal and all
state income fa)( reports

446·0294 ..

6260 .

in my home . Appo~ntment ,
evenings and weekends .

&lt;&gt;

·n;mk

SWEEPER and sewing
ma'c hine repair, parts, and
supplies .
P1ck u p and
delivery . Dav•S Va cuum
. Cie,aner , one hal t mile up
Georges Cret&gt;k Rd
Call

panda room

~

('pu nt ~

~

Mobile Homes - Sale

and Huskie male dog, well

PLEA~ANTVALLEY

:DISCHARGES : Sandra Pancake.
floint Pleasant ; Clara Rairden,
lioint Pleasant ; Matthew Zerkle.
Gallipolis Ferry : J ane Rollins ,
l~n ; Mrs. David A. Flowers and
s¢'1. Roberts burg; Terrance Dennis,
Point Pleasant ; r.lr s. Norma
Belcher, New Haven; Mrs. Boyd
Hodge and daughter, Point
Iileasant: Cheryl Fisher, Crown
dty, Ohio: Kenneth Payne, West
Q&gt;lwnbia; Mildred Hanna , Point
P,Jeasant: Mabel Win ebrenner ,
~iddleport, Ohio ; Carrie I .uh , Point
Pleasant: Gerald Kearns, Point
F:ieasant; Jeff Holley, Crown City,
Ohio : Gre~ory Dinguss, Mason :
James J•errell, Palnt Pleasant ;
P-earl Snyder, Ewington, Ohi o :
E;unice Hesson , Clifton ; Tra cy
/&gt;lbrris, New Haven : Harold Youn g,
G~llipol!s, Ohio : Joseph . Sal,·cr.
JW¢sville, Ohio : Jimm y W;; ikr r. ·
Bidwell, Ohio: Charle s E sL ep . •
~meroy, Ohio: Sonrtra .Jabharpour.
P»int Pleasant.

'

4.&lt;16 3431 .

Faint starlike objects
called guasars emil more
energy than the moot
powerful galaxies known.
If they are as distant as
many astronomers think,
the total energy emitted by
a single quasar in one
second could supply all of
the earth's electrical
energy needs for a billion
years.

By Bryson R. ~Budl Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

.•

'

W. apart. Call 4461134 or

L OST
Oigda l Quart z
lady's w .1tch at K M art or
l(rogers or Jones Boys.

Notices

Notices
--··---·---

Ca ll «6 3411&lt;

Agriculture and
•
our community

·rUIW'H\1!

1

LOST · White male shaggy
poo dle, answe rs to the
name of Fluff, vicini ty of 35

-~-i~eilway_
SI X MIXED breed pups,
just wr;oaned . Mainly bla ck
LabrddOr . 742· 2692 .

BABYSITTING

Homemakers'
Circle

MANAGING111E
HEATING SYSTEM
GALUPOLIS - Cold weather ts
With us again and the fuel bills certainiy don't seem to be getting any
lower. Perhaps there is still a
possibility of reducing the amount of
fuel that's used during the heating
season by a little caref ul
management. We occasionally hear
about zone heating, which seems to
work well with the electrically
heated home, but how about forced
air heating system?
It is a little more difficult for the
forced air heating systems because
there is only one thermostat for the
whole house. This means we need to
think about what we can do to reduce
the amount of heat . used in the
various areas. For example, the
bedrooms do not need to be maintained at a 70 degrees temperature
during, say the 16 hours they are not
occupied. Therefore, we can shut the
registers in these rooms, or adjust
the dampers in the heat ducts
leading to these rooms to restrict the
heat going into the rooms. Of course,
you will close the doors to all rooms
l)ot in use.
· Another thing you might consider
iB reducing the temperature in the
!louse when no one is home, as well
as those rooms not used for sleeping
during the sleeping period. During
the sleeping hours, say an eight hour
period, the rest of the house that
you're not using does not need to be
70 degrees. You can turn the ther·
mostat down to 62 degrees and save
the amoWlt of fuel those 8 degrees
are not heated for the next eight
hours. Turn your thermostat back
up to your nonnal setting in the morning; in about a half hour, you'll
have the 8 degrees back.
Don't forget the efficiency of your
heating unit, whether gas or oil , also
is important in determining the
amount of fuel you use . The gas furnace needs to be checked by service
personnel who can adjust it to its
peak of efficiency. The oil burning
furnace needs attention more often
to maintain its highest efficiency.
l\nd if you're using a converted oil
l!umer or converted gas burner, yo"
would gain some efficiency by in·
stalling a new furnace made
specifically for oil or gas . The efficiency of the new Wlit will be much
liigher than the old so will conserve
dn our much needed energy.

I woul d ili(C to take thi s
to say
opportun1t y
thanks to all our dear
friends and neighbors
and loved ones tor their
9reat concern and help
'"our time of sorrow for
the illneSs and death of
our beloved husband
and father, Stanley J .
Glassburn. Those who
sent beautiful cards and
flowers . Those who
brought food , for the
ver y
many ,
many
prayers that was of·
fe red up in his behalf. A
v ery special thanks to
all the fifth floor nurses
and to Or. Clark and Or.
Walker from the Holrer
Medical Center for their
loving· care. Thanks to
Re v . Jeff Butcher and
Rev. Donald Jones tor
their beautiful consoling
words, to the singers
that sang so beautifully,
and The McCoy-Moore
funeral directors for the
kindness and love they
gave, for each one that
said a kind word or said
a prayer. Words can't
express our gratitude.
W1te, Mrs.
stanley
Glassburn and Children .

Lost and Found

Lost and Found

••••••

n

LOS T . f em a le t iger ":ilt •n
Rac i ne area Ch ild 's pet .
Reward . C all 949 2495

MY SI NC ERE

thanks to
fr1ends and rw•Qhbors for
food, t lowers and o f her d(..ls
of ktndn~sses
ex rended
durtng the dines!:. a nd death
at mV wife, Ma&gt;une L1nd . A
special !hanks to Dr J J
Davi s, Dr . I . C. Walker , the
stall ot thP Holzer Medical
Cen ter , tne Rev . W . H .
Perr1n.. Mrs. L 1nda Mayer
and 'the Ewing Funr:ral
Home
Reina Lind

Lost and Found

Lost and Found

Card of Thanks

Card tf Thanks

For Best Results ·use Sun~ay Times-Senti~el Classifieds

-L.

.

.

CORN an!l hay , J.D. .
Pollilt, Jet. Rl. 7 ·and Han·'
nan Trace Rd. Call 256·

6537 .

--.-

1977 PLYM. VOLARE
STA. WGN ••••••••••••• ..S3195
1978 AMC
CONCORD ............... $3895
1979 FORD
MUSTANG•••••••• ~ ••••••$5495
RIVERSIDE
TRADE .CENTER·
•'

.

122o
EASTERN, '·. AVE.
,.
'

)

.

.

''

.

I

·-•,·

· GAWPOUS .•,

�'I

•2- TheSWlday Times-&amp;nllncl, Sunda)·, Jan . l3. 1980

.

p-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 19110

For Best Results Use Sunday Tintes-Sentinel Classifieds
In Memorl' .
IN MEMORY
o t Mrs
L.ydia
B. Bee~ c h . who
passed awav one vear ago
on January 11. 1979 .

What is a Mother

It takes a mettler 's tove to
make i'l house a h ome
A place to be rem embered ,
no matter where we roam
It takes a mother ' s patien
ce to bring a c·hild vp right

And her courage and her
cheerfulness to make a

dark day bright

It
takes a
molh er·s
thoughtfu l ness to mend the
heart's deep "hu rt s"
And her skill and her en

durance to mend littl e
socks and shirts
It takes a mother's kind
ness to forgi ve us when we

err

To sympathize in trouble
and bow her head in prayer

It takes a mot her 's wisdom
to recogniz e our needs
And to give us reassurance
by her lovi ng words and
deeds
It takes a mother 's endless
1
fai th , her confi dence and
trust
To guide us thro u g h the pit·
falls of selfishness and lust
And that is why in all this
world there co u ld not be
another
Who could lutfi 11 God's pur
pose as completely as
mother !
Sadly missed
by her
ch ildren , Mrs . Mildred
Jacobs, Mrs . Clyda Bing ,
Mrs. Oma N e lson . Mrs
Freda va.n 1nwagen an d
Mr. R ic hard Beach

THE FAMILY of Isaac l
Shupe would l•k.c to e); press
fhe•r s•ncere thanks and
app recia tion to our fnends
and relatives for th e many
beaut dul flow ers . the car
ds, food, Gallia Coun ty
Highway
Dept
and
trustees tor th eir part in
clea ring the ,roads, I hose
opening and c losing the
grave, and for all other ex
press ions ot sym pathy.
Specia l !hanks To the Doc
tors. and Nurses at Holzer
Hospital and at th e H ous ton
Nursing Home at Hamden.
the M cC oy ·Moore Funeral
Home , th e singe r s, the
Rev 's O.H. Cart and Bob
Madison tor Their co nso ling
wo r ds . May God Bless each
of
YOU.
Wif e
Sallie,
Childre n, Gra n dchi ld ren
and Great Grandc h ildren .

LOST : envelope con taining
large sum of money on
Kroger's Parking Lot . II
found . call 992 5596 .

.o.r.mt An ybrld)'

I!ETTIE fl..MU{

FOUND

FLUFFY eared shepherd
type male, black
and
b,..own. Blue tick hound,
male . Humane Society, 992·

Oil distilled from the two
aromatic resins frankincense and myrrh goes
mostly into perfumes.
Somalia and .Ethiopia furnish most of the frankincense that reaches the
United States . Saudi
Arabia and Somalia supply
the myrrh , according to
National Geographic .

In ancient times,
smoldering frankincense
was used to honor the gods.
Myrrh was used to aooint
the dead, supposedly cured
the sick, and perfumed the
body.

•

Med . size black.

and brown dog w ith pup·
pies. by Church oi the
Nazarene ., Call between 6
p. m . and 7 p.m . Call 446

1343.

GALLIPO!JS - We now have
copies of the "Fanner's Tax Guide"
for use in preparing 1979 Fann Income Tax Returns. If you'd like your
free copy please call us at the Gallia
County Extension Office, 446-4612
ext. 32, or write us at P. 0. Box 72,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631. You're also
welcome to stop by the office either way we'd be glad to furnish
you a copy.
We also have copies of the "Ohio
Commercial Fann Account Book"
and if you need fillers for your
current book, then stop by and get
your supplies. Also, if you've never
used this accoWlt system before,
then ask our ·secretaries to see a
copy. We think that it is a real good
system.
If the expiration date on your
private pesticide applicator card
says that your card expires at the
end of either February of 1980 or 1981
then you should be making plans to
get recertified for another three (3)
years.
I have scheduled one recertification meeting for January 22 at
the Grace United Methodist Church
in Gallipolis. You may attend either
a H p.m. or 7-10 p.m. session to get
the required three hours recertification training that you will need.
You'll need three (3) hours of
retraining even if you're just certified in one category . If you took
some training last year then this will
count towards the hours you'U need.
If you 're certified for more than four
(4) different categories, then you'll
need an additional one-half hour
(beyhond the minimwn three (3)
hours for each category.
We'll have a second recertification
training sessi.on on Tuesday 1
February 26, at the Hannan Trace
High School. Here, again, the times
are from 1-4 p.m. and 7-10 p.m. and
you may attend either session.
Exams will be given here at the
Ha1man Trace session for those who
want to take them or who are new
people wanting to become certified

.r,.
.

'

•

FOUND · Gently Shephard
trained. For

information

ca ll 256·6783.
LOST · 5 mo . old, Bull
Terrier · white with brown
spots. In v ic inity of Cen ·
tenary area . Ca ll 446· 7504 .

Wanted to Do
WILL DO NOTARY WORK

to Babysit i n her . home.

Rodney area . Call245·5688.
WOULD

Ll KE

for the first time.
If you have questions about recertificallon training or getting licensed
for the first time, then feel free to
call my office.
We 're having a Corn-&amp;ybean
Production Meeting on Wednesday,
January 30, 9:45a.m. to3 p.m. at the
Holiday lrut here in Gallipolis. The
meeting is for Gallia and neighboring county fanners in Ohio and
West Virginia. Lunch will be
provided by cooperating chemical
companies and agribusiness !inns.
The meeting is about growing
corn, the conventional or customary
way (plow, disk,- plant, etc.) and
since severaj people are now raising
soybeans we decided t9 devote some
attention to that crop, too.
Dr. Ed Stroube, OSU Extension
Weed Specialist, will lead a "Weed
Roundtable" (emphasis on Johnsongrass) in the morning and after
lunch Dr. Don Eckert, OSU Extension Agronomist, Energy Conservation, will talk about "New Com
Varieties that Will Dry Down," and
"Using Nitrogen Most Effectively."
We'll be happy to have you join us
for this crop production meeting.
Please have your lunch reservation
into our office by January 26.

TO

do

babysitting in my home for
one or two small children .
1928'12
Chestnut
St .

8444.

home,

reasonab le

In

my
pr ice,

love chi ldren . Calll45·5422.
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away lmd

does not offer or altempt to
Dffer any other thing for
sate m_ay place an ad in this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

2 YR. OLD DOG · to good
home. Call446·4315 after 5.
2 KITTENS ~ Real cute but
not real tame . Caii24S·5804 .

3 PT. HIMALAYAN kil·
tens, 10 wks . old. Call 245·
5800.
PUPP IES · Approximately
12 wks. old. Call367-068l.

homes . TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES . CA LL
446·7572.

1971 Fleelwood t4X65, 3
bdr.
1970 Vindale 12X63, w. ex

B&amp;S

HOME · 2 miles from town

jazz, and

ballet,

tap,

adult exercise

;azz ctasses. Call Shirley
Carpenter,

Dance Studio, 949·2710
before January 30th.
INCOME

TAX

1979 l4X70 3 bedroom, l
bath , rented

lot

in

ci ty

Bradbury.

992

This week only, any 2 Cushion Sofa for
Only $90 Labor Plus 10% Discount on
fabric, plus Free armcaps &amp; head flaps.
Free pick-~p &amp; deli~ery.

district. 446·7247.
Notices
GUN

SHOOT .

AKC Gordon

Sellers, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446·4191.

Racine

Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6 : 30p.m .
At their buildingin Bashan.
Factory c hoke guns only ,

Our tabor price includes tightening &amp;
reglueing Ira me where needed, relying
springs, tone finish wood, extra padding
where necessary.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only.
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249.

Call now for your free estimate. No job
too small or too large.

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will

harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves. 61"'·

bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,

Riding Lessons and Horse

Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592,

698·3290 .
Care

Bordlng

and

products. Western

boots.

Children' s

Adults $29.00.

$15 ..501

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, a it breeds. Clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also

AKC

registered

Doberrnans . 61~·«6· 7795 .
POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

service,

Federal and State. Wallace

Russell,
7226.

grooming.

Carpenter's

UPHOLSTERY SPECIAL

details. 446-3142 .

ches, class rings, weddlno
7"'2· 2331.

Treasure

Chest

6462.

GIVE A CUTE loveable
pup a future. Adopt an or·
phan from your Humane

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA

and

one

flame

pt

Himalayan cat . Orders for
spring puppies and kittens

are being accepted . Call
· 446 ~ 3~44 after 6 p.m.

Society.

Shots, wormed.

Donations

appreciated .

992-6260.

MARTIN ' S APPRAISAL.
Stop, think, are you about
to tose money? Over 25

wprk. Send resumes, Box

years experience in buying

HOME
ADDRESSERS
wanted . $500 per week
possible. No experience
required. A.S .D., PO

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on

CENTENARY WOODS Pet
Grooming
Professional

Facil i ties .
services of -

fered. All breeds, all styles.
Call «6·0231 .
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor fa ci lities .

largest

end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
stab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .• Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 9'/2·2689.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes, brass beds, iron
beds, desks, etc., complete

households.

Write

M.D.

Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call4&lt;16·7795.

Miller. Rt. ,.., Pomeroy or

DOGS OBEDIENCE
TRAINED · and boarded,
S35. wk.. dogs boarded
only, $20. wk. free pick-up
and· delivery , Red Brush
Kennels. Call1·286·2939 .

ANTIQUES,

FUR·

NITURE,

china,

call9'/2~

new, used Qr antique fur·
niture.. One piece or com·

plete

7760.
glass,

anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 9'12·
3161.

f9r antiques and col lec·
fibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . . A lso,

household.

Gold,

silver and other old coins,
china, olass, old toys, dolls,
Iron banks•. tools, antique

clothing, razors. po&lt;:ket
knives and other old Items.
Call 992·6370.

752U.
as a young business person

and earn good money plus

January 13, 1980
This coming year you will put to
beneficial uses knowledg e
you 've gained academ •cally and
througll expenence. II will be
used in areas where you can
make remarkab le progress
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)
Do not deviate one 1ota today
!rom doing thai wh1ch you
believe to be right and proper
Let your high standards gUide all
your ac1ions. Travel. re sources .
romance. luck. possible pitfalls
and career lor I he months ahead
are all discussed in your new
Astro-Grapll letter which begins
with your birthday .Mail ·$1 lor
each to Astro-G raph . Bo,. 489 .
Radio City Station. N.Y. 10019
Be sure to spacily birth date

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19)

Matters which mean something
to you malerlally should be
attended to today. postponed
unlit tomorrow. Delays may not
work to your ad&gt;wanlage.
PISCES (Feb. 20· M•rch 20)
Because you're a person of your
word you will '!)'in admiration
today. Others know that when
you make a promise you'll live up
to it to I he letter.
ARIES (M•rch 21-April 19)
Ratner than request favors of
friends today, put yourself at
their disposal. You 'll get more
joy !rom doing tt1an receiving .

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver coins,
silverware, other gotd and
silver Items, jewelry, old

glass frames and antiQue
Will

buy

one

piece or household. Call
992·6370.
SILVER DOLLARS AIIID
SILVER
CHANGE
BEFORE
1964
AT
RECORD HIGH PRICES. •
ALSO, GOLD COINS,
RINGS, JEWELRY AND
MISC. ITE!MSAT HONEST
UP ·TO· DATE PRICES.
CONTACT ED BURKETT,
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
992·3476.
LIMITED TIME ONLY.
Yellow brass, JOe lb., Junk
balterles $3 ea. , No. 1 and
No. 2 caper, 60c and 70c lb.
Radiators, ,.OC lb. Clean
aluminum 20c lb . 2 fl. short
Iron, $1 .75 hd. Stove cas! $2
hd. Motors cast $3.25 hd.
Long 1ron $1.25 hd. Rider's
Salvage, SR 124, Pomeroy.
992- ~-

tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list al 992·
2156or992·2157.
EXPERIENCED
TAX
PREPARERS wanted .
Hourly rate and bonus
plan. Full or part-time
hours. Capital Fnance Ser·
vices. Phone 992·2111
today. Equal Opportunity
Employers. M·F.

All work completely guaranteed.
, Sale Ends Saturday, Jan. 19 ·

GEMINI (Mor 21-June 20) To

keep the peace at home today
you'll lind it worthwhile to make
some compromises or concessions . Be cooperative, not
demanding.

CANCER tJuno 21-July 22)

Steer clear of siluationa loday
where you are looking lor something for nothing . Rewards can
be realized , but only il you're
prepared to work tor them .

LEO (.luly n.Aug, 22) Be roolls-

tlc today in matters whtch could
Bither cost or eave you money.
Sharpen your penc:ll and your
wits to figure everything oul ta
the laat detail.

VIR(JQ (AUt. 21-lopl. 22)

Arrange your schedule today so
that time devoted to pleasurable
pursuits won't take precedence
over lime you should be devoting
to your responslbilllles.

23) Witb·

out causing the olher party
embarrassment, you mlghl lind
the right opportunity today to
remind this person of an old debt
owed you whiCh snould be
repaid .
SCORPIO (Oct 21-Nov. 22) This
• Is a good day to get in touch wl'h
old friends so they know they'te
still important to you. Make
arrangements tor a fuiUre get,. tOQe1her.
IAQtTT ARtUStNov. 21·0111:. 21)
Your ambi.l lon~ Wllltbe mont.eas.
ily lultl!led today II you go about
doing what nteija doing without
calling too much attentlofl to
yo~rHif. Tread sollly.
!NEW SPAPEA E~lE!'IItAIS! AS, N 1

'

In 1800, J . w, llkar k took
the first aerial photograph
!root-a ball con over Boston.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~t!!!l~ ~

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

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

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
Yeah , sure!

t

,_.,"""'-'''"'"... N' ~-· • · ... ,,..

LUFTO

WHAI

J

0

I

I BOPISHb

r

I I

Print answer here:
Yesleodav 5

I

~HIE

5AW

WHE.N HER HU6"AND
CAME. HON\E
"~E.AR I N6 61FT5. ' 1
Now arrange the circt&amp;d letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above canaan .

KI I XI XX) r XXJ

(Answers Monday)
Jumbles ITCHY EVOKE . 'EMPIRE MATURE
Answer: How ne p1cked h1 s way thr ough the

A POCK ET AT I. TIME

c rowd ~

Jumble Book No. 13,C onlainlng 110 puules,lsav•llablelor$1 .75 p011pald
from Jumble, c/o this newtpaper, Bo~t 34, Norwood, N.J.07648.1ncludeyour
nama, addreu, tip code and make checks payable to Newapaperbooks.

Saturday, Jan. 12

1 Started
6 Pen
1I Snared
18 Gladden
19 Longlegged bird
20 Simplest
21 Fairy
23 Keen ·
24 Scottish cap
26 Deposits
27 Spanish
(abbr.)
29 Box
30 Electrical
unit
31 Speech
Impediment
32 Age
33 As written:
Mus.
34 Nerve net work
35 Face part
36 Caviled
38 Scheduled
40 Imitate
41 Fooiwear
42 Femur, e.g .
43 Female ruH
45 Watched
secretly
46 Ma's mate
47 Unruffled
48 Flower
49 Vital organ
51 Narrate
52 Teutonic
deity
53 Possess
54 Shock
55 Amend
57 Diocese
58 Vends
60 Musical
instrument

61 State: Abbr.
62 Burn with
ho.t water
64 Rupees

BRIDGE

(abbr.)
65 Near
66 Food fish
67 Yearns
69 Handle
7-1 John: Scot.
73 Arabs, e.g.
74 Emmets
76.Brlsttellke
79 Head part
81 Luau fare
82 Grog
84 Beguiles
85 Measuring
devices
87 Rostur
90 Fat
92 AHirmatlve
vote
93 Growing out
of
95 Famed
97 Amount
owed
98 Pronoun
99 Exist
101 Beef animal
103 Edible seed
104 Possessive
pronoun
105 Perch
108 Anglo-Saxon money
110 Mexican
shawls
112 Prohibits
113 Torrid
114 Hebrew letter
115 Danish
Island
111 Citrus fruit:
Pl.
118 Man's nicknamne

119 Kind of
bean
120 Printer's
measure
121 Odor
123 Goddess of
healing

merchandising , etc. Must

complete application at
Moore's. An equal opportunity employer.
Wanted to Buy
DIAMONDS, old coins,
gold bands, estate jewelry,
class rings, TAWNEY
JEWELERS, 422 Second
Ave.

124 Flesh
125 Additional
126 Latin conjunction
127 Touchwood
129 Regard
131 Dull one
132 Persian
133 Greek tetter
134 River Island
136 Bard
13 7 Assistant
138 More
revealing
139 Down: PreIii
140 Egyptian lizard
141 Writing fluid
142 Monster
143 Hindu tribe:
Pl.
144 More precipitous
146 Finished
148 Eagle's nest
149 Tell
150 Highways
151 Tibetan
priests
DOW !It
1 Chastise
2 Choice part
3 Portal
4 Devoured
5 Compass
pt.
6 Color
7 Lease
B Anger
9 Preposition
10 All
11 Annealed
12 Sun god
13 Thecaama
14 Docks
15 Flower parts
16 Worm
17 Delirium
tremens

(abbr.)
21 Predicaments
22 Make ready
23 Swift
25 Snake
27 Pittsburgh
football
player
28 Oars
30 Kind of tabric
31 Path
33 Pigpens
35 Midday
36 Expense
37 Loved ones
39 Likely
41 Nods
42 Tree trunk
44 Build
47 Young horse
48 Revolution
49 Girt's name
50 Nicholas
and Ivan
54 Senior 's son
55 Rockfish
56 Jacket part
59 Woolly
SO Wad
61 Roman
gods
63 Facts
66 Tellurlum
symbol
67 Letter abbr.
68 Harshsounding
70 Salad
Ingredient
71 Doctrine
72 High card
73 Aat fish : Pl.
75 Opera
extras
77 Secret
agent
78 Compass
pt.
eo Eye part
83 Crowds

PRO-

BABYSITTER

Call «6·4605.

86.Metai
88 Drinks heavily
89 The sweetsop
90 Paid notice
91 Ave.
94 Weird
96 Babylonian
deity
98 Greek letter
99 Bragged
100 Hermit
102 Fiber plant
104 Male deer
105 European
city ·
106 Racer
107 OHers
109 Combat
place
111 Sweat
1 t2 Ray
113 Lease
116 Ancient
118 Vegetable
119 Learning
122 Chief
124 More timid
125 Fashion
126 Sequence
128 One borne
130 Cargo unit
131 Flying creatures
132 Italian
secret SOCIety
135 Bark cloth
137 Matured
138 Brewer's
yeast
140 Indonesian
142 Harem room
143 New Zealand parrot
144 Tin symbol
145 Latin conjunction
147 Negative
148 Man's nickname

sand,
gravel , calcium
ch loride. fertilizer. dog
food. and all types of salt.
Excelsior Slllt Works, Inc .,

E Ma in St., Pomeroy, 9'12·

3891 .

APPLES
Cl DER '·
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard,
Phone

State Route
Wilkesville,

inch alum . complete
storm entry door. Call 446·

2281 .

APPLES - ROME beauty ·
apples at $.4 per bu . Best for ·
apple buller. Call 669·3785,
Fi tzpatrick

Orchard,

LADIES lovely size 12 X 16
dresses, worn only once or
twice. New size 14 full

manufacturer

length salmon color leather

coat . Catl992·3263.
HUNT'S

balm,

requires

incentives. Call

ROUTE SERVICEMAN
Approximately 75 per cent
travel, W.VA., Penn., NY,

Virginia, must have depen·
dable van, sta . wagon or

full size car, 25 or over.
Bondable,
National
Sanitary Labs. Call «6·
0090, rm. 239.
LOROBI'S PIZZA Silver
Bridge Plaza, apply in per·
son only . Help wanted.
SALES MANAGEMENT
Sa les person needed lm·
mediately for Gallia and
Meigs Co. $20,000. pes. lst.
yr. Must have proven sue·
cessful sales background.
Call collect person to per·
son for John Pettigrew at 1·
533·3817. Mon. Jan. 14, 9

a.m.to4p.m .

three

minute

Whitmet

Black

Diamond
Liniment,
Rawleigh products, Across
street from Smith Buick

Garage . 1924 Eastern Ave.
Gall ipolls, OH Call 446·
9516.

For Sale
ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,
sewer pipes, windows, lin·
tels, etc. Claude Winters_
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245·

.

NICE PIGS for sale. Wor·
med, castrated. 949·2857 .
CURED

firewood, ·

reasonab ly

priced.

H2·

ZENIT"f CONSOLE stereo.

5 years old . Very gOOd con-

HAY FOR SALE. $1 per
bole, 80c by truckload.
Delivery can be arranged. ·

843·2795.
EMERGE IIICY
alternators -

power

own the best

- buy Winpower. Call 513·
788·2589.
17

CUBIC

FOOT

refrigerator,

good

GE .
con·

dillon. $100. Cati992·27S9.

1----------HOTPOINT
GENERAL
E..ECTRIC

IRON BED and springs. Oil
furnace~

PENDLETON REBUILT
BATTERY . $20. plus tax
and old battery. We buy old

trailer

$50. Two bedroom
furnished, $8,000.

Headquarters

9'/H341 .

4ooliances

sates &amp; Service

batteries. Repair batteries .

HS.N Day old or started
leghorn pullets, both floor

Ca tt 388·8596.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

or cage grown available.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES.
Washers,

Poultry

Housing

Automation,

and

c;(J,.,_Jack w, Carsey

Modern

Poultry, 399 W. Main,
Pomeroy. Phone 992· 216~ .

refridgerators,

ranges.
Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern Av·
ce., «6·7396.

AFRICAN VIOLETS. Er·
ma Roush, 32502 Miner·
sville Rd., Minersville.

LUMP, stoker 8. egg coal,
4&lt;16·1408.

AFRICAN VIOLETS. Er·

ECHO CHAIN SAWS,
hydraulic wood spl itters.

rna Roush, 32502 Minersville Rd ., Minersv ille.

saw chain, bars, and all
wood cutting supp lies.

So,tadtemp
USED TRUMPET. 9'12·
5702.

Charles McKean, Fairfield
Centenary Road, «6·9&lt;142.

VALENTINE'S DAY : for

FIREWOOD, seasoned
oak, ash and hickory, Ph
4-16·9442 .
FIREWOOD

~

and

5121afler 5pm.

dryers,

SR

dition . After S, 992-5085.

38 SPECIAL · 6 inch barrel,
new cond .. S91J. cash. Call
367·0202.

RETIREMENT

689 .
669·

3785.

25&lt;14.

36

wanted .

BE HONEST with yourself .
If your present Job stifles
your creativity 8. limits
your development- - we're
your ticket. Established

DRYER

Good working cond., $40.

If you have management potential
and would like to arrange an interview,
Number 175 in care of Gallipolis Daily
Tribune.

PART·TtME GIRL to work

· sale, crocheted roses. scen-

ted or unscented. 992·5240.

~
Mgr.
, .....~ . Phone 992-2111

1---------TRY THE NEW
"PILLOW SOFT"
SERTA
PERFECT
SLEEPER
THE ULTIMATE IN
SLEEPING COMFORT

CORBIN and SNYDER:
FURNITURE
955 Second A~enue
Gallipolis, Ohio

GOOD MIXED hay, $1

Spilt,

bale.

seasoned oak &amp; hickory ,

Raymond Cotterill,

45631
F'HONE 614·446·1171

Harrisonvlle, 742·2082.

cross tie ends. Cali.W. ~&lt;ISJ4
or «6·2329.
40 LB Box of West Virginia

USED FURNITURE

Chunks, low ash, low sulfur

Foster Coal co .. «6·2783.

WASHER &amp; DRYER, G.E .
DINETTE SET WITH 6CHAIRS
3 PC. BDR. SUITE, MAPLE
3 PC. BDR. SUITE, MAHOGANY
BLACK&amp;. WHITE TELEVISION
CONSOLE STEREO
SWIVEL CHAIR

BUCKEYE COMMUNITY
SERVICES · Transitional · LAYNE'S FURNITURE
facility, is offering em· Sofa, chair, rocker, ofloman, 3 !abies, SSOO. Sofa,
ployment as par1·time
chair and loveseat, $275.
community
services
worker for group home for · Sofas and chairs priced
from 5275. to $550. Tables,
adults with mental retar·
dation and developmental $33. ·$60·$70 and $85.
disabilities. 16 hours on Sofabed and choir, $150.
weekend. Responsible tor Hide·a·bed, $225., Queen
dally -living program and size, $325. Recliners, $125.,
$150., $160., $175., and $225.
weekend recreation and
Gallipolis
leisure time activities. Ap· Lamps from $18. to $50. 5
ply with David Mlllihen pc . dine11es from $69. to
facility director. P.O. box S325. Wood tab Ie and 4
906 Gallipolis or call «6· chairs, $235. Table, two 1
leaves, 6 chairs. (high
1642, ext. 332 .
backed), $400. Hutches,
and $350., maple or
HOME
SERVICES S300.
pine
finish. Bedroom
WORKER to work with suites, $175.,
(white),
persons who are develop- S325. (pecan),$275.
$350.
(oakJ.
mentally disabled through Bassett Oak, $550., Bassett
placement In worker's Cherry,
$625.
Bunk' bed
home.
H"ome services
complete
with
maltresses,
workers will be responsible
$250., $275. Captain's
tor providing training, $175.,
beds, S250. complete. Baby
social services end home
$75. Mattresses or
care for adults and beds,
box springs, full or twin,
children . Room and board SSO.,
$60. and $70.
rate and salary will be Queenfirm,
sets,
$175. 4 dr.
paid : Room and board Is
S-42. 5 dr . chests, S-49.
$5.50 per day , sa lary chest,
Bed frames, $20 . En·
ranges from $3,016 to 8,000. terlalnment
centers, $.40.
Contact Marie B. Hobbs
S50. Desks, $38.
9'12·6025 or write P.O. box and
906, Gallipolis, OH . EQUAL USED
Ranges, refrldgerators,
OPPORTUNITY EM · dresser
s, TV's, stereo,
1
PLOVER.
headboards and beds. Por·
table dryers, cold heater, ·
RN OR LPN
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Ideal part·tlme job tor Open 9am to 6pm, Mon.
Gallla · resident, not thru Fri., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
working full time. No
446·0322
pallenl . ere, flexible hrs.
exc. pay, call (304) 3-16·5916 FIREWOOD
Hickory,
or write lnsurex P.O. box red,
white 8. black Oak.
6571 St. Charles W.Va.
Sugar Maple, $30. truck
25303.
load, we also have apple
wood. Call 446·7106 after 6.
PART · TIME PIECE
WORK
Webster, SILVER DOLLARS and
Amerlca•s foremost die· gold
coins. For investment
IIOnary company needs or collection.
MTS Coin
Home workers to update Shop. Call 446·1842
or 446·
IO&lt;:ol mailing lists . All 0690.
ages,
experience
unnecessary . Send name. ad·
dress, phone number to HAY FOR SALE. 245·5457.
Webster, 175 5th. Ave.,
suite 1101·747-F, New York, F'RACTICE spinet plano
NY 10010.
sacrifice at $2,j9 or terms
arranged, Ph 245·9559.•

CORBIN &amp; SNYDER .FURN~ CO.
446:1171

955 Second Ave.

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

INVENTORY SAI.E
LOOK OVER THESE
GOOD BUYS

1969 CHEV. C10 ••.•••• $395

1973 FORD LTD •••••••• !595
1974 FORD
MAVERICK ••••••••••••• !1295
1975 FORD
MAVERICK ••••••••••••• !1995
1976 PACER ••••••••••• ~1995

14 HCP Always open bidding
or more

13 HCP 95 percenl of hands
should be opened

12 HCP 75 percent should
be opened
11 HCP 25 percent shOuld
be opened
10 HCP Do not open
Two Words to tbe Wise
· There is a lot of bal~~rdash
about the weaker standards in
third or fourth seat. Your
bridge life will be sweeter and
easier if/ou,just consideNhat
if a han is worth .an opening
bid it 'is worth It in any, JlOSi:

Elec welder 100 amp, 110
volt, brand new, Franklin
fireplace complete with
barbeQue grill, new grate,
tire screen and 22 auto rlf·
fie with telescope, call 367·
0317.

hop. ,

,.

TRAINING

SHARING

675·19S..

PIONEER Under·dosh 8·
track car ster~. model T!'·
252 wtm mounting bracket,
S!O. KRACO 40 walt power
booster, under-dash model
PB ·13l, $25. eoth new and I
ready to hook up .. Call 446'
.9595.
.
.

NOI1010S,
.
.
.

(

ePROFIT
PLAN

Benefits,

high-card points which we
will call HCP from now on.
Here a~e minimum standards:

This is the corner stone of
The fact.that a hand' meets
both ·attack and defense . all requirements lor an openthere are all sorts of guide- ing bid does not mean that you
lines here, but we will. try to
must bid with It after an oppogive-the simplest poSsible set,
nent has opened lbe bidding:
temporarily omitting preINEWSPARER ENTERPRISE ASSN) '
emptive openings llased on .a
.
.
long suit , a stout heat! and a ' • ; (For ll ·copy · Of JJ190BY
,:,•sire to make thil)gs difficult
MODERN, "nd .$ 1 to: "Win' at
lor your ,opp9nents who preBridge, " care of thlil MWIPB·
sumably hav~ more high
pe~. P._q , Box 489, Radio 'r;lty
cards than you .
Station, · Nsw Y,ork, N. Y.
The yrst requirement is
10019.)
'
'
.

TWO 14 inch snow tires,
slightly used, $25. Call 379·
2
4
0
9

e EXCELLENT SALARY
eHEALTH -LIFE INSURANCE
ePAIDVACATION

5:30 . .w, 1526.

Basic bidding principles
The {irst and most ifl\j)Or·
tant principle is that each bid
or pass places a top and bottom limit on your strength.
Subsequent action tends to
define your llmits more closely, but never increases them.
The second principle Is
prep~redness . When you have
choice of act,ion you should
choose the one that is most
likely to make future action
slinpler.
.t
The third is that or risk
versus again. Before you tak~
any action, balance the risk of
1os_s against the prospect of
gam .. Before you take any
action balance the risk .of loss
against the prospect of gain.
Tbe Opening Bid

and telephOne stand. Call
«6·1970.

HOTPOINT
eMANAGEMENT
GRAM

Prefer in my home, 8 to

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

TUPPERWARE · 1h price,
antique oval table, couch,

We offer selected candidates:

evenings.

ACROSS

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin·
g machine, $50. Cal l «6·
2342.

eUNIT PROFIT BONUS PROGRAM
assist customers. Must be
willing to work Friday
evenings. General duties
Include stocking, pricing,

if

Call367·7180.

RETAIL CLERK. Seeking
aggressive sales person to

splii

For Safe
COAl.., LIMESTONE,

689.

In concession at the Colony

Commercial &amp; Residential
Finest quality at the lowest possible
prices.

FIREWOOD

needed. $20 . load, ac ·
cordi .no to where delivered .

We are a growth oriented, fl.lll service
restaurant chain, seeking aggressive Individuals with management experience
to become manager or assistant manager
for our restaurant in the Gallipolis area.

Tl)eoter. Apply in person

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) In

co mmercial deaiLngs to~. ~y .
don't be overly influenced by initial appearances. A hard second
look will help you determine their
real worth.

RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT

some great gifts as a Sen·

767·3167 or 557·3411 .
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT). DON ' T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S.

· like new, 16 gal. output
per day . Caii388·8U6.

GET VALUABLE training

SUNDAY PUZZLER

256-1562

coin collections. Call 614·

1 CONSOLE HUMIDIFIER

-166. Racine, OH .

Drawer 1.60069, Dallas, TX

For Sale

Help Wanted

energetic 8. ambitious persons who enjoys an at·
mosphere of challenge plus
high earnings potential.

GALLI POpS, OHIO ·

guns, pO&lt;:ket watches and

Help Wanted

WORK white children are
In school. Educotlat soles

furniture .

AKC
REGISTERED
Cocker Spaniel. 6 wks. old.
446·0109 .
'·

· Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in
the Middleport and
Pomeroy areas. Call the
Dally Sentinel between 8:30
and 5:00p.m., 992·2156.

BROTHERS UPHOLSTERY

pay cash or certified check

.'Birthday

L

pre -school,

ATTENTION!

MOBILE:

~q'our

1
'

in ballet, tap a_nd jazz now
open. Classes offered art

Pets for Sate
BRIARPATCH
KEN ·
NELS.
Boarding and

Himalayan , Persian and
Siamese cats. Available
now, Chow Chow puppies,

on Rt . 568 . Call eve nings for

Bernice Bede Osol ·

2~0ct.

2ND SEMESTER classes

Pt. Pleasant W.VA .
675·4424.

VINDALE

Wanted to Buy
OLD COl NS, pocket wat·

and selling . . Will appraise

Mobile Home Sa les

ASTRO·GRAPH

(fllpl.

prices

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and

Shop, Middleport.

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RACINE
(;UN CLUB .

1971 Camron 14X64, 2 bdr.
1971 Shakespeare 12X65, 2
bdr.

h i ghest

Mobile Homes- Sale
197-2 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex ·
panda, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 J bdr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
S'ALE5, PT. PLEASANT ,
wv . 304·675·4424.

Contact Ed Burkett Barber

6260. Pets available tor
adoption and information
service .
I nvestigative
Agent ,

all el ec t .

PAY

possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 992·

1972 Crown 12)(65, 3 bdr.,

I:;J

LIBR~ ·

1

ANTIQUES APPRAI St;: D.
Ph 245·5050.

'iflfflrut m'if

KILLING JUS'tiF'IED
EFFINGHAM, lll. (API - A
coroner's jury has ruled that the
shooting death of a Kentucky man
wanted for the murder of a state
police trooper was justifiable
homicide.
The ruling came at an inquest
Friday into the death of Clyde
Daniel
Graham,
22,
of
Elizabethtown, Ky., shot by a Kentucky state trooper Dec. 8, 1979 at
the Villa Inn Motel in Effingham.
Kentucky State Police Sgt.
Eugene Coffey, who shot Graham,
told the jury that he and Special
Agent John Roberts of the Illinois
State Police had confronted Graham
at the door of his room in an effort to
"grab and subdue" him.

AIJ \1..1 :O JRF. ~ JE N - Tho; , '' l'i:ir r;rim;tcad, left, treasur~ r ,,f thr
!'lew llaven Fire llepartmer.t. lt • ·e~pts a $500 donation on behalf of his
fe ll fl w ftremcn rrom Dick Ord. executiv e vice president of the Mason

FOR THE BEST buy in
diamonds, go to Tawney
Jewelers ,
422 Second
Avenue , Gallipolis . Com ·
pare prfc es anywhere.

Gallipolis. OH .

WILL TEAR down house
and .haul away. Call 366·

wi II be prepared by ap·
pointment~ 992·2272 or see
Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cllll
Rd ., Pomeroy .

WINTER SALE · Pri ces
reduced on used mobile

Call256·1969.

MOTHER OF 2 would like

INCOME TAX SERVICE .
Quarterly , Federal and all
state income fa)( reports

446·0294 ..

6260 .

in my home . Appo~ntment ,
evenings and weekends .

&lt;&gt;

·n;mk

SWEEPER and sewing
ma'c hine repair, parts, and
supplies .
P1ck u p and
delivery . Dav•S Va cuum
. Cie,aner , one hal t mile up
Georges Cret&gt;k Rd
Call

panda room

~

('pu nt ~

~

Mobile Homes - Sale

and Huskie male dog, well

PLEA~ANTVALLEY

:DISCHARGES : Sandra Pancake.
floint Pleasant ; Clara Rairden,
lioint Pleasant ; Matthew Zerkle.
Gallipolis Ferry : J ane Rollins ,
l~n ; Mrs. David A. Flowers and
s¢'1. Roberts burg; Terrance Dennis,
Point Pleasant ; r.lr s. Norma
Belcher, New Haven; Mrs. Boyd
Hodge and daughter, Point
Iileasant: Cheryl Fisher, Crown
dty, Ohio: Kenneth Payne, West
Q&gt;lwnbia; Mildred Hanna , Point
P,Jeasant: Mabel Win ebrenner ,
~iddleport, Ohio ; Carrie I .uh , Point
Pleasant: Gerald Kearns, Point
F:ieasant; Jeff Holley, Crown City,
Ohio : Gre~ory Dinguss, Mason :
James J•errell, Palnt Pleasant ;
P-earl Snyder, Ewington, Ohi o :
E;unice Hesson , Clifton ; Tra cy
/&gt;lbrris, New Haven : Harold Youn g,
G~llipol!s, Ohio : Joseph . Sal,·cr.
JW¢sville, Ohio : Jimm y W;; ikr r. ·
Bidwell, Ohio: Charle s E sL ep . •
~meroy, Ohio: Sonrtra .Jabharpour.
P»int Pleasant.

'

4.&lt;16 3431 .

Faint starlike objects
called guasars emil more
energy than the moot
powerful galaxies known.
If they are as distant as
many astronomers think,
the total energy emitted by
a single quasar in one
second could supply all of
the earth's electrical
energy needs for a billion
years.

By Bryson R. ~Budl Carter
Gallia County Extension Agent

.•

'

W. apart. Call 4461134 or

L OST
Oigda l Quart z
lady's w .1tch at K M art or
l(rogers or Jones Boys.

Notices

Notices
--··---·---

Ca ll «6 3411&lt;

Agriculture and
•
our community

·rUIW'H\1!

1

LOST · White male shaggy
poo dle, answe rs to the
name of Fluff, vicini ty of 35

-~-i~eilway_
SI X MIXED breed pups,
just wr;oaned . Mainly bla ck
LabrddOr . 742· 2692 .

BABYSITTING

Homemakers'
Circle

MANAGING111E
HEATING SYSTEM
GALUPOLIS - Cold weather ts
With us again and the fuel bills certainiy don't seem to be getting any
lower. Perhaps there is still a
possibility of reducing the amount of
fuel that's used during the heating
season by a little caref ul
management. We occasionally hear
about zone heating, which seems to
work well with the electrically
heated home, but how about forced
air heating system?
It is a little more difficult for the
forced air heating systems because
there is only one thermostat for the
whole house. This means we need to
think about what we can do to reduce
the amount of heat . used in the
various areas. For example, the
bedrooms do not need to be maintained at a 70 degrees temperature
during, say the 16 hours they are not
occupied. Therefore, we can shut the
registers in these rooms, or adjust
the dampers in the heat ducts
leading to these rooms to restrict the
heat going into the rooms. Of course,
you will close the doors to all rooms
l)ot in use.
· Another thing you might consider
iB reducing the temperature in the
!louse when no one is home, as well
as those rooms not used for sleeping
during the sleeping period. During
the sleeping hours, say an eight hour
period, the rest of the house that
you're not using does not need to be
70 degrees. You can turn the ther·
mostat down to 62 degrees and save
the amoWlt of fuel those 8 degrees
are not heated for the next eight
hours. Turn your thermostat back
up to your nonnal setting in the morning; in about a half hour, you'll
have the 8 degrees back.
Don't forget the efficiency of your
heating unit, whether gas or oil , also
is important in determining the
amount of fuel you use . The gas furnace needs to be checked by service
personnel who can adjust it to its
peak of efficiency. The oil burning
furnace needs attention more often
to maintain its highest efficiency.
l\nd if you're using a converted oil
l!umer or converted gas burner, yo"
would gain some efficiency by in·
stalling a new furnace made
specifically for oil or gas . The efficiency of the new Wlit will be much
liigher than the old so will conserve
dn our much needed energy.

I woul d ili(C to take thi s
to say
opportun1t y
thanks to all our dear
friends and neighbors
and loved ones tor their
9reat concern and help
'"our time of sorrow for
the illneSs and death of
our beloved husband
and father, Stanley J .
Glassburn. Those who
sent beautiful cards and
flowers . Those who
brought food , for the
ver y
many ,
many
prayers that was of·
fe red up in his behalf. A
v ery special thanks to
all the fifth floor nurses
and to Or. Clark and Or.
Walker from the Holrer
Medical Center for their
loving· care. Thanks to
Re v . Jeff Butcher and
Rev. Donald Jones tor
their beautiful consoling
words, to the singers
that sang so beautifully,
and The McCoy-Moore
funeral directors for the
kindness and love they
gave, for each one that
said a kind word or said
a prayer. Words can't
express our gratitude.
W1te, Mrs.
stanley
Glassburn and Children .

Lost and Found

Lost and Found

••••••

n

LOS T . f em a le t iger ":ilt •n
Rac i ne area Ch ild 's pet .
Reward . C all 949 2495

MY SI NC ERE

thanks to
fr1ends and rw•Qhbors for
food, t lowers and o f her d(..ls
of ktndn~sses
ex rended
durtng the dines!:. a nd death
at mV wife, Ma&gt;une L1nd . A
special !hanks to Dr J J
Davi s, Dr . I . C. Walker , the
stall ot thP Holzer Medical
Cen ter , tne Rev . W . H .
Perr1n.. Mrs. L 1nda Mayer
and 'the Ewing Funr:ral
Home
Reina Lind

Lost and Found

Lost and Found

Card of Thanks

Card tf Thanks

For Best Results ·use Sun~ay Times-Senti~el Classifieds

-L.

.

.

CORN an!l hay , J.D. .
Pollilt, Jet. Rl. 7 ·and Han·'
nan Trace Rd. Call 256·

6537 .

--.-

1977 PLYM. VOLARE
STA. WGN ••••••••••••• ..S3195
1978 AMC
CONCORD ............... $3895
1979 FORD
MUSTANG•••••••• ~ ••••••$5495
RIVERSIDE
TRADE .CENTER·
•'

.

122o
EASTERN, '·. AVE.
,.
'

)

.

.

''

.

I

·-•,·

· GAWPOUS .•,

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swlllay , Jan.

:&gt;-+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1900

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in theSun(lay Times-Sentinel

For Best Results ·use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Mobile Hom es- Rent
2 BDR . Mobile Home. Call
379 2119 o r 446 2317 .

- Services Offered
L IMESTONE , gravel and
sand . AU size-s. At Ricl'lards
and Son, Upper RtYer Rd .,
Galli polis , Oli10. Ca ll 446

Business Services

SLEEPI NG ROOMS
·rent, Gallia Hotel.

-STOVE , furnace and chim ·
ney

insulation,.

Call

4.46

3407
KEN MANNON MOB ILE
: wELDING Service . Cut
• t lng, brazing, arc welding.

: Ca ll 256-9302 aft er S. 30
- ---~-----

CO .

. (Formerly
Fain e~
and
. Q'delt) Oak Hil l. Oh ., ca ll
· coiled «6-7569 .

. THEISS IN SULATION, In
sul master f oam insu l ation.
New homes, old homes,
commer cial structures.
For fr ee esti m ates call 446

1911.
· PIANO TUN IN G
Lane
· oaniel s Qu ality service si n ' ce 1965. Call 742 -2951 or 992·
2082.
LA IR CO NST .
Block,
brick, fi r eplac es . new
homes,

remodeling,

0445. Ca ll atrer 4. 30

J IM

MARCUM

yea rs

and

roofing ,
sidi ng . 30

experience

estimates

Free

Remodeling .

11 63 Sec. Ave .. Ga ll ipolis .
446 7833 or 446 1BJJ .

ROBERT S

BROT HER S

GARAGE . 2d hr. wrecker

ser vice. All types of repa ir .
Upper Rt 1 Ca ll 446·244S
days and 446 -4792 nights .

HAMMOND BODY SHO P,

·EDWARD
CUSTOM
MEA TS
under
new
management . Cal l 675 1234

work,
reasonable
pri ces .
Sand and
pain t, quality
Cal l 245·9371 or 379·2306.

or 675· 56l 3 tor infor mation
and appointment .

JOHN SO N Water Deli very .

P &amp;: J's Garage - 225 Jrd .
Ave ., in Gallipolis. Call 4462114. Conventional, auto,
'diesel and tru cks. Body
.work is our spec ia lty .

JERRY LUCA S'S water
delivery .
Call 446-7534
anytime.

QUALITY
MA l N ·
T E NAN CE
Elec tr ica l,
plumb i ng ,
he at i n g,
specializ ing in oi l and gas
fur naces. Caii388·969B .
1ANDYANDBEAVERin
:Surance Co has offered
-servic es for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
propertv coverages are
available to mee t in ·
dividual needs . Contact, T.
F Burleson, your neighbor
8nd agent .
D·DAY REFRIDGERATI ·
ON
Residential , commercial,
heating, coati ng, electrica l
service. Ca ll 388·827-4, or
388·9963 .
1\UTO REPA IR WORK on
your car at your home . Ex ·
pert servi ce, low rates . Call
&lt;146·2338.
CAKE DECORATING · All
character cakes and 3 sizes
of sheet cakes. Call446·7681
or 446-7249.

Call 4-46·1004 any time .

CHIMNEY 'S cleaned and
r epaired . St oves insata ll ed .
Call the Chim ney sweep,
373·6057 .

E &amp; R Tree Service. Pain
ling and excavating. Cal
388 8797 or 388· 8860.
REESE TRENC HIN G.
Ditches, 8 inches wide to 5
f1. deep, septi c tanks,
drainage lines, concr ete
work. Call367 7560

JIM'S
DEP E NDABLE
water delivery . Call 256·
9366 anytim e.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Auto &amp; Truck

Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 ·5682
, 30 tf c

367 -0S27

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
* Remoldings
*Free Estimates
1·4-(Pd .)
Services Offered
WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling , floor Tile, ceiling
tile . Fred Miller , 992·6338 .
HOUSECL EAN lNG on a
regular basis, 1 day per
week . References. Phone
949·2655.

STUCCO,
plastering,
plaster repair , te xture
ce ilings, tree eslimates.
ca 11256 _1182 _

1976 FORD 11:~ Ton p ~c k - up ,
302 V -8, auto ., p.s., p.b .,
will trade for any F.W.D.
truck . Call446·0515.
1974 FORD MU ST ANG II
Ghia · V·6, p .s., p.b ., a.c.,

'-:::====-:==-===~~:==========-+AMFM.
24·00p
mpg.
~
0515after5
.m .&lt;Call

·.----- - - - - .
C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home im·
pr ovements - Roof'ing
· gutters - spouts - con·
trete work . Ph . 367 -0427,
: 367-0194, 367 -0141 . Free
· estimates.

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING, INC.
Backhoe &amp; dozer work
by the iob or by thE
hour. Also licensed sep
tic 1ank\ installed.
Dump
truck.
FreE
estimates . Call 388-862
Ior 446-94S9.

KOTALIC
LANDSCAPING
Residential &amp; Commer cial , Tree &amp; shrubs in stalled, designing &amp;
planting ,
shrubbery
trimming, lawn need
control programs .
446-3100
41 State St ,
Galllt&gt;OIIS, Ohio

COMPUTEliiZED
FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
complete Tu Service,
Plenty
of
parking
IVIIItble, Avollabilily
in D•y or Evening
ttours. We ' ve got the
Rf'Ollrlm for you! Stop
In or Clll for more
details. '
, Bob Lane's Complete
Bookkeeping &amp;
Tax Service
Spring Valley Plaza
446-7600

W0005
REMODELING CO .
Com~lete

Remodeling
Or General Repair
14S·9SSS

CONTINUING
INCOME TAX
SERVICE
of RobertS . Betz office.
26 Locust St.
Gallipolis , OH .

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, gutter,
build -up root, home
repair.
Free Estimates
388-97S9

SEPTIC TANKS
Installed and
Leach Bed s Installed
Gallla County Certified

Reese Trenching

&amp; Backhoe Service
367·7560

_

:========~f~==:~~:~==~~·
I
SWAIN '
HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

AUCTION BARN

Storm
Windows.
Storm
Doors ;
Replacement
·
Win&lt;tows ,
Pallo
Covers-,
Aluminum

Wt ltll lnY1hlng for
anybOdy 111 our Auction
Barn or In ~our home. For
lnformltlon and pickup
service ctll 1"· 1967.
Salt. Every ·seturdey
Nlghtat 7 p.m.

S I d i n .t ·
Accessories,

e .n d

Call

'

' BilL'S
44-2j42

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

446-

14 MATADOR . 1995. 17
Monte Carlo, loaded $3,575 .
Don 't Miss These Two! Car
Rea lty , Inc. Call446-1118.

1974 CHEVY pick up in
good cond ., $1,000. and 1972
DATSUN sports car, $1,000.
Call 256·1393 .
1979 JEEP CJ 5 · 6 cyl., low
miles, call367·0102 between
8 and 4 weekdays . Weeken ds call592·5704 collect .
1979 CHEVY · 4·W·D, p .s.,
p .b ., auto., 1100 l ir es, Whife
spoKe rims, call 379-2141 .
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS
on 1978 ford 4-W D, low
mileage . Call446 7249.
1978 CHRY SL E R COR ·
DOVA - Exc . cond ., ca ll
367 -0541.

1970 CAD I LLAC Sedan
DeVille . Loaded . New m uf ·
r----~~-~~~~~---1 fler sysyem, fuel pump.
1500. 446·4444 .
WOODYARD76
Second -A ve , Galllt&gt;Oiis
Mechanic
on du1y ,
formerly Harrison 76.
Operated by Warren
woodyard .
PH . 446-9233

SWAIN
~ION

SERVIC,E

KtnntthSwain, Auct.
.__c_.,_n_•r_T-'h-lr_d_&amp;o_..u,!.:.,.
e_Jl·

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.
Hours 9-1 M ., w., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment:
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, o.

INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

·

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

12 -7-1 mo.

10 ·191 mo.

r-------------,
1
HOME
1

I
1
I •
1 e
I •
1 •

Planning to sell this Spring. The buying

I

rush has begun!
We Offer:
Free Home Sellers Protection
Prolessiona I Stall
Finest
Home
Marketing
Available
Electronic Referral System

I
t--::;:::::::;::=::=;;:==:=:=:-r-=;;=:::::==;::=;===1
I B .
S
-------------·
usmess

ervices

ELWOOD
·. BOWERS
REPAIR ~ Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.
S 1!. G Carpel Cleaning .
Sleam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonab le
rates . Scotchguard. 9926309 or 742·2348.
WALL PAPERING
painting . 742-2328.

and

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone number, 742·2951 . Service to
sc hools and home since
1965,
REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St . Rewind and
repair electr ic motors . 992 2356 . WiH make service
calls.
ARNOLD

AND

DICK ' S

Mechanic
992·7768 . work . Open 9-5,

Auto Sales
1974 Plymouth Scamp,
custom inter ior, . 6 cyl'. ,
auto., $1800 or trade. 742·
2451 .
1977 CHEVROLET Blazer,
P.S., P.B., A.C., 2·wheel
drive. 13,000 actual . miles.
992·6192.

1970 MONTE CARLO · Will
trade tor pick-up - Gooa
corip ., new palM, . QO!)d
tire!, call446·1\667. · 1
1970 REBEL - 4-dr., 6-cyl. ,
auto., and 1968 Chevy 4·di".,
both gd. cond . C_411446-9782 .
1971 SINCA
$150 needs
some _repa ir.s. CaH367-054l.
1968 PONTIAC · $200 . Cal l
446- 13~.
_ _ _ .:__

AUTOMOBILE
IN SURANCE
been
can celled?
Lost
your
operator ' s license? Phone
992 ·2143 .
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do-it-yourself or
let us Install t.pr vou. 0 .
Bumgardner Sales, Inc .,
992-5724.

1979 OLDS Diesel98 Regen·
cv 4 door sedan, A.C .,
cruise control, all the ex·
tras, looks and runs like
new . 30 mpg. Will take
trades. 949·2763.
1976 FORD F -150. GOOd
condition . 12400. 992-7378 .
1974 MUSTANG Ghi a, low

mile~ge. New tires, $1650.6

cyl, auto,, 949-2042 .
1973 CHEVY PICKUP·;
auto,
Cont·acl
Eldon ·
Walbur11, , 980 S. :. Jrd St.,
Middleport. 992' 2805.

TRAILER LOT · In town.
$60. water pd. , no chi ldren,
pets or total electric
trailers. Call .446·.4.416 after

4.
2 BDR. MOBILE HOME Ref. req ., call446-0974.
COUNTRY MOBI LE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Calt
992·7479
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts . Phone 992·5434 .
TWO BEDROOM !railer .
Adults only 992 -3324.
12X60 TWO BEDROOM
mobile home. Rae i ne a rea .
992-5858.
THREE bedroom mobile
home near Pomeroy and
Middleport. 992-58S8.
COMPLETELY furnished
house. Util ities pa id. Con ·
struction men only . M id·
dleport area. 992-7791 .
TWO BEDROOM APT . in
country . Completely newly
decorated . Must have
references . 742 . 2173 _
TWO BEDROOM 12x60 In
Syracuse. Carpeted, fur ·
nished. Water paid . I child
accepted. $160 a month plus
security . Phone992·1897 .

.iJ

BMR-C361 - Commercial bus iness, Rt. 7, Middleport. Contains grocery store, includes equipment, for complete operation. c -2 beer and w ine
license. Price includes all stock and equipment .

BIDWELL- Attractive 3 bedroom home,_ b_o h, dining room, storage building, large level lot, owner
wi II consider offers .
11572

BMR -361 - Rio Grande, 4 BR home with 3 ex tra
lots. Verv good condition .

FIRST LISTING - Nice Bl-level, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, garage with electric opener, heat pump with
central air. Close to hospital on 2 acres with woods.

BMR -329 - Extra nice 3 BR hom e in Addison includes F.R . in baement, and built -in kitchen .
Situated on large flat lot. owner will consider VA or
FHA financing.

JUST LISTED - Nice Vinedole mobile home,
12x60, tip out, 2 bedrooms , centra l air, nice loU 1217

BMR -333 - Located 2 miles below Eureka . 3 BR 's,
LR , OR , FR, kitchen includes r efrigerator and
rai"IQ~ . All electric with wood burner in F . R .

·nus

BMR·334- Commercial land. 1.3 acres. Owner will
consider land contract atB% interest . Call today!

LAND CONTRACT - Small down payment will buy
you a house with 2 apartments and a mobile. home In
F!io Grande. Call today .
# 0250

BMR-33S - Older home in heart of downtown
Gallipolis . In need of repair . Has lot s of potentia l.
Must be seen to appreciate.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots w~th~;
rentol mobile home pads, all are rented, each
has concrete runners and patio, located in Rodney .

BMR ·336- New listing. First time on the market.
This house has lots of space throughout (2800 sq.
ft. ). Includes entrance hall , LR w it h FP, FR with
FP. DR, 4 BR's, 2lJ:z baths, large kitchen..with built ins. Nearly 6 acr~s. City schools. Call without delay.

lllSS
139 ACRES - GOOd 4 bedroom home with furniture.
bath, fully carpeted, full basement, large barn, all'
mineral rights and some coal and limestone. N1870
NICE HOME WITH RENTAL - Nice ranch,\I!J).
fireplace in living room , full basement, 2 tar
garage, also 2 bedroom block house. 1.76 acres.
10051

BMR ·l39 - Older two story home on Second Ave. in
Gallipolis. 31arge BR 's, LR, FR, DR, eat-in kitchen cUnder $30,000.
BMR ·155 - Two story home in Vin1on , 3 BR , LR.
FR, eat·in kitchen, carpeted, drapes and cur ta ins
stay. Less than $18,000.

9J ACRES - Vacant land, good investment proper·
ty, some timber, all mineral rights, located In Ad dison Twp .
1 1032

BMR ·IS7 - Located in Eureka , very nice 3 BR
frame home with 32 acres. City or county schools.

Evenin~

Can
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599

BMR -IS9 - Two story home in city . 4 BR's , LR , FR ,
DR, large kitchen, 1112 baths . Less than $33,000.

~

Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
~ohn fuller, Realtor 446-4327

BMR -137A - Beautiful brick ranch featuring full
basement, FR with fireplace, 3 BR's, 11h baths,
carpet, kitchen with built ·ins, 1lf:z baths, _carpet, kit·
chen with buill-ins, and a bar plus d1nlng area.
Situated on large flat lot . City Schools.

REAL ESTATE
31; 2 YR . OLD RANCH HOME - Just.( miles from
Pomeroy . Quiet country living in this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath with cen tral heat and air condi ·
tion. over 3 acres at flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just U-4,900 .00 .

THREE BEDROOM home
a big lot. can be partially financed. Call Guido
Girolaml : 992-5786, 10·6. No
realtors.

POMEROY - ·Lincoln His. 2 );led room, both, large
living room, full basement, new furnace. $17,500.
216 E. Second Slr"t
COUNTRY SETTING A real live stocked fish
pond. Has over an acre
and a like new 2
bedroom mobile home
12' x50'. Gas furnace,
patio, shade trees, rural
water and all furniture
on Slael Rt. Only
$12,000 .
DUPLEX POSSIBLE 9 rooms, 1112 baths," or
bedrooms, natural gas
heat and r~ for a
wood burner in the large
family room, 2 car
garage with storage
gOOd corner Jot near
!lchools ., Asking only
$15,000 .
OWN A BUSINESS All stock and fixtures. A
3 bedroom apartment
with bath and extra lot
on Slate Rt. 124. Only
$27,500.
!IRICK RANCH 3
nice bedrt&gt;oms, 2 baths,
l,arge living , dining ,
~;overed patio, 2 car
11arage, all this on the
roiver.
ACREAGE - Inseveral
{pcatlons and prl~es,
Some river front lots on
~1. 124.
BUILDING LOTS tountrv, In town, on
water
line, woods,
cleared and on road
frontage.
CALL
992-3325 or
.992-3176 FOR A LOCA·
TION, FREE NEW
' CALENDAR$,

MIDDLEPORT - Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center of town. Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.

5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot. 17,000.

s

MIDDLE PORT - Building lot on S. Second, 6J'xS3' .
$4,500.

Loans

CALL 992-2342

VENTURE
CAPITAL
$50,000 up. Slarl·up, Buyout, Expansion. Any wor·
thwhlle
pro[ecl .
Mr .
Donald, 214·368-2635 -368-

Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992·3731
•

THE

Baron
THIS BARON HOME HAS ALL THE EXTRAS
FOR GRACIOUS LIVING.
--WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE
--BUILTIN STER_
EO
-GARDEN TUB WITH SEPARATE
FIBERGLASS SHOWER
--CARPETED THROUGHOUT
'
--TOTAL Y(RAP FOAM COR
-TOTAL ELECTRIC
-BAY WINDOW
--TOp GRAD_E _FURNISHINGS _

Heating

00

.

.

'

:;DEWITT'S PLUMBING
•
ANDHEATING .
Route 160 at Evergreen
li~one 446-27~5 . . · _ ··
•

" ,F inest In Manufactured Housing"

·;: tt2·70B4

I

; ,CARTER'S"PLUMBING
AND HEATING
'. Cor. Fourth and Pine
e hone 446-3888 or .446-.c.l77

it AT

K'INGSiURY HOME
SAL.ES &amp;- SERVICE ·
· ··
'

R eal Estate lor Sale

--------

Real Estate for Sale

FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
992-7559.
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 roomS, bath,
carpeted. 3 lo 17 acres
availdble . Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 alter 6.

BY OWNER, house in
Pomeroy. Large · living
room, dining room, built-in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lois of carpet and paneling.
FA gas heat, IL'II baemenl.
Price up 30'S. One-third
acre lot close to hospital
and school. Call 992·5917 for
appointment .

TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, l lf:z baths, garage.
College Rd ., Syracuse . Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.

HOUSE FOR SALE by
owner : 6 room house plus
bath. 1 acre ground.
Located 2lf2 miles from
Mine No. 2. 992 ·2145 for Information.

, Realtor Associate
Home 446·2230

*

We cover over
7 mil~on miles

Holstein, Realtor A~s ociate
Ph. 388-9760

10% LOAN AVAILABLE
This home is just waiting to be your~ ou' ll bubble
with excitement when yoU Sip the features this lux ·
ury home offers. Foyer, flooring, formal living
room, w .b . fireplace, cedar mantel track, lightin g,
new plush carpeting, formal dining room , beaut iful
family room with large sliding door leading to
beautiful pool and patio area , terra ced ground with
lots of shrubbery, as gr ill, ideal for entertainment, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, large kichen with unusual
breakfast bar , che rry, walnut wood, full basement,
centra l air, garage and openers. Thi s home is
beautifully decorated. All new cust8m draperies .
Looks like it just cam eright out of an interior
decorator's magazine. One of th e finest. I' m sure it
will be love at first sight .
BUILD TO SUIT
Qualif ied builder Will build you a new ranch home, 3
bedroom modern, single car garage on a lot 120x120.
Priced in the mid 30's. Call for more details .
$38,000
Here is opportunity to get the space you need at the
price you want. 3 bedrooms, 3 acres.
RODNEY -CORA RD.

.58 Acre, mobil ehome runners for a 12x60 tra iler,
septic tank, rural water available . Very reasonable.
LOAN ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE

lo fi.,d you a home.

* oanPh .

Agency

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

IJ

NICE HOME
PRICED RIGHT
3 bedrooms, 2 baths with showers, tam i
ly room, dinin g area . Total 8 r oom s
mo~ern _k itchen with e!ec tri c range:
refng ., d iShwasher, garbage disposal &amp;
lot of cabinets. F . A ~·F ., also wood·
burner , Gallia rural water service
storage build ing, carefree alum . siding :
nice landscaped lot. Approx. 1 acre .
House approx . 4 years Old. See this one

STEP INTO A
DREAM HOUSE
This home makes vour dream com e
true! You'll love the pr ivacv of th e
bedroom wing, a half -leve l up rom the
liv ing, din ing &amp; kitchen areas. Down
stairs there is a large family room and
balh .

9% int. Owner transferred and very anxious to sell.

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
Four' apartments , 4
rooms each apartment.
2 BR , kit chen wil h built ·
in cabinets , stove,
refrigerator , dining
room plus bath, utility
room , has good rental
income, could pay tor
the bu i Iding with in a few
years. A relaTively new
apartm ent home . Each
apartm ent has own gas
furna ce. Do you need a
income property?
' T WAIT TO SEE

Citv schools, acre of ground more or less, living
room, 2 w .b . -firela ces, kitchen &amp; di ning area . Full
baement. priced in $40's. Call for more deta ils.
LAND CONTRACT 9% INT.
Owners are willing to help finance this love lv brick
home close to Holzer Hosp ital. 4 bedrooms, formal
entry and living rnrom , m odern ktihen, full base·
men!, w.b.
2 car garage attached. Also a
workshop and ... var n . All this situated on 5 acres
more or less. This home reflects tender lovin g care
and true value.

finSI'lE

ASSUME THIS LOAN
of only 9V:z% Int. and ow11 this lovel y Cedar Rach on ly 2 y ~s. old . 3 bedroom s, 2 batt:: . modern built-in kitchPn, dining area . Thi s home is only W:z m i les
from c ity . Owner has been tr ansferred and is very
anxious to sell .
FINANCE I FINANCE! FINANCE
Owner will help- finance with a down payment and
carry lhe balance on a LAND CONTRACT. Stately 2
story pillary posts, 3 bedroom , forma l entrv &amp; large
open winding staircase. Family room with plank
flooring &amp; w .b. f ireplace . Formal liv ing room,
spacious eat-in kitchen with loads of kn.otty pine
cabinets . This and much more setting on 3 acres.
Can buy only one acre. City Schools . Give us a call
for more detai Is.

EXCELLENT LEVEL
LOT
2/ 3 acre M . or L . for
residential.
mobile
home and garden. Fron ·
ta ge on Patr iot-Camdus
Rd .
Rura l
water
avo!ila1ble_. Ask ing price

57SOO.OO
acres vacant land
M organ Twp. off White
Oak Rei . Level to slight·
ly rolling, at one time
had a lrailer hookup . 2
wells, some fences ,
some ou tbu i ldings .
9

RENTAL
Tra iler lot. Located one and a halt miles from city
limits on St . Rt. 7.
NEW SECTIONAL
4 mos. old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, livi ng
room and dining room . Modern built-in kitchen.
Woodburner. Take a1ook at this real nic ehome. All
setting on one and half acres in the city school
district. Priced in the 30's .

NICE building lots on CR

32, Eastern School Oistrkt,
TP water district, 5 miles
off Rt. 7.
spection.
showing.

Priced on in·
949-2763 for

On State Highway . 5
room and bath frame
home. Garden . Its own
wafer svstem . 4 apple
trees, 1 pea ch. Large
store room 1st fl oo r, has
an upstairs. Basement .
Lots of poss ibility, like
feed store, hardware,
sto re, et c.

~~~~~~~e 1!. all

Camping Equipment
GO CAMPING AMERICA .-.
Wllh Coachman RVS .
Q~allly built, pried right.
DOzens of models with a
wide range of family ·
_pleasing floorplons.
See
them loday! Apple Cily
Recreational Vehicle's, Rt
35, 1 ml Wesl of Jackson,
0~, 61086·S700.

•

SEE

R ea l Estate lor
- Sale

~--~~-

oustng
Headquarters

,flumbing

''15~600

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

-

Real Estate lor Sale
-----

on

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ONLY ONE
AT TIUS PRICE

FINANCING -VA-FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614-592-3051.

OonaMtGhee
Sales Assoc.
446-0SS2

on

ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath, fully equipped kitchen, near Meigs High School, f,ully furnish·
ed. $25,000 .

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11 ,600.

.,

Steve McGhee
Sales Assoc .
446-0SS2

Tom White
SlltiAUOC:.
446·9551

MIDDLEPORT - Cementblock home on large cor- ..
ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1 V:~ bath, garage. ,
127,000.
,.

ONE BEDROOM hOuse,
adults only . 992·2598 .

...

·WE ARE SELLING MORE.

I~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..

RUTLAND - One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a lit11e paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

Depresstoa. Proof
Booming Business
Every car needs it!
You've herd of us;
we're the Ameri·
can
T _v _reshield
Corp.

"2·2259
RACINE Recently
remodeled llh story
frame with 2 bedrooms,
dining room , living
r oom , and kitchen . Full
basement, and 2 possi ·
ble rooms upstairs.
Really nice. $25,000 .00.
RENTAL PROPERTY
- I bedroom frame with
full basement Make an
offer.
START A FUTURE
NOW - with this nice
home in Syracuse. Has 3
bedrooms, basement.
and a double lot. VA ap·
proved. Excellent condi ·
tion . $26,800.00.
OVERLOOKS RIVER
Beautiful 2 story
home. 3 bedrooms, 1112
baths, central air, .and a
full usuable basement
on a level lot. Fully
carpeted . $40,000.00.
CLOSE TO THE MINES
Huge l iving room
with fireplace, new k it·
chen, 3 bedrooms, part
basement and 6 acres .
$24,500 .00 .
BUSINESS
OP PORTUNITY nice
clean business with ex ·
cellent track record .
"The Kiddie Shop" in ·
eludes all equi pme nt
necessary . Come in for
details . .
MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful home in ex ·
cellent condition, appx .
2,600 sq. ft. of living
space, 2 story frame, 4
bedrooms, l'h baths,
family room, rec . room ,
den, large living room ,
dining, break. nook ,
modern built-in k it.,
central air &amp; heat , tree
house ,
storage .
159,500.00.
• REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742-2474
Jean Trussell949-2660
OFFICE PHONE
992-22S9

BMR-149 - Development land, 30 acres on Clark
Chapel Rd. 50011. of fronlfootage. including mtneral
rights. Call today .

I,;; ..

I~~======·~==i-1

*

BMR ·I47 - Crown City, commercial building on Rt.

7. Situated on two lots - Under $18 ,000.

ROOM AND BOARD, laun ·
dry . Elderly or working
men. 992··6022 .

TWO BEDROOM house,
unfurnished . 992 -3090.

-

e.

BMR-c360 - Commercial building in downtown
Gallit&gt;OIIs. ExcellentlnveStfllent property .

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Serv ice. Phone
949·2487 Or 949 ·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford.

Ralph Franco,
SR . VT,
At 800 · 327·0444

19788 FORD 'h ton pickup
super cab with topper.
Good
condition .
Low
m ileage . U500 . 949-2042.

6547 .

- ---·

608
•.&amp;o~~QJI.I.,.I
MAIN
i'OMEROY, 0 ,

BMR-ISO - Building lot on Hol comb Hill . $9 ,500.

5475.

1977 INTERNATIONAL
cal'&gt;·over 350 tra ctor. 1978
Inte rnati onal cab ·over ~T 450. 247 3051 or 247 2063.

1977 FIAT X19 . Very low
1')'1ileage. Call Gary, 949·
2210 before 3 p .m .

m iles. equipped,
One owner. 26Exc.
fully
,500
cond . Call 379·2302 .

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
service,
all
makes .
992 -2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.

1974 MUSTA~G IL Will
trade for a pickup truck of
equal ~alue. 949-2083.

1964
SCOTTY
travel
trailer , and 1979 G.M .C.
pick -up truck . Call446·1514.

1976
LiNcoLN
coN
TINENTAL · Town Coupe,

Business Services

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455.

Thanks to the space age
miracle of Polymer
chemistry, our revolu·
tionary
product,
TYRESHIELD, scientifically designed to
eliminate flat tires
forever, is making i1
possible for our dealers
1o earn huge sums of
money on a full or part
1ime basis.
•Nationally Adv. pro·
duct (Popular 'science,
T.V. National EnRulren
• I rrislstably low retail
price
P.rO:fit
• Enormous
margin
Finan.clng avalla.ble
• No franchise fees
Seeing_Is believing. One
blockbuster demonstra•
lion of TYRESH I ELDIn
action will amaze and
convince even the most
sceptical Individual. Invest what Is com. fortable tor you ·--' only
a fa irly small cash In·
vestment Is required.
IMAGINE I
T,YRESHIELD lnstlnt·
,ly llxes any, flal tire by
permanently vulcanil· .•
. lnO It, ••~ Inflating ' it
·again, (We lhln.k otltas
lnstont road service al
less than 51Q,OO) Do you
think this is the business
for you to be In? Then
call

1975 AMC Pacer, GOOd con dition. No rust. $1700. 742·
2957.
.

1979 FORD RANGER
LARIET
F-150, 4-W-d
truck . V-8, a.t., p.s.. air,
am·fm stereo, factory top·
per, white St&gt;Oke wheels.
Extra sharp . Call446-9868 .

I
I
I
I
I
I

WISEMAN'S ERA 446-3643
CALL NOWI

1977 JEEP CHROKEE ·S·
LOADED, Call446·2509 .

1978 FORD BRONCO XLX
· free wheeling package,
many extras . Low mileage,
call675-2415 after 5:30.

Plan

house, full size basement,
garden, dep., call aner 256-

2 BOR . house in cit y, 1st.
class, adults only, no pets,
ref. req . Call446·0893 .

All types roof work, new
or repair gut1ers and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and pain1ing .
All work guaranteed.
Free Estima1es
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
11 ·14 ·mo.

OW~ERS

421Second Ave .
taii446-G552 Anytime

."

working
middle
person girl or prefer
aged person . For more in·
formation call446·of063 .

IN EUREKA - Clean 5 rm .

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ROofing, guners, and
downspouts ...
Free
Estimates. All work
guaranteed. 20 years ex·
perience. Call Athens.
collect, Gerald Clark
797 -48S7 or Tom Hoskins
797 -274S.

onl~,

- ~

communities

446-7013

1

NICE 2 bdr . home, in
Villa;e-of·€ rown City, ref.
and dep . req. completely
turn ., new carpet, a .c.,
prefer adults . Call 446-3 257
or 446·1393.

Free Estimate

CALL 992·7544

APT .

NEWLY REMODELED 2
bdr. apartment, $300. mo.
plus deposit. Ca ll9 to 9 256·
6413.

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
esrorm Windows
• Replacement Win ·

dows

·-···

Real Estate lor Sale

"

Realtor -Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000

REALTY

COMPLETELY
FUR ·
NISHED, 3 bdr. house i n
city limits. Adults only.
Call 446· 7473 or 446·9204.

EFFICIENCY

__

Real Estate for
Sale
_._
--

W'&amp;AIRD &amp; FULLER

EFF . APT . · Spring Valley
Ghen Apts. Call446-1599.

Guararlteed Work
Free Estimates
Aft er s P.M . 992-SS47
12·13·2mo. pd .

I

Real Estate lor Sale

SMALL 2 bedroom home
located on Rt . 7 near CrOwn
Ci1y.
Mature
couple
preferred. Wiseman Agen·
cy . 446-3643.

~~=~~;;;;;;;~~;;~~========~~~=========~

WATER WELL Drilling
and cle aning . Pu mps sold
and instal led. Ca ll W.T.
Gran t, 446 8508 .

vice , chemical toilets.

Remodeling
Addi1ions
Siding
Brick work
Block work
concrete Finishing

Cheap Rates
Quality service
Call 992 ·2852
or 992 · 7235
1213 pd
_

mil e ott Rt. 7 by -pa ss
on St Rt . 174 toward
Ru11and.

McCORMICK
1!.
STILLMAN
for
remodeling . Roofing, co ncr ete, and gen . home maintenance. Call 675·5774 and
eveni ngs, 675· 1298.

Septic tank service,
residential &amp; commer cial. Electric eel ser ·

us

~ Cold Weather

11

WILL CARE for the elderly
in our home, trained llnd
experienced. Phone 9921314.

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE

Quali1y construction at
reasonable rates .

Let
WrapYour
Pipeslor

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Ve1erans Admin. Loans~

Auto Sales
D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
All types home im·
provements and room
additions . Also
insurance claim repairs &amp;
electric wiring.
Free Estimates
446-3407 or 367-0389

N. L CONSTRUCTION

~==========~=12=2=8~-p=d=·:;~====~~=======·===· ~r;:::;;;~;;~~~::~
J&amp;l BLOWN

ELMER
MURREL
FOLD EN, Dozer work, 4-46 9835.

FOR BEST
In Carpet
Cl ean ing
Ca ll Paul 's
Steamway . Call 614·446 ·
2096.

-

RACINE , 0 .
949-2748 or
992 ·7314

Call388 9857 .
TRI STA TE
UPH OLST E RY SHOP

n

~r--r'-'·1

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Call 3671784 or 367 ·1160

call

379·2123 .

Gu1ter work, down
spouts , some concre1e
work ,
walks
and
driveways .
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

PA I NTING . Residential in ·
ter ior ana ex terior barn
and mobi te home roofs
Free es Ti mates . 15 yr exp _

spouting

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PW~BING REPAIR.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

2642

insu lation . 4-46·8515 or 446 -

: IN TERIOR PAINTING
Call245 5050 .
BOG GS
EXTERM I NATIN G

Bl LL·s MOBILE HOME S
and Home Improvements .
Free eslimates. Call 446 -

RUSSANDMAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Heati ng and air
conditioning . Rapco Foam

for

FURN . APAR T. · parking,
1 or 2 adults only . Dep . and
lease, call446 0338.

7785.

: ~--:--::-;:------:­
Services Offer e d

I~~~~!!!!!!!!

For Rent-

~-

13, 1980

GE(IIE PLANTS
~
ANDSONS
Plumbing - Heating • Air
eopdlllonlng. 300 Fourth ·
Ave, F'h. 446· 1637-

1:

•
~

o

STAN DAR
~r
·:
F'lumblng·Heotlng
• 215 Third Ave., 446·3782

"
•:...IL.. ~~-­
•

..

A New Home This Nice Can Be Yours

F_or A~ Unbelievably Lo.w Price ...

'

equipment
which includes cooler
(holds approx . 9 lo 10
cases
of
beer),
showcase, V ictor cash
reg iser
&amp;
adding
machine, ref . &amp; gas
cooK stove. All stock and
equipment
&amp;
D-2
licenses all for only
$5,900.00 . Be lhe fir st to
pick up this bargain,
COME IN NOW .

We think you'll be surprised to discover that we can place a three
bedroom , one-and -a-half bath house like this on your lot for only
$37,500. We'll include the foundation , an attached garage, carpeting,
10" of blown insulatiop , wood kitchen cabinets and Anderson thermopane windows . This 1152 sq. ft house, and other "All-American"
homes, can be seen at Kingsbury Home Sales , 1100 East Main Street,
Pomeroy . We')l even take y.our mobile home in on trade . Visit us, or call
992· 7034, and be pleasantly surprised. We'll show vou how to beat th'e
high cost .of housing . .
..
· ·
·
.

KINGSB.URY HOME SALES
,,

.

NOW A NEW HOME YOU CAN

•

SJ9,900 .00
Ni ce comfortable 2 BR
located on 1.1 A . of ni ce
landscaped yard and
large garden area . Par ·
tial finished basement .
F .A . furnace, garage,
storm doors and win dows. Th is property has
lots of shrubbery, shade
trees, fru i t trees {3 ap ple, 2 peach) , grape ar ·
bor, strawberrv · and
raspberry bushes .

CABIN3
OR4 BEDROOM
Fishing, vacation. 1 or 2
bedroom cabin located
fac ing Raccoon Creek
and Blue Lake . N Ice
large wOOded lot. Make
your life a year round
vacation . CALL US
NOW.

$17,000
HOME SITTING
IN THE WOODS
3 B.R., bath, area for
washer
&amp;. dryer ,
spacious living room,
built · in
kitchen
cabinets, With range,
has drilled well. all si t·
ting on approx. 1 A. of
lively wooded land near
M ercervi lle.

LOT OVER LOOKING
BLUELAKE&amp;
RACCOON CREEK
Beautiful lot for camper
trailer. A place to get
away from i1 all &amp; fish ,
boat or just peace &amp;
qu iet. Rural water &amp;
sewer available . Electric already here. ALL
ONLY $3,900.00 .
~

•,
I
I
I

I

I

I
I

·For Leas
"-'e' - - AMSBARY Eve;Ciinic near
Hoizer Hospital, suitable
for Otli cc~s. or business,
plenty ct parking. Call'446·
0239.
-- --~·~

..

Professional Services
CALL
US for
your
pholographlc .needs. Portrait, commercial and wed ding photography, Tawney
:itu diOs, 42.. second Ave.
-·- .....____

~::;:;;:::;::::;::=wanted to Rent

WANT TO RENT OR
LEASE · .3 or • bedroom
residence. Will furnish
deposit, references. Call
446'· 0915 evenings.

'

i·

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Swlllay , Jan.

:&gt;-+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1900

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found in theSun(lay Times-Sentinel

For Best Results ·use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Mobile Hom es- Rent
2 BDR . Mobile Home. Call
379 2119 o r 446 2317 .

- Services Offered
L IMESTONE , gravel and
sand . AU size-s. At Ricl'lards
and Son, Upper RtYer Rd .,
Galli polis , Oli10. Ca ll 446

Business Services

SLEEPI NG ROOMS
·rent, Gallia Hotel.

-STOVE , furnace and chim ·
ney

insulation,.

Call

4.46

3407
KEN MANNON MOB ILE
: wELDING Service . Cut
• t lng, brazing, arc welding.

: Ca ll 256-9302 aft er S. 30
- ---~-----

CO .

. (Formerly
Fain e~
and
. Q'delt) Oak Hil l. Oh ., ca ll
· coiled «6-7569 .

. THEISS IN SULATION, In
sul master f oam insu l ation.
New homes, old homes,
commer cial structures.
For fr ee esti m ates call 446

1911.
· PIANO TUN IN G
Lane
· oaniel s Qu ality service si n ' ce 1965. Call 742 -2951 or 992·
2082.
LA IR CO NST .
Block,
brick, fi r eplac es . new
homes,

remodeling,

0445. Ca ll atrer 4. 30

J IM

MARCUM

yea rs

and

roofing ,
sidi ng . 30

experience

estimates

Free

Remodeling .

11 63 Sec. Ave .. Ga ll ipolis .
446 7833 or 446 1BJJ .

ROBERT S

BROT HER S

GARAGE . 2d hr. wrecker

ser vice. All types of repa ir .
Upper Rt 1 Ca ll 446·244S
days and 446 -4792 nights .

HAMMOND BODY SHO P,

·EDWARD
CUSTOM
MEA TS
under
new
management . Cal l 675 1234

work,
reasonable
pri ces .
Sand and
pain t, quality
Cal l 245·9371 or 379·2306.

or 675· 56l 3 tor infor mation
and appointment .

JOHN SO N Water Deli very .

P &amp;: J's Garage - 225 Jrd .
Ave ., in Gallipolis. Call 4462114. Conventional, auto,
'diesel and tru cks. Body
.work is our spec ia lty .

JERRY LUCA S'S water
delivery .
Call 446-7534
anytime.

QUALITY
MA l N ·
T E NAN CE
Elec tr ica l,
plumb i ng ,
he at i n g,
specializ ing in oi l and gas
fur naces. Caii388·969B .
1ANDYANDBEAVERin
:Surance Co has offered
-servic es for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
propertv coverages are
available to mee t in ·
dividual needs . Contact, T.
F Burleson, your neighbor
8nd agent .
D·DAY REFRIDGERATI ·
ON
Residential , commercial,
heating, coati ng, electrica l
service. Ca ll 388·827-4, or
388·9963 .
1\UTO REPA IR WORK on
your car at your home . Ex ·
pert servi ce, low rates . Call
&lt;146·2338.
CAKE DECORATING · All
character cakes and 3 sizes
of sheet cakes. Call446·7681
or 446-7249.

Call 4-46·1004 any time .

CHIMNEY 'S cleaned and
r epaired . St oves insata ll ed .
Call the Chim ney sweep,
373·6057 .

E &amp; R Tree Service. Pain
ling and excavating. Cal
388 8797 or 388· 8860.
REESE TRENC HIN G.
Ditches, 8 inches wide to 5
f1. deep, septi c tanks,
drainage lines, concr ete
work. Call367 7560

JIM'S
DEP E NDABLE
water delivery . Call 256·
9366 anytim e.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Auto &amp; Truck

Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 ·5682
, 30 tf c

367 -0S27

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
* Remoldings
*Free Estimates
1·4-(Pd .)
Services Offered
WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling , floor Tile, ceiling
tile . Fred Miller , 992·6338 .
HOUSECL EAN lNG on a
regular basis, 1 day per
week . References. Phone
949·2655.

STUCCO,
plastering,
plaster repair , te xture
ce ilings, tree eslimates.
ca 11256 _1182 _

1976 FORD 11:~ Ton p ~c k - up ,
302 V -8, auto ., p.s., p.b .,
will trade for any F.W.D.
truck . Call446·0515.
1974 FORD MU ST ANG II
Ghia · V·6, p .s., p.b ., a.c.,

'-:::====-:==-===~~:==========-+AMFM.
24·00p
mpg.
~
0515after5
.m .&lt;Call

·.----- - - - - .
C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types home im·
pr ovements - Roof'ing
· gutters - spouts - con·
trete work . Ph . 367 -0427,
: 367-0194, 367 -0141 . Free
· estimates.

M&amp;T CONSTRUCTION
&amp; EXCAVATING, INC.
Backhoe &amp; dozer work
by the iob or by thE
hour. Also licensed sep
tic 1ank\ installed.
Dump
truck.
FreE
estimates . Call 388-862
Ior 446-94S9.

KOTALIC
LANDSCAPING
Residential &amp; Commer cial , Tree &amp; shrubs in stalled, designing &amp;
planting ,
shrubbery
trimming, lawn need
control programs .
446-3100
41 State St ,
Galllt&gt;OIIS, Ohio

COMPUTEliiZED
FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS
complete Tu Service,
Plenty
of
parking
IVIIItble, Avollabilily
in D•y or Evening
ttours. We ' ve got the
Rf'Ollrlm for you! Stop
In or Clll for more
details. '
, Bob Lane's Complete
Bookkeeping &amp;
Tax Service
Spring Valley Plaza
446-7600

W0005
REMODELING CO .
Com~lete

Remodeling
Or General Repair
14S·9SSS

CONTINUING
INCOME TAX
SERVICE
of RobertS . Betz office.
26 Locust St.
Gallipolis , OH .

GEORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, gutter,
build -up root, home
repair.
Free Estimates
388-97S9

SEPTIC TANKS
Installed and
Leach Bed s Installed
Gallla County Certified

Reese Trenching

&amp; Backhoe Service
367·7560

_

:========~f~==:~~:~==~~·
I
SWAIN '
HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

AUCTION BARN

Storm
Windows.
Storm
Doors ;
Replacement
·
Win&lt;tows ,
Pallo
Covers-,
Aluminum

Wt ltll lnY1hlng for
anybOdy 111 our Auction
Barn or In ~our home. For
lnformltlon and pickup
service ctll 1"· 1967.
Salt. Every ·seturdey
Nlghtat 7 p.m.

S I d i n .t ·
Accessories,

e .n d

Call

'

' BilL'S
44-2j42

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

446-

14 MATADOR . 1995. 17
Monte Carlo, loaded $3,575 .
Don 't Miss These Two! Car
Rea lty , Inc. Call446-1118.

1974 CHEVY pick up in
good cond ., $1,000. and 1972
DATSUN sports car, $1,000.
Call 256·1393 .
1979 JEEP CJ 5 · 6 cyl., low
miles, call367·0102 between
8 and 4 weekdays . Weeken ds call592·5704 collect .
1979 CHEVY · 4·W·D, p .s.,
p .b ., auto., 1100 l ir es, Whife
spoKe rims, call 379-2141 .
TAKE OVER PAYMENTS
on 1978 ford 4-W D, low
mileage . Call446 7249.
1978 CHRY SL E R COR ·
DOVA - Exc . cond ., ca ll
367 -0541.

1970 CAD I LLAC Sedan
DeVille . Loaded . New m uf ·
r----~~-~~~~~---1 fler sysyem, fuel pump.
1500. 446·4444 .
WOODYARD76
Second -A ve , Galllt&gt;Oiis
Mechanic
on du1y ,
formerly Harrison 76.
Operated by Warren
woodyard .
PH . 446-9233

SWAIN
~ION

SERVIC,E

KtnntthSwain, Auct.
.__c_.,_n_•r_T-'h-lr_d_&amp;o_..u,!.:.,.
e_Jl·

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.
Hours 9-1 M ., w., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment:
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, o.

INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

·

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

12 -7-1 mo.

10 ·191 mo.

r-------------,
1
HOME
1

I
1
I •
1 e
I •
1 •

Planning to sell this Spring. The buying

I

rush has begun!
We Offer:
Free Home Sellers Protection
Prolessiona I Stall
Finest
Home
Marketing
Available
Electronic Referral System

I
t--::;:::::::;::=::=;;:==:=:=:-r-=;;=:::::==;::=;===1
I B .
S
-------------·
usmess

ervices

ELWOOD
·. BOWERS
REPAIR ~ Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.
S 1!. G Carpel Cleaning .
Sleam
cleaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonab le
rates . Scotchguard. 9926309 or 742·2348.
WALL PAPERING
painting . 742-2328.

and

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone number, 742·2951 . Service to
sc hools and home since
1965,
REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St . Rewind and
repair electr ic motors . 992 2356 . WiH make service
calls.
ARNOLD

AND

DICK ' S

Mechanic
992·7768 . work . Open 9-5,

Auto Sales
1974 Plymouth Scamp,
custom inter ior, . 6 cyl'. ,
auto., $1800 or trade. 742·
2451 .
1977 CHEVROLET Blazer,
P.S., P.B., A.C., 2·wheel
drive. 13,000 actual . miles.
992·6192.

1970 MONTE CARLO · Will
trade tor pick-up - Gooa
corip ., new palM, . QO!)d
tire!, call446·1\667. · 1
1970 REBEL - 4-dr., 6-cyl. ,
auto., and 1968 Chevy 4·di".,
both gd. cond . C_411446-9782 .
1971 SINCA
$150 needs
some _repa ir.s. CaH367-054l.
1968 PONTIAC · $200 . Cal l
446- 13~.
_ _ _ .:__

AUTOMOBILE
IN SURANCE
been
can celled?
Lost
your
operator ' s license? Phone
992 ·2143 .
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits. Do-it-yourself or
let us Install t.pr vou. 0 .
Bumgardner Sales, Inc .,
992-5724.

1979 OLDS Diesel98 Regen·
cv 4 door sedan, A.C .,
cruise control, all the ex·
tras, looks and runs like
new . 30 mpg. Will take
trades. 949·2763.
1976 FORD F -150. GOOd
condition . 12400. 992-7378 .
1974 MUSTANG Ghi a, low

mile~ge. New tires, $1650.6

cyl, auto,, 949-2042 .
1973 CHEVY PICKUP·;
auto,
Cont·acl
Eldon ·
Walbur11, , 980 S. :. Jrd St.,
Middleport. 992' 2805.

TRAILER LOT · In town.
$60. water pd. , no chi ldren,
pets or total electric
trailers. Call .446·.4.416 after

4.
2 BDR. MOBILE HOME Ref. req ., call446-0974.
COUNTRY MOBI LE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Calt
992·7479
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts . Phone 992·5434 .
TWO BEDROOM !railer .
Adults only 992 -3324.
12X60 TWO BEDROOM
mobile home. Rae i ne a rea .
992-5858.
THREE bedroom mobile
home near Pomeroy and
Middleport. 992-58S8.
COMPLETELY furnished
house. Util ities pa id. Con ·
struction men only . M id·
dleport area. 992-7791 .
TWO BEDROOM APT . in
country . Completely newly
decorated . Must have
references . 742 . 2173 _
TWO BEDROOM 12x60 In
Syracuse. Carpeted, fur ·
nished. Water paid . I child
accepted. $160 a month plus
security . Phone992·1897 .

.iJ

BMR-C361 - Commercial bus iness, Rt. 7, Middleport. Contains grocery store, includes equipment, for complete operation. c -2 beer and w ine
license. Price includes all stock and equipment .

BIDWELL- Attractive 3 bedroom home,_ b_o h, dining room, storage building, large level lot, owner
wi II consider offers .
11572

BMR -361 - Rio Grande, 4 BR home with 3 ex tra
lots. Verv good condition .

FIRST LISTING - Nice Bl-level, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, garage with electric opener, heat pump with
central air. Close to hospital on 2 acres with woods.

BMR -329 - Extra nice 3 BR hom e in Addison includes F.R . in baement, and built -in kitchen .
Situated on large flat lot. owner will consider VA or
FHA financing.

JUST LISTED - Nice Vinedole mobile home,
12x60, tip out, 2 bedrooms , centra l air, nice loU 1217

BMR -333 - Located 2 miles below Eureka . 3 BR 's,
LR , OR , FR, kitchen includes r efrigerator and
rai"IQ~ . All electric with wood burner in F . R .

·nus

BMR·334- Commercial land. 1.3 acres. Owner will
consider land contract atB% interest . Call today!

LAND CONTRACT - Small down payment will buy
you a house with 2 apartments and a mobile. home In
F!io Grande. Call today .
# 0250

BMR-33S - Older home in heart of downtown
Gallipolis . In need of repair . Has lot s of potentia l.
Must be seen to appreciate.

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots w~th~;
rentol mobile home pads, all are rented, each
has concrete runners and patio, located in Rodney .

BMR ·336- New listing. First time on the market.
This house has lots of space throughout (2800 sq.
ft. ). Includes entrance hall , LR w it h FP, FR with
FP. DR, 4 BR's, 2lJ:z baths, large kitchen..with built ins. Nearly 6 acr~s. City schools. Call without delay.

lllSS
139 ACRES - GOOd 4 bedroom home with furniture.
bath, fully carpeted, full basement, large barn, all'
mineral rights and some coal and limestone. N1870
NICE HOME WITH RENTAL - Nice ranch,\I!J).
fireplace in living room , full basement, 2 tar
garage, also 2 bedroom block house. 1.76 acres.
10051

BMR ·l39 - Older two story home on Second Ave. in
Gallipolis. 31arge BR 's, LR, FR, DR, eat-in kitchen cUnder $30,000.
BMR ·155 - Two story home in Vin1on , 3 BR , LR.
FR, eat·in kitchen, carpeted, drapes and cur ta ins
stay. Less than $18,000.

9J ACRES - Vacant land, good investment proper·
ty, some timber, all mineral rights, located In Ad dison Twp .
1 1032

BMR ·IS7 - Located in Eureka , very nice 3 BR
frame home with 32 acres. City or county schools.

Evenin~

Can
Darvin Bloomer, Assoc. 446-2599

BMR -IS9 - Two story home in city . 4 BR's , LR , FR ,
DR, large kitchen, 1112 baths . Less than $33,000.

~

Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
~ohn fuller, Realtor 446-4327

BMR -137A - Beautiful brick ranch featuring full
basement, FR with fireplace, 3 BR's, 11h baths,
carpet, kitchen with built ·ins, 1lf:z baths, _carpet, kit·
chen with buill-ins, and a bar plus d1nlng area.
Situated on large flat lot . City Schools.

REAL ESTATE
31; 2 YR . OLD RANCH HOME - Just.( miles from
Pomeroy . Quiet country living in this beautiful 3
bedroom, two bath with cen tral heat and air condi ·
tion. over 3 acres at flat land with a split rail fence,
garage and workshop. Just U-4,900 .00 .

THREE BEDROOM home
a big lot. can be partially financed. Call Guido
Girolaml : 992-5786, 10·6. No
realtors.

POMEROY - ·Lincoln His. 2 );led room, both, large
living room, full basement, new furnace. $17,500.
216 E. Second Slr"t
COUNTRY SETTING A real live stocked fish
pond. Has over an acre
and a like new 2
bedroom mobile home
12' x50'. Gas furnace,
patio, shade trees, rural
water and all furniture
on Slael Rt. Only
$12,000 .
DUPLEX POSSIBLE 9 rooms, 1112 baths," or
bedrooms, natural gas
heat and r~ for a
wood burner in the large
family room, 2 car
garage with storage
gOOd corner Jot near
!lchools ., Asking only
$15,000 .
OWN A BUSINESS All stock and fixtures. A
3 bedroom apartment
with bath and extra lot
on Slate Rt. 124. Only
$27,500.
!IRICK RANCH 3
nice bedrt&gt;oms, 2 baths,
l,arge living , dining ,
~;overed patio, 2 car
11arage, all this on the
roiver.
ACREAGE - Inseveral
{pcatlons and prl~es,
Some river front lots on
~1. 124.
BUILDING LOTS tountrv, In town, on
water
line, woods,
cleared and on road
frontage.
CALL
992-3325 or
.992-3176 FOR A LOCA·
TION, FREE NEW
' CALENDAR$,

MIDDLEPORT - Two bedroom brick only 1 block
from center of town. Low utilities. A bargain at
$12,500.

5 ACRES OF LAND on Hysell Run, beautiful
building lot. 17,000.

s

MIDDLE PORT - Building lot on S. Second, 6J'xS3' .
$4,500.

Loans

CALL 992-2342

VENTURE
CAPITAL
$50,000 up. Slarl·up, Buyout, Expansion. Any wor·
thwhlle
pro[ecl .
Mr .
Donald, 214·368-2635 -368-

Bill Childs, Branch Mgr., Home 992-2449
Rodney Downing, Broker, Home 992·3731
•

THE

Baron
THIS BARON HOME HAS ALL THE EXTRAS
FOR GRACIOUS LIVING.
--WOOD BURNING FIREPLACE
--BUILTIN STER_
EO
-GARDEN TUB WITH SEPARATE
FIBERGLASS SHOWER
--CARPETED THROUGHOUT
'
--TOTAL Y(RAP FOAM COR
-TOTAL ELECTRIC
-BAY WINDOW
--TOp GRAD_E _FURNISHINGS _

Heating

00

.

.

'

:;DEWITT'S PLUMBING
•
ANDHEATING .
Route 160 at Evergreen
li~one 446-27~5 . . · _ ··
•

" ,F inest In Manufactured Housing"

·;: tt2·70B4

I

; ,CARTER'S"PLUMBING
AND HEATING
'. Cor. Fourth and Pine
e hone 446-3888 or .446-.c.l77

it AT

K'INGSiURY HOME
SAL.ES &amp;- SERVICE ·
· ··
'

R eal Estate lor Sale

--------

Real Estate for Sale

FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
992-7559.
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming
or fishing, 9 roomS, bath,
carpeted. 3 lo 17 acres
availdble . Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33. 446·2359 alter 6.

BY OWNER, house in
Pomeroy. Large · living
room, dining room, built-in
kitchen, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
lois of carpet and paneling.
FA gas heat, IL'II baemenl.
Price up 30'S. One-third
acre lot close to hospital
and school. Call 992·5917 for
appointment .

TWO STORY house, 9
rooms, l lf:z baths, garage.
College Rd ., Syracuse . Call
992·5133 or 992·3981.

HOUSE FOR SALE by
owner : 6 room house plus
bath. 1 acre ground.
Located 2lf2 miles from
Mine No. 2. 992 ·2145 for Information.

, Realtor Associate
Home 446·2230

*

We cover over
7 mil~on miles

Holstein, Realtor A~s ociate
Ph. 388-9760

10% LOAN AVAILABLE
This home is just waiting to be your~ ou' ll bubble
with excitement when yoU Sip the features this lux ·
ury home offers. Foyer, flooring, formal living
room, w .b . fireplace, cedar mantel track, lightin g,
new plush carpeting, formal dining room , beaut iful
family room with large sliding door leading to
beautiful pool and patio area , terra ced ground with
lots of shrubbery, as gr ill, ideal for entertainment, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, large kichen with unusual
breakfast bar , che rry, walnut wood, full basement,
centra l air, garage and openers. Thi s home is
beautifully decorated. All new cust8m draperies .
Looks like it just cam eright out of an interior
decorator's magazine. One of th e finest. I' m sure it
will be love at first sight .
BUILD TO SUIT
Qualif ied builder Will build you a new ranch home, 3
bedroom modern, single car garage on a lot 120x120.
Priced in the mid 30's. Call for more details .
$38,000
Here is opportunity to get the space you need at the
price you want. 3 bedrooms, 3 acres.
RODNEY -CORA RD.

.58 Acre, mobil ehome runners for a 12x60 tra iler,
septic tank, rural water available . Very reasonable.
LOAN ASSUMPTION POSSIBLE

lo fi.,d you a home.

* oanPh .

Agency

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

IJ

NICE HOME
PRICED RIGHT
3 bedrooms, 2 baths with showers, tam i
ly room, dinin g area . Total 8 r oom s
mo~ern _k itchen with e!ec tri c range:
refng ., d iShwasher, garbage disposal &amp;
lot of cabinets. F . A ~·F ., also wood·
burner , Gallia rural water service
storage build ing, carefree alum . siding :
nice landscaped lot. Approx. 1 acre .
House approx . 4 years Old. See this one

STEP INTO A
DREAM HOUSE
This home makes vour dream com e
true! You'll love the pr ivacv of th e
bedroom wing, a half -leve l up rom the
liv ing, din ing &amp; kitchen areas. Down
stairs there is a large family room and
balh .

9% int. Owner transferred and very anxious to sell.

INVESTMENT
PROPERTY
Four' apartments , 4
rooms each apartment.
2 BR , kit chen wil h built ·
in cabinets , stove,
refrigerator , dining
room plus bath, utility
room , has good rental
income, could pay tor
the bu i Iding with in a few
years. A relaTively new
apartm ent home . Each
apartm ent has own gas
furna ce. Do you need a
income property?
' T WAIT TO SEE

Citv schools, acre of ground more or less, living
room, 2 w .b . -firela ces, kitchen &amp; di ning area . Full
baement. priced in $40's. Call for more deta ils.
LAND CONTRACT 9% INT.
Owners are willing to help finance this love lv brick
home close to Holzer Hosp ital. 4 bedrooms, formal
entry and living rnrom , m odern ktihen, full base·
men!, w.b.
2 car garage attached. Also a
workshop and ... var n . All this situated on 5 acres
more or less. This home reflects tender lovin g care
and true value.

finSI'lE

ASSUME THIS LOAN
of only 9V:z% Int. and ow11 this lovel y Cedar Rach on ly 2 y ~s. old . 3 bedroom s, 2 batt:: . modern built-in kitchPn, dining area . Thi s home is only W:z m i les
from c ity . Owner has been tr ansferred and is very
anxious to sell .
FINANCE I FINANCE! FINANCE
Owner will help- finance with a down payment and
carry lhe balance on a LAND CONTRACT. Stately 2
story pillary posts, 3 bedroom , forma l entrv &amp; large
open winding staircase. Family room with plank
flooring &amp; w .b. f ireplace . Formal liv ing room,
spacious eat-in kitchen with loads of kn.otty pine
cabinets . This and much more setting on 3 acres.
Can buy only one acre. City Schools . Give us a call
for more detai Is.

EXCELLENT LEVEL
LOT
2/ 3 acre M . or L . for
residential.
mobile
home and garden. Fron ·
ta ge on Patr iot-Camdus
Rd .
Rura l
water
avo!ila1ble_. Ask ing price

57SOO.OO
acres vacant land
M organ Twp. off White
Oak Rei . Level to slight·
ly rolling, at one time
had a lrailer hookup . 2
wells, some fences ,
some ou tbu i ldings .
9

RENTAL
Tra iler lot. Located one and a halt miles from city
limits on St . Rt. 7.
NEW SECTIONAL
4 mos. old, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, livi ng
room and dining room . Modern built-in kitchen.
Woodburner. Take a1ook at this real nic ehome. All
setting on one and half acres in the city school
district. Priced in the 30's .

NICE building lots on CR

32, Eastern School Oistrkt,
TP water district, 5 miles
off Rt. 7.
spection.
showing.

Priced on in·
949-2763 for

On State Highway . 5
room and bath frame
home. Garden . Its own
wafer svstem . 4 apple
trees, 1 pea ch. Large
store room 1st fl oo r, has
an upstairs. Basement .
Lots of poss ibility, like
feed store, hardware,
sto re, et c.

~~~~~~~e 1!. all

Camping Equipment
GO CAMPING AMERICA .-.
Wllh Coachman RVS .
Q~allly built, pried right.
DOzens of models with a
wide range of family ·
_pleasing floorplons.
See
them loday! Apple Cily
Recreational Vehicle's, Rt
35, 1 ml Wesl of Jackson,
0~, 61086·S700.

•

SEE

R ea l Estate lor
- Sale

~--~~-

oustng
Headquarters

,flumbing

''15~600

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

-

Real Estate lor Sale
-----

on

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ONLY ONE
AT TIUS PRICE

FINANCING -VA-FHA LO·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E. STATE, ATHENS .
614-592-3051.

OonaMtGhee
Sales Assoc.
446-0SS2

on

ROCKSPRINGS - 2 bedroom and bath, fully equipped kitchen, near Meigs High School, f,ully furnish·
ed. $25,000 .

SYRACUSE - 6 room house on nice lot. $11 ,600.

.,

Steve McGhee
Sales Assoc .
446-0SS2

Tom White
SlltiAUOC:.
446·9551

MIDDLEPORT - Cementblock home on large cor- ..
ner lot. 7 rooms, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 1 V:~ bath, garage. ,
127,000.
,.

ONE BEDROOM hOuse,
adults only . 992·2598 .

...

·WE ARE SELLING MORE.

I~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..

RUTLAND - One bedroom down, two upstairs, on
large corner lot. Just needs a lit11e paint &amp; paper.
$9,900.

Depresstoa. Proof
Booming Business
Every car needs it!
You've herd of us;
we're the Ameri·
can
T _v _reshield
Corp.

"2·2259
RACINE Recently
remodeled llh story
frame with 2 bedrooms,
dining room , living
r oom , and kitchen . Full
basement, and 2 possi ·
ble rooms upstairs.
Really nice. $25,000 .00.
RENTAL PROPERTY
- I bedroom frame with
full basement Make an
offer.
START A FUTURE
NOW - with this nice
home in Syracuse. Has 3
bedrooms, basement.
and a double lot. VA ap·
proved. Excellent condi ·
tion . $26,800.00.
OVERLOOKS RIVER
Beautiful 2 story
home. 3 bedrooms, 1112
baths, central air, .and a
full usuable basement
on a level lot. Fully
carpeted . $40,000.00.
CLOSE TO THE MINES
Huge l iving room
with fireplace, new k it·
chen, 3 bedrooms, part
basement and 6 acres .
$24,500 .00 .
BUSINESS
OP PORTUNITY nice
clean business with ex ·
cellent track record .
"The Kiddie Shop" in ·
eludes all equi pme nt
necessary . Come in for
details . .
MIDDLEPORT
Beautiful home in ex ·
cellent condition, appx .
2,600 sq. ft. of living
space, 2 story frame, 4
bedrooms, l'h baths,
family room, rec . room ,
den, large living room ,
dining, break. nook ,
modern built-in k it.,
central air &amp; heat , tree
house ,
storage .
159,500.00.
• REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742-2474
Jean Trussell949-2660
OFFICE PHONE
992-22S9

BMR-149 - Development land, 30 acres on Clark
Chapel Rd. 50011. of fronlfootage. including mtneral
rights. Call today .

I,;; ..

I~~======·~==i-1

*

BMR ·I47 - Crown City, commercial building on Rt.

7. Situated on two lots - Under $18 ,000.

ROOM AND BOARD, laun ·
dry . Elderly or working
men. 992··6022 .

TWO BEDROOM house,
unfurnished . 992 -3090.

-

e.

BMR-c360 - Commercial building in downtown
Gallit&gt;OIIs. ExcellentlnveStfllent property .

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Serv ice. Phone
949·2487 Or 949 ·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford.

Ralph Franco,
SR . VT,
At 800 · 327·0444

19788 FORD 'h ton pickup
super cab with topper.
Good
condition .
Low
m ileage . U500 . 949-2042.

6547 .

- ---·

608
•.&amp;o~~QJI.I.,.I
MAIN
i'OMEROY, 0 ,

BMR-ISO - Building lot on Hol comb Hill . $9 ,500.

5475.

1977 INTERNATIONAL
cal'&gt;·over 350 tra ctor. 1978
Inte rnati onal cab ·over ~T 450. 247 3051 or 247 2063.

1977 FIAT X19 . Very low
1')'1ileage. Call Gary, 949·
2210 before 3 p .m .

m iles. equipped,
One owner. 26Exc.
fully
,500
cond . Call 379·2302 .

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs ,
service,
all
makes .
992 -2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors.

1974 MUSTA~G IL Will
trade for a pickup truck of
equal ~alue. 949-2083.

1964
SCOTTY
travel
trailer , and 1979 G.M .C.
pick -up truck . Call446·1514.

1976
LiNcoLN
coN
TINENTAL · Town Coupe,

Business Services

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking . Phone 742·2455.

Thanks to the space age
miracle of Polymer
chemistry, our revolu·
tionary
product,
TYRESHIELD, scientifically designed to
eliminate flat tires
forever, is making i1
possible for our dealers
1o earn huge sums of
money on a full or part
1ime basis.
•Nationally Adv. pro·
duct (Popular 'science,
T.V. National EnRulren
• I rrislstably low retail
price
P.rO:fit
• Enormous
margin
Finan.clng avalla.ble
• No franchise fees
Seeing_Is believing. One
blockbuster demonstra•
lion of TYRESH I ELDIn
action will amaze and
convince even the most
sceptical Individual. Invest what Is com. fortable tor you ·--' only
a fa irly small cash In·
vestment Is required.
IMAGINE I
T,YRESHIELD lnstlnt·
,ly llxes any, flal tire by
permanently vulcanil· .•
. lnO It, ••~ Inflating ' it
·again, (We lhln.k otltas
lnstont road service al
less than 51Q,OO) Do you
think this is the business
for you to be In? Then
call

1975 AMC Pacer, GOOd con dition. No rust. $1700. 742·
2957.
.

1979 FORD RANGER
LARIET
F-150, 4-W-d
truck . V-8, a.t., p.s.. air,
am·fm stereo, factory top·
per, white St&gt;Oke wheels.
Extra sharp . Call446-9868 .

I
I
I
I
I
I

WISEMAN'S ERA 446-3643
CALL NOWI

1977 JEEP CHROKEE ·S·
LOADED, Call446·2509 .

1978 FORD BRONCO XLX
· free wheeling package,
many extras . Low mileage,
call675-2415 after 5:30.

Plan

house, full size basement,
garden, dep., call aner 256-

2 BOR . house in cit y, 1st.
class, adults only, no pets,
ref. req . Call446·0893 .

All types roof work, new
or repair gut1ers and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and pain1ing .
All work guaranteed.
Free Estima1es
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
11 ·14 ·mo.

OW~ERS

421Second Ave .
taii446-G552 Anytime

."

working
middle
person girl or prefer
aged person . For more in·
formation call446·of063 .

IN EUREKA - Clean 5 rm .

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ROofing, guners, and
downspouts ...
Free
Estimates. All work
guaranteed. 20 years ex·
perience. Call Athens.
collect, Gerald Clark
797 -48S7 or Tom Hoskins
797 -274S.

onl~,

- ~

communities

446-7013

1

NICE 2 bdr . home, in
Villa;e-of·€ rown City, ref.
and dep . req. completely
turn ., new carpet, a .c.,
prefer adults . Call 446-3 257
or 446·1393.

Free Estimate

CALL 992·7544

APT .

NEWLY REMODELED 2
bdr. apartment, $300. mo.
plus deposit. Ca ll9 to 9 256·
6413.

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
esrorm Windows
• Replacement Win ·

dows

·-···

Real Estate lor Sale

"

Realtor -Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
Serving 6,000

REALTY

COMPLETELY
FUR ·
NISHED, 3 bdr. house i n
city limits. Adults only.
Call 446· 7473 or 446·9204.

EFFICIENCY

__

Real Estate for
Sale
_._
--

W'&amp;AIRD &amp; FULLER

EFF . APT . · Spring Valley
Ghen Apts. Call446-1599.

Guararlteed Work
Free Estimates
Aft er s P.M . 992-SS47
12·13·2mo. pd .

I

Real Estate lor Sale

SMALL 2 bedroom home
located on Rt . 7 near CrOwn
Ci1y.
Mature
couple
preferred. Wiseman Agen·
cy . 446-3643.

~~=~~;;;;;;;~~;;~~========~~~=========~

WATER WELL Drilling
and cle aning . Pu mps sold
and instal led. Ca ll W.T.
Gran t, 446 8508 .

vice , chemical toilets.

Remodeling
Addi1ions
Siding
Brick work
Block work
concrete Finishing

Cheap Rates
Quality service
Call 992 ·2852
or 992 · 7235
1213 pd
_

mil e ott Rt. 7 by -pa ss
on St Rt . 174 toward
Ru11and.

McCORMICK
1!.
STILLMAN
for
remodeling . Roofing, co ncr ete, and gen . home maintenance. Call 675·5774 and
eveni ngs, 675· 1298.

Septic tank service,
residential &amp; commer cial. Electric eel ser ·

us

~ Cold Weather

11

WILL CARE for the elderly
in our home, trained llnd
experienced. Phone 9921314.

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE

Quali1y construction at
reasonable rates .

Let
WrapYour
Pipeslor

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Ve1erans Admin. Loans~

Auto Sales
D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
All types home im·
provements and room
additions . Also
insurance claim repairs &amp;
electric wiring.
Free Estimates
446-3407 or 367-0389

N. L CONSTRUCTION

~==========~=12=2=8~-p=d=·:;~====~~=======·===· ~r;:::;;;~;;~~~::~
J&amp;l BLOWN

ELMER
MURREL
FOLD EN, Dozer work, 4-46 9835.

FOR BEST
In Carpet
Cl ean ing
Ca ll Paul 's
Steamway . Call 614·446 ·
2096.

-

RACINE , 0 .
949-2748 or
992 ·7314

Call388 9857 .
TRI STA TE
UPH OLST E RY SHOP

n

~r--r'-'·1

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Call 3671784 or 367 ·1160

call

379·2123 .

Gu1ter work, down
spouts , some concre1e
work ,
walks
and
driveways .
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

PA I NTING . Residential in ·
ter ior ana ex terior barn
and mobi te home roofs
Free es Ti mates . 15 yr exp _

spouting

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PW~BING REPAIR.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

2642

insu lation . 4-46·8515 or 446 -

: IN TERIOR PAINTING
Call245 5050 .
BOG GS
EXTERM I NATIN G

Bl LL·s MOBILE HOME S
and Home Improvements .
Free eslimates. Call 446 -

RUSSANDMAX
ELLIOTT
Lennox Heati ng and air
conditioning . Rapco Foam

for

FURN . APAR T. · parking,
1 or 2 adults only . Dep . and
lease, call446 0338.

7785.

: ~--:--::-;:------:­
Services Offer e d

I~~~~!!!!!!!!

For Rent-

~-

13, 1980

GE(IIE PLANTS
~
ANDSONS
Plumbing - Heating • Air
eopdlllonlng. 300 Fourth ·
Ave, F'h. 446· 1637-

1:

•
~

o

STAN DAR
~r
·:
F'lumblng·Heotlng
• 215 Third Ave., 446·3782

"
•:...IL.. ~~-­
•

..

A New Home This Nice Can Be Yours

F_or A~ Unbelievably Lo.w Price ...

'

equipment
which includes cooler
(holds approx . 9 lo 10
cases
of
beer),
showcase, V ictor cash
reg iser
&amp;
adding
machine, ref . &amp; gas
cooK stove. All stock and
equipment
&amp;
D-2
licenses all for only
$5,900.00 . Be lhe fir st to
pick up this bargain,
COME IN NOW .

We think you'll be surprised to discover that we can place a three
bedroom , one-and -a-half bath house like this on your lot for only
$37,500. We'll include the foundation , an attached garage, carpeting,
10" of blown insulatiop , wood kitchen cabinets and Anderson thermopane windows . This 1152 sq. ft house, and other "All-American"
homes, can be seen at Kingsbury Home Sales , 1100 East Main Street,
Pomeroy . We')l even take y.our mobile home in on trade . Visit us, or call
992· 7034, and be pleasantly surprised. We'll show vou how to beat th'e
high cost .of housing . .
..
· ·
·
.

KINGSB.URY HOME SALES
,,

.

NOW A NEW HOME YOU CAN

•

SJ9,900 .00
Ni ce comfortable 2 BR
located on 1.1 A . of ni ce
landscaped yard and
large garden area . Par ·
tial finished basement .
F .A . furnace, garage,
storm doors and win dows. Th is property has
lots of shrubbery, shade
trees, fru i t trees {3 ap ple, 2 peach) , grape ar ·
bor, strawberrv · and
raspberry bushes .

CABIN3
OR4 BEDROOM
Fishing, vacation. 1 or 2
bedroom cabin located
fac ing Raccoon Creek
and Blue Lake . N Ice
large wOOded lot. Make
your life a year round
vacation . CALL US
NOW.

$17,000
HOME SITTING
IN THE WOODS
3 B.R., bath, area for
washer
&amp;. dryer ,
spacious living room,
built · in
kitchen
cabinets, With range,
has drilled well. all si t·
ting on approx. 1 A. of
lively wooded land near
M ercervi lle.

LOT OVER LOOKING
BLUELAKE&amp;
RACCOON CREEK
Beautiful lot for camper
trailer. A place to get
away from i1 all &amp; fish ,
boat or just peace &amp;
qu iet. Rural water &amp;
sewer available . Electric already here. ALL
ONLY $3,900.00 .
~

•,
I
I
I

I

I

I
I

·For Leas
"-'e' - - AMSBARY Eve;Ciinic near
Hoizer Hospital, suitable
for Otli cc~s. or business,
plenty ct parking. Call'446·
0239.
-- --~·~

..

Professional Services
CALL
US for
your
pholographlc .needs. Portrait, commercial and wed ding photography, Tawney
:itu diOs, 42.. second Ave.
-·- .....____

~::;:;;:::;::::;::=wanted to Rent

WANT TO RENT OR
LEASE · .3 or • bedroom
residence. Will furnish
deposit, references. Call
446'· 0915 evenings.

'

i·

�~7-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Jan.l3, 1980

..,.___The Sunday Times-&amp;ntlnel , Sunday , Jan. 13, 1980

•
Your ·n est Real Estate Buys Are Found zn
the Sunday Times-Se_n tinel

•

Your Best Real Estate!Buys Are Found zn the Sund;;Jy Times-Sentinel

Reall!state for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

R eal Estate for Sale

TONEY REALT.Y
WM. D. TONEY • BROKER

' 446 3087

24 STATE STREET
GAlliPOliS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

,, .. ·. ,n·
50 NICt '0 COME HOME TO!
Own er has r.!duced the p r ice oo th is 53
acre farm ~
N ewtv r em ode led, 3

bedr oom home . b ar~ . . to bacco base,
pond . p le nty of wa ter. 30x42 n ew me tal
b uild i ng with conc r e te f l oo r . Take a
took , you ' ll like i t. Red uced to sell
NOW ! $4 2, 500 .
1J 29S

GET THE CIDER AND DOUGHNUTS
out a nd SJ t by one of you r 2 t 1r ep 1aces
1n th1 s chil r m 1ng s tu cco and stone
ranc h 3 bed r oom s, entr y ha ll , family
r oom , f ormal dini ng , P .. bath s, unique
k it ch en with bu ilt-in ap pliances. Full

ba semen t. Sur r ound ed by 2 acres. On ly
3 yr s. old . A hom e anyone would be
comfortabl e living in. Ca ll for more
de tai ls.
N363

120 SCENIC ACRES
W1tn mode r n 3 bed r oom ho m e. Wood ,
coal bu rner , one of the best. suppl em en t ed by electri c heat . Well in ::.ul ated. Acreage, hay and pa::.ture ,
some tim be r, tob ac co base, b a rn , rural
wat er. I mmed1ate possessi on .
1J 40S
NEW LISTING
You can 't beat th e pr ice of this 2
bedroom mob ile home and lot Situated
at Rt 554. Pri c ed aT $10.000 .00 Call for
anappo intmenttoday .
N424

R
- No reasonable offer will be r efused
on th is Jl/:z story home. 4 bedrooms, llv ·
ing room, fami ly room, bath, pantry ,
tull basement . 3 acres . Natural gas fur ·
nace . City water and sewage . Wi thin 1h
mile of city limits. Will sell on land con ·
tra ct .
Nl66
OLDER HOME WITH CHARM
Look today at the beauty of this we ll
ma intained home. l l!:z story, liv ing
room, enclosed sun porch, 3 bedrooms.
! 1/1 ba th s. large k1 tchen and dining area
featuring la r ge heat-c-lator firep lace.
Base ment, gara ge, lg . flat corner lot.
Hook-up h. : mobile home.
IJ 370
PRICE REDUCED
MOBILE HOME
2 ACRE s
1974 Freeman, 3 bedrooms. most al l
furn i tur e included, underpinning, new
septic tan k, 700 new concrete blocks.
rural water ava ila ble . St . Rt . 325, one
mile north of 141 . Clea n and well land·
scaped . Im med iate possession . $10,000 .
! 388
BARGAIN! BARGAIN
And th at is what we mean . Thr ee
bedrooms, livi ng room, and kitchen .
Hardwood fl oors. Natural gas heat.
Si ngle car garage. Don ' t miss this one
for $19,500 .
N410

SOMETHING SPECIAL
at t ra c t i v e brick home 1 s
something special in any person' s eyes.
3 bedrCJ?ms, _liv ing room, step saver kit·
che~ w•th di Shwasher, disposal. Large
fam1ly room , l lf:z baths, full fin ished
basem~nt , 2 f ireplaces. Natural gas
heot w1th tow heating bills . 'h ac r e with
12X16 ~tor age bui lding. Top qua lity con·
str uct10n . Owner wi ll consider land con·
tract to qualified buyer.
11392
CIRCLE THIS ONE
Ideal location for c on ve ni ence
h ig hways &amp; shopping, lh is 3 bedroo~
br ick is in excellent condition . Features
living room, dining roo m with sliding
glass door s, very nice fin 1shed tamily
room in basement, 1 1/ i baths, 2 car
garage . It has a persona lit y a ll its own!
CALL NOW
N380
43 ACRES
- Vacant land, possibility of coa l and
N322
agricultural lime.
This

LOAN ASS UMPTION POSSIBLE
Idea l for sm al l fa mil y, two fine
bedrooms, kitc hen has lots of cabinets .
Rura l water , thermopane windows,
carpeted and r eal nice. Presently has a
VA loan. Ca ll for det ails. This will sell
fa st.
# 423

A PLEASURE TO SEE AND
A JOY TO LIVE IN
This home is in move -in condit ion. 3
bedrooms, kitchen and din ing comb ina ·
tion , bath, family room with wood burner . Well iMulated . LO . lot . At a
price you can afford . In the SJO's . ~&lt;~4') 0
till ACRE FARM
If you're looking for a home for yourself
AND your animals ... then look no fur ther! 33 good level, tillable acres.
Some woods, some pa sture, nice size
barn . Located 15 min. from GaiiJoolis
on a blacktop road, this gent leman's
fa rm has ~hat "down home feeling ".
~ orne conststs of 3 BR , liv ing rm., din ·
tng rm ., kitchen, bath and aood '&lt;17~'~
util1ty roorn . Ca ll for more specifics.
f 419
6 ACRES
Wooded land, road frontage, rural
water ava ilable. $11,900 .
N404

CLOSE IN
T~ i s looks inviting in times of hig h
pnc~s . 3 BR , eat-in kitchen, fuel oil

fuel
FA,
part1al basement, 11/:z acres, scenic
view, c lose to town. Many other
features, not too many of these for sale.
$26,900.
N40ll

On tv ten 1nutes from town. Two story,
seven r11oms and two baths, fu II base-

ment, dr illed well, rural water
available. Over five acres grou nd. No
foolin', owner really anxious to sell.
Calltoday!
N425

\

·AU·
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Approx. 6 acres
revel &amp; gentlv ro llinq land, countv water, nice
buildin_9 51tes, loca ted on the Floyd Clark Rd. ap·
•· prox . 1/ 2 mi off Route 160 near Porter . Asking
.. $1 5.000 .
OWNER FINANCI NG AVAILABLE Remodeled
· home Includes 5 rm s. &amp; bath, carport , stove, retrig.,
:· dishwasher, mobi le home pad, almost 6 acres on 588
2 mi . from town. SJO.OOO.
FREE GAS - 100 acr es m L va cant la nd near
Bulavi lle, approx . 40 acr es wooded, balance ro ll ing
pastureland. some timber r eported 7 miles ou t,

$55,000.
RACCOO_N CREEK FARM 50 acres. 38 A. bottom,
11 A . pasture, lovely modern bric k home with J Brs .,
2 ba ths, cathedra l ce il ings , f ireplac e, large sun deck
and !ots of other extr as. new metal pol e bar n, crib,
loadmg c hute, approx . 1700 ft . c reek fronta ge,
located -4 mi . from Meigs Mine No.3 .
WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF - Matur e land
scap ing &amp; r ic h green lawn hig hligh t th is enchanting
riverv iew home. owner has been transf erred &amp;
must sell_ th is c u ~ to m bui l t 3 BR home . LR , dining
rm ., equ1pped k 1tchen, foye r with open stairway
fam il Y r m . with FP, basement &amp; 2 car gar age are
only a f ew of the spec ial features. Located on Route
7 south of town with front age on th e Ohio River .
OWNE _R F_IN ANC ING AVA IL AB LE 20a,,., down cam pstt es 1n th e Way ne Nat ional For es t. 5 to a ac re
tr acts wooded land, gooc: hunting , pric es start at

$3,500 .

HARRISON TWP. - 1-47 acr es, approx . 60 A . wood·
ed (co mm er ci al timb er r eported&gt;. 40 A . ti ll able, 50
A pas tur e. l r m. home, barn, pond, spr ings, 2 wells,

tob base, lots of r d frontage, asking $65,000.

ROONEY BIDWELL ROAD - 76 Acre farm, ap
prox . 50 A. ti llabl e, balance pa sture &amp; woods, 4 BR
sect1ona 1 home. 5 yr s. old . 2Bx30 concrete biock
building , co. wa ter, pond, creek , 135 Massey
Ferguson tr actor &amp; equipment included in price.

446-0008
LOW DOWN PWMENT - SUPER BUY - FHA VA · CONVENTIONAL - T his 3 yr. old bi -level is
like new &amp; must be sc;&gt;ld th1s month . 3 or 4 BR's, 21:..
baths, f am ily rm ., heata lator fireplace, low hea t
bill s, Clay grade sc hool, Gallia Academy Hi gh
Sc hool . Ca ll for Appointment.
OHIO RIVER VIEW - This 3 ~R bri ck ranch is in
excel len t condition and off er s 2111 bat hs, den wi th
FP, dining rm , Ioyer , HW floor s, glassed in por ch.
patio, ex tr a nice landscapi ng, double garage pl us a
detached 22 x24 brick and con cr et e garage. Lots of
pr ivacy . .

m

Mosa canlerbury
Evenings 446·:1408

BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER
Spring Valley Plaza

INe' A" all you oeed 111 !.on.. m re.d .. ,,~le
'Wf: alief :
• Amrrica\ mi gi n~ l • llllldlgt'\1t&gt;lec!rnmc

realty i ystem

NEW LISTIN~ - 2 bedroom home with 2 acres.
Located ap:x. ftve miles from town on Kerr Bethel
Rd. New plumbing and wiring . $21.500.00.

NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom home sllualed within
lhe city; nat. gas F .A. furnace, full basement, ap·
prox . 117 acre lot. Buy now lor $43,000.00.

RIO GRANDE AREA - Approx. 45 acres vacant
land, county wafer, pond , so·me tim ber nice
building sites, city schools, $18.000.
'
CHESHIRE - $24,000 - Remodeled Jlh stor' 2 BR
bath, LR , di ni ng r m ., kit chen, part baseme.1f. dou :
ble carport', stor age building and a large corner lot .

10; Jimmy Swa ggart t3; Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15; Ha zel 17;
Stu dio See 33 .
10 30- Rex Humbard 3; Ernest
Ang ley 8; Zoom 20 ; Mo vie
" Gentle man' s Agreement " 17;
Big Blue M arble 33 .
11: 00- Rex Hu m bard 15; Rev .
Henry Mahan 13; Elec. Co . 20;
Footsteps 33.
11:30- Bi l l Dence Outdoors 3;
Anima ls, Anima ls, Animals 6, 13;
Fa ce Th e Nation 8; Big Blue
Marb le 20. Unlearn Ta les 33.
12:00- M eet lhe Press3,t5; I ssues &amp;
Answers 6.13; Viewpoint 8; The
Issue 10; Ohio Journal 20; M ovie
''Red River Shor e" 33 .
12 :3Q-At l ssue3; Directions 6; Glen
Korobov : BasketballS; Face the
Nallon 10; Kids Are People Tcio
13; Better Way 15; Nallonal
Geographic 20 .
1: OO ~Co llege Baske lball 3,15 ;
Aware 6; NBA Basketball 8.10;
M ovie " Home Before Dark" 17;
Mov t~ " Paomy Days" 33 .
1 30--.£,.-;Nica' s Black Forum 6;
• Hlgi &lt;·Q 13; Soun dstag e 20.
7: 00- ~oarl '" Mos.cow 6; Mar lo &amp;
1he M.:Jgic Movi e Machine 1J.
2· Jo- · .•. ~ !.: of th e Planets 13;
Hoc r. l&lt;·g Valley Bluegrass 20.

3: 00-Movle " T he Three Stooges in
Orbi t " 3; Sportsworld 15; Tri
State 13; Poldark II 20; M ovie
" The Lathe of Heaven " 33 .
3: IS- Sports Spectacular 8, 10 :
Eme r ge ncy 13 .
•: 00- Tennis 8,10 ; Movie " The
Reluctant Astronau t" 17 ; Lap
Quilting 20.
4:30-Golf 3, 15; In Search Of 6,
Movie " The Harder They Fal l"
13: Wal l Street Week 20.
5:0020·20 6; Elec Co. 20; Nova 33.
5: 30...Bes t of Groucho 20.
6:0Q-News 8, 10; ABC News 6;
Wrestling 17: Seseme St. 20;
Free lo ·Choose 33 .
6:30...News 3,6; NBC News 15; CBS
News 8,10; ABC News 13.
7: 00 -· 0 isney' s Wonderful World
3,15; ABG News Cl oseup 6, 13; 60·
Minutes 8, 10; Nashvl"e On The
Road 17; Like II I s 20; Greot
Performances 33 .
JG-Porter Wagoner 17 ; As We See
11lQ.

8 oo- Gulnne ss Book of World
RecOrd s 4, 13; Ar chie (l •,•lke&gt;r' s
Place 8, 10; M em or ies ot E: IJh iP
20.33; Winston Chur ch!l! 11
B:3G--One Day AI A linw 8. 10. N B/\
Baskelba tl 17.
·/ 00 - M ovie " Doc tor Frank t&gt; n ''

FOR YOUR
R·IN· LAW - No more tight
squeezes becauselhls well kept 2 story
home has enough space to ac·
commodate everyone. 3 or 4 king sized
bedrooms, large equipped kitchen,
famfly room, full basment, F.A . nat.
gas heat, garage, city water fenced
yard &amp; polio, les.s than 2 miles from
town on state highway. $29,900. Assume
Loan . .

COUNTRY HAVEN- Br ,ck stucco and
cedar tudor, 3 BR, 2 baths, family rm .
w :fireplace , cen . air, $57,900 .

ENERGY MISER- Low, low gas bill . Only a few
miles from city so YOOJ'II save gasoline tool 3 BR,
large kllchen has range, tots d cabinet spoce. At-'
tached garoge, level fenced backyard . $36,000.

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Res tricted bui lding lol,
1. 22 acre, n ice woOded set11 ng, c i ty schoo ls. $5,950.

HOM~ STE AD HER E or use as a hunting loag e,
vaca t1on home, etc. Qusti c log home is built from
hand hewn beams &amp; has a sleeping lpft, m odern
bat h, la rge stone fireplace &amp; approx . 27 acr es of
woods in the Wayne National Forest. Extr a land
available .

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TREES ·- PRIVACY Expansive
ranch , 1700 sq. ft . living area, oversized
living rm . with stone fireplace and
sliding glass doors leading onto high
10'x40 ieck. 3 BR, 2 full baths, fully
equipped "counlry style" kitchen .
Plush carpel. Alllhe extras you expect
to find in · a cust&lt;Jm home. Separate
24'X30' garage . Beautiful lawn. C:lty
schools. $68,900.

BRICK- 3 Br., 1'.... baths, f&amp;mlly rm ., fireplace,
basement,$54,900.
CENTENARY --! Natural cedar ranch , nearly an
acre tawn, 3 BR, family rm., 2 car garoge. A
showplace! $61,900.

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

RAMBLII'I' BRICK RANCH - With range , relrlg.
and lolsOt cablnel$tn kllchen , 3 BR , 1112 baths, fully
carpeted. Forml!ll dining area, 2 car finished garage
with overhead storage. Concrete drive , city schools .
$56,500 .

- 5 PAC E - 4 Br •• 2112 baths, basement, fireplace,
screened porch, formel dining, nearly an acre, lust
outside clly. $53,900.

NEW LISTING - In city, 2 bedroom collage·
situated on Mill Creek Rd., 50'x75' lot. Buy now for

:

510~.00.

NEW LISTING - BEAT THIS FOR $25,000 - V.A :
APPROVED - This 3 bedroom frame home is
perfect tor the small family . Kitchen includes
refrigerator and double-oven range. Nice level lot
with ptenly of shode trees. Gallipolis City School s.
No down payment, Veterans!

• Tra.med ll'o~ l ~1•11" proie!. s iOfla l~.
• The Mo~' "l M .!c ho llll'" 10 help you Du}
or wll iiOywl\efe m thE&gt; COUfltry,
• Home Selle~ Prott"t.lion f'lar-1.

~~~~~o· H~ '"";:~~~ 446::;;·""'~la

A 'DELICATE BALANCE - graceful
ti.me and family needs ,~ BR, living rm.
with fireplace, f ormal dining, full base·
ment, l i!:z acre roll ing lawn fronts on
Ohio River , lusl outside cily .

' FARM AND DRCHARDI
BACK YARD
- Apple, peach, cherry. and pear trees.
Asparagus, grapes, strawberries and
rhubarb plus large garden spot lor
potatoes, beans, etc. Home is in move in
condition . 2 BR , formal dining, low cost
.gas heat. Garage, olher outbldg . Rio
Grande, $36,500.

Phone 446·7900
or 446·2730

NEW LISTING - IN TOWN - FOURTH AVE.
LOCATION - Completely remodeled 2 or 3
bedroom home with partial basement and utilitY
buildi ng . Close to washington Elementary, Gallia
Academy and downtown erea. Priced at $39,900.00.

OI AII O W

PLUSH - 1750 SQ. Fl. - And a full
basement too. One year old brick could
easily be your dream home . 3 large
bedrooms, formal dining, equ ipped kit·
chen, family room with fireple,ce, extra
fireplace in basement, 3 baths, central
air, 2 car garage &amp; deck ov~rlookfng
large meadow. 1 acre landscaped yerd.
Between Oak Hill and Thurman .

NeW LISTING -

NEW ..LISTING - BRAND NEW AND READY TO
MOVE INTO - Fully carpeled, 1 cor garage, wood ed deck in bl!lck, and 100'x200' lot. A .Jot of living for
your money - at $.41,500 .

ENO - 4.25 acr es level land . Over 400ft. frontage
on Stat e Route 554, cou nty wa ter ava ilab le, ex ·
cel!ent bu ild ing or mobile home site. $6,500.

PERRY TOWNSHIP - General far m, 15 A. Si mm s
Cr eek bottom, ba lance rolli ng pastur e &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large barn, sev eral other buildings,
tab. base. corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon Woods Rd .
M INI FARM - Owner s moved to Florida and are
se ll mg th i s lovely 3 BR brick ho me. This 6 yr . old
beauty offer s lots of good living· for some lucky
fam il y with a large kit chen &amp; t,iin ing r m ., LR, fami ·
ly r m . with fireplace, garage &amp; barn . Loca ted on
State Rou te 160 approx . 6 m i. from HMC

lH

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

BUY THIS BRAND NEW HOME WITH
NO DOWN PAYMENT, VA and very
low down payment FHA. owners will
consider used mobile home or vacant
land lor doWn payment. $49,500.

3 bedr&lt;XIm home sltoJa~!d
OGre lot, 2 miles from Golllpolls City
· water and sewer, AC, nat. gas. I.a. heat .
pletely fenced . You'll llkelhe convenience
here!
·

AFTER HOURS
PHONE
Willa Davis, AssociAte
446·0844
Becky Lane, Associate
446-0451
VIckie Hauldren
Assocla.t e
446·4042

---------------,
WISEMAN'S ERA®

446-3636 ·
ANY HOUR

25 Locust Sl, Gallipolis Ohio

FARM- HIGH AND ORY
Ideal for part time farmer. 67 acres, 30
acres tillable, large pastured wood lot.
small stream runs through tand,,6 room
house, 2 barns, 1 almost new, 2600 lb.
tobacco base. Tobacco looks good. In·
eluded in price - 6 head cattle, all far·
ming equipment. Mineral right sinclud ·
ed. Fami ly retiring. Reasonably prlc·
ed. $33,000.
N377

AFFORDABLE 1971 mob i le home,
situated on .82 of an
ac:re . Extra room added
on .
Metal
storage
building
i nctuded .
Located O{'t Graham ·
School Rood, off Rt . w .
Priced at$16,500.
Business Is toOd B t
we're low on llstlni .;.
need your help. If yO.,•re
thinking of selling. ~ Give
us a call
·
WE BRING
PEOPLE HOME

1

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

446-1066

NEW LISTING - Ideally located lor those who
don't like to drive through lhe Ice and snow lo get to
the grocery . 2-bedroom coHage located across from
Pennytare Grocery , city services, nat . gas furnace,
.storm w indows·doors . Buy now for $24,500.00.

and Monday's TV Log

SUNDAY ,JANUARY 13,1980
s: 3o-Chu r ch Ser v ice 17.
6 : 00 - Am ti'r i ca n
P r oblem s
&amp;
: Chall en'ges 10; Betwee n th e
- Lines 17 .
6; 30...C hri s1opher Closeup 3; Better
• Wa y 8; Tree house Club 10;
• Ac tion News m aker 1J.
r.;oo- This Is The Life 3; Jer r y
., Fal w el l 8; Urban League 10,•.
- Gospel Outreach 13.
1;·3o-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
• 6; Jerry Falwell 10; The B&lt;ble
: Answers 13; J im my Swaggart
' 15; I I Is Wr lllen 17
S:oo-Mormon Choir 3; Day of
"' Discovery 8; Grace for the
; World 13; Sesame St . 20,33.
8:3Q-Ora l Roberts 3; Contact 6;
· Rev. Leonard Repass 8; James
Rob ison 10; Lower Ligh thouse
; 13; Open Bible 15.
·
9;()()-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Rex
• Humbard 6; Christian Cenler 8;
Oral Rober ts 10; Rev. Jim
Frank l in 13 ; Ernest Ang ley 15:
•~ l ost in Space 17; Mister Roger s
... 20,33.
t lQ- Robcrt Schu ll er a; E lec.· Co.
~ 33 : it Is Wr itten 10; Re v . R.A
, West 13; Sesame St . 20.
11l :CO- Th is is the NF L 3; Ki ds ~ re
" P~,ple Too 6; M ov ie "Bandido"

I

CANADAY REALTY

·DILLON

CAMPGROUND IFORMERL Y CLARK CHAPEL
ACRES) Make so meth ing of this property again. 71
A., 2 acre la ke, severa l bu ildings in need of r epa tr,
dumping station, 2 water sys tems, lots of p ine tr ees .
Fix th is dandy place up &amp; start making money . Op ·
portu nity knocks.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - - 20%
DOWN - Older 2 st ory farm home with 6 rms. &amp;
bath, ce ll a r house. sheds, large shade trees on ap·
prox. 4 acres. Loca t ed 4 mi. south of Rio Grande on
the Tom Wood s Rd. 519,900.

~Sunday

1.167 ACRE·S llalland.

AGENCY

OW~EI&lt; FINANCING AVAILABLE -

$7 ,500 down
- 9 ~ - Asktn g $33 , 0~0 - Remodeled 2 story home,
3 BR s, L R, den, family r m ., dini ng, kitchen, 2 WB
f1repl aces. 31/:o&gt; acre s. Located on Sta te Route 233
betw een Galli poli s and Oa k HilL

PRIVACY ABOUNDS - In ln iS brick -~
ranch nestled In the pine 1rees. The
home consists of alg. living room with a STATELY ..,.. Lovely . older home
huge fireplace, 3 bedrooms, buill· in kll·
located in the city. 4 bedrooms, lor . din.
chen, n iCe dining area, family rm.,
kit .. lam. room. llv . room, 2 baths,
bath,lg. double brick carport. all of this basement, attic, swim. pool, and 3 car
No r~str lctfons . Ni ce on acres ot
th a nice pond. Plus
garage. ·

PRI.CED REDUCED - Nice older
home !'flth 4 bedrooms. Slluated on 1.18
ocrea of nice flat land. Fruit trees and
couple of outbuildings. s:!O,SQO.

MOBILE HOMES - 2-12x60 with fur niture and 1.75 ocres. In nlcelocotlon.
BUILDING LOT - ·118'xl50' reslrlcled
building lot wllh waler and gas
available In nice subdivision.

REALTOR

HOBART DILLON,
BROKER

O.UTSTANDING -: Lovely sweeping
'111ew of the Ohio R1ver, from this · im·
maculate l BR ranch. Th !s home
featur~s LR with pretty corner frpl.,
nice k1tchen, den, bath, C.A., 2 car
garage and full basement with shower.
Situated on 1 acre Qf lovely lawn.

'WARM AND
·-Completely remodeled
with 3
bedrooms, cellar, 2 car garage with et·
. !ached green house setting on 3.5 acres
In Green Elementory and ·GAHS High
scnoot districts. ·

-

WOOD

Ken Morgan
Evenings 446·097~1

STROUT REALTY, Inc-.

. .

'

GRADE A DAIR Y
Read this before th e owner ca lls. He
may want to keep it. FamilY side dairy .
Most all tr actor land , 2 large pond~.
fields green and exciti ng to a farmer ,
even in Decembe r . 2 silos, " bar ns, 2
"corn cribs. E:x tra c lea n remodel ed
milking parlor and milk house . 9 room
modern house with bat.ement. Call to·
Call today .
N420

Real Estate for Sale

(()'NEW LISTING' - SUPERB CEDAR
RANCH - 'Firsl rote craftsmanship
throughout. 4 bedrooms, double closets,
2 lull balhs, complete built-In kitchen
with Corning lop range, formal dt~lng, .
lg. tam tty rm. with WOOdburner . Red ·
WOOd deck and 2 car garage. '4 acre lol.
Call lor appolnlment.

NEW LISING
EXCELLENT
POSSIBILITIES - Need an added Income? Then invesl In this apartment
building, _. units, 2 bedrooms each,
natural gas heat, coun1y water, In·
etudes some furnishings. In a good loco·
tion.
BUILDING LOT - In one of yOOJrbetler
.subdivisions. City water and sewage,
electric.

NG

·R eal Estate for Sale

ALL OUT GLAMOUR - Stonellreplace,llle entry,
covered Wood deck, barbecue area, 3 8 R, 2 baths,
velvet lawn. $59,600.

NEW LISTING - 107 acre farm, With 3 bedroom
fx?me, situated on hard surface rd . in Guy an Twp.,
-.With barn and other outhtllldinas. Price 164,000.00.
'NEW LISTING - 4 bedroom home in Eno. Buy one··
·acre or 20 acres. Localed on Rt.
llv. rm., din.
rm., kit. downstairs, -41g . bedrooms up. 2 cisterns, 1
well , rural water a'llallable. Barn and pond
available with the 20 acres . Buy It all for $53,500.00
or the house and 1 ~c re for $43,500,

ss•.

A HIDEOUT - But only a few minutes from city, 2
story frame home has 3 BR, enormous living rm.
with fireplace. eot ·ln kitchen equipped with range,
refrigerator, concrete block garage . City schools.
$3?,500.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE 1 Roomy modern
ranch . 3 BR, eat -In kitchen, new roof, new furnace.
Chain link fence, Atlached garage. Extra room now
used tor work' Shop would make nice family room.
Kyger Creek schools. Nearly on acre. Counlry surroundlngsonty few miles from city. $27,500.

.• NEW 3 BR, 11/ 2 BATHS, heat pump, lnsutaled, buillin· range, cedar closet, copper plumbing,
underground utilities, public water and sewer
·
·
Prlce$39,500.00.

3 BEDROOM, CARPETED HOME - Sltualed on
· shaded corner lot at intersection of Rl . 160and 3251n
Vinton . 1'17 baths, LR, DR, kit. and summer kit. In·
eludes adlacentslore bldg. All lor $31,000.

COMMERCIAL
BUIDING
DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS- Brick, 2 story, presently leased lor
Iovern, upslalrs apt., tg. building In rear suitable
lor garage.

17 UNIT MOTEL - Localed along ,Eastel'll Avenul.
Property Includes commercial frontage on St. Rt. 7.
. corner tot w ith exfsttng restaurant business. Plenty
of parking area. Use as Is or mOdify to your needs.

WOODREALTY,INC".
FHA·IiA-Convenllal Home
Loans, Columbus
Mortgage
co. ,
loan
representative,
Violet
(Cookie) Viers, ol63 second
Ave., ·Gallipolis, o~ 446·

7172

,.

..

.

BY OWNER - 3 bdr. house1
F . R., WOOd 'bur1\lng fireplace, lg. level lot.
klt~hen,

BYOWNER
.
St. Rl . 7; '5 • Call4ol6·3100,"
mlnules from Clly Park.

Down

.

·

2 story fr1me: 4 B.R .'I,
living room with W.B.
flrept•u, eet-tn kll•
chen . h sement and
gongo. Priced In low
40'1. '

Call : Dtytl,me. 446·1615
After 5: 446· 1244 '

,,

RESTRICTED
BUILDING .·, LOTS · Dlblly 1 D~lye o Ill
utllltlti •:ot•lloblll! •
STROUT ,REALTY,

446-111111.

cOZY FOR A couPLE - Here's o 5
room frame home that Is mighty com ·
fortable and convenient to shopping.
Located Just off US 35 lhls 3 bedroom
home includes nat. gas heat, hardwood
ltoors mosiiY carpeted. kitchen &amp; din·
lng comb .• plus a large carport &amp; a nice
sized yard. Priced al onlY $34,900.

•e

.

e
•
:
1

1e

·•e
-·•

•

N'ormtlllme for protosslngon FHA or VA Loan IJ uo6 weeks.

•

·~..

8'17% MORTGAGE MONEY thousands of dollors In lnt~resl,
down poyment and low monthly pay• ment when compared to conventional
,
financing. Very aHractlve quality built • .
3 bedroom homes w ith 2 baths,
.
beautiful kitchen, garage and patio. • .
Just north of Polnl Pleasant on large
flat useable lois. we have 4 to choose
from. Call Ike Wiseman for lull details
on financing and home warranty. The
financing is available to anybody In lhe
tr i-county area who wants to live In
Wesl Virginia and con qualify. $40' s.
• .

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The ~Uill! man
whodecided
to eofishin2
unfl'f fhe pn'ce

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YOU CAN GET TO AND FROM WORK
WITH EASE - because lhls stone &amp;
frame home IS only 1 mile from U.S. 35
Bypass. There's tots of space lor your
family Including 3 or ~ bedrooms, 2117
balhs. Stone fireplace In tl\e klngslzed
livin g room, equipped eal-ln kitchen,
formal dining, full bosemenllncludes a
huge bar room. rec . room &amp; plenty of

:

enjoyment. Tolally remodeled 3
• bedroom
home located lust out of town
kitchen,
On Rt. 588. Large equip"""'
,.,....
fireplace In living roomr family room,
lull basement, nat. gas neat• auxlllary
w.b.lurnace &amp; new carpets. Situated on
3acresofland.Ca.ilnowl

•e I
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·ME- Just old enough to give
NEW
H.
O
I you thai·homeY feeling. Brick &amp; trame 3
ranch wllh 1112 bath, lamil)lh &amp;
I 'bedroom
dining comblnJIIon, step-saver kitchen.
I

ulllltY room, carport w/$torali~ &amp;
fireplace . l-ocated 5 miles from t.own on
'II&lt;
City SchoOls $49 900

~real
Ul

estate

came down.

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Some PeOPle'
calth1·m
II
the oldman .
andthe.sea.
II
101 ACRES- VACANT LAND - Split
by oounty road .wllh lots of r.qad Iron- I
tage on both sides. 35 ac . tillable,

balance In pasture &amp; WOOds, located
jusI off Rt . ss.. $40,000 .
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23'11 ACRES - Greatspot to build your
h
th t d
h
orne or • ream unltng and fishing
cabin. Overlooks Tycoon Lake. Land
lays very well . Includes an old block
building on property,
1
YOUR OWN ESTATE ~ Neor Meigs
Mine No. 1 ~ Spacious ell brick ranch
In • lovely rural setting on 5 acr.es with
a panoramic view. This 2 yr . old homt
Ofltrs 3 bedrooms, 2\'.o b•ths, formal
dining, large family room, equipped
kitchen, full baMment and 2· car
garage. Large metal storage bldg. or
workshop·, 20 additional
ocres

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.........-. ..• 1;oAN ~s ·AHOUSET~, ij WORD •
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tow

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VfiTERANS- "0" Down Flanclng up to $100,000,00
FHA BUYERS.,...3'J'·dciwn on .the lirst$25,000.00 '
5% down on the remainder.,
Financing up to $60,000.00.
,
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***It is the Intent of FHA·VA Guaranteed Loans to make
more LONG TERIIII .Home Loans to people with MI .!IIIMUM
DownPaymenfl,*** _

HANNAN TRACE SCHOOLS - What a
chance to own your own home lor little
cash and still have plenty of space. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. family room.
firepll!lce, dining room, full divided
basement, central heat, fully carpeted,
extra insulated. Also aux llle ry w.b. fur·
nace. Large yard, $29,900 .

I1N A HOME wiTH sucH A Low
PRICE - Better quality was never
I found lor $42,000. Owners anXIOUS TO sell
11\IS 3 bedroom bHevel wllh loads ol
space, huge familY room, 2 baths, eat-In
kitchen (bultt-l nsl . hardwood · floors,
carpet. nal. gas .heat &amp; garage, large·
deck &amp; '17 acre yard on SR 141 , 3 miles
from town. Lers hear on offer.

. DOWNTOWN BAR
·Well established bar
located In prime spot on
Second Avenue . 0 ·1, D -2
and D -3 license .
Business and bldg . Good
cash flow. owner w ill
help finance .
Full
det.alls to qualify .

Home·LDBI!S ~?cl Refinancing"

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H ..t pump/air c - .
Appro• . 4,1511 sq. ft. '
IF·Y O(i FIND this little ad,
finished. 4U-4S3t.
.It's worth ~ free ..,.rket
11ppr~lsal on your home.
' Call A-46·3643' Wiseman's
ERA.

,RIVE8 VIEW HOME
FOR SALE

$16,500 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE ..,. An
Inexpensive home lor o relired couple
or newlyweds. Move· In condition, In·
etudes large garage &amp; yard. City conveniences. Close to shopping centers. 1mmediate possession.

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•RIO GRANDE - 3 bedroom ranch slyte home, for -:
. mal dining rm ., living rm ., family rm ., lull base·
ment, wood -burning stove, 2-car gorage, village
water &amp; sewer. $44,000.00.

.

PRIVACY ON 2 ACRES - You'll have
plenty of peace &amp; quiet on this Rio
Grande prOP!!rty. Nearly new 3
bedroom ranch. 2 baths, elecl. heal
with auxiliary w.b. furnace, fami lY
room , workshop &amp; lots of storage. 2
acre wooded tot. 545,000.

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J,...--------------------------------~ 1slorage.
2 car garage &amp; '1:1 acre yard .
F.A. nal. gas heat. cenl. air. $511,900.
1
I couNTRY
HoMe &amp; 10 AcREs Large 4 bedroom frame home ori Rl.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I 160. eat-in kitchen. family room,
central forced a.l r lurnoce &amp;
••
•• I carpet,
cellar. 2 barns and ntce laying land for
• Columbus First MortBge company
• I grazing cattle or horses. S44.000.
• . 463 Second Avenue, Second floor
Phone: 446·7172 e
.·
• GallipOlis, Ohio 45631
• I·
REDUCED TO $40,000 - owners anxlous to sell this month. Th 1seorly sprl ng
•e
•
l
"Specializing In FHA end VA
e
bargain can offer you p 1enty d lam1ly

pedrooms, k itc hen. dining ond llvfng rm . . Call for
,mor e Info.

••r•~M·

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WE HAVE MORE FARI'I\S; H(IME &amp; iUSINESS PROPEI!tY AVII.,LAILE

'1 !:/'R~E HOME ~ In Bidwell. Two . storY, 4

DOrch, 21At c•r

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CROWN CITY - Ni ce 3
BR home on tg . 7B'X221'
lot . Fuel oil furnace ,
drilled well . Can be
bought furnished or un ·
furnished . $16,000.

FINANCINt; AVAILABL~ Conventional, FHA,

, ACREAGE - ol6 acres located on Liddy Hollow Rd
(Graham School Rd .), off Rt. W . Price $28,000.

FOR SALE
•
BYOWNER
~ yrs. old, 4·5 Br., dining
·room, 3 tun uths, ·2
lroplecu, screened

FIF:rY·SEVEN - Approx. 25 llllable meadow,
pine groves, wooded areas . large stocked
pond, rural water available. $25,700.
~veral

PLANS CALL FOR 3
BR , 2 lull
baths,
fireplace, eat-In kitchen'
wlrh range, dishwasher
and Jlsposol. Full base·
ment, 2 car garag · ~ Heotpump, cen. air . Soe
ft now while under con·
strucllon and chocse
your tavor lle carpet&lt; Jlors, cabinet,s etc. 11h
mttesfrom city. \1&gt;56,000.
S'oOP
Looking for a small
farm with room for
chickens, a few pigs and
a garden spol? This is
It I 6V2 acres, good
frame home wllh forced
air furnace,
rural
water. 45'x45' barn..
ce llar
house .
On
blacktop road aboul 10
miles from city . City
school distri ct, B ~tter
hurry! Juslllsled.

4.

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Ike Wlsem•n, Broker, 446-37N, Eve.
. D•n Evens, Alloclelt,"HI..I_ll Evo,;
E. N. Wiseman&lt;Broker, 444-4500 Eve.
J, H•lralon, Assocllh, 444-4240, E'lli.
Jim Cocllron, Auacleto, 446·7•1, Eve. Heney Smllh, Auocloh, - • • · E'v~ ·

a.

1..-seicoNoAvE.

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•· c;ALLIPO.&amp;:.as

�~7-TheSundayTimes-Sentinel,Sunday, Jan.l3, 1980

..,.___The Sunday Times-&amp;ntlnel , Sunday , Jan. 13, 1980

•
Your ·n est Real Estate Buys Are Found zn
the Sunday Times-Se_n tinel

•

Your Best Real Estate!Buys Are Found zn the Sund;;Jy Times-Sentinel

Reall!state for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

R eal Estate for Sale

TONEY REALT.Y
WM. D. TONEY • BROKER

' 446 3087

24 STATE STREET
GAlliPOliS, OHIO
WE DO OUR HOMEWORK!

,, .. ·. ,n·
50 NICt '0 COME HOME TO!
Own er has r.!duced the p r ice oo th is 53
acre farm ~
N ewtv r em ode led, 3

bedr oom home . b ar~ . . to bacco base,
pond . p le nty of wa ter. 30x42 n ew me tal
b uild i ng with conc r e te f l oo r . Take a
took , you ' ll like i t. Red uced to sell
NOW ! $4 2, 500 .
1J 29S

GET THE CIDER AND DOUGHNUTS
out a nd SJ t by one of you r 2 t 1r ep 1aces
1n th1 s chil r m 1ng s tu cco and stone
ranc h 3 bed r oom s, entr y ha ll , family
r oom , f ormal dini ng , P .. bath s, unique
k it ch en with bu ilt-in ap pliances. Full

ba semen t. Sur r ound ed by 2 acres. On ly
3 yr s. old . A hom e anyone would be
comfortabl e living in. Ca ll for more
de tai ls.
N363

120 SCENIC ACRES
W1tn mode r n 3 bed r oom ho m e. Wood ,
coal bu rner , one of the best. suppl em en t ed by electri c heat . Well in ::.ul ated. Acreage, hay and pa::.ture ,
some tim be r, tob ac co base, b a rn , rural
wat er. I mmed1ate possessi on .
1J 40S
NEW LISTING
You can 't beat th e pr ice of this 2
bedroom mob ile home and lot Situated
at Rt 554. Pri c ed aT $10.000 .00 Call for
anappo intmenttoday .
N424

R
- No reasonable offer will be r efused
on th is Jl/:z story home. 4 bedrooms, llv ·
ing room, fami ly room, bath, pantry ,
tull basement . 3 acres . Natural gas fur ·
nace . City water and sewage . Wi thin 1h
mile of city limits. Will sell on land con ·
tra ct .
Nl66
OLDER HOME WITH CHARM
Look today at the beauty of this we ll
ma intained home. l l!:z story, liv ing
room, enclosed sun porch, 3 bedrooms.
! 1/1 ba th s. large k1 tchen and dining area
featuring la r ge heat-c-lator firep lace.
Base ment, gara ge, lg . flat corner lot.
Hook-up h. : mobile home.
IJ 370
PRICE REDUCED
MOBILE HOME
2 ACRE s
1974 Freeman, 3 bedrooms. most al l
furn i tur e included, underpinning, new
septic tan k, 700 new concrete blocks.
rural water ava ila ble . St . Rt . 325, one
mile north of 141 . Clea n and well land·
scaped . Im med iate possession . $10,000 .
! 388
BARGAIN! BARGAIN
And th at is what we mean . Thr ee
bedrooms, livi ng room, and kitchen .
Hardwood fl oors. Natural gas heat.
Si ngle car garage. Don ' t miss this one
for $19,500 .
N410

SOMETHING SPECIAL
at t ra c t i v e brick home 1 s
something special in any person' s eyes.
3 bedrCJ?ms, _liv ing room, step saver kit·
che~ w•th di Shwasher, disposal. Large
fam1ly room , l lf:z baths, full fin ished
basem~nt , 2 f ireplaces. Natural gas
heot w1th tow heating bills . 'h ac r e with
12X16 ~tor age bui lding. Top qua lity con·
str uct10n . Owner wi ll consider land con·
tract to qualified buyer.
11392
CIRCLE THIS ONE
Ideal location for c on ve ni ence
h ig hways &amp; shopping, lh is 3 bedroo~
br ick is in excellent condition . Features
living room, dining roo m with sliding
glass door s, very nice fin 1shed tamily
room in basement, 1 1/ i baths, 2 car
garage . It has a persona lit y a ll its own!
CALL NOW
N380
43 ACRES
- Vacant land, possibility of coa l and
N322
agricultural lime.
This

LOAN ASS UMPTION POSSIBLE
Idea l for sm al l fa mil y, two fine
bedrooms, kitc hen has lots of cabinets .
Rura l water , thermopane windows,
carpeted and r eal nice. Presently has a
VA loan. Ca ll for det ails. This will sell
fa st.
# 423

A PLEASURE TO SEE AND
A JOY TO LIVE IN
This home is in move -in condit ion. 3
bedrooms, kitchen and din ing comb ina ·
tion , bath, family room with wood burner . Well iMulated . LO . lot . At a
price you can afford . In the SJO's . ~&lt;~4') 0
till ACRE FARM
If you're looking for a home for yourself
AND your animals ... then look no fur ther! 33 good level, tillable acres.
Some woods, some pa sture, nice size
barn . Located 15 min. from GaiiJoolis
on a blacktop road, this gent leman's
fa rm has ~hat "down home feeling ".
~ orne conststs of 3 BR , liv ing rm., din ·
tng rm ., kitchen, bath and aood '&lt;17~'~
util1ty roorn . Ca ll for more specifics.
f 419
6 ACRES
Wooded land, road frontage, rural
water ava ilable. $11,900 .
N404

CLOSE IN
T~ i s looks inviting in times of hig h
pnc~s . 3 BR , eat-in kitchen, fuel oil

fuel
FA,
part1al basement, 11/:z acres, scenic
view, c lose to town. Many other
features, not too many of these for sale.
$26,900.
N40ll

On tv ten 1nutes from town. Two story,
seven r11oms and two baths, fu II base-

ment, dr illed well, rural water
available. Over five acres grou nd. No
foolin', owner really anxious to sell.
Calltoday!
N425

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·AU·
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Approx. 6 acres
revel &amp; gentlv ro llinq land, countv water, nice
buildin_9 51tes, loca ted on the Floyd Clark Rd. ap·
•· prox . 1/ 2 mi off Route 160 near Porter . Asking
.. $1 5.000 .
OWNER FINANCI NG AVAILABLE Remodeled
· home Includes 5 rm s. &amp; bath, carport , stove, retrig.,
:· dishwasher, mobi le home pad, almost 6 acres on 588
2 mi . from town. SJO.OOO.
FREE GAS - 100 acr es m L va cant la nd near
Bulavi lle, approx . 40 acr es wooded, balance ro ll ing
pastureland. some timber r eported 7 miles ou t,

$55,000.
RACCOO_N CREEK FARM 50 acres. 38 A. bottom,
11 A . pasture, lovely modern bric k home with J Brs .,
2 ba ths, cathedra l ce il ings , f ireplac e, large sun deck
and !ots of other extr as. new metal pol e bar n, crib,
loadmg c hute, approx . 1700 ft . c reek fronta ge,
located -4 mi . from Meigs Mine No.3 .
WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF - Matur e land
scap ing &amp; r ic h green lawn hig hligh t th is enchanting
riverv iew home. owner has been transf erred &amp;
must sell_ th is c u ~ to m bui l t 3 BR home . LR , dining
rm ., equ1pped k 1tchen, foye r with open stairway
fam il Y r m . with FP, basement &amp; 2 car gar age are
only a f ew of the spec ial features. Located on Route
7 south of town with front age on th e Ohio River .
OWNE _R F_IN ANC ING AVA IL AB LE 20a,,., down cam pstt es 1n th e Way ne Nat ional For es t. 5 to a ac re
tr acts wooded land, gooc: hunting , pric es start at

$3,500 .

HARRISON TWP. - 1-47 acr es, approx . 60 A . wood·
ed (co mm er ci al timb er r eported&gt;. 40 A . ti ll able, 50
A pas tur e. l r m. home, barn, pond, spr ings, 2 wells,

tob base, lots of r d frontage, asking $65,000.

ROONEY BIDWELL ROAD - 76 Acre farm, ap
prox . 50 A. ti llabl e, balance pa sture &amp; woods, 4 BR
sect1ona 1 home. 5 yr s. old . 2Bx30 concrete biock
building , co. wa ter, pond, creek , 135 Massey
Ferguson tr actor &amp; equipment included in price.

446-0008
LOW DOWN PWMENT - SUPER BUY - FHA VA · CONVENTIONAL - T his 3 yr. old bi -level is
like new &amp; must be sc;&gt;ld th1s month . 3 or 4 BR's, 21:..
baths, f am ily rm ., heata lator fireplace, low hea t
bill s, Clay grade sc hool, Gallia Academy Hi gh
Sc hool . Ca ll for Appointment.
OHIO RIVER VIEW - This 3 ~R bri ck ranch is in
excel len t condition and off er s 2111 bat hs, den wi th
FP, dining rm , Ioyer , HW floor s, glassed in por ch.
patio, ex tr a nice landscapi ng, double garage pl us a
detached 22 x24 brick and con cr et e garage. Lots of
pr ivacy . .

m

Mosa canlerbury
Evenings 446·:1408

BOB LANE
SALES MANAGER
Spring Valley Plaza

INe' A" all you oeed 111 !.on.. m re.d .. ,,~le
'Wf: alief :
• Amrrica\ mi gi n~ l • llllldlgt'\1t&gt;lec!rnmc

realty i ystem

NEW LISTIN~ - 2 bedroom home with 2 acres.
Located ap:x. ftve miles from town on Kerr Bethel
Rd. New plumbing and wiring . $21.500.00.

NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom home sllualed within
lhe city; nat. gas F .A. furnace, full basement, ap·
prox . 117 acre lot. Buy now lor $43,000.00.

RIO GRANDE AREA - Approx. 45 acres vacant
land, county wafer, pond , so·me tim ber nice
building sites, city schools, $18.000.
'
CHESHIRE - $24,000 - Remodeled Jlh stor' 2 BR
bath, LR , di ni ng r m ., kit chen, part baseme.1f. dou :
ble carport', stor age building and a large corner lot .

10; Jimmy Swa ggart t3; Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15; Ha zel 17;
Stu dio See 33 .
10 30- Rex Humbard 3; Ernest
Ang ley 8; Zoom 20 ; Mo vie
" Gentle man' s Agreement " 17;
Big Blue M arble 33 .
11: 00- Rex Hu m bard 15; Rev .
Henry Mahan 13; Elec. Co . 20;
Footsteps 33.
11:30- Bi l l Dence Outdoors 3;
Anima ls, Anima ls, Animals 6, 13;
Fa ce Th e Nation 8; Big Blue
Marb le 20. Unlearn Ta les 33.
12:00- M eet lhe Press3,t5; I ssues &amp;
Answers 6.13; Viewpoint 8; The
Issue 10; Ohio Journal 20; M ovie
''Red River Shor e" 33 .
12 :3Q-At l ssue3; Directions 6; Glen
Korobov : BasketballS; Face the
Nallon 10; Kids Are People Tcio
13; Better Way 15; Nallonal
Geographic 20 .
1: OO ~Co llege Baske lball 3,15 ;
Aware 6; NBA Basketball 8.10;
M ovie " Home Before Dark" 17;
Mov t~ " Paomy Days" 33 .
1 30--.£,.-;Nica' s Black Forum 6;
• Hlgi &lt;·Q 13; Soun dstag e 20.
7: 00- ~oarl '" Mos.cow 6; Mar lo &amp;
1he M.:Jgic Movi e Machine 1J.
2· Jo- · .•. ~ !.: of th e Planets 13;
Hoc r. l&lt;·g Valley Bluegrass 20.

3: 00-Movle " T he Three Stooges in
Orbi t " 3; Sportsworld 15; Tri
State 13; Poldark II 20; M ovie
" The Lathe of Heaven " 33 .
3: IS- Sports Spectacular 8, 10 :
Eme r ge ncy 13 .
•: 00- Tennis 8,10 ; Movie " The
Reluctant Astronau t" 17 ; Lap
Quilting 20.
4:30-Golf 3, 15; In Search Of 6,
Movie " The Harder They Fal l"
13: Wal l Street Week 20.
5:0020·20 6; Elec Co. 20; Nova 33.
5: 30...Bes t of Groucho 20.
6:0Q-News 8, 10; ABC News 6;
Wrestling 17: Seseme St. 20;
Free lo ·Choose 33 .
6:30...News 3,6; NBC News 15; CBS
News 8,10; ABC News 13.
7: 00 -· 0 isney' s Wonderful World
3,15; ABG News Cl oseup 6, 13; 60·
Minutes 8, 10; Nashvl"e On The
Road 17; Like II I s 20; Greot
Performances 33 .
JG-Porter Wagoner 17 ; As We See
11lQ.

8 oo- Gulnne ss Book of World
RecOrd s 4, 13; Ar chie (l •,•lke&gt;r' s
Place 8, 10; M em or ies ot E: IJh iP
20.33; Winston Chur ch!l! 11
B:3G--One Day AI A linw 8. 10. N B/\
Baskelba tl 17.
·/ 00 - M ovie " Doc tor Frank t&gt; n ''

FOR YOUR
R·IN· LAW - No more tight
squeezes becauselhls well kept 2 story
home has enough space to ac·
commodate everyone. 3 or 4 king sized
bedrooms, large equipped kitchen,
famfly room, full basment, F.A . nat.
gas heat, garage, city water fenced
yard &amp; polio, les.s than 2 miles from
town on state highway. $29,900. Assume
Loan . .

COUNTRY HAVEN- Br ,ck stucco and
cedar tudor, 3 BR, 2 baths, family rm .
w :fireplace , cen . air, $57,900 .

ENERGY MISER- Low, low gas bill . Only a few
miles from city so YOOJ'II save gasoline tool 3 BR,
large kllchen has range, tots d cabinet spoce. At-'
tached garoge, level fenced backyard . $36,000.

CROUSE BECK ROAD - Res tricted bui lding lol,
1. 22 acre, n ice woOded set11 ng, c i ty schoo ls. $5,950.

HOM~ STE AD HER E or use as a hunting loag e,
vaca t1on home, etc. Qusti c log home is built from
hand hewn beams &amp; has a sleeping lpft, m odern
bat h, la rge stone fireplace &amp; approx . 27 acr es of
woods in the Wayne National Forest. Extr a land
available .

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TREES ·- PRIVACY Expansive
ranch , 1700 sq. ft . living area, oversized
living rm . with stone fireplace and
sliding glass doors leading onto high
10'x40 ieck. 3 BR, 2 full baths, fully
equipped "counlry style" kitchen .
Plush carpel. Alllhe extras you expect
to find in · a cust&lt;Jm home. Separate
24'X30' garage . Beautiful lawn. C:lty
schools. $68,900.

BRICK- 3 Br., 1'.... baths, f&amp;mlly rm ., fireplace,
basement,$54,900.
CENTENARY --! Natural cedar ranch , nearly an
acre tawn, 3 BR, family rm., 2 car garoge. A
showplace! $61,900.

GALLIA COUNTY'S OLDEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

RAMBLII'I' BRICK RANCH - With range , relrlg.
and lolsOt cablnel$tn kllchen , 3 BR , 1112 baths, fully
carpeted. Forml!ll dining area, 2 car finished garage
with overhead storage. Concrete drive , city schools .
$56,500 .

- 5 PAC E - 4 Br •• 2112 baths, basement, fireplace,
screened porch, formel dining, nearly an acre, lust
outside clly. $53,900.

NEW LISTING - In city, 2 bedroom collage·
situated on Mill Creek Rd., 50'x75' lot. Buy now for

:

510~.00.

NEW LISTING - BEAT THIS FOR $25,000 - V.A :
APPROVED - This 3 bedroom frame home is
perfect tor the small family . Kitchen includes
refrigerator and double-oven range. Nice level lot
with ptenly of shode trees. Gallipolis City School s.
No down payment, Veterans!

• Tra.med ll'o~ l ~1•11" proie!. s iOfla l~.
• The Mo~' "l M .!c ho llll'" 10 help you Du}
or wll iiOywl\efe m thE&gt; COUfltry,
• Home Selle~ Prott"t.lion f'lar-1.

~~~~~o· H~ '"";:~~~ 446::;;·""'~la

A 'DELICATE BALANCE - graceful
ti.me and family needs ,~ BR, living rm.
with fireplace, f ormal dining, full base·
ment, l i!:z acre roll ing lawn fronts on
Ohio River , lusl outside cily .

' FARM AND DRCHARDI
BACK YARD
- Apple, peach, cherry. and pear trees.
Asparagus, grapes, strawberries and
rhubarb plus large garden spot lor
potatoes, beans, etc. Home is in move in
condition . 2 BR , formal dining, low cost
.gas heat. Garage, olher outbldg . Rio
Grande, $36,500.

Phone 446·7900
or 446·2730

NEW LISTING - IN TOWN - FOURTH AVE.
LOCATION - Completely remodeled 2 or 3
bedroom home with partial basement and utilitY
buildi ng . Close to washington Elementary, Gallia
Academy and downtown erea. Priced at $39,900.00.

OI AII O W

PLUSH - 1750 SQ. Fl. - And a full
basement too. One year old brick could
easily be your dream home . 3 large
bedrooms, formal dining, equ ipped kit·
chen, family room with fireple,ce, extra
fireplace in basement, 3 baths, central
air, 2 car garage &amp; deck ov~rlookfng
large meadow. 1 acre landscaped yerd.
Between Oak Hill and Thurman .

NeW LISTING -

NEW ..LISTING - BRAND NEW AND READY TO
MOVE INTO - Fully carpeled, 1 cor garage, wood ed deck in bl!lck, and 100'x200' lot. A .Jot of living for
your money - at $.41,500 .

ENO - 4.25 acr es level land . Over 400ft. frontage
on Stat e Route 554, cou nty wa ter ava ilab le, ex ·
cel!ent bu ild ing or mobile home site. $6,500.

PERRY TOWNSHIP - General far m, 15 A. Si mm s
Cr eek bottom, ba lance rolli ng pastur e &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large barn, sev eral other buildings,
tab. base. corner of SR 141 &amp; the Vernon Woods Rd .
M INI FARM - Owner s moved to Florida and are
se ll mg th i s lovely 3 BR brick ho me. This 6 yr . old
beauty offer s lots of good living· for some lucky
fam il y with a large kit chen &amp; t,iin ing r m ., LR, fami ·
ly r m . with fireplace, garage &amp; barn . Loca ted on
State Rou te 160 approx . 6 m i. from HMC

lH

REAL ESTATE AGENCY

BUY THIS BRAND NEW HOME WITH
NO DOWN PAYMENT, VA and very
low down payment FHA. owners will
consider used mobile home or vacant
land lor doWn payment. $49,500.

3 bedr&lt;XIm home sltoJa~!d
OGre lot, 2 miles from Golllpolls City
· water and sewer, AC, nat. gas. I.a. heat .
pletely fenced . You'll llkelhe convenience
here!
·

AFTER HOURS
PHONE
Willa Davis, AssociAte
446·0844
Becky Lane, Associate
446-0451
VIckie Hauldren
Assocla.t e
446·4042

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WISEMAN'S ERA®

446-3636 ·
ANY HOUR

25 Locust Sl, Gallipolis Ohio

FARM- HIGH AND ORY
Ideal for part time farmer. 67 acres, 30
acres tillable, large pastured wood lot.
small stream runs through tand,,6 room
house, 2 barns, 1 almost new, 2600 lb.
tobacco base. Tobacco looks good. In·
eluded in price - 6 head cattle, all far·
ming equipment. Mineral right sinclud ·
ed. Fami ly retiring. Reasonably prlc·
ed. $33,000.
N377

AFFORDABLE 1971 mob i le home,
situated on .82 of an
ac:re . Extra room added
on .
Metal
storage
building
i nctuded .
Located O{'t Graham ·
School Rood, off Rt . w .
Priced at$16,500.
Business Is toOd B t
we're low on llstlni .;.
need your help. If yO.,•re
thinking of selling. ~ Give
us a call
·
WE BRING
PEOPLE HOME

1

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636
Audrey Canaday, Realtor 446-3636

446-1066

NEW LISTING - Ideally located lor those who
don't like to drive through lhe Ice and snow lo get to
the grocery . 2-bedroom coHage located across from
Pennytare Grocery , city services, nat . gas furnace,
.storm w indows·doors . Buy now for $24,500.00.

and Monday's TV Log

SUNDAY ,JANUARY 13,1980
s: 3o-Chu r ch Ser v ice 17.
6 : 00 - Am ti'r i ca n
P r oblem s
&amp;
: Chall en'ges 10; Betwee n th e
- Lines 17 .
6; 30...C hri s1opher Closeup 3; Better
• Wa y 8; Tree house Club 10;
• Ac tion News m aker 1J.
r.;oo- This Is The Life 3; Jer r y
., Fal w el l 8; Urban League 10,•.
- Gospel Outreach 13.
1;·3o-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
• 6; Jerry Falwell 10; The B&lt;ble
: Answers 13; J im my Swaggart
' 15; I I Is Wr lllen 17
S:oo-Mormon Choir 3; Day of
"' Discovery 8; Grace for the
; World 13; Sesame St . 20,33.
8:3Q-Ora l Roberts 3; Contact 6;
· Rev. Leonard Repass 8; James
Rob ison 10; Lower Ligh thouse
; 13; Open Bible 15.
·
9;()()-Gospel Singing Jubilee 3; Rex
• Humbard 6; Christian Cenler 8;
Oral Rober ts 10; Rev. Jim
Frank l in 13 ; Ernest Ang ley 15:
•~ l ost in Space 17; Mister Roger s
... 20,33.
t lQ- Robcrt Schu ll er a; E lec.· Co.
~ 33 : it Is Wr itten 10; Re v . R.A
, West 13; Sesame St . 20.
11l :CO- Th is is the NF L 3; Ki ds ~ re
" P~,ple Too 6; M ov ie "Bandido"

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CANADAY REALTY

·DILLON

CAMPGROUND IFORMERL Y CLARK CHAPEL
ACRES) Make so meth ing of this property again. 71
A., 2 acre la ke, severa l bu ildings in need of r epa tr,
dumping station, 2 water sys tems, lots of p ine tr ees .
Fix th is dandy place up &amp; start making money . Op ·
portu nity knocks.

OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - - 20%
DOWN - Older 2 st ory farm home with 6 rms. &amp;
bath, ce ll a r house. sheds, large shade trees on ap·
prox. 4 acres. Loca t ed 4 mi. south of Rio Grande on
the Tom Wood s Rd. 519,900.

~Sunday

1.167 ACRE·S llalland.

AGENCY

OW~EI&lt; FINANCING AVAILABLE -

$7 ,500 down
- 9 ~ - Asktn g $33 , 0~0 - Remodeled 2 story home,
3 BR s, L R, den, family r m ., dini ng, kitchen, 2 WB
f1repl aces. 31/:o&gt; acre s. Located on Sta te Route 233
betw een Galli poli s and Oa k HilL

PRIVACY ABOUNDS - In ln iS brick -~
ranch nestled In the pine 1rees. The
home consists of alg. living room with a STATELY ..,.. Lovely . older home
huge fireplace, 3 bedrooms, buill· in kll·
located in the city. 4 bedrooms, lor . din.
chen, n iCe dining area, family rm.,
kit .. lam. room. llv . room, 2 baths,
bath,lg. double brick carport. all of this basement, attic, swim. pool, and 3 car
No r~str lctfons . Ni ce on acres ot
th a nice pond. Plus
garage. ·

PRI.CED REDUCED - Nice older
home !'flth 4 bedrooms. Slluated on 1.18
ocrea of nice flat land. Fruit trees and
couple of outbuildings. s:!O,SQO.

MOBILE HOMES - 2-12x60 with fur niture and 1.75 ocres. In nlcelocotlon.
BUILDING LOT - ·118'xl50' reslrlcled
building lot wllh waler and gas
available In nice subdivision.

REALTOR

HOBART DILLON,
BROKER

O.UTSTANDING -: Lovely sweeping
'111ew of the Ohio R1ver, from this · im·
maculate l BR ranch. Th !s home
featur~s LR with pretty corner frpl.,
nice k1tchen, den, bath, C.A., 2 car
garage and full basement with shower.
Situated on 1 acre Qf lovely lawn.

'WARM AND
·-Completely remodeled
with 3
bedrooms, cellar, 2 car garage with et·
. !ached green house setting on 3.5 acres
In Green Elementory and ·GAHS High
scnoot districts. ·

-

WOOD

Ken Morgan
Evenings 446·097~1

STROUT REALTY, Inc-.

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GRADE A DAIR Y
Read this before th e owner ca lls. He
may want to keep it. FamilY side dairy .
Most all tr actor land , 2 large pond~.
fields green and exciti ng to a farmer ,
even in Decembe r . 2 silos, " bar ns, 2
"corn cribs. E:x tra c lea n remodel ed
milking parlor and milk house . 9 room
modern house with bat.ement. Call to·
Call today .
N420

Real Estate for Sale

(()'NEW LISTING' - SUPERB CEDAR
RANCH - 'Firsl rote craftsmanship
throughout. 4 bedrooms, double closets,
2 lull balhs, complete built-In kitchen
with Corning lop range, formal dt~lng, .
lg. tam tty rm. with WOOdburner . Red ·
WOOd deck and 2 car garage. '4 acre lol.
Call lor appolnlment.

NEW LISING
EXCELLENT
POSSIBILITIES - Need an added Income? Then invesl In this apartment
building, _. units, 2 bedrooms each,
natural gas heat, coun1y water, In·
etudes some furnishings. In a good loco·
tion.
BUILDING LOT - In one of yOOJrbetler
.subdivisions. City water and sewage,
electric.

NG

·R eal Estate for Sale

ALL OUT GLAMOUR - Stonellreplace,llle entry,
covered Wood deck, barbecue area, 3 8 R, 2 baths,
velvet lawn. $59,600.

NEW LISTING - 107 acre farm, With 3 bedroom
fx?me, situated on hard surface rd . in Guy an Twp.,
-.With barn and other outhtllldinas. Price 164,000.00.
'NEW LISTING - 4 bedroom home in Eno. Buy one··
·acre or 20 acres. Localed on Rt.
llv. rm., din.
rm., kit. downstairs, -41g . bedrooms up. 2 cisterns, 1
well , rural water a'llallable. Barn and pond
available with the 20 acres . Buy It all for $53,500.00
or the house and 1 ~c re for $43,500,

ss•.

A HIDEOUT - But only a few minutes from city, 2
story frame home has 3 BR, enormous living rm.
with fireplace. eot ·ln kitchen equipped with range,
refrigerator, concrete block garage . City schools.
$3?,500.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE 1 Roomy modern
ranch . 3 BR, eat -In kitchen, new roof, new furnace.
Chain link fence, Atlached garage. Extra room now
used tor work' Shop would make nice family room.
Kyger Creek schools. Nearly on acre. Counlry surroundlngsonty few miles from city. $27,500.

.• NEW 3 BR, 11/ 2 BATHS, heat pump, lnsutaled, buillin· range, cedar closet, copper plumbing,
underground utilities, public water and sewer
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Prlce$39,500.00.

3 BEDROOM, CARPETED HOME - Sltualed on
· shaded corner lot at intersection of Rl . 160and 3251n
Vinton . 1'17 baths, LR, DR, kit. and summer kit. In·
eludes adlacentslore bldg. All lor $31,000.

COMMERCIAL
BUIDING
DOWNTOWN
GALLIPOLIS- Brick, 2 story, presently leased lor
Iovern, upslalrs apt., tg. building In rear suitable
lor garage.

17 UNIT MOTEL - Localed along ,Eastel'll Avenul.
Property Includes commercial frontage on St. Rt. 7.
. corner tot w ith exfsttng restaurant business. Plenty
of parking area. Use as Is or mOdify to your needs.

WOODREALTY,INC".
FHA·IiA-Convenllal Home
Loans, Columbus
Mortgage
co. ,
loan
representative,
Violet
(Cookie) Viers, ol63 second
Ave., ·Gallipolis, o~ 446·

7172

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BY OWNER - 3 bdr. house1
F . R., WOOd 'bur1\lng fireplace, lg. level lot.
klt~hen,

BYOWNER
.
St. Rl . 7; '5 • Call4ol6·3100,"
mlnules from Clly Park.

Down

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2 story fr1me: 4 B.R .'I,
living room with W.B.
flrept•u, eet-tn kll•
chen . h sement and
gongo. Priced In low
40'1. '

Call : Dtytl,me. 446·1615
After 5: 446· 1244 '

,,

RESTRICTED
BUILDING .·, LOTS · Dlblly 1 D~lye o Ill
utllltlti •:ot•lloblll! •
STROUT ,REALTY,

446-111111.

cOZY FOR A couPLE - Here's o 5
room frame home that Is mighty com ·
fortable and convenient to shopping.
Located Just off US 35 lhls 3 bedroom
home includes nat. gas heat, hardwood
ltoors mosiiY carpeted. kitchen &amp; din·
lng comb .• plus a large carport &amp; a nice
sized yard. Priced al onlY $34,900.

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N'ormtlllme for protosslngon FHA or VA Loan IJ uo6 weeks.

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8'17% MORTGAGE MONEY thousands of dollors In lnt~resl,
down poyment and low monthly pay• ment when compared to conventional
,
financing. Very aHractlve quality built • .
3 bedroom homes w ith 2 baths,
.
beautiful kitchen, garage and patio. • .
Just north of Polnl Pleasant on large
flat useable lois. we have 4 to choose
from. Call Ike Wiseman for lull details
on financing and home warranty. The
financing is available to anybody In lhe
tr i-county area who wants to live In
Wesl Virginia and con qualify. $40' s.
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The ~Uill! man
whodecided
to eofishin2
unfl'f fhe pn'ce

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YOU CAN GET TO AND FROM WORK
WITH EASE - because lhls stone &amp;
frame home IS only 1 mile from U.S. 35
Bypass. There's tots of space lor your
family Including 3 or ~ bedrooms, 2117
balhs. Stone fireplace In tl\e klngslzed
livin g room, equipped eal-ln kitchen,
formal dining, full bosemenllncludes a
huge bar room. rec . room &amp; plenty of

:

enjoyment. Tolally remodeled 3
• bedroom
home located lust out of town
kitchen,
On Rt. 588. Large equip"""'
,.,....
fireplace In living roomr family room,
lull basement, nat. gas neat• auxlllary
w.b.lurnace &amp; new carpets. Situated on
3acresofland.Ca.ilnowl

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·ME- Just old enough to give
NEW
H.
O
I you thai·homeY feeling. Brick &amp; trame 3
ranch wllh 1112 bath, lamil)lh &amp;
I 'bedroom
dining comblnJIIon, step-saver kitchen.
I

ulllltY room, carport w/$torali~ &amp;
fireplace . l-ocated 5 miles from t.own on
'II&lt;
City SchoOls $49 900

~real
Ul

estate

came down.

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Some PeOPle'
calth1·m
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the oldman .
andthe.sea.
II
101 ACRES- VACANT LAND - Split
by oounty road .wllh lots of r.qad Iron- I
tage on both sides. 35 ac . tillable,

balance In pasture &amp; WOOds, located
jusI off Rt . ss.. $40,000 .
I
23'11 ACRES - Greatspot to build your
h
th t d
h
orne or • ream unltng and fishing
cabin. Overlooks Tycoon Lake. Land
lays very well . Includes an old block
building on property,
1
YOUR OWN ESTATE ~ Neor Meigs
Mine No. 1 ~ Spacious ell brick ranch
In • lovely rural setting on 5 acr.es with
a panoramic view. This 2 yr . old homt
Ofltrs 3 bedrooms, 2\'.o b•ths, formal
dining, large family room, equipped
kitchen, full baMment and 2· car
garage. Large metal storage bldg. or
workshop·, 20 additional
ocres

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.........-. ..• 1;oAN ~s ·AHOUSET~, ij WORD •
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tow

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VfiTERANS- "0" Down Flanclng up to $100,000,00
FHA BUYERS.,...3'J'·dciwn on .the lirst$25,000.00 '
5% down on the remainder.,
Financing up to $60,000.00.
,
.
***It is the Intent of FHA·VA Guaranteed Loans to make
more LONG TERIIII .Home Loans to people with MI .!IIIMUM
DownPaymenfl,*** _

HANNAN TRACE SCHOOLS - What a
chance to own your own home lor little
cash and still have plenty of space. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. family room.
firepll!lce, dining room, full divided
basement, central heat, fully carpeted,
extra insulated. Also aux llle ry w.b. fur·
nace. Large yard, $29,900 .

I1N A HOME wiTH sucH A Low
PRICE - Better quality was never
I found lor $42,000. Owners anXIOUS TO sell
11\IS 3 bedroom bHevel wllh loads ol
space, huge familY room, 2 baths, eat-In
kitchen (bultt-l nsl . hardwood · floors,
carpet. nal. gas .heat &amp; garage, large·
deck &amp; '17 acre yard on SR 141 , 3 miles
from town. Lers hear on offer.

. DOWNTOWN BAR
·Well established bar
located In prime spot on
Second Avenue . 0 ·1, D -2
and D -3 license .
Business and bldg . Good
cash flow. owner w ill
help finance .
Full
det.alls to qualify .

Home·LDBI!S ~?cl Refinancing"

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H ..t pump/air c - .
Appro• . 4,1511 sq. ft. '
IF·Y O(i FIND this little ad,
finished. 4U-4S3t.
.It's worth ~ free ..,.rket
11ppr~lsal on your home.
' Call A-46·3643' Wiseman's
ERA.

,RIVE8 VIEW HOME
FOR SALE

$16,500 2 BEDROOM COTTAGE ..,. An
Inexpensive home lor o relired couple
or newlyweds. Move· In condition, In·
etudes large garage &amp; yard. City conveniences. Close to shopping centers. 1mmediate possession.

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•RIO GRANDE - 3 bedroom ranch slyte home, for -:
. mal dining rm ., living rm ., family rm ., lull base·
ment, wood -burning stove, 2-car gorage, village
water &amp; sewer. $44,000.00.

.

PRIVACY ON 2 ACRES - You'll have
plenty of peace &amp; quiet on this Rio
Grande prOP!!rty. Nearly new 3
bedroom ranch. 2 baths, elecl. heal
with auxiliary w.b. furnace, fami lY
room , workshop &amp; lots of storage. 2
acre wooded tot. 545,000.

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2 car garage &amp; '1:1 acre yard .
F.A. nal. gas heat. cenl. air. $511,900.
1
I couNTRY
HoMe &amp; 10 AcREs Large 4 bedroom frame home ori Rl.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I 160. eat-in kitchen. family room,
central forced a.l r lurnoce &amp;
••
•• I carpet,
cellar. 2 barns and ntce laying land for
• Columbus First MortBge company
• I grazing cattle or horses. S44.000.
• . 463 Second Avenue, Second floor
Phone: 446·7172 e
.·
• GallipOlis, Ohio 45631
• I·
REDUCED TO $40,000 - owners anxlous to sell this month. Th 1seorly sprl ng
•e
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"Specializing In FHA end VA
e
bargain can offer you p 1enty d lam1ly

pedrooms, k itc hen. dining ond llvfng rm . . Call for
,mor e Info.

••r•~M·

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WE HAVE MORE FARI'I\S; H(IME &amp; iUSINESS PROPEI!tY AVII.,LAILE

'1 !:/'R~E HOME ~ In Bidwell. Two . storY, 4

DOrch, 21At c•r

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CROWN CITY - Ni ce 3
BR home on tg . 7B'X221'
lot . Fuel oil furnace ,
drilled well . Can be
bought furnished or un ·
furnished . $16,000.

FINANCINt; AVAILABL~ Conventional, FHA,

, ACREAGE - ol6 acres located on Liddy Hollow Rd
(Graham School Rd .), off Rt. W . Price $28,000.

FOR SALE
•
BYOWNER
~ yrs. old, 4·5 Br., dining
·room, 3 tun uths, ·2
lroplecu, screened

FIF:rY·SEVEN - Approx. 25 llllable meadow,
pine groves, wooded areas . large stocked
pond, rural water available. $25,700.
~veral

PLANS CALL FOR 3
BR , 2 lull
baths,
fireplace, eat-In kitchen'
wlrh range, dishwasher
and Jlsposol. Full base·
ment, 2 car garag · ~ Heotpump, cen. air . Soe
ft now while under con·
strucllon and chocse
your tavor lle carpet&lt; Jlors, cabinet,s etc. 11h
mttesfrom city. \1&gt;56,000.
S'oOP
Looking for a small
farm with room for
chickens, a few pigs and
a garden spol? This is
It I 6V2 acres, good
frame home wllh forced
air furnace,
rural
water. 45'x45' barn..
ce llar
house .
On
blacktop road aboul 10
miles from city . City
school distri ct, B ~tter
hurry! Juslllsled.

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Ike Wlsem•n, Broker, 446-37N, Eve.
. D•n Evens, Alloclelt,"HI..I_ll Evo,;
E. N. Wiseman&lt;Broker, 444-4500 Eve.
J, H•lralon, Assocllh, 444-4240, E'lli.
Jim Cocllron, Auacleto, 446·7•1, Eve. Heney Smllh, Auocloh, - • • · E'v~ ·

a.

1..-seicoNoAvE.

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•· c;ALLIPO.&amp;:.as

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D-3-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 13, 1980

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Holzer pediatric TV and toy funds receive donations
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THE SECOND ANNUAL DONATION from the Robbins and Myers

Fowulation to the Holzer Medical Center Pediatric Toy Fund is presented
to Earl Neff, right, by Ruth Hamilton, left, Employee Relations Manager
of the Robbins and Myers Inc. Gallipolis plant.
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JACK B. lEWIS, Left, Manager of Voto ManufaCturers Sales Com-·
pany, presents the check for the January Pediatric Television Fund to
Earl Neff, right. This Is the seventh consecutive year that Voto has sponsored Television for the ehlldren who are hospitalized on the pediatric
unit at Holzer Medical Center.

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Road,·made the presentation of too;
company's FOU(ldatlon check to Neff
for the leCOIId consecutive year to,.
the Pediatric Toy Fund
~
Any Individual, business o..:;
organization . Interested In par--:
ti~ in either of these two"
bolp(tal funds, should contact Neff::
at 1113 Teodora Avenue in Gallipolis•
The TelevisiOn Fund Is now in ItS.
elgbth year and the Toy Fund In Its~
fourth year;
·

GALlJPOUS - For the seventh

consecutive year, the Voto ~nufac­
turers Sales Colllplly located on the
Bob McCormick l\Oad In Galllpoll8,
ts . contributing to the Pediatric
Television Fund at the Holzer
Medical Center. Their sponsorship
· provides free color televilion for aU
Of the children who are ~tallzed
during the month of January.
The Robbins and ·Myers Founds·
lion made ·their secOnd annual contribution to the Hospital's Pediatric
Toy Fund- The Toy donations are used to purchase toys, games · and
books for the Pediatric Toy Room,
as weD as for individual Items that
chlldren who are confined to their
1'001118 may have to make the time
pass by in a more pleasant way
while they are hospitalized.
Jack B. Lewis, Manager of Voto,
presentd the check to Earl Neff who
Initiated both the television and toy
funds on behalf of the bospltal. In
fact, the first donation' ' to the
pediatric television fund, when It
bi!san In October of 1972, was from
Voto Manufacturers Sales Com-

(USPS 145-96U)

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Let's judge wisely

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Poor class hurting

decreasing the commission's
. authority concerning employees,
rule-making, contraeta, and reports.
The Director would be In charge of
day-tG-day administration of the lottery, with t!te authority to hire and
fire people directly respollllthle to
him. This includes authority over
the lottery's 300-person staff head·
quarters in Cleveland. The bill also
requires that the Director of the Lottery ~intain an office in Columbus
for liaison with other state government agencies.
Additionally, the bill would Increase the memberahip conunission
from five to nine, but make It an advisory - '!'ather than a policymaking group. Commissioners
would be chosen in a manner that
more nearly represents geographic

MEETING PLANNED

ty Board of Commlasloners will hOld.
a meeting concernillg sewage waste
problems In the BldweD-Porter area ·
on January 17, at i p.m., at the Bldwell·Porter Elementary School.
Reprelentatives from the;
engineering firm Barrett-Cargc.-,
Withers will be present, along witlt:
tbe Cowity Commlssioners, to
swer questlona concerning the
problem situation.
·
All area residents are invited to at,
tend.

regiOM of Ohio. They would also be
required to have had experience of
education In marketing, advertising,.
or related fields.
Originally enabling legislation
creating the State Lottery Conuni.sslon was Initiated during the lloth
General Assembly, 1973-74. The
public came In contact with the lottery on August 19, 1974.
Lottery money goes directly into
the General Fund. It Is not earmark·
ed for education or any other purpose. Lottery sales, originally
predicted to bring In $150 million a
year, actually bring In only abOQt $40
million. For fiBcal year 1979, ending

June 30;. there were t67.9 million in
sales, of which the slate's share was
$2Um1Uion.
In the past five years, lottery
receipts have provided approximately I percent of the $21 bUUon
that has gobe Into the General Fund.
This amounts to $203 million.
Without the lottery, It is estimated
that each adult in Ohio would have to
pay more than $6in additional taxes
each year to maintain services provided by lottery funds.
On January 16, 111110, the full House
State Government Committee will
begin consideration of Senate . Bill
139.

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WIN-R
sarciAL
. r 110 • r 5

80
Specials
Reduced
As Much
As30%
(to be sel
In the spring)

Write for booklets showing memorials In 'full color with
sizes and prices stated.

LOGAN. MONUMENT CO.
VINTON,O.
James 0. Bush, Mgr.
Ph. 318·8603 •

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Willis T. Leadingham

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OPPORTUNITY VS. INCONVENIENCE

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once you lisl your nome with a REALTOR. ih 'up to him or her to
: . find a buyer fast . Normally, the REAL TOR will arrange appointments ·•
.. to view the home which are convenient to all parties. That's always
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sometimes, however. prospects are on tight schedules, requiring •
your REAL TOR to make last·minute appointments. Don 'l get an·
e
e noyed. I' d like to nave a dollar for every sale consummatec1on a iasl· •
e minute appointment. Believe me, these are the best ones. Why?
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•
Often, prospects who are transferr lnu .into y()!Jr area are on shorl
househimting visits. They don' t have the iu•ury of time. on their sllle . •
• And they want and need a house now - not in a ye~r. The busy pro·· •
• specl is oiso more apt to make an Immediate purchase !~an one who
• has all the ti)'ne in the world. so, lf you really want to sell your house In e
a hurry, treat the last-inlnute ~ppointment as an opportunity - not an·
e lnconvenlenc.e.
•
\

.'
I

•
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there is "inythlhg we c'an do

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please phone or drop in el LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE , SUSecond , e
live., Gallipolis. PhOne 446-7699. We're hero tn h'lp.
e

........... ~...................
~
.

Traffic· accidents
claim five people

0~'1

Low-interest loans

e
e

If

Walkout affects local stores

Mechanic needed

e

e·

Millfield residents
back in homes again

Tax plans out

GEstate :•

Weather

w:'

CHOOSE FROM OAK, PINE. MAPLE, CHERRY OR WALNUT FINISHES.

:

Two 17-year old juveniles who
escaped from the Meigs County
Jail's Juvenile Section at noon
Saturday were apprehended three
hours later on Willis Hill by Sheriff
James J. Proffitt and Capt. Robert
Beegle.
Juvenile officer Carl Hysell had
been trailing them through the
woods.
The juveniles, one from Rt. 1,
Rutland, and the other from Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, were being held on orders
of the Ohio Youth Commission. They
escaped · by picking a hole in the
ceiling of the bathroom in the
ceUation of most of the Meigs High season. Miss LightVariable cloudiness tonight and
HOMECOMING QUEEN - Cheri Lightfoot,
juvenile section.
foot, a senior, was escorted by Craig Nicinsky. At·
Tuesday.
Lows tonight in the low to
dsughter of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Lightfoot, Rutland
The ceiling plaster had been
tendants, aU seniors, and their escorts included Sonia
mid
30s.
Highs
Tuesday in the mid
Road, was crowned homecoming queen at Saturday
damaged by a leaky roof. They
Ash,
escorted
by
Rob
Parker;
Tonia
Ash,
escorted
by
40s.
The
chance
ol precipitation is 10
night's basketball game between Meigs High and
enlarged a hole between the rafter
Larry
Stewart;
Dee
Simms,
escorted
by
Wesley
Smith,
percent
tonight
and near zero
Wahama. The homecoming Is normally held during
and were able to get into the attic.
and
Terri
Yeauger,
escorted
by
Ray
Patterson.
Tuesday.
football season but could not be staged due to the canIMide the attic, they climbed into
the skylight, kicked out a window
and climbed onto the roof of the
sheriff's residence. They jumped
down onto the roof of the jaD and
went over the side' onto the fire
escape.
Around 1:30 p.m. deputies were
notified that the pair was at a traDer
on New Street, but before officers
arrived, they bad left.
• hi h ·
h · used in food d
A short time later the office was
MILLFIELD, Phio (AP) - Most W: .c LS a c enuca1
a •
1,1otified that the suspects were on
of the residents evacuated after a ditives, seeped out of a second Clll'·
thehlllbyNyeAve.
.
.-(;old,.
· fre~&amp;~~t ~ctrabl.t deraHlnerit· ·and · · But.EP4 .~n:!!ltll~\!!~.~~--~ Juvenlle- omcer Carl HyseD' and
· this southeastern ZumbroS81dltcauilednoproblem.
~"-chemlcal spill m
So
of the TDI lied int0 the
Deputy Dave vmu
06 er went Into the
LONDON (AP) - Gold prices
Ohio community have returned
me
sp
wooded section trailing the youths.
Jumped $25 an ounce to new
home, but Conrail crews are still septic.system ?f a nearby home and
Sheriff Proffitt and Capt. Beegle
record levela in Europe this morcleaning up the accident site.
theThenliltoca dramail gepokditch.
'd
went to Willis Hill and waited on the
ning, following sharp rises over
Authorities said the cleanup will
onra
s esman 881
ridg
the weekend in the Far East. The
last until late today or Tuesday.
earlier reports that some of the
Po~eroy Police Officer Randy
dollar was mixed.
About 750 persOD!I were evacuated spille? che~cal bad caught fire
Carpenter, Investigator Gary Wolfe,
At mid-morning gold was
Sunday morning after 17 cars of a 68- were mcorr~ ·
.
Deputies Dave Ohlinger and Jim
trading at a record $648.50 an
The chenucal also seeped mto SunSoulsby•and OSP Trooper Tom Dancar Conrail freight train derailed
ounce in London and Zurich. The
and one of the cars spilled a highly day Greek, a tributary of the
ner also asslated, as weD as Slierlff
previous European trading high
Hocking River. The Chauncey and
Proffitt, Deputy Beegle, and
tolric,flammablechemlcal.
was $645in Zurich on Jan. 3.
HOLE IN CEIUNG -Two juveniles were successful in their bid for
The chemical was Identified by the Athens water systems were shut.for
Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell.
Last Friday, gold closed at
freedom
from !be Meigs County Jail Saturday. The escape was made by
Ohio Envirorunental Protection a few hours afte~ the derailment, but
Several East Main Street reslden$622.50 In London and 621.50 In
picking
a
large hole in the ceiling of the bathroom of the Meigs County
Agency as toluene dllsocyanate, or resumed operation early Sunday afts notified the office that the pair
ZUrich.
Jail's
Juvenile
Section. Both escapees were caught Saturday afternoon.
TDI. It is used in the manufacture of tern"?~·
. . .
was spotted walking along the ridge
plastics and vinyls.
Offtcl81s said srx fu-emen and a
behind the Kroger Store. Sheriff
The derailment occurred near ~D boy who bad come in contact
Proffitt and Capt. Beegle were on
Ohio Roi!te 13 aboutiO miles north of ~th the TDI w~re taken to
the ridge waiting and took thefu into
MIAMI (AP) - Four persons
0 Bleness Hosp1tal m Athens and
tod
the topped the 'dg
Athe""
·-·
eased 'tho t treatm t Thr
cus Y as y
n e.
were killed and nine others InBy Sunday night, only about 80 rel
. Wl u
en ·
ee
The Juveniles will be charged in
jured, four of them critically,
persoM who Uve close to the site of area. residents were treated at the
Juvenile Court on Escape and
The Gallipolis Kroger Store located in the SDver Bridge Shopping
when a van plunged iJJto a canal
Plaza and the Pomeroy Kroger Store were being picketed today as the
the accident were being kept away hospital:
.
.
.
Destruction of County Property.
southwest of Miami Sunday
result of a strike vote taken midnight Sunday by truck drivers and
from their homes, according to the theConrail sa;d ~
~stifa~g
In other activity, a 1973 Chevrolet
night, police said.
warehouse workers.
Athelis County Sheriff's Departcause 0 .e e
.en · e
Impala owned by Sue Smith, Rt. 1,
The body of the driver was
ment. The rest of the evacuees retur- train was traveling from Dickenson,
Langsville, was destroyed by fire.
Members of Teamsters Local175 began piCketing Kroger Company
recovered .late Sunday when the
ned to their homes in Mi1lfield and
W.Va., to Columbus. 1
••
Rutland Firemen responded but
stores Sunday in Southern West Virginia, Eastern Kentucky and
vehicle was holated from several
East Millfield after spending the day
The accident ~as one of three rail
were unable to save the vehicle.
Southern Ohio.
feet of water, Dade County police
at an elementary school in nearby tank car derailments across the
At 12:35 a.m. Sunday, Jackie L.
Truck drivers and warehouse workers voted ~28 Saturday to
U. Dennis Shaw said.
· strike after reJecting a contract proposal.
Chauncey.
country on Sunday: Another Conrail
LyoM, 18, Racine, traveling on SR
The three others killed and
Ohio EPA spokesman Allan freight ·tram derailed and one car
124, lost control of his vehicle. The
At the Kanauga store, Manager Cam Sands said pickets were up at
seven d. the ipjured were
Franks said Conrail planned to have . carrying a flammable liqwd caught
car ran off the roadway striking a
the store's entrance and union employees are not crossing picket Unes,
Juveniles, Shaw said. He ~d the
however, management Is keeping the store open. Sands said prices
its crews work continuously untll firehllm :m"r:!=~· M~
fence owned by Joe Swain of Racine.
van, enroute from a migrant
have been reduced on dairy, produce and meats.
cleanup operatioM were completed. w e, cen
• ~ ca~s
There was moderate damage.
labor camp, bad been weaving
He said workers would have to a 104-car Southern Pacific freight
Deputies are, also Investigating
Company officials have not speculated on how an extended strike
aC1"08S a roadway before It went
would affect the finn's 48 stores served by the warehouse.
neutralize the TDI and possibly mix derailed.
damages to a mailbox owned by
out of control and Into the canal.
No new talks have been scheduled, but it is believed negotiations will
It with soil so It could be collected
Lowell McNickle, Rt. I, Racine. The
resume
this week.
andcarriedtoalandfill.
incident occurred 1ate s.turday or
Nine of the 17 derailed cars have
early Sunday morning.
been put back on the tracks and
three had been set aside by late SunNEW YORK (AP) - The Car.
.
day night, a ConraD spokesman
ter administration, sensing that
Traffic acciden.ts over the
said. The four locomotives and nine
higher gasoline prices are
weekend in Ohio resulted in at least
cani at the front of the train bad
already cutt:!ng energy confive deaths, according to the Highbeen moved northward to Corning,
way Patrol.
sumption, is dropping plallll to
while the 42 cars at the rear were
Among the victims was a ,_yearpush a 50-cent-a-gaDon tax Inmoved about seven miles south of
crease on gasoline, Time
old
boy who was struck by a car
the scene.
he and another youth were
while
magazine said Sunday.
Franks said TDI "can be
The · magazine said the adriding
a
minibike In Toledo on Saturneutralized fairly easDy" by using
day.
ministration, fearing Increased
rubbing alcohol, a type of ariunonia,
The patrol counts weekend trl[lffic
taxes could hurt Carter
and water.
fatalities
from 6 p.m. Friday to midpoHtically, wiD instel!d prepare
In addition to the TDI, a small
night
Sunday.
to move more quickly to energy
amount of propylene glycol alcohol,
The dead:
rationing If a shortage developa.
SUNDAY
DAYTON - Brenda Hill, 37, of
There is another Job opening In !lie
Alpha, in a one-car accident on a
Meigs Local School District.
Dayton city street.
This time an bus mechanic is
PORT .CLINTON - Ruben
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) needed.
The
new
employe
would
CaStillo,
50, of Port Clinton, In a twoLow-Interest loans for attic lnwork
at
the
bus
garage
of
the
district
car
accident
on Ohio 163 In ottawa
llulatlon and energy.efflclent burinRutland.
·
County
.
ners will be ~ by the StanSATURDAY
dard Oil Co. ·(Oblo) to Ita 1110,000
RealdeniB Interested in applying for
TOlEDO - Floydell P.arker, 43,
RvCfR,
the mechanic's pclllt may stop by the
home heating oil customers.
Meigs Junior· High School Ia Mid· of Toledo, in a OIIM:ar accident on a
. · Sohlo spokeilman Charles. Par·
Toledo city street.·
tridge iald the company will ~
() ~ )~~j
dleport w.!Jere they can lleCIIre ~ apMANSFIELD - Eric J. Cozad, 18;
. seD energ)t-eav!ng thennostats.at
plicatiQn from Dwight GoiM, ad- of C!:'estllne, iii a one-c&amp;r aecldent on
cost. ' .
.,. .
''
· nilnistrative 8ssistilnt, and uridergo ' Obi • 1 in Rl hla d Co .t
interviewing
ov . c n
un y. .
Tile' COIIIJIU&gt;' will also ·Offer
ter,l-r, tnick flr!~ers ~J:&gt;)m Charleston, were stationed
. ON STRIKE--Forty-eight Kroger stores in Ohio
Goinl
also.
reports
that
there
are
'
,
tolEDO
David
M. Padilla, 9,
home heating oil cuitomel'll a
at the Kroger store in Pomeroy this mornjng. Jack
aild West Virginia were manned'with picketa this moropenings in !he district tor subl!tltute . addl'esa not listed, when the minifree computerU:ecl home energy
ning as the result of Teamsters Loeal175, Charleston
Ambrose, manager of the Pomeroy store, stated that
bus driving posts. Thole Interested bike on whicll he was a passenger · · divislon,gO!ng out on strike Saturday at midnight when
use aMiysia.
I
.
the store In Pomeroy was not open this momlng but·
should contact Goins at the juruor was struck by a car oo a Toledo city
possibly could be this aftemaon.
tiM!ir
ell))lred. Don Harding
and Bob Pain·
. contract
.
high.
II•
stree~..
Il.
. .
.,. .
1\!

Wreck kills 4

A BIG SELECTION OF STYLES- COFFEE TABLES- LAMP TABLES
HEX TABLES - MARBLE TOPS AND OTHERS.

:•

doing this sort of thing for centuries."
In neighboring Moslem Iran,
where up to 50 Americans are still
being held hostage at" the U.S. Embassy in Tehran, Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh linked' the
Soviet military intervention in
Mghanistan to American "in·
terference in the internal affairs" of
Iran and other countries.
Tehan radio quoted Ghotbzadeh as
saying : "As long as America con·
tinues to use Its influence to in·
terfere in the internal affairs of Iran
and other parts of the world, the
Soviet Union too finds the opportunity to intervene militarily In
Mghanistan."
He said, " The Soviet invasion of
Mghanistan is eruemely dangerous
for our country ... We cannot remain
silent about it," and added, "We
fully the support the Afghan people's
struggle against the Soviet occupation of their country and con(Continued on page 8)

up· again. ··' .

OCCASIONAL TABLES

:

/ .r

Afghanistan as thousands of
Afghans packed mO'lljues in the
capital city of Kabul to mourn
political prisoners killed by the
previous communist government.
Diplomats in Islamabad,
Pakistan, said the Afghan rebels had
stepped up fighting near the eastern
border with Pakistan. Pakistani
newspapers reported heavy fighting
across the rugged countryside of the
Central Asian nation, including the
northern region bordering the Soviet
Union.
The reports could not he confirmed, and Western diplomatic
sources in Kabul said the Soviets
had tightened their military hold on
the country, gaining control of the
north-south, Herat-Kandahar highway in the western part of the country. The highway is one of the two
main paved roads in Mghanistan.
One Western infonnant told
Associated Press correspondent
Marcus Eliason, who is in Kabul,
that fighting had stopped "almost
everywhere." But other sources In
Kabul told Eliason combat apparenUy was still going on in the nor·
theastern province of Bli~han,
and in Paktia, southeast of the
capital and near Pakistan.
" They (the Moslem rebels) can go
on harassing the Russians forever,"
said one source. "They have been

Following evacuation

ELBERFELDS JA.NUARY SALE

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1======;~;;;;;~;;;;;::==:;:;;:;

POMEROY,O.
· Leo L. Vaughiln, Mgr. •
Ph. 992·2586

Juvenile
escapees
captured

I

NOW AT HEALTH CENTER
POMEROY-Mrs. Homer (Louise)
Hawkins is a resident of the new
Pomeroy Health Care Center, 36759 ·
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy.

Ruth Hamilton, the Employee
RelatiOIIS Manager for the local
plant of Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc., al$o
located on the Bob Me Connick

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1980

By The Associated Press
Moslem rebels were reported putting up stiff resistance to Soviet
troops in the highlands of eastern

an.:

pany.

II

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GALLIPOIJS - The Gallla Coun-;

View from· the Statehoustt ;
VIEW FROM THE STATEHOUSE
By: State Rep. Roo James
(D-ProclorvUle, 9%Dd House Dlst.)
On January 8 the House State
Govenunent Sub-Committee recommended for full committee passage,
a bill that woiild restructure the
state lottery.
Senate Bill 139, which pased the
Senate on Sept. '1:/, 1979, contains a
"sunset clause" for the slate lottery.
Specifically, the bill calls for the
abolition of the state lottery on
January I, 1983, unless the Ohio
General Assembly votes to continue
the games.
Senate Bill 139 would increse the
power of the Lottery Director while-

NO. 190

enttne

at

Rebels offering stiff
resistance to Soviets

I

were roUected from the little people
·1
Letters of opinion are welcomed . They should be less 1 of Amelica to pay for au that
brutality. We never heard about it
I than 300 words long (or subJ' ect to reduclion by the editor) 1 because
the "important" people
1 and must he signed with the signee's address. Names may 1 know better than tell the truth to
1 be withheld upon publication. However, on request, 1 "ordinary" people.
I names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste, I When Carter invited the Shah to
I addressing Issues, not personalilies.
I take his retirement in America, it
I
1 was too much for the militants. They
I
~ ~~ ,f,
1 took our embassy staff hostage and
I
,(7~
1 offered a 50 to I trade to get the Shah
1
back to answer for his crimes. While
~
•
I
what the militants did was clearly
I •••
•
'-' •
I wrong, it seems obvious to me that
I
I the ordinary people of Iran deserve
grows thin. To America's foes I say· an apology, not punishment.
Now Washington wants to send
-Evaluate your actioM, we offer you
peace or the wrath of the American guns and ammunition to China to be
Dear Editor,
people will wreck havoc upon you forwarded to the tribesmen of
I just watched the late news,
and your country. Respectfully, Bill Mghanistan.
hopeful for a change in our leaders'
Washington wants to punish
Foster, P. 0 . Box 475, Racine, Ohio
wait and see policy.
Russia, but who Is going to hurt?
45771.
Will we wait until hostile forces
Ignorant Afghans wiJI use
disembark upon our land? Before we.
American guns to shoot Russians
~~ee the "Holocaust" in our country•
GI's. And RWISian GI's who would
Dear Sir:
We better discard our coma like
rather be home will shoot back ...
apathy.
In the news we keep seeing the Ordinary people will be wounded
Our leaders say they "will" or
word, "punishment" in connection and fall to earth to bleed away their
11
could" or "might" impose an em..
with the crises in Iran and lives ih the Mghan mountains while
Afghanistan.
bargo on Iran and RWISia. What will
the "iriiPortant" politiciallll in
the embargo consist of? They will
The U.S. government wants to im· Moscow and Washington count the
ship food and medicine, some parts.
pose economic sanctions against the
bodies to see Just who Is winning.
"Big Deal."
USSR and Iran in order to "punish"
When will the cOmmon people
Has the past not proven that of all
the bad guys who are causing all the begin to realize that the ·"imf~ and medicine shipped "to these
trouble in the world. I wonder how portant" people cannot function
type countries, that "maybe" 10 perthat's going to work out.
without their support? When will the
cent will get to those who need it?
Does Washington think, if we don't common people ~~ee that their
The rest is appreciated by the
sell corn and wheat to Russia the big decision not to resist the evil of
corruptible leaders and their unboys in the Kremlin will go hungry?
power, allows power to be evil? derlings.
Do they think, If we don't sell Erny Davis, Rt. I, Box 42,
The late George Meany once said
spare parts to Iran the militants in Langsville, Ohio.
d. one diplomat of ours, "I pray
the embassy will have to wear dirty
every night that Blank won't give
laundry or do without their stereo?
Volcanoes are still active on the
the Russians the Washington ,
No, the little people of Iren and
Hawaiian
Islands. Eruptions in
Monument, he's given them every
Russia will take the punishment,
recent
years
have added hundreds of
other Blank thing."
and the lltUe people of America will
acres
of
land
to the island of Hawaii.
I think history will prove Mr.
pay the bills for Washington's adMeany right. Every time we gave
ventures. The ordinary people of the
something or gave in to these people,
world always suffer for the sins of
we gave more than we ever thought.
the important people.
A little pride here, a little pride
The Shah took the throne of Iran in
there. Let's get our pride back. AlitAugust of 1953 .with the help of our
tle piece here and a big piece there.
own CIA and reigned until he was
Let's stop giving and backing up. We
deposed by the outrage of his own
. have our pride. We'll give no one
people last year.
"NO MORE."
During his "royal tenure" more
One newspaper can't do it alone,
than 300,000 people were imprisoned
no one man. What made our country
for opposition to his regime.
great•
The first hand accounts of the
Every man, woman and child, ditsadistic torture used in the Shah's
ch digger, miner, lawyer,
prisons are too obscene to be
repeated.
newspaper man, banker, store
owner. People from aU work forces
All during that time the " imand aU nationalities.
portant" politicians In Washington
Let no one ever forget, We Are
were sending "His Royal Highness"
Americans, one and aU, and we are
aU the political, economic, and
proud people.
military aid ·he could use. Iranian
To our leaders, I say judge wisely
soldiers and policemen were trained
the caliber of Americans and the
in America.
steel within them. Our patience
Millions and miUioM of dollars

VOL. XXVIII

•

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fURNITURE
DEPT. 3RD FLOOR .:_ F"EE 'DELIV.I"Y -:-- SEN~I·U CREPIT
~.
•

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&lt;

•

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f

ELBERFEISDS IN BtlMEROY
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STRiKE
K

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�</text>
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