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..
~

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday. Feb. 29, 1980

~

"

Indicators reveal recession close
WASHINGTON (AP) - A government index designed to forecast
economic activity fell m January for
the fourth consecutive month,
suggesting that a recession could be
in the offing.
January's drop of 0.7 percent in
the Index of Leading Indicatprs
followed declines of 0.2 percent in
December, 1.9 percent in November
and 1.1 percent in October, the Commerce Department reported today.
The December reading initially
had been reported as unchanged, but
the figure was revised downward to
reflect a faU-&lt;&gt;ff in liquid assets,
items that can quickly be converted
to cash.
The rule of thumb usually used in
analysing the index 0 that three consecutive months of decline indicate a
recession is on the way.
Many government and private
analysts had forecast that the
nation's economy would fall into
recession last year. But output as
measured by the gross national
product, the value of aU goods and
services, remained strong.
Economic growth occurred, the
analysts say, because consumers
continued to spend despite the pinch
inflation and higher taxes were putting on their income.
Meanwhile, the average working
American lost ground to inflation for
a second straight year in 1979
despite a record 8.7 percent rise in
wages, new government figures
show.
The Labor Department reported
Thursday that the annual rise in
base wage and salary rates of
privately employed workers last
year was the highest since the government first developed its Employment Cost Index in 1975.
But the 8.7 percent rise in wage
rates was more than eaten up by a
13.3 percent rise in consumer prices
during 1979, resulting in a net
decline in purchasing power.
The average wage-earner's purchasing power also declined in 1978,
when consumer prices rose 9 percent while wage and salary rates advanced 7. 7percent.
According to the Employment
Cost Index, wage rates rose 7 percent in 1977 and 7.2 percent in 1976.
Consumer prices, by comparison,
rose 6.8 percent in 1977 and 4.8 percent in 1976.
The index, based on a survey ci

the esllmated ti!i JruUlOn privately
employed workers in non-farm industries, measures changes in base
wages only and does not count increases from overtime pay or fringe
benefits.
The average wage increase for
1979 was well above the voluntary 7
percent ceiling set by President Carter as part of his anti-inflation
program.
But administration officials contend the increase in wages was
modest relative to the rise in inflation and that wages would have
climbed even higher had there been
no guidelines.
Carter is expected to replace the 7
percent ceiling this year with a
guideline range of 7.5 percent to 9.5
percent proposed by an advisory
commlttee composed of labor,
business and public representatives.
The Labor Department said the
jump in wage rates in 1979 was
spurred by a record 2.4 percent increase for the year's last quarter.
Inflation advanced even faster,
however, with consumer prices jum~iug 3.2 percent during the period.
The previous record increase in
wage rates for a single quarter was
2.1 percent, set during the second
quarter of 1978 and the third quarter
of 1979.
For the year, wages rose 8.6 percent for white-collar workers,

Atbena UvestockSales
Market Report
February 23, 1980
CAITLEPRJCES '
Feeder Steers: (Good and Cho!de ) J()()..5(X) lbs.
74-100.50; 500-700 lb5. 72-&amp;.ZJ.
Feeder Heifers: (Good and Choicc)JOO..SOO lbs.

60-91; 500-700 lbs. 54-77.
Feeder Bulls: (Good and Choice) 300-600 IUs.
&amp;0-105 ; 500-700 lbs. 61..&amp;.1 .25.

LELA RIFFLE ROBINSON
Lela Riffle Robinson, 71, Route 2,
Racine, died Thursday evening at
Veterans Memorisl Hospital.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, Harvey and Edna Boyd
Cook, her husband, Floyd Riffle, and
two SODB, Harry Leroy Riffle and Joe
Riffle.
Surviving are a sister, Emma M.
Hayman, Syracuse; seven sons, Roy
Frank Riffle, Long Bottom; James
A. Riffle, Syracuse; Donald C. Riffle, Wheelersburg; David E. Smith,
Whitehall; Daniel P. Riffle and Dale
E . Riffle, Racine, and Ruby Riffle,
Syracuse; three daughters, Peggy S.
Payne, North Ridgeville ; Sarah A.
Spangler, Peterstown, W. Va., and
Dortha Riffle, Racine, and several
grandchildren and greatgrandchildren.
She W8B a member of the Mt.
Moriah Church ci God.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday at the Letart Falla
Methodlst Chureh wlth the Rev .
James Satterfield . officiating.
Burial will be In Fairview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home anytime after 7 p.m.
Saturday.

. CLARA VNROE
Mn. Clara ll Unroe, Tl, a resident
« LOwer River Rd., Galllpolla, died

In Holzer Medical Center around
8:45a.m. Wednesday.
Sbe had been In falling health
.everal yean and In seri01111 condition tJJe past three days.
She W8B born June 7, 1902, In
'•

Emergency squad runs
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to High St. at 12:56 p.m.
Thursday for Patrick Lochary,
retired Pomeroy Postmaster, who
was ill. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was admitted.

The Middleport Emergency Squad
went to 1212 Mill St. at 7: 10 a.m.
Friday for Mrs. Irene Russell who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Thursday at 9:59 a.m. the unit
went to 137 Pearl St. for James Sears
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 10 :34 a.m.
the unit went to Storys Run Road for
Raymond Fife who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
The Tuppers Plains ER Squad was
called out twice Thursday. AI 5:20
p.m. they transported a Reedsville
resident to St. Joseph Hospital and
at 10:45 p.m. a Tuppers Plains area
resident was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

Slaughter Bulls : (Over l,OCXIIbs. 1 50-61 .75.
Slaughter Cows : Ulilit1es ~.20; Canners
Veals : (CHoice and Prime } 81-117.
Baby Ca lves : ( By the head) 57.50-115

Couples end marriages

HOG PRICES '
Hogs : (No. 1, Barrows and Gilts) 200-230 Jbs.
36 . ~ . 70 .

Butcher Sows 26.75-34.75.
Butcher Boarl!29.75--33.60.
Feeder PijSS: !By the head) 3.21!'»11

Gallia County, daughter of the late
Charles Henry and Rowena Patterson Haffelt.
She married Oliver A. Unroe on
June 6, 1923, in Russell, Ky. He sur,vives, along with one daughter, Mrs.
George (Donna June) Adams; one
granddaughter and one grandson.
Two brothers survive: Elmer and
Clay Haffelt, both of Gallipolis. One
brother and one sister preceded her
in death.
She was a member of the Church
of Christ of Gallipolis but attended
the First Baptist Church.
Funeral services will be held 2 p.
m. Saturday at the First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis with Rev.
Allred Holley and Rev. Joseph Godwin officiating. Burial will follow in
Mound Hlll Cemetery.
The body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to the services.
Friends may call at the Willis
Funeral Home on Friday from 2-4
and 7-9p. m.
Pallbearers will be Noah Dale
Houck, Jerry Evans, Wyman
Sheets, Joe Giles, Jim Dailey and
Bruce Unroe.

Three suits for divorce have been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Filing for divorce were Diana
Lynn Jenkins, Pomeroy, against
[:tephen 0 .- Jenkins, Hemlock
Grove; Kimberly Ann Phillips, Rt. 1,
~ tiddleport, against Richard E.
l'hillips, Morehead, Ky.; Cecelia
11om, Rt. 3, Albany, against James
T. Horn, Rt. 1, Albany.
Naree Hale was granted a divorce
from William A. Hale on charges of
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty and Karen J. Layne from
Leo F. Layne on charges of gross
neglect.

Attend funeral
Funeral services for Mrs. Ural
Thomas, 89, of Columbus, formerly
of Syracuse, were held Wednesday
at the Ewing Funeral HOme with
burial in the Minersville Cemetery.
Mrs. Thomas since the death of
her husband has made her home
with her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Miller In
Columbus. Mrs. Thomas is survived
by two sisters, Mrs. Laura Watson
who resides with her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Roush in West Jefferson, and Mrs.
Sadie Turner, Middleport, both in
their 80's. Mrs. Dale Roush of Apple
Creek was among the out-&lt;&gt;f-town
relatives here for the services and
visiting with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Turner.

A.C., P.S., P.B., cruise,
AM·FM. 301 engine.

1978 BUICK
REGAL 2 DR
Sport Cpe ., 60·40 split
seat, til1 wheel. cruise,
AM·FM, V·6 motor's
like new.

$5795

ss395

1977 PLYMOUTH
VOI.ARE

1975 FORD

Premelr Station Wagon.
6 cyl., A.C., ready for
delivery.

BRONCO
4x4
Automatic trans., 302
motor, l9tk·out hubs.

WMPO radio explaining National FF A week. Several ·:
students also drove tractors to school in observance ct:·•
FFA week. Pictured are Glen Putiium, Rodney Tripp, :
Clell LaBonte and Jeff Newell.
'

Judge says United States faces
serious civil rights problem·
CINCINNATI (AP) - The United
States will face "very serious civil
rights problems" in the 1980s,
predicts Judge Nathaniel Jones of
the the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Progress in the last century "tends to create the impression ... that
the civil rights struggle for black
Americans is over. Nothing could be
further from the truth. We're still
more likely to be the first fired and
the last hired," said Jones, the former general counsel of the National
Association for the Advancement of
Colored People who was appointed
to the court last year.
"While more black students are

February gasoline excise tax
checks totaling $10,087,034 were
distributed today by State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson's office to Ohio
counties, townships, cities and
villages.
Ferguson said that each county
received $35,000, or $3,080,000 of the
total, and that the state's 1,319 townships received $1,200 each, or
$1,582,800 of the distribution.
Amounts received by villages of
Meigs County include : Middleport,
$2,179; Pomeroy, $2,322; Racine ,
$620; Rutland, $550, and Syracuse,
$715, a total of $6,386.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Des Jeffers, Athens ;
Dorothy Roller, Middleport; Patrick
Lochary, Pomeroy; Gladys Bennett,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Gregory Bonecutter,
Gerald Shuster, Wilson Wolfe.
DISCO DANCE SET
A disco dance will be held Saturday night from 8 to 11 :30 at the Orchid Room. Chaperons will be
present.

, DEGREE WORK SLATED
A special meeting of Pomeroy Chapter, 80, Royal Arch Masons, will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Monday with work
to he involved in the mark master
and past master degrees.
MEET TUESDAY
The trustees of the Meigs County
Historical Society will meet
Tuesday, March 4, at 7:30 p.m. at
the museum.

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
1979 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

hazardous for driving.
Most functions in the area, including aU of last night's high school
basketball tournaments (both boys
and girls ) were postponed.
The latest onslaught caught area
residents off guard for the second
time in three days. The Ohio
Weather Bureau had predicted "a
chance of snow f)urrie.,," late

1977 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

1977 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

SJ, loaded. Runs as
900d as it looks.

2 Dr.

graduating from high school and
going to college, black unemployment continues to remain the
highest of all time," he told a
meeting of the Cincinnati Hwnan
Relations Council on Thursday.
While the unemployment rate for
whites is 5 percent, it is 15 percent
for blacks and 40 percent among
black youths, he noted, calling the
youthful unemployment rate "a
nationill scandal."
"One of your tasks is to help
people understand the problem for
what it is. The problem is not the
bus. The problem is not preferential
treatment
and
reverse
discrimination. The problem is the
way in which persons and their
progenitors were treated simply
because of the color of their skins,"
he told the gathering.
The 52-year-&lt;&gt;ld jurist quoted
Supreme Court Justice Thurgood
Marshall's opinion in the Bakke
reverse discrimination case:

"The position of the Negro today:
in America is a tragic but inevitable·
consequence of centuries of unequal•
treatment ... Meaningful equalitYremains a distant dream for the:
Negro."
.
"The legacy of discrimination Is'
sufficiently prominent In Cin-;
cinnati," he told the audience that~
included Cincinnati Mayor J. Ken-!
neth Blackwell and other members'
of the City Council, which funda the:
Human Relations Commission.
;
Jones advised lawmakers :;
"Waste no time in providing ... the ~
commission with the funding and the enforcement power and the political;
support to agggressively eradicate•
that legacy ... so that Cincinnati will~
not find itself again a chapter in the~
next Kerner Colllmis8lon report.
:
"Instead It will be cited as a com-:
munity that saw wrong and·
:
struggled mightily to correct it."
The Kerner Commission atudied :
Cincinnati's racial riots In the 1960s.

VOL 15 NO. 5

•

tttttS

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1980

Cincinnati hard hit
by late winter storm
By The All-lated Press

What may well be winter's last
gasp showed up in Ohio with the lion
of March, dumping as much as 10 inches of snow on southern sections of
the state,, with nwnbing cold for
everyone.
While most areas received only a
few inches, Cincinnati was hard hit
by the snow that carqe whipping in
along with winds that gusted up to 26
mph and a wind chill factor of 29
below zero.
Heavy snow warnings were lifted
for southern Ohio by midday, IIlli
travelers advisories were continued
across much of the state in the area
roughly south of a line stretching
from near Dayton in the west to
Marietta on the Ohio River in the
east.
Some record lows were recorded
. a crass OhiC1 Saturday. Two of the
Coldest pl&amp;ces reporting were Thorn-

pson, in Geauga County, where the
temperature dropped to 13 below,
and at Montpelier In Williams County where the mercury bottomed out
at8 below.
Hamilton County sheriffs dl.spatcher Terry Ott called the stonn ''the
worst since the blizzard of '78.''
Ott said road crews had been
working since early Saturday morning but in some cases they had to
"slack off because they just keep
going over and over the same
places."
For a while, Interstate 75 in Northem Kentucky was closed to traffic
because of the snow, but by early afternoon the highway was reopened
to traffic. Other interstates in the
area were open, the Ohio Highway
Patrol reported.
Cincinnati Highway Maintenance
Department spokesman Bob Everetts said, "If it weren'tforthe fact that
It's a weekend we'd be up· to our

Officials say maneuvers do

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

Doi violate understandings

Men's Shirts - Women's Coats - Women's and
Children's Winter Sleepwear- Men's Sweaters
- Women's Dresses - Women's Knit Gloves,
Scarfs, Headwear - Men's Sport Coats and 3
Pc. Suits.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
POMEROY NATIONAL' BANK
OFFERS BIG and SMALL SAVERS
GUARANTEED
HIGH MONEY MARKO
INTEREST RATES
THE 6-MONTH $10,000
MONEY MARKET
CERTIFICATE
13.629% effective rate
through March 5
$10,000 minimum deposit
Here's the best shortterm
interest rate
available at our bank.
Your Investment Is
guaranteed and 'insured
by the Federal Deposit
1nsurance Corporation .
I

WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Ti1j!
Soviet brigade In Cuba is once again
engaged In military maneuvers, but
the State Department says the activities do not violate any U.S..SOviet
understandings.
Department spokesman Hooding
Carter IBid that, based on existing
evfdence, the Soviet activities do not
contradict Soviet pledges not to
enlarge Its brigade in Cuba or give it
additional capabilities.
Garter's unusual Friday evening
briefing came a few hours after
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance
met with Soviet Ambassador
Anatoly Dobrynln.
State Department .officials refused
to say whether Vance raised the
issue of the brigade in Cuba with the

published reports of a possible
Soviet diplomat.
,
Earlier, before the briefing on the meeting ~~ Vance and Soviet
situation in Cuba, department of- Foreign Minister . Andrei A.
ficials had acknowledged privately · Gromyko.
"-x:here is no plan for such a
that Vance and Dobrynin_discuBsed
Soviet Involvement in Afghanistan meeting," Carter said. "Whether or
not such a possibility would arise
at their morning meeting.
The meeting, the first between would depend on fu~ events."
On the Cuban situation, Carter
Vance and Dobrynin in a month,
IBid
the new activity, which was not
came .amid reports West Europeans
in detail, is the first of its
deacribed
are trying to set up negotiations to
kind in Coba aince last sununer
neutralize Afghanistan. ,
when U.S, discovery of the brigade
The United States insists on the
produced a minor confrontation bettotal withdrawill of Soviet troops
ween the two superpowers.
from Afghanistan, now estimated at
Sen. Frank Church, O.ldaho, who
75,000, but State Department officials say the withdrawal is not a first disclosed the presence of the
precoii(Ution for. talking with the Soviet force last summer, said the
new tralnjng exercise "is their way
· Soviets about Afghanistan.
of flouting the combat brigade in the
However. Carter discounted
face of the United States.''

· The deadline was extended Friday
by state motor vehicles registrar
Dean L. Dollison.
A spokeswoman for the Bureau of
Motor Vehlcles, Leslie Thoman, said

OUR BRAND NEW 2112· YEA
CERTIFICATE OF DEP,OSli'tl

1f2

TON

6 cyl., ~ spd. trans.,
short w~ael base, lock·
out hubs, sliding rear
window.

SPECIAL
· BUT CHEAP

1973

2 dr

11.75% rate this month

$100 minimum deposit
This Is a big-money Interest rate for small
saver funds. Insured by
FDIC ·and available In
any amount from $100
up.

.

Cadillac . '795•
1973 Catalina

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

MIDOLE PORT- POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

Epidemic
forecast
hy .agents

skies had deposited seven inches of snow in the city
proper.

Inside today.

• •

Areadeaths •••• ~ ••••••• •• ••••• •• ••••••••• ••••••••••• A-7

Editorial .•..•.••...•••.......•.•...•.....•..•..•. .• ; • A-2
ClassUied ads . . • • • • • • • . • • . . . . • • . • • . • . • • • . . . • • . . • . . 1)-6::.11
Farm news •• .• ••••••••• ~ .•••••.• •••..•.••••••.•••• ·1).4..;.5
[A)ca] news ••.. .•••.•.•. .•. .·.•.•. .•....•..•..•.. ..•• A-3-8
IJfestyle ..••••••••.•••••••.••••• :~ ••••••• , ••••••••• B-1·11
Sports . . . . • . . • • • • . . • • • • . . • . . . . • . . . . . • . • • . • • • . . . . • . • C.. I·7
TV guide . • . . • • • • • . • • • • . . • . . • . • . • • . • • • • • . • • . • • • . • • • • D-11

Program now in effect

Press.

There ts A Subltentlellnter"t Penalty For Eerlv Withdrawal

I

entine

TRAFFIC CRAWLED through downtown
Gallipolis early Saturday. By 4 p.m. the dark, overcast

LONDON (AP) - The United
States and Western Europe face a
flood of heroin, worth billions of
the extention was granted· because dollars to major crime syndicates,
In the next few months following the
of a problem with telephone ,lines
.
harvest
of bumper crops of opium in
connecting about 25 deputy
Southeast
Asia and the Middle East,
registrars around the state witb the
say.
narcotics
agents
bureau's central computer in
"We're
facing
an epidemic
Columbus.
because of the rapidly growing
heroin traffic," a Scotland Yard narcotics officer told The Associated

The effective yield on U.S.
Treasury Bills Is higher than
the quoted discount rate.

1976 CHEVROLET

fires burning across DIXie.
With dozens of towns and cities in
several states suffering their coldest
March 1 of the century, residents of
Emberrass, Minn., could brag that
their thennometers dropped to 35
degrees below zero,
Snow hubcap deep and still falling
bogged down much of southern Ohio
Continued on A-3

I

Extend new license plate deadline
OOWMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The .
Feb. '29 deadline for persons whose
last names begin with C.and D to buy
their new auto license tags has been
extended to Monday, March 3.

recorded approximately 10 inches
by4p.m.
No accidents were reported in the
Pomeroy-Middleport area.
Meanwhile, the Associated Press
eported March stormed in "on the
wrong foot" Saturday, stunning
much of the nation with record subzero cold, car-stopping snows and
freezing rains that put out forest

necks.''
Everetts said the department was
not bothering to salt the roads
heca~·there was too much snow to
BCC!llllPllsh anything.
"We had a warning at about 7:30
last night (Saturday) that there
would be snow, but they didn't know
there'd be this much," he .said.
Evertts said no more than 2-4 inches
of snow had been expected.
"Obviously it's the worst of the
winter," he said.
The patrol said most highways in
southern Ohio were snow covered
and extremely slippery, while roads
in central prtions were partially
snow covered and slippery. In northern Ohio roads were reported
clear.
The National Weather Service
said the cold was expected to abate
by Monday with temperatures getting back to nonnal for this time of
the year.

ELBERFELD$

TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON~
WINTER WEARING APPAREL

d•r bender" accidents were reported throughout the day by area
lawmen.
Gallipolis proper had recorded
seven inches by 4 p.m. Saturday -it
was averaging about one-half inch of
snow an hour. Nine inches was
reported in rural areas of Gallia
County while the Bend Area
(Pomeroy-Middleport-Mason) had

Friday.
To make matters worse, the temperature dropped to 11 degrees
Saturday afternoon, and with a
strong wind, the chill factor was
somewhere around minus 9 degrees.
More snow was predicted Saturday
night.
Motorists were stranded in
several areas and a nl!ffiber of "fen-

unba
OBSERVE FFA WEEK - Eastern FFA students observed FFA week Feb. 18 through the 22. Students in
observance put up a bulletin board, wore their FF A
jackets and Jeff Newell and Nick Leonard spoke over

lankets area

uge snow all
· Snow, whieh began falling around
midnight Friday, was still coming
·down strong at 4:30 p.m. Saturday
with an aceumulation of seven to 10
inches in the Tri'-County Area.
::. CoqUng on the first day of March,
the late winter blast is the worst of
the current season thus far. Traffic
jVas paralyzed throughout the area
as roads and highways became

Gas taxes distributed

and Cutters 47 .:t5-51 .5CI.
Springer Cowl!: (By the head) 47.25-&amp;4.50.

Area deaths
OKEY L. HAGGY
Okey Luther Haggy, 70, 123 Lincoln Hlll Road, Pomeroy, died Thursday evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
He was a son of the late Lonzo and
Allie Sloan Haggy and was also
preceded in death by a son, Russell
Haggy, and two brothers, Jessie and
Emory Haggy.
Surviving are children including
Karen Haggy, Pomeroy ; James
Haggy, Springfield; Alvin Haggy,
Bolivor, Ohio, and Mary Layne,
Cheshire; two brothers, Alvin
Haggy, Pomeroy, and Art of
Springfield; two sisters, Flora McClain, Ranel, W. Va., and Della
· Uoyd, Middleport; seven grandchildren; a great-grandchild and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Floyd Shook officiating. Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after 10
a.m. Saturday.

ranging from a low of 7. 4 percent tor
managers a nd administrators to 9.4
percent for clencal workers. Wages
rose 9 percent lor blue-collar
workers and 7.2 percent for service
employees.
Wages were up 8.6 percent in
manufacturing; 7.2 percent in construction; 9.4 percent in transportation and utilities ; 7.9 percent
in wholesale and retail trade; 13.2
percent in finance , insurance and
real estate, and 8.5 percent in service industries.
By region, wages were up 7.3 percent in the Northeast, 8.5 percent in
the South and West, and 9.4 percent
in the Midwest.
Wages rose 9 percent for unionized
workers and 8.5 percent for nonunion workers, the government said.

.

pomeroy
nationa
bank ·...
the bank of
_the.century .
estat,llished 1872
FDIC
011

' '
ON THE.JOB- Pomeroy'a street df!pailment was
tile job early Saturday IIIOI'IIinC ,uti a acraper

~the~ after the~- Ol ~year
had fallen overnight and was CCIItlnulni! Saturday.

•

Britain is being hit by a heroin and
opium flood from Iran, Yard agents
say. Latest offiCial estimates are
that 40 percent of the drugs intercepted in Brib!in came from
there. Two years ago·i t was 3 percent.
Much of it is smuggled in by
Iranians fleeing their country, the
sources say. Unable to take out their
wealth, they convert it to heroin to
trade when tliey reach London.
"There's no way we can stop the
flow of' Iranian heroin," a Scotllmd
Yard narcotics officer said. "We're
lucky if we get 10 percent of what's
coming in."
.
Much of the dope that comes into
Europe Is destined for U.S. cities,
the agents report, and narcotics
bureaus acknowledge that the
smugglers are winning despite
agent lnfUtration of syndicates,
wider governinent cooperation and
better intelllgence.
Narcotics agents claim they are
seizing more drugs than ever before,
b\l~ even the most optimistic admit
that rw every kUOgr8!D (2.2 pounds)
of drugs seized,. between 5 an~ 10
kilograms get through.
A customa spokesman in,London,
which h!ls in recent years become a ·
mB jor heroin_conduit, conunented:
Continued on A-3

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in Gallia County area
OOLtiMBUS - The Ohio Commission on Aging's Postal Security
Alert Program is now in effect in
Gallia County· according to Martin
A. Janis, Ohio Colllmis8lon on Aging

an unusual accumulation ci mail, or
may suspect some other trouble at
the home the carrier notifies the
Gallla County.Senior Citizen Center
and the situation is immediately inDirector.
'
vestigated. This may necessitate
"Those who will be taking part In
sending an outreach worker tp the
the program, are 60 Year!! and older
home. Postal Security Alert can
and are being served through the
summon emergency aid when the
· Gallla County Senior Citizen Center
seniors may be unable to do so \hell)&gt;
under the direction of Mrs. Jean
selves.
.
Niday and the Gallia County Postal
'Registration fonns are available
carriers," Janis said.
as the Gai11i County Senior Citizens
Whenever a mafJ carrier .notices · Center, P. 0 . Box. 411, Ga!Upolla
45631 and at Crlslsline, U2 VInton
Pike, Gallipolla4ji631.

walbum rues for
• •

oomnus~10ner

post ·

p()MEROY - Elden C. (Whitey)
Willbutn, Mid~, a Republican,
Fri&lt;ii!Y filed his ,petition ci candidacy for tlie nO!illnation to run for
the Meigs County ·Ccmmialoner
post which begins on Jan. 3, 1881.
Walburn Is making hia first bid for a
political o(fl~. ~ is ~agent
of Bricklayers Local Union32. .

Weather
EXTENDBD()UTLOOK
Moadar ll!rwP Wedanday -

"¥'MIDday 1114 'i'lel!taY· Ciw!-

ce of ~ • _ . exllewe west
poriltll Wedaelday.' JIIPalD 10.
..Ma.day~tedaeMt

by . . . lilly. !Awl '18 to u
Mellday 1114 Ia - 1'11e1da)' 1114

Wedauday.

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A-2- The SWlday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, March 2, 1980

~uttbatJI

.l !imts· ~tntittel

PubliJ.hed every Swtday by TheObo Valley Publi.shingCo.· Mullimedia , Inc.
Letters ot opinion are welcuned. They !lhould be lesa than DJ words ion&amp; Ior subject to reduction by the editor I and must be sign@&lt;! with the siinee's addres.1. N!Uilea may be withheld upon
publication. Howeve r, on request, names will be disclosed. Ldt.en !lhou.ld be in good taste. ad-

drossini woes, not "'"''""'illtieo.

GAI.UPOLIS

DAn.v mmuNE
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio t$631 .
Publl!hed every weekday evening eicept Satun:iay . Second Class POI!tage Paid at Gallipolis,

otUo45631 .

·

TilE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court St.. Pomeroy, 0 . 45769. Publi.shed every week day evening exei!pl Saturday. Entel"'!d
as second chis, mailing rtlfllter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.

j(

/~

TO MA'I&lt;E A
'DEAL UlE'LL 1-\A~
TI-\'ROUI lt.l TJ.I' 61-tAI-\
AN' TH'
'PAWAMA CANAL!

stxmontbs no.oo; threemortths '11 .00.

The Associated Press ls e~c!ustvely entitled tG the use for publication of all ne'N3 di:Jpat.ches
credi~ to the newspaper and also the to:cat news published hen! ln.

I

Capital comment

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In business circles and in government, the anti-inflation talk bas
toughened since it was reported that consumer prices rose in January at
a shocking 18 percent annual rate.
With inflation at the end of last year running at 13.3 percent -- the worst
in more than 30 yesrs - and the outlook for 1980 even worse, private
economists are increasingly talking in tenns of drastic and painful steps
to slow the price spiral.
Credit controls, which have been used sparingly in the past, are Wider
consideration by the administration. But Carter's advisors and members
.of the Federal Reserve are reportedly split on whether such restrictions
would help.

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(ContinuedfrompageA-1)
and noktbem Kentucky. It was ex_1!ecled to get almost a foot deep In
::JIIIrls of Indiana, Virginia and West
Virginia.
,
- An ice storm ripped down power
;'lines in Oklahoma, leaving 60,000
t homes in Oklahoma City and neigh~ . boring conununities without elec: triclty in sub-freezing weather
• throughout the night. Officials said It
~ may be Sunday night before all of
~ the power Is restored.
: "We've called In all the manpower
·: we can muster to work," said
: George CaMon, a spokesman for
: _!)klahoma Gas and Electric Co.
• • In Cincinnati Hamilton County
' Terry Ott called
,.~ Sheriff's dispatcher
~ 'It the worst snowstorm since the
-: 'blizzard of 1978.
: ·· ·Wblle Ott said the pollee depart: ,l!lent had received "about a
•• thousand" calls about road con• -dltlons, the only highway officially
~ closed was I-75 in northern Kentucky
: "iiear Cincinnati.
; " The Midwesterners' cousins In the
: De!1Ji South were not iJpai'ed either.
: ~- The temperature dropped :IAl
• degrees in six hours Saturday in
: Georgia.
: ~ · In Arkansas, where it '11'118 a balmy
: Mdegrees late last week, most of the
: state was coated with ice, and snow
: '11'88falllngatmid-day.
: The glaze of Ice spread through
" parts of Tennessee, Mississippi,
: Alabama, Georgia and into the
: Carolinas, coating trees and power
; lines and creating ba:voc on the high-

Haitians find no refuge in U. S.
talking of fleeing to the United
States, Deme gladly became one of
the conspirators. At first they
thought about hiring professional
GRAND BAHAMA IS.
smugglers to get them out of Haiti,
but no one had money to pay the fee.
In the end they decided to build a
~
boat and slip away themselves.
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A ' '"'\ • ~..,\!'
Word got around, Deme recalls,
and soon more and more people
enlisted in the plot. Six women
booked passage, as did one child,
\
and by the time the boat was com\
pleted almost 50 Haitians decided to
risk their lives in the desperate,
audacious scheme. They set sail in
the dark of night; it was in
December of 1979.
They left by way of the Golfe de Ia
PORT -AU-PRINCE
Gondave, and were instantly spotted
by Haitian police. Asavage firefight
ensued, and many escapees were cut
HAITIAN ESCAPE ROUTE: Immlgrallon autborllleti do
down. Deme remembers pushing
aol imow how maDY Haillan refugees there are In the Unit·
ed Stales. One etillmale Is 75,010. Aboutl5,010 are said to
bloody bodies overboard and
be living in &amp;MIIb Florida, 50,100 In New York City and
crouching in mortal terror. He
I0,100 eisewllet'e In tile nalloD. Tbey say tbey are political
thought he would die; be says
refugees, bullbe Ullited States does aot recoptze tbe
everyone aboard thought the same.
dalm. Haiti is a friendly ally.
Thirteen did die, actually, but the
rest sailed through the Windward
Passage and into the Atlantic Ocean.
They sailed most uncomfortably; none of the escapees had been to sea the outset.And one of the storms hit
the homemade boat was only 17 feet before. Deme was made bebnsman ~~ five days out. Deme says the boat
long, and the 36 survivors bad to sit because he volunteered He says be was tossed about on Jl).foot waves
side by side to fit. There was no put the boat on the course suggested and nearly swamped by· torrential
privacy, nor could anyone lie down by a bright star over Florida. raln. Again, Deme says, everyone on
to sleep.
Distance: 800 miles through stormy board feared they would perish. The
The boat had a sail, but no motor. and shark-infested waters.
only thing louder than the wind, he
Neither did it have a captain, for
The sharks pestered the boat from adds, were the prayers.

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That storm damaged tire food, of
course, and polluted the water with
salt. Some of the refugees got sick,
and others kept falling overboard.
Deme says he lost his direction more
times than he found it, and, drifting
on the sea, some of the people
wondered if it would be better to
return to the island.
Butthey kept·on. The alternatives,
Deme says,. were drowning in the
Atlantic or standing trial in Haiti. So
they continued to roast in the sun,
shiver in the rain and, periodically,
talk of suicide. Many became sullen.
The women wept and the baby
wailed. And at length they were into
their fourth week.
The, on day 26, the refugees saw a
dot on the horizon; a great ship
coming at them. Deme wondered
whom it represented. He thought he
may have merely sailed aroWld in
circles in the ocean, and this was a
Haitian cutter approaching to blow
the boat from l.hP water. It wasn't. It
was the U.S. Coast Guard.
Sereve Deme had made it.

"
And so Deme's new freedom may
only be temporary. U.S. ill!migration officials may allow him to
stay, send him to any nation that wffi
have him, or return him to Haitl
The decision could take months, nr
years. Meanwhile, as an illegw
entry, he will have difficulty gettil),&amp;
work and enough groceries.
·
Right now he lives with oilier
Haitians in one room of a shabby
apartment here. He speaks 1111
Englfllh, bas no education, afid 'lB
resented liy many Floridilins wl!A
think be is a problem the nation
doesn' t need. Clearly, this yoWlg
man's long journey is not oveF,t
some people can never escape ~
from circumstances.
'"
(Newspaper Ente~ise Assn.)

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TOM TIEDE

: waya.
: "March is starting off on the
: wrong foot," said Charley Bejln of
•
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~ Epidemic

But bad he really? When Deme
was landed in Miami he joined an
estimated 75,000 Haitian escapees
who are, at best, unwelcome guests
in this country. They say they are
political refugees, boat people like
·the Vietnamese, but the U.S. does
not recognize the claim. Unlike
Vietnam, Haiti is a friendly ally.

...

Berry's World

Letters to the editor ·

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Own
" er

New Revelation
New Revelation? Yes!
This article is written in response
to an article published in the
February 4, 1911 issue of the
Gallipolis Dally Tribune entitled
"New ReVelation?"
In the article the validity of latterday revelaUm was questioned. Purpose of this article Is to show that
revelation !rom God Is necessary
today, as It bas always been; that
revelation.is necessary to reCeive
testimony of Cbrlst; and that
revelation to the prophets of God 111
necessary to maintain order and to
edify tbe church.
.
Revelatim 1rom God bas always
existed 81110118 the faltbful people of .
God. The Old Testament Ia a record
of God's revelations to melt and their
actiOIIIJ under His lnfiuence. Tbe 8l)o
ctent Jllvpbeta testllf to the importance of propbesyiDg .throUgh
reveiaUmfrom God.
. In Numbera 11:25-2:9 the .great
pcopbet ~ II cblllqecl by
JOibua to forbid propbolyiDg 11110111
tile lntbren In tbe camp of .....
~ responded, "Would to Go4
that all tbe lArd'• PeoPle "'"'
prqlblta 111111 tbit the Lord would put
hlnplrit upoh thefu." . ·
Another ancient~ under inspiration from God reveala In Anlo.
3:7 that "Surely the Lord God wU1 do
no&amp;hing, but H revealetll His aecret

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Wltohisservantstheprophets."
ns, "Beware of false prophets which
--:...1-God's gift of revelation did not end . come to you in sheqp's clothing, but
~
with the gift of His Son. As a matter
mwardly they are ravening wolye~. ':
of fa~ it was th!'ough revelation
How do we tell these false prophets - :aDsW~r
C:
that the a~e Peter received his
from the true prophets of God? The • · •
:
testlmonyofthedlvlnltyofCbiist.
answer Is foWid in Matthew 7:20: .
~
ln Matthew 8:17 Christ himself
"Wberefore}y their fruits ye sb8ll ·~b ago~ of
says to ·Peter, "Blessed art thou
know them. -RobertS. Painter.
Township..,,..., •A "'-a........__..
Simon illlrjona: for fiesh and blood
·-,....., .... ....,.. ...........,..
bath not revealed it to thee, but my
~ ~ R&amp;Cllle~ Flte DePt fot
Father which is In heaven." ·
,
''"'""'""'" iign(iJa lnlltead wiUJ:
In the next verse Christ explains.
· Syr&amp;euse. Now, my questlm Ill '!
that it Ill upon this nick that He will
Dear Sir:
' ·Wbill~ Insurance ""'pONes flnt
build His church. The apostle Paul. _ I would like to take this op- ,, .Gilt .are farther ~ our ~
received his testimony of Je.us ' portunlty to expresa lilY, ~ tb ;.:~l~~~Qiif, premiUJIIIIo

(~ntinued from page A-1)
"\\'e've made sune good busts. But
we've hardly dented the traffic.
Drugs are coming from all sides."
Authorities say the battle Is getting tougller as criminal gangs move
into the lucrative drug business.
""theY anticipate that the heroin glut
will push down · street prices and
wipe out the gains made against
clrug-puahing in recent years. · .
:' British authorities, for Instance,
:have In the last four years seized
:nearly 150 ldlograins (3.'11 pounds) of
: heroin worth an estimated $71
:~oo, twice as much as the loot
: 1romannedrobberies !Jithat period. ·
w
Heroin addictjon bas reached

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Successful reVI"val

;

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills
Career Center bas been awarded a
grant to study ways to reduce truancy, court referrals, and reduce nwnber of students not completing high
schools.
Two years ago Buckeye Hills was
selected as one of three schools in
the state to pilot programs to coordinate services to students. Last
year the Ohio Bureau of Em-

_................ """"' ,. ""-·"' "' -·~ . ' ... .1'.'\'!l'~l!''a
.ustice

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On cross-examination, Newell
acknowledged most of the overdrafts were covered before the end
of his three-week inSpection, and
most of the loans were paid within
two years.
The government contends many of
the repayments merely shifted the
loans to other north Georgia banks
Lance controlled. The defendants
later repaid some of those loans, the
indictment charges, by lying to
other banks to get new loans.

testimony last w~ek.
Richard T. Newell, the bank
examiner who inspected the books of
Lance's CalhoWI First National
Bank in April1976, told the jury the
bank was in poor condition, the victim of ''insider abuse."
Newell said Lance's relatives had
run up $250,000 in overdrafts and
$900,000 in laans. Many loans, he
said, had little or no collateral, no
statement of purpose on file , and
were not being repaid.

TRAINING BRAS
$325 AND $4~
Sizes 28 To 34A

V:z rl. /Jiamotub.·

I ct. DU1moud\

Y4 rt. Diamomi
fa. rring.~

linff d11Jia&gt;

Hustler publisher guilty of libel

141\ Wlu/Ror
lfilfm 'Gold

The panei of five women and three
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A jury
men
handed down the decision after
Saturday found Larry Flynt and his
day
and a half of deliberations.
a
Hustler magazine guilty of libel and
Flynt's
attorney, Lawrence Sturinvasion of privacy and awarded
tz, said be will appeal the verdict.
Penthouse publisher Hilbert GucGuccione bad contended that
cione $39.3 million in damages.
Guccione bad sought $80 million in · Flynt and Hustler conducted a campaign of malice against him and his
the Franklin CoWlty Common Pleas
associates.
Court suit.

Pleasan~

OHIO VALLEY BA~K IS Pl&lt;OUD

\O At.J~OUNCt: A ~D NBV AD'DmO~···

A PlAN CALLED'E/«1'11'=-:
'f7ARNIE-' ts A PIPN ~A\ L.Efs YOJ~t Yo~MONer FROM

W. Va.

ClEARANCE SALE

YOUR SAYitJGS A~ouNT AND You~ M~ ~M. YOI.Je a-\f&lt;'t~N~
A,~COVN\,AND C~lb ~ CHECKJ~,Cb-~'ll~GS PlAN SOYOUCAf..4
c~N 5#~ ~LY JNIGK'&amp;STON AlLOf rr. (WHEW) AND '(OU

CA~ STILL WR[f C44ECKS~ To~LL THE: ~,'fAJ::NIE' IS
JlJsr AWvr 11-\1:" a:&amp; THINb. Ti4AT.S f-IA~NeD Al2CUND !-\at"
SINCE
~t CHerlCIN(;. ACC.DUNT WAS lf.lVGNTED. ~VIN6'S
.
.
ACCOUNT' .,NraesT AND.Q.lt.CtaNG ACCDUI{f CCNVE.MIENCE".
NM '(OU ' KNO\JJ WH.Y WE CALL HIN\. EAANlE.'.
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FAtL &amp; WINTER.
MERCHANDISE.
...
STOREWIDE.

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ployment Service and Bureau of North Gallia
89.9
Vocational Rehabilitation - Southwestem
89.2
establi.shed offices at the vocational
Wellston
90.9
school. · This past year the Mental OakHill
89.7
Health Center bas provided per- Jackson
92.4
sonnel in the. area of speech and Vinton County
90.5
hearing to screen all of the
The statistics gathered from this
vocational students.
grant will be shared with the other
. The profile of schools that are
three schools and the State Departselected are : Youngstown City ,ment to detennine the area which
School representing the city will help reduce school dropouts.
population, the Great Oaks
Alocal active advisory conunittee
Vocational School near Cincinnati has met and local input has been
and Penta CoWlty Vocational School
gathered to establish ideas in which
near Toledo representing the
to work. The Advisory Conunittee
Metropolitan population and
includes: Carla Miller, Ohio Youth
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Commission; Heber Annstrong, atrepresenting the rural area.
tendance officer, Jackson; George
One of the major concerns
Scurlock, Juvenile Judge, Jackson;
throughout Ohio and the nation is
Gacy Bane, probation officer, Gallia
school truancy and school dropouts.
County; Tom Moulton, Judge, Gallia
The vocational educators are very
County; John Dunn, Principal,
concerned about these students and
Gallia Academy High School;
are looking for ways to reduce them.
Hoiner Willlams, Principal, Oak Hill
"In this grant of $18,556 we will obHigh School; Charles Curran,
tain a specialist to work directly
Judge, Vinton County; Marshan
with those students and other agenGordon, Mental Health Center; Tom
cies including the courts trying to
Jenkins, Principal, Vinton CoWlty
find ways to help those students," a
High School; George Plants, atspokesman said Saturday.
tendance officer; Marvin Spencer,
The attendance percentage of all
attendance officer; Bill Hayden, atstudents at the vocational school extendance officer; Tom Slater,
ceeds 90 percent attendance. Last
assistant principal, Jackson High
year's percentages wereL:
School; Barbara Martin, attendance
Sehool
Pet.
officer; James Dukas, Supervisor,
Gallia Academy
91.5
Buckeye Hills Career Center and
Hannan Trace
111.7
Ponney G. Cisco, Director, Buckeye
Kyger Creek
92.1
Hills Career Center.

record . proportions in Western
Europe. West Germany, now the
most drug-plagued nation, bas ·an
estimated 60,000 addlcls, double the
number a few years ago. Fran&amp; bas
some 35,000 addicls and Britain
40,000, offictal sources say.
John Warner, a senior Paris-based
officer of the U.S. Drugs Enforcement Agency (DEA) predicted: "Intbreeoffouryears, Western
Europe's narcotics problem will be
as bad as anything yet seen in the
. United States." The United States
bad about 480,000 heroin addlcls in
19'71, the last year for 'which figures
are avallable.

!

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Temperatures dropped to at least
:IAl degrees below zero in most of North Dakota and northwestern Min·
nesota, with sub-zero readings
reported from Nebraska across the
upper Mississippi Valley and the
Great Lakes into New England.
Readings in the teens and sin&amp;le
digits prevailed from the Rockies
and aCI'OIIS northern Texas, Kansas,
Oklahoma and the Ohio Valley into
the mid-Atlantic Coast.
Among the cities reporting the
coldest March 1 on record were:
fargo, N. D., Zl below zero;
Syracuse, N. Y., 8 below zero, and
Erie, Pa., 3 below zero, and Worcester, Mass., 1 below zero.
On the "wanner" side, but still
records, were the 3 degrees in Pit·
tsburgh, 5 in Atlantic City, N.J., Bin
Wilmington, Del., and 3 in Hartford,
Conn.

LARGEST

:e

revelatim u fO!Uid IIi Galatlaris · , &lt;ll1,1rch. Rev. ' Mark friend, the me tAl _
llitO • Private cmtra
1:12. .
•
'youth evangelist, and eve~One wbo , wltb the Racine Fire Dept.,.Propllets wbo' receive revelation ' )lad a part in maklng ow.flv&amp;day . Cl~ ~ve done?- A
·
and make 1mow!\ G9d's will to His
youtbrevivalagreatsuccellll; "'~, · . Citizen. t~ !&lt;. '"'' ' ''1
:;
people are required In 'the churCh ;' It thrilled~ aoul to see-~ · ~ li •
..,~If:;.,:; , , ;t'"!.
"'
e.tabllahed by Cbrlst. In I CorJn.
-fWed every nlgiX with young ~e - \VIii\~
??
thlani12:2B,In Ephesians 2i11, 8ild
'dealrlngtobearthewordofGod:
• • ..
agAin in Epbes1ans 4:11-12 Paul . . I really aJllll'll&lt;:late t!Je church and
:
deleribea the churcb establlsbed by · its pastor, Reverend WW!am Knittel Dear Sir:
·
.;
God tbrou8h His Sm Je&amp;ull Cbrlst, a 1.and ftlllllij&gt; aild au tbe work~ ofthi!, . I'm wri~ ~ ~~
church in which, "He gave IIQIJie
~urch. ·
''
••
.. · !bit 'Yilllii!*f~ Jut ,&lt; ......, Mt
apostles; and IICJI1le propbets· and • · I awrecJate the love and cuiJcem dalillli(er had bei' car Ioiied but ~
1101111, evangellllts; and ~onie
they have shown to everyme, and, man bl'ob Into It In MJc!dieport. Hi
Jillion and teachers; for the pe..:: l1!1e Interest~~ have ~en iltour ~~PJIII;;:'II": tllaleJ~~~
fectlng of tbe aaln~ for UJe work of ~ young ~e throughout
~ )IlL Je !*lbeta1ti'~
the
. ministry, fOr the 'edifying
. ot the . · County and . surrOWldlng
. · ,com- . · bef~, bUt bit OlilY I« Ill~~~
body of Christ.." (EpiMislans 4:11· • . mulJities• .· . .
, · ·
it,anilafUQ~.Now!IV'dll .
12). 'lberefore, seek after the true . It lets me kiiOw there ·a$ -~ ,. ~~=~'f'.!cetlt~
· prophets of God, they do exist.
thoee that really care about our ·g. away with ·lllYtlilBI
~
However; also beware of false
youtboftodayandthelrfuturea.
'Counll
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prophets.
• Rea~ully. - CarolYn Van , ......~ ..... .._...... Jt• .::
In Matthew 7:15 the apostle warMeter, Clifton, W. Va,
• ·
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the Natiopal Weather Service in
Kansas City.
But firefighters welcomed the
stonn in several Southern states
where hundreds of forest fires bad
destroyed 80,000 acres of dry timberland and giaaslands.
Before the weekend, forestry officials reported 33,000 acres bad
been burned in Mississippi, 22,000
acres in Arkansas, 14,000 acres in
Alabama and 11,000 acres in Texas.
"The situation is now in control,"
Bart Williams of the Alabams
forestry service said Saturday.
Saturday's snows spread from
Oklahoma and eastern Kansas
across the Ohio Valley into Virginia,
with parts of Indiana and Virginia
targeted for up to 10 inches.

. Point

404 Main Street

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remove him.
Defense attorneys say a new JUdge
could take over with little trouble,
because the trial is really only just
beginning. When the trial began, it
was estimated to last 10 weeks. Now,
court officials and attorneys decline
to speculate on how much more time
the trial might take.
After a month of tedious
wrangling over the authenticity of
thousands of docwnents, the government presented its first substantial

Buckeye Hills Career Center
awarded grant to study issues

0. J. MORRISON'S

::

suttmi

accoWlt - of a COWltry banker
helping a growing conununity - :&lt;&lt;
be gave a S~nate Committee 2t
years ago before submitting his
resignation to President Carter, his
friend and fellow Georgian.
Lance's attorneys asked on Mon. day that Moye take himself off the
case. Moye refused. The four defendants put their request in writing as
the week ended, asking Moye to
change his mind. If he doesn't, the
stage is set to ask an appeals court to

forecast. • •

E

Today •••in history
fort in the Bahamas In the
Revolutionary War.
In 1949, the first non-stop flight
around the world was completed
when a U.S. 8-liO Superfort plane
landed in Fort Worth, Texas.
In 1956, France recognized the independence of Morocco, and
Pakistan decided to stay in British
Commonwealth.

CHILD'S MOI'QER ARRESTED
TOLEDO, .Ohio (AP) - The
mother of an '1ant who died of
malnutrition bas been arrested on a
charge of lnvoiQDtary bomicide in
COIDiectlon with the death.
Sabrina Mathis, 21, '11'118 scheduled
for arraignment today in Toledo
Municipal Court.
Lucas County Coroner Harry
Mlgnerey ruled the death of Danon
Mathis, 8¥.!. months, at Mercy
Hospital on Feb.. :lA!, a bomicide due ·
to malnutrition and starvation.
The youth's twin sister, Delana, is
listed in good condition and is still at
the hotiptlal.

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last week, "that bias and prejudice,
sufficient to destroy the preswnption of innocence, exists in the mind
of Judge Moye."
The 48-year-old Lance and three ,_
associates are charged with conspiracy, misuse of bank fWlds and
other banking law violations·. The
charges involve bWldreds of loans
and overdrafts that amOWlted to
almost $20 million.
Lance says he will testify in his
own defense, giving much the same

Huge snowfall. . .

The other boat people

Today is Sunday, Mercb 2, the
62nd day of 1980. There are 304 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On March 2, 1836, Texas
proclaimed Its independence from
Mexico.
On this date:
In IT/6, American Merines fought
thei_r first battle, capturing a British

!Defendants
seek
new
judge
in
Lance
trial
.
ATLANTA (AP) - Seven weeks
• after the start of his bank fraud trial,
: Bert Lance bas come to what the for: . mer U.S. budget director calls "the
: llllhaPPY belief'' that he must have a
: new judge if he is1o get a fair trial.
Lance, who was forced to resign
: his federal post in September 1977,
: amid controversy over his practices
: as head of two Georgia banks, says
: he bad hoped be would find a fair
: and Impartial forwn in U.S. District
• Judge Charles Moye's court.
' "I have now come to the unliappy
belief.'' Lance wrote in an affidavit

By carrier daily and Sunday90c per week. Motor route 1:1.90per month.
MAIL
SUBSCRJPI'ION RATES
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune In Otuo and West Vlrglnia one year 533.00: six mooth.'l lt7Ji0; three
rnonthallO.SO. Ebewhere $38.00 per year; six months PJ.OO; three months '11.00; motor roote
$3.90 moothly.
The Dally Sentinel, one yea r J3,1.00; Six mooths S17.50; three mooths PJ.OO. Elsewhere $38.00:

(Afghan and Southeast Asian
refugees dominate the news, but
there Is another group of homeless
people closer to America. Tbls Is the
story of a Haitian's search for
freedom, a harrowing odyssey that
continues.)
By Tom Tiede
MIAMI (NEA) - As Sereve Deme
tells it, he was destined by birth to
leave Haiti. He was bor.c on the
island 23 years ago, about the time
the nation was seized in the iron grip
of the ruling Duvalier family. Deme
says be's feared the Duvaliers from
childhood - and he's dreamed of
escape for two decades.
There was one short period when
he thought escape would not be
necessary. That was in 1971, when
Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier died
and willed the Haitian government
to his son, Jean Claude. Papa Doc
had been a brutal overlord and
there was hope his son would be
different. Deme says the hope was
soon dashed.
The astonishing excesses of the
senior Dualier's regime did end,
Deme says, but "Jean-Claude's rule
is terrible enough." The hated
private militia, the Tonton
Macoutes, still rapes Haiti's people,
and state oppression is ongoing. As
example, Deme says his own
brother was executed, while going to
school.
So last year when friends began

March 2, 1980

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Opinions and Comments
iunbll)l 'mime.- jentittel

A-J-TheSw~&lt;lay Times-Sentinel, SWlday,

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STOP-IN AND ASt:.·FO'f: \-tiN'\ •

Expect more from

hi() Valley: .
Four lo.catloria to aerve you better.
Member: FDIC
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A-2- The SWlday Times-Sentinel, SWlday, March 2, 1980

~uttbatJI

.l !imts· ~tntittel

PubliJ.hed every Swtday by TheObo Valley Publi.shingCo.· Mullimedia , Inc.
Letters ot opinion are welcuned. They !lhould be lesa than DJ words ion&amp; Ior subject to reduction by the editor I and must be sign@&lt;! with the siinee's addres.1. N!Uilea may be withheld upon
publication. Howeve r, on request, names will be disclosed. Ldt.en !lhou.ld be in good taste. ad-

drossini woes, not "'"''""'illtieo.

GAI.UPOLIS

DAn.v mmuNE
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio t$631 .
Publl!hed every weekday evening eicept Satun:iay . Second Class POI!tage Paid at Gallipolis,

otUo45631 .

·

TilE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court St.. Pomeroy, 0 . 45769. Publi.shed every week day evening exei!pl Saturday. Entel"'!d
as second chis, mailing rtlfllter at Pomeroy, Ohio Post Office.

j(

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TO MA'I&lt;E A
'DEAL UlE'LL 1-\A~
TI-\'ROUI lt.l TJ.I' 61-tAI-\
AN' TH'
'PAWAMA CANAL!

stxmontbs no.oo; threemortths '11 .00.

The Associated Press ls e~c!ustvely entitled tG the use for publication of all ne'N3 di:Jpat.ches
credi~ to the newspaper and also the to:cat news published hen! ln.

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Capital comment

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In business circles and in government, the anti-inflation talk bas
toughened since it was reported that consumer prices rose in January at
a shocking 18 percent annual rate.
With inflation at the end of last year running at 13.3 percent -- the worst
in more than 30 yesrs - and the outlook for 1980 even worse, private
economists are increasingly talking in tenns of drastic and painful steps
to slow the price spiral.
Credit controls, which have been used sparingly in the past, are Wider
consideration by the administration. But Carter's advisors and members
.of the Federal Reserve are reportedly split on whether such restrictions
would help.

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(ContinuedfrompageA-1)
and noktbem Kentucky. It was ex_1!ecled to get almost a foot deep In
::JIIIrls of Indiana, Virginia and West
Virginia.
,
- An ice storm ripped down power
;'lines in Oklahoma, leaving 60,000
t homes in Oklahoma City and neigh~ . boring conununities without elec: triclty in sub-freezing weather
• throughout the night. Officials said It
~ may be Sunday night before all of
~ the power Is restored.
: "We've called In all the manpower
·: we can muster to work," said
: George CaMon, a spokesman for
: _!)klahoma Gas and Electric Co.
• • In Cincinnati Hamilton County
' Terry Ott called
,.~ Sheriff's dispatcher
~ 'It the worst snowstorm since the
-: 'blizzard of 1978.
: ·· ·Wblle Ott said the pollee depart: ,l!lent had received "about a
•• thousand" calls about road con• -dltlons, the only highway officially
~ closed was I-75 in northern Kentucky
: "iiear Cincinnati.
; " The Midwesterners' cousins In the
: De!1Ji South were not iJpai'ed either.
: ~- The temperature dropped :IAl
• degrees in six hours Saturday in
: Georgia.
: ~ · In Arkansas, where it '11'118 a balmy
: Mdegrees late last week, most of the
: state was coated with ice, and snow
: '11'88falllngatmid-day.
: The glaze of Ice spread through
" parts of Tennessee, Mississippi,
: Alabama, Georgia and into the
: Carolinas, coating trees and power
; lines and creating ba:voc on the high-

Haitians find no refuge in U. S.
talking of fleeing to the United
States, Deme gladly became one of
the conspirators. At first they
thought about hiring professional
GRAND BAHAMA IS.
smugglers to get them out of Haiti,
but no one had money to pay the fee.
In the end they decided to build a
~
boat and slip away themselves.
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Word got around, Deme recalls,
and soon more and more people
enlisted in the plot. Six women
booked passage, as did one child,
\
and by the time the boat was com\
pleted almost 50 Haitians decided to
risk their lives in the desperate,
audacious scheme. They set sail in
the dark of night; it was in
December of 1979.
They left by way of the Golfe de Ia
PORT -AU-PRINCE
Gondave, and were instantly spotted
by Haitian police. Asavage firefight
ensued, and many escapees were cut
HAITIAN ESCAPE ROUTE: Immlgrallon autborllleti do
down. Deme remembers pushing
aol imow how maDY Haillan refugees there are In the Unit·
ed Stales. One etillmale Is 75,010. Aboutl5,010 are said to
bloody bodies overboard and
be living in &amp;MIIb Florida, 50,100 In New York City and
crouching in mortal terror. He
I0,100 eisewllet'e In tile nalloD. Tbey say tbey are political
thought he would die; be says
refugees, bullbe Ullited States does aot recoptze tbe
everyone aboard thought the same.
dalm. Haiti is a friendly ally.
Thirteen did die, actually, but the
rest sailed through the Windward
Passage and into the Atlantic Ocean.
They sailed most uncomfortably; none of the escapees had been to sea the outset.And one of the storms hit
the homemade boat was only 17 feet before. Deme was made bebnsman ~~ five days out. Deme says the boat
long, and the 36 survivors bad to sit because he volunteered He says be was tossed about on Jl).foot waves
side by side to fit. There was no put the boat on the course suggested and nearly swamped by· torrential
privacy, nor could anyone lie down by a bright star over Florida. raln. Again, Deme says, everyone on
to sleep.
Distance: 800 miles through stormy board feared they would perish. The
The boat had a sail, but no motor. and shark-infested waters.
only thing louder than the wind, he
Neither did it have a captain, for
The sharks pestered the boat from adds, were the prayers.

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That storm damaged tire food, of
course, and polluted the water with
salt. Some of the refugees got sick,
and others kept falling overboard.
Deme says he lost his direction more
times than he found it, and, drifting
on the sea, some of the people
wondered if it would be better to
return to the island.
Butthey kept·on. The alternatives,
Deme says,. were drowning in the
Atlantic or standing trial in Haiti. So
they continued to roast in the sun,
shiver in the rain and, periodically,
talk of suicide. Many became sullen.
The women wept and the baby
wailed. And at length they were into
their fourth week.
The, on day 26, the refugees saw a
dot on the horizon; a great ship
coming at them. Deme wondered
whom it represented. He thought he
may have merely sailed aroWld in
circles in the ocean, and this was a
Haitian cutter approaching to blow
the boat from l.hP water. It wasn't. It
was the U.S. Coast Guard.
Sereve Deme had made it.

"
And so Deme's new freedom may
only be temporary. U.S. ill!migration officials may allow him to
stay, send him to any nation that wffi
have him, or return him to Haitl
The decision could take months, nr
years. Meanwhile, as an illegw
entry, he will have difficulty gettil),&amp;
work and enough groceries.
·
Right now he lives with oilier
Haitians in one room of a shabby
apartment here. He speaks 1111
Englfllh, bas no education, afid 'lB
resented liy many Floridilins wl!A
think be is a problem the nation
doesn' t need. Clearly, this yoWlg
man's long journey is not oveF,t
some people can never escape ~
from circumstances.
'"
(Newspaper Ente~ise Assn.)

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TOM TIEDE

: waya.
: "March is starting off on the
: wrong foot," said Charley Bejln of
•
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~ Epidemic

But bad he really? When Deme
was landed in Miami he joined an
estimated 75,000 Haitian escapees
who are, at best, unwelcome guests
in this country. They say they are
political refugees, boat people like
·the Vietnamese, but the U.S. does
not recognize the claim. Unlike
Vietnam, Haiti is a friendly ally.

...

Berry's World

Letters to the editor ·

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Own
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New Revelation
New Revelation? Yes!
This article is written in response
to an article published in the
February 4, 1911 issue of the
Gallipolis Dally Tribune entitled
"New ReVelation?"
In the article the validity of latterday revelaUm was questioned. Purpose of this article Is to show that
revelation !rom God Is necessary
today, as It bas always been; that
revelation.is necessary to reCeive
testimony of Cbrlst; and that
revelation to the prophets of God 111
necessary to maintain order and to
edify tbe church.
.
Revelatim 1rom God bas always
existed 81110118 the faltbful people of .
God. The Old Testament Ia a record
of God's revelations to melt and their
actiOIIIJ under His lnfiuence. Tbe 8l)o
ctent Jllvpbeta testllf to the importance of propbesyiDg .throUgh
reveiaUmfrom God.
. In Numbera 11:25-2:9 the .great
pcopbet ~ II cblllqecl by
JOibua to forbid propbolyiDg 11110111
tile lntbren In tbe camp of .....
~ responded, "Would to Go4
that all tbe lArd'• PeoPle "'"'
prqlblta 111111 tbit the Lord would put
hlnplrit upoh thefu." . ·
Another ancient~ under inspiration from God reveala In Anlo.
3:7 that "Surely the Lord God wU1 do
no&amp;hing, but H revealetll His aecret

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Wltohisservantstheprophets."
ns, "Beware of false prophets which
--:...1-God's gift of revelation did not end . come to you in sheqp's clothing, but
~
with the gift of His Son. As a matter
mwardly they are ravening wolye~. ':
of fa~ it was th!'ough revelation
How do we tell these false prophets - :aDsW~r
C:
that the a~e Peter received his
from the true prophets of God? The • · •
:
testlmonyofthedlvlnltyofCbiist.
answer Is foWid in Matthew 7:20: .
~
ln Matthew 8:17 Christ himself
"Wberefore}y their fruits ye sb8ll ·~b ago~ of
says to ·Peter, "Blessed art thou
know them. -RobertS. Painter.
Township..,,..., •A "'-a........__..
Simon illlrjona: for fiesh and blood
·-,....., .... ....,.. ...........,..
bath not revealed it to thee, but my
~ ~ R&amp;Cllle~ Flte DePt fot
Father which is In heaven." ·
,
''"'""'""'" iign(iJa lnlltead wiUJ:
In the next verse Christ explains.
· Syr&amp;euse. Now, my questlm Ill '!
that it Ill upon this nick that He will
Dear Sir:
' ·Wbill~ Insurance ""'pONes flnt
build His church. The apostle Paul. _ I would like to take this op- ,, .Gilt .are farther ~ our ~
received his testimony of Je.us ' portunlty to expresa lilY, ~ tb ;.:~l~~~Qiif, premiUJIIIIo

(~ntinued from page A-1)
"\\'e've made sune good busts. But
we've hardly dented the traffic.
Drugs are coming from all sides."
Authorities say the battle Is getting tougller as criminal gangs move
into the lucrative drug business.
""theY anticipate that the heroin glut
will push down · street prices and
wipe out the gains made against
clrug-puahing in recent years. · .
:' British authorities, for Instance,
:have In the last four years seized
:nearly 150 ldlograins (3.'11 pounds) of
: heroin worth an estimated $71
:~oo, twice as much as the loot
: 1romannedrobberies !Jithat period. ·
w
Heroin addictjon bas reached

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Successful reVI"val

;

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills
Career Center bas been awarded a
grant to study ways to reduce truancy, court referrals, and reduce nwnber of students not completing high
schools.
Two years ago Buckeye Hills was
selected as one of three schools in
the state to pilot programs to coordinate services to students. Last
year the Ohio Bureau of Em-

_................ """"' ,. ""-·"' "' -·~ . ' ... .1'.'\'!l'~l!''a
.ustice

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On cross-examination, Newell
acknowledged most of the overdrafts were covered before the end
of his three-week inSpection, and
most of the loans were paid within
two years.
The government contends many of
the repayments merely shifted the
loans to other north Georgia banks
Lance controlled. The defendants
later repaid some of those loans, the
indictment charges, by lying to
other banks to get new loans.

testimony last w~ek.
Richard T. Newell, the bank
examiner who inspected the books of
Lance's CalhoWI First National
Bank in April1976, told the jury the
bank was in poor condition, the victim of ''insider abuse."
Newell said Lance's relatives had
run up $250,000 in overdrafts and
$900,000 in laans. Many loans, he
said, had little or no collateral, no
statement of purpose on file , and
were not being repaid.

TRAINING BRAS
$325 AND $4~
Sizes 28 To 34A

V:z rl. /Jiamotub.·

I ct. DU1moud\

Y4 rt. Diamomi
fa. rring.~

linff d11Jia&gt;

Hustler publisher guilty of libel

141\ Wlu/Ror
lfilfm 'Gold

The panei of five women and three
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A jury
men
handed down the decision after
Saturday found Larry Flynt and his
day
and a half of deliberations.
a
Hustler magazine guilty of libel and
Flynt's
attorney, Lawrence Sturinvasion of privacy and awarded
tz, said be will appeal the verdict.
Penthouse publisher Hilbert GucGuccione bad contended that
cione $39.3 million in damages.
Guccione bad sought $80 million in · Flynt and Hustler conducted a campaign of malice against him and his
the Franklin CoWlty Common Pleas
associates.
Court suit.

Pleasan~

OHIO VALLEY BA~K IS Pl&lt;OUD

\O At.J~OUNCt: A ~D NBV AD'DmO~···

A PlAN CALLED'E/«1'11'=-:
'f7ARNIE-' ts A PIPN ~A\ L.Efs YOJ~t Yo~MONer FROM

W. Va.

ClEARANCE SALE

YOUR SAYitJGS A~ouNT AND You~ M~ ~M. YOI.Je a-\f&lt;'t~N~
A,~COVN\,AND C~lb ~ CHECKJ~,Cb-~'ll~GS PlAN SOYOUCAf..4
c~N 5#~ ~LY JNIGK'&amp;STON AlLOf rr. (WHEW) AND '(OU

CA~ STILL WR[f C44ECKS~ To~LL THE: ~,'fAJ::NIE' IS
JlJsr AWvr 11-\1:" a:&amp; THINb. Ti4AT.S f-IA~NeD Al2CUND !-\at"
SINCE
~t CHerlCIN(;. ACC.DUNT WAS lf.lVGNTED. ~VIN6'S
.
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ACCOUNT' .,NraesT AND.Q.lt.CtaNG ACCDUI{f CCNVE.MIENCE".
NM '(OU ' KNO\JJ WH.Y WE CALL HIN\. EAANlE.'.
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FAtL &amp; WINTER.
MERCHANDISE.
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STOREWIDE.

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ployment Service and Bureau of North Gallia
89.9
Vocational Rehabilitation - Southwestem
89.2
establi.shed offices at the vocational
Wellston
90.9
school. · This past year the Mental OakHill
89.7
Health Center bas provided per- Jackson
92.4
sonnel in the. area of speech and Vinton County
90.5
hearing to screen all of the
The statistics gathered from this
vocational students.
grant will be shared with the other
. The profile of schools that are
three schools and the State Departselected are : Youngstown City ,ment to detennine the area which
School representing the city will help reduce school dropouts.
population, the Great Oaks
Alocal active advisory conunittee
Vocational School near Cincinnati has met and local input has been
and Penta CoWlty Vocational School
gathered to establish ideas in which
near Toledo representing the
to work. The Advisory Conunittee
Metropolitan population and
includes: Carla Miller, Ohio Youth
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Commission; Heber Annstrong, atrepresenting the rural area.
tendance officer, Jackson; George
One of the major concerns
Scurlock, Juvenile Judge, Jackson;
throughout Ohio and the nation is
Gacy Bane, probation officer, Gallia
school truancy and school dropouts.
County; Tom Moulton, Judge, Gallia
The vocational educators are very
County; John Dunn, Principal,
concerned about these students and
Gallia Academy High School;
are looking for ways to reduce them.
Hoiner Willlams, Principal, Oak Hill
"In this grant of $18,556 we will obHigh School; Charles Curran,
tain a specialist to work directly
Judge, Vinton County; Marshan
with those students and other agenGordon, Mental Health Center; Tom
cies including the courts trying to
Jenkins, Principal, Vinton CoWlty
find ways to help those students," a
High School; George Plants, atspokesman said Saturday.
tendance officer; Marvin Spencer,
The attendance percentage of all
attendance officer; Bill Hayden, atstudents at the vocational school extendance officer; Tom Slater,
ceeds 90 percent attendance. Last
assistant principal, Jackson High
year's percentages wereL:
School; Barbara Martin, attendance
Sehool
Pet.
officer; James Dukas, Supervisor,
Gallia Academy
91.5
Buckeye Hills Career Center and
Hannan Trace
111.7
Ponney G. Cisco, Director, Buckeye
Kyger Creek
92.1
Hills Career Center.

record . proportions in Western
Europe. West Germany, now the
most drug-plagued nation, bas ·an
estimated 60,000 addlcls, double the
number a few years ago. Fran&amp; bas
some 35,000 addicls and Britain
40,000, offictal sources say.
John Warner, a senior Paris-based
officer of the U.S. Drugs Enforcement Agency (DEA) predicted: "Intbreeoffouryears, Western
Europe's narcotics problem will be
as bad as anything yet seen in the
. United States." The United States
bad about 480,000 heroin addlcls in
19'71, the last year for 'which figures
are avallable.

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Temperatures dropped to at least
:IAl degrees below zero in most of North Dakota and northwestern Min·
nesota, with sub-zero readings
reported from Nebraska across the
upper Mississippi Valley and the
Great Lakes into New England.
Readings in the teens and sin&amp;le
digits prevailed from the Rockies
and aCI'OIIS northern Texas, Kansas,
Oklahoma and the Ohio Valley into
the mid-Atlantic Coast.
Among the cities reporting the
coldest March 1 on record were:
fargo, N. D., Zl below zero;
Syracuse, N. Y., 8 below zero, and
Erie, Pa., 3 below zero, and Worcester, Mass., 1 below zero.
On the "wanner" side, but still
records, were the 3 degrees in Pit·
tsburgh, 5 in Atlantic City, N.J., Bin
Wilmington, Del., and 3 in Hartford,
Conn.

LARGEST

:e

revelatim u fO!Uid IIi Galatlaris · , &lt;ll1,1rch. Rev. ' Mark friend, the me tAl _
llitO • Private cmtra
1:12. .
•
'youth evangelist, and eve~One wbo , wltb the Racine Fire Dept.,.Propllets wbo' receive revelation ' )lad a part in maklng ow.flv&amp;day . Cl~ ~ve done?- A
·
and make 1mow!\ G9d's will to His
youtbrevivalagreatsuccellll; "'~, · . Citizen. t~ !&lt;. '"'' ' ''1
:;
people are required In 'the churCh ;' It thrilled~ aoul to see-~ · ~ li •
..,~If:;.,:; , , ;t'"!.
"'
e.tabllahed by Cbrlst. In I CorJn.
-fWed every nlgiX with young ~e - \VIii\~
??
thlani12:2B,In Ephesians 2i11, 8ild
'dealrlngtobearthewordofGod:
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agAin in Epbes1ans 4:11-12 Paul . . I really aJllll'll&lt;:late t!Je church and
:
deleribea the churcb establlsbed by · its pastor, Reverend WW!am Knittel Dear Sir:
·
.;
God tbrou8h His Sm Je&amp;ull Cbrlst, a 1.and ftlllllij&gt; aild au tbe work~ ofthi!, . I'm wri~ ~ ~~
church in which, "He gave IIQIJie
~urch. ·
''
••
.. · !bit 'Yilllii!*f~ Jut ,&lt; ......, Mt
apostles; and IICJI1le propbets· and • · I awrecJate the love and cuiJcem dalillli(er had bei' car Ioiied but ~
1101111, evangellllts; and ~onie
they have shown to everyme, and, man bl'ob Into It In MJc!dieport. Hi
Jillion and teachers; for the pe..:: l1!1e Interest~~ have ~en iltour ~~PJIII;;:'II": tllaleJ~~~
fectlng of tbe aaln~ for UJe work of ~ young ~e throughout
~ )IlL Je !*lbeta1ti'~
the
. ministry, fOr the 'edifying
. ot the . · County and . surrOWldlng
. · ,com- . · bef~, bUt bit OlilY I« Ill~~~
body of Christ.." (EpiMislans 4:11· • . mulJities• .· . .
, · ·
it,anilafUQ~.Now!IV'dll .
12). 'lberefore, seek after the true . It lets me kiiOw there ·a$ -~ ,. ~~=~'f'.!cetlt~
· prophets of God, they do exist.
thoee that really care about our ·g. away with ·lllYtlilBI
~
However; also beware of false
youtboftodayandthelrfuturea.
'Counll
'
·
.
prophets.
• Rea~ully. - CarolYn Van , ......~ ..... .._...... Jt• .::
In Matthew 7:15 the apostle warMeter, Clifton, W. Va,
• ·
''· .' ~
1ft!, ·

the Natiopal Weather Service in
Kansas City.
But firefighters welcomed the
stonn in several Southern states
where hundreds of forest fires bad
destroyed 80,000 acres of dry timberland and giaaslands.
Before the weekend, forestry officials reported 33,000 acres bad
been burned in Mississippi, 22,000
acres in Arkansas, 14,000 acres in
Alabama and 11,000 acres in Texas.
"The situation is now in control,"
Bart Williams of the Alabams
forestry service said Saturday.
Saturday's snows spread from
Oklahoma and eastern Kansas
across the Ohio Valley into Virginia,
with parts of Indiana and Virginia
targeted for up to 10 inches.

. Point

404 Main Street

.....

remove him.
Defense attorneys say a new JUdge
could take over with little trouble,
because the trial is really only just
beginning. When the trial began, it
was estimated to last 10 weeks. Now,
court officials and attorneys decline
to speculate on how much more time
the trial might take.
After a month of tedious
wrangling over the authenticity of
thousands of docwnents, the government presented its first substantial

Buckeye Hills Career Center
awarded grant to study issues

0. J. MORRISON'S

::

suttmi

accoWlt - of a COWltry banker
helping a growing conununity - :&lt;&lt;
be gave a S~nate Committee 2t
years ago before submitting his
resignation to President Carter, his
friend and fellow Georgian.
Lance's attorneys asked on Mon. day that Moye take himself off the
case. Moye refused. The four defendants put their request in writing as
the week ended, asking Moye to
change his mind. If he doesn't, the
stage is set to ask an appeals court to

forecast. • •

E

Today •••in history
fort in the Bahamas In the
Revolutionary War.
In 1949, the first non-stop flight
around the world was completed
when a U.S. 8-liO Superfort plane
landed in Fort Worth, Texas.
In 1956, France recognized the independence of Morocco, and
Pakistan decided to stay in British
Commonwealth.

CHILD'S MOI'QER ARRESTED
TOLEDO, .Ohio (AP) - The
mother of an '1ant who died of
malnutrition bas been arrested on a
charge of lnvoiQDtary bomicide in
COIDiectlon with the death.
Sabrina Mathis, 21, '11'118 scheduled
for arraignment today in Toledo
Municipal Court.
Lucas County Coroner Harry
Mlgnerey ruled the death of Danon
Mathis, 8¥.!. months, at Mercy
Hospital on Feb.. :lA!, a bomicide due ·
to malnutrition and starvation.
The youth's twin sister, Delana, is
listed in good condition and is still at
the hotiptlal.

'
last week, "that bias and prejudice,
sufficient to destroy the preswnption of innocence, exists in the mind
of Judge Moye."
The 48-year-old Lance and three ,_
associates are charged with conspiracy, misuse of bank fWlds and
other banking law violations·. The
charges involve bWldreds of loans
and overdrafts that amOWlted to
almost $20 million.
Lance says he will testify in his
own defense, giving much the same

Huge snowfall. . .

The other boat people

Today is Sunday, Mercb 2, the
62nd day of 1980. There are 304 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On March 2, 1836, Texas
proclaimed Its independence from
Mexico.
On this date:
In IT/6, American Merines fought
thei_r first battle, capturing a British

!Defendants
seek
new
judge
in
Lance
trial
.
ATLANTA (AP) - Seven weeks
• after the start of his bank fraud trial,
: Bert Lance bas come to what the for: . mer U.S. budget director calls "the
: llllhaPPY belief'' that he must have a
: new judge if he is1o get a fair trial.
Lance, who was forced to resign
: his federal post in September 1977,
: amid controversy over his practices
: as head of two Georgia banks, says
: he bad hoped be would find a fair
: and Impartial forwn in U.S. District
• Judge Charles Moye's court.
' "I have now come to the unliappy
belief.'' Lance wrote in an affidavit

By carrier daily and Sunday90c per week. Motor route 1:1.90per month.
MAIL
SUBSCRJPI'ION RATES
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune In Otuo and West Vlrglnia one year 533.00: six mooth.'l lt7Ji0; three
rnonthallO.SO. Ebewhere $38.00 per year; six months PJ.OO; three months '11.00; motor roote
$3.90 moothly.
The Dally Sentinel, one yea r J3,1.00; Six mooths S17.50; three mooths PJ.OO. Elsewhere $38.00:

(Afghan and Southeast Asian
refugees dominate the news, but
there Is another group of homeless
people closer to America. Tbls Is the
story of a Haitian's search for
freedom, a harrowing odyssey that
continues.)
By Tom Tiede
MIAMI (NEA) - As Sereve Deme
tells it, he was destined by birth to
leave Haiti. He was bor.c on the
island 23 years ago, about the time
the nation was seized in the iron grip
of the ruling Duvalier family. Deme
says be's feared the Duvaliers from
childhood - and he's dreamed of
escape for two decades.
There was one short period when
he thought escape would not be
necessary. That was in 1971, when
Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier died
and willed the Haitian government
to his son, Jean Claude. Papa Doc
had been a brutal overlord and
there was hope his son would be
different. Deme says the hope was
soon dashed.
The astonishing excesses of the
senior Dualier's regime did end,
Deme says, but "Jean-Claude's rule
is terrible enough." The hated
private militia, the Tonton
Macoutes, still rapes Haiti's people,
and state oppression is ongoing. As
example, Deme says his own
brother was executed, while going to
school.
So last year when friends began

March 2, 1980

'

Opinions and Comments
iunbll)l 'mime.- jentittel

A-J-TheSw~&lt;lay Times-Sentinel, SWlday,

..

'

STOP-IN AND ASt:.·FO'f: \-tiN'\ •

Expect more from

hi() Valley: .
Four lo.catloria to aerve you better.
Member: FDIC
\

•

.

f

�I·

. A+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWiday, March 2, 19110

A-4- The SWlday Times-Sentinel, SWlday. !\larch t. 1980

Mason County given $44,443,300 checl. :

Chaplains honored at appreciation banque1

PT. PLEASANT - West Virginia State Auditor Glen B.
Gainer, Jr. has announced that
his office has 'llailed to the county
clerks of each county · the apportionment of values of public
utility property located within each
count~
the
respe ctiv e
municipalities and the board of
education for the year 19~2. Of
the grand total assessment of
$2,120,099 ,000
Mason County
received $44,443,300.
The grand total figure !s an increase of $107,907,100 from the 1979

'

!

l

I

'

a!'l;scssm cnts.

Kanawha

Couuty

received the largest apportionment
of $256 .756,600 folin wed by ll•rrison
with $134,629,BO O; Gr•nt with
$88,713 ,700 ; Putnam with $84,699,600
and Cabell with $75,997,800. The
smallest apportionment went to Wirt
County in the amount of $4 ,395,900.
Upon rece ipt of these values, the
&lt;'ounty cler~ ' will in turn certify the
apportionment of values to the
county boards of education and the
respective municipaliti es within
each county as per location.
These values. along with the

assessment by the county assessors.
will be used by the eount ~ courts.
boards of education and muniCipal
govrrnmenl~ ·in determinin g the
levy rates for the tax vear 198()..81.

After these rates are set. the state
audit nr 's .off irr

will

statements and bill each utility on or
ahout July 15, and upon receiving
pa) nwnt will distribut e thesr
monies back to the counties, boards
of educalion and re s pe cti Vt&gt;
llJUniripal governnwnt .

t' f'lmpute

FIELDS EXHIBIT
BEVERLY fiLLS, Calif. (AP ) The Academy of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences has mounted an
exhibition to celebrate the tOOth anniversary of the birth of the late

comedian W.C. Fields.
The centennial display will be on
view in the lobby of the academy's
Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly
Hills through April30.

OPEN DAILY 10·9: SUNDAY H
Ou r l lrm lnl en!lon 11 to hi.,. .VI')'

lciYtfiiUclllem II'IIIGCII. on OUf lhtiYII&amp; .
It tn tdre riiMd Item It not llll'-blt lor

FEATURED SPEAKER Eleanor Straug, R.N., Director of
Nursing Service!! at the Holzer
Medical Center, was the featured
speaker at the Seventh Annual
Appreciation Luncheon and
Meeltng of the Holzer Medleal
Center Volunteer Cbnplalns'
Assoeiation,

GALIJPOIJS - A Appreciation
LWlcheon honoring members of the
Holzer Medical Center Volunteer
Chaplains' Association, along with
their aMual meeting to elect officers, was held recently in the French Five Hundred Room at the
hospital.
Featured speaker was Eleanor
Strang, R.N., the hospital's Director
of Nursing Service at this Seventh
AMual event, attended by 50 persons and hosted by the Holzer
Medical Center.
Elected to a second term as the
chairperson of the organization was
the Rev. Donald Silverthorne, pastor
of the First Baptist Church in
Jackson.
.
Other officers re-elected included
Rev. Paul Daggett from Christ
Episcopal Church in Pt. Pleasant,
vice chairperson; Rev. Roger Parsons, Trinity Wesleyan Church of

SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT - Members of the quintet from the
Rio Grande College Grand Chorale who presented a "Singing Valentine"
to the members of the Volunteer Chaplains' Association and other guests
at their Seventh Annual Meeting in the French Five Hundred Room at the
hospital were, left to right, front row, Steffie Purcell, Dee Penn and Beth
Fuller ; back row, Matt Muller and Jack Trainer.

Oak Hill, secretary; Rev. Daphne
Resch, pastor of Little Kyger
Congregational Christian Church,
Rt. I, Cheshire, treasurer.
Elected to the position of clergy
representative to the executive committee was the Rev. Donald Walker
from Racine Baptist Church,
Racine.
Following the buffet luncheon,
Hugh P. 'Kirkel, president of the
Holzer Medical Center, welcomed
the guests and expressed the a)&gt;'
preciation of the entire hospital to
the Volunteer Chaplains for their
ministry to patients, their families
and loved ones, and the hospital
staff.
He recognized individually the
volunteer organists, past chairpersons of the Volunteer Chaplains'
Association, other volunteers and
hospital staff members in attendance.
Rev. Silverthorne introduced Mrs.
Strang who shared some of her

thoughts on the close association of
the nursing staff and the volunteer
chaplains in patient care. She commented that the chaplains in the
hospital help remind both the staff
and the patients that temples and
churches were the first hospitals for
those who were sick and dying, and
in addition, remind us of our roots.
Chaplains and pastors are part of
the healing process. Often this
process seems to be a mystery but
pastoral care can contribute
significantly to helping it happen.
Mrs. Strang said that healing can
take place witnout a "cure" in the
physical sense. Chaplain involvement plays a very important
role.
Chaplain-pastors help remind
other members of the healing team
that patients are always more than a
physical body. Their ministry of
presence symbolizes God and the
church and they are involved as well
in an association with other staff

View from the Statehouse
BY: STATEREPREljENTATIVE
RON JAMES
(()-PROCTORVILLE,
92ND HOUSE DISTRICT)
During this week's legislative activity, the Ohio Senate passed
legislation that will place an amendment to the Ohio Constitution on the
June 3, 19110, primary election ballot.
House Joint Resolution 60 proposes
that Ohio voters enact a new article
in the Ohio Constitution that would
ease the way for decent low and
moderate income housing,
Purpose of the proposed state constitutional amendment is to make

Wrestling .coach

featured speaker
MivDLEPORT - Jim Sheets
wrestling coach at Meigs High
School, was the guest speaker at the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Friday
night held at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport.
With Coach Sheets were two menr
bers of the learn, Dave Davis and
Charlie Stone. A question and answer period was held.
DiMer was served by the ladies of
the ~burch. Jack Walker, president,
prestded.

4-H News.

• •

Cadmll.'!l RedskinJ Pre-Teen met Feb. 11 at the
cadmus Grade School. Pam MWer preSided and
had charge of the program. Officere elected

were: preaident, Oeedra Walker; secretary, Jori
Salley; treasurer, Tina Hively; neWI reporter,
Brian Miller;
Ouisto Batley; hoallh
and safety, Brad Hively and vice president.
Shannon Belv111e. The next rneellq will be
MardllO at Cadmus School. Adviaon are Pam
Mlller and Pat EWoU. Memben praent were
Jori Batley, Shannan Belv111e~ B~ Mlllor,

....,..u..,,

Christa Bailey, Tina Hively, IJeedrl; Walker,
KeiUl Nichols.. D. J. Harden and Brad Hively.

Mrs. L.i.nda BaiJey wu a guest. Reporter ~ Brian
Miller.

Green HU!llers met Feb. $ at Fannera Home
Loon .W.. Bldg. hfike Ta,...y P""lded. l\alpll
Dil.an had ch.arge of the prognun. Mn. Jactie
Graham dlscuss&lt;d lhe j.ft ~pn&gt;j1&gt;octl. 0111elected were, Mike TawneY, pres dent; Carmah
naon_,, vice prt~~ldent ; secretary, Uaa Tawney;

treuurer, Jem McPhenon; recreatioo leader

Jola!ne Bartirnua; ...,.,nor, Stacy autior. 1110
nat meeting wW be Mardi 4 at PCA Bldg. J.d.
viaon: are Jackie Butler and Joyce Mckean.
Membe" pnlellt ...,. Stacy BuUer, Cannah
llovta, Coby llovta, Jollnny McK... , Colin
McKean, Ralph 1&gt;11011, Sheny Diloo, Joey Lone
Jerry Mcl'buriJn. . Nldcy llootor, Mldlaei
Slutes, Kimberly Slutes, Kttly Brownin&amp;
Jllalne Banlmua, Stacy B.vUrnua u.i
Tawney, Mike Ta"'''ly. Guest~ ~ wt:re
Joyce Bartlrnua, Bconle stuteo and Cud McPIIta_,,

a•

CodmuaRtdlldniTttn+-11 ClubmotPeb. lht
Codmlll SdJool~ Scott Wood, put prt11&lt;1en1, had
d the prosnm. Office" elected were
dent, Cbarlel Slawart · rice praldtnt, Scoti
ood; aecrtlary, Sulan EWoU; ntWI-r
Uaa Mllltt: treuunr, Lori Mlller; heoflh Mel
aafety, Joe Ferp110n.; revrutfan, Steve Baier.
The nllllt meetln&amp; will be at Cailrn111 lidlool Mal'
clllO. Advbon ..-e Mr. and Mn. Joclt MIUer and
Mr. and Mn. Glttl EUiott. Mtmben preaen1
were Lori Miller, ~om ln&amp;les. Robert Stanley
Sieve Baker, Suaan EUlolt, Marth. Sourlock'
Jerry Spurlo&lt;k, llAqer Spurloclt, BW Stanley'
JoM Baker, Scott I!IJlOJtt, Mart stanley,
Belv111o, Joe
Dovtd Jallnaon Jim ·
Ingles, steve Milllt, · ·Scott Wood, cba.rla
Slcwort. llell " - ' · ·Ancel Nelaon, ctru
!Uvely, Tom Inclol. Joe Boker. A gum P'....,t
was Steve Rolanda. - fWportl!r 1..1&amp;. Miller,

r-

Grtl·

,,

(

low-&lt;!ost financing available for the
rehabilitation and construction of
low and moderate income housing.
To effect this purpose, the state or
its cities and counties could borrow
money and issue bonds and notes in
order to provide loans to residentai
mortgage loan brokerage
businesses.
The General Assembly would ~
authorized to pass enabling
legislation to carry out the purpose
of H.J.R. 60 and to authorize the
issuance of revenue bonds by the
state or its cities and counties.
Money raised by taxation could not
be used to repay these bonds or
notes.
Presently, tbe Ohio Constitution
prohibits the state and local governments from lending aid and credit.
While there are some exceptions to
this rule, the state is not allowed to
sell tax-free bonds and notes to
finance private rehabilitation and
construction of low and moderate income housing.
H.J .R. 60 will allow needy Ohioans
to share the housing benefits
available to citizens in other states.
In 1977, 41 states had bonafide
state housing finance agencies. Under their staff constitutions, all were
able to issue tax-exempt housing

mortgage revenue bonds to reduce
housing costs for low and moderate
income persons. Ohio was not, and is
not, included among those states.
Moreover, in July, 1979, 13 states,
including Kentucky and West
Virginia, had the kind of legal
authorization required to assist
prospective
middle-income
homeowners to obtain state-assisted
reduced-interest mortgages through
private lending insitutions. Similar
legislation has been introduced in an
additional twelve states, exclusive
of Ohio.
The current economic situation,
with runaway inflation and high interest rates, has priced the majority
of the middle-class population out of
today's market for new housing.
House Joint Resolution 60 represents
an unwavering commitment by the
legislative leadership to resolve the
housing dilerruna that faces many
Ohjoans, without cost to taxpayers.
Furthermore, H.J.R. 60 represents a
cooprative effort by both government and free enterprise to meet the
needa of low and moderate income
Ohioans for decent housing.
If the resolution is ado~ted by a
majority of Ohio electors on June 3,
1980, the amendment would take immediate effect.

purchtM due lo eny untortM_,
rtaton , K rntrl wllll.. llt 1 Rain Che&lt;:tl
on rtoqU411 lor the mercl\endlu to M
purc htMd 11 the ule price whtMflf
.,llltble Or will Mil you I tOmPIIIblt
quality II em ell comjMrtble reducllorl
'" prlct . Our poUcy It
I our
c utlo men

Church of Jackson, re-elected chairperson; the
Reverend Daphne Resch of Little Congregational
Church, Cheshlre, re-elected Treasurer; the ReVerend
P~ul Daggett, Christ Episcopal Church, Pt. Pleasant,
re-elected Vice Chairperson; the Rev~rend Roger Pal'sons, Trinity Wesleyan Church, Oak Hill, Ohio, reelected Secretary.

CHAPLAIN OFFICERS - Officers for the coming
year, leading the Holzer Medical Center Volunteer
Chaplains' Association are, left to right, The Reverend
Donald Walker from Racine Baptist Church, Clergy
Representative to the Executive Conunittee· the
Reverend Donald Silverthorne from the First B~ptist

members tnat mc10aes bOtn gtvmg
and receiving.
Asurprise feature of the afternoon
program was the appearance of a
quintet from the Grande Chorale of
Rio Grande College, to present a
"Singing Valentine" to the chaplains
from the nursing staff of the
hospital.
During the annual business
meeting that followed the program,
an announcement was made that 14
new chaplains have joined the
association since the last annual
meeting. Rev. Silverthorne reported
on the work of the group during the
last year, expressing deep BJ&gt;'
preciation to the executive com-

mittee members and members of
the sub-committees for their
assistance in accomplishing the
organization's established goals.
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, Director of
the Chaplaincy Services at the
hospital, related the emphasis on
continuing education during the past
year.
Two outstanding seminars were
presented, one on preparation for ·
disaster counseling and the other on
ministry to the elderly.
In addition, a clergy consultation
group ·under the direction of Robert
Huestis, M.D., and the continuing
use of Care Cassettes have been an
important part of the association's

further professional growth.
•
A questionnaire on possible future
topics for continuing education
seminars was distributed by Rev.
Robert McGee who chairs the Continuing Education Committee, to
aSllist the conunittee in tlieir plans
for the cominl! vear.

YOUr
GOOd
•

NeigHBOr
'C. K. Snowden
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446-4290

NOTICE

The one to see for all your
family insurance needs.

Dr. G. Randolph Hand will be closing his
practice of internal medicine
in the State
•
•
of Ohio, effective March 31, 1980. Records
will continue to be available at 12 State
Street, Gallipolis, OH. after that date.

Area squads busy
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered three
calls Friday.
At 11:30 p.m., the unit went.to the
office ol Dr. James Conde for Kenneth Hawk who was taken to Holzer
Medica Center.
The squad went to MUlberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, at 1:50 p.m. for Arvel
Mohler, who was dead upoil ~e
arrival of the unit. Mr. Mohler
reportedly suffered a heart attack
while driving his truck in Pomeroy.
He had pulled to the side of the street
when he became IlL
At 3:28 p.m., the squad was called
for WUUam Clonch, 930 Logan St.
Clonch who was choking on food was
treated on the scene.

The Rutland Emergency Squad
wu called to Mine I ol the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. at ~:35 p.m. Friday for
Raf!\h -~ Pomeroy, who had
~lved ali electrical shock. He was
taken tO Holzer Medical Center. At
10:26 p.m. the Rutland unit was
called for Naomi Bentley, Rutland,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital.

li!1 A

Good 'Niighbor,

$1111 , , ,

11 The,.
State Farm Insurance Companies

Home Offi ces: 91oomlntton, Illinois

p

ALPHO PHOTO OF MONTH - This picture of the Tu-Endie-Wei
Park monument shot by ALPHO photographer John Cooper in near-zero
temperatures with a Grafiex camera using tri-x film at shutter speed of
one-two hundredths of a second and aperature opening 116. .

7302.1

$:34 p.m; Friday for Richard
Wlnebrermer who was taken to the
HOlzer Medical Center.

PR.

'lourAeg.
78 '

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The Pomeroy Emergency Squad

answered a call to We3t Main St., at

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. A+-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, SWiday, March 2, 19110

A-4- The SWlday Times-Sentinel, SWlday. !\larch t. 1980

Mason County given $44,443,300 checl. :

Chaplains honored at appreciation banque1

PT. PLEASANT - West Virginia State Auditor Glen B.
Gainer, Jr. has announced that
his office has 'llailed to the county
clerks of each county · the apportionment of values of public
utility property located within each
count~
the
respe ctiv e
municipalities and the board of
education for the year 19~2. Of
the grand total assessment of
$2,120,099 ,000
Mason County
received $44,443,300.
The grand total figure !s an increase of $107,907,100 from the 1979

'

!

l

I

'

a!'l;scssm cnts.

Kanawha

Couuty

received the largest apportionment
of $256 .756,600 folin wed by ll•rrison
with $134,629,BO O; Gr•nt with
$88,713 ,700 ; Putnam with $84,699,600
and Cabell with $75,997,800. The
smallest apportionment went to Wirt
County in the amount of $4 ,395,900.
Upon rece ipt of these values, the
&lt;'ounty cler~ ' will in turn certify the
apportionment of values to the
county boards of education and the
respective municipaliti es within
each county as per location.
These values. along with the

assessment by the county assessors.
will be used by the eount ~ courts.
boards of education and muniCipal
govrrnmenl~ ·in determinin g the
levy rates for the tax vear 198()..81.

After these rates are set. the state
audit nr 's .off irr

will

statements and bill each utility on or
ahout July 15, and upon receiving
pa) nwnt will distribut e thesr
monies back to the counties, boards
of educalion and re s pe cti Vt&gt;
llJUniripal governnwnt .

t' f'lmpute

FIELDS EXHIBIT
BEVERLY fiLLS, Calif. (AP ) The Academy of Motion Picture Arts
and Sciences has mounted an
exhibition to celebrate the tOOth anniversary of the birth of the late

comedian W.C. Fields.
The centennial display will be on
view in the lobby of the academy's
Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly
Hills through April30.

OPEN DAILY 10·9: SUNDAY H
Ou r l lrm lnl en!lon 11 to hi.,. .VI')'

lciYtfiiUclllem II'IIIGCII. on OUf lhtiYII&amp; .
It tn tdre riiMd Item It not llll'-blt lor

FEATURED SPEAKER Eleanor Straug, R.N., Director of
Nursing Service!! at the Holzer
Medical Center, was the featured
speaker at the Seventh Annual
Appreciation Luncheon and
Meeltng of the Holzer Medleal
Center Volunteer Cbnplalns'
Assoeiation,

GALIJPOIJS - A Appreciation
LWlcheon honoring members of the
Holzer Medical Center Volunteer
Chaplains' Association, along with
their aMual meeting to elect officers, was held recently in the French Five Hundred Room at the
hospital.
Featured speaker was Eleanor
Strang, R.N., the hospital's Director
of Nursing Service at this Seventh
AMual event, attended by 50 persons and hosted by the Holzer
Medical Center.
Elected to a second term as the
chairperson of the organization was
the Rev. Donald Silverthorne, pastor
of the First Baptist Church in
Jackson.
.
Other officers re-elected included
Rev. Paul Daggett from Christ
Episcopal Church in Pt. Pleasant,
vice chairperson; Rev. Roger Parsons, Trinity Wesleyan Church of

SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT - Members of the quintet from the
Rio Grande College Grand Chorale who presented a "Singing Valentine"
to the members of the Volunteer Chaplains' Association and other guests
at their Seventh Annual Meeting in the French Five Hundred Room at the
hospital were, left to right, front row, Steffie Purcell, Dee Penn and Beth
Fuller ; back row, Matt Muller and Jack Trainer.

Oak Hill, secretary; Rev. Daphne
Resch, pastor of Little Kyger
Congregational Christian Church,
Rt. I, Cheshire, treasurer.
Elected to the position of clergy
representative to the executive committee was the Rev. Donald Walker
from Racine Baptist Church,
Racine.
Following the buffet luncheon,
Hugh P. 'Kirkel, president of the
Holzer Medical Center, welcomed
the guests and expressed the a)&gt;'
preciation of the entire hospital to
the Volunteer Chaplains for their
ministry to patients, their families
and loved ones, and the hospital
staff.
He recognized individually the
volunteer organists, past chairpersons of the Volunteer Chaplains'
Association, other volunteers and
hospital staff members in attendance.
Rev. Silverthorne introduced Mrs.
Strang who shared some of her

thoughts on the close association of
the nursing staff and the volunteer
chaplains in patient care. She commented that the chaplains in the
hospital help remind both the staff
and the patients that temples and
churches were the first hospitals for
those who were sick and dying, and
in addition, remind us of our roots.
Chaplains and pastors are part of
the healing process. Often this
process seems to be a mystery but
pastoral care can contribute
significantly to helping it happen.
Mrs. Strang said that healing can
take place witnout a "cure" in the
physical sense. Chaplain involvement plays a very important
role.
Chaplain-pastors help remind
other members of the healing team
that patients are always more than a
physical body. Their ministry of
presence symbolizes God and the
church and they are involved as well
in an association with other staff

View from the Statehouse
BY: STATEREPREljENTATIVE
RON JAMES
(()-PROCTORVILLE,
92ND HOUSE DISTRICT)
During this week's legislative activity, the Ohio Senate passed
legislation that will place an amendment to the Ohio Constitution on the
June 3, 19110, primary election ballot.
House Joint Resolution 60 proposes
that Ohio voters enact a new article
in the Ohio Constitution that would
ease the way for decent low and
moderate income housing,
Purpose of the proposed state constitutional amendment is to make

Wrestling .coach

featured speaker
MivDLEPORT - Jim Sheets
wrestling coach at Meigs High
School, was the guest speaker at the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Friday
night held at the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport.
With Coach Sheets were two menr
bers of the learn, Dave Davis and
Charlie Stone. A question and answer period was held.
DiMer was served by the ladies of
the ~burch. Jack Walker, president,
prestded.

4-H News.

• •

Cadmll.'!l RedskinJ Pre-Teen met Feb. 11 at the
cadmus Grade School. Pam MWer preSided and
had charge of the program. Officere elected

were: preaident, Oeedra Walker; secretary, Jori
Salley; treasurer, Tina Hively; neWI reporter,
Brian Miller;
Ouisto Batley; hoallh
and safety, Brad Hively and vice president.
Shannon Belv111e. The next rneellq will be
MardllO at Cadmus School. Adviaon are Pam
Mlller and Pat EWoU. Memben praent were
Jori Batley, Shannan Belv111e~ B~ Mlllor,

....,..u..,,

Christa Bailey, Tina Hively, IJeedrl; Walker,
KeiUl Nichols.. D. J. Harden and Brad Hively.

Mrs. L.i.nda BaiJey wu a guest. Reporter ~ Brian
Miller.

Green HU!llers met Feb. $ at Fannera Home
Loon .W.. Bldg. hfike Ta,...y P""lded. l\alpll
Dil.an had ch.arge of the prognun. Mn. Jactie
Graham dlscuss&lt;d lhe j.ft ~pn&gt;j1&gt;octl. 0111elected were, Mike TawneY, pres dent; Carmah
naon_,, vice prt~~ldent ; secretary, Uaa Tawney;

treuurer, Jem McPhenon; recreatioo leader

Jola!ne Bartirnua; ...,.,nor, Stacy autior. 1110
nat meeting wW be Mardi 4 at PCA Bldg. J.d.
viaon: are Jackie Butler and Joyce Mckean.
Membe" pnlellt ...,. Stacy BuUer, Cannah
llovta, Coby llovta, Jollnny McK... , Colin
McKean, Ralph 1&gt;11011, Sheny Diloo, Joey Lone
Jerry Mcl'buriJn. . Nldcy llootor, Mldlaei
Slutes, Kimberly Slutes, Kttly Brownin&amp;
Jllalne Banlmua, Stacy B.vUrnua u.i
Tawney, Mike Ta"'''ly. Guest~ ~ wt:re
Joyce Bartlrnua, Bconle stuteo and Cud McPIIta_,,

a•

CodmuaRtdlldniTttn+-11 ClubmotPeb. lht
Codmlll SdJool~ Scott Wood, put prt11&lt;1en1, had
d the prosnm. Office" elected were
dent, Cbarlel Slawart · rice praldtnt, Scoti
ood; aecrtlary, Sulan EWoU; ntWI-r
Uaa Mllltt: treuunr, Lori Mlller; heoflh Mel
aafety, Joe Ferp110n.; revrutfan, Steve Baier.
The nllllt meetln&amp; will be at Cailrn111 lidlool Mal'
clllO. Advbon ..-e Mr. and Mn. Joclt MIUer and
Mr. and Mn. Glttl EUiott. Mtmben preaen1
were Lori Miller, ~om ln&amp;les. Robert Stanley
Sieve Baker, Suaan EUlolt, Marth. Sourlock'
Jerry Spurlo&lt;k, llAqer Spurloclt, BW Stanley'
JoM Baker, Scott I!IJlOJtt, Mart stanley,
Belv111o, Joe
Dovtd Jallnaon Jim ·
Ingles, steve Milllt, · ·Scott Wood, cba.rla
Slcwort. llell " - ' · ·Ancel Nelaon, ctru
!Uvely, Tom Inclol. Joe Boker. A gum P'....,t
was Steve Rolanda. - fWportl!r 1..1&amp;. Miller,

r-

Grtl·

,,

(

low-&lt;!ost financing available for the
rehabilitation and construction of
low and moderate income housing.
To effect this purpose, the state or
its cities and counties could borrow
money and issue bonds and notes in
order to provide loans to residentai
mortgage loan brokerage
businesses.
The General Assembly would ~
authorized to pass enabling
legislation to carry out the purpose
of H.J.R. 60 and to authorize the
issuance of revenue bonds by the
state or its cities and counties.
Money raised by taxation could not
be used to repay these bonds or
notes.
Presently, tbe Ohio Constitution
prohibits the state and local governments from lending aid and credit.
While there are some exceptions to
this rule, the state is not allowed to
sell tax-free bonds and notes to
finance private rehabilitation and
construction of low and moderate income housing.
H.J .R. 60 will allow needy Ohioans
to share the housing benefits
available to citizens in other states.
In 1977, 41 states had bonafide
state housing finance agencies. Under their staff constitutions, all were
able to issue tax-exempt housing

mortgage revenue bonds to reduce
housing costs for low and moderate
income persons. Ohio was not, and is
not, included among those states.
Moreover, in July, 1979, 13 states,
including Kentucky and West
Virginia, had the kind of legal
authorization required to assist
prospective
middle-income
homeowners to obtain state-assisted
reduced-interest mortgages through
private lending insitutions. Similar
legislation has been introduced in an
additional twelve states, exclusive
of Ohio.
The current economic situation,
with runaway inflation and high interest rates, has priced the majority
of the middle-class population out of
today's market for new housing.
House Joint Resolution 60 represents
an unwavering commitment by the
legislative leadership to resolve the
housing dilerruna that faces many
Ohjoans, without cost to taxpayers.
Furthermore, H.J.R. 60 represents a
cooprative effort by both government and free enterprise to meet the
needa of low and moderate income
Ohioans for decent housing.
If the resolution is ado~ted by a
majority of Ohio electors on June 3,
1980, the amendment would take immediate effect.

purchtM due lo eny untortM_,
rtaton , K rntrl wllll.. llt 1 Rain Che&lt;:tl
on rtoqU411 lor the mercl\endlu to M
purc htMd 11 the ule price whtMflf
.,llltble Or will Mil you I tOmPIIIblt
quality II em ell comjMrtble reducllorl
'" prlct . Our poUcy It
I our
c utlo men

Church of Jackson, re-elected chairperson; the
Reverend Daphne Resch of Little Congregational
Church, Cheshlre, re-elected Treasurer; the ReVerend
P~ul Daggett, Christ Episcopal Church, Pt. Pleasant,
re-elected Vice Chairperson; the Rev~rend Roger Pal'sons, Trinity Wesleyan Church, Oak Hill, Ohio, reelected Secretary.

CHAPLAIN OFFICERS - Officers for the coming
year, leading the Holzer Medical Center Volunteer
Chaplains' Association are, left to right, The Reverend
Donald Walker from Racine Baptist Church, Clergy
Representative to the Executive Conunittee· the
Reverend Donald Silverthorne from the First B~ptist

members tnat mc10aes bOtn gtvmg
and receiving.
Asurprise feature of the afternoon
program was the appearance of a
quintet from the Grande Chorale of
Rio Grande College, to present a
"Singing Valentine" to the chaplains
from the nursing staff of the
hospital.
During the annual business
meeting that followed the program,
an announcement was made that 14
new chaplains have joined the
association since the last annual
meeting. Rev. Silverthorne reported
on the work of the group during the
last year, expressing deep BJ&gt;'
preciation to the executive com-

mittee members and members of
the sub-committees for their
assistance in accomplishing the
organization's established goals.
Rev. Arthur C. Lund, Director of
the Chaplaincy Services at the
hospital, related the emphasis on
continuing education during the past
year.
Two outstanding seminars were
presented, one on preparation for ·
disaster counseling and the other on
ministry to the elderly.
In addition, a clergy consultation
group ·under the direction of Robert
Huestis, M.D., and the continuing
use of Care Cassettes have been an
important part of the association's

further professional growth.
•
A questionnaire on possible future
topics for continuing education
seminars was distributed by Rev.
Robert McGee who chairs the Continuing Education Committee, to
aSllist the conunittee in tlieir plans
for the cominl! vear.

YOUr
GOOd
•

NeigHBOr
'C. K. Snowden
417 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446-4290

NOTICE

The one to see for all your
family insurance needs.

Dr. G. Randolph Hand will be closing his
practice of internal medicine
in the State
•
•
of Ohio, effective March 31, 1980. Records
will continue to be available at 12 State
Street, Gallipolis, OH. after that date.

Area squads busy
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered three
calls Friday.
At 11:30 p.m., the unit went.to the
office ol Dr. James Conde for Kenneth Hawk who was taken to Holzer
Medica Center.
The squad went to MUlberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, at 1:50 p.m. for Arvel
Mohler, who was dead upoil ~e
arrival of the unit. Mr. Mohler
reportedly suffered a heart attack
while driving his truck in Pomeroy.
He had pulled to the side of the street
when he became IlL
At 3:28 p.m., the squad was called
for WUUam Clonch, 930 Logan St.
Clonch who was choking on food was
treated on the scene.

The Rutland Emergency Squad
wu called to Mine I ol the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. at ~:35 p.m. Friday for
Raf!\h -~ Pomeroy, who had
~lved ali electrical shock. He was
taken tO Holzer Medical Center. At
10:26 p.m. the Rutland unit was
called for Naomi Bentley, Rutland,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital.

li!1 A

Good 'Niighbor,

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State Farm Insurance Companies

Home Offi ces: 91oomlntton, Illinois

p

ALPHO PHOTO OF MONTH - This picture of the Tu-Endie-Wei
Park monument shot by ALPHO photographer John Cooper in near-zero
temperatures with a Grafiex camera using tri-x film at shutter speed of
one-two hundredths of a second and aperature opening 116. .

7302.1

$:34 p.m; Friday for Richard
Wlnebrermer who was taken to the
HOlzer Medical Center.

PR.

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Clow-Up ' dnlgn wi th $011.
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ihlli!JI •~~11111 L.h'lfl o.l: 0111111

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tr. 7

"a. Ftom 1M . , •'

Agricultural Ume

Elghl economical wipln~ cloths per
' each .
oackage. Disposable . 2

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Onl!ol fli" mb11•~«'lt~ t~ 111111111 ( 1\1111' 1h l11i,... "' w w• •'' &gt;&lt;~¥1''
filw~ ("n'll"vtr 11nn~ hl!lhl~h! 'ttlo! &lt;Jrorplv pad~ :~~·~ 1 ""d
hU(~

'lourReg.
. PKGS.
56' pkg.

of free crvslals lor the Ire·
~quencles ot your chOice.
So oet on the receMng end.
A Beorcat Crystal Sconner.
Plus, free crystals In 1he bar·
gain. '.~sit our sconner dlsploy
soon. Don't fool around untll
Al&gt;llllst.

aa~A.

3

ar.

.

~POi.ls, OHIO

f'lm•

'40 !JC.4Socket Set
Our

\

,'I•" &amp;

..

Reg. 24.B8 ' .

'
3/B''·Drlve, t\)mbl(lation

metric and SAE wrenches.
~

'l!~,

.·

Sr:nall, Hand-held LCD
8-digit Calculator ,
Fjeadout calct:ilator with memory,
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50 cartridges, .

�A·7- The Sunday Ttmes.S.ntinel. Sunday. March 2, 1980

Preliminary hearing dates scheduled
r, AI.LIPOLIS

The govenunent would like to
count heads !hill year and the 1980
census will begin at the end of March
when you will receive a questionnaire In the mail.
You will be given a postage-paid
envelope to mail the questionnaire in
about April!.

Up Racine way, SP-4 James
Holman, who has been serving in
. Korea for the past year, is home on a
:l(klay leave with his wife, Denise,
his mother, Mrs. Jacob Holman and
other relatives and friends.
Jinuny is wrapping up his three
years in the anny and has reenlisted
for a six year hitch. Upon the completion of his leave, he'll be going to
. Camp Polk, La.

The Meigs edition; we find, is a dandy reference volwne.
The Gal!ia County Historical
Society is in charge of the compilation. There is no charge for the
family histories being printed as
long as they fall under 500 words and
one picture is permitted free of
charge with each family history.

I know Saturday's snow was
enough to discourage you, but just
think, a miracle has taken place.
Sohio lowered the price of gasoline
three cents a gallon - Incredible!
Now just which government will
move to pick that up in taxes? You
keep smiling.

- Preliminary*
hearings for two Pl. Pleasant
residents charged with trafficking in
drugs were set for March 5 Friday in
Gallipolis Municipal Court. Bond for
each was set at $5,000.
One other case was continued in
Judge James A. Bennett's Court
Friday.
Guy E. Bing, 63, Middleport,
requested time to !Ill'""'" nttorn(W on

•

~harge

of DWI. Bond was set at

$500.

Sheriff appointee seeking reelection

·and would like to hear from anyone
who might know some background
Info on the Don Huggins family. If
you can help, contact Mrs. Dowdy.
. A Gallia Cowtty History Book,
quite similar to the one recently
completed in Meigs County, is being
jmnplled with March 30 set as the
deadline for Gallia Countians to
Write their history and submit them
for publication in the book.
The Meigs books is great, attractive and well done, so I hope that
Gallia Countians do get involved and
~me up with a comparable volume.

CLARENCE E. BOSTER
GALLIPOLIS - Clarence Edward
Boster, 66, Rt. 3, GalliPolis, died
· Friday in the Holzer Medical Center.
He was a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School..a veteran of
WorldWarDanda farmer.
He was the son of the late Charles
E. and Emma Boster and a member
of the First United Presbyterian
Church, Gallipolis.
Survivors include his wife, Helen

Have II set In the spring.
small down payment.

We have. many more memorials.
Up to 30% Discount

Write for booklet showing memorials.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

VINTON,O.

POMEROY,O.

Jam~s

Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.

o. Bush, Mgr .
Ph. 388·8603

Ph. 9t2-2S88

, COLO'\' · .
•

lhj t J i f , .

Tonight thru Thursday
March 6th

COOKWARE

FEATUREDTHISWEEK

2-0t. Covered .,1y
Saucepan °

WITH COUPON
ON LEFT PAGE

tiiO , iALitii1AU.1n.n

.U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

~~~··t n'Lively

THOROFARE

5 FLAVORS

HICKORY SMOKED

Fresh Whole Frying

2%
Milk

Yogurt

GOLDEN CRISP

Sliced
Bacon

Chicken Legs

'

PLASTIC GALLON

Family Pak
8to 12-Legs

CHICKEN
DRUMSTICKS •••.••••••
IIG0•1·lb.Can

2_

·,

Peas &amp;Carrots ••• ~ for

~•Jmollve

.&amp;

.

pi &amp;

2
$ ...
M_ixed. Veget~bles ~for . .&amp;
•15-oz. Can
t• .
$

VIG·AU •1-111, C.

Kidney B•ans ••••

THOIOFARtoSIIcttl Oi WhOU.

.

'llfOROIAII•Whole1·1b.Cail

Peeled Tomatoes

I

IHOROFARI

PICKLES

for

~~~~~~~~~M

$ ....

·~ for .

:.'·~ •

"

• loltlt .

1:

' ~

.·

.•,.

•

CARNATION

68C

SWANSON

68

CHUNK CHtCICEH • , • , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , •• , , , f ·o&amp;. Can

:.&amp;

C

.~

SWISS MISS

Ill HALF

~~~NTtiYSTYLi

$ 129

CINTIR Cur

PORK LOIN ROAST •••••• lb.

HI•••"
4Pack
PUDDINGS ........................... 1.1•01. Cano

SPARE RIBS ............. lb.

KELLOGG'S

IAISIN NAN atlll •••• , ••• , • , , • , •• • • • , , •••• • , , ,

•

PORK ROAST..... , ...... lb.

99c

.25·01.
Trial Size

CORONET FACIALS ... ................ .

l'

$169
-

.::=.c:o:.
...

VARIIn

PORK CHOPS .,.,,..,._ •• lb.
•

BACK RIBS .............. lb.

IUnll :

~~::~~.

0 •• 0 •••••••••••••••••••••

$119 JUMIO

-

$

.

Hot Dogs • • II·••· Pkg. -Beef Franks ....... , .. :·~~· 1!!
1·10. $329
Hoi Dogs • e 1' 1 ~' PkI• $149
Dinner Franks .•.•.... "•· GfNUINI
"
$ n

MUI.,IIIf

c

Wieners

511 Cia

M..Ct.loa

DINNER BELL

-

ORTEGA
M&amp;M CANDIES
o, o •• , o o. •o ,,, •••••• , •• o. •o oltU-oa.hl

TACOIUTI, ••••••• •• , •• ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, P·oa,,kl •

JlAINC)I'" ..NUT,

A-1 STEAK SAUCE ••••••••••• ~..... .... $J28
-

00 8
a am ll••·$169 IMOKID
It"· $1ft
Fashion Loaf ... "•·
Ham Slices .......... ·"•· -

BUnER BASTED

3to 7-lb.

Boneless "•e· $ ,. 'Z!l.
Turkeys .lb. ~ .
All8oneao Neck, TaU, Wings &amp; Giblets Removed, lolled &amp; Netted.

•t.a9

99
$1 69
Kielbasa or Smoked Sausage .•. , .. ,.,~&gt;.
•
$2
·
Medium Sharp Colby Wedge, .• ,, ....• I~.
79
99
Semi-Boneless Ham Portions.,,,. , .• , •.. ,

IAISH

.

Sea Trout Fillets ..

I

•••••••• I

$ 2l
-

1

•

JUU t COOkfD 5MOII:lD

.
lb .

BOB EVANS FARMS

.

.

C

lb.

.

Ci'LEil"cAaa'Aol, ...•...... ·"·49c

ENLoiv!'Oi'lscAROLE ••••••• ~ •.

...... CMIP

CANOf •

•

.

CELERY HEARTS., •..••• , ••• ,,. 1 5 ~c .CANADA MINTS., .......... ,;..

39c
9C
6

,C· •won • iuou
· •·
$1 A!
9
3
6
NEW RED POTATOES.;.....
....
CANTALOUPE..................
·
..

STEVE MARTIN~

...,.,,{, .• u.•; NO.\ .,.:; "·• •·

1hej~

'

'

•'

HOWARD (PETE) VANMATRE
MASON - Howard (Pete) VanMatre, 65, Mason, died Friday at
Pleasant Hospital.
He was born Dec. 18, 1914 in West
Columbia. the son of the late Harry
and Grace Kerwood VanMatre.
A World War II veteran, he was a
member of the International Union
of Operating Engineers Local of
Charleston 132 B for 38 years 1111d
worked primarily on construction.
He was a member of SmithCapehart Post 140 American Legion
of New Haven and a fonner member
of the Mason Town Council.
One brother, a sister and gran G.
daughter preceded him in death.
Surv.ivin g are his wife June
VanMatre ; one son, George Ray
VanMatre, Mason ; two daughters,
Mrs. Carolyn A. Roush, Mason, and
Mrs Joan A. Huffman, Middleport,
Ohio; fiv e sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth
Johnson, Columbus, Ohio, Mrs.
Betty VanDenDolweert, Toledo,
Ohio, Mrs. Alice Jackson, Maumee,
Ohio, Mrs. Norma Jackson, Eureka,
Ohio, and Mrs. Dorothy Whited,
Sissonsville; two brothers, Richafd
T.. Belleville. W.Va., and George D.,
Columbus; and seven grandchildren.
·
. S..rvices will be held at I: 30 p.m.
Monday at the Foglesong Funeraf
Home with the Rev. George Hoscluir
and Dr. John Wildman officiating.
Burial will be .in Graham Cemethry.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 3 p.m. today.
·
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions be made to
the Mason Fire Department or
Mason Rescue Squad.

OLIVER WOODRUFF
GALLIPOUS - Oliver Wendell
Woodruff, 70, a resident of Lancaster Methodist Campground, di~
Friday at his home. He was born in
Vinton County, son of the late ErneSt
and Agnes White Woodruff.
·'
He was a retired conductor with
the C and 0 Railroad. He was a
member of Brotherhood of Railrolid
Trainmen, the Good Fellowship Cllij&gt;
in Lancaster Mt. Zion United
Methodist Church.
He Is survived by his wife, FeJ'11
and two daughters: Mrs. Willlain
(Gwen) Horton, Columbus, and MrS.
Lee (Nina) Upperman, Pleasan(Vi!te; five grandchildren, four grea'~­
grandchildren, one brother and four
sisters. Several nieces and nephews
survive.
He was preceded In death by one
''
daughter, Valorie Jt!an.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at the Mt. Zion Unife4
Methodist Church, Lancaster, · will)
Rev. David Moody &lt;ificlattns.
Burial will be In Franklin Hill
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Owa~
R. Spence Funeral Home, c8nal
· Winchester. Friends who wish rna-!
contribute to the Mt. Zion Unlted
Methodist Church Building Fund or ·
the Lancaster Campground Davis
Auditorium Fund.

•

COUN11 LINI

0

C

p.m. Monday at the Hobson Church
of Christ in Christian Union with the
Rev. Keith Eblin officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call at .the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Sunday and until 12:30 p.m.
Monday when the body will be taken
to the church.

DINNIIIILL

SLICED BOLOGNA IIOUUIOitltiN •••• • ••
. SLICED BE!P BOLOGNA IIGUli.IOIIIIIN ••

CRUNCHY FRESH-LARGI SIZI

'

$1

C

PORK BREAKFAST STRIPS .•..•• . ••.••.•.. .' • .. -"·" ·"•· 1 1,49
, BEEF IREAKFASTSTRIPS ......... : ..... , .•..• ""·"•· 1 I ,49

39
DELICIOUS APPLES ••••
9
9
C
MUS.HROOMS ••••• n-oz:,.,, , ·
GREEN PEPPERS ••••• I. 59

.WHITE BUTTON

u,.

OSCAR MAYER

WASHINGTON STATE
EXTRA FANCY-GOLDEN

never dreamed he wn
lllo,lecl.

•••••••• I

MEAT WIENERS.,,., •• , •• o .. . , o • • , . , , • • • • • • • • • 1·"·"11 1. 11,69
BEEF FRANKS. o••• o ••••• • •• o o. o o•• , . o o •• o: •• •·1•. ~'~~• · 1 1.89

lb.

,

Lamb

SM~LLCASING

lot.

. .

oi ·IO· "•· . , . , ,

1 • • • • • 1 • • • • •' ·" · "• ·

8PPIIiSTEAK W/GREEN PEPPERS ••••• • .. ; •••• ; .

~9.2v£~~~J.~....... ,~ .... ,.. ,...... ,14~1. $1.!@
,I!Y,~Y!.DCAliOOO ... ... ,..... , •, ... ,.... O. I~l.Cin 20C

IHOIOIAB

1 •59

Ring BOlogna nctiJLo\IOiouuc ••••••••••••••• " · • 1.89
Ring Liver .•.• ·...••••••••.•.•.•••••••••. •1.19
Sliced Lunch Meat .,.,,..,,. .......... , ' ·10·"•· 1 1.69
Sliced Bacon •rouluOITNio: ••

• • • • •• , • , , •• , , , o•• , •• , o, U.I·Oio C.n

SEEDLESS RAISINS., •••••••• , 1~-o~....
CLOROX BLEACH

LegO'
GOLDEN STAR BY ARMOUR

HGuU101nus11u . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.,. •

J!t&gt;AI:i$i~·RY . ST!IAK WITH.GRAVY, •••••••••:.;.: ••1 ,.,.1 ,.,t~i"'i:~I:•c~:,

·22c
88c
$J78 ~!£2~.~~~~ ..... --.... :=~~:i~·:::· 3 '" $1
-

FROZEN IMPORTED NEW ZEALAND

-

. Beef Wlan•riiiO.OiniAI•U-.-.-'- •• - ••

Sliced Bologna
$149
Kulbassy .............. 10. $ 1•t
11-or.
_
or Pic•
· Sllce d 1aeon ............'·10,.· 1"'CI• Loaf
k d•......
S I I "•·

.

-

GRAVY &amp; DRESSING ••••• ,.;, •• ••• • • •t.t...,,,..

1
YET
S
DOG fOOD - J Ylrittltt

-

en

' (Ptlck•tMI for ... , or Mlcf'oweve _,.,.,,

~··Cit. Jir $1

$1 S9

Chic"
Parts ·
Family
Pa•
lb.· ·49~

·'·1. .t.
; Iotti•

~,IN~

I

Beel Patty Mix

TOMATO
CATSUP
..

88

$ J!

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED .

MIAI .. IIII

SUNRISE
INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••••••••••••••

$1J!

GENUINE SPRING

3-lbs. Or' Mora

..

ICE CREAM

£~Q~~2~u~~J~J',~~L~~.~~, ........... 11·•• 1o1

PORTION

~;: lb.'Z.Z9

1

... ·'"·
· Avg.

CUT rREEINTO CHOPS, ROASTS OR" Any Way You Pref•r"

liB

PORK LOIN ROAST ••••• ·'"·

-

14 to 17-lb.

2S·Cil . ICit

"

'~
~s
.&amp;·~

Pork
Loins
',

$1!!

BROUGHTON .
v, -Gal.
Ctn.

ARMOUR tc STAR IIERI-BEST PORK

FRESH WHOLE

'

.LOIH PORTION

Tetley .

MANY MORE lnMS CAN IE FOUND ON DI$PLAY
AT EAOt THOROFARE. HURRY WHILE SALE IS
STILL IN PROGRISS. ·

lb.

lb.

Boast

INSTANT
Moho
NON·FAT DRY MILK ...... , ... . ............ 20 Ouarll

.. .. .. • . . . .. . . . . .. . .. . . ll·o1.Jar

1-lb.
Pkg.

Pork Loin

~!

,

JJC

BONUS
BUY

ARMOUR u STAR VERI-BEST PORK

• KOSHIR DILLS
• POLISH DILLS ..... . ....... l2·ol. Jar

for

2

"I

.,

3 ·. $ :l'
Z

.Pot~toes 1·1b.ean -4

..
liOOID DISH ()ITIRGENT

$ ...

He wa 1 ~ black ·
sharect:OPPtr 1 son who

0

0

••

0

0

•

0 ••

0 ••

0 •••• •

0

lhl. ,.,,, 1
11·1)1:, , . ,.

1

1.49
1.59

·$ .. S9

L1nk.s • • 12-oz.P.,.~

Area honor roll ··
•• i

. ' Soulhweslem High Scimlllm1liUICOI! Ill~ ·
roll'
.
.1
Seventh grade - Michael BaUey, 8edl;f
Battler, JeffBurleson, Uaa Cochran, Debra Darnell, William Edwards, Greg 11a11. Rbondtr lfam.
monel, Brt!lllanisoa, Jom """'· Tncoy Hill!,
Mary Nlda, SO!ven PeUrey, 'MllclleU Self.,.,
RoosldSaunde!'l, TomSava£1!.
Elihtb srade - Kim Amlwoocl, T8m,y Ball,
Sharon Amlwooll, Tina Bosllc, Joy Bur~
Bl1anna Cochran, Eric C.lnel, Troy Danlela,·
steTollammood, Brenda Hoover, Cbris Jell.....,
Kenny Kiser, Randy l.oyton, Poul Lehman, Del&gt;,
by M&lt;Cariney, Tammy M~ulre, David Nl&lt;ll;l
KalhY Saunders, RusHII SaWidm, UndilI
Sourfoct~ Judy S1anley, Angle Thornton, Carrie
~alker.. rwger Weill.
. .. ~
Ninlh grade" Michele Caae, JallellaU, l!obe,...
Ia Halley, Leda llammood, Leon Hammoacl,
llon1lj- !fa'IIIIYDI Jtu111 Hill, Palrlcla lAil1iaU

~~.EII&lt;IRSivap,SOoj&amp;WIIIIImo,~
'I'II&gt;U&gt;sracle-T..... ~S&amp;ral&gt; ·· 'fi
.

~ Bubr, Sieve Fqey, U.. Green,
Joilklno, ~ . ~. Datma Sbato,
'
staruey,Keiat Walker.
·
Eieventll llftldo -Todd ~er, Jay~
Pam IJonMU, Llnda- Edwardo, · ~
Fa-y, Jeff Gilbert, lion llamaland, ftocv

Spurlack.

.

Twetlllt grade - Slt!ve ~ Marleae
Balu!r, Tarnl Bollllc, Dwoyne Forpy, 8ondrl
bolley, Dana Jtlfen, Walle Miller, r .... Neol,
Sherman POIIer, HuileU Spurlock.

at .

Ronald E. Paxton, Principal·
Hannan Trace li:lementary Schcioi•.
would Ulte to announc'e the •fourth
six-weeks honor roll• • All ·. capli
represent all A's.
.

·!

.
~

~ '

a..:..u. v.-.4

Fourib Grade - Anlrea·
I MitcheU, Kent . Seuftderl,

r;rt: .

Dillon,
RIOIARD

G""' --

a-·-

J

Flflb
Do... llallo1,
Callly Lore, 1'um!u .....
Grode - Dopln
Ullo lllu,
Julie Dillon, Evelp - . , Wi!Mior:
HIIIIJ Wbllley.
·
llonnlll Grille-- Cia, 11o1iJ !.amber\

DIUalillllrklon.lllneSIIII,*"'"-

!11'14!

• .

.

·,

~
-!Mike IInCe, a.rta Cllittnrllo
Julie Flnle , """' Mlldroll Olorlo IIOiilqr\

Stepllonle~,CI!ERYLmTi',amu"'1

·· . .
·

· '. '

...

i
I
(

'

I

I~ ln 1944, the

,\'~PICTURE . · efll

'·

li fetimt: memher of ttl&lt;&gt; Aineru:an
Legion. Mason Cowtty Post 23.
Born August 22. 1898 in Mason
Cowtty, Mr. Lutton was the son of
the late Samuel a nd Ella Selby
Lutton. In addition to his parents he
was preceded in death by a
daughter, Margaret Ann Hoffman .
in 1969.
Surviving are his wife, Edna
Cheesebrew Lutton ; two daughters,
Mrs. Boyd (Lillian l Pickens and
Mrs. Clarence (Mary) Vickers, hoth
of Point Pleasant; two brothers,
Everett Lutton and Samuel Lutton,
hoth of Point . Pleasant; eight
grandchildren and II great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. iVionday at the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with the Rev. Ralph
Sager and Rev. Ray Whiteman
offiating. Burial will follow in the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today 4-10 p.m.

$I .OO EKCOET::
CoelrtnJ
OFF

NU SWANSON MAIN COURSE

CARDSASXED
ADDISON - Ross Kent will be 91
~ears old on March 4. Anyone
wishing to send him a card may send
It to his home, P. 0. Box 24, Addison,
Oblo45610.

relirod l'aq•cntcr. a member of the
!1·. :hht&lt; 1' .nled Methodi st Church, a
"'• :.Jv~· ..,t.'ll•ran of World War I and a

VIRGD.. W. WITON
PT. PLEASANT - Virgil W. Lutton, 81, 2107 Jefferson Ave., Polrit
Pleasant, died Friday at 10:07 a.m.
at his horne. He was a retired carpenter, a member of the Heights
Unlted Methodist Oiurch, a Navy
veteran of World War I and a
lifetime member of the American
Legion, Mason County POst 23.
Virgil W. Lutton, 81, 2107 Jefferson

I

Penngfare

MEETSnJESDAY
GALLIPOUS - The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet in
regular session Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
the Municipal Court Room. A public
hearing on the 1980 operations
budget is included in the agenda of
that meeting.

Specla,l '549

Allan

ARVEL DALE MOHI..ER
MIDDLEPORT - Arvel Dale
Mohler, '!9, Route I, Middleport,
died unexpectedly in Pomeroy
Friday afternoon.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy Friday afternoon.
Mr. Mohler had become ill while
driving and had pulled his vehicle to
the side of Mulberry. He had al&gt;"
parently suffered a heart attack and
was •lead upon the squad's arrival.
Mr. Mohler was preceded in death
by his father, Isaac Mohler, two
brothers and two sisters.
Surviving are his mother, Anna
Mae Reeves; his wife, Della Bowen
Mohler, Route 1, Middleport; a
daughter, Della Jane Bradlin, at
home ; four brothers, James, Ken·
neth and John, all of Route 1, Middleport, and Willard of Piney Flats,
Tenn.; two sisters, Mrs. Carl (Wanda) Findling, Reedsville, ·and Mrs.
Clair (Patricia) Might, Route I,
Middleport.
Mr. Mohler attended the Hobson
Church of Christ in Christian Unlon
and was a member of a citizens band
radio club.
Funeral services will be held at 2

-------------------------------...:..___________________.:...:::.=.::.::.:::....:..::..:~=-=-=::::.:...,

Bob has been with Krogers for
many years and for the past four
years has been residing at Beckley,
serving as a zone manager for
Krogers. He has managed some five
or six area stores for the Kroger Co.
over the past years.
Many In Meigs will remember Bob
· and his attractive wife, the former
·Sheila Strauss, and wish the couple
much ~uccess In the new endeavor.

'64oao, is researching family history

Buy Now and save $136
Reg. $685

tral committee named him to sucBOWIJNG GREEN, Ohio (AP) George Ginter is ·doing a lot of run- ceed Sheriff Raymond Coller on
ning these days - miles for fitness,
Feb. 6, when Coller retired because
the Wood County sheriff's depart- of illness. And Ginter Is seeking to
ment, and for election to the office have the voters confirm the action of
he holds by appointment.
the GOP.
"Tw~nty years ago, six road
Ginter, 56, is a one-time minorleague baseball pitcher. He has been deputies did it all," he said. Now,
with the sheriff's department for 19 · even with 12 road deputies, eight
years and was the first deputy in the jallers, a detective, a matron, two
department to hold the rank of cooks, a chief deputy and three
secretary·derks, the department is
sergeant.
The Wood County Republican centoo thinly spread, he feels.

Williamson Boster; - two children
Dr.
Boster, DVM, Gallipolis:
and Mrs. Allan Rink (Susan) of
Downingtown, Pa.; two grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Harold
(Anne) Notter, Mrs. Jessie Kerns,
Mrs. Mary Boster, all of Gallipolis
and Mrs. Cleo Sterling, Salem, Ohio,
and a brother, Ralph Booter of Northup.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday from the Warehime
Funeral Home, Upper River Rd.,
with Revs. Frank and Tura Hayes
officiating. Burial will be In Mound
Hill Cemetery.
Visitation will be held at the
funeral home from 3-5 p.m. today.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions shoold be sent to the
American Cancer Society or
Memorial Fund of the First United
Presbyterian Church.

JOSEPH L. BARKER
GLENWOOD - Joseph L. Barker,
59, Glenwood, died · Friday in St.
Mary's Hospital, Huntington.
· Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Fairfield
ChurcH near Glenwood. Burial wiU
be in the Pete Meadows Cemetery.
Friends are being received tonight
at the Heck's Fwteral Home, Milton.

WINTER SPECIAL

ning.

• Mrs. John L. Dowdy, 1211 Country
Club Drive, Pleasant Hill, Missouri,

James R. Starkey, 43, Gallipolis,
$26; John J. Fulkerson, 30,
Gallipolis, $28; George Kotalic, 25,
Gallipolis, $26; Klireit' F. Blanken·
ship, Zl, Gallipolis, $28; John D.
stiarp, 18, Gallipolis,~; Herbert B.
Cremeans, 33, Gallipolis, $33; and,
Lonnie Boggs, 30, Gallipolis, $2'1.

Eleven other cases were terminated Friday.
Michael E. Larkins, Addison, was
found guilty to a charge of assault
and was fined $50 plus a six month
suspended sentence.
Charged with assault, Tim Lucas, r--------------~--------­
Addison, was found not guilty.

Bob Eastman, son of Mrs. Leland
Saxton of Pomeroy, will be officially
opening his new Foodland Store on
Route 35 near Gallipolis with ribbon
· cutting ceremonies at 10 !hill mor-

· Mr. and Mrs Timotpy R. Priddy
and family are quite thankful for UJe
,kindnesses which have been shown
.them by residents after they loot
their household furnlshings and personal belongings in a fire.
The family resided In a home
behind the Rutland Furnlture Store
and the store was completely
demolished by the fire recently.
. The Priddy family has been
,residing with her parents, Mr. and
l\fr.l. Dale Jacobs, Second Ave., In
Middleport, until they could get
.imother start. They're in the process
of setting up a mobile home on
Hysell Run.
· At any rate, they are extremely
)lrateful for all of the kindnesses.
Meigs County's really not a bad
place to live.

Damy C. Morrow, 30, Gallipolis,
forfeited ~ on a charge of failure to
display a valid registration.
W11iving $30 on a charge of failure
to obey a traffic control device was
Rickey D. Dailey, 19, GallipOlis.
F'ine4 or forfeiting bond on
.
charges of excessive speed were

Art&gt; . Point Plet4sant. dit~d Fnday ~t
10:07 a.n1 . at hi:; lu•:. •· H£1 was a

CHARLES Dll.CHER
POMEROY - Charles Dilcher, 98;
Boynton Beac :1. Fla . died Thursday.
Mr. Dilcher was born Jan. 10, 1882•
He · wall survived by his wife ,
Josephine, three sons, Charles,
Dwayne and· Dale; all of Boynton
Beach; two daughters, Eva Allmond
and Loranlne Robbinson, both of
Lake Worth, Fla.; eight grandchildren, three great-grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held
Monday at 10:30 a.m. at Riggs
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Ewing Funeral Home any time Sunday.

l

Army football

team.! ,

starring Glenn Davis and Doe BJu; . ·

.e

..
I

i

.,,

tl

(

· chard, ave~aged 56 points per pine. ·

. '

�A·7- The Sunday Ttmes.S.ntinel. Sunday. March 2, 1980

Preliminary hearing dates scheduled
r, AI.LIPOLIS

The govenunent would like to
count heads !hill year and the 1980
census will begin at the end of March
when you will receive a questionnaire In the mail.
You will be given a postage-paid
envelope to mail the questionnaire in
about April!.

Up Racine way, SP-4 James
Holman, who has been serving in
. Korea for the past year, is home on a
:l(klay leave with his wife, Denise,
his mother, Mrs. Jacob Holman and
other relatives and friends.
Jinuny is wrapping up his three
years in the anny and has reenlisted
for a six year hitch. Upon the completion of his leave, he'll be going to
. Camp Polk, La.

The Meigs edition; we find, is a dandy reference volwne.
The Gal!ia County Historical
Society is in charge of the compilation. There is no charge for the
family histories being printed as
long as they fall under 500 words and
one picture is permitted free of
charge with each family history.

I know Saturday's snow was
enough to discourage you, but just
think, a miracle has taken place.
Sohio lowered the price of gasoline
three cents a gallon - Incredible!
Now just which government will
move to pick that up in taxes? You
keep smiling.

- Preliminary*
hearings for two Pl. Pleasant
residents charged with trafficking in
drugs were set for March 5 Friday in
Gallipolis Municipal Court. Bond for
each was set at $5,000.
One other case was continued in
Judge James A. Bennett's Court
Friday.
Guy E. Bing, 63, Middleport,
requested time to !Ill'""'" nttorn(W on

•

~harge

of DWI. Bond was set at

$500.

Sheriff appointee seeking reelection

·and would like to hear from anyone
who might know some background
Info on the Don Huggins family. If
you can help, contact Mrs. Dowdy.
. A Gallia Cowtty History Book,
quite similar to the one recently
completed in Meigs County, is being
jmnplled with March 30 set as the
deadline for Gallia Countians to
Write their history and submit them
for publication in the book.
The Meigs books is great, attractive and well done, so I hope that
Gallia Countians do get involved and
~me up with a comparable volume.

CLARENCE E. BOSTER
GALLIPOLIS - Clarence Edward
Boster, 66, Rt. 3, GalliPolis, died
· Friday in the Holzer Medical Center.
He was a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School..a veteran of
WorldWarDanda farmer.
He was the son of the late Charles
E. and Emma Boster and a member
of the First United Presbyterian
Church, Gallipolis.
Survivors include his wife, Helen

Have II set In the spring.
small down payment.

We have. many more memorials.
Up to 30% Discount

Write for booklet showing memorials.

LOGAN MONUMENT CO., INC.

VINTON,O.

POMEROY,O.

Jam~s

Leo L. Vaughan, Mgr.

o. Bush, Mgr .
Ph. 388·8603

Ph. 9t2-2S88

, COLO'\' · .
•

lhj t J i f , .

Tonight thru Thursday
March 6th

COOKWARE

FEATUREDTHISWEEK

2-0t. Covered .,1y
Saucepan °

WITH COUPON
ON LEFT PAGE

tiiO , iALitii1AU.1n.n

.U.S.D.A.INSPECTED

~~~··t n'Lively

THOROFARE

5 FLAVORS

HICKORY SMOKED

Fresh Whole Frying

2%
Milk

Yogurt

GOLDEN CRISP

Sliced
Bacon

Chicken Legs

'

PLASTIC GALLON

Family Pak
8to 12-Legs

CHICKEN
DRUMSTICKS •••.••••••
IIG0•1·lb.Can

2_

·,

Peas &amp;Carrots ••• ~ for

~•Jmollve

.&amp;

.

pi &amp;

2
$ ...
M_ixed. Veget~bles ~for . .&amp;
•15-oz. Can
t• .
$

VIG·AU •1-111, C.

Kidney B•ans ••••

THOIOFARtoSIIcttl Oi WhOU.

.

'llfOROIAII•Whole1·1b.Cail

Peeled Tomatoes

I

IHOROFARI

PICKLES

for

~~~~~~~~~M

$ ....

·~ for .

:.'·~ •

"

• loltlt .

1:

' ~

.·

.•,.

•

CARNATION

68C

SWANSON

68

CHUNK CHtCICEH • , • , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , •• , , , f ·o&amp;. Can

:.&amp;

C

.~

SWISS MISS

Ill HALF

~~~NTtiYSTYLi

$ 129

CINTIR Cur

PORK LOIN ROAST •••••• lb.

HI•••"
4Pack
PUDDINGS ........................... 1.1•01. Cano

SPARE RIBS ............. lb.

KELLOGG'S

IAISIN NAN atlll •••• , ••• , • , , • , •• • • • , , •••• • , , ,

•

PORK ROAST..... , ...... lb.

99c

.25·01.
Trial Size

CORONET FACIALS ... ................ .

l'

$169
-

.::=.c:o:.
...

VARIIn

PORK CHOPS .,.,,..,._ •• lb.
•

BACK RIBS .............. lb.

IUnll :

~~::~~.

0 •• 0 •••••••••••••••••••••

$119 JUMIO

-

$

.

Hot Dogs • • II·••· Pkg. -Beef Franks ....... , .. :·~~· 1!!
1·10. $329
Hoi Dogs • e 1' 1 ~' PkI• $149
Dinner Franks .•.•.... "•· GfNUINI
"
$ n

MUI.,IIIf

c

Wieners

511 Cia

M..Ct.loa

DINNER BELL

-

ORTEGA
M&amp;M CANDIES
o, o •• , o o. •o ,,, •••••• , •• o. •o oltU-oa.hl

TACOIUTI, ••••••• •• , •• ,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, P·oa,,kl •

JlAINC)I'" ..NUT,

A-1 STEAK SAUCE ••••••••••• ~..... .... $J28
-

00 8
a am ll••·$169 IMOKID
It"· $1ft
Fashion Loaf ... "•·
Ham Slices .......... ·"•· -

BUnER BASTED

3to 7-lb.

Boneless "•e· $ ,. 'Z!l.
Turkeys .lb. ~ .
All8oneao Neck, TaU, Wings &amp; Giblets Removed, lolled &amp; Netted.

•t.a9

99
$1 69
Kielbasa or Smoked Sausage .•. , .. ,.,~&gt;.
•
$2
·
Medium Sharp Colby Wedge, .• ,, ....• I~.
79
99
Semi-Boneless Ham Portions.,,,. , .• , •.. ,

IAISH

.

Sea Trout Fillets ..

I

•••••••• I

$ 2l
-

1

•

JUU t COOkfD 5MOII:lD

.
lb .

BOB EVANS FARMS

.

.

C

lb.

.

Ci'LEil"cAaa'Aol, ...•...... ·"·49c

ENLoiv!'Oi'lscAROLE ••••••• ~ •.

...... CMIP

CANOf •

•

.

CELERY HEARTS., •..••• , ••• ,,. 1 5 ~c .CANADA MINTS., .......... ,;..

39c
9C
6

,C· •won • iuou
· •·
$1 A!
9
3
6
NEW RED POTATOES.;.....
....
CANTALOUPE..................
·
..

STEVE MARTIN~

...,.,,{, .• u.•; NO.\ .,.:; "·• •·

1hej~

'

'

•'

HOWARD (PETE) VANMATRE
MASON - Howard (Pete) VanMatre, 65, Mason, died Friday at
Pleasant Hospital.
He was born Dec. 18, 1914 in West
Columbia. the son of the late Harry
and Grace Kerwood VanMatre.
A World War II veteran, he was a
member of the International Union
of Operating Engineers Local of
Charleston 132 B for 38 years 1111d
worked primarily on construction.
He was a member of SmithCapehart Post 140 American Legion
of New Haven and a fonner member
of the Mason Town Council.
One brother, a sister and gran G.
daughter preceded him in death.
Surv.ivin g are his wife June
VanMatre ; one son, George Ray
VanMatre, Mason ; two daughters,
Mrs. Carolyn A. Roush, Mason, and
Mrs Joan A. Huffman, Middleport,
Ohio; fiv e sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth
Johnson, Columbus, Ohio, Mrs.
Betty VanDenDolweert, Toledo,
Ohio, Mrs. Alice Jackson, Maumee,
Ohio, Mrs. Norma Jackson, Eureka,
Ohio, and Mrs. Dorothy Whited,
Sissonsville; two brothers, Richafd
T.. Belleville. W.Va., and George D.,
Columbus; and seven grandchildren.
·
. S..rvices will be held at I: 30 p.m.
Monday at the Foglesong Funeraf
Home with the Rev. George Hoscluir
and Dr. John Wildman officiating.
Burial will be .in Graham Cemethry.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 3 p.m. today.
·
In lieu of flowers, the family
requests contributions be made to
the Mason Fire Department or
Mason Rescue Squad.

OLIVER WOODRUFF
GALLIPOUS - Oliver Wendell
Woodruff, 70, a resident of Lancaster Methodist Campground, di~
Friday at his home. He was born in
Vinton County, son of the late ErneSt
and Agnes White Woodruff.
·'
He was a retired conductor with
the C and 0 Railroad. He was a
member of Brotherhood of Railrolid
Trainmen, the Good Fellowship Cllij&gt;
in Lancaster Mt. Zion United
Methodist Church.
He Is survived by his wife, FeJ'11
and two daughters: Mrs. Willlain
(Gwen) Horton, Columbus, and MrS.
Lee (Nina) Upperman, Pleasan(Vi!te; five grandchildren, four grea'~­
grandchildren, one brother and four
sisters. Several nieces and nephews
survive.
He was preceded In death by one
''
daughter, Valorie Jt!an.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Monday at the Mt. Zion Unife4
Methodist Church, Lancaster, · will)
Rev. David Moody &lt;ificlattns.
Burial will be In Franklin Hill
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Owa~
R. Spence Funeral Home, c8nal
· Winchester. Friends who wish rna-!
contribute to the Mt. Zion Unlted
Methodist Church Building Fund or ·
the Lancaster Campground Davis
Auditorium Fund.

•

COUN11 LINI

0

C

p.m. Monday at the Hobson Church
of Christ in Christian Union with the
Rev. Keith Eblin officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call at .the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Sunday and until 12:30 p.m.
Monday when the body will be taken
to the church.

DINNIIIILL

SLICED BOLOGNA IIOUUIOitltiN •••• • ••
. SLICED BE!P BOLOGNA IIGUli.IOIIIIIN ••

CRUNCHY FRESH-LARGI SIZI

'

$1

C

PORK BREAKFAST STRIPS .•..•• . ••.••.•.. .' • .. -"·" ·"•· 1 1,49
, BEEF IREAKFASTSTRIPS ......... : ..... , .•..• ""·"•· 1 I ,49

39
DELICIOUS APPLES ••••
9
9
C
MUS.HROOMS ••••• n-oz:,.,, , ·
GREEN PEPPERS ••••• I. 59

.WHITE BUTTON

u,.

OSCAR MAYER

WASHINGTON STATE
EXTRA FANCY-GOLDEN

never dreamed he wn
lllo,lecl.

•••••••• I

MEAT WIENERS.,,., •• , •• o .. . , o • • , . , , • • • • • • • • • 1·"·"11 1. 11,69
BEEF FRANKS. o••• o ••••• • •• o o. o o•• , . o o •• o: •• •·1•. ~'~~• · 1 1.89

lb.

,

Lamb

SM~LLCASING

lot.

. .

oi ·IO· "•· . , . , ,

1 • • • • • 1 • • • • •' ·" · "• ·

8PPIIiSTEAK W/GREEN PEPPERS ••••• • .. ; •••• ; .

~9.2v£~~~J.~....... ,~ .... ,.. ,...... ,14~1. $1.!@
,I!Y,~Y!.DCAliOOO ... ... ,..... , •, ... ,.... O. I~l.Cin 20C

IHOIOIAB

1 •59

Ring BOlogna nctiJLo\IOiouuc ••••••••••••••• " · • 1.89
Ring Liver .•.• ·...••••••••.•.•.•••••••••. •1.19
Sliced Lunch Meat .,.,,..,,. .......... , ' ·10·"•· 1 1.69
Sliced Bacon •rouluOITNio: ••

• • • • •• , • , , •• , , , o•• , •• , o, U.I·Oio C.n

SEEDLESS RAISINS., •••••••• , 1~-o~....
CLOROX BLEACH

LegO'
GOLDEN STAR BY ARMOUR

HGuU101nus11u . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,.,. •

J!t&gt;AI:i$i~·RY . ST!IAK WITH.GRAVY, •••••••••:.;.: ••1 ,.,.1 ,.,t~i"'i:~I:•c~:,

·22c
88c
$J78 ~!£2~.~~~~ ..... --.... :=~~:i~·:::· 3 '" $1
-

FROZEN IMPORTED NEW ZEALAND

-

. Beef Wlan•riiiO.OiniAI•U-.-.-'- •• - ••

Sliced Bologna
$149
Kulbassy .............. 10. $ 1•t
11-or.
_
or Pic•
· Sllce d 1aeon ............'·10,.· 1"'CI• Loaf
k d•......
S I I "•·

.

-

GRAVY &amp; DRESSING ••••• ,.;, •• ••• • • •t.t...,,,..

1
YET
S
DOG fOOD - J Ylrittltt

-

en

' (Ptlck•tMI for ... , or Mlcf'oweve _,.,.,,

~··Cit. Jir $1

$1 S9

Chic"
Parts ·
Family
Pa•
lb.· ·49~

·'·1. .t.
; Iotti•

~,IN~

I

Beel Patty Mix

TOMATO
CATSUP
..

88

$ J!

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED .

MIAI .. IIII

SUNRISE
INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••••••••••••••

$1J!

GENUINE SPRING

3-lbs. Or' Mora

..

ICE CREAM

£~Q~~2~u~~J~J',~~L~~.~~, ........... 11·•• 1o1

PORTION

~;: lb.'Z.Z9

1

... ·'"·
· Avg.

CUT rREEINTO CHOPS, ROASTS OR" Any Way You Pref•r"

liB

PORK LOIN ROAST ••••• ·'"·

-

14 to 17-lb.

2S·Cil . ICit

"

'~
~s
.&amp;·~

Pork
Loins
',

$1!!

BROUGHTON .
v, -Gal.
Ctn.

ARMOUR tc STAR IIERI-BEST PORK

FRESH WHOLE

'

.LOIH PORTION

Tetley .

MANY MORE lnMS CAN IE FOUND ON DI$PLAY
AT EAOt THOROFARE. HURRY WHILE SALE IS
STILL IN PROGRISS. ·

lb.

lb.

Boast

INSTANT
Moho
NON·FAT DRY MILK ...... , ... . ............ 20 Ouarll

.. .. .. • . . . .. . . . . .. . .. . . ll·o1.Jar

1-lb.
Pkg.

Pork Loin

~!

,

JJC

BONUS
BUY

ARMOUR u STAR VERI-BEST PORK

• KOSHIR DILLS
• POLISH DILLS ..... . ....... l2·ol. Jar

for

2

"I

.,

3 ·. $ :l'
Z

.Pot~toes 1·1b.ean -4

..
liOOID DISH ()ITIRGENT

$ ...

He wa 1 ~ black ·
sharect:OPPtr 1 son who

0

0

••

0

0

•

0 ••

0 ••

0 •••• •

0

lhl. ,.,,, 1
11·1)1:, , . ,.

1

1.49
1.59

·$ .. S9

L1nk.s • • 12-oz.P.,.~

Area honor roll ··
•• i

. ' Soulhweslem High Scimlllm1liUICOI! Ill~ ·
roll'
.
.1
Seventh grade - Michael BaUey, 8edl;f
Battler, JeffBurleson, Uaa Cochran, Debra Darnell, William Edwards, Greg 11a11. Rbondtr lfam.
monel, Brt!lllanisoa, Jom """'· Tncoy Hill!,
Mary Nlda, SO!ven PeUrey, 'MllclleU Self.,.,
RoosldSaunde!'l, TomSava£1!.
Elihtb srade - Kim Amlwoocl, T8m,y Ball,
Sharon Amlwooll, Tina Bosllc, Joy Bur~
Bl1anna Cochran, Eric C.lnel, Troy Danlela,·
steTollammood, Brenda Hoover, Cbris Jell.....,
Kenny Kiser, Randy l.oyton, Poul Lehman, Del&gt;,
by M&lt;Cariney, Tammy M~ulre, David Nl&lt;ll;l
KalhY Saunders, RusHII SaWidm, UndilI
Sourfoct~ Judy S1anley, Angle Thornton, Carrie
~alker.. rwger Weill.
. .. ~
Ninlh grade" Michele Caae, JallellaU, l!obe,...
Ia Halley, Leda llammood, Leon Hammoacl,
llon1lj- !fa'IIIIYDI Jtu111 Hill, Palrlcla lAil1iaU

~~.EII&lt;IRSivap,SOoj&amp;WIIIIImo,~
'I'II&gt;U&gt;sracle-T..... ~S&amp;ral&gt; ·· 'fi
.

~ Bubr, Sieve Fqey, U.. Green,
Joilklno, ~ . ~. Datma Sbato,
'
staruey,Keiat Walker.
·
Eieventll llftldo -Todd ~er, Jay~
Pam IJonMU, Llnda- Edwardo, · ~
Fa-y, Jeff Gilbert, lion llamaland, ftocv

Spurlack.

.

Twetlllt grade - Slt!ve ~ Marleae
Balu!r, Tarnl Bollllc, Dwoyne Forpy, 8ondrl
bolley, Dana Jtlfen, Walle Miller, r .... Neol,
Sherman POIIer, HuileU Spurlock.

at .

Ronald E. Paxton, Principal·
Hannan Trace li:lementary Schcioi•.
would Ulte to announc'e the •fourth
six-weeks honor roll• • All ·. capli
represent all A's.
.

·!

.
~

~ '

a..:..u. v.-.4

Fourib Grade - Anlrea·
I MitcheU, Kent . Seuftderl,

r;rt: .

Dillon,
RIOIARD

G""' --

a-·-

J

Flflb
Do... llallo1,
Callly Lore, 1'um!u .....
Grode - Dopln
Ullo lllu,
Julie Dillon, Evelp - . , Wi!Mior:
HIIIIJ Wbllley.
·
llonnlll Grille-- Cia, 11o1iJ !.amber\

DIUalillllrklon.lllneSIIII,*"'"-

!11'14!

• .

.

·,

~
-!Mike IInCe, a.rta Cllittnrllo
Julie Flnle , """' Mlldroll Olorlo IIOiilqr\

Stepllonle~,CI!ERYLmTi',amu"'1

·· . .
·

· '. '

...

i
I
(

'

I

I~ ln 1944, the

,\'~PICTURE . · efll

'·

li fetimt: memher of ttl&lt;&gt; Aineru:an
Legion. Mason Cowtty Post 23.
Born August 22. 1898 in Mason
Cowtty, Mr. Lutton was the son of
the late Samuel a nd Ella Selby
Lutton. In addition to his parents he
was preceded in death by a
daughter, Margaret Ann Hoffman .
in 1969.
Surviving are his wife, Edna
Cheesebrew Lutton ; two daughters,
Mrs. Boyd (Lillian l Pickens and
Mrs. Clarence (Mary) Vickers, hoth
of Point Pleasant; two brothers,
Everett Lutton and Samuel Lutton,
hoth of Point . Pleasant; eight
grandchildren and II great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. iVionday at the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with the Rev. Ralph
Sager and Rev. Ray Whiteman
offiating. Burial will follow in the
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today 4-10 p.m.

$I .OO EKCOET::
CoelrtnJ
OFF

NU SWANSON MAIN COURSE

CARDSASXED
ADDISON - Ross Kent will be 91
~ears old on March 4. Anyone
wishing to send him a card may send
It to his home, P. 0. Box 24, Addison,
Oblo45610.

relirod l'aq•cntcr. a member of the
!1·. :hht&lt; 1' .nled Methodi st Church, a
"'• :.Jv~· ..,t.'ll•ran of World War I and a

VIRGD.. W. WITON
PT. PLEASANT - Virgil W. Lutton, 81, 2107 Jefferson Ave., Polrit
Pleasant, died Friday at 10:07 a.m.
at his horne. He was a retired carpenter, a member of the Heights
Unlted Methodist Oiurch, a Navy
veteran of World War I and a
lifetime member of the American
Legion, Mason County POst 23.
Virgil W. Lutton, 81, 2107 Jefferson

I

Penngfare

MEETSnJESDAY
GALLIPOUS - The Gallipolis
City Commission will meet in
regular session Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
the Municipal Court Room. A public
hearing on the 1980 operations
budget is included in the agenda of
that meeting.

Specla,l '549

Allan

ARVEL DALE MOHI..ER
MIDDLEPORT - Arvel Dale
Mohler, '!9, Route I, Middleport,
died unexpectedly in Pomeroy
Friday afternoon.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Mulberry Ave. in
Pomeroy Friday afternoon.
Mr. Mohler had become ill while
driving and had pulled his vehicle to
the side of Mulberry. He had al&gt;"
parently suffered a heart attack and
was •lead upon the squad's arrival.
Mr. Mohler was preceded in death
by his father, Isaac Mohler, two
brothers and two sisters.
Surviving are his mother, Anna
Mae Reeves; his wife, Della Bowen
Mohler, Route 1, Middleport; a
daughter, Della Jane Bradlin, at
home ; four brothers, James, Ken·
neth and John, all of Route 1, Middleport, and Willard of Piney Flats,
Tenn.; two sisters, Mrs. Carl (Wanda) Findling, Reedsville, ·and Mrs.
Clair (Patricia) Might, Route I,
Middleport.
Mr. Mohler attended the Hobson
Church of Christ in Christian Unlon
and was a member of a citizens band
radio club.
Funeral services will be held at 2

-------------------------------...:..___________________.:...:::.=.::.::.:::....:..::..:~=-=-=::::.:...,

Bob has been with Krogers for
many years and for the past four
years has been residing at Beckley,
serving as a zone manager for
Krogers. He has managed some five
or six area stores for the Kroger Co.
over the past years.
Many In Meigs will remember Bob
· and his attractive wife, the former
·Sheila Strauss, and wish the couple
much ~uccess In the new endeavor.

'64oao, is researching family history

Buy Now and save $136
Reg. $685

tral committee named him to sucBOWIJNG GREEN, Ohio (AP) George Ginter is ·doing a lot of run- ceed Sheriff Raymond Coller on
ning these days - miles for fitness,
Feb. 6, when Coller retired because
the Wood County sheriff's depart- of illness. And Ginter Is seeking to
ment, and for election to the office have the voters confirm the action of
he holds by appointment.
the GOP.
"Tw~nty years ago, six road
Ginter, 56, is a one-time minorleague baseball pitcher. He has been deputies did it all," he said. Now,
with the sheriff's department for 19 · even with 12 road deputies, eight
years and was the first deputy in the jallers, a detective, a matron, two
department to hold the rank of cooks, a chief deputy and three
secretary·derks, the department is
sergeant.
The Wood County Republican centoo thinly spread, he feels.

Williamson Boster; - two children
Dr.
Boster, DVM, Gallipolis:
and Mrs. Allan Rink (Susan) of
Downingtown, Pa.; two grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Harold
(Anne) Notter, Mrs. Jessie Kerns,
Mrs. Mary Boster, all of Gallipolis
and Mrs. Cleo Sterling, Salem, Ohio,
and a brother, Ralph Booter of Northup.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Monday from the Warehime
Funeral Home, Upper River Rd.,
with Revs. Frank and Tura Hayes
officiating. Burial will be In Mound
Hill Cemetery.
Visitation will be held at the
funeral home from 3-5 p.m. today.
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions shoold be sent to the
American Cancer Society or
Memorial Fund of the First United
Presbyterian Church.

JOSEPH L. BARKER
GLENWOOD - Joseph L. Barker,
59, Glenwood, died · Friday in St.
Mary's Hospital, Huntington.
· Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Fairfield
ChurcH near Glenwood. Burial wiU
be in the Pete Meadows Cemetery.
Friends are being received tonight
at the Heck's Fwteral Home, Milton.

WINTER SPECIAL

ning.

• Mrs. John L. Dowdy, 1211 Country
Club Drive, Pleasant Hill, Missouri,

James R. Starkey, 43, Gallipolis,
$26; John J. Fulkerson, 30,
Gallipolis, $28; George Kotalic, 25,
Gallipolis, $26; Klireit' F. Blanken·
ship, Zl, Gallipolis, $28; John D.
stiarp, 18, Gallipolis,~; Herbert B.
Cremeans, 33, Gallipolis, $33; and,
Lonnie Boggs, 30, Gallipolis, $2'1.

Eleven other cases were terminated Friday.
Michael E. Larkins, Addison, was
found guilty to a charge of assault
and was fined $50 plus a six month
suspended sentence.
Charged with assault, Tim Lucas, r--------------~--------­
Addison, was found not guilty.

Bob Eastman, son of Mrs. Leland
Saxton of Pomeroy, will be officially
opening his new Foodland Store on
Route 35 near Gallipolis with ribbon
· cutting ceremonies at 10 !hill mor-

· Mr. and Mrs Timotpy R. Priddy
and family are quite thankful for UJe
,kindnesses which have been shown
.them by residents after they loot
their household furnlshings and personal belongings in a fire.
The family resided In a home
behind the Rutland Furnlture Store
and the store was completely
demolished by the fire recently.
. The Priddy family has been
,residing with her parents, Mr. and
l\fr.l. Dale Jacobs, Second Ave., In
Middleport, until they could get
.imother start. They're in the process
of setting up a mobile home on
Hysell Run.
· At any rate, they are extremely
)lrateful for all of the kindnesses.
Meigs County's really not a bad
place to live.

Damy C. Morrow, 30, Gallipolis,
forfeited ~ on a charge of failure to
display a valid registration.
W11iving $30 on a charge of failure
to obey a traffic control device was
Rickey D. Dailey, 19, GallipOlis.
F'ine4 or forfeiting bond on
.
charges of excessive speed were

Art&gt; . Point Plet4sant. dit~d Fnday ~t
10:07 a.n1 . at hi:; lu•:. •· H£1 was a

CHARLES Dll.CHER
POMEROY - Charles Dilcher, 98;
Boynton Beac :1. Fla . died Thursday.
Mr. Dilcher was born Jan. 10, 1882•
He · wall survived by his wife ,
Josephine, three sons, Charles,
Dwayne and· Dale; all of Boynton
Beach; two daughters, Eva Allmond
and Loranlne Robbinson, both of
Lake Worth, Fla.; eight grandchildren, three great-grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held
Monday at 10:30 a.m. at Riggs
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Ewing Funeral Home any time Sunday.

l

Army football

team.! ,

starring Glenn Davis and Doe BJu; . ·

.e

..
I

i

.,,

tl

(

· chard, ave~aged 56 points per pine. ·

. '

�A-3--The Sunday Times-Sentmel. Sunda~ . !'&lt;l ar.·h 2. 1!180

Meigs journalism students receive newspaper experience
ROCK SPRINGS - Some Meigs
High School sophomores had a taste
&lt;I journalism recently.
The English II College Prep
classes, under the supervision of
their teacher, Ms. Celia McCoy.
have spent the Jlii.St few weeks
becoming acquainted with many
aspects of the newspaper as well as
constructing an edition for each of
the three classes.
By a democratic vote process,
t{lCh class selected the name of its
edition, the editor and the lead
stories for the front and sports
pages. The edition of the fourth
period class was entitled "Pepe's
Prints," Greg Bush, editor; the sixth
period chose "The Rare Edition,"
Jeanette Cook, editor; the seventh
period group selected "The Samurai
Sentinel," Lynne Oliver, editor.
Each student in each class wrote
an article for his class newspaper.
These articles included front page
news itema, news in brief, editorials,
letters to the editor, advice columns,
feature stories, personal columns,
sports news items and sports columns.
Several sophomores are also
taking typing this semester, so they
volunteered to type all of the articles. The remaining students made
ads, cartoons, and fillers.
When these chores were completed, the classes were divided into
(our groups to create the layouts and
headlines, each group having been
assigned to one page. Finally, these
four pages were put together as one
\lllit. "Pepe's Prints," "The Rare
Edition," and "The Samurai Sentinel" are currently on display in
('oom 208 at the high school.

'•

..

B
An estimated 75 homeowners
in East Gallipolis will be
eligible for necessary home
repairs, weatherization and
general upgrading under the
tenns of the $490,000 Housing
and Urban Development Community Development Block
Grant awarded to the Maple
Shade area of the city.

SCAN PAPER - Meigs High. sophomores, Lynne Oliver and Greg
Thomas, look over a copy of "The Samurai Sentinel" produced by their
7th period English class under the direction of Ms. Celia McCoy, English
instructor.

PHV home health unit
make 126 visitations
POINT PLEASANT - Pleasant
Valley Hospital Home Health Agency persormel traveled over 1,800
miles in January making 126 visits.
The registered nurses made eightythree skilled nursing visits and the
home Health aide made forty-three
visits to assist with personal care.
There were 13 new admissions to the
Home Health program and eight
discharges.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home

Dr. Blazewicz named society president
POMEROY - Dr. Salim
Blazewicz, M.D., was elected
president of the Meigs County
Medical Society at its organizational
meeting held here recently.
Other officers are James E.
Wltherall, M.D., vice president; and
Wilma Mansfield, M.D., secretarytreasurer. Delegates named to the
Ohio State Medical Society will he E.
S. VIllanueva, M.D., with J . J.
Davis, M.D. as alternate. Com·mi!tee chainnen were also appointed.

8-1 - The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday, March2, 1980

The county medical society is
composed of physicians practicing
in Meigs County and is a component
unit of the Ohio State Medical
Association and the American
Medical Assn. The society was
originally organized to promote better health care by providing means
of disseminating infonnation to
physicians, furthering the
availability of continuing education,
and supporting high professional
ethics.

Health Agency is designed for the
benefit of the Mason County community. It extends the services of
Pleasant Valley Hospital outside its
door and indicates a concern with
the patients' care not only as an inpatient but after discharge as well.
This service can be helpful for
short-tenn convalescent individuals
recovering from an acute illness, for
the chronically Ill, for those who
usually receive treatment on an outpatient basis but .are temporarily
unable to do so; and for certain individuals with tenninal Illness.
A person need not be admitted to
the hospital before"receiving home
health service so if you or someone
you know has a need, call Pleasant
Valley Hospital Home Health AgenCY 675-4340, ext. 254.

LEARNING TECHNIQUES Allen Arnott, Lorri Snowden and
Beck.i Tillis learn techniques of
newspaper layout in their sixth
period English class at . Meigs
High School. Three sophomore
cl¥5es under the direction of Ms.
Cella McCoy produced their own
newspapers during the study on
newspapers.

READY FOR CONCERTS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Riverfront
Coliseum and city officials have
cleared the way for rock concerts to
resume at the coliseum -+ the first
such concerts since 11 rock fans died "
in a stampede for seats last December.
Scheduled is a March 21 perfonnance by the ZZ Top, the first
rock concert here since the 11 persons died just before a concert by the
British rock group The Who.
The way was cleared Friday when
coliseum officials agreed to abide by
city safety guidelines.

A Message from the

Block Grant Home Repairs

POMEROY HEAlT,., CARE CENTER
I am happy to announce that we will be opening
Wing B of our facility on March 10. This is only happen·
ing because the nurses we have are cooperating with me
to work shifts that we still need nurses to staff. Nurses
from 11 to 7 : 30 are needed badly for full time and part
time.
·
I appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are "in retiremen.t " to consider working at our new,
beautiful facility in Meigs County.
We have residents who love to be loved and cared
for; and we have a staff that you would be proud to work
with.
We need you. Please respond .
Ronald E. Zidian, Administrator
Please call me from 9 to 5,
Monday through Friday, at 992-6606.

$3 75, 000 allocated for home repair

HUD grant upgrades East Gallipolis

Sears announces nationwide conteSt
. CHICAGO - Sears, Roebuck and
Co. has announced a nationwide contest offering youngsters a chance to
appear in next year's springsummer general catalog.
The contest opens the way for 20
boys and girls age 1-16, who never
have modeled professionally, to
model children's clothing in one of
the nation's best-read books. The
~talog is circulated to some 16
inilllon household.
Winners will have their names in~ded near their pictures in the
Spring 1981 catalog. They will
receive standard modeling fees for
the photography sessions; a trip to

Chicago next July with parentS or
guardians; hotei accommodations
and meals for the Chicago stay, and
a number of activities in the city appropriate to the winners' ages and
interests.
"Over the years, we have received
thousands of calis and letters from
parents asking how their children
could be models for our catalogs,"
said John B. Kelly, Jr., vice
president, catalog for Sears.
"We have always used models
chosen for us by a professional
modeling agency and will continue
to do so. This contest is for children
who aren't professional models."

Hernando Cortez captured
'J'enochtitlan in 1521, two years after
he had.)Jeen welcomed to the Aztec
capital as the incarnation of the god
QuetzalcoaU. Mter his arrival, Cortez had won the friendship of the Aztec king, Montezuma II, and had at-

lacked and absorbed the second
Spanish expedition sent to relieve
him of his command. After the fall of
Tenochtitlan, the Aztec culture
quickly disintegrated. Cortez later
rebuilt the city and renamed it
Mexico City.

-

MARCH SPECIALS

...

GAILIPOUS - '"This Is just a great program," Virginia Howell,
Gallipolis, said recently of the $490,000 Housing and Urban
Development (H.U.D.) Community Development Block Grant
awarded to the Maple Shade area of the city.
"I've worked and have done what I could," the Chestnut Street
resident continued, "but It would have taken me the rest of my life
to do the work that ls now being done.''
An estimated 75 homeowners in East Gallipolis will be eligible for
necessary home repairs, weatherization and general upgrading ol
their property under the terms of the grant.
Of the total amount awarded to the city, $375,000 was allocated
for home repairs; $65,000 was designated for street resurfacing and
stonn gutters; and, $50,000 was set aside for recreation.
Eligibility for home repairs ls detennined by the size of the
household income, with the stipulation that the property be owneroccupied. Applications are reviewed every three months by a

Ell

17.8 Cu. fl no-frosl refngerator-freeze r llll Re ve rsible doors !'ill Adjustab le glass shelves llill
Energy-Saver switch li] See -lhru meal keeper,
vegelable, fru 1l , and dairy bins lEI Rolls-out on
whee ls !iii] Jus I 30V2" wide.
Model CTF1BGY

'

Twenty-two home repair
projects will be bid in the
early spring. Combs and
Associates, the consulting
finn engaged by the city to administer the grant, expects to
process 33 more applications
before the program is completed.

'

' 50

citizens advisory council and representatives of Combs ' and
Associates, Wheelersburg, the consulting firm engaged to administer the grant.
Applications are rated according to need, using a system that
places priority on the elderly, the handicapped, and families with
small children. Each home chosen has an upward limit of $5,000 for
repairs.
To date, four home repair projects have been completed; ten are
under contract and construction; and six have been bid. Twentytwo additional home repair projects will be bid in the early spring.
Combs and Associates expects to process thirty-three more applications before the program is terminated.
The East Gallipolis Home Repair is located in the City Garage on
Chestnut Street in Maple Shade, and may be reached by calling 4-469660.

00

•

•

DISCOUNT

..

!

Ill Large capacity 2 agi1a1or Hand-

waSh· ~ system for genlle or rugged ·

El 6 Cycle buill-in dishwasher [l
Cus hion-coa ted upper and lowe r
racks l!ll Ene rgy-save r . dry cycle CJ
Short Wash-Cycle l!lJ Cfyslal Clea r'M
nnse d1spen ser
Salt food di spose r
[l] So und insulation .

rn

M r; :~e l

20% OFF LIST PRICE

HDA780

'50 .DISCOUNT

Eligibility for home repairs
is determined by the size of
the household income,.with
the stipulation that the
property be owneroccupied. Eligible homes
have an upward limit of
$5,000 for repairs.

.•

,:

loads II'J Variable waler level co ntrol
II Malching •
dryer w!th up. to 50 minute timed cycle
II Sens1-DryTM Ill End -of-cycle signal. ·
11!1 Automatic soak cycle

rn.

30" Self-cleaning oven·- range El

Wmdow door liD Clock &amp; oven timer
C Plug -i n Calrod'll surface heating
un its. 2-8", size ill Surface unil "on "
md1cator lights .
Model RB737A

'50 DISCOUNT

To date, four borne repair
projects have been completed; ten are under contract
and construction; and sbr:
have been bid.

~!!~!!!~~@

0

'50 DISCOUNT

We Cany AComplete Une of Trailers
by MORin and

&lt;lle(i ·)Haul
00

. MONTGOMERY TRAILER
·.SALES

~-·

I'·,

\

0

0

2 Miles East of Wilkesville. . . LangsviUe, ·OH.
PH. 614-669-4245 (E~ings)

.....~

'"'!~!---------(

.

r

POMEROY LANDMARK
Main

"Serving Mel~s,
Street~Pomerov

JA(:K W. CARSEY,MGR.

Ga!lla and 111\~son Counties"
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30
Mill (:losecl at'S:OO P.M.

L.C.E.

•

�A-3--The Sunday Times-Sentmel. Sunda~ . !'&lt;l ar.·h 2. 1!180

Meigs journalism students receive newspaper experience
ROCK SPRINGS - Some Meigs
High School sophomores had a taste
&lt;I journalism recently.
The English II College Prep
classes, under the supervision of
their teacher, Ms. Celia McCoy.
have spent the Jlii.St few weeks
becoming acquainted with many
aspects of the newspaper as well as
constructing an edition for each of
the three classes.
By a democratic vote process,
t{lCh class selected the name of its
edition, the editor and the lead
stories for the front and sports
pages. The edition of the fourth
period class was entitled "Pepe's
Prints," Greg Bush, editor; the sixth
period chose "The Rare Edition,"
Jeanette Cook, editor; the seventh
period group selected "The Samurai
Sentinel," Lynne Oliver, editor.
Each student in each class wrote
an article for his class newspaper.
These articles included front page
news itema, news in brief, editorials,
letters to the editor, advice columns,
feature stories, personal columns,
sports news items and sports columns.
Several sophomores are also
taking typing this semester, so they
volunteered to type all of the articles. The remaining students made
ads, cartoons, and fillers.
When these chores were completed, the classes were divided into
(our groups to create the layouts and
headlines, each group having been
assigned to one page. Finally, these
four pages were put together as one
\lllit. "Pepe's Prints," "The Rare
Edition," and "The Samurai Sentinel" are currently on display in
('oom 208 at the high school.

'•

..

B
An estimated 75 homeowners
in East Gallipolis will be
eligible for necessary home
repairs, weatherization and
general upgrading under the
tenns of the $490,000 Housing
and Urban Development Community Development Block
Grant awarded to the Maple
Shade area of the city.

SCAN PAPER - Meigs High. sophomores, Lynne Oliver and Greg
Thomas, look over a copy of "The Samurai Sentinel" produced by their
7th period English class under the direction of Ms. Celia McCoy, English
instructor.

PHV home health unit
make 126 visitations
POINT PLEASANT - Pleasant
Valley Hospital Home Health Agency persormel traveled over 1,800
miles in January making 126 visits.
The registered nurses made eightythree skilled nursing visits and the
home Health aide made forty-three
visits to assist with personal care.
There were 13 new admissions to the
Home Health program and eight
discharges.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Home

Dr. Blazewicz named society president
POMEROY - Dr. Salim
Blazewicz, M.D., was elected
president of the Meigs County
Medical Society at its organizational
meeting held here recently.
Other officers are James E.
Wltherall, M.D., vice president; and
Wilma Mansfield, M.D., secretarytreasurer. Delegates named to the
Ohio State Medical Society will he E.
S. VIllanueva, M.D., with J . J.
Davis, M.D. as alternate. Com·mi!tee chainnen were also appointed.

8-1 - The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday, March2, 1980

The county medical society is
composed of physicians practicing
in Meigs County and is a component
unit of the Ohio State Medical
Association and the American
Medical Assn. The society was
originally organized to promote better health care by providing means
of disseminating infonnation to
physicians, furthering the
availability of continuing education,
and supporting high professional
ethics.

Health Agency is designed for the
benefit of the Mason County community. It extends the services of
Pleasant Valley Hospital outside its
door and indicates a concern with
the patients' care not only as an inpatient but after discharge as well.
This service can be helpful for
short-tenn convalescent individuals
recovering from an acute illness, for
the chronically Ill, for those who
usually receive treatment on an outpatient basis but .are temporarily
unable to do so; and for certain individuals with tenninal Illness.
A person need not be admitted to
the hospital before"receiving home
health service so if you or someone
you know has a need, call Pleasant
Valley Hospital Home Health AgenCY 675-4340, ext. 254.

LEARNING TECHNIQUES Allen Arnott, Lorri Snowden and
Beck.i Tillis learn techniques of
newspaper layout in their sixth
period English class at . Meigs
High School. Three sophomore
cl¥5es under the direction of Ms.
Cella McCoy produced their own
newspapers during the study on
newspapers.

READY FOR CONCERTS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Riverfront
Coliseum and city officials have
cleared the way for rock concerts to
resume at the coliseum -+ the first
such concerts since 11 rock fans died "
in a stampede for seats last December.
Scheduled is a March 21 perfonnance by the ZZ Top, the first
rock concert here since the 11 persons died just before a concert by the
British rock group The Who.
The way was cleared Friday when
coliseum officials agreed to abide by
city safety guidelines.

A Message from the

Block Grant Home Repairs

POMEROY HEAlT,., CARE CENTER
I am happy to announce that we will be opening
Wing B of our facility on March 10. This is only happen·
ing because the nurses we have are cooperating with me
to work shifts that we still need nurses to staff. Nurses
from 11 to 7 : 30 are needed badly for full time and part
time.
·
I appeal to any nurses working out of the county or
are "in retiremen.t " to consider working at our new,
beautiful facility in Meigs County.
We have residents who love to be loved and cared
for; and we have a staff that you would be proud to work
with.
We need you. Please respond .
Ronald E. Zidian, Administrator
Please call me from 9 to 5,
Monday through Friday, at 992-6606.

$3 75, 000 allocated for home repair

HUD grant upgrades East Gallipolis

Sears announces nationwide conteSt
. CHICAGO - Sears, Roebuck and
Co. has announced a nationwide contest offering youngsters a chance to
appear in next year's springsummer general catalog.
The contest opens the way for 20
boys and girls age 1-16, who never
have modeled professionally, to
model children's clothing in one of
the nation's best-read books. The
~talog is circulated to some 16
inilllon household.
Winners will have their names in~ded near their pictures in the
Spring 1981 catalog. They will
receive standard modeling fees for
the photography sessions; a trip to

Chicago next July with parentS or
guardians; hotei accommodations
and meals for the Chicago stay, and
a number of activities in the city appropriate to the winners' ages and
interests.
"Over the years, we have received
thousands of calis and letters from
parents asking how their children
could be models for our catalogs,"
said John B. Kelly, Jr., vice
president, catalog for Sears.
"We have always used models
chosen for us by a professional
modeling agency and will continue
to do so. This contest is for children
who aren't professional models."

Hernando Cortez captured
'J'enochtitlan in 1521, two years after
he had.)Jeen welcomed to the Aztec
capital as the incarnation of the god
QuetzalcoaU. Mter his arrival, Cortez had won the friendship of the Aztec king, Montezuma II, and had at-

lacked and absorbed the second
Spanish expedition sent to relieve
him of his command. After the fall of
Tenochtitlan, the Aztec culture
quickly disintegrated. Cortez later
rebuilt the city and renamed it
Mexico City.

-

MARCH SPECIALS

...

GAILIPOUS - '"This Is just a great program," Virginia Howell,
Gallipolis, said recently of the $490,000 Housing and Urban
Development (H.U.D.) Community Development Block Grant
awarded to the Maple Shade area of the city.
"I've worked and have done what I could," the Chestnut Street
resident continued, "but It would have taken me the rest of my life
to do the work that ls now being done.''
An estimated 75 homeowners in East Gallipolis will be eligible for
necessary home repairs, weatherization and general upgrading ol
their property under the terms of the grant.
Of the total amount awarded to the city, $375,000 was allocated
for home repairs; $65,000 was designated for street resurfacing and
stonn gutters; and, $50,000 was set aside for recreation.
Eligibility for home repairs ls detennined by the size of the
household income, with the stipulation that the property be owneroccupied. Applications are reviewed every three months by a

Ell

17.8 Cu. fl no-frosl refngerator-freeze r llll Re ve rsible doors !'ill Adjustab le glass shelves llill
Energy-Saver switch li] See -lhru meal keeper,
vegelable, fru 1l , and dairy bins lEI Rolls-out on
whee ls !iii] Jus I 30V2" wide.
Model CTF1BGY

'

Twenty-two home repair
projects will be bid in the
early spring. Combs and
Associates, the consulting
finn engaged by the city to administer the grant, expects to
process 33 more applications
before the program is completed.

'

' 50

citizens advisory council and representatives of Combs ' and
Associates, Wheelersburg, the consulting firm engaged to administer the grant.
Applications are rated according to need, using a system that
places priority on the elderly, the handicapped, and families with
small children. Each home chosen has an upward limit of $5,000 for
repairs.
To date, four home repair projects have been completed; ten are
under contract and construction; and six have been bid. Twentytwo additional home repair projects will be bid in the early spring.
Combs and Associates expects to process thirty-three more applications before the program is terminated.
The East Gallipolis Home Repair is located in the City Garage on
Chestnut Street in Maple Shade, and may be reached by calling 4-469660.

00

•

•

DISCOUNT

..

!

Ill Large capacity 2 agi1a1or Hand-

waSh· ~ system for genlle or rugged ·

El 6 Cycle buill-in dishwasher [l
Cus hion-coa ted upper and lowe r
racks l!ll Ene rgy-save r . dry cycle CJ
Short Wash-Cycle l!lJ Cfyslal Clea r'M
nnse d1spen ser
Salt food di spose r
[l] So und insulation .

rn

M r; :~e l

20% OFF LIST PRICE

HDA780

'50 .DISCOUNT

Eligibility for home repairs
is determined by the size of
the household income,.with
the stipulation that the
property be owneroccupied. Eligible homes
have an upward limit of
$5,000 for repairs.

.•

,:

loads II'J Variable waler level co ntrol
II Malching •
dryer w!th up. to 50 minute timed cycle
II Sens1-DryTM Ill End -of-cycle signal. ·
11!1 Automatic soak cycle

rn.

30" Self-cleaning oven·- range El

Wmdow door liD Clock &amp; oven timer
C Plug -i n Calrod'll surface heating
un its. 2-8", size ill Surface unil "on "
md1cator lights .
Model RB737A

'50 DISCOUNT

To date, four borne repair
projects have been completed; ten are under contract
and construction; and sbr:
have been bid.

~!!~!!!~~@

0

'50 DISCOUNT

We Cany AComplete Une of Trailers
by MORin and

&lt;lle(i ·)Haul
00

. MONTGOMERY TRAILER
·.SALES

~-·

I'·,

\

0

0

2 Miles East of Wilkesville. . . LangsviUe, ·OH.
PH. 614-669-4245 (E~ings)

.....~

'"'!~!---------(

.

r

POMEROY LANDMARK
Main

"Serving Mel~s,
Street~Pomerov

JA(:K W. CARSEY,MGR.

Ga!lla and 111\~son Counties"
Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30
Mill (:losecl at'S:OO P.M.

L.C.E.

•

�'
B-3-The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday. March 2. 19110
S-2- The Sw"lay Times-sentinel, Sunday. March 2. 19811

I.

an entire group of animals because
they are misunderstood," said Martin J . Rosenbeffl, a Case Western
Reserve University biologist.
About 40 persons, some of whom
carried coiled snakes, attended a
committee meeting on Monday to
protest the proposal, which is sponsored by Councilman Edward Lon·
jak.

" I was surprised at the number of
people there," Lonjak said.
City Law Director Andrew Boyko
asked Lonjak to sponsor the
legislation after Boyko said he
received calls from Panna residents

~ BCS
'

How do yQu reach Minnie Mouse? ??

Parma proposal to ban reptiles draws hisses
PARMA, Ohio !AP I - Snake
lovers and others are hissing at a
proposal in Parma that would ban
"any dangerous or carnivorous wild
animal or reptile" from the city.
Legislation being considered by
City Council would prohibit the
keeping of bears, boa constrictors
longer than sil feet, bison, baboons
and 24 Other creatures.
Snake devotees argued at a city
safety committee meeting this week
that their favorite reptile has been
given a bum rap ever since Adam
and Eve.
"What I object to is condemning

asks for help to develop
residential alternatives

. JACKSON- Buckeye Community
: Services (BCS), a Jackson-based
;. agency which serves persons who
,. are developmentally disabled in
; eight Southeastern Ohio counties,
•·has devr:loped Recruitment Com·
: mittees for its "Small Residential
:.Alternatives Program."
: The role of the Recruitment Com'.mittees is to seek families and in':terested people to open their homes
·to persons who are developmentally
'·disabled and who are ready to return
; to the community. Handicapped per·
; sons enjoy the same rights as non}handicapped persons and are able to
:.develop to their potential with the
;aid of the Small Residential Alter·
:natives Program.
· B. C.S.' Small Residential Alter;natives Program has been
;'developed to provide a stable en.virorunent for persons who are
-developmentally disabled. The
.program consists of placing one to
lhree individuals who are mentally

retarded in a private home in which
the client can live as a family member, receiving both care and
training. A unique feature of the
Small R ~sidential Alternati ves
Program is that a home service
worker offers community training.
This is an in-home job that pays a
good salary, plus daily room and
board stipends. "If you are in need
of additional finariees but are unable
to leave your home, this would be an
ideal position for you, " says Marie
Hobbs, Recruitment Committee
chairman in Gallia County.
If anyone is interested in
becoming a home service worker or
are interested in volunteering in the
efforts of the Recruitment Committees, please contact Marie Hobbs, P. 0. Box 908, Gatilpolls, OH
45631 at 446-7032, lHS-9273, ~.
992-7296, or Buckeye Coliununity
Services, P. 0. Box 604, J ackson, OH
45640 at 2116-5039.

who wanted to keep tigers, camels
and even elephants as pets.
Legislation was obviously needed
and he stands by it, Boyko said.
"The most interesting pari of a
boa constrictor is feeding the snake
by placing a live mouse in the cage
and watching the snake stalk it,"
Boyko said. "If that's fun, you've got
to be a sadist to enjoy it. "
Not so, argued a Panna teacher.

co nstrictor supplied by the
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. "Don't
they (the council 1 have anything
better to do?"
A Panna man, Charles Cervanak,
ridiculed the limit which the
legislation places on the lengths or
crocodiles and snakes a nd
questioned how the rules would be
enforced. "Is Parma going to create
a civil service class for 'snake

''This is how kids learn.'' said

measurer nwnber one'?'' he won·

Mary J . Swisher as her '1:1 pr~
schoolers took turns Wednesday tarr
pping the scales on a 4G-pound boa

dered.
Rosenberg, who is also president
of the Northern Ohio Association of

Herpetologists, pointed out that " the
length or a snake frequenUy bears no
resemblance to its aggressiveness."
And "the co-owner of Panna Pets,
George K. Kratsas, said the
proposed law would hurt at the cash
register. He said he would lose at
least a fourth of his busineSs if
snakes were banned. Kratsas' own
!~foot boa hatched 24 snakes which
he said sold out quickly last year.
Lonjak, who predicts that the law
will be passed within two to four
weeks despite the objeetions, said
the fina l version will probably con-

,

ta in exemptions for educational
programs and professionals accredited to handle reptiles. It now
would exempt licensed pet shops and

said, "A lot of mail is going to be
delivered that hadn't been delivered
before. It's a useful little book.
Everyone should have one."
Levine, of course, wants everyone
to have one because he is the book's
compiler, the one who decided
whether someone is anyone. As it
t111111l out, about 3,200 people, world·
wide, rate 8ll anyone.
''I've tried to include people we en·

ANGELES (AP) - Superman, Miss Piggy, Colonel Sanders,
Ayatollah Khomeini, R202, Joe
' DiMaggio, Jolly Green Giant, Billy
Carter, Ronald McDonald, you may
come out now, you've been found.
· Where but in this town, awash in
celebrities, would somebody dream
up a directory called "How to Reach
Anyone WhO's Anyone?"
' "I'll tell you this," Michael Levine

'

zoos.
Rosenberg said that another
Cleveland suburb, Broadview
Heights, is the only Ohio city that
currently bans wild animals.
That city's law was enforced once
since it was ~ in 1978. A man
who was arrested last J uly was fined
$500 for possession of marijuana and
a python, said Broadview Heights
police.

LOO

sprtn sewtn

•••

BE AN INSTANT WINNER.
PLAY NEW SUPER 7
JACKPOT.
WIN
UP TO
.
'777.77 INSTANTLY. ~ETA
JACKPOT TICKET WHEN
YOU VISIT JOHNSON'S.
IS WILL BE THE LAST WEEK
THE JACKPOT MACHIN
THREE MAJOR WINNERS
ARE
SANDRA SAXON '77.77
EUGENE BURD '77.77 and

Q~J!.(kian
Bevel1Jgewate
This Week's
Special

59~
5% OZ. JUICE
GlASS
SPECIAL SIWINGS EJCH WEEK
ON FEATURED ITEMS

ROYAL
CREST

Spec ia l sa vi ng s on the high qu a lity
fab ric that's making fa shion news thi s
sp rin g I Co tton / pol yester solids, machine was h, d ry, 58-60" w ide.

Upon standing in my bedroom
looking at my dressing table t :er·
flowing with creams, lotions,
masques, gelnnd assorted globs c1
goo and gook, it has occurred to
me .....ah, the tortures I go through
to be beautifui. (First person who
snickers gets written up in next
week 's column under "Local
Deviants". )
: I can never remember being
really satisfied with my looks. I've
always felt frustrated because I was
so short. Other peoples' remarks
about "petite" and " tiny" only
meant to me cutting enough off
every new pair of jeans to make a
Barbie doll a complete trousseau or
a beach blanket for a five-year-old
child ...

And, even though I've never been
able to improve on being short, I
have tried to improve on everything
else.

I've taken so many leisurely soaks
in bath oil, that I had to install safety

rails along the bathroom walls. It
was either that or put cletes on my
bedroom slippers.
I'v.e hung so many mirrors around
my bedroom walls (in order to check
hem lengths, mak~up, hair, etc.),
that my friends tell complete

Fo r th e sp ring suit! Go slim an d sophisti cated with the se polyester / rayon
slubbed solid s. Machine wash, dry, 4445 " wide.
Reg . $3.99 &amp; $4.49 yd.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 2ND THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 8TH

PARTS

39~

BUTIERM ILK·

79~

oz. 89~
: CHICKEN BREAST · ·:.,:,:,;. :.,:.; :;:;:;:·: : .•'p:: ~:: G:: :. :. ; :; .: : :,.,
12

••.::;::;,,.,,•. , • ••,;::,-;,:;:;:;:::••··'··•::::;::.:::;:;:;.:::;:;:;:;:

..

89

9064

VALLEY BElL
Fashion Basics ... o n the go in Ponte
double knits or gabardine and po plin w o ve n s. Pol ye st e r, machine
wa sh, dry. 60" w id e .

Save ·SO%!
Denim Blues
A fine value iust in time fo! the
fashionable " baggie -pants" lookl
Polyest e r / cotton solids, machine
wash, dry, from 42 11 wide.

$oz. .

Reg. $3.99 yd.

$1!!

Printed Interlocks ... the knit s that
ma ke yo u fee l as pre tty a s sp ring time! Polyeste r, mach ine wa sh and
dr y, 6 0" wide .

;;g99 yd .

$2?.!

..

Entire Stock Decorator Fab rics ...
for a fresh, clean, new deco r ! Special orde r swatchbooks or in -sto re
stock.

Save to 33%!
Pretty Prints

8-16

WHOLE FRYERS/ )

ICO'nAGE
CHEESE

COKE,
OR SPRITE

45¢L8.

24 OZ. CTN.

~LB.

:::

89

DEL MONTE

Save to 43%!
Sheer Delights

MONTE

Fi ne wovens. Polyester l_cotton lena
solids, prints; dimity and voile prints.
Machine wash, dry, 45 " wide .

Reg. $1.99 to $2.49 yd.

Reg. $2.49 to $3.49 yd .

CATSUP

••
'
I'

i
i

~

••J

A

I

I'.

U.S. 10c Before 1808 . ..... .......... . $30.00toS3500 .00
us 10c 1809· 1837 ... . ............ . ...... $.4.00 to $30.00
US 10C 1838-1891 . . .. .. . .... . .... . .. ... . . $1 .50toS7.00
us 20C 1875· 1878 .......... . . . ......... $8.00 to $300.00
us 25c to 1796 .. .. . .. ..... . ... .. ... $300.ootos7000.00
US 25c 1804· 1807 . .... .. ............ . S30.o0tOS1000.00
us 2sc 1815-1837 ... . ... . . ... .. . ....... sa.oo to ssoo.Oll
US 25c 1838·1891 .. ....... .. .. . .. ...... , $3,15 to $25.00 ·
us soc 1796 and 1797 .. . ...... . ... ... ssoo.oO'to $6000.00 .
us 50c 1794 to 1806 .................. $15.00to $1000.00
US 50&lt;: 1807 to 1837 . ........ ... ......... $6:80 to $25.00
us 1838 to 1891 .... . . . .............. $3 } 5 to S25.00
us $1.00 to 1794 .. .. . .... ... . . .. .. . . ssoo.oo to $5000.00

3

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING
. PLAZA
.

soc

ST. RT. 7

TAWNEY JEWELERS
r

GALLIPOLIS, OH.O

••

=me.

ICS

•

-~
'·

,

. HOLSUM SPECIAL .

l
~

~i\1· ·

•

N

I,

j,

SLICED WHITE BREAD

F?~9: 9~.

',SAV~ 30• ON I~CH PACKAGE

·oF ARCHWAY FAMILY STYLE
'
'
COOKIES•

US NO.

~APPLES
3LB.
BAG

99~

'i

·WHITE POTATOES

FRESH GREEN

CABBAGE

s~

.ORANGES.
5 i.B.

$}29

170Z.
CAN

55~

2FOR99~

I

;•

Buying U. S. Type Coins

29

,
·~

DEL MONTE
CHUNKY MIXED
FRUIT

.·.
...

.·.

·_;

:-:

GOLD KIST

t

CHICKEN LEGS

., 7
FOUR
5 oz.
CANS

.

LB.79~

79~

DOZEN

LARGE EGGS CARTON

DEL MONTE
CUT GREEN BEANS
NEAPPLE IN JUICE

28 OZ. CAN

SLICED-CHUNK-CRUSHED

59¢

16 OZ. CAN

PKG.

•

FLAVORS

DEL MONTE
CHUNKY PEACHES

TOILET TISSUE

$

!
All

DDING CUPS

BOmES

Flor(Jl s that put the sp ring in your
ste p and a smile in your style I For
tops, skirts ; polyester / cotton , machine wash, dry, 45 " wide.

c:8~KE~EJlsT

..

~ · ·

$}19

09

6 ROLL

II'

tioLD , ~Ist

Sui t Si m plici t y -

$1.000 U.S. Gol d Coins- We Pay ..... . ..... $100.00&amp; up
$2.40 u.s. Gold Coi ns-We Pay ...... . . . .. $100.00&amp; up
$3.00 u.s. Gold Coins-We Pay ........... $175.00&amp; up
$5.00 U.S. Gold Coins- We Pay .......... . $120.00 &amp; up
$10.00 u.s. Gold Coins- We Pay ........... $250.00&amp; up
· $20.00 U.S . Gold Coins- We Pay .... . ...... $500.00&amp; up
PLEAS E NOT E: We pay at leas t twice above pric es for
U.S. gold coins dated 1833 or before.

fj

CITY WIEN

•• • TASTEE BOLOGNA
...
'.··•••
BY THE PIECE ONLY
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, _, , .G
, , ,~,·, ,~,'D
' ' ' ''K
' ' 'r's'' r'' '"'••:·•:·:,., ,_, , , _: · ' ' '"' ',.,·::':::•·:t·· ••': "·'·'·• '''"'"'""u'"•s'•'•'•&amp;'"',7A:..;•·•'c
•'•'•' ~
' ': : :o
:' ' ' 'l•'('·:'· '·~'•'•'" ".,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.),
LB.
~

HALF GALLON

SALE SET
POMEROY - A nunmage sale
will be held from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday in the
basement of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church.

424 Second AN.

49~B.

. ..

"BROUGHTON

GALLON
PLASTIC

CUT UP FRYERS

MIXED FRYER

98~

Gold Coins·

·•

PHONE 446-9593

VIN,E STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ICE
HALF GALLON

-YARD

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

CHHJSUPPERSATURDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Sorority will stage a public chill supper from 4 to 8 p.m. Saturday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
Those wishing to purchase chill to
take out are to take their own containers.

was an autograph collector. I picked
up the hobby from my father. Ex·
cept, rather than hapg afOWld stage
doors all day, as he did, I decided to
use the mail. Much more efficient, I
thought.
"But I discovered I couldn't lind
any body's address. I had to learn the
tricks. Well, I became good at finding addresses.

BROUGHTON

Mli.K

s321

By S.llr•nne Holts

Even so, it took him four years to
convince a publisher that his zany
idea had merit. The publisher,
Price-Stem-sloan, promises the
book by spring, perhaps by April
Fool's Day. Neither Price nor Stern
nor Sloan, by the way, is listed.
Levine came to his idea for his
directory rather by accident.
"Back in New York ," he said, "I

•

•

Save to 27%! Linen Looks
Timei·Sentinelst•ff writer

right. Decker, Alonzo Jr., Pres., 701
East Joppa Rd., Towson, Md., 21204.
It's all in the book."
Levine, Michael, compiler, 256 S.
Robertson , Beverly Hills, Calif.,
90211, is a 26-year-old former New
Yorker who dropped out of college
and headed for the opposite coast
where zany ideas seem td root bet·
ter .

Sale ends Saturday, March 8th.

Reg. $5.99 yd .

strangers ·about m y " huge"
bedroom. It is nine by. twelve.
Upon hearing "You are what you
eat" (How many times has
MOTHER told you that?), I've
resolved a hundred times to try to
like liver - just one more Ume. I
never did. (Interesting note : my
cookbook lists liver under the
beading "variety meats"; I would
have called it something else .. . ) Who
wants to look like liver, anyway?
It's all soft and wrinkled ...
I wear so many garments
designed to push in, push out or hold
up, when I soak my stomach in, my
knee hose fall down. (Not being able
to breathe is so conunon to me, I
carry a portable lank of oxygen in
my purse, just in case.)
This time of year, it's especially
hard to look my best - with the
static electricity in my hair making
me look like I've just surprised a
burgler in the act. My hair looks
good u long as I stand perfectly still
and don't try to do anything daring
- for instance, breathe. ( Heaven
forbid I should try to do anything
really exotic, like walk!)
The trouble is, there's so much
competition - and all of them are
22, 5 foot 7, and 110 poWlds. I only
weigh 100 pounds and 1 suppose I
could wear high heels; it's the "22"
that's got me stumped...

COWlter in daily life but who are so
remote1\le-don;t know how to reach
them," he said.{
. "Want to write to the head of the
Hilton hotel to tell him how much
you enjoyed our stay? Here he is.
Hilton, Barron, Pres., 9800 Wilshire
Blvd., Beverly Hills, Calif., 90210.
"Want to write to the head of
Black and Decker Tool Co.? All

POUND

DEL MONTE
CHUNKY PEARS

DEL MONTE
VAC PACK
WHOLE KERNEL CORN
12 OZ. CAN

3FoR99~

DEL MONTE
BUFFET FRUITS
FRUIT COCKTAIL,
SLICED PEACHES,
PEAR HALVES

~rf'99~
FOR

�'
B-3-The Sunday Times-sentinel. Sunday. March 2. 19110
S-2- The Sw"lay Times-sentinel, Sunday. March 2. 19811

I.

an entire group of animals because
they are misunderstood," said Martin J . Rosenbeffl, a Case Western
Reserve University biologist.
About 40 persons, some of whom
carried coiled snakes, attended a
committee meeting on Monday to
protest the proposal, which is sponsored by Councilman Edward Lon·
jak.

" I was surprised at the number of
people there," Lonjak said.
City Law Director Andrew Boyko
asked Lonjak to sponsor the
legislation after Boyko said he
received calls from Panna residents

~ BCS
'

How do yQu reach Minnie Mouse? ??

Parma proposal to ban reptiles draws hisses
PARMA, Ohio !AP I - Snake
lovers and others are hissing at a
proposal in Parma that would ban
"any dangerous or carnivorous wild
animal or reptile" from the city.
Legislation being considered by
City Council would prohibit the
keeping of bears, boa constrictors
longer than sil feet, bison, baboons
and 24 Other creatures.
Snake devotees argued at a city
safety committee meeting this week
that their favorite reptile has been
given a bum rap ever since Adam
and Eve.
"What I object to is condemning

asks for help to develop
residential alternatives

. JACKSON- Buckeye Community
: Services (BCS), a Jackson-based
;. agency which serves persons who
,. are developmentally disabled in
; eight Southeastern Ohio counties,
•·has devr:loped Recruitment Com·
: mittees for its "Small Residential
:.Alternatives Program."
: The role of the Recruitment Com'.mittees is to seek families and in':terested people to open their homes
·to persons who are developmentally
'·disabled and who are ready to return
; to the community. Handicapped per·
; sons enjoy the same rights as non}handicapped persons and are able to
:.develop to their potential with the
;aid of the Small Residential Alter·
:natives Program.
· B. C.S.' Small Residential Alter;natives Program has been
;'developed to provide a stable en.virorunent for persons who are
-developmentally disabled. The
.program consists of placing one to
lhree individuals who are mentally

retarded in a private home in which
the client can live as a family member, receiving both care and
training. A unique feature of the
Small R ~sidential Alternati ves
Program is that a home service
worker offers community training.
This is an in-home job that pays a
good salary, plus daily room and
board stipends. "If you are in need
of additional finariees but are unable
to leave your home, this would be an
ideal position for you, " says Marie
Hobbs, Recruitment Committee
chairman in Gallia County.
If anyone is interested in
becoming a home service worker or
are interested in volunteering in the
efforts of the Recruitment Committees, please contact Marie Hobbs, P. 0. Box 908, Gatilpolls, OH
45631 at 446-7032, lHS-9273, ~.
992-7296, or Buckeye Coliununity
Services, P. 0. Box 604, J ackson, OH
45640 at 2116-5039.

who wanted to keep tigers, camels
and even elephants as pets.
Legislation was obviously needed
and he stands by it, Boyko said.
"The most interesting pari of a
boa constrictor is feeding the snake
by placing a live mouse in the cage
and watching the snake stalk it,"
Boyko said. "If that's fun, you've got
to be a sadist to enjoy it. "
Not so, argued a Panna teacher.

co nstrictor supplied by the
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. "Don't
they (the council 1 have anything
better to do?"
A Panna man, Charles Cervanak,
ridiculed the limit which the
legislation places on the lengths or
crocodiles and snakes a nd
questioned how the rules would be
enforced. "Is Parma going to create
a civil service class for 'snake

''This is how kids learn.'' said

measurer nwnber one'?'' he won·

Mary J . Swisher as her '1:1 pr~
schoolers took turns Wednesday tarr
pping the scales on a 4G-pound boa

dered.
Rosenberg, who is also president
of the Northern Ohio Association of

Herpetologists, pointed out that " the
length or a snake frequenUy bears no
resemblance to its aggressiveness."
And "the co-owner of Panna Pets,
George K. Kratsas, said the
proposed law would hurt at the cash
register. He said he would lose at
least a fourth of his busineSs if
snakes were banned. Kratsas' own
!~foot boa hatched 24 snakes which
he said sold out quickly last year.
Lonjak, who predicts that the law
will be passed within two to four
weeks despite the objeetions, said
the fina l version will probably con-

,

ta in exemptions for educational
programs and professionals accredited to handle reptiles. It now
would exempt licensed pet shops and

said, "A lot of mail is going to be
delivered that hadn't been delivered
before. It's a useful little book.
Everyone should have one."
Levine, of course, wants everyone
to have one because he is the book's
compiler, the one who decided
whether someone is anyone. As it
t111111l out, about 3,200 people, world·
wide, rate 8ll anyone.
''I've tried to include people we en·

ANGELES (AP) - Superman, Miss Piggy, Colonel Sanders,
Ayatollah Khomeini, R202, Joe
' DiMaggio, Jolly Green Giant, Billy
Carter, Ronald McDonald, you may
come out now, you've been found.
· Where but in this town, awash in
celebrities, would somebody dream
up a directory called "How to Reach
Anyone WhO's Anyone?"
' "I'll tell you this," Michael Levine

'

zoos.
Rosenberg said that another
Cleveland suburb, Broadview
Heights, is the only Ohio city that
currently bans wild animals.
That city's law was enforced once
since it was ~ in 1978. A man
who was arrested last J uly was fined
$500 for possession of marijuana and
a python, said Broadview Heights
police.

LOO

sprtn sewtn

•••

BE AN INSTANT WINNER.
PLAY NEW SUPER 7
JACKPOT.
WIN
UP TO
.
'777.77 INSTANTLY. ~ETA
JACKPOT TICKET WHEN
YOU VISIT JOHNSON'S.
IS WILL BE THE LAST WEEK
THE JACKPOT MACHIN
THREE MAJOR WINNERS
ARE
SANDRA SAXON '77.77
EUGENE BURD '77.77 and

Q~J!.(kian
Bevel1Jgewate
This Week's
Special

59~
5% OZ. JUICE
GlASS
SPECIAL SIWINGS EJCH WEEK
ON FEATURED ITEMS

ROYAL
CREST

Spec ia l sa vi ng s on the high qu a lity
fab ric that's making fa shion news thi s
sp rin g I Co tton / pol yester solids, machine was h, d ry, 58-60" w ide.

Upon standing in my bedroom
looking at my dressing table t :er·
flowing with creams, lotions,
masques, gelnnd assorted globs c1
goo and gook, it has occurred to
me .....ah, the tortures I go through
to be beautifui. (First person who
snickers gets written up in next
week 's column under "Local
Deviants". )
: I can never remember being
really satisfied with my looks. I've
always felt frustrated because I was
so short. Other peoples' remarks
about "petite" and " tiny" only
meant to me cutting enough off
every new pair of jeans to make a
Barbie doll a complete trousseau or
a beach blanket for a five-year-old
child ...

And, even though I've never been
able to improve on being short, I
have tried to improve on everything
else.

I've taken so many leisurely soaks
in bath oil, that I had to install safety

rails along the bathroom walls. It
was either that or put cletes on my
bedroom slippers.
I'v.e hung so many mirrors around
my bedroom walls (in order to check
hem lengths, mak~up, hair, etc.),
that my friends tell complete

Fo r th e sp ring suit! Go slim an d sophisti cated with the se polyester / rayon
slubbed solid s. Machine wash, dry, 4445 " wide.
Reg . $3.99 &amp; $4.49 yd.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUNDAY, MARCH 2ND THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 8TH

PARTS

39~

BUTIERM ILK·

79~

oz. 89~
: CHICKEN BREAST · ·:.,:,:,;. :.,:.; :;:;:;:·: : .•'p:: ~:: G:: :. :. ; :; .: : :,.,
12

••.::;::;,,.,,•. , • ••,;::,-;,:;:;:;:::••··'··•::::;::.:::;:;:;.:::;:;:;:;:

..

89

9064

VALLEY BElL
Fashion Basics ... o n the go in Ponte
double knits or gabardine and po plin w o ve n s. Pol ye st e r, machine
wa sh, dry. 60" w id e .

Save ·SO%!
Denim Blues
A fine value iust in time fo! the
fashionable " baggie -pants" lookl
Polyest e r / cotton solids, machine
wash, dry, from 42 11 wide.

$oz. .

Reg. $3.99 yd.

$1!!

Printed Interlocks ... the knit s that
ma ke yo u fee l as pre tty a s sp ring time! Polyeste r, mach ine wa sh and
dr y, 6 0" wide .

;;g99 yd .

$2?.!

..

Entire Stock Decorator Fab rics ...
for a fresh, clean, new deco r ! Special orde r swatchbooks or in -sto re
stock.

Save to 33%!
Pretty Prints

8-16

WHOLE FRYERS/ )

ICO'nAGE
CHEESE

COKE,
OR SPRITE

45¢L8.

24 OZ. CTN.

~LB.

:::

89

DEL MONTE

Save to 43%!
Sheer Delights

MONTE

Fi ne wovens. Polyester l_cotton lena
solids, prints; dimity and voile prints.
Machine wash, dry, 45 " wide .

Reg. $1.99 to $2.49 yd.

Reg. $2.49 to $3.49 yd .

CATSUP

••
'
I'

i
i

~

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A

I

I'.

U.S. 10c Before 1808 . ..... .......... . $30.00toS3500 .00
us 10c 1809· 1837 ... . ............ . ...... $.4.00 to $30.00
US 10C 1838-1891 . . .. .. . .... . .... . .. ... . . $1 .50toS7.00
us 20C 1875· 1878 .......... . . . ......... $8.00 to $300.00
us 25c to 1796 .. .. . .. ..... . ... .. ... $300.ootos7000.00
US 25c 1804· 1807 . .... .. ............ . S30.o0tOS1000.00
us 2sc 1815-1837 ... . ... . . ... .. . ....... sa.oo to ssoo.Oll
US 25c 1838·1891 .. ....... .. .. . .. ...... , $3,15 to $25.00 ·
us soc 1796 and 1797 .. . ...... . ... ... ssoo.oO'to $6000.00 .
us 50c 1794 to 1806 .................. $15.00to $1000.00
US 50&lt;: 1807 to 1837 . ........ ... ......... $6:80 to $25.00
us 1838 to 1891 .... . . . .............. $3 } 5 to S25.00
us $1.00 to 1794 .. .. . .... ... . . .. .. . . ssoo.oo to $5000.00

3

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING
. PLAZA
.

soc

ST. RT. 7

TAWNEY JEWELERS
r

GALLIPOLIS, OH.O

••

=me.

ICS

•

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'·

,

. HOLSUM SPECIAL .

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~

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SLICED WHITE BREAD

F?~9: 9~.

',SAV~ 30• ON I~CH PACKAGE

·oF ARCHWAY FAMILY STYLE
'
'
COOKIES•

US NO.

~APPLES
3LB.
BAG

99~

'i

·WHITE POTATOES

FRESH GREEN

CABBAGE

s~

.ORANGES.
5 i.B.

$}29

170Z.
CAN

55~

2FOR99~

I

;•

Buying U. S. Type Coins

29

,
·~

DEL MONTE
CHUNKY MIXED
FRUIT

.·.
...

.·.

·_;

:-:

GOLD KIST

t

CHICKEN LEGS

., 7
FOUR
5 oz.
CANS

.

LB.79~

79~

DOZEN

LARGE EGGS CARTON

DEL MONTE
CUT GREEN BEANS
NEAPPLE IN JUICE

28 OZ. CAN

SLICED-CHUNK-CRUSHED

59¢

16 OZ. CAN

PKG.

•

FLAVORS

DEL MONTE
CHUNKY PEACHES

TOILET TISSUE

$

!
All

DDING CUPS

BOmES

Flor(Jl s that put the sp ring in your
ste p and a smile in your style I For
tops, skirts ; polyester / cotton , machine wash, dry, 45 " wide.

c:8~KE~EJlsT

..

~ · ·

$}19

09

6 ROLL

II'

tioLD , ~Ist

Sui t Si m plici t y -

$1.000 U.S. Gol d Coins- We Pay ..... . ..... $100.00&amp; up
$2.40 u.s. Gold Coi ns-We Pay ...... . . . .. $100.00&amp; up
$3.00 u.s. Gold Coins-We Pay ........... $175.00&amp; up
$5.00 U.S. Gold Coins- We Pay .......... . $120.00 &amp; up
$10.00 u.s. Gold Coins- We Pay ........... $250.00&amp; up
· $20.00 U.S . Gold Coins- We Pay .... . ...... $500.00&amp; up
PLEAS E NOT E: We pay at leas t twice above pric es for
U.S. gold coins dated 1833 or before.

fj

CITY WIEN

•• • TASTEE BOLOGNA
...
'.··•••
BY THE PIECE ONLY
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,, _, , .G
, , ,~,·, ,~,'D
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LB.
~

HALF GALLON

SALE SET
POMEROY - A nunmage sale
will be held from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m.
Tuesday and Wednesday in the
basement of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church.

424 Second AN.

49~B.

. ..

"BROUGHTON

GALLON
PLASTIC

CUT UP FRYERS

MIXED FRYER

98~

Gold Coins·

·•

PHONE 446-9593

VIN,E STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ICE
HALF GALLON

-YARD

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

CHHJSUPPERSATURDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Sorority will stage a public chill supper from 4 to 8 p.m. Saturday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
Those wishing to purchase chill to
take out are to take their own containers.

was an autograph collector. I picked
up the hobby from my father. Ex·
cept, rather than hapg afOWld stage
doors all day, as he did, I decided to
use the mail. Much more efficient, I
thought.
"But I discovered I couldn't lind
any body's address. I had to learn the
tricks. Well, I became good at finding addresses.

BROUGHTON

Mli.K

s321

By S.llr•nne Holts

Even so, it took him four years to
convince a publisher that his zany
idea had merit. The publisher,
Price-Stem-sloan, promises the
book by spring, perhaps by April
Fool's Day. Neither Price nor Stern
nor Sloan, by the way, is listed.
Levine came to his idea for his
directory rather by accident.
"Back in New York ," he said, "I

•

•

Save to 27%! Linen Looks
Timei·Sentinelst•ff writer

right. Decker, Alonzo Jr., Pres., 701
East Joppa Rd., Towson, Md., 21204.
It's all in the book."
Levine, Michael, compiler, 256 S.
Robertson , Beverly Hills, Calif.,
90211, is a 26-year-old former New
Yorker who dropped out of college
and headed for the opposite coast
where zany ideas seem td root bet·
ter .

Sale ends Saturday, March 8th.

Reg. $5.99 yd .

strangers ·about m y " huge"
bedroom. It is nine by. twelve.
Upon hearing "You are what you
eat" (How many times has
MOTHER told you that?), I've
resolved a hundred times to try to
like liver - just one more Ume. I
never did. (Interesting note : my
cookbook lists liver under the
beading "variety meats"; I would
have called it something else .. . ) Who
wants to look like liver, anyway?
It's all soft and wrinkled ...
I wear so many garments
designed to push in, push out or hold
up, when I soak my stomach in, my
knee hose fall down. (Not being able
to breathe is so conunon to me, I
carry a portable lank of oxygen in
my purse, just in case.)
This time of year, it's especially
hard to look my best - with the
static electricity in my hair making
me look like I've just surprised a
burgler in the act. My hair looks
good u long as I stand perfectly still
and don't try to do anything daring
- for instance, breathe. ( Heaven
forbid I should try to do anything
really exotic, like walk!)
The trouble is, there's so much
competition - and all of them are
22, 5 foot 7, and 110 poWlds. I only
weigh 100 pounds and 1 suppose I
could wear high heels; it's the "22"
that's got me stumped...

COWlter in daily life but who are so
remote1\le-don;t know how to reach
them," he said.{
. "Want to write to the head of the
Hilton hotel to tell him how much
you enjoyed our stay? Here he is.
Hilton, Barron, Pres., 9800 Wilshire
Blvd., Beverly Hills, Calif., 90210.
"Want to write to the head of
Black and Decker Tool Co.? All

POUND

DEL MONTE
CHUNKY PEARS

DEL MONTE
VAC PACK
WHOLE KERNEL CORN
12 OZ. CAN

3FoR99~

DEL MONTE
BUFFET FRUITS
FRUIT COCKTAIL,
SLICED PEACHES,
PEAR HALVES

~rf'99~
FOR

�84-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday. !'&lt;larch 2. 1980
8-4-- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday. March 2, 1980

People in the news

'BoRie' movie on CBS

"' '
"'
-rc
•··
;&lt;
; 1,M·

;' '

.~

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·~
'·'
·''
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LOS ANGELES (AP) - Kathryn
Harrold said she had misgivings
about playing Lauren Bacall in the
CBS move "Bogie" to air tltis week
and, "ktill do.
"!don't think I would have done It
if it was Lauren Bacall's story," the
actress said. "But it was really
about Humphrey Bogart and my
part was not the main focus , so that
sort of took the onus off. It was fun to
study her and see her movies. The
parts where I really got to do her I
had a lot of fun doing."
Miss Harrold said she had never
heard from Miss Bacall, who on
several occasions expressed her
outrage about the movie. Miss
Bacall had said she not only resen-

ted the invaswn of the privacy of her
relationship with Humphrey Bogart,
but that scenes In the film were "fie-

Romero, Cleavon Little and singer
Trini Lopez. The jazz vocal ~up
Manhatta n Transfer performed and
bunnies abounded.
NO DRINKS TO
DANCE BY
NEW YORK (AP) - The trendy

'BUNNIES' MULTIPLY
LOS ANGElES (AP) - "We had
no idea that the bunnies were going
to literally multiply like rabbits.''
So said Playboy magazine founder
Hugh Hefner as he welcomed guests
Friday night to the twentieth anniversary celebration of the Playboy
Club.
The party was held at the Los
Angeles Playboy Club and televised
on a closed circuit to several other
clubs. Celebrities attending included
· actors Stuart Whitman, Cesar

In any case, Miss Harrold barely
missed an encounter with tbe legendary actress. "! did 'The Rockford
Files' right after her," Miss Harrold
said.
Both episodes in the NBC series
were broadcast right after the start
of the new season in September.
It appears Miss Bacall's fears
about the movie, which airs Tuesday
night, were well founded. The movie
does no honor to Bogart, despite its
mtention. It is a crashing bore and is
clumsily constructed with a dated
look to it.

to March 1, leaving actors Jon
Voight and Sylvester Stallone and
others to only non-alcoholic drinks to
round out their evening.
The disco on Friday was denied a
temporary extension of the license,

crowd stood about Studio 54 early r~;;;:;:;:=::::;::::=========:=::::::::::=::=
Saturday lOOming, sipping soft
drinks and fruit juices while state
liquor agents had their eyes peeled ,
for booze.
The Manhattan disco lost Its liquor
license when the calendar switched

...
l f"
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'

MONKEY RUN · WEST MAIN AREA

I

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,,
."' '' '

...''

'

,

'·"'-'~~

,, 1
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•
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',.
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I.

Sally Ann Hayman

Thi s yea r. make su re yo u are usin g the proper tax form .
. Even 1f yo u ftl ed the Short Form last yea r. yo ur
c trcumstances th is y ea r co uld he lp you save money by
f1 1!ng th e Long Form . At H&amp;R Block . we'll revi ew your
tax sttu atton to deci de which form all ows you to pay the
lowest legi timate tax .

CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL

i!OOleOile ebe can use them.

·',

save you
money on
your taxes

CARRIER NEEDED
IN POMEROY

,r.

"·

·."..

The Long

·'
,,

POMEROY .:.. o Illes - pleaae
bring bacll: thoee overdue boob eo

Macbeth, a son of Macduff, won
the 1888 Kentucky Derby.

.l"r---------..
Form could
ATTENTION
...•

Five local couples announce their engagements

wltich was lifted when owners Steve
Rubell and Ian Schrager were convicted of federal income tax evasion.
The Liquor Authority said they were
"not fit and proper persons" to bold
·
a license.
The disco is changing ownership to
try to retrieve the license:

• Substantial interest penally required for early withdrawal.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hayman, Union Ave.,
' Pomeroy, are announcing the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Sally Ann, to James
Rankin Hutton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Manford Hutton, Bradbury.
Miss Hayman is a junior at Meigs
High School and her fiance is a 1976
graduate of Meigs High. He is
employed as a bricklayer. A July
wedding is being planned.

La Leche League

2nd
&amp; BROWN
ST.
""":~~-=~~~'!!!"'!"!!'
MASON,
W. VA
. ..
POMEROY,O.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
OPEN TUES .
THURS . &amp; SAT.
ft 6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9 A.M.-5 P.M.
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE 773-9128 THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
PHONE 992·3795
618 E . MAIN ST.

H&amp;R BLOC.,."'

BElWEEN 8:30 and 5:00

plans to meet
~

THE ATHENS COUNTY
~SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second

PH. 992-2156

Gallipolis, Ohio
10pen 9 am -6 pm Weekdays, 9-S Sat.

Phone 446-0303
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Alhens • !!92-e681 - Pomeroy • 992-6655

:
•

~

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY

~

ALL MEAT FRANKS....... ~.$1

39

•'
~ New

KAHN'S

ALL BEEF FRAN KS........ ~.$1

49

TONY'S HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD MIX ............~..$1

19

KEEBLER

PRODUCE

·cABBAGE
FRESH
SOLID

CINNAMON CRISP. .~.~-·~·~x

YOUR

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

arrival

j

29~· ·

2 LB.

the

•

8 PACK

'

GALUPOUS - Activities for this
week at the Senior Citizens Center
220JacksonPlke,are:
'
Monday, March 3 - Chorus, 1-a
p.m.
MONDAY
Tuesday, March 4 - S.T.O.P.
EASTERN ATHLETIC Boosters,
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the high school
11 :15a.m.; Bible Study, 1-2p.m.
SPECIAL MEETING, Pomeroy
Wednesday, March 5 - Mobile
Unit at Cr11wn City, 1 p.m.; Card
Chapter SO, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Monday with work in mark
Games, 1-3;. World Religion Class • 1
p.m. ; Macrame Class, 1-3.
master and past master degree.
FRENCH Colony Chapter DAR at . Thursday' March 6 - Choking
Seminar, 1 p.m. ; Blood Pressure
1:30 p.m. with Miss Mary VIrginia
Check,1 : 1~1:45.
O'Brian.
Friday, March 7 - Art Class
GRACE GUILD, Grace UM Church,
12:»-3 p.m.; Advisory Council, 1:30
atGodSquadnn., poUuck, 6:15p.m.
p.m.; Social Hour, 7.
ANNUAL meeting of the Advisory
The Senior Nutrition Program will
Council of the GalUa County Health
serve the following menus:
Dept. will meet at 11 a.m.
Monday - John Manettl, ·green
beans, cottage cheese, bread, butter, peaches, milk.
Weight loss reported
Tuesday - New England boiled
RU'l'LAND-Ribbon awards for
d!Mer, cornbread, butter, yellow
weight loss are being given at the
cake, milk.
weekly meetings of the TOPS Club
Wednesday - Liver and onions
OH 1466, Rutland.
baked potato, spinach bread, butter:
Lynda Adkins was queen for the
fruit gelatin, mllk.
week and received her lavender and
Thursday - Italian Polenta with
purple ribbon with the Inscription
Italtan sausage, brocc!oli, tossed
"Weekly Queen", a dollar, and had
aalad, ron, buttu, lee cream, milk.
the club membe!'ll sing in Iier honor.
Friday - Chicken, mashed
Members are encouraged to keep
potatoes, peas, bread, butter, apple
their ribbons, the colors to be chang- cobbler, milk.
ed each week.
Choice of beverage served with
Ellen Rife presided at the meeting
each meal .
which opened with the club pledge.
"Services rendered on a nonRoll call showed two gainers, two discriminatory basis...
turtles, and three TOPS. Mrs. Rife
conducted TOPS bingo for the ·pro.
gram, and Shorty Wright had an exMEETS MONDAY
ercise session. The exercise proROCK
SPRINGS - . The Meigs
gram will become a part of the
County
Board
will meet at 8 p.m.
regular meeting.
Monday
at
the
~·s office on
Anyone lnte~ In Joining the
the
Rock
Sprines
Fairgrounds.
"lUb Is asked totelephone742-3re2.

Social Calendar

.:.
=

FLORIDA ·ORANG,ES

··~

5 LB. BAG

PRICE IGOOD ALL WEEK - NO·UMIT

i~--------coueorr-------, ~ - -------coiiitoil-----~--~ •1----------------------·-·~
r--------~~----~·~--COUPON ·· No. 255
, COUesll
1 :
.

I

I

BAKED BY BETSY ROSS
·

1I
1I

1I GATEWAY BREAD III I
I
3t6 OZ. LOAVES 79~ II
I
UMIT 3
I
Coupon Expires Sat., March a, 1980 l
CITY GATEWAY

------

-

.

BROUGHTON

I

2% MILK
GALLON PLASnC '179
UMIT 1

Coupon EKpires Sat., March a, 1980

L.-----_T~.!~£.1!!,

y

I

I

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I
l II
1

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I
I

..

12·

SUPERIOR NO. 1

IIACON

oz. PKG.

UMITl

I

,,-~

Coupon Expires Sat~ , March.8, 1980
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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

I'

!

I

wx LIQUID
SOAP DETERG~T
32 oz an.
"

'1 ,.,

Coupon Expires Sat., Mar,ch 1, 1910

TWtN err~ ftATaWAY .

.

I, ••

Tues~.

,,

..

14oun.: mon, ., Fri. 111 I
ytld., Set. IllS

'l"llur;:tfll ·! 'ol-·
'

.

""'~*· ···

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.

Now Avalla!J~~ Thruugh Th~ - - - -

I

-

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MART .

CIRCULAR

FEAtHER PUFF
fi1MERS 5For '1
UVA PWMES

'1

For

On Pg. 2
Due to the manufacturer
unable to ship, these Items
will not be available tor
this sale. No rainchecks
will be issued.
We are sorry for any in·
convenie.n ce this has caused our customers.

If you're ge tt ing mar rie d soon, 9u r bridal consultant will take
the time to learn about you r p ~rsona l preferences and projected
lifestyle . She c&lt;m hdp yoll &lt;;elect the pattern s and gifts that you
genuinely wan t and will always ~.: nj oy.

9tH·lA'
Member National Bridal Sen'ice

."The Shop W'zth
Larger Ladies In Mirid.

'1-Q

"'

· *"((;

~,.

c;

~ A large selection of blouses,

~
~o

q.c;

Just Arrived!

&lt;-.

()J-

()
vests &amp; iackets, sizes 36-44 "'-s. ~~
0
Skirts ,&amp; slacks, size. 30·42i "'-t:
in a wide variety of colors in~
eluding navy, brown, pink,
'P
carnation, turquoise, red and
lade.
O.p

-s.

"'.o

·

"'

We Also
Have:
Coffee Coats
Gowns
Negligees
In X, XXL,

&amp;XXXL
Sizes.

I

.

·
NiciC Johnion, Accountant Exeeuti vp
'4SUnl! 4v". ·.
·. ' Phorle446· 1761 ·
·,· Gallipolis ..

.

In Today's Newspaper

33,Second

McGINf'!IISI-STAHLEY .· AGENCY, .INC.

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

•

For yeal'll, you've
seen and heard
· advertising abo~t
Allstate Homeownel)l insurance.
Ahil now, it's available lu!re, at our
agency. But, did you know that if .
your house is 5 years old or less you
may qutilify for Allstate's "New'
House tO Percent Discount" on your
baaic premium?
Allstete has found it costs lesa
to insure newer homes, and they're
' passing this savings on to you .
Give us a call and get in oh the
savings! ,
Al-.• • ln&gt;~f\Ont&gt;• I 'h'"ll'l'~'

-

OLDER IS BE'ITER
NEW YORK (AP) - New York
voters apparently are undisturbed
by Sen. Jacob Javits' advancing
years or falling health.
A new poll shows the Republican
senator lB favored over any of his opponents.
The results of the Seasonweln Poll
were released Friday, four days 11(ter the 7r&gt;-year-old Javits announced
his decision to run for a fifth six-year
term this year. He is suffering from
a motor neuron disease that lB slow
in developing.

4Q

Allstate can save~ 10% ·
u..:_.J_".
on ttr--~.J
uuuu n.aii08 msurance
. for your . home.

Murphqs)

On Pg. 4and

Here in Gallia County

•

. SWEET ANDJU

' '1 1

16 OZ. BTL CTN.

CHOICE

3 LB. BAG

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs.
Chester C. Rice of College Park,
Ga. , f~nnerly of Middleport, are announcmg the engagement of Miss
Ginger Sue James, to Robert David
Merrill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dame
E. Merrill, Joppa, Md.
The bride-elect is a 1979 grsduate
of Mllligan College in Johnson City,
.Tenn., and is presently employed by
the Federal Aviation Administration
in Atlanta, Ga.
Her fiance is a ministerial
graduate of Milligan College and is
Amployed by the Federal Census
Bureau pending employment with a
Christian Church in the Atlanta
area.
AMarch 22 candlelight wedding is
planned at the Westside Christian
Church in East Point, Ga.

o+

ONIONS

RC or DIET ·. RITE COLA

MIDDLEPORT--Mrs . Reva
Vaughan, Middleport, and Frank
Vaughan, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Pamela
Jean, to George David Miller, Columbus, son of Mrs. Jane Huffman
Middleport, and George Miller, Col:
wnbus.
Miss Vaughan is a 1977 graduate of
Meigs High School and is employed
at Kaiser Aluminum, Ravenswood,
W. Va. Her fiance is also a 1977
grsduate of Meigs High School and
is employed by Cardinal Bullders
Columbus.
'
The wedding will be an event of
March 8 at the United Methodist
Churoh, Pomeroy, 6:30 p.m. The
ceremony will be preceded by a'halfhour of nuptial music. The gracious
custom ct open church will be
observed. A reception will follow in
the church social room.

GALUPOUS- Mr. and Mrs.
110~ G. Jones, Route 3, Gallipolis,
are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage rl. their
daughter, Kathy Lynn, to Ronnie P.
Newman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frankk Gammons, Route 1, Claudville, Va.
The open church wedding wlll be
an event of March 22 at 7:30p.m. at
the Salem Baptist Church, Gage.
Music will be presented one-half
hour preceding the ceremony. The
Rev. Ronald Nicholas will perfonn
the ceremony.
The bride-elect will be attendect by
Sherr! Ward, Rio Grande, maid of
lunner, and Jo Ellen Fuller and
Valerie. Campbell, Gallipolis, and
Elizabeth Callahan, Jackson,
bridesmaids. Jackie Brim of Claudville, Va. will be best man and the
groomsmen will be Dennis Martin,
Winston Salem, N. C., Mike Heath,
Claudville, Va., and Randy Jones
Gallipolis.
'
The bride-elect ls a graduate of the
Buckeye Hl1ls Career Center, Rio
Grande, and attends the Buckeye
Hi11s Practical Nursing School at
Rio Grande. Her fiance is employed
with Floyd S. Pike Electrical Contractors.

(&lt;,."

U. S. NO. 1 YELLOW

VANILLA WAFERS ...~~..~~-~~.
HONEY GRAHAMS. ...~·..~~-

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Harry
L. Bailey, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Debra
Kay, to Charles Byrne Mullen, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Mullen, Middleport.
Miss Bailey is a grsduate of Meigs
High School and is employed at the
office of Charles I... Fulks, D.D.S. in
Athens. Her fiance, also a .graduate
of M.eigs High School, is · presently
self-employed in business with his
father at the Mullen Insurance
Agency, Inc., Pomeroy, and is a
journeyman cement mason af·
filiated with Local 32, BMPW,
Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an event of
May 17, at 2:30 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
The grscious custom of open
church will be observed.

•

-

Ginger Sue james

Kathy Jones

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
~
the Pomeroy Junior High Schoo! Is
~
open, 8:30 il.m.-4 :30 p.m., Monday
;
through Friday.
·
i
Monday, March 3 -Square Dance,
'
12:30-3 p.m.
.
•
Tuesday. March 4 - Craft Making
~
all day; Chorus,12:45-2p.m.
·
!
Wednesday, March 5 - Socta1
~
Security Representative, 9:30a.m.~
12:30 p,m.; Games,1-2:30 p.m.
~
Thursday, March 6 - Craft
;
Making all day; Kitchen Band,
•
12:45-2 p.m.
:;
Friday, March 7 - Bowling, 1-3
•
p.m.
;;
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to
12:4li p.m., Monday through
'
Friday.
Monday - HmDburger steak,
mashed potatoes, gravy. tossed
•
salad, fruit cocktail, bread, butter
;
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
milk.
.
•
• Sayre, Racine, are announcing the
Tuesday - Macaroni and cheese
birth of their nrst child, a nine
buttered beets, 3-bean salad, oat:
~ pound 1 one ounce son, Daniel Bruce
meal
cake, bread, butter, milk.
: Sayre, Jr., on Feb. 18 at Holzer
Wednesday
- Pork chop, sweet
• MedlcalCenter.
.
potatoes,
applesauce,.
ice cream,
: Matemal grandparents are Mr.
cornbread,
butter,
milk.
) andand Mrs. Kenneth .Theiss, Racine,
Thursday - Creamed chicken,
.;
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rogers,
mashed
potatoes, green beans,
) Columbus, are the paternal grsnd·
pineapple,
biscuit, butter, milk.
; parents. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Friday
Tuna noodle casserole,
= Sayre, .Racine, are the great- buttered peas,
pear salad, chocolate
: grandparents.
.
chip cookies, bread, butter, milk.
'
. CQffee, tea and a choice of whole
.,.
CRIME REPLAYED
milk or buttennllk served dally.
~
GRAZ, Austria (AP) -Television
Please register the day before you
. . n!!Wscaster Jakob Erhardt, conplan to eat. Pomeroy, 99'b7886. 1be
~ tending a particular bank robbery ·
Racine Satellite ls temporarily
• was Uke "chlld's play," decided to
cloaed. Please call for tran: rob the same bank in a carbon eopy
sportation to the Pomeroy Center.
t of the crime a year later.
t · Masked and anned wl.th a toy
,1· pistol, he managed to get '15 000 and
TOMEETnJFSD.AY
made good his escape, but
bank
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
trustees will meet at a p.m. Tuesday
1 manager recognized Erhardt, who
• toldpollce:
·
at the Syracuse MJmicipal Building.

~

KAHN'S

POINT PLEASANT - " The
Family in Relation to the BreasUed
Baby" will be the topic when the La
Leche League of Point Pleasant
meets · Monday, March 3, at 7:30
p.m. The meeting wW be held in the
home of Mrs. Gloria Palkovic, 2904
Chandler Drive, Point Pleasant. An
Informal discussion Will center on
the management of those first
weeks, with emphasis on the enure
family, as well as timely tips for
mother and baby.
·
La Leche League meetings· are
held each month to acquaint a
woman with the physical, practical,
and psychological sides of breast.!._~; The League belleves that
JlliiUJel' s lnl1k Is tJie best food· for
baby and more Importantly that
breastfeeding. givea the baby the
best atart in life.
· The continuing series of
dlscuaslona is open to all women 'W:.
terested in breasUeedlng. Babies
are always welcome. Further information may be obtained by con·
!acting Betsy Crank, ~2776 tr
Glona Palkovic, 67S-6804.

Debra Bailey

Monday, March 3 - Darwin, Duncan's Store, 1- 45 ;2:15 p.m .;
Pagevllle, Church, 2:45-3 : 15j
Harrisonville, Sohio Station, 3:304 ;
New Lima Road, 1 mlle south of Fort
Meigs, 4:15-5 (Short film at 4:30);
Rutland, Pomeroy National Bank,
~ : 1~ (Short film at 5:30) ; RntJarv!
Depot stret, 6: 1~7,
•
Tuesday, March 4- I..oog BoUcm,
Post Office, 3-4 (Short film at 3: 15);
Reedaville, Reed's store, 4:30-6:45
(Short flbn at US); Tuppers Plains,
Arbaugh Housing, 8:15-7 (Short flbn
at6:30); BaumAddltlon, 7:30-a.
Wednesday, March ~ - Toreh,
Post Office; 4-4 :30; HockingpGrt,
Community Bldg., 5-5:45 ; Coolville,
School Lot, 6: 1~7 (Short fllm at
6:30); Riggs Addition, 7:»4:15
(Shortflbnat 7:45).
Thursday, March 6 - Mulberry
Hts. lnflnnary, 1:45-2 :30 p.m.;
Chester, Methodist Church, 3-3 :30;
Keno, North Side of Keno Bridge,
3:e-4:15; Racine, Home Natioaal
Bank, 4:45-5:30 (SHort fllm at 5) · 1
Racine, Wagner's Hardware, 5:30.
6:15 (Short fllm at 5:45); SyraCIIIIe,
Pool, 8:»-7:45 (Shortfilmat8:45).

''

1

Avenue,
Gallipolis
Ohio ·

�84-The Sunday Times-&amp;ntinel, Sunday. !'&lt;larch 2. 1980
8-4-- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday. March 2, 1980

People in the news

'BoRie' movie on CBS

"' '
"'
-rc
•··
;&lt;
; 1,M·

;' '

.~

,L

·~
'·'
·''
'"

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Kathryn
Harrold said she had misgivings
about playing Lauren Bacall in the
CBS move "Bogie" to air tltis week
and, "ktill do.
"!don't think I would have done It
if it was Lauren Bacall's story," the
actress said. "But it was really
about Humphrey Bogart and my
part was not the main focus , so that
sort of took the onus off. It was fun to
study her and see her movies. The
parts where I really got to do her I
had a lot of fun doing."
Miss Harrold said she had never
heard from Miss Bacall, who on
several occasions expressed her
outrage about the movie. Miss
Bacall had said she not only resen-

ted the invaswn of the privacy of her
relationship with Humphrey Bogart,
but that scenes In the film were "fie-

Romero, Cleavon Little and singer
Trini Lopez. The jazz vocal ~up
Manhatta n Transfer performed and
bunnies abounded.
NO DRINKS TO
DANCE BY
NEW YORK (AP) - The trendy

'BUNNIES' MULTIPLY
LOS ANGElES (AP) - "We had
no idea that the bunnies were going
to literally multiply like rabbits.''
So said Playboy magazine founder
Hugh Hefner as he welcomed guests
Friday night to the twentieth anniversary celebration of the Playboy
Club.
The party was held at the Los
Angeles Playboy Club and televised
on a closed circuit to several other
clubs. Celebrities attending included
· actors Stuart Whitman, Cesar

In any case, Miss Harrold barely
missed an encounter with tbe legendary actress. "! did 'The Rockford
Files' right after her," Miss Harrold
said.
Both episodes in the NBC series
were broadcast right after the start
of the new season in September.
It appears Miss Bacall's fears
about the movie, which airs Tuesday
night, were well founded. The movie
does no honor to Bogart, despite its
mtention. It is a crashing bore and is
clumsily constructed with a dated
look to it.

to March 1, leaving actors Jon
Voight and Sylvester Stallone and
others to only non-alcoholic drinks to
round out their evening.
The disco on Friday was denied a
temporary extension of the license,

crowd stood about Studio 54 early r~;;;:;:;:=::::;::::=========:=::::::::::=::=
Saturday lOOming, sipping soft
drinks and fruit juices while state
liquor agents had their eyes peeled ,
for booze.
The Manhattan disco lost Its liquor
license when the calendar switched

...
l f"
I··

'

MONKEY RUN · WEST MAIN AREA

I

I
I•

,,
."' '' '

...''

'

,

'·"'-'~~

,, 1
t '1

•
'''
',.
'.
I.

Sally Ann Hayman

Thi s yea r. make su re yo u are usin g the proper tax form .
. Even 1f yo u ftl ed the Short Form last yea r. yo ur
c trcumstances th is y ea r co uld he lp you save money by
f1 1!ng th e Long Form . At H&amp;R Block . we'll revi ew your
tax sttu atton to deci de which form all ows you to pay the
lowest legi timate tax .

CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL

i!OOleOile ebe can use them.

·',

save you
money on
your taxes

CARRIER NEEDED
IN POMEROY

,r.

"·

·."..

The Long

·'
,,

POMEROY .:.. o Illes - pleaae
bring bacll: thoee overdue boob eo

Macbeth, a son of Macduff, won
the 1888 Kentucky Derby.

.l"r---------..
Form could
ATTENTION
...•

Five local couples announce their engagements

wltich was lifted when owners Steve
Rubell and Ian Schrager were convicted of federal income tax evasion.
The Liquor Authority said they were
"not fit and proper persons" to bold
·
a license.
The disco is changing ownership to
try to retrieve the license:

• Substantial interest penally required for early withdrawal.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hayman, Union Ave.,
' Pomeroy, are announcing the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Sally Ann, to James
Rankin Hutton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Manford Hutton, Bradbury.
Miss Hayman is a junior at Meigs
High School and her fiance is a 1976
graduate of Meigs High. He is
employed as a bricklayer. A July
wedding is being planned.

La Leche League

2nd
&amp; BROWN
ST.
""":~~-=~~~'!!!"'!"!!'
MASON,
W. VA
. ..
POMEROY,O.
OPEN 9 A.M. TO
OPEN TUES .
THURS . &amp; SAT.
ft 6 P.M. WEEKDAYS
9 A.M.-5 P.M.
9·5SATURDAY
PHONE 773-9128 THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
PHONE 992·3795
618 E . MAIN ST.

H&amp;R BLOC.,."'

BElWEEN 8:30 and 5:00

plans to meet
~

THE ATHENS COUNTY
~SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Corner Sycamore &amp; Second

PH. 992-2156

Gallipolis, Ohio
10pen 9 am -6 pm Weekdays, 9-S Sat.

Phone 446-0303
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

Alhens • !!92-e681 - Pomeroy • 992-6655

:
•

~

PRICES EFFECTIVE
MONDAY
THRU
SATURDAY

~

ALL MEAT FRANKS....... ~.$1

39

•'
~ New

KAHN'S

ALL BEEF FRAN KS........ ~.$1

49

TONY'S HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD MIX ............~..$1

19

KEEBLER

PRODUCE

·cABBAGE
FRESH
SOLID

CINNAMON CRISP. .~.~-·~·~x

YOUR

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

arrival

j

29~· ·

2 LB.

the

•

8 PACK

'

GALUPOUS - Activities for this
week at the Senior Citizens Center
220JacksonPlke,are:
'
Monday, March 3 - Chorus, 1-a
p.m.
MONDAY
Tuesday, March 4 - S.T.O.P.
EASTERN ATHLETIC Boosters,
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the high school
11 :15a.m.; Bible Study, 1-2p.m.
SPECIAL MEETING, Pomeroy
Wednesday, March 5 - Mobile
Unit at Cr11wn City, 1 p.m.; Card
Chapter SO, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
p.m. Monday with work in mark
Games, 1-3;. World Religion Class • 1
p.m. ; Macrame Class, 1-3.
master and past master degree.
FRENCH Colony Chapter DAR at . Thursday' March 6 - Choking
Seminar, 1 p.m. ; Blood Pressure
1:30 p.m. with Miss Mary VIrginia
Check,1 : 1~1:45.
O'Brian.
Friday, March 7 - Art Class
GRACE GUILD, Grace UM Church,
12:»-3 p.m.; Advisory Council, 1:30
atGodSquadnn., poUuck, 6:15p.m.
p.m.; Social Hour, 7.
ANNUAL meeting of the Advisory
The Senior Nutrition Program will
Council of the GalUa County Health
serve the following menus:
Dept. will meet at 11 a.m.
Monday - John Manettl, ·green
beans, cottage cheese, bread, butter, peaches, milk.
Weight loss reported
Tuesday - New England boiled
RU'l'LAND-Ribbon awards for
d!Mer, cornbread, butter, yellow
weight loss are being given at the
cake, milk.
weekly meetings of the TOPS Club
Wednesday - Liver and onions
OH 1466, Rutland.
baked potato, spinach bread, butter:
Lynda Adkins was queen for the
fruit gelatin, mllk.
week and received her lavender and
Thursday - Italian Polenta with
purple ribbon with the Inscription
Italtan sausage, brocc!oli, tossed
"Weekly Queen", a dollar, and had
aalad, ron, buttu, lee cream, milk.
the club membe!'ll sing in Iier honor.
Friday - Chicken, mashed
Members are encouraged to keep
potatoes, peas, bread, butter, apple
their ribbons, the colors to be chang- cobbler, milk.
ed each week.
Choice of beverage served with
Ellen Rife presided at the meeting
each meal .
which opened with the club pledge.
"Services rendered on a nonRoll call showed two gainers, two discriminatory basis...
turtles, and three TOPS. Mrs. Rife
conducted TOPS bingo for the ·pro.
gram, and Shorty Wright had an exMEETS MONDAY
ercise session. The exercise proROCK
SPRINGS - . The Meigs
gram will become a part of the
County
Board
will meet at 8 p.m.
regular meeting.
Monday
at
the
~·s office on
Anyone lnte~ In Joining the
the
Rock
Sprines
Fairgrounds.
"lUb Is asked totelephone742-3re2.

Social Calendar

.:.
=

FLORIDA ·ORANG,ES

··~

5 LB. BAG

PRICE IGOOD ALL WEEK - NO·UMIT

i~--------coueorr-------, ~ - -------coiiitoil-----~--~ •1----------------------·-·~
r--------~~----~·~--COUPON ·· No. 255
, COUesll
1 :
.

I

I

BAKED BY BETSY ROSS
·

1I
1I

1I GATEWAY BREAD III I
I
3t6 OZ. LOAVES 79~ II
I
UMIT 3
I
Coupon Expires Sat., March a, 1980 l
CITY GATEWAY

------

-

.

BROUGHTON

I

2% MILK
GALLON PLASnC '179
UMIT 1

Coupon EKpires Sat., March a, 1980

L.-----_T~.!~£.1!!,

y

I

I

l!
I
l II
1

I I
I
I

..

12·

SUPERIOR NO. 1

IIACON

oz. PKG.

UMITl

I

,,-~

Coupon Expires Sat~ , March.8, 1980
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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

I'

!

I

wx LIQUID
SOAP DETERG~T
32 oz an.
"

'1 ,.,

Coupon Expires Sat., Mar,ch 1, 1910

TWtN err~ ftATaWAY .

.

I, ••

Tues~.

,,

..

14oun.: mon, ., Fri. 111 I
ytld., Set. IllS

'l"llur;:tfll ·! 'ol-·
'

.

""'~*· ···

\' .

.

Now Avalla!J~~ Thruugh Th~ - - - -

I

-

__,.,

MART .

CIRCULAR

FEAtHER PUFF
fi1MERS 5For '1
UVA PWMES

'1

For

On Pg. 2
Due to the manufacturer
unable to ship, these Items
will not be available tor
this sale. No rainchecks
will be issued.
We are sorry for any in·
convenie.n ce this has caused our customers.

If you're ge tt ing mar rie d soon, 9u r bridal consultant will take
the time to learn about you r p ~rsona l preferences and projected
lifestyle . She c&lt;m hdp yoll &lt;;elect the pattern s and gifts that you
genuinely wan t and will always ~.: nj oy.

9tH·lA'
Member National Bridal Sen'ice

."The Shop W'zth
Larger Ladies In Mirid.

'1-Q

"'

· *"((;

~,.

c;

~ A large selection of blouses,

~
~o

q.c;

Just Arrived!

&lt;-.

()J-

()
vests &amp; iackets, sizes 36-44 "'-s. ~~
0
Skirts ,&amp; slacks, size. 30·42i "'-t:
in a wide variety of colors in~
eluding navy, brown, pink,
'P
carnation, turquoise, red and
lade.
O.p

-s.

"'.o

·

"'

We Also
Have:
Coffee Coats
Gowns
Negligees
In X, XXL,

&amp;XXXL
Sizes.

I

.

·
NiciC Johnion, Accountant Exeeuti vp
'4SUnl! 4v". ·.
·. ' Phorle446· 1761 ·
·,· Gallipolis ..

.

In Today's Newspaper

33,Second

McGINf'!IISI-STAHLEY .· AGENCY, .INC.

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

•

For yeal'll, you've
seen and heard
· advertising abo~t
Allstate Homeownel)l insurance.
Ahil now, it's available lu!re, at our
agency. But, did you know that if .
your house is 5 years old or less you
may qutilify for Allstate's "New'
House tO Percent Discount" on your
baaic premium?
Allstete has found it costs lesa
to insure newer homes, and they're
' passing this savings on to you .
Give us a call and get in oh the
savings! ,
Al-.• • ln&gt;~f\Ont&gt;• I 'h'"ll'l'~'

-

OLDER IS BE'ITER
NEW YORK (AP) - New York
voters apparently are undisturbed
by Sen. Jacob Javits' advancing
years or falling health.
A new poll shows the Republican
senator lB favored over any of his opponents.
The results of the Seasonweln Poll
were released Friday, four days 11(ter the 7r&gt;-year-old Javits announced
his decision to run for a fifth six-year
term this year. He is suffering from
a motor neuron disease that lB slow
in developing.

4Q

Allstate can save~ 10% ·
u..:_.J_".
on ttr--~.J
uuuu n.aii08 msurance
. for your . home.

Murphqs)

On Pg. 4and

Here in Gallia County

•

. SWEET ANDJU

' '1 1

16 OZ. BTL CTN.

CHOICE

3 LB. BAG

Sr. Citizen
Calendar

MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs.
Chester C. Rice of College Park,
Ga. , f~nnerly of Middleport, are announcmg the engagement of Miss
Ginger Sue James, to Robert David
Merrill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dame
E. Merrill, Joppa, Md.
The bride-elect is a 1979 grsduate
of Mllligan College in Johnson City,
.Tenn., and is presently employed by
the Federal Aviation Administration
in Atlanta, Ga.
Her fiance is a ministerial
graduate of Milligan College and is
Amployed by the Federal Census
Bureau pending employment with a
Christian Church in the Atlanta
area.
AMarch 22 candlelight wedding is
planned at the Westside Christian
Church in East Point, Ga.

o+

ONIONS

RC or DIET ·. RITE COLA

MIDDLEPORT--Mrs . Reva
Vaughan, Middleport, and Frank
Vaughan, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Pamela
Jean, to George David Miller, Columbus, son of Mrs. Jane Huffman
Middleport, and George Miller, Col:
wnbus.
Miss Vaughan is a 1977 graduate of
Meigs High School and is employed
at Kaiser Aluminum, Ravenswood,
W. Va. Her fiance is also a 1977
grsduate of Meigs High School and
is employed by Cardinal Bullders
Columbus.
'
The wedding will be an event of
March 8 at the United Methodist
Churoh, Pomeroy, 6:30 p.m. The
ceremony will be preceded by a'halfhour of nuptial music. The gracious
custom ct open church will be
observed. A reception will follow in
the church social room.

GALUPOUS- Mr. and Mrs.
110~ G. Jones, Route 3, Gallipolis,
are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage rl. their
daughter, Kathy Lynn, to Ronnie P.
Newman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frankk Gammons, Route 1, Claudville, Va.
The open church wedding wlll be
an event of March 22 at 7:30p.m. at
the Salem Baptist Church, Gage.
Music will be presented one-half
hour preceding the ceremony. The
Rev. Ronald Nicholas will perfonn
the ceremony.
The bride-elect will be attendect by
Sherr! Ward, Rio Grande, maid of
lunner, and Jo Ellen Fuller and
Valerie. Campbell, Gallipolis, and
Elizabeth Callahan, Jackson,
bridesmaids. Jackie Brim of Claudville, Va. will be best man and the
groomsmen will be Dennis Martin,
Winston Salem, N. C., Mike Heath,
Claudville, Va., and Randy Jones
Gallipolis.
'
The bride-elect ls a graduate of the
Buckeye Hl1ls Career Center, Rio
Grande, and attends the Buckeye
Hi11s Practical Nursing School at
Rio Grande. Her fiance is employed
with Floyd S. Pike Electrical Contractors.

(&lt;,."

U. S. NO. 1 YELLOW

VANILLA WAFERS ...~~..~~-~~.
HONEY GRAHAMS. ...~·..~~-

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. Harry
L. Bailey, Pomeroy, are announcing
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Debra
Kay, to Charles Byrne Mullen, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Mullen, Middleport.
Miss Bailey is a grsduate of Meigs
High School and is employed at the
office of Charles I... Fulks, D.D.S. in
Athens. Her fiance, also a .graduate
of M.eigs High School, is · presently
self-employed in business with his
father at the Mullen Insurance
Agency, Inc., Pomeroy, and is a
journeyman cement mason af·
filiated with Local 32, BMPW,
Pomeroy.
The wedding will be an event of
May 17, at 2:30 p.m. at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
The grscious custom of open
church will be observed.

•

-

Ginger Sue james

Kathy Jones

POMEROY - Meigs Senior
Citizens Center activities located at
~
the Pomeroy Junior High Schoo! Is
~
open, 8:30 il.m.-4 :30 p.m., Monday
;
through Friday.
·
i
Monday, March 3 -Square Dance,
'
12:30-3 p.m.
.
•
Tuesday. March 4 - Craft Making
~
all day; Chorus,12:45-2p.m.
·
!
Wednesday, March 5 - Socta1
~
Security Representative, 9:30a.m.~
12:30 p,m.; Games,1-2:30 p.m.
~
Thursday, March 6 - Craft
;
Making all day; Kitchen Band,
•
12:45-2 p.m.
:;
Friday, March 7 - Bowling, 1-3
•
p.m.
;;
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to
12:4li p.m., Monday through
'
Friday.
Monday - HmDburger steak,
mashed potatoes, gravy. tossed
•
salad, fruit cocktail, bread, butter
;
RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
milk.
.
•
• Sayre, Racine, are announcing the
Tuesday - Macaroni and cheese
birth of their nrst child, a nine
buttered beets, 3-bean salad, oat:
~ pound 1 one ounce son, Daniel Bruce
meal
cake, bread, butter, milk.
: Sayre, Jr., on Feb. 18 at Holzer
Wednesday
- Pork chop, sweet
• MedlcalCenter.
.
potatoes,
applesauce,.
ice cream,
: Matemal grandparents are Mr.
cornbread,
butter,
milk.
) andand Mrs. Kenneth .Theiss, Racine,
Thursday - Creamed chicken,
.;
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Rogers,
mashed
potatoes, green beans,
) Columbus, are the paternal grsnd·
pineapple,
biscuit, butter, milk.
; parents. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Friday
Tuna noodle casserole,
= Sayre, .Racine, are the great- buttered peas,
pear salad, chocolate
: grandparents.
.
chip cookies, bread, butter, milk.
'
. CQffee, tea and a choice of whole
.,.
CRIME REPLAYED
milk or buttennllk served dally.
~
GRAZ, Austria (AP) -Television
Please register the day before you
. . n!!Wscaster Jakob Erhardt, conplan to eat. Pomeroy, 99'b7886. 1be
~ tending a particular bank robbery ·
Racine Satellite ls temporarily
• was Uke "chlld's play," decided to
cloaed. Please call for tran: rob the same bank in a carbon eopy
sportation to the Pomeroy Center.
t of the crime a year later.
t · Masked and anned wl.th a toy
,1· pistol, he managed to get '15 000 and
TOMEETnJFSD.AY
made good his escape, but
bank
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
trustees will meet at a p.m. Tuesday
1 manager recognized Erhardt, who
• toldpollce:
·
at the Syracuse MJmicipal Building.

~

KAHN'S

POINT PLEASANT - " The
Family in Relation to the BreasUed
Baby" will be the topic when the La
Leche League of Point Pleasant
meets · Monday, March 3, at 7:30
p.m. The meeting wW be held in the
home of Mrs. Gloria Palkovic, 2904
Chandler Drive, Point Pleasant. An
Informal discussion Will center on
the management of those first
weeks, with emphasis on the enure
family, as well as timely tips for
mother and baby.
·
La Leche League meetings· are
held each month to acquaint a
woman with the physical, practical,
and psychological sides of breast.!._~; The League belleves that
JlliiUJel' s lnl1k Is tJie best food· for
baby and more Importantly that
breastfeeding. givea the baby the
best atart in life.
· The continuing series of
dlscuaslona is open to all women 'W:.
terested in breasUeedlng. Babies
are always welcome. Further information may be obtained by con·
!acting Betsy Crank, ~2776 tr
Glona Palkovic, 67S-6804.

Debra Bailey

Monday, March 3 - Darwin, Duncan's Store, 1- 45 ;2:15 p.m .;
Pagevllle, Church, 2:45-3 : 15j
Harrisonville, Sohio Station, 3:304 ;
New Lima Road, 1 mlle south of Fort
Meigs, 4:15-5 (Short film at 4:30);
Rutland, Pomeroy National Bank,
~ : 1~ (Short film at 5:30) ; RntJarv!
Depot stret, 6: 1~7,
•
Tuesday, March 4- I..oog BoUcm,
Post Office, 3-4 (Short film at 3: 15);
Reedaville, Reed's store, 4:30-6:45
(Short flbn at US); Tuppers Plains,
Arbaugh Housing, 8:15-7 (Short flbn
at6:30); BaumAddltlon, 7:30-a.
Wednesday, March ~ - Toreh,
Post Office; 4-4 :30; HockingpGrt,
Community Bldg., 5-5:45 ; Coolville,
School Lot, 6: 1~7 (Short fllm at
6:30); Riggs Addition, 7:»4:15
(Shortflbnat 7:45).
Thursday, March 6 - Mulberry
Hts. lnflnnary, 1:45-2 :30 p.m.;
Chester, Methodist Church, 3-3 :30;
Keno, North Side of Keno Bridge,
3:e-4:15; Racine, Home Natioaal
Bank, 4:45-5:30 (SHort fllm at 5) · 1
Racine, Wagner's Hardware, 5:30.
6:15 (Short fllm at 5:45); SyraCIIIIe,
Pool, 8:»-7:45 (Shortfilmat8:45).

''

1

Avenue,
Gallipolis
Ohio ·

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~The Sunday Tirnco-Sentmel. Sumla 1 . :&gt;.l"rch 2, 1980

IH- The SundBy TiJnes..Sentinel, Sunday, Marrh 2. 1980

On the Light 5zde

U.. S.. co_nservationist questioned for
freeing doomed ]ap[!nese dolphins . . '

For The Supentltl0118
ODMarcb 1
DETROIT ( AP) - Did you yell
" Rabbit! Rabbit! Rabbit! " as you
hopped out of bed yesterday ? If so,
according to supersitition, you will
get a presentfrom someone you like.
That tip - good for the first day of
any month - Is from the folklore·of
North Carolina, Pennsylvania and
New Mexico, says Dr. James T.
Callow, University of Detroit's ar·
chives director.
The university 's Computer
Folklore Archives has developed a
calendar warning system that alerts
the superstitious to important days
and tells them what to do, Callow
said Friday.
He said he Is not certain how the
"rabbit" practice began in the
United States, but said it might be
traced to Uverpool, England, where
the first of the month Is celebrated in
such a manner.
On March 1:
- Italian folklore demands that a
person wash his hsiror go bald.
- The Welsh must wear leeks - an
onionlike vegetable - in their hats
because It Is the feast of st. David, a
national saint of Wales.
Manball BeDDeU's
Late Bloomers.
BAY crrv, Mich. (AP) _ MarshsllBennettmaynothavewonBay
County officia!B over with a barrel,
but the fanner jail inmate will get a
new pair of pants just the same.

•

SheriH Robert Wood has 1:1ven
BenneU ll check for $36.40.
BenneU's beef with the sheriff's
department he~an i" .July when, af. .
.
ter serving a 7:Hiay sentence for
concealing stolen property, he was
released and turned in his prisoner's '
uniform. He got back only two-thirds
of his lhree-piece suit.

I

GOOD NOW THRU
MARCH 8TH

After several truiUess requests for
mission meeting in mid-February
wearing the top-hall of his suit. His
bottom hall was covered by a
wooden barrel, complete with
suspenders.

;•
~

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:
•

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:.;
;:

•

demonstrations and a tour of the•
·Ohio University greenhouse. Mrs.
Denison will take take reservations
at the March meeting. Members
were asked to donate items for the
sales table.
The state convention was also an·
nounced. It will be held at the Holiday Inn, Lane Ave., Columbus in Ju·
ly. The Gardeners Day Out will be
held at Kings Island, Sept. 10. Mrs.
Holter noted that there are over 500
members in Region 11, and stated
thst she is hopeful that each club will
prepare a history.
For the program, Mrs. Eugene
Atkins reported on heroo mentioning

,,

..

'·

" Mighly Mot" in plush piles, ·
shags, more. Jute 01 foam
bock . Choice of de corator

SOLID COLOR
POLYESTER KIIITS
1 REG.

1.86Yd.

'I

colors. 1B" x 27" size.

Easy -care knit s in many

70"x 72 " "inyl curtain .
Decora to r solid co lors.

spri ng co lors and lovely

Mognets in hem .

$1

REG.

'1.98

D

••••• $1
REG.

fash ion sti tches. 60 - inch

wi dlh s ... on full bolts .

......$1

........

'Save Your Vision
Week' March 2-8

WOMIII'S
GLOYIS

AUTOMADC

BOWL C:LEAIIER

REG.
'1.29

'

PAIR

I

2 FOR$1

REG. 72' EA:
,

9-0UNCE SOLID
LIMIT 2

2 FOR$1

-------------

KilT PCII.O SIIITS
Shl)l'f sleeve cot·
t on krt i ll . So l id

2

II!.
ifl

.

Toddlers' lo• of 12
Ovemlght Pampers®

•

2 '3

REG. 11.71

3 Pkgs~l

HIGF10
IIIOMUIIS

. . . . . PLASTICS
Dlshpon, solod ~1.

J. plece f un~~ellel ,
.--OHer bowl, · boc~et,
cutlerr troy, 6 -p c.

'•

COINS

.'

Retired after 40 years of tesching,
Mrs. Gibbll baa written three books.
She Is a member of the New Haven
Garden Club, Alpha Delta Kappa;
the Mason County Historical Society, Col. Charles Lewis, Da~tera of
the American Revolution, lind the
Mason County Fann Museum. She
will be speaking to the group on
Riverboats.

2 FOR

'1

REG.
19'

2 . 'I
FOR

.

Ml, morel

-----1

......... ..u..........-.

..
•

-•
•

eSilver Dollars 1915&amp; Before
• Halt Dollars, Quarters, Dim~s
!964 &amp; Before

...•

lottie

lOllY, NO IAINCHICKS
·ATLIAST 576 Nil STOll

iouv. NO IAIHCHICKS

LOll, BEAmFUL
IYLOILOUHER

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

•a:

2 PKGS.

.

nual event sponsored by the
American Optometric Association
and its affiliated state associations
which promotes better Cllre of the
vision system. This year's theme is
"Keep Your Eyes in Shape" which
serves to remind everyone that good
vision care Is a part of total health
care and total physical well·being.
President Ji.mm,y Carter, the
United States Congress, Governor
James A. Rhodes, and many local
mayors have all publiCly endorsed
"Save Your Vision Week." Gov.
Rhodes has proclaimed March 2-8 as
Save Your VIsion Week in Ohio and
has, "called upon the citizens of Ohio
to be mindful of the value of good
vision and to include vision care as a
part of thei~ total health care."
The OOA urges all to celebrate
"Save Your Vision Week" by
making an appointment for a
thorough vision examination.

REG. ~.17 PKG.

llG '
SAVINO

NOW

.

GALLIPOLIS The announcement that the .Ohio State
University Assn. Pl!ms to meet in
Thtll'9day's Tribune bad a headline
error. It Is the 06U Af~ Asan.
which plans to meet March 13, 1
p.m., at Oscar's and not ..the OU
Alumni Assn. . .

Katie Canaday

Katie sees one year
RIO GRANDE- Kate Casnaday,
daughter of Pat and Betsy Canaday,
Rio Gral)de, celebrated her first birthday on January 4 with a dinner at
the horne of Marshall and Helen
Canaday, her paternal grandparents
of Rio Grande.
After dinner, those present enjoyed a ~ggedy Ann birthday cake,
after which KaUe opened her many
gifts.
Those present were Katie's peternat great..grandmother, Bernice
Jones of Thunnan, her maternal
grandparents, Howard and Allee
Saunders of Gallipolla, and her aunts
and uncles, Ruth Jones, Joyce ·
Canaday, Mark Canaday, Scott
Canaday, Dow Saunders and John
Saunders.

Acetate trlc:Ot. CKolce bf
white, cluUsshades or .

•ADCO®

pa Stel s. Sizes S ~o 10 .

• •1111'

.REG.

.

3-PAIIP~C:KAGi .

Washable, lead-free paint
thai goes on easy; dries fast.
Clean up with soap and water. Choice
of while, or beautiful decor colors.

MEN'S FAVORITE
cm01 POLO SIIIU

•s
TJ:•
2Fol

. O.rl....._'!~•

'•M

Soft 'n cozy long -sleeved gown.
Solid colors . One size Iii$ all.

ICI'I

'2.37

REG.

••

..... . I

.

PAIR .

l!a~ROLL

Comfortable cotton knit in
papular solid colors. Toped
neck, short sfeeves, 1 chest .
pocket. Sizes S,M,L,Xl. ·

WOMEII'S AID TEEIIS'

•

I

REGULAR

a l'Ll GlVE '{OU
SAVIN€JS NXQJ~ NfE~tSf

• •••97
.

.

. CONVENIENC€ "
'

I

'

. · Nylc;m and suede-look uppers with vinyl
side stripes. Padded c9llqr. Cushioned .

. · NfO CUEOONG NnM«

ins&lt;&gt;les. Traction sales. Sizes 5-10.

Solid urethane foam core.
Amerlcana ·and Provincial
prints In gafd, green or
brown . l~" 'x, 14" x 7/ , " .

AVA,LABlf AT ·o. C. MURPHY DOWNTOWN STORE- 348 2ND. AVE.

more from

.

'

,(/
I •

AT LWT 4U Pll SfOil

GALLIPOLIS - The February .
Birthday Party was Tuesday af. ternoon at the Gallla County Senior
Citizen Center with three
celebrating their birthdsy. They
were Dan Stewart, Charles Skeens
and Awilda Brucker.
The program was presented by
·Ethel Robinson and Minnie
Washington. The program was
opened with group singing.
Meditation was by Evelyn Rothgeb,
prayer by Ada Carter. A poem titled
"February" was presented by Hazel
Claytor. Ethel Robinson fl!lld a story
Utled "Happy Birthday" .to those
who had a birthday. Evelyn Rothgeb
.and Awilda Brucker both read
poems. Ethel Robinson lllso had a
game to aee how well we knew our
birds. Frank Claytor sang a
hllautiful solo.
·
"Happy Birthday" was sung to
tholle baving a birthday. Cake, punch and mints were· served to
everyone. The om birthday party
will . be March 'r/ ; everyone is
welcome.
CORRECTIQN

GALLONS
•
REG.
Gallon .

Gallipolis

,, 4~

(

FOR

p,.. u .,. tele ct lonl 3" stema,

2 .••

REG.

'''

5 '1

Big w lectionl 11 " lo 13" sterrn

1111'111108 .
.WALL PAIII'I'.

JEWELERS
...... 1647

FOR

IlliG.
I ..
EA.

LAIIXI'LAT

PAUL DAVIES
tucky Derby, were completed in
1895.

1

1

.;GEA. 5FoR

....iiAIII
OUALIYYIIS'I'ID

Also buying old gold. Stamped 10
KT, 141&lt;T and 181&lt;T.

404 second

ILOSSOM PICKS

SPI- FLOWERS

3 '1

32.0%.

IIAJI'IY
SU'"

'nti·SU'"

lll_,.l"lUIM"
..._ 1111111111

We pay top cash price.
Don't sell until you check
with us.

The twin spires of Churchill
Downs, the trademark of the Ken-

COLUMBUS - In honor of the
53rd observance of "Save Your
Vision Week," Ohio McDonald's
owners, in cooperation with the Ohio
Optometric Association Auxiliary,
will be IISing special tray liners thst
stress the importanCe of children's
vision care and vision safety. TheSe
tray liners will be distributed to as
many as one milllon people during
Save Your Vision Week.
Carole ·Dreffer, ·Public lnfonnation Trustee for the Ohio OPtometric Association (OOA)
Auxiliary, says that, " The
promotion will greatly increase
public awareness of. the importance
for early vision· care for children."
Dreffer stated thst the state-wide
tray Uner program is the result of a
tw~year effort by the Auxiliary thst
was · piloted in Akron-Canton area
McDonald's.
"Save Your Vision Week" is an an·

Seniors celebrate
FebJwry birthdays

.,

U. S.• SILVER

noon.

REGUlAR 0 1.1e
h c•ll•" ' lo• oil p lonh.
Sl•rllll.-d, •eodv 10 ..... . ·

REGULAR '1.03

BUYING

GWBS TO SPEAK
TO LUNCHEON
POMEROY-Mildred Chapman
Gibbs, local historian, will he guest
speaker at the Meigs County Retired
Teachers AssociatiQilluncheon to be
held Saturday at the Meigs Inn, 12

•

I
t
t
f
I

2 FOR$1

Terrific bargain buy on
a big variety of chews'
Stock up now!

LIMIT 2 BOXES

SORn, NO IIAINCHECkS
AT LEAS~ t6 PU STORE

00

RAWHIDI
DOGCHIWS

~~·

Boxes

look flov-e11. Clear ~lois d omes.
· ·SOftY, NO IAINCHECKS
AT LEAST 16 PIR STOill
'
. ~

colo". Sizes 4-l .

1$1

$1

MAGIC TAPE

I
I

I,.IMIT6 QUARTS

EACH

SCOTCH•u•

II

QUARTS

I

•••• llsfisAILE
IUTA. UIHIIIS
CAR~OF

Arra ngements of dr.ed ond silk·

••

PKG.OF lD

Fantastic bargain
buy for cor core.
Stock up now.

$1

~.~m.~•n·

REGULAR •••

AUTOMATIC TRAIISMISSIOII FLIID

.~~; 7

t

I

2Pkgs~~

SORRY. NO RAINCHECKS·At least IAA Par Store

--t[~~~

I

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"
•I .. Ua1 • •tti!1.. 1H J
•t•~ru.,~ ••bt"-'" I
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So&gt;~•. t toc• - up now •
1

•1o.~t.• ~ ~tt.to.,t ~

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~---·-·---- ----------~-.,

PLASTIC
HANG IRS

CAR ACCISSORIIS
Choose fro m key ho lder$ ,
spark plug go uge s, doo r
guards, ond mu ch m ore l

I

RONALD McDonald and Seymour Safely seal an agreement to
· promote children's vision safety during "Save Your Vision Week," March 2-8.

DOUBLE-BOWL
PET FEED DISH

MAHETIC SHOWER C:URTAIII

YD.

•I

tvll'lbler

I

'

ALL PURPOSE FLOOR MATS

anise, caraway, rosemary, sagel

thyme, chicves, dill, parsley,
sesame, and scented getanium as
being the most popular. Mrs. Bernard Ledlie . quoted from "Spr·
ingtime in February" thst now Is the
time to plant annuals as indooc
g11J:dens from seeds using prepared '
soil in flats. She said that two or
three seeds can be placed in one
moist peat peUet.
Mrs. Harry Williamson noted thst
wood ashes are good for soil and thst
geraniums in storage should be
checked, that pots of bulbll for forcing should he brought out, and thst
feeding of the birds should be. con·
tinued.

make the dollar more attractive to
hold by inc~asing the yield of dollar
investments.
The tum-around fo~ ·the dollar
began with the government's
dramatic $30 billlon dollar-support
operation in November 1978 after it
. lost 24 percent against the ma'ril in a
single year, 29 percent against the
yen and 33 percent against the Swiss
franc.
.
It baa conie all the way back
against the yen. While it has
~ only pert of its losses
against the mark and franc, the important development for investors
and oil-exporting nations Is that it
has stoppe&lt;;llosing value.

reversed and it has been
unlikely to Increase as much as
remarkably stable against the Gerwhen the dollar Is falling.
However, a top Gennan IJlOIIelary man mark and the Swiss franc.
In fact, the nation's dollar policy
expert warns the dollar gains may
baa been the one economic policy
he shOrt-lived if the United States
falls to contaitllitfla'Uon.
· · that has seemed to he working. It's a
"I keep my fingeta CI'G8Sed in view policy that has been forged in
of the latest effect of the present in- cooperation with other strong·
flation perfonnance in this coun- currency nations, notably Gennany.
The rise in interest rates in the
try," Olinar Emmlnl!er, the retired
.
United'
States, to levels well in exces
head of ~ German central bank,
ol
interest
rates in most other counsaid at a monel!lry CQIJfa:ence here
tt~es,
have
helped the dollar. Not
last week.
. .· ..
only
have
the
higher rates signalled
For the inomeot, however, the
the
·Federal
Reserve
Board's deterdollar is doing fine, in spite Of the
'mtnation
to
fight
Inflation,
but they
nation's 18 percent Inflation rate in

v.

his pants, or reimbursement, Bennett appeared at a county com·

GOP Booze Time
LANSING, Mich. , (AP)
RepubllC811.'!1 who will descend on
Detroit for their presidential
nominating convention in J uJy
should hsve two hours extra
drinking time, Rep. Casmer
Ogonowski says.
Ogonowski proposed le~lation
Fridsy thst would allow Michigan's
"last call" to he stretched from 2
a.m. to 4 a.m. in counties thst
receive state money to attract conventionsandpromotetourism.
Although he's a Democrat, the
Detroit lawmaker insisted he's not
trying to encourage Republicans to
get drunk while they work.

, It lllso helps agalhst illflation, as · January. Much of its past losses
against the Japanese yen have been
the price of Imported goods Is

WAS;HINGTON (AP)- After two
yean ol being bad-mouthed and
badly treated on world currency
markelll, the
S. dollar Is finally
gaining respect again.
I
The latest surge tn dollar strength 1
came Friday when Its value rose ·
sharply ~galilsl other major CIIITeD'
cies aftelo major U. S. banks hiked
· · their prtnie lernling rates to 1~ percent.
.
A .stable doilar Is impOrtant to
American .consumers · beCause it ·
may help to ~venl1111otber big iii, . crease In w~ld oil p!ic;ei. Officia!B
• of oll-elpOI'tlng nations have said the
value of the dollar Is a major factor
in their pricing decisions.
·

Therapy program planned
RUTLAND-Plans for a therapy
program at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center on March 'r/
were made when the Rutland
Garden Club met at the home of
Mrs. Dayton Parsons recenUy.
Mrs. Eugene Atkins will be chairman for the therapy program with
Mrs. James Nicholson, Mrs. Harry
Williamson, Mrs. Carl Denison, Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Mrs. C. 0. Chapman and Mrs. Marvin Wilson to bring instructions for corsage craft.
Mrs. Charles Lewis will provide
the favors, and other members have
donated toward materials and
refreshments.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins opened the
meeting with greetings in the
absence of Mrs. Ralph Turner,
president. Mrs. Denison, ro-hostess,
presented devotions using poems
from Ideals.
Mrs. Roy Holter, regional director, was a guest at the meeting and
talked about regional and state activities. She announced the spring
meeting for Region 11 to be held at
Morton Hall on ·the Ohio University
campus on April19. The coffee hour
will be at 9 a.m. and the luncheon
will he served at Baker Center.
Regional directors will be
chairmen for clinics during the mor-Ding session and there will he a slide
presentation on "Exotic Gardens in

.

,.

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r

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i' .

•

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'

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.•

.••
;..:
•.
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•• .
~·

~The Sunday Tirnco-Sentmel. Sumla 1 . :&gt;.l"rch 2, 1980

IH- The SundBy TiJnes..Sentinel, Sunday, Marrh 2. 1980

On the Light 5zde

U.. S.. co_nservationist questioned for
freeing doomed ]ap[!nese dolphins . . '

For The Supentltl0118
ODMarcb 1
DETROIT ( AP) - Did you yell
" Rabbit! Rabbit! Rabbit! " as you
hopped out of bed yesterday ? If so,
according to supersitition, you will
get a presentfrom someone you like.
That tip - good for the first day of
any month - Is from the folklore·of
North Carolina, Pennsylvania and
New Mexico, says Dr. James T.
Callow, University of Detroit's ar·
chives director.
The university 's Computer
Folklore Archives has developed a
calendar warning system that alerts
the superstitious to important days
and tells them what to do, Callow
said Friday.
He said he Is not certain how the
"rabbit" practice began in the
United States, but said it might be
traced to Uverpool, England, where
the first of the month Is celebrated in
such a manner.
On March 1:
- Italian folklore demands that a
person wash his hsiror go bald.
- The Welsh must wear leeks - an
onionlike vegetable - in their hats
because It Is the feast of st. David, a
national saint of Wales.
Manball BeDDeU's
Late Bloomers.
BAY crrv, Mich. (AP) _ MarshsllBennettmaynothavewonBay
County officia!B over with a barrel,
but the fanner jail inmate will get a
new pair of pants just the same.

•

SheriH Robert Wood has 1:1ven
BenneU ll check for $36.40.
BenneU's beef with the sheriff's
department he~an i" .July when, af. .
.
ter serving a 7:Hiay sentence for
concealing stolen property, he was
released and turned in his prisoner's '
uniform. He got back only two-thirds
of his lhree-piece suit.

I

GOOD NOW THRU
MARCH 8TH

After several truiUess requests for
mission meeting in mid-February
wearing the top-hall of his suit. His
bottom hall was covered by a
wooden barrel, complete with
suspenders.

;•
~

'
:
•

..•
~

•
:.;
;:

•

demonstrations and a tour of the•
·Ohio University greenhouse. Mrs.
Denison will take take reservations
at the March meeting. Members
were asked to donate items for the
sales table.
The state convention was also an·
nounced. It will be held at the Holiday Inn, Lane Ave., Columbus in Ju·
ly. The Gardeners Day Out will be
held at Kings Island, Sept. 10. Mrs.
Holter noted that there are over 500
members in Region 11, and stated
thst she is hopeful that each club will
prepare a history.
For the program, Mrs. Eugene
Atkins reported on heroo mentioning

,,

..

'·

" Mighly Mot" in plush piles, ·
shags, more. Jute 01 foam
bock . Choice of de corator

SOLID COLOR
POLYESTER KIIITS
1 REG.

1.86Yd.

'I

colors. 1B" x 27" size.

Easy -care knit s in many

70"x 72 " "inyl curtain .
Decora to r solid co lors.

spri ng co lors and lovely

Mognets in hem .

$1

REG.

'1.98

D

••••• $1
REG.

fash ion sti tches. 60 - inch

wi dlh s ... on full bolts .

......$1

........

'Save Your Vision
Week' March 2-8

WOMIII'S
GLOYIS

AUTOMADC

BOWL C:LEAIIER

REG.
'1.29

'

PAIR

I

2 FOR$1

REG. 72' EA:
,

9-0UNCE SOLID
LIMIT 2

2 FOR$1

-------------

KilT PCII.O SIIITS
Shl)l'f sleeve cot·
t on krt i ll . So l id

2

II!.
ifl

.

Toddlers' lo• of 12
Ovemlght Pampers®

•

2 '3

REG. 11.71

3 Pkgs~l

HIGF10
IIIOMUIIS

. . . . . PLASTICS
Dlshpon, solod ~1.

J. plece f un~~ellel ,
.--OHer bowl, · boc~et,
cutlerr troy, 6 -p c.

'•

COINS

.'

Retired after 40 years of tesching,
Mrs. Gibbll baa written three books.
She Is a member of the New Haven
Garden Club, Alpha Delta Kappa;
the Mason County Historical Society, Col. Charles Lewis, Da~tera of
the American Revolution, lind the
Mason County Fann Museum. She
will be speaking to the group on
Riverboats.

2 FOR

'1

REG.
19'

2 . 'I
FOR

.

Ml, morel

-----1

......... ..u..........-.

..
•

-•
•

eSilver Dollars 1915&amp; Before
• Halt Dollars, Quarters, Dim~s
!964 &amp; Before

...•

lottie

lOllY, NO IAINCHICKS
·ATLIAST 576 Nil STOll

iouv. NO IAIHCHICKS

LOll, BEAmFUL
IYLOILOUHER

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

•a:

2 PKGS.

.

nual event sponsored by the
American Optometric Association
and its affiliated state associations
which promotes better Cllre of the
vision system. This year's theme is
"Keep Your Eyes in Shape" which
serves to remind everyone that good
vision care Is a part of total health
care and total physical well·being.
President Ji.mm,y Carter, the
United States Congress, Governor
James A. Rhodes, and many local
mayors have all publiCly endorsed
"Save Your Vision Week." Gov.
Rhodes has proclaimed March 2-8 as
Save Your VIsion Week in Ohio and
has, "called upon the citizens of Ohio
to be mindful of the value of good
vision and to include vision care as a
part of thei~ total health care."
The OOA urges all to celebrate
"Save Your Vision Week" by
making an appointment for a
thorough vision examination.

REG. ~.17 PKG.

llG '
SAVINO

NOW

.

GALLIPOLIS The announcement that the .Ohio State
University Assn. Pl!ms to meet in
Thtll'9day's Tribune bad a headline
error. It Is the 06U Af~ Asan.
which plans to meet March 13, 1
p.m., at Oscar's and not ..the OU
Alumni Assn. . .

Katie Canaday

Katie sees one year
RIO GRANDE- Kate Casnaday,
daughter of Pat and Betsy Canaday,
Rio Gral)de, celebrated her first birthday on January 4 with a dinner at
the horne of Marshall and Helen
Canaday, her paternal grandparents
of Rio Grande.
After dinner, those present enjoyed a ~ggedy Ann birthday cake,
after which KaUe opened her many
gifts.
Those present were Katie's peternat great..grandmother, Bernice
Jones of Thunnan, her maternal
grandparents, Howard and Allee
Saunders of Gallipolla, and her aunts
and uncles, Ruth Jones, Joyce ·
Canaday, Mark Canaday, Scott
Canaday, Dow Saunders and John
Saunders.

Acetate trlc:Ot. CKolce bf
white, cluUsshades or .

•ADCO®

pa Stel s. Sizes S ~o 10 .

• •1111'

.REG.

.

3-PAIIP~C:KAGi .

Washable, lead-free paint
thai goes on easy; dries fast.
Clean up with soap and water. Choice
of while, or beautiful decor colors.

MEN'S FAVORITE
cm01 POLO SIIIU

•s
TJ:•
2Fol

. O.rl....._'!~•

'•M

Soft 'n cozy long -sleeved gown.
Solid colors . One size Iii$ all.

ICI'I

'2.37

REG.

••

..... . I

.

PAIR .

l!a~ROLL

Comfortable cotton knit in
papular solid colors. Toped
neck, short sfeeves, 1 chest .
pocket. Sizes S,M,L,Xl. ·

WOMEII'S AID TEEIIS'

•

I

REGULAR

a l'Ll GlVE '{OU
SAVIN€JS NXQJ~ NfE~tSf

• •••97
.

.

. CONVENIENC€ "
'

I

'

. · Nylc;m and suede-look uppers with vinyl
side stripes. Padded c9llqr. Cushioned .

. · NfO CUEOONG NnM«

ins&lt;&gt;les. Traction sales. Sizes 5-10.

Solid urethane foam core.
Amerlcana ·and Provincial
prints In gafd, green or
brown . l~" 'x, 14" x 7/ , " .

AVA,LABlf AT ·o. C. MURPHY DOWNTOWN STORE- 348 2ND. AVE.

more from

.

'

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I •

AT LWT 4U Pll SfOil

GALLIPOLIS - The February .
Birthday Party was Tuesday af. ternoon at the Gallla County Senior
Citizen Center with three
celebrating their birthdsy. They
were Dan Stewart, Charles Skeens
and Awilda Brucker.
The program was presented by
·Ethel Robinson and Minnie
Washington. The program was
opened with group singing.
Meditation was by Evelyn Rothgeb,
prayer by Ada Carter. A poem titled
"February" was presented by Hazel
Claytor. Ethel Robinson fl!lld a story
Utled "Happy Birthday" .to those
who had a birthday. Evelyn Rothgeb
.and Awilda Brucker both read
poems. Ethel Robinson lllso had a
game to aee how well we knew our
birds. Frank Claytor sang a
hllautiful solo.
·
"Happy Birthday" was sung to
tholle baving a birthday. Cake, punch and mints were· served to
everyone. The om birthday party
will . be March 'r/ ; everyone is
welcome.
CORRECTIQN

GALLONS
•
REG.
Gallon .

Gallipolis

,, 4~

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FOR

p,.. u .,. tele ct lonl 3" stema,

2 .••

REG.

'''

5 '1

Big w lectionl 11 " lo 13" sterrn

1111'111108 .
.WALL PAIII'I'.

JEWELERS
...... 1647

FOR

IlliG.
I ..
EA.

LAIIXI'LAT

PAUL DAVIES
tucky Derby, were completed in
1895.

1

1

.;GEA. 5FoR

....iiAIII
OUALIYYIIS'I'ID

Also buying old gold. Stamped 10
KT, 141&lt;T and 181&lt;T.

404 second

ILOSSOM PICKS

SPI- FLOWERS

3 '1

32.0%.

IIAJI'IY
SU'"

'nti·SU'"

lll_,.l"lUIM"
..._ 1111111111

We pay top cash price.
Don't sell until you check
with us.

The twin spires of Churchill
Downs, the trademark of the Ken-

COLUMBUS - In honor of the
53rd observance of "Save Your
Vision Week," Ohio McDonald's
owners, in cooperation with the Ohio
Optometric Association Auxiliary,
will be IISing special tray liners thst
stress the importanCe of children's
vision care and vision safety. TheSe
tray liners will be distributed to as
many as one milllon people during
Save Your Vision Week.
Carole ·Dreffer, ·Public lnfonnation Trustee for the Ohio OPtometric Association (OOA)
Auxiliary, says that, " The
promotion will greatly increase
public awareness of. the importance
for early vision· care for children."
Dreffer stated thst the state-wide
tray Uner program is the result of a
tw~year effort by the Auxiliary thst
was · piloted in Akron-Canton area
McDonald's.
"Save Your Vision Week" is an an·

Seniors celebrate
FebJwry birthdays

.,

U. S.• SILVER

noon.

REGUlAR 0 1.1e
h c•ll•" ' lo• oil p lonh.
Sl•rllll.-d, •eodv 10 ..... . ·

REGULAR '1.03

BUYING

GWBS TO SPEAK
TO LUNCHEON
POMEROY-Mildred Chapman
Gibbs, local historian, will he guest
speaker at the Meigs County Retired
Teachers AssociatiQilluncheon to be
held Saturday at the Meigs Inn, 12

•

I
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f
I

2 FOR$1

Terrific bargain buy on
a big variety of chews'
Stock up now!

LIMIT 2 BOXES

SORn, NO IIAINCHECkS
AT LEAS~ t6 PU STORE

00

RAWHIDI
DOGCHIWS

~~·

Boxes

look flov-e11. Clear ~lois d omes.
· ·SOftY, NO IAINCHECKS
AT LEAST 16 PIR STOill
'
. ~

colo". Sizes 4-l .

1$1

$1

MAGIC TAPE

I
I

I,.IMIT6 QUARTS

EACH

SCOTCH•u•

II

QUARTS

I

•••• llsfisAILE
IUTA. UIHIIIS
CAR~OF

Arra ngements of dr.ed ond silk·

••

PKG.OF lD

Fantastic bargain
buy for cor core.
Stock up now.

$1

~.~m.~•n·

REGULAR •••

AUTOMATIC TRAIISMISSIOII FLIID

.~~; 7

t

I

2Pkgs~~

SORRY. NO RAINCHECKS·At least IAA Par Store

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PLASTIC
HANG IRS

CAR ACCISSORIIS
Choose fro m key ho lder$ ,
spark plug go uge s, doo r
guards, ond mu ch m ore l

I

RONALD McDonald and Seymour Safely seal an agreement to
· promote children's vision safety during "Save Your Vision Week," March 2-8.

DOUBLE-BOWL
PET FEED DISH

MAHETIC SHOWER C:URTAIII

YD.

•I

tvll'lbler

I

'

ALL PURPOSE FLOOR MATS

anise, caraway, rosemary, sagel

thyme, chicves, dill, parsley,
sesame, and scented getanium as
being the most popular. Mrs. Bernard Ledlie . quoted from "Spr·
ingtime in February" thst now Is the
time to plant annuals as indooc
g11J:dens from seeds using prepared '
soil in flats. She said that two or
three seeds can be placed in one
moist peat peUet.
Mrs. Harry Williamson noted thst
wood ashes are good for soil and thst
geraniums in storage should be
checked, that pots of bulbll for forcing should he brought out, and thst
feeding of the birds should be. con·
tinued.

make the dollar more attractive to
hold by inc~asing the yield of dollar
investments.
The tum-around fo~ ·the dollar
began with the government's
dramatic $30 billlon dollar-support
operation in November 1978 after it
. lost 24 percent against the ma'ril in a
single year, 29 percent against the
yen and 33 percent against the Swiss
franc.
.
It baa conie all the way back
against the yen. While it has
~ only pert of its losses
against the mark and franc, the important development for investors
and oil-exporting nations Is that it
has stoppe&lt;;llosing value.

reversed and it has been
unlikely to Increase as much as
remarkably stable against the Gerwhen the dollar Is falling.
However, a top Gennan IJlOIIelary man mark and the Swiss franc.
In fact, the nation's dollar policy
expert warns the dollar gains may
baa been the one economic policy
he shOrt-lived if the United States
falls to contaitllitfla'Uon.
· · that has seemed to he working. It's a
"I keep my fingeta CI'G8Sed in view policy that has been forged in
of the latest effect of the present in- cooperation with other strong·
flation perfonnance in this coun- currency nations, notably Gennany.
The rise in interest rates in the
try," Olinar Emmlnl!er, the retired
.
United'
States, to levels well in exces
head of ~ German central bank,
ol
interest
rates in most other counsaid at a monel!lry CQIJfa:ence here
tt~es,
have
helped the dollar. Not
last week.
. .· ..
only
have
the
higher rates signalled
For the inomeot, however, the
the
·Federal
Reserve
Board's deterdollar is doing fine, in spite Of the
'mtnation
to
fight
Inflation,
but they
nation's 18 percent Inflation rate in

v.

his pants, or reimbursement, Bennett appeared at a county com·

GOP Booze Time
LANSING, Mich. , (AP)
RepubllC811.'!1 who will descend on
Detroit for their presidential
nominating convention in J uJy
should hsve two hours extra
drinking time, Rep. Casmer
Ogonowski says.
Ogonowski proposed le~lation
Fridsy thst would allow Michigan's
"last call" to he stretched from 2
a.m. to 4 a.m. in counties thst
receive state money to attract conventionsandpromotetourism.
Although he's a Democrat, the
Detroit lawmaker insisted he's not
trying to encourage Republicans to
get drunk while they work.

, It lllso helps agalhst illflation, as · January. Much of its past losses
against the Japanese yen have been
the price of Imported goods Is

WAS;HINGTON (AP)- After two
yean ol being bad-mouthed and
badly treated on world currency
markelll, the
S. dollar Is finally
gaining respect again.
I
The latest surge tn dollar strength 1
came Friday when Its value rose ·
sharply ~galilsl other major CIIITeD'
cies aftelo major U. S. banks hiked
· · their prtnie lernling rates to 1~ percent.
.
A .stable doilar Is impOrtant to
American .consumers · beCause it ·
may help to ~venl1111otber big iii, . crease In w~ld oil p!ic;ei. Officia!B
• of oll-elpOI'tlng nations have said the
value of the dollar Is a major factor
in their pricing decisions.
·

Therapy program planned
RUTLAND-Plans for a therapy
program at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center on March 'r/
were made when the Rutland
Garden Club met at the home of
Mrs. Dayton Parsons recenUy.
Mrs. Eugene Atkins will be chairman for the therapy program with
Mrs. James Nicholson, Mrs. Harry
Williamson, Mrs. Carl Denison, Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Mrs. C. 0. Chapman and Mrs. Marvin Wilson to bring instructions for corsage craft.
Mrs. Charles Lewis will provide
the favors, and other members have
donated toward materials and
refreshments.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins opened the
meeting with greetings in the
absence of Mrs. Ralph Turner,
president. Mrs. Denison, ro-hostess,
presented devotions using poems
from Ideals.
Mrs. Roy Holter, regional director, was a guest at the meeting and
talked about regional and state activities. She announced the spring
meeting for Region 11 to be held at
Morton Hall on ·the Ohio University
campus on April19. The coffee hour
will be at 9 a.m. and the luncheon
will he served at Baker Center.
Regional directors will be
chairmen for clinics during the mor-Ding session and there will he a slide
presentation on "Exotic Gardens in

.

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M-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Swtday. March 2. 1980

~ Nibert

available to
low income

''

YEAR OF mE CENSUS
Every len years is the time to be
counted, and during the Spriilg of
19110, every household in the United
States will be receiving a Censua
form through the mail. It is ~
portant that every aealor clUzea ID
Melp COUDty takes the time to fill
out the Censua form so everyone will
be counted. The figureS from the
19110 census will be used to appropriate monies from the Federal,
State, and local governments.
Needless to say, as the elderly
population grows the census figures
will be used for the basis of such appropriations, which could mean an
increase - or a decrease - In
monies for senior citizen programs.
If you need help In completing the
Census form, stop by the I and R of·
fice at the Senior Citizens Center for

.

POINT PLEASANT - The
·: University of Notre Dame, South
Bend, Ind., has named Max Lee·
• Nibert of Point Pleasant as the Class
,: d 1980 Valedictorian. He earned this
honor as top ranked student With a
straight "A" average for his four ·
years at Notre Dame. There are
1,700 members of t~e 1980
graduatlnR class.
Nibert received his elementary

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sal 8 .ut·1 0 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.

·
·.

:
:

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1980

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS..........:!;~...
QUALITY PLUS

..

SLICED BACON.....~·.
$

SEMI BONELESS ·

HAMS ....................~.....

:
•.
:
::
,.~

19

QUARTER

$ 39

CENTER CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS .........~...
CENTER CUT LOIN .

•'•'

$ 49

·

"
t~ ~ GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Coun~ ty History Book committee will meet

PORK CHOPS ........ ~~ ...

r
,.•

.

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.

MILK................. !~5• ~-

.

PAPER

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DOERGINT

MADISON.
SHOES-

. 171 Ol

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~

Silver Bridge PIIZI
Le'athtr re(er• to uppcn

1.•.1...- --

p

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$539

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20ot

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8
§
§

Something
Smaller

X

§
SallyaDDe Holtz
Well, March certainly came in like
Max Nibert
a lion, no question about that ... Now
if the old adage is true, in two-three
weeks, all this disgusting ground
CHESHIRE - " Readers' Fair," a
' cover should be gone!
student
book festival, is being spon·
(I hope,! hope, I hope.)
sored
by
Kyger Creek High School
If you read my column in the
from
March
5 to March 10. Books
Tribune llll the change in Gallipolis
will
be
on
display
in the school
phone service Wednesday, then you
might be wondering how to place library each day of the fair from 7:30
a.m. to 2:15 p.m. Students may
your operator-assisted calls. Well,
as ever, I am coming to your rescue browse and purchase books during
with the answer. According to a these hours.
The Readers' Fair display will
press release that came in Saturday
feature
interesting new books from a
from Ohio Bell:
variety
of publishers. Book subjects
-For operator-assisted calls
include
classics 1 fiction,
(Person-to-person, collect, etc.),
biographies,
adventure stories,
dial 'zero', then the area code if not
science,
reference,
nature, crafts
614, then the number you are calling.
and
mysteries.
The
books are
The operator will come on the line
available
at
popular
prices
which
for further Instructions.
-For station-to-station calls, dial range from 95 cents to $2.
All students and ABrents are in·
'1', the ares code, and the number.
vited
to attend the FAir. In addition
(This hasn't changed.)
··
to
building
student interest in
Customers now dial ALL their own
reading,
the
Fair
will help a wor·
long distance calls.
thwhlle
project.
All
profits will be
Happy dialing!
donated
to
the
school
library.
The River Recreation Festival
Conunlttee of Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce will start planning
for the annual Fourth of July
program on Monday, March 10,
beginning at 7 p.m. in the Chamber
office. The committee is looking for
new ideas and ways to improve the
celebration.
If you have to drive, do !t
carefully; I pity anyone who has to
go out on a day like this .. .why not
stay In and stay dry?
709 First Ave.

'Readers' Fair'

~

$

Everyone knows we do an excellent job of c leaning
carpet. Most people don ' t know that we al so c lean fur ·
niture, auto interiors, trailer exteriors, auto motors at prices that most people can afford. We can clean
almost•anything , Because of inflation we are forced to
ra1se our m'"omum charge to 524 .95 plus mileag e. Our
new name is Smeltzer' s Steamway, changed to match
the phone book. lf you need cleaning of any kind , and

~

8

~

~

l ~CQ:CCCCIOCOOOQ:~ QQQQ:~~,...cr_,-_,.-..,r...r_..o.-.....oocBi
446· 2096 -

Formerly Paul' s Steam way
C

LEAN
NO WASTE

Sliced

READY TO
EAT.

GALLIPOLIS
ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU
CARRY OUT

the Way

You like
ft.

6% COLD BEER

AND WINE

FUND-RAISING .
DINNER SUNDAY
RACINE - As a fund..-aising

event, !he Racine Emergency Squad
will stage a ham and turkey dinner

on Sunday, March 9, at the Southern
High Schoolfrom 11 a.m. to 2 p:m.

Diners will have their choice of
meat, mas~ polstoes and gravy,
noodles, green beans, rolls and butter, dessert and beverage with
prices to run $1 for ages one through
six; $2, seven through 12, and $3 for
those 13 and older.

This Week's Special

BARRELHEAD
OR
ORANGE CRUSH

VALlEY BEll

2% MILK

8·16oz. 99~
Btls.

GALLON

PLASTIC JUG

$159

BREAD

SEAFOOD
PLATT-ER

3

20

oz.

$}00

· LVS.

HOUAND RICH 'n' CREAMY

ICE CREAM

Special $2.99

GAL
CTN.

1h

Thio Mll'Cb 8, 1980.

$1 1
.

!orted
Flavors

PEPSI OR
DIET PEPS•

$1 ~!""""

...t

TRICOT LINING WITH
THICI&lt; FOAM CUSHIONING

"'

R

&amp; CLEANING SERVICE

I"'
"'

8

8

I ·::~;;;;·~;E:~:AY CARPET I

WALKING SHOE EVER MADE .

...•

§
~

SMELTZER'S STEAMWAY

HOLSUM KING SIZE

Philippines, and for the Gault
family, missionaries to Africa.
Minutes for the last meeting were
resd by Mary Casto and a short
business meeting was beld.
The evening was spent in packing
boxes to be sent to the missionaries.
Asalad was served by Patsy Fitch
and Freda Alley.
Due to the regional meeting to be
held at Mlnforcj, Ohio on March 22,
the next meeting will be Apri117.

i=.

~
~

·FLAVORITE
.
.

·..

·

·

.

;

FOLGER'S COFFEE

MARG"·R
· IN.. E.··~········ .
'

.

.

~

.

r

. : LB•.

3 LB.

.

CAN
BONE

WHITE BREAD
'

George Washington was burled in
1799 at Mount Vernon.

r=-CQWJ"J: J"~~C~Cm.-a~;-;-o;;~.rJ".-QCCC~~

Allison,~.

Vall.
.

resear ch pr ogr ams under the
direction of Or. Charles F . Kulpa.
He has been active in intramural
sports. and this year served as
residence assistant in his donn,
Stanford !lall

Everyone is welcome.

:• 1-------------------------------------------~

~.

'

Oamr. ht• has worked with seve'r al

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit
is entiUed to 500 words.
We now carry Eckrich Lunch
If anyone did not receive a letter,
Meats for your party needs.
he can pick one up at the Dr. Samyel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary.
For further Information, conla~ ,--------------------L-------------- -------1
Henny Evans, 446-1775 or Mary

Mission{Jry Fellowship meets locally

::' GALUPOLIS - The Ladies
::: Missionary fellowship of Faith Bap~ tist Church was held on Feb. 20 at
,, the church.
::: Molly Plymale opened the
meeting by asking each member to
I; give her favorite Bible verse and a
~~ · short testimony.
:, A special payer was given by Lena
: Blackburn and Janet House for the
~ Beverly family, missionaries to the
"'

. 3LB.BAG '

.

'

household is entitled to a story. If
three generations of a family live in
three different homes, each family

nfthe IHit' Mr. and Mrs. C.L. Costen
and tht• late Mr. anrl Mrs. r. .n.
Nibert. Sr.
Nibert plans a career in medtcJl
resear ch. Wh ile attending Notre

MORGAN CENTER - There will
be a special service at the Morgan
Center Gospel Mission March 9 at 7
p.m. Rev. Hennan George, formerly
of the area and now of West Virginia,
will be doing the preaching.

.,

TOWE·LS.~

BOLD

'33.99

·

.

1ree. Also, each and every

t ~============~
~
IT'S THE MOST COMFORTABLE

POT PIES..~ ....~.~..4/

PET EVAPORATED
•

GALA
II
.
.

·

~

RAVORITE

J

.u·~

:. at 7:30 p.m. In the Probate Court
:• Room Tuesday, march 4.
•; Family histories are beginning to
,, arrive and the proof-resdlng commitll.e has begun Its work. The gears
,. .have been set In motion for proper
~ flllng of each and every storY and
~ photograph. Deadline is March 30. A
::;~ 500 word story and one photograph ·

.
ONI -ONS ..............

.'

~.:
~

Gallia ffistory Book
... committee to meet
.

YELLOW

leather uppers.
padded insoles, and
a light, flexibl e
"Walkin · Natural"
sole. Co mplete size
ra nge, too. Start
"Walk in' Natural "
today!

;:

•

TOMATOES........... ~~.

Fea turing genuine

~:

~d

FLORIDA

Now In sleek new
's hapes for Spring!

But Arthur Jensen, a psy~hologist
at the University of California at
Berkeley, argues "there is a substantial inherited component of Intelligence. There is no doubt you
could selectively breed humans for
Intelligence."
Jensen, a controversial figure sin·
ce he suggestecl genetic differences
could be responsible for blacks
scoring below whites on IQ tests in
his 1969 study, said "we are
probably going to get some superior
children out of it."
But Stanford University geneticist
Luigi Cavalli-Sforza said any increased Intelligence in the children
will likely be minimal - probably
less than enhanced homelife and
education would produce.
There are "serious problems"
with "this kind of social
manipulati.on," he said, calling the
project "just another episode In the
eugenics movement."
The movement, proposed In~ the
late 19th century and embraced by
many scientists and government of·
ficials, was designed to improve
humanity by encouraging
procrestion by those deemed most
desirable and discouraging it among
those ~udged deficient.
A recenUy disclosed program In
which Virginia state hospitals had
sterilized thoiiSIIIIds of mental
hospital patients grew out of laws
passed In many states in the 1920s
wben eugenics was at!ts peak.
'
The movement fell Into disfavor
when Adolf Hitler used !t to justify
the extennination of Jews, Gypsies,
mentally retarded citizens and
others.

-Scientists
dispute whether selective breeding
actua,lly could boost human Intelligence - and they also disagree
over what sort of moral issues may
be raised by a sperm bank for Nobel
Prize winners.
But the Escondido businessman
who claims to have developed the
exclusive sperm bank for artificial
Insemination of carefully screened
women has no doubts.
"The principles of this may not be
popular, but they are sound," says
Robert K. Graham, 74. " We're
trying to take advantage of the
possibilities of genetics. So far, we
have refused to apply to humans
what we already know and apply to
animals and plants."
At least five Nobel laureates have
donated spenn to his RepositorY for
Germinal Choice, Graham said. He
said two dozen women have ex·
pressed interest and three have
become pregnant.
One acknowledged donor is
William B. Schockley winner of the
1956 Nobel Prize In physics. He has
long contended that intelligence is
!lased on genes and that some races
are genetically inferior to others.
"The whole idea of sort of
engineering birth in this way raises
all sorts of moral issues," said Prillceton University psychologist Leon
J . Kamin, author of "The Science
and Politics oflQ."
"If you believe that Intelligence is
carried by the genes and that environment and other factors don't
play any part...then, In theory, It
would make some sense. But the
evidence for that Is extremely weak
at best."

..

the Grace United Methodist Church
from 9 a.m. to~ p.m. Friday.

'

,~

PORK LOIN............ ~•.

GAI.J.JPOLIS - A rummage sale

(

;;

:.

will be held by the Ellulbeth Unit of

..

1m

LOS ANGELES (AP)

RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY

'

education at Or&lt;lnan&lt;·r P.Jemrntarv
and ~raduated fro111 l'uinl Pleasa~t
Hi~h Sc~ool in
when· he was
also valedictoria n.
A member of the Point Pleasant
Main Street Ba ptist Church. Nibert
has been acti ve at Cah·ary Ra ptis!
Church of South Bend while at·
tending Notre D8J)Ie.
He is the son of the late Max
Nibert and Lois Costen Nibert of
Point Pleasant. He is the ~ra ndson

Selective breeding ·
.. plan rais~s questions

assistance.
LEGAL .:SERVICES AVAILABLE

FOR LOW INCOME
The Southeastern Ohio Legal Services, 24 West Union Street, Second
Floor, Athens, Ohio, hail recently
opened a new office in Athens County staffed by two attorneys and a
paralegal. 'l,'he office is staffed by
Timothy J . Foran, Managing At·
torney; Patrick Chorpening McGee,
Staff Attorney; Michelle Ajamian,
Paralegal and Mary Ellen Nose, Administrative Secretary.
The office, which will also be serving Meigs County in the inunediate
future on a one day a week basis, Is
eStablished by the Legal Services
Corporation in Washington, D. C. to
provide direct delivery of legal services to eligible low-income reslden·
ts of Meigs and Athens Counties. The
office will be handling civil cases including Social Security representation, divorce and custody
proceedings, landlord arid tenant
disputes, conswner problems, and
other direct services to eligible
residents In the two counties.
A toll-free number to the Athens
office of 992-5478 has been put in
operation. Anyone desiring to meet
with the Legal Services staff can call
this number for an appointment.
Due to the nature of the attorney·
client relationship, consultation Is
not given over the telephone but an
actual meeting with the atto1.1eys
and staff ls required.
The service is part of the Ohio
State Legal Services AsSociation,
155 North High Street, Columbus,
Ohio. The office Is also available to
- do public speaking to Interested
· groups and infonnation can be
resched at the above number.
·i If you would llke furthe~ information on the low-Income legal
. services, call the I and R office at
: 992-7311.

J;Taledictorian At ;votre Dame

SPECIAL SERV ICES SET

t:ANCEllA TION NOTED
POMEROY - A meting for the
establishment of an organization on
coupon refund and rebate pur·
chasing originally scheduled last
week, but cancelled due to inclement
weather, has been reset for 6:30p.m.
Thursday at the Riverboat Room
~eigs Branch, Athens County
Savings and Loan, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy.

&amp;
CAMEL

.

3/$·1

11

•Crispy Fish Fillet •Two' tasty Shrimp
•Two Tender Scallops •Fresh Coie Slaw
•Crunchy Hushpupples •Gblden Fryes

~T!i ..:The Shoe Cafe
:tou Second :\ve.
LafayeUe,l\hJII
Gallipolis, 0 •

·
Good only al:

.

. STAlE IOJJ1E 7
· SILVER BRIDGE PlAzA

Good Only at
1..1,5. No. 1

POTATOES

20 lb.

Bag ·

'169

~8~9With .

Coupon

I

·I
I
I

I

1

~~~s-E~~~.:~~~--J
Florida

'1G9.

�~~~~~~~s~,~~~~~~====~~~~=;~~~~~--------~==~~==~--~------~----1

M-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. Swtday. March 2. 1980

~ Nibert

available to
low income

''

YEAR OF mE CENSUS
Every len years is the time to be
counted, and during the Spriilg of
19110, every household in the United
States will be receiving a Censua
form through the mail. It is ~
portant that every aealor clUzea ID
Melp COUDty takes the time to fill
out the Censua form so everyone will
be counted. The figureS from the
19110 census will be used to appropriate monies from the Federal,
State, and local governments.
Needless to say, as the elderly
population grows the census figures
will be used for the basis of such appropriations, which could mean an
increase - or a decrease - In
monies for senior citizen programs.
If you need help In completing the
Census form, stop by the I and R of·
fice at the Senior Citizens Center for

.

POINT PLEASANT - The
·: University of Notre Dame, South
Bend, Ind., has named Max Lee·
• Nibert of Point Pleasant as the Class
,: d 1980 Valedictorian. He earned this
honor as top ranked student With a
straight "A" average for his four ·
years at Notre Dame. There are
1,700 members of t~e 1980
graduatlnR class.
Nibert received his elementary

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sal 8 .ut·1 0 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.

·
·.

:
:

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1980

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS..........:!;~...
QUALITY PLUS

..

SLICED BACON.....~·.
$

SEMI BONELESS ·

HAMS ....................~.....

:
•.
:
::
,.~

19

QUARTER

$ 39

CENTER CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS .........~...
CENTER CUT LOIN .

•'•'

$ 49

·

"
t~ ~ GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Coun~ ty History Book committee will meet

PORK CHOPS ........ ~~ ...

r
,.•

.

r'"

.

MILK................. !~5• ~-

.

PAPER

r

·.
~

''•

I.
t

DOERGINT

MADISON.
SHOES-

. 171 Ol

l

€
~

Silver Bridge PIIZI
Le'athtr re(er• to uppcn

1.•.1...- --

p

.

-·

$539

.•

\

~

LARGE

20ot

~

~

8
§
§

Something
Smaller

X

§
SallyaDDe Holtz
Well, March certainly came in like
Max Nibert
a lion, no question about that ... Now
if the old adage is true, in two-three
weeks, all this disgusting ground
CHESHIRE - " Readers' Fair," a
' cover should be gone!
student
book festival, is being spon·
(I hope,! hope, I hope.)
sored
by
Kyger Creek High School
If you read my column in the
from
March
5 to March 10. Books
Tribune llll the change in Gallipolis
will
be
on
display
in the school
phone service Wednesday, then you
might be wondering how to place library each day of the fair from 7:30
a.m. to 2:15 p.m. Students may
your operator-assisted calls. Well,
as ever, I am coming to your rescue browse and purchase books during
with the answer. According to a these hours.
The Readers' Fair display will
press release that came in Saturday
feature
interesting new books from a
from Ohio Bell:
variety
of publishers. Book subjects
-For operator-assisted calls
include
classics 1 fiction,
(Person-to-person, collect, etc.),
biographies,
adventure stories,
dial 'zero', then the area code if not
science,
reference,
nature, crafts
614, then the number you are calling.
and
mysteries.
The
books are
The operator will come on the line
available
at
popular
prices
which
for further Instructions.
-For station-to-station calls, dial range from 95 cents to $2.
All students and ABrents are in·
'1', the ares code, and the number.
vited
to attend the FAir. In addition
(This hasn't changed.)
··
to
building
student interest in
Customers now dial ALL their own
reading,
the
Fair
will help a wor·
long distance calls.
thwhlle
project.
All
profits will be
Happy dialing!
donated
to
the
school
library.
The River Recreation Festival
Conunlttee of Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce will start planning
for the annual Fourth of July
program on Monday, March 10,
beginning at 7 p.m. in the Chamber
office. The committee is looking for
new ideas and ways to improve the
celebration.
If you have to drive, do !t
carefully; I pity anyone who has to
go out on a day like this .. .why not
stay In and stay dry?
709 First Ave.

'Readers' Fair'

~

$

Everyone knows we do an excellent job of c leaning
carpet. Most people don ' t know that we al so c lean fur ·
niture, auto interiors, trailer exteriors, auto motors at prices that most people can afford. We can clean
almost•anything , Because of inflation we are forced to
ra1se our m'"omum charge to 524 .95 plus mileag e. Our
new name is Smeltzer' s Steamway, changed to match
the phone book. lf you need cleaning of any kind , and

~

8

~

~

l ~CQ:CCCCIOCOOOQ:~ QQQQ:~~,...cr_,-_,.-..,r...r_..o.-.....oocBi
446· 2096 -

Formerly Paul' s Steam way
C

LEAN
NO WASTE

Sliced

READY TO
EAT.

GALLIPOLIS
ICE CO.
DRIVE THRU
CARRY OUT

the Way

You like
ft.

6% COLD BEER

AND WINE

FUND-RAISING .
DINNER SUNDAY
RACINE - As a fund..-aising

event, !he Racine Emergency Squad
will stage a ham and turkey dinner

on Sunday, March 9, at the Southern
High Schoolfrom 11 a.m. to 2 p:m.

Diners will have their choice of
meat, mas~ polstoes and gravy,
noodles, green beans, rolls and butter, dessert and beverage with
prices to run $1 for ages one through
six; $2, seven through 12, and $3 for
those 13 and older.

This Week's Special

BARRELHEAD
OR
ORANGE CRUSH

VALlEY BEll

2% MILK

8·16oz. 99~
Btls.

GALLON

PLASTIC JUG

$159

BREAD

SEAFOOD
PLATT-ER

3

20

oz.

$}00

· LVS.

HOUAND RICH 'n' CREAMY

ICE CREAM

Special $2.99

GAL
CTN.

1h

Thio Mll'Cb 8, 1980.

$1 1
.

!orted
Flavors

PEPSI OR
DIET PEPS•

$1 ~!""""

...t

TRICOT LINING WITH
THICI&lt; FOAM CUSHIONING

"'

R

&amp; CLEANING SERVICE

I"'
"'

8

8

I ·::~;;;;·~;E:~:AY CARPET I

WALKING SHOE EVER MADE .

...•

§
~

SMELTZER'S STEAMWAY

HOLSUM KING SIZE

Philippines, and for the Gault
family, missionaries to Africa.
Minutes for the last meeting were
resd by Mary Casto and a short
business meeting was beld.
The evening was spent in packing
boxes to be sent to the missionaries.
Asalad was served by Patsy Fitch
and Freda Alley.
Due to the regional meeting to be
held at Mlnforcj, Ohio on March 22,
the next meeting will be Apri117.

i=.

~
~

·FLAVORITE
.
.

·..

·

·

.

;

FOLGER'S COFFEE

MARG"·R
· IN.. E.··~········ .
'

.

.

~

.

r

. : LB•.

3 LB.

.

CAN
BONE

WHITE BREAD
'

George Washington was burled in
1799 at Mount Vernon.

r=-CQWJ"J: J"~~C~Cm.-a~;-;-o;;~.rJ".-QCCC~~

Allison,~.

Vall.
.

resear ch pr ogr ams under the
direction of Or. Charles F . Kulpa.
He has been active in intramural
sports. and this year served as
residence assistant in his donn,
Stanford !lall

Everyone is welcome.

:• 1-------------------------------------------~

~.

'

Oamr. ht• has worked with seve'r al

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit
is entiUed to 500 words.
We now carry Eckrich Lunch
If anyone did not receive a letter,
Meats for your party needs.
he can pick one up at the Dr. Samyel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary.
For further Information, conla~ ,--------------------L-------------- -------1
Henny Evans, 446-1775 or Mary

Mission{Jry Fellowship meets locally

::' GALUPOLIS - The Ladies
::: Missionary fellowship of Faith Bap~ tist Church was held on Feb. 20 at
,, the church.
::: Molly Plymale opened the
meeting by asking each member to
I; give her favorite Bible verse and a
~~ · short testimony.
:, A special payer was given by Lena
: Blackburn and Janet House for the
~ Beverly family, missionaries to the
"'

. 3LB.BAG '

.

'

household is entitled to a story. If
three generations of a family live in
three different homes, each family

nfthe IHit' Mr. and Mrs. C.L. Costen
and tht• late Mr. anrl Mrs. r. .n.
Nibert. Sr.
Nibert plans a career in medtcJl
resear ch. Wh ile attending Notre

MORGAN CENTER - There will
be a special service at the Morgan
Center Gospel Mission March 9 at 7
p.m. Rev. Hennan George, formerly
of the area and now of West Virginia,
will be doing the preaching.

.,

TOWE·LS.~

BOLD

'33.99

·

.

1ree. Also, each and every

t ~============~
~
IT'S THE MOST COMFORTABLE

POT PIES..~ ....~.~..4/

PET EVAPORATED
•

GALA
II
.
.

·

~

RAVORITE

J

.u·~

:. at 7:30 p.m. In the Probate Court
:• Room Tuesday, march 4.
•; Family histories are beginning to
,, arrive and the proof-resdlng commitll.e has begun Its work. The gears
,. .have been set In motion for proper
~ flllng of each and every storY and
~ photograph. Deadline is March 30. A
::;~ 500 word story and one photograph ·

.
ONI -ONS ..............

.'

~.:
~

Gallia ffistory Book
... committee to meet
.

YELLOW

leather uppers.
padded insoles, and
a light, flexibl e
"Walkin · Natural"
sole. Co mplete size
ra nge, too. Start
"Walk in' Natural "
today!

;:

•

TOMATOES........... ~~.

Fea turing genuine

~:

~d

FLORIDA

Now In sleek new
's hapes for Spring!

But Arthur Jensen, a psy~hologist
at the University of California at
Berkeley, argues "there is a substantial inherited component of Intelligence. There is no doubt you
could selectively breed humans for
Intelligence."
Jensen, a controversial figure sin·
ce he suggestecl genetic differences
could be responsible for blacks
scoring below whites on IQ tests in
his 1969 study, said "we are
probably going to get some superior
children out of it."
But Stanford University geneticist
Luigi Cavalli-Sforza said any increased Intelligence in the children
will likely be minimal - probably
less than enhanced homelife and
education would produce.
There are "serious problems"
with "this kind of social
manipulati.on," he said, calling the
project "just another episode In the
eugenics movement."
The movement, proposed In~ the
late 19th century and embraced by
many scientists and government of·
ficials, was designed to improve
humanity by encouraging
procrestion by those deemed most
desirable and discouraging it among
those ~udged deficient.
A recenUy disclosed program In
which Virginia state hospitals had
sterilized thoiiSIIIIds of mental
hospital patients grew out of laws
passed In many states in the 1920s
wben eugenics was at!ts peak.
'
The movement fell Into disfavor
when Adolf Hitler used !t to justify
the extennination of Jews, Gypsies,
mentally retarded citizens and
others.

-Scientists
dispute whether selective breeding
actua,lly could boost human Intelligence - and they also disagree
over what sort of moral issues may
be raised by a sperm bank for Nobel
Prize winners.
But the Escondido businessman
who claims to have developed the
exclusive sperm bank for artificial
Insemination of carefully screened
women has no doubts.
"The principles of this may not be
popular, but they are sound," says
Robert K. Graham, 74. " We're
trying to take advantage of the
possibilities of genetics. So far, we
have refused to apply to humans
what we already know and apply to
animals and plants."
At least five Nobel laureates have
donated spenn to his RepositorY for
Germinal Choice, Graham said. He
said two dozen women have ex·
pressed interest and three have
become pregnant.
One acknowledged donor is
William B. Schockley winner of the
1956 Nobel Prize In physics. He has
long contended that intelligence is
!lased on genes and that some races
are genetically inferior to others.
"The whole idea of sort of
engineering birth in this way raises
all sorts of moral issues," said Prillceton University psychologist Leon
J . Kamin, author of "The Science
and Politics oflQ."
"If you believe that Intelligence is
carried by the genes and that environment and other factors don't
play any part...then, In theory, It
would make some sense. But the
evidence for that Is extremely weak
at best."

..

the Grace United Methodist Church
from 9 a.m. to~ p.m. Friday.

'

,~

PORK LOIN............ ~•.

GAI.J.JPOLIS - A rummage sale

(

;;

:.

will be held by the Ellulbeth Unit of

..

1m

LOS ANGELES (AP)

RUMMAGE SALE FRIDAY

'

education at Or&lt;lnan&lt;·r P.Jemrntarv
and ~raduated fro111 l'uinl Pleasa~t
Hi~h Sc~ool in
when· he was
also valedictoria n.
A member of the Point Pleasant
Main Street Ba ptist Church. Nibert
has been acti ve at Cah·ary Ra ptis!
Church of South Bend while at·
tending Notre D8J)Ie.
He is the son of the late Max
Nibert and Lois Costen Nibert of
Point Pleasant. He is the ~ra ndson

Selective breeding ·
.. plan rais~s questions

assistance.
LEGAL .:SERVICES AVAILABLE

FOR LOW INCOME
The Southeastern Ohio Legal Services, 24 West Union Street, Second
Floor, Athens, Ohio, hail recently
opened a new office in Athens County staffed by two attorneys and a
paralegal. 'l,'he office is staffed by
Timothy J . Foran, Managing At·
torney; Patrick Chorpening McGee,
Staff Attorney; Michelle Ajamian,
Paralegal and Mary Ellen Nose, Administrative Secretary.
The office, which will also be serving Meigs County in the inunediate
future on a one day a week basis, Is
eStablished by the Legal Services
Corporation in Washington, D. C. to
provide direct delivery of legal services to eligible low-income reslden·
ts of Meigs and Athens Counties. The
office will be handling civil cases including Social Security representation, divorce and custody
proceedings, landlord arid tenant
disputes, conswner problems, and
other direct services to eligible
residents In the two counties.
A toll-free number to the Athens
office of 992-5478 has been put in
operation. Anyone desiring to meet
with the Legal Services staff can call
this number for an appointment.
Due to the nature of the attorney·
client relationship, consultation Is
not given over the telephone but an
actual meeting with the atto1.1eys
and staff ls required.
The service is part of the Ohio
State Legal Services AsSociation,
155 North High Street, Columbus,
Ohio. The office Is also available to
- do public speaking to Interested
· groups and infonnation can be
resched at the above number.
·i If you would llke furthe~ information on the low-Income legal
. services, call the I and R office at
: 992-7311.

J;Taledictorian At ;votre Dame

SPECIAL SERV ICES SET

t:ANCEllA TION NOTED
POMEROY - A meting for the
establishment of an organization on
coupon refund and rebate pur·
chasing originally scheduled last
week, but cancelled due to inclement
weather, has been reset for 6:30p.m.
Thursday at the Riverboat Room
~eigs Branch, Athens County
Savings and Loan, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy.

&amp;
CAMEL

.

3/$·1

11

•Crispy Fish Fillet •Two' tasty Shrimp
•Two Tender Scallops •Fresh Coie Slaw
•Crunchy Hushpupples •Gblden Fryes

~T!i ..:The Shoe Cafe
:tou Second :\ve.
LafayeUe,l\hJII
Gallipolis, 0 •

·
Good only al:

.

. STAlE IOJJ1E 7
· SILVER BRIDGE PlAzA

Good Only at
1..1,5. No. 1

POTATOES

20 lb.

Bag ·

'169

~8~9With .

Coupon

I

·I
I
I

I

1

~~~s-E~~~.:~~~--J
Florida

'1G9.

�B-10- The Sunday Tunes-sentinel. SundaY . March 2. 19110

I
I

I
Exhtutt for the month of M;,rc h dua l exhibit. "AGroup of Six: Cincinnati Pr intmakers," 24 works by
six mtists who sha re the same studio
in Ci ncinnati. " Amnesty Interna tional," 16 posters designed by
an extraordinary group of leading
contemporary artists who volunteered for th e Amnesty Interna tional project.
Gallery Hours: Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m.·3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m.-5 p.m.
March 3 - Membership drive
begins. co-chaired by Ja n Thaler
and Anita Tope.
March 6, 7 p.m .-10 p.m. - First in
series of seven Creative Writing
Classes to be held on consecutive
Thursday evenings for seven weeks.
Instructor : Wayne Dodd, Ph.D.,
Professor of English at Ohio University, author and poet of note. To
register call Janel E. Byers at 4461903. Fee for seven classes, $25 for
members, $30 for non-members.
Emphasis on poetry.
March 10 - Full week of Poet in
Residence at Kyger Creek featUring
Devon McNamara.
March 17 - Full week of Poet in
Residence at North Gallia featuring
Devon McNamara and at Hannan
Trace with Bob Fox.
March 20, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - Potpourri of Poets with Wayne Dodd,
Devon McNamara and Bob Fox at
Riverby.
A

A GROUP OF SlX : CI NCINNATI

Ali Han se n
" Ce dar - Bar Project - i\BC-X-nh "

li t ho/collage

P R I N~~ K ER S

ph n togr ;lph C'l) u r t cs y o f
1\ Cr o up ,.. , f s ix

:Two traveling exhibits at Riverby
~

GALUPOUS - Two traveling
txhibits in loan to the French Art
S:Olony from the Ohio Foundation for
the Arts, Inc., will be in both
Calleries at Riverby during the
:month of March. One will be a group
Df 24 works by six printmakers from
Cincinnati, and the other a collection
Of 16 posters designed by leading
contemporary artists who volun!eered for the Amnesty International Project.
: The six artists participating in the
:•·A Group of Six: Cincinnati Printmakers" portion of the dual
'exhibition, all share the same studio
a'nd printmaking facilities in Cincinnati. Each individual's work
represents different concepts,
philosophies and mediwns. Yet,
Jiecause of this working relationship,
:they each inevitably share :deas
:Which influence their growth, and, at
;t!mes, the direction or elements
Jtithin the works they produce in
:t!Jeir studio. Together they have ineluded 24 works in this particular
:obit, including four from each ar:tlst.
: ~ These six young artists met whiie

......
,.

.

they were graduate students at the
University of Cincinnati. Their
de cision to continue their
association and to seek opportunities
of joint exhibitions demonstrates the
effectiveness of group involvement
in an age otherwise preoccupied by
individual artistic investigations.
They have a commitment and continue'to contribute to the enrichment
of the artistic community.
To briefly describe their styles :
Kate Maynard is especially concerned with rich colors, using successive layers of ink; the simplicity
of Ron Johnson's etchings belies the
complexity of the technical
processes he employs ; the work of
Ali Hansen is a documentation of envirorunental situations; the works of
Jack Anderson are concerned with
space; David Applegate achieves a
rapport between a drawn image and
a printed image; Mark Patsfall accomplishes a montage of images
which occurs within the photo
processes.
In all, these 24 prints have
something that will appeal to
everyone who takes advantage of

Gardeners see slides

: RACINE --Mrs . Ida Diehl
P,reSenled slides of her trip to
·Surope at the Monday night meeting
iX the Bend 0' the River Garden
:Cub held at the home of Mrs. Gretta
Simpson.
: Mrs. Diehl spoke of the many
!1).aces she visited and gave detailed
descriptions of the colorful scenes.
She commented on the customs of
the people in the various countries
llisiled and of the neat appearance of
the area north of Frankfort, Germany and the northern part of
!!ranee and the Bavarian Alps. To
l,tegin her slide presentation, Mrs.
J?iehl showed the ruins of Europe
and then the renovations. She talked
about the primitive way in which
me of the people live.
~ Devotions
by Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter opened the meelinP. She

New books released

the opportunity to come to Riverby
while the Galleries are open to view
"A Group of Six : Cincinnati Printmakers."
The "Amnesty International"
exhibit consists of the entire set of 16
posters designed by an extraordinary group of nine leading
contemporary artists who volunteered to make posters for the Amnesty International project. They
are Botero, Arman, Jack Youngerman, Alexander Calder, David
Hackney, Dorazio, Joan Miro, Dibbets and Topor.
Both of these unusual exhibits are
circulated by the Ohio Foundation
for the Arts, Inc., whose Statewide
Arts Services Program is supported
by its friends, members and public
lunda from the National Endowment
for the Arts and the Ohio Arts Council.
Residents of the area are invited
to visit the Galleries at Riverby, the
home of the French Art Colony on
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10
a.m. until 3 p.m., and Saturdays and
Sundays from I p.m. until 5 p.m.,
when the Galleries are open to the
public.

GALUPOUS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library announces the. following new books
have been released:
Fiction - Stamping Ground, Loren
Estleman ; Jackals' Gold, Kenneth
Fowler; Lion of Ireland: The
Legend of Brian Boru, Morgan
Uywelyn.
Non-Fiction- Book of Facts, Isaac
Asimov; The Three Biggest Ues,
Howard Smith, Styles of Loving,
Marcia Lasswell; The Audubon
Society Field Guide to North
American Reptiles · and Amphibians; The Great Apes, Daniel
Freeman; Classic Cars, Henry
Rasmussen; Mastering the Art of
Beekeeping, Ormond Aebi; Toys
and Puppets, Ethne Rose; Landscape Painting, Bo Jeffares; A
Flight of Butterflies; Murphy's Law
Book Two, Arthur Bloch; Ohio's
Natural Heritage, Michael Lafferty;
Stalin: History of a Dictator, H.
Montgomery Hyde; Ohio Almanac

Creative writing,
emphasis on poems,
offered by FAC
GALUPOUS - The second in a
series of classes in Creative Writing
will begin on Thursday evening at
Riverby, home of the French Art
Colony, featuring Wayne Dodd,
Ph.D., Professor of English at Ohio
University in Athens, Ohio.
This particular series of seven
classes, scheduled to meet on Thursday evenings !rem 7 p.m. until 10
p.m., conducted by Dr. Dodd, will
place special emphasis on poetry.
An important part of the
Educational program sponsared by
the French Art Colony, this series of
workshops is made possible through
the partial support by a grant from
the Ohio Arts Council and the
National Endowment for the Arts.
Dr. Dodd holds his Bachelors,
Masters and Doctorate in
Literature, all from the University
of Oklahoma. In addition, he has
completed a significant amount of
post doctoral studies at Wesleyan
University in Middletown, Connecticut. He is an author of note,

having published both books of
poetry, a novel and a children's
book, as well as having his works appear in over 50 magazines and
periodicals. He is the founding editor
of The Ohio Review, a national
literary review.
Presently, he is Professor of
English at Ohio University where he
teaches poetry workshops. He is
past Director of the Program in
Creative Writing.
To register for Dr. Dodd'sseries of
seven workshops, to begin Thursday
evening at 7 p.m., call Janet E.
Byers at 446-1903. The cost for the
series of seven is $25 for members of
the French Art Colony and $30 for
non-members.
On Thursday evening, March 20,
Dr. Dodd will join Devon McNamara, Ph.D., and Bob Fox for a
"Potpourri of Poetry" at Riverby . ..
Dr. McNamara and Fox are
scheduled for Poetry in the Schools
residencies in two Gallia County
Schools that entire week.

What's Up Qn Trendiness?
New York - Are you always
among the first to adopt the latest
fad? Or are you still bowling when ·
everyone else is playing racquet
ball, or still drinking cola when
everyone else is drinking mineral
water? ·
Find out where you stand b,
taking this trendiness test from
Apartment Life magazine:
I. Have you recently purchased a
palr of roller skates?
2. Do you make everything In your
food processor except spaghetti?
3. Have you participated In at least
one marathon? (Encountergroup
marathons don't count; they were
replaced 10 years ago by "I'm O.K.,
You're O.K."l
4. Do you own at least one blank Tshlrt?
5. Do you own at least one piece of
rattan furniture?

S. Do you live In a converted loft
and work In a converted house?
7. Are you unafraid to admlt
publicly that you've always bated
yogurt?
8. Do you sleep under a quilt that
doubles as a wall hanging and cover
your windows with decorator' bed
sheets?
9. Are you about to try the new
' location diet' which permits you to
eat whatever you want as long as
you consume It In the restroom at
Grand Central Station?
The higher your percentage of
"yes" answers, the trendier you are
likely to be. However, notes the
magazine, "a failure to identify with
any of the activities means that you
are hopelessly eccentric and likely
to become fashionable at any
moment."
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

K &amp; K MOBILE HOMES
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GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
chapter of American Associatioin pf
University Women will hold its
regular monthly meeting on March 3
at 7:30 p.m. at the Jackson Pike
branch of Ohio Valley Bank. The
guest speaker will be Dr. John
Malacos and his topic will be "The
Re-Entry of Women into Higher
Education ." All members are urged
to attend and there will also be a
discussion on the homes tour
scheduled for April 'll.

2. No Increase In Past Interest Rates

Looking for objects that go
'swoosh' in the night. . .

/

Devon McNamara, Ph. D.

·Poet in the Schools
begins March 10 at K C
GALUPOUS - As a part of the
Ohio Poetry-in-the-Schools/ Community Program, arrangements
have been made in the Gallia County
Schools to provide a total of three,
full week programs in three high
scbools during March. This is the fifth poetry residency brought to the
community under the auspices o! the
French Art Colony.
This program in the Stalt! of Ohio
is coordinated by the Ohio Arts
Council and through the partial funding of the program bY the National
Endowment for the Arts by grants to
state arts agencies and other
cooperating organizations; the total
program has been ex1remely successful.
The Artists in the Scbools (AIS)
program plllces professional artists
in elementary and secondary
schools, where they conduct
workshops and demonstrate their
particular discipline. The Ohio
Poetry in the Schools components is
one of the programs sponsored by
~the Ohio Arts Council
• The program iii Gal1ia County will
get underway on Monday, March 10,
when Devon McNamara, Ph. D., will
come to Kyger Creek High School to
;spend a week with students who are
)tudying under the direction of four
:J&lt;yger Creek teachers in the areas of
t:nglish and Creative' Writing, four
periods each day. Dr. McNamara is
resident of Philippi, W. Va.,
l!-·~ her Ph. D. from New York
University in American Literature.
She graduated with a Bachelors
;\legree In English from Principia
~liege in lliinois, and holds her
Masters in English frwn the Unlver-

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read scripture and the article, "Wlla
Geese Flying Homeward." For roU__
.
.
.
MalWle Philson, and Mrs. Sunpson.
call members gave a quotation a!)propriate to February.
Tentative plans w~re made tor an
Mrs. Andrew Cross read the club
open meeting of the club to be held in
675-3000
poem, and Mrs. Eileen Buck, the
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
Point Pleasant
3411 Jackson Ave.
club prayer. During the busienss
County Savings and Loan Co.,
meeting communication was read
Pomeroy, in April.
by Mrs. Diehl announcing the r------------------------...l--------------_;___________
Regional meeting to be held on April
19 at Baker Center in Athens.
The valentine theme was carried
out in the refreshment table decorations. A red and white cake centered
the white lace-covered table and red
velvet roses were used down the
center of the talbe on white satin ribbon. Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Ruth Barnitz, Mrs. Esther
West, Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs,
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help you create dazzling new and easy
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lea)le your pocket bare either.

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FABRIC SHOPPE

sity of lliinois at Urbana.
Dr. McNamara bas taught in the
English Department at Principia
College and at New York University,
as well as Alderson-Broaddus
. College in Philippi, West Virginia.
She has been involved in a number of
Poet-in-Residence programs in both
Ohio and West Virginia. A sizable
selection of her works in both poetry
and prose have been published, and
she has done a radio series on
Women and Literature for West
VIrginia Public Radio.
Students at Kyger Creek can anticipate an exciting, motivating and
infonnative week with Dr. McNamara starting Monday, March 10,
19111.
The following week, starting March 17, Dr. McNamara will be at Nor-

th Gallla High School, and at the
same time, Bob Fox, who bas
previously conducted a Poet in the
Schools residency locally, will be at
Hannan Trace for a week. Fox is the
Poet-In-Residence for the Ohio Arts
Council and will be remembered by
many students In the area from his
earlier visit.
A highlight of Thursday evening,
March 20, will be a special program
of poetry at Riverby, home of the
French Art Colony. Frwn 7 p.m. untll10 p.m. on that evening, Dr. McNamara and Bob Fox will join
Wayne Dodd, Ph. D., whols teaching
a series of seven classes in Creative
Writing with emphasis on poetry at
Riverby w Thursday evenings.
These three talented writers and
poets will conduct a "Potpourri of
Poetry" to which the public is invited.

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He also feels earthlings are not in
any danger from extra-terrestrial
creatures who may drop in for a visit
now and then.
"I don't think we have anything
really to fear from them," he says.
"I think they are here for experimentation . They are seeing how
we live.''
As an investigator, Lutz contacts
people who have reported any type
of strange occurrence, preferably
soon after the sighting.
" The faster you get back to
people, the more accurate the story
is going to be," he says, " because if
they think about for 24, 48 or 72
hours, they tend to exaggerate a little bit more."
Lutz says Odyssey Research has
checked about 480 claims of
sightings in Maryland since 1970.
The December incident was one of
about -90 reported sightings the
group investigated in 1979.
Lutz went to the field where the
second caller had reported seeing
the rocket. He went over the area
but found no evidence of a rocket
takeoff. "We left that as an
unknown," Lutz says.
It wasn't the first unexplained occurrence in the state.
In February 1976 a man reported
seeing a small triangular cloud of
dull white moving along the bottom
of the cloud cover at about 5,100 feet.
Lutz went to the scene near
Baltimore and saw it himself, and at
about the same lime airport radar
picked up an "unidentified blip."

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WORLD DAY OF PRAYER
TO BE CELEBRATED
GALUPOUS - Cbureh Women
United will meet March 7 to
celebrate World Day of Prayer in
Rio Grande, Gallipolis and Cheshire.
Time will be announced later.

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RETURNS HOME
POMEROY - Mrs. Wilbur
Rowley, Bailey Run Road, has returned home from the hospital after 13
days.

11tANSFERS TO
HEALTH CENTER
POMEROY - Margaret Vadish,
Pomeroy, has been transferred from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Pomeroy Health Care Canter. Her
room number is 121.

Lutz.also recalls a day when about
1,000 dead ducks dropped out of the
sky in St. Marys City. He says be's
unconvinced by theories that the
ducks flew into an airplane or a high
~~~~g before dropping to the

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And Lutz is a believer.
"(JFOs, I think, are one of the
greatest mysteries of.our time, and I
think nobody really wants to pursue
it,'' he says. .
"I am not out to convince anyone
UFOs exist, or anything exists," he
says. "That is one thing I have learned over the years.''

says, "afraid of being ridiculed."

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curred.

He remembers an incident in
Febru•ry 1978 .When 3o pilot contacted the airport control tower in
Hagerstown, saying he had just seen
an unidentified object and had been
blinded. Before help could be summoned, Lutz says, the plane crashed
into a mountain and the pilot was
killed.
Of the reports of aerial
phenomena referred to. him by
police, fire and other agencies, Lutz
says, about 75 percent can be identified. The rest, he says, remain
mysteries - true UFOs.
Sinc2 he became interested in the
study of unexplained phenomena in
1970, Lutz has devoted a good deal of
his spare lime to investigating
reports of the unexplained - not just
aerial phenomena, but geological
phenomena, strange animals and
"Big Foot," the legendary apeman
of the Pacific "'"rthwest.
The rest of the time, he works as a
dispatcher in Baltimore city's Transit and Traffic division and, since he
works different shifts, is able to
spend some daylight hours and his
days off checking locations where
different phenomena have been
reported.
Lutz and his cohort often encounter difficulties when trying to
investigate UFO reports. Lutz says
he feels the govenunent covers up a
lot of information it has about aerial
spottings. And movies and television
shows dealing with subjects such as
UFOs "hurt true investigators more
than they help."
Lutz says the problem with such
shows is that they take a nwnber of
reported cases and lump them
together rather than deal with
separate and specific occurrences.
But perhaps the biggest obstacle,
according to Lutz, is the attitude of
the people first reporting the
sightings. They are embarrassed, he

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By LINDA DUFFIELD
Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP ) - &lt;AI a cold,
crisp night last December, the phone
rang at a suburban police station.
The caller told officers he tlhd just
seen something strange in the sky.
The man said tbe thing was a
dullish red color when he first spotted It, then it changed to blue. About
the lime the object changed color, he
said, his car started running funny.
Twenty minutes later, a second
man called Baltimore-Washington
International Airport. Traveling in
the same area of Baltimore County
as the first caller, he said he had
seen something that looked like a
rocket sitting in a field.
As be watched, the thing rose from
tile ground and took off, he said.
The callers were referred to John
Lutz, Maryland director of Odyssey
Research, a non-profit organization
that also operates in Delaware,
southern Pennsylvania, eastern
West Virginia and northern
VIrginia.
The callers became sources of two
of the many reports of sightings of
unidentified flying objects Lutz
receives each year. He describes his
interest in UFOs as a "hobby that
bas mushroomed."
Lutz and the other 15 Maryland
members interview people who
claim to have seen UFOs or other
unexplained phenomena. When
warranted, they make field trips to
check areas where the sightings oc-

BAKER FURNITURE

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RETIRED TEACHERS
TO MEET
GALUPQUS - The Gallia County Chapter of the Retired Teachers
will meet at the Rio Grande
Cafeteria on Marc~ 6 at 12 o'clock
noon. President Paul C. Hayes, Rio
Grande College, will be the mall(
speaker . The Senior Center Choir
will entertain at the opening of the
program.
The GCCRT expects to hand out
the aMual program bulletin at that
time.

B-11- The Sunday Times-Sentinet, ~unda)' . March 2. 19110

FRI!E oi.LiVERY

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�B-10- The Sunday Tunes-sentinel. SundaY . March 2. 19110

I
I

I
Exhtutt for the month of M;,rc h dua l exhibit. "AGroup of Six: Cincinnati Pr intmakers," 24 works by
six mtists who sha re the same studio
in Ci ncinnati. " Amnesty Interna tional," 16 posters designed by
an extraordinary group of leading
contemporary artists who volunteered for th e Amnesty Interna tional project.
Gallery Hours: Tuesdays and
Thursdays, 10 a.m.·3 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays, I p.m.-5 p.m.
March 3 - Membership drive
begins. co-chaired by Ja n Thaler
and Anita Tope.
March 6, 7 p.m .-10 p.m. - First in
series of seven Creative Writing
Classes to be held on consecutive
Thursday evenings for seven weeks.
Instructor : Wayne Dodd, Ph.D.,
Professor of English at Ohio University, author and poet of note. To
register call Janel E. Byers at 4461903. Fee for seven classes, $25 for
members, $30 for non-members.
Emphasis on poetry.
March 10 - Full week of Poet in
Residence at Kyger Creek featUring
Devon McNamara.
March 17 - Full week of Poet in
Residence at North Gallia featuring
Devon McNamara and at Hannan
Trace with Bob Fox.
March 20, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. - Potpourri of Poets with Wayne Dodd,
Devon McNamara and Bob Fox at
Riverby.
A

A GROUP OF SlX : CI NCINNATI

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li t ho/collage

P R I N~~ K ER S

ph n togr ;lph C'l) u r t cs y o f
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:Two traveling exhibits at Riverby
~

GALUPOUS - Two traveling
txhibits in loan to the French Art
S:Olony from the Ohio Foundation for
the Arts, Inc., will be in both
Calleries at Riverby during the
:month of March. One will be a group
Df 24 works by six printmakers from
Cincinnati, and the other a collection
Of 16 posters designed by leading
contemporary artists who volun!eered for the Amnesty International Project.
: The six artists participating in the
:•·A Group of Six: Cincinnati Printmakers" portion of the dual
'exhibition, all share the same studio
a'nd printmaking facilities in Cincinnati. Each individual's work
represents different concepts,
philosophies and mediwns. Yet,
Jiecause of this working relationship,
:they each inevitably share :deas
:Which influence their growth, and, at
;t!mes, the direction or elements
Jtithin the works they produce in
:t!Jeir studio. Together they have ineluded 24 works in this particular
:obit, including four from each ar:tlst.
: ~ These six young artists met whiie

......
,.

.

they were graduate students at the
University of Cincinnati. Their
de cision to continue their
association and to seek opportunities
of joint exhibitions demonstrates the
effectiveness of group involvement
in an age otherwise preoccupied by
individual artistic investigations.
They have a commitment and continue'to contribute to the enrichment
of the artistic community.
To briefly describe their styles :
Kate Maynard is especially concerned with rich colors, using successive layers of ink; the simplicity
of Ron Johnson's etchings belies the
complexity of the technical
processes he employs ; the work of
Ali Hansen is a documentation of envirorunental situations; the works of
Jack Anderson are concerned with
space; David Applegate achieves a
rapport between a drawn image and
a printed image; Mark Patsfall accomplishes a montage of images
which occurs within the photo
processes.
In all, these 24 prints have
something that will appeal to
everyone who takes advantage of

Gardeners see slides

: RACINE --Mrs . Ida Diehl
P,reSenled slides of her trip to
·Surope at the Monday night meeting
iX the Bend 0' the River Garden
:Cub held at the home of Mrs. Gretta
Simpson.
: Mrs. Diehl spoke of the many
!1).aces she visited and gave detailed
descriptions of the colorful scenes.
She commented on the customs of
the people in the various countries
llisiled and of the neat appearance of
the area north of Frankfort, Germany and the northern part of
!!ranee and the Bavarian Alps. To
l,tegin her slide presentation, Mrs.
J?iehl showed the ruins of Europe
and then the renovations. She talked
about the primitive way in which
me of the people live.
~ Devotions
by Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter opened the meelinP. She

New books released

the opportunity to come to Riverby
while the Galleries are open to view
"A Group of Six : Cincinnati Printmakers."
The "Amnesty International"
exhibit consists of the entire set of 16
posters designed by an extraordinary group of nine leading
contemporary artists who volunteered to make posters for the Amnesty International project. They
are Botero, Arman, Jack Youngerman, Alexander Calder, David
Hackney, Dorazio, Joan Miro, Dibbets and Topor.
Both of these unusual exhibits are
circulated by the Ohio Foundation
for the Arts, Inc., whose Statewide
Arts Services Program is supported
by its friends, members and public
lunda from the National Endowment
for the Arts and the Ohio Arts Council.
Residents of the area are invited
to visit the Galleries at Riverby, the
home of the French Art Colony on
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10
a.m. until 3 p.m., and Saturdays and
Sundays from I p.m. until 5 p.m.,
when the Galleries are open to the
public.

GALUPOUS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Library announces the. following new books
have been released:
Fiction - Stamping Ground, Loren
Estleman ; Jackals' Gold, Kenneth
Fowler; Lion of Ireland: The
Legend of Brian Boru, Morgan
Uywelyn.
Non-Fiction- Book of Facts, Isaac
Asimov; The Three Biggest Ues,
Howard Smith, Styles of Loving,
Marcia Lasswell; The Audubon
Society Field Guide to North
American Reptiles · and Amphibians; The Great Apes, Daniel
Freeman; Classic Cars, Henry
Rasmussen; Mastering the Art of
Beekeeping, Ormond Aebi; Toys
and Puppets, Ethne Rose; Landscape Painting, Bo Jeffares; A
Flight of Butterflies; Murphy's Law
Book Two, Arthur Bloch; Ohio's
Natural Heritage, Michael Lafferty;
Stalin: History of a Dictator, H.
Montgomery Hyde; Ohio Almanac

Creative writing,
emphasis on poems,
offered by FAC
GALUPOUS - The second in a
series of classes in Creative Writing
will begin on Thursday evening at
Riverby, home of the French Art
Colony, featuring Wayne Dodd,
Ph.D., Professor of English at Ohio
University in Athens, Ohio.
This particular series of seven
classes, scheduled to meet on Thursday evenings !rem 7 p.m. until 10
p.m., conducted by Dr. Dodd, will
place special emphasis on poetry.
An important part of the
Educational program sponsared by
the French Art Colony, this series of
workshops is made possible through
the partial support by a grant from
the Ohio Arts Council and the
National Endowment for the Arts.
Dr. Dodd holds his Bachelors,
Masters and Doctorate in
Literature, all from the University
of Oklahoma. In addition, he has
completed a significant amount of
post doctoral studies at Wesleyan
University in Middletown, Connecticut. He is an author of note,

having published both books of
poetry, a novel and a children's
book, as well as having his works appear in over 50 magazines and
periodicals. He is the founding editor
of The Ohio Review, a national
literary review.
Presently, he is Professor of
English at Ohio University where he
teaches poetry workshops. He is
past Director of the Program in
Creative Writing.
To register for Dr. Dodd'sseries of
seven workshops, to begin Thursday
evening at 7 p.m., call Janet E.
Byers at 446-1903. The cost for the
series of seven is $25 for members of
the French Art Colony and $30 for
non-members.
On Thursday evening, March 20,
Dr. Dodd will join Devon McNamara, Ph.D., and Bob Fox for a
"Potpourri of Poetry" at Riverby . ..
Dr. McNamara and Fox are
scheduled for Poetry in the Schools
residencies in two Gallia County
Schools that entire week.

What's Up Qn Trendiness?
New York - Are you always
among the first to adopt the latest
fad? Or are you still bowling when ·
everyone else is playing racquet
ball, or still drinking cola when
everyone else is drinking mineral
water? ·
Find out where you stand b,
taking this trendiness test from
Apartment Life magazine:
I. Have you recently purchased a
palr of roller skates?
2. Do you make everything In your
food processor except spaghetti?
3. Have you participated In at least
one marathon? (Encountergroup
marathons don't count; they were
replaced 10 years ago by "I'm O.K.,
You're O.K."l
4. Do you own at least one blank Tshlrt?
5. Do you own at least one piece of
rattan furniture?

S. Do you live In a converted loft
and work In a converted house?
7. Are you unafraid to admlt
publicly that you've always bated
yogurt?
8. Do you sleep under a quilt that
doubles as a wall hanging and cover
your windows with decorator' bed
sheets?
9. Are you about to try the new
' location diet' which permits you to
eat whatever you want as long as
you consume It In the restroom at
Grand Central Station?
The higher your percentage of
"yes" answers, the trendier you are
likely to be. However, notes the
magazine, "a failure to identify with
any of the activities means that you
are hopelessly eccentric and likely
to become fashionable at any
moment."
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)

K &amp; K MOBILE HOMES
EASY AS J · .2 · 3

1980.

·1. 10% Down and Sales Tax
AAUWWILLMEET
GALUPOUS - The Gallipolis
chapter of American Associatioin pf
University Women will hold its
regular monthly meeting on March 3
at 7:30 p.m. at the Jackson Pike
branch of Ohio Valley Bank. The
guest speaker will be Dr. John
Malacos and his topic will be "The
Re-Entry of Women into Higher
Education ." All members are urged
to attend and there will also be a
discussion on the homes tour
scheduled for April 'll.

2. No Increase In Past Interest Rates

Looking for objects that go
'swoosh' in the night. . .

/

Devon McNamara, Ph. D.

·Poet in the Schools
begins March 10 at K C
GALUPOUS - As a part of the
Ohio Poetry-in-the-Schools/ Community Program, arrangements
have been made in the Gallia County
Schools to provide a total of three,
full week programs in three high
scbools during March. This is the fifth poetry residency brought to the
community under the auspices o! the
French Art Colony.
This program in the Stalt! of Ohio
is coordinated by the Ohio Arts
Council and through the partial funding of the program bY the National
Endowment for the Arts by grants to
state arts agencies and other
cooperating organizations; the total
program has been ex1remely successful.
The Artists in the Scbools (AIS)
program plllces professional artists
in elementary and secondary
schools, where they conduct
workshops and demonstrate their
particular discipline. The Ohio
Poetry in the Schools components is
one of the programs sponsored by
~the Ohio Arts Council
• The program iii Gal1ia County will
get underway on Monday, March 10,
when Devon McNamara, Ph. D., will
come to Kyger Creek High School to
;spend a week with students who are
)tudying under the direction of four
:J&lt;yger Creek teachers in the areas of
t:nglish and Creative' Writing, four
periods each day. Dr. McNamara is
resident of Philippi, W. Va.,
l!-·~ her Ph. D. from New York
University in American Literature.
She graduated with a Bachelors
;\legree In English from Principia
~liege in lliinois, and holds her
Masters in English frwn the Unlver-

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"Your Quality Mobile Home Dealer"

read scripture and the article, "Wlla
Geese Flying Homeward." For roU__
.
.
.
MalWle Philson, and Mrs. Sunpson.
call members gave a quotation a!)propriate to February.
Tentative plans w~re made tor an
Mrs. Andrew Cross read the club
open meeting of the club to be held in
675-3000
poem, and Mrs. Eileen Buck, the
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
Point Pleasant
3411 Jackson Ave.
club prayer. During the busienss
County Savings and Loan Co.,
meeting communication was read
Pomeroy, in April.
by Mrs. Diehl announcing the r------------------------...l--------------_;___________
Regional meeting to be held on April
19 at Baker Center in Athens.
The valentine theme was carried
out in the refreshment table decorations. A red and white cake centered
the white lace-covered table and red
velvet roses were used down the
center of the talbe on white satin ribbon. Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Ruth Barnitz, Mrs. Esther
West, Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs,
We, at French City Fabric Shoppe, can
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Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. Diehl, Mrs.
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make) and lots of bright new ,asy to sew
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fabrics, too. So; If your closet Is bare and
so are you, visit French City Fabric
Shoppe, today for quick cover that won't
lea)le your pocket bare either.

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FABRIC SHOPPE

sity of lliinois at Urbana.
Dr. McNamara bas taught in the
English Department at Principia
College and at New York University,
as well as Alderson-Broaddus
. College in Philippi, West Virginia.
She has been involved in a number of
Poet-in-Residence programs in both
Ohio and West Virginia. A sizable
selection of her works in both poetry
and prose have been published, and
she has done a radio series on
Women and Literature for West
VIrginia Public Radio.
Students at Kyger Creek can anticipate an exciting, motivating and
infonnative week with Dr. McNamara starting Monday, March 10,
19111.
The following week, starting March 17, Dr. McNamara will be at Nor-

th Gallla High School, and at the
same time, Bob Fox, who bas
previously conducted a Poet in the
Schools residency locally, will be at
Hannan Trace for a week. Fox is the
Poet-In-Residence for the Ohio Arts
Council and will be remembered by
many students In the area from his
earlier visit.
A highlight of Thursday evening,
March 20, will be a special program
of poetry at Riverby, home of the
French Art Colony. Frwn 7 p.m. untll10 p.m. on that evening, Dr. McNamara and Bob Fox will join
Wayne Dodd, Ph. D., whols teaching
a series of seven classes in Creative
Writing with emphasis on poetry at
Riverby w Thursday evenings.
These three talented writers and
poets will conduct a "Potpourri of
Poetry" to which the public is invited.

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He also feels earthlings are not in
any danger from extra-terrestrial
creatures who may drop in for a visit
now and then.
"I don't think we have anything
really to fear from them," he says.
"I think they are here for experimentation . They are seeing how
we live.''
As an investigator, Lutz contacts
people who have reported any type
of strange occurrence, preferably
soon after the sighting.
" The faster you get back to
people, the more accurate the story
is going to be," he says, " because if
they think about for 24, 48 or 72
hours, they tend to exaggerate a little bit more."
Lutz says Odyssey Research has
checked about 480 claims of
sightings in Maryland since 1970.
The December incident was one of
about -90 reported sightings the
group investigated in 1979.
Lutz went to the field where the
second caller had reported seeing
the rocket. He went over the area
but found no evidence of a rocket
takeoff. "We left that as an
unknown," Lutz says.
It wasn't the first unexplained occurrence in the state.
In February 1976 a man reported
seeing a small triangular cloud of
dull white moving along the bottom
of the cloud cover at about 5,100 feet.
Lutz went to the scene near
Baltimore and saw it himself, and at
about the same lime airport radar
picked up an "unidentified blip."

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WORLD DAY OF PRAYER
TO BE CELEBRATED
GALUPOUS - Cbureh Women
United will meet March 7 to
celebrate World Day of Prayer in
Rio Grande, Gallipolis and Cheshire.
Time will be announced later.

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RETURNS HOME
POMEROY - Mrs. Wilbur
Rowley, Bailey Run Road, has returned home from the hospital after 13
days.

11tANSFERS TO
HEALTH CENTER
POMEROY - Margaret Vadish,
Pomeroy, has been transferred from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Pomeroy Health Care Canter. Her
room number is 121.

Lutz.also recalls a day when about
1,000 dead ducks dropped out of the
sky in St. Marys City. He says be's
unconvinced by theories that the
ducks flew into an airplane or a high
~~~~g before dropping to the

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ESTER, OH •

And Lutz is a believer.
"(JFOs, I think, are one of the
greatest mysteries of.our time, and I
think nobody really wants to pursue
it,'' he says. .
"I am not out to convince anyone
UFOs exist, or anything exists," he
says. "That is one thing I have learned over the years.''

says, "afraid of being ridiculed."

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curred.

He remembers an incident in
Febru•ry 1978 .When 3o pilot contacted the airport control tower in
Hagerstown, saying he had just seen
an unidentified object and had been
blinded. Before help could be summoned, Lutz says, the plane crashed
into a mountain and the pilot was
killed.
Of the reports of aerial
phenomena referred to. him by
police, fire and other agencies, Lutz
says, about 75 percent can be identified. The rest, he says, remain
mysteries - true UFOs.
Sinc2 he became interested in the
study of unexplained phenomena in
1970, Lutz has devoted a good deal of
his spare lime to investigating
reports of the unexplained - not just
aerial phenomena, but geological
phenomena, strange animals and
"Big Foot," the legendary apeman
of the Pacific "'"rthwest.
The rest of the time, he works as a
dispatcher in Baltimore city's Transit and Traffic division and, since he
works different shifts, is able to
spend some daylight hours and his
days off checking locations where
different phenomena have been
reported.
Lutz and his cohort often encounter difficulties when trying to
investigate UFO reports. Lutz says
he feels the govenunent covers up a
lot of information it has about aerial
spottings. And movies and television
shows dealing with subjects such as
UFOs "hurt true investigators more
than they help."
Lutz says the problem with such
shows is that they take a nwnber of
reported cases and lump them
together rather than deal with
separate and specific occurrences.
But perhaps the biggest obstacle,
according to Lutz, is the attitude of
the people first reporting the
sightings. They are embarrassed, he

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SEE ONE TODAY

By LINDA DUFFIELD
Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP ) - &lt;AI a cold,
crisp night last December, the phone
rang at a suburban police station.
The caller told officers he tlhd just
seen something strange in the sky.
The man said tbe thing was a
dullish red color when he first spotted It, then it changed to blue. About
the lime the object changed color, he
said, his car started running funny.
Twenty minutes later, a second
man called Baltimore-Washington
International Airport. Traveling in
the same area of Baltimore County
as the first caller, he said he had
seen something that looked like a
rocket sitting in a field.
As be watched, the thing rose from
tile ground and took off, he said.
The callers were referred to John
Lutz, Maryland director of Odyssey
Research, a non-profit organization
that also operates in Delaware,
southern Pennsylvania, eastern
West Virginia and northern
VIrginia.
The callers became sources of two
of the many reports of sightings of
unidentified flying objects Lutz
receives each year. He describes his
interest in UFOs as a "hobby that
bas mushroomed."
Lutz and the other 15 Maryland
members interview people who
claim to have seen UFOs or other
unexplained phenomena. When
warranted, they make field trips to
check areas where the sightings oc-

BAKER FURNITURE

I

HOM ELITE'S

·985-3308 .

RETIRED TEACHERS
TO MEET
GALUPQUS - The Gallia County Chapter of the Retired Teachers
will meet at the Rio Grande
Cafeteria on Marc~ 6 at 12 o'clock
noon. President Paul C. Hayes, Rio
Grande College, will be the mall(
speaker . The Senior Center Choir
will entertain at the opening of the
program.
The GCCRT expects to hand out
the aMual program bulletin at that
time.

B-11- The Sunday Times-Sentinet, ~unda)' . March 2. 19110

FRI!E oi.LiVERY

'No"Down Payment Necessary
j'

•

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. BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC•
•

�C-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. SundH)". ~:;rrh 2. 1980
8-12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. March 2, 1980

FOODLAND IS PROUD TO WELCOME
A NEW STORE TO OUR FAST GROWING FAMILY

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MON. THRU SAT. 8 AM TIL 10 PM

Eastern girls claim
sectional cage title
BUCIITEL :... The Eastern Girls
basketball team captured the Class
A Sectional Tournament at Nelaonvllle York Friday by defeating the
Crooksville Ceramics, 43-42.
In the first period, 1the Eastern
girla were out in front, 12-8 and going
into half time the Eastern team led
by two, 21-19.
In the third period, both teams
played even with each team scoring
10 points apiece to put the score 31·

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.Moskau ordered to lose 24

46 01. Cln

- -'--------

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Paul
Moskau, under orders from the club,
has trinuned down fnm 220 to 196
pounds and is battling to win one of
10 pitching jobs with the Cincinnati
Reds.
"Moskau could make It very interesting around here," said
Mailager John McNamara as the first week of spring training for pitchers and catchers ended. The
·• remainder of the club reports Monday.
· ,. "I don't know what he means by
, intere,'ltlng," said Moskau, who has
•. been uP and·down over the past four
yean!, twice sent to the minors.
· "DoeS that mean my job is to put
· • pressure oo the other pitchers to pitch well?
·
• "I know If I reported in my old
- shape, I don't think I would've
ha4 a
.

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Buckeyes past Purdue.
Ransey, the Buckeyes second all·
time leading scorer, said, "I've been
playing for State for four years and
to come away from Purdue with a
win is incredible.
''It's great because no other Big
Ten team was able to beat them on
their own floor thls season.
The Buckeyes, ninth-ranked
nationally thls week, face the same
task at Indiana. The Hoosiers have
won all eight of their home assign·
ments against league opposition this
winter.
No matter what the Buckeyes do
Sunday, they are assured of their first NCAA Tournament berth since
1971.

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Ten's automatic qualifier for the
National Collegiate Athletic
Association Tournament. However,
the looer is also expected to receive
an at-large bid to the post-season
play-offs.
Ohio State and Indiana are 1U in
the conference, while Ohio State
~and Indiana 1~7 for all games.
The Buckeyes nipped Ute Hoosiers
59-58 In their first meeting thls
season in Columbus.
Ohio State worked out in St. John
Arena Friday before taking a bus to
Bloomington Saturday.
The game will be televised by
NBC-TV at 1:05p.m. EST Sunday.
Two free throws each by freshman
Larry Huggins and Kelvin Ransey in
the last 45 seconds lifted the

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chance of making thls ball club.
They would've said, 'The same old
stuff, he doesn't care.' Well, I do!"
Moskau, 26, said. ·
He said pitching coach Bill
Fischer told him there are pitchers
on the team who bad passed him up
last season: Mike LaCoss, Tom
Hurne and now Frank Pastore.
Fischer told him it was up to him
prove he belong.s ahead of them
again, Moskau said.
.
"I've shown them that I bave_.a dlf.
ferent attitude and I'm in the best
shape I've ever been. They just have
to see the pitching part of It now. But
I'm not down here thinking I don't
have a job. I know I'D pitch here or
somewhere. I'm so ready
physically, I want to bust It right
now," Moskau said.
The Reds starting rotation now is

all right-handed: Tom Seaver, Mlke
LaCoss, Bill Bonham, and probably
Frank Pastore.
The Reds are reporLedly looking
for a trade to acquire a lefthand
starting pitcher. Pastore will not go
back to the bullpen.
"No," McNamara said. "We feel
his biggest asset is as a starter. Last
year, he was In the bullpen out of
necessity !Jecause (Mario) Sotowent
down and Hurne hadn't been moved
there yet."
The Reds announced that Pastore
had signed a one-year contract but
did not disclose the tenns.
The Reds &amp;!so 81Ulounced that the
first ball to be thrown out at Opening
.Day this year will be hand carried,
on foot, all the way froin St. Louts,
Mo. where the ball will be made.

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The mighty Southern express, who
put together a tremendous team ef·
fort, and one of their best overall
perfonnances of the year, will fire
up the coals and roll into Chillicothe
High School March 11 , to face the
winner oi the Lucasville Valley Sectional. Game time will be at 7 p.m.
Tickets for the game will be on sale
at Southern High School Thursday
morning.
A1l the pre-game warm-ups and
the highly spir;ited battle between
the cheering Sj!Ctions came to an ·
end, one could feel the excitement
building in anticipation of the
opening tip off. After the two games
made final preparations and broke
from their pre-game huddles ,
Southern's brilliant purple and gold
lined up against North Gal!ia 's
flashy green and white for a battle
that kept the rafters in the Meigs
Gym shaking until the final buzzer.

SOUTHERN's Big Dave
Foreman, &amp;-4 senior center,
scored 16 points Friday night to
help the Tornadoes capture their
fourth sltalgbl Class A Sectional
cbamploosblp. Sauthero defeated
SVAC Oppol!ent North Gallla, 71,55, to advance to district play at
Cbllltcothe. The SVAC champs
own a 20-1 record.

I

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sport&amp; Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State's Buckeyes have sbattered one
road jinx and now aim at another at
Indiana Sunday In a nationally
televised showdown Sunday for the
Big Ten Conferencebasketball title.
The Buckeyes had dropped five
straight games at Purdue before
defeating the Boilennakers ~
Thursday night.
The victory kept the Buckeyes tied
with Indiana for the conference lead
. going into their final regular season
game.
Ohio State has not won at Indiana
- since 1910, A~Plng seven straight
~ decisions to the Hoosie~.
·· The winner Sunday will be the Big

ROCK SPRINGS -"- "Chillicothe BoWid! " That's what the
spirited Southern Tornado fans were chanting after the rampaging Southern Tornadoes captured their fourth consecutive
sectional championship by defeating the North Gallia Pirates
72-55 before a near capacity crowd here Friday night.
The champion Tornadoes raised their season record to an outstanding 20 wins against just one loss (20-1) and in doing so earned the right to compete in the district tournament at
Chillicothe for the fourth year in a row. The Pirates, who were
playing their third game in five days, ended their season with a
record of 12-10.

Eichinger and Kaleen Millhone with
six each, Sarah Goebel, two, and
Tammy Hudson with one.
·
Leading scorers for Crooksville
were Belh Schooley with 14, aiid
Janey WOOd\vith 10. Other scorers
were Mert Nelson with eight, Karen
Spring with six, and Kathy Yoder
and Jill Miller with two apiece.
The Eastern Girls now play in the
District's at Chillicothe on March 6
against Portsmouth Clay .

Bucks .e ye first win
at Indiana in 10 years

Gold Corn
Garden
Peas
CUT 01 f!ENCH SIYLE
Green Beans

59e

24 OZ. CARTON~

Up by six in the fourth quarter, the
Eastern girls held off a late rally by
the Crooksville squad with two
minutes to go and came out on top by
one point. Crooksville outscored
Eastern 13-12in the fourth quarter.
Leading the way for the Eastern
girls was Lita Young with 10 points
and 15 rebounds. Other top scorers
for Eastern were Jeannie McClure
and Teresa Hannwn both with nine
points. Other scorers were Laura

BY SCOTI' WOLFE

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Tornadoes eliminate
Pirates, 72-55, for
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PIRAT!21 ELIMINATED '- COI!ch Ted Lehew's
" Nol111 a.J11a Pirates "put up 8 gallant effort before
• ·bvlrlaC to lloitllenl, 7:1-10, In the cbampl'xllblp game .
.: Friday ~ r1 tbe Clau. A llectlonal Tournament at
,.. Meip ~ School. 'nle 'Pirates finished their iJea8on
.

•,

Team

.

r

•

· with a a-10 record.
llllllllllerll were, left to right.
ll'OIIt row, Bruce Shriver, Jefflllillth, Keith Payne, TJm,
Howell, Greg Dee!, and Jeff Bl&amp;ck. Back row, left to
·· right, Matt Queen, Joe Peck, Dan Berry, Mark Miller,
ScOtt.HoweU and Steve Franklin.
·

I

.

PACES PIRATES
North
Gallla's Keith Payne led the
Pirates with 19 points in a losing
cause against Southern In
Friday's Class .A SecUoul championship tournament game at
Rock Springs.

Redwomen
gain finals
CEDARVILLE - Coach Diane
Lewis' Rio Grande College Redwomen gained the finals of the Ohio
AlA,w·District ill Tournament for
the first time In the school's history
after bea~ Ohio Northern University; 11-M, F'iiday.
Thursday, the Redwomen gained
semifinal play by turning back host
Cedarville, 75-74, on two free throws
with 11 seconds left by Freslunan
Kim Martin of Reynoldsburg.
In Friday's tilt, VIcki Epple paced
lhil Redwcimen with 17 points. Rio
traDed 35.,'12 dtning the halftime intermission.
The Redwomen were to meet
Malone at 3 p.m. Saturday for the
state title. A win would put the Redwomen in the national regionals, to
be played at Taylor, Ind., University
this year. Rio is now19-4on the year. ,

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W17 2L 10p26 082~·
Chillicothe·.
Ironton .
16 4 1193 101)•
Wheelersburg
16 S U16 1250
Portsmouth
15 5 1218 1078
Athens
13 7 13&lt;18 ·1068
Gallipolis
13 1 1158 1035
waverly
· 12 B 1174 1040
Wellston·x
12 .9 U59 1364
Logan
8 i1 10~1 1106
court House
7 12 · 916 99~
Pt. Pleasant
4 16 1082 1301
J.ckson·x
' 3 18 989 1290
Melg•·x
. ·
2 19 1052 1424
x .. complet~d season
\ ·.
Frld•v•oresults:
·
Whaeler•burg 61 Jackson 42
Chesape1ke 68 Wellston 65
Ripley 75 Pt. Pleasont 56
Tuesday's games:
Logan vs. Lancaster, at OU
G•llip&lt;&gt;lls vs. Marietta, at ou

. Southern's high jwnplng 6-foot-2
Dale Teaford swiped the opening tip
off from 6-9 center Dan Berry and-30
seconds later the talented Southerner swished a long jumper from the
corner to put the Tornadoes on top 20. Several seconds later Pirate
Senior Joe Peck netted a basket of
his own to tie the score at two all.
The Tornadoes took the lead for good
on a J olmny Davis basket, then unveiled a surprise l-3·1 zone defense
that proved effective enough for
them to grab an 8-2 lead with 5:30
still remaining in the opening
period. Pirate Tim Howell who
played an excellent floor game then
came back to cut the lead to 8-4.
Jack Duffy, Dave "Big Red"
Foreman, and Dale Teaford who
snagged a needle threading pass
from the hands of Kent Wolfe, then
combined for some spectacular of·
fensive efforts to propel their team
to a 24-14 first quarter advantage
over Ted Lehew's fighting Pirates.
In the latter stages of the canto
Southern switched back to its always
effective man-t&amp;-man defense, but
they still weren't able to stop that
hot handed Keith Payne who paced
his club the opening round with six
iinportant markers.

The hustling North Gallia squad
controlled the second quarter tip .
The Pirates fought hard and tried to
pick away at the Tornado lead, but
the overpowering purple
powerhouse had other ideas and at
one point took al4 point advantage.
North Gallla then hopped on the
scoring teeter totter and cu~ the lead
to eight, but when the dust had
finally ·seWed the two clubs found
that they bad batUed to a 7·17 second
quarter tie and went into the locker
rooms with the Meigs countlans on
top 41-31. Jack Duffy paced the local
Tornadoes with an amazing 17
markers. Mark Miller and Keith
Payne each had eight points at the
half.
'
. Although Southern led at the half,
they found themselves in foul
trouble and had to substitute early In
the game. Despite some torrid hot
streaks the champions actually
struggled through the opening .hlllf,
bu! came on strong late In the game.
· Coach Carl Wolfe' CWIIIlented on
his team'S first half perforJll811ce,
' •we rea11Ydidn't Ptayasgood aswe
should have the filst balf, but of
course we did get in foul trouble, so
pia ·
ti ..
we started to · Y cooaerva ve.
Coach Wolfe also stated, "I was
thinking about just getting through
the sectional. The boys bave had
· .tremendoiiiJ presaure on them In the
· secttonal .beCatile everyooe expects
them to win 81111 this really affects
' 1a· , .
·
thewaytheyp y.

relieved off the Southern team
because they really put together an
excellent team effort. Jolumy Davis
who played a good floor game round
a hot hand and scored six of the Tor·
nadoes 12 third quarter points. The
sticky Southern defense who held the
high scoring Dan Berry to just four
points for the entire evening held the
quick and talented Pirates to just
nine points to lead 53-40 at the end of
the third canto. Another key fact
was that Tim Howell was held to just
four points for the night like team·
mate Berry.
The fourth stanza started out on a
high note as both teams scored at a
rapid pace with North Gallia's Keith
Payne ending up In the limelight.
Payne's efforts however, weren't
enough as the Tornadoes really star·
ted to "knit" their team into a potent
offensive monster. The team work
started to take shape early in the
game and finally geUed towards the
end. The Racine boys took charge
and wrote the final chapter, then
closed the book on the Pirates with a
final score of 72-53. The Pirates
tallied 15 that last go-round while the
Tornadoes scored 19 even after the
winners slowed the ball down the
final3:00 minutes. Every member of
the winning squad got to see action
and contributed to the victory in
someway.
Coach Wolfe said of his team's
perfonnance, "Tonight we finally
put it all together. These kicla are
fabulous. They all hustled and
they're just a great group to work
with.
"I was pleased with tonight's
game and I was very pleased with
the season. We had a good year. I
think the pressure is gone now and I
think we will be much more relaxed
in the diatrict. I have confidence in
thls team and I feel we're as good as
any team we will play in the
district.''
Jack Duffy, the "Southern Southpaw'' led all scorers by pouring in 23
points followed in double figures by
Dave Foreman with 16, and Dale
Teaford who netted 15. The trio
sparked their team on offense and
also hauled down 28 of their team's
38 rebounds. Foreman led with 11,
Duffy 10, and Teaford 7.
Keith Payne had an excellent
evening by canning 19 points to lead
his team. Mark Miller had 11 and
Scott Howell nine. Joe Peck hauled
down 9 caroms to lead his team in
that category.

Southern controlled the boards !IS. 32 and shot 47 percent from the field.
(27-58) while North Gallia shot 39
percent from the field (za.-63).
Southern shot for 75 percent (1824) from the charity stripe led by
Jack Duffy who canned ~for-10 to
add to his scoring total. Duffy also
had six assists out of the team's total
of 15. Southern had 10 steals and 14
turnovers.
·North Gallia shot 50 percent (9-18)
from the foul line and had 9 assists,
while committing 21 turnovers. Both
teams conunitted 20 fouls apiece.
Southern Will play one of two Pol"
tsmouth teanil in the district i the
winner of the Lucasville Valley sectional finala which were held last
nlgbt (March 1). They will play
either Portsmouth Clay who
defeated Pike Western ~70 -in two
overtlmes In the first round or P.ortamouth Notre Dame who bel!t New·
. Boston 61-69.
Box IICOI"e:

·

The second half started out slow,
but the excitement was still there.
.There was also some evidence that
some of the pressure had been
\

17 17 • 1&amp;-111

• IT 12 lt-72

I

�C-1-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. SundH)". ~:;rrh 2. 1980
8-12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. March 2, 1980

FOODLAND IS PROUD TO WELCOME
A NEW STORE TO OUR FAST GROWING FAMILY

c
., .
strict

OHIO VALLEY

outherna vancesto
10 A.M. TO 8 P.M.
FOODLAND'
GRADE A LARGE

MARTHA WHITE

CORN
MUFFIN MIX
7Y2 oz.
PKGS.

.,

,

MON. THRU SAT. 8 AM TIL 10 PM

Eastern girls claim
sectional cage title
BUCIITEL :... The Eastern Girls
basketball team captured the Class
A Sectional Tournament at Nelaonvllle York Friday by defeating the
Crooksville Ceramics, 43-42.
In the first period, 1the Eastern
girla were out in front, 12-8 and going
into half time the Eastern team led
by two, 21-19.
In the third period, both teams
played even with each team scoring
10 points apiece to put the score 31·

. 29.

COTTAGE
CHEESE

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~

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3 c.~o $1
Vegetables

Mixed

16

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Beams

~~~·

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Dll 1110111(

Tomato
Juice

69c

&amp;9c

Ofl Wllltll

.Moskau ordered to lose 24

46 01. Cln

- -'--------

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Paul
Moskau, under orders from the club,
has trinuned down fnm 220 to 196
pounds and is battling to win one of
10 pitching jobs with the Cincinnati
Reds.
"Moskau could make It very interesting around here," said
Mailager John McNamara as the first week of spring training for pitchers and catchers ended. The
·• remainder of the club reports Monday.
· ,. "I don't know what he means by
, intere,'ltlng," said Moskau, who has
•. been uP and·down over the past four
yean!, twice sent to the minors.
· "DoeS that mean my job is to put
· • pressure oo the other pitchers to pitch well?
·
• "I know If I reported in my old
- shape, I don't think I would've
ha4 a
.

LIMIT 2 WITH COUI'OJII
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JEUY ROUS

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Buckeyes past Purdue.
Ransey, the Buckeyes second all·
time leading scorer, said, "I've been
playing for State for four years and
to come away from Purdue with a
win is incredible.
''It's great because no other Big
Ten team was able to beat them on
their own floor thls season.
The Buckeyes, ninth-ranked
nationally thls week, face the same
task at Indiana. The Hoosiers have
won all eight of their home assign·
ments against league opposition this
winter.
No matter what the Buckeyes do
Sunday, they are assured of their first NCAA Tournament berth since
1971.

2il Oz. ~~~

Btls.

lf• Pork loin

Ten's automatic qualifier for the
National Collegiate Athletic
Association Tournament. However,
the looer is also expected to receive
an at-large bid to the post-season
play-offs.
Ohio State and Indiana are 1U in
the conference, while Ohio State
~and Indiana 1~7 for all games.
The Buckeyes nipped Ute Hoosiers
59-58 In their first meeting thls
season in Columbus.
Ohio State worked out in St. John
Arena Friday before taking a bus to
Bloomington Saturday.
The game will be televised by
NBC-TV at 1:05p.m. EST Sunday.
Two free throws each by freshman
Larry Huggins and Kelvin Ransey in
the last 45 seconds lifted the

l?'A(I;.!.J I 1.1

Half Hams

$119

.

lb.

Ta

chance of making thls ball club.
They would've said, 'The same old
stuff, he doesn't care.' Well, I do!"
Moskau, 26, said. ·
He said pitching coach Bill
Fischer told him there are pitchers
on the team who bad passed him up
last season: Mike LaCoss, Tom
Hurne and now Frank Pastore.
Fischer told him it was up to him
prove he belong.s ahead of them
again, Moskau said.
.
"I've shown them that I bave_.a dlf.
ferent attitude and I'm in the best
shape I've ever been. They just have
to see the pitching part of It now. But
I'm not down here thinking I don't
have a job. I know I'D pitch here or
somewhere. I'm so ready
physically, I want to bust It right
now," Moskau said.
The Reds starting rotation now is

all right-handed: Tom Seaver, Mlke
LaCoss, Bill Bonham, and probably
Frank Pastore.
The Reds are reporLedly looking
for a trade to acquire a lefthand
starting pitcher. Pastore will not go
back to the bullpen.
"No," McNamara said. "We feel
his biggest asset is as a starter. Last
year, he was In the bullpen out of
necessity !Jecause (Mario) Sotowent
down and Hurne hadn't been moved
there yet."
The Reds announced that Pastore
had signed a one-year contract but
did not disclose the tenns.
The Reds &amp;!so 81Ulounced that the
first ball to be thrown out at Opening
.Day this year will be hand carried,
on foot, all the way froin St. Louts,
Mo. where the ball will be made.

Piece Bologna .......................... ~~:. 89~
TENDERBESr

SMOMIO

USIM QtOICE BONELESS BEEf$

Bottom
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Lb

269

I WHOLE OR K•LF

Slab
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79c

Lb.

(hlcken

Lets

Lb.

ggc

COUNTRY PRIDE
FRESH

u..

Chicken/Beef/Turkey/Mac. &amp; Cheese&amp;Spag w/beet

Pot Pies ••.................. 4 ~~:~
Cream PI·es .. .... .......... 2 Pies

$1
$1
Pie Shells••••••....•.....••••~ k~~- 69

'

Banquet Deep Dish

~

2

Food land

Whipped Topping ....•.... ~:~. 59~
Foodland

.

Cut Corn.•.•••..•........... ~k~· 69
Foodland

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Pkgs.

Creamer•••••• •••••• 3

16oz.

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99

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WHY PAY MOR

Banquet Banana/Choc.!Lemon/Coconut·

14 oz.

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_A pples · 3 tt:·ggc
Medium Onions
8 . $.,

:swm

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l.bs.

SWEET

The mighty Southern express, who
put together a tremendous team ef·
fort, and one of their best overall
perfonnances of the year, will fire
up the coals and roll into Chillicothe
High School March 11 , to face the
winner oi the Lucasville Valley Sectional. Game time will be at 7 p.m.
Tickets for the game will be on sale
at Southern High School Thursday
morning.
A1l the pre-game warm-ups and
the highly spir;ited battle between
the cheering Sj!Ctions came to an ·
end, one could feel the excitement
building in anticipation of the
opening tip off. After the two games
made final preparations and broke
from their pre-game huddles ,
Southern's brilliant purple and gold
lined up against North Gal!ia 's
flashy green and white for a battle
that kept the rafters in the Meigs
Gym shaking until the final buzzer.

SOUTHERN's Big Dave
Foreman, &amp;-4 senior center,
scored 16 points Friday night to
help the Tornadoes capture their
fourth sltalgbl Class A Sectional
cbamploosblp. Sauthero defeated
SVAC Oppol!ent North Gallla, 71,55, to advance to district play at
Cbllltcothe. The SVAC champs
own a 20-1 record.

I

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sport&amp; Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State's Buckeyes have sbattered one
road jinx and now aim at another at
Indiana Sunday In a nationally
televised showdown Sunday for the
Big Ten Conferencebasketball title.
The Buckeyes had dropped five
straight games at Purdue before
defeating the Boilennakers ~
Thursday night.
The victory kept the Buckeyes tied
with Indiana for the conference lead
. going into their final regular season
game.
Ohio State has not won at Indiana
- since 1910, A~Plng seven straight
~ decisions to the Hoosie~.
·· The winner Sunday will be the Big

ROCK SPRINGS -"- "Chillicothe BoWid! " That's what the
spirited Southern Tornado fans were chanting after the rampaging Southern Tornadoes captured their fourth consecutive
sectional championship by defeating the North Gallia Pirates
72-55 before a near capacity crowd here Friday night.
The champion Tornadoes raised their season record to an outstanding 20 wins against just one loss (20-1) and in doing so earned the right to compete in the district tournament at
Chillicothe for the fourth year in a row. The Pirates, who were
playing their third game in five days, ended their season with a
record of 12-10.

Eichinger and Kaleen Millhone with
six each, Sarah Goebel, two, and
Tammy Hudson with one.
·
Leading scorers for Crooksville
were Belh Schooley with 14, aiid
Janey WOOd\vith 10. Other scorers
were Mert Nelson with eight, Karen
Spring with six, and Kathy Yoder
and Jill Miller with two apiece.
The Eastern Girls now play in the
District's at Chillicothe on March 6
against Portsmouth Clay .

Bucks .e ye first win
at Indiana in 10 years

Gold Corn
Garden
Peas
CUT 01 f!ENCH SIYLE
Green Beans

59e

24 OZ. CARTON~

Up by six in the fourth quarter, the
Eastern girls held off a late rally by
the Crooksville squad with two
minutes to go and came out on top by
one point. Crooksville outscored
Eastern 13-12in the fourth quarter.
Leading the way for the Eastern
girls was Lita Young with 10 points
and 15 rebounds. Other top scorers
for Eastern were Jeannie McClure
and Teresa Hannwn both with nine
points. Other scorers were Laura

BY SCOTI' WOLFE

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•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TD LIMIT QtJ~NTITIES

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Tornadoes eliminate
Pirates, 72-55, for
fourth title in row

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2 For J9•
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.
PIRAT!21 ELIMINATED '- COI!ch Ted Lehew's
" Nol111 a.J11a Pirates "put up 8 gallant effort before
• ·bvlrlaC to lloitllenl, 7:1-10, In the cbampl'xllblp game .
.: Friday ~ r1 tbe Clau. A llectlonal Tournament at
,.. Meip ~ School. 'nle 'Pirates finished their iJea8on
.

•,

Team

.

r

•

· with a a-10 record.
llllllllllerll were, left to right.
ll'OIIt row, Bruce Shriver, Jefflllillth, Keith Payne, TJm,
Howell, Greg Dee!, and Jeff Bl&amp;ck. Back row, left to
·· right, Matt Queen, Joe Peck, Dan Berry, Mark Miller,
ScOtt.HoweU and Steve Franklin.
·

I

.

PACES PIRATES
North
Gallla's Keith Payne led the
Pirates with 19 points in a losing
cause against Southern In
Friday's Class .A SecUoul championship tournament game at
Rock Springs.

Redwomen
gain finals
CEDARVILLE - Coach Diane
Lewis' Rio Grande College Redwomen gained the finals of the Ohio
AlA,w·District ill Tournament for
the first time In the school's history
after bea~ Ohio Northern University; 11-M, F'iiday.
Thursday, the Redwomen gained
semifinal play by turning back host
Cedarville, 75-74, on two free throws
with 11 seconds left by Freslunan
Kim Martin of Reynoldsburg.
In Friday's tilt, VIcki Epple paced
lhil Redwcimen with 17 points. Rio
traDed 35.,'12 dtning the halftime intermission.
The Redwomen were to meet
Malone at 3 p.m. Saturday for the
state title. A win would put the Redwomen in the national regionals, to
be played at Taylor, Ind., University
this year. Rio is now19-4on the year. ,

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W17 2L 10p26 082~·
Chillicothe·.
Ironton .
16 4 1193 101)•
Wheelersburg
16 S U16 1250
Portsmouth
15 5 1218 1078
Athens
13 7 13&lt;18 ·1068
Gallipolis
13 1 1158 1035
waverly
· 12 B 1174 1040
Wellston·x
12 .9 U59 1364
Logan
8 i1 10~1 1106
court House
7 12 · 916 99~
Pt. Pleasant
4 16 1082 1301
J.ckson·x
' 3 18 989 1290
Melg•·x
. ·
2 19 1052 1424
x .. complet~d season
\ ·.
Frld•v•oresults:
·
Whaeler•burg 61 Jackson 42
Chesape1ke 68 Wellston 65
Ripley 75 Pt. Pleasont 56
Tuesday's games:
Logan vs. Lancaster, at OU
G•llip&lt;&gt;lls vs. Marietta, at ou

. Southern's high jwnplng 6-foot-2
Dale Teaford swiped the opening tip
off from 6-9 center Dan Berry and-30
seconds later the talented Southerner swished a long jumper from the
corner to put the Tornadoes on top 20. Several seconds later Pirate
Senior Joe Peck netted a basket of
his own to tie the score at two all.
The Tornadoes took the lead for good
on a J olmny Davis basket, then unveiled a surprise l-3·1 zone defense
that proved effective enough for
them to grab an 8-2 lead with 5:30
still remaining in the opening
period. Pirate Tim Howell who
played an excellent floor game then
came back to cut the lead to 8-4.
Jack Duffy, Dave "Big Red"
Foreman, and Dale Teaford who
snagged a needle threading pass
from the hands of Kent Wolfe, then
combined for some spectacular of·
fensive efforts to propel their team
to a 24-14 first quarter advantage
over Ted Lehew's fighting Pirates.
In the latter stages of the canto
Southern switched back to its always
effective man-t&amp;-man defense, but
they still weren't able to stop that
hot handed Keith Payne who paced
his club the opening round with six
iinportant markers.

The hustling North Gallia squad
controlled the second quarter tip .
The Pirates fought hard and tried to
pick away at the Tornado lead, but
the overpowering purple
powerhouse had other ideas and at
one point took al4 point advantage.
North Gallla then hopped on the
scoring teeter totter and cu~ the lead
to eight, but when the dust had
finally ·seWed the two clubs found
that they bad batUed to a 7·17 second
quarter tie and went into the locker
rooms with the Meigs countlans on
top 41-31. Jack Duffy paced the local
Tornadoes with an amazing 17
markers. Mark Miller and Keith
Payne each had eight points at the
half.
'
. Although Southern led at the half,
they found themselves in foul
trouble and had to substitute early In
the game. Despite some torrid hot
streaks the champions actually
struggled through the opening .hlllf,
bu! came on strong late In the game.
· Coach Carl Wolfe' CWIIIlented on
his team'S first half perforJll811ce,
' •we rea11Ydidn't Ptayasgood aswe
should have the filst balf, but of
course we did get in foul trouble, so
pia ·
ti ..
we started to · Y cooaerva ve.
Coach Wolfe also stated, "I was
thinking about just getting through
the sectional. The boys bave had
· .tremendoiiiJ presaure on them In the
· secttonal .beCatile everyooe expects
them to win 81111 this really affects
' 1a· , .
·
thewaytheyp y.

relieved off the Southern team
because they really put together an
excellent team effort. Jolumy Davis
who played a good floor game round
a hot hand and scored six of the Tor·
nadoes 12 third quarter points. The
sticky Southern defense who held the
high scoring Dan Berry to just four
points for the entire evening held the
quick and talented Pirates to just
nine points to lead 53-40 at the end of
the third canto. Another key fact
was that Tim Howell was held to just
four points for the night like team·
mate Berry.
The fourth stanza started out on a
high note as both teams scored at a
rapid pace with North Gallia's Keith
Payne ending up In the limelight.
Payne's efforts however, weren't
enough as the Tornadoes really star·
ted to "knit" their team into a potent
offensive monster. The team work
started to take shape early in the
game and finally geUed towards the
end. The Racine boys took charge
and wrote the final chapter, then
closed the book on the Pirates with a
final score of 72-53. The Pirates
tallied 15 that last go-round while the
Tornadoes scored 19 even after the
winners slowed the ball down the
final3:00 minutes. Every member of
the winning squad got to see action
and contributed to the victory in
someway.
Coach Wolfe said of his team's
perfonnance, "Tonight we finally
put it all together. These kicla are
fabulous. They all hustled and
they're just a great group to work
with.
"I was pleased with tonight's
game and I was very pleased with
the season. We had a good year. I
think the pressure is gone now and I
think we will be much more relaxed
in the diatrict. I have confidence in
thls team and I feel we're as good as
any team we will play in the
district.''
Jack Duffy, the "Southern Southpaw'' led all scorers by pouring in 23
points followed in double figures by
Dave Foreman with 16, and Dale
Teaford who netted 15. The trio
sparked their team on offense and
also hauled down 28 of their team's
38 rebounds. Foreman led with 11,
Duffy 10, and Teaford 7.
Keith Payne had an excellent
evening by canning 19 points to lead
his team. Mark Miller had 11 and
Scott Howell nine. Joe Peck hauled
down 9 caroms to lead his team in
that category.

Southern controlled the boards !IS. 32 and shot 47 percent from the field.
(27-58) while North Gallia shot 39
percent from the field (za.-63).
Southern shot for 75 percent (1824) from the charity stripe led by
Jack Duffy who canned ~for-10 to
add to his scoring total. Duffy also
had six assists out of the team's total
of 15. Southern had 10 steals and 14
turnovers.
·North Gallia shot 50 percent (9-18)
from the foul line and had 9 assists,
while committing 21 turnovers. Both
teams conunitted 20 fouls apiece.
Southern Will play one of two Pol"
tsmouth teanil in the district i the
winner of the Lucasville Valley sectional finala which were held last
nlgbt (March 1). They will play
either Portsmouth Clay who
defeated Pike Western ~70 -in two
overtlmes In the first round or P.ortamouth Notre Dame who bel!t New·
. Boston 61-69.
Box IICOI"e:

·

The second half started out slow,
but the excitement was still there.
.There was also some evidence that
some of the pressure had been
\

17 17 • 1&amp;-111

• IT 12 lt-72

I

�C-3-The Sunday Tiffies.&amp;ntinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

Toledo
•
•
ln semzs

C-2- The Sunday Times-Selllinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

Boston Celtics dismantle Warriors, 110-99
ByALEXSACHARE
AP Spo1111 Wrller
" Just call them Clockwork
· Green."
. That's the way the Boston Celtics
looked to .lolm Bach, who is
: coaching the Golden Stale Warriors
: in place of the injured AI Attles and
who watched the Celtics dismantle
his team 11(}.99 Friday night. The
· catalyst in Boston's fifth straight
- victory was the green-and-white's
super rookie, Larry Bird.
· "Bird was a can opener tonight . he popped ~n the tid and
_ everything came open for the
Celtics ." said Bach. "He entices

you, then makes you pay for a
mistake."

The victory was Boston's 13th in
the last 15 games and kept the
Celtics It games in front of
Philadelphia in the National Basketball Association's Atlantic Divisio!L
The Philadelphia 76ers edged the
Denver Nuggets 104-103.
There were three overtime games
Friday night, the Milwaukee Bucks
beating the Los Angeles Lakers 126117, the Atlanta Hawks topping the
Cleveland Cavaliers 111·1113 and the
Detroit Pistons defeating the New
Jersey Nets 137-128. fn other games,

the Kan.'!lls City Kings trimmed the
San Diego Clippers 93-93, the Utah
Jazz edged the Portland Trail
Bllizers 91-a'l and the Seattle SuperSonics downed the Olicago Bulls 103101.
71en liM, Nucgets 103
Philadelphis trailed 'n-75 after
three quarters but rallied in the final
period behind 10 points by reserve
forward Steve Mlz.
The Nuggets then made a late
rush, with John Roche scoring seven
points, but the final buzzer sounded
just before Alex English sank a book
shot that would have given Denver
the victory.

.Georgetown .and
•
;
•
;
;
:
:
•

~ ~t~:!~ ~~:o~y!~

Friday night. It was the 12th straight
victory for the Hoyas, a team that
,was . once floundering with five
losses in the middle of January.
i "We threw everything at them ' "
! Carnesecca added, "but nothing
:
'
;
'

.

• worked.''
:

!
•
:
;
;
•

l
.;
.o:

Everything was working for the
Hoyas, including the shooting of
Craig Shelton and Eric Floyd. They
scored 21 and 20 points, respectively.
"It was our time to win, that's
all," said Georgetown Coach Jolm
Thompson. "We thought we were
good when we came here. Nothing
that happened tonight surprised

scored 27 points, including 16 during
a nine-minute stretch of the second
half.
Louisville, the nation's fourthranked team, was one of the finalists
in the Metro Conference playoffs after defeating Memphis State ~
behind Derek Smith's 24 points. The
Cardinals played in the championship game against Florida
State, which needed Murray
Brown's baskets in the second overtime to overcome Cincinnati ~9 in
the other semifinal game rriday
night.
In the Southwest Conference
semifinals, Vernon Smith scored 20
points as Texas AXM defeated
Texas Tech 61-lil and Arkansas
edged Texas 64-62 as U.S. Reed and
Keith Hilliard contributed key foul
shots late in the game.
Rory Sparrow scored 16 points to
pace Villanova to a 72-59 victory
over Pittsburgh and West Virginia
stopped Rutgers 77.00 behind Lowes
Moore's 27 points in the Eastern
Eight semifinals.

me."

: No one was surprised, either, by
; the results of the second game of
: Friday night's semifinals, which
: saw third-ranked Syracuse wallop
• Connecticut !lUI behind Roosevelt
: Bouie's 15 points.
•· "That was the best offensive game
· we've played all year," said
.Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim. "We
:• didn't make any miBtakes. We've
:: played second-half ball aD year.
: Now we're playing the whole

': game."

·. Along with St. John's, another Top
:Ten team went down in tournament
:play when loth-ranked North
:Carolina lost to Duke 7~1 in the
:·semifinals of the Atlantic Coast Con;:ference playoffs.
: The Blue Devils, spearheaded by
.. Mike Gmlnskl 's 24 points, earned a
.:spot in tonight's finals against
': Maryland. The Terrapins, ranked
:~ seventh in the country, defeated No.
cl7 Clemson 91-85 behind Albert
::King's career-high 38 points.
:. Kansas upset No. 11 Missouri in
:. the Big Eight tourney ID-71 as Dar-: nell Valentine and David Magley
::combined for 35 points. KansaS State
:· won the other semifinal game with a
:·66-59 victory over Nebraska on
: Rolando Blackman's shot with 15
·. seconds left.
:- Second·ranked Kentucky and fif.
::th-ranked Louisiana State both . ad•: vanced to Saturday's finals in the
:· Southeastern Conference playoffs.
:·The Wildcats held off detennined
;:Mis&amp;salppi 70-67 as Sam Bowie
•:tallied 21 points and u;u beat
: · Alabama~ as DeWayne Scales

Weber State, ranked 16th 'in the
country, earned a.spot in the Big Sky
Conference championship game
with a 93-70 triumph over Montana
State as Richard Smith and Bruce
Collins teamed for 52 points. Montana won the other semfinal match,
beating Idaho 63-li3 behind Craig
Zanon's 19 points.
In the Southern Conference playof.
fs, Funnan defeated East Tennessee
State 93-81 behind Jonathan Moore's
21 points and Marshall trounced Appalachian State 91·76 as Ken
Labanowski scored 29.
Michael Brooks scored 20 points to
lead LaSalle past Lafayette 7~
and St. Joseph's whipped Bucknell
7U7 behind Bryan Warrick's 15
points in the East Coast Conference
playoffs.

Mickey Jackson collected 21 points as San Jose State scored an upset
94-llll victory over Utah State in the
Pacific Coast Athltitic Association
semifinals. Long Beach State took
the other semifinal game, beating
Pacific 72-70 on Michael Wiley's I~
foot jumper with me second
remaining. '

Milwaukee at San Diego

Notiooalllubllloll"-lalloo

Utah at Seattle

A.tAGluee
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K.ansaa City
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Milwaukee
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Denver
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Pacific Dh11ioli
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Vancouver

Colorado

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Quebec
Mootnal
LooAncet..

=~

llattoo110,Goldon
Atlanta lll, Cleveland 102, ot
Detroit 137, New Jeneyl28, ot

FOR

W. L. T. Pia. GF GA
Pblladelpllla
NY Ranger~
NY lllandtn
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St. Loois
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No games scheduled

Euten c.feftlll.'e

Bolton

the game into overtime with a jwnJolm Drew scored four of his ?JJ
per with II seconds to play, tying the
points in overtime as the Hawks
score at 119.
posted their fifth victory in six
Klnga 98, CUppen_93
games.
otis Birdsong's 27 points helped
Cleveland missed a golden chance
Kansas City beat San Diego and exto win in regulation. The Cavs
tend
its Midwest Divtslon lead to two
trslled 93-93 with 15 seconds left but
games
over Milwaukee. The Kings
tied the score on two fll!&lt; throws by
led
by
six
points midway through the
Dave Robisch and a three-point goal
final
period
·but Cllnched the victory
by Austin Carr. With four seconds
on
~tive
baskets by Gus ·
left, Cleveland's Willie Smith stole
Gerard, Birdsong and Sam Lacey.
the hall from Eddie Johnson and
Sonlcs 108, Balla 101
passed to Foots Walker, who was
wide open for a layup. But the shot ·
SeatUe guar:di G"' 'ft"Jlllams
DenniS Johnson combined for 511bounced off the front rim and fell
points. The outcome was never in
away as the buzzer sounded.
doubt a~ the Sonics capitalized oil15
Pistons 137, Nets 128
Chicago turnovers in the first period
Detroit snapped a 13-game losing
to build a 37-221ead:
streak ori consecutive baskets by
Jazz 91, Blazen 8'1
Jolm Long, Bob McAdoo and Keht
Utah snapped a five-game losing
Benson to start the overtime. The
streak by beating the B~rs. clln·
· Pistons then clinched the victory
ching the victory on a pair of free
with 10 straight free throws.
throws by Ben PllQuette with 35
Mike Newlin of New Jersey, who
led all scorers with 40 points, sent
seconds left.

I

Pro standings

;Syracuse advance
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Spol18 Wrller
For a while the Georgetown
basketball team seemed to be just
going through the motions.
Recently, those motions have accelerated.
•
"That's the hottest team we've
seen so far," said St. Jolm's Coach
Lou Carnesecca after his eighthranked team lost a 7&amp;4i6 decision to.

Burks 126, Lakers 117
Recently acquired center Qob
I.omier scored seven points in overtime as Milwaukee spapped Los
Angeles' 18-game home floor , winning streak. The Lakers'· Earvin
"Magic" Johnson had tied the score
at 107 with a three-point basket with
seven seconds remaining in
regulation.
Milwaukee then scored the first 11
points in overtime to pull away to its
second straight overtime victory on
the road. The Bucks beat the
Phoenix Suns 119-110 in overtime
earlier this week.
Hawks Ill, Cavs 1113

Detro~

41 5 14 98
2t 211 9 67
Ill :; ' e 66
. 2li %1 11 63
19 33 Ul 48
Smy111e Dlvllloo
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20 32 12 ~
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16 35 10 4(]
Waitt Coafere~et
A-Divllloll
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Z1 31 I 58
2! 32 8 ~
Norris Dlvtalon
ll 20 8 13
211 3D 9 59
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zr

2M 118
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Buffalo I, Edmonton 2

Utab 111, Portland If/
S..Wetoe, ChlcatJolOl
Sudly'l Gamet
Denver at Atlanta
Golden Slate at PblladelpiJia
Indiana at Wuhlngton
Delroltalllolton
Kan&amp;UL~ty at H...,ton
New.Vortl: at New Jeftey
Loo Al.ge!es at l'boen1a
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Clllcat!••t
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llostcirlatNVRaniel'l
Loo Angeleltl Quebec
TonlOto at Detroit
BuffaloatMinnelola

·

"'f!Z'' Game

l'iltoburghat St.

Wittenberg advances in tournament

SARAH EVANS

SHIRL STONEY

(Ftnt Team AIWIEOAL)

(SecondTeamAIWIEOAL

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~~~

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) Bears.
Senior Brad Gutchall scored eight ol
Five Wittenberg players scored in
ALL MODELS
bls 12 points early in the second half double figures, led hy Brian Agler
to spark a Wittenberg rally and the
with 18 and Tyrone Curtis with 14.
Tigers went on to beat Wabash 76-68 ' Wabash, llh'i, was paced by subFriday night in the first round of the stitute Bob Thomas with 15 points.
Galli pOll~, Ohio .
405 Secon~ Ave.
NCAA Division IT Great Lakes
Wabash led 4().38 at halftime. WitPH. 446· 7027
Regional b88ketball tournament.
tenberg finally moved out front_48-46
•
Wittenberg, 26-2, advanced to the
early In the second period and never t----------------~---..:.....---~
·
regional championship game Saturtrailed thereafter.
day night agalust Ohio Northern In a
Ohio Northern moved into the
rematch ol the Ohio Conference title
finals on a 92-90 triwnph over Calvin
game won last week by the Polar
In three over".imes.

. JACKSON - Ironton's seth Rist,
averaged 13.7 points a game to
lead Ironton to its second straight
Southeastern Ohio League girls
.basketball crown, was named the
-loop's Most Valuable Player by
Jeague coaches here last week.
: The league chaJDpe a1ao walked
cit with the "Coach of the Year"
_award in Doris Hannun.
Ironton placed Lauren Triplett on
.the first team. The Lady Tigers'
:Jayna Riggs and Janette Vinaon
:rated second team honors. Usa
:Bryant received bonorable mention.
: Three Galllpolla Blue Angels of
: Coach Jackie Knight were honored.
~who

.

: Bob Saund~rs crew
•
•

:cops cage tourney ·
: GAI.UPOI.JS - Bob Saunders
•Quaker State won the Bend Area
:.Jaycees Buketball Tournament,
:played Feb. ·23 and 24 at Wahama
:High School. Q.'ISC repeated their
: Perfonnance ol two years ago by
: tecapturlng the tiUe Sunday nlglt
: pver Gallipolla No. 2 107-65. The
:~ouhle-ellmlnation event featured a
: third team from Galllpolla taking
•third place.
1
: Bob Saunders beat teama from
:Ravenswood, Meigs, Wahama, and
:Galllpolla and wW now have good
: momentum going Into next month's ·
:tournaments at Meigs High School,
. :FairlandHighandPI.Pleasant.
: Team members were ~ark
:Moyer, Ron Ferguson, Rod
•Ferguson, aD ol wbo played two
:years ago and ex·Rio aces Gil Price
:and Steve Loomis, ex-southwestern
: teader Ronnie Jackson, and Mike
:Johnson ol Ewlngton.

PRODUCTS

A 27-point, 21}-rebound per·
fonnance by Larry Smith led Alcorn
State to a 11&amp;-92 decision over
Southern In the semifinals of the
Southwestern Athletic Conference
playoffs. Grambling won the other
berth In tonight's finals, beating
Jackson State 94-77 Friday night
with the help of Martin Lemelle's 36
points.

AT BIG SAV.INGS!

Sarah J!!vans, sophomore center
·who led the league in scoring with
316 points and 196 rebounds,
received first team honors. In
leading GA!fl! to a 11-2 second place
finish in the conference, Evans had
27 steals and 12 assists. She hit 57
percent ol her shots from the field
(146-243) and 60 percent of her free
throws (36 of 60).
Shirl Stoney, junior guard,
received second team honors. She
scored 92 points, had 62 rebounds, 38
steals and 29 assists. She was the
Angels' top defensive player.
Jane Stoney, also a junior guard
and twin sister of Shirl, received
bonorable mention. She had 79 points, 44 rebounds, 35 steals and 14
assists.
Meigs' Terri Wilson ws named first team all·league. A senior, Wilson
was fifth In league scoring this winter with 216 points. Meigs placed
fourth tbls year with a 6-6 league

SI!COND TEAM AIJAEOAL
Pllyer-Sebool
Ja)'IUI Rlgp,lrooloo
Shirl Stoney, Galllpolli
Lori Vickers, Welllton

Janette Vinton. Ironton

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record.
Dodie Chapman, ninth in league
scoring with 150 points, received
honorable mention.
Wllaon sbot 40 percent from the
field. in the conference, hitting 86 of
213. She connected on 34 of 66 free
throws for 52 percent, and was
credited with 32 steals. She
averaged 11 rebounds a game.
Chapman made 64 of 171 field goal
attempts and 18 of 41 charity tosses.
She tallied 146 points in league play,
had 32 steals and averaged 9.3
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Other first team honorees were
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Ironton dominates
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•

Friday'• Games
llattfonll, St.Louis 0

~10f,Denver103

..

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Toledo's Jim Swaney poured in 27
points and Harvey Knuckles added
26 Saturday as the Rockets defeated
Ball State 91-&amp; in the semi-finals of
the first Mid-American Conference
basketball tournament.
The Rockets, 22-li for the season,
were to meet the winner of the semifinal game between Bowling Green
and Northern Illinois for the championship Sunday at Michigan's
Crisler Arena. The winner of that
game will represent the MAC in the
NCAA tournament.

Jolin E. Fultt

'

'·

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3
3

�C-3-The Sunday Tiffies.&amp;ntinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

Toledo
•
•
ln semzs

C-2- The Sunday Times-Selllinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

Boston Celtics dismantle Warriors, 110-99
ByALEXSACHARE
AP Spo1111 Wrller
" Just call them Clockwork
· Green."
. That's the way the Boston Celtics
looked to .lolm Bach, who is
: coaching the Golden Stale Warriors
: in place of the injured AI Attles and
who watched the Celtics dismantle
his team 11(}.99 Friday night. The
· catalyst in Boston's fifth straight
- victory was the green-and-white's
super rookie, Larry Bird.
· "Bird was a can opener tonight . he popped ~n the tid and
_ everything came open for the
Celtics ." said Bach. "He entices

you, then makes you pay for a
mistake."

The victory was Boston's 13th in
the last 15 games and kept the
Celtics It games in front of
Philadelphia in the National Basketball Association's Atlantic Divisio!L
The Philadelphia 76ers edged the
Denver Nuggets 104-103.
There were three overtime games
Friday night, the Milwaukee Bucks
beating the Los Angeles Lakers 126117, the Atlanta Hawks topping the
Cleveland Cavaliers 111·1113 and the
Detroit Pistons defeating the New
Jersey Nets 137-128. fn other games,

the Kan.'!lls City Kings trimmed the
San Diego Clippers 93-93, the Utah
Jazz edged the Portland Trail
Bllizers 91-a'l and the Seattle SuperSonics downed the Olicago Bulls 103101.
71en liM, Nucgets 103
Philadelphis trailed 'n-75 after
three quarters but rallied in the final
period behind 10 points by reserve
forward Steve Mlz.
The Nuggets then made a late
rush, with John Roche scoring seven
points, but the final buzzer sounded
just before Alex English sank a book
shot that would have given Denver
the victory.

.Georgetown .and
•
;
•
;
;
:
:
•

~ ~t~:!~ ~~:o~y!~

Friday night. It was the 12th straight
victory for the Hoyas, a team that
,was . once floundering with five
losses in the middle of January.
i "We threw everything at them ' "
! Carnesecca added, "but nothing
:
'
;
'

.

• worked.''
:

!
•
:
;
;
•

l
.;
.o:

Everything was working for the
Hoyas, including the shooting of
Craig Shelton and Eric Floyd. They
scored 21 and 20 points, respectively.
"It was our time to win, that's
all," said Georgetown Coach Jolm
Thompson. "We thought we were
good when we came here. Nothing
that happened tonight surprised

scored 27 points, including 16 during
a nine-minute stretch of the second
half.
Louisville, the nation's fourthranked team, was one of the finalists
in the Metro Conference playoffs after defeating Memphis State ~
behind Derek Smith's 24 points. The
Cardinals played in the championship game against Florida
State, which needed Murray
Brown's baskets in the second overtime to overcome Cincinnati ~9 in
the other semifinal game rriday
night.
In the Southwest Conference
semifinals, Vernon Smith scored 20
points as Texas AXM defeated
Texas Tech 61-lil and Arkansas
edged Texas 64-62 as U.S. Reed and
Keith Hilliard contributed key foul
shots late in the game.
Rory Sparrow scored 16 points to
pace Villanova to a 72-59 victory
over Pittsburgh and West Virginia
stopped Rutgers 77.00 behind Lowes
Moore's 27 points in the Eastern
Eight semifinals.

me."

: No one was surprised, either, by
; the results of the second game of
: Friday night's semifinals, which
: saw third-ranked Syracuse wallop
• Connecticut !lUI behind Roosevelt
: Bouie's 15 points.
•· "That was the best offensive game
· we've played all year," said
.Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim. "We
:• didn't make any miBtakes. We've
:: played second-half ball aD year.
: Now we're playing the whole

': game."

·. Along with St. John's, another Top
:Ten team went down in tournament
:play when loth-ranked North
:Carolina lost to Duke 7~1 in the
:·semifinals of the Atlantic Coast Con;:ference playoffs.
: The Blue Devils, spearheaded by
.. Mike Gmlnskl 's 24 points, earned a
.:spot in tonight's finals against
': Maryland. The Terrapins, ranked
:~ seventh in the country, defeated No.
cl7 Clemson 91-85 behind Albert
::King's career-high 38 points.
:. Kansas upset No. 11 Missouri in
:. the Big Eight tourney ID-71 as Dar-: nell Valentine and David Magley
::combined for 35 points. KansaS State
:· won the other semifinal game with a
:·66-59 victory over Nebraska on
: Rolando Blackman's shot with 15
·. seconds left.
:- Second·ranked Kentucky and fif.
::th-ranked Louisiana State both . ad•: vanced to Saturday's finals in the
:· Southeastern Conference playoffs.
:·The Wildcats held off detennined
;:Mis&amp;salppi 70-67 as Sam Bowie
•:tallied 21 points and u;u beat
: · Alabama~ as DeWayne Scales

Weber State, ranked 16th 'in the
country, earned a.spot in the Big Sky
Conference championship game
with a 93-70 triumph over Montana
State as Richard Smith and Bruce
Collins teamed for 52 points. Montana won the other semfinal match,
beating Idaho 63-li3 behind Craig
Zanon's 19 points.
In the Southern Conference playof.
fs, Funnan defeated East Tennessee
State 93-81 behind Jonathan Moore's
21 points and Marshall trounced Appalachian State 91·76 as Ken
Labanowski scored 29.
Michael Brooks scored 20 points to
lead LaSalle past Lafayette 7~
and St. Joseph's whipped Bucknell
7U7 behind Bryan Warrick's 15
points in the East Coast Conference
playoffs.

Mickey Jackson collected 21 points as San Jose State scored an upset
94-llll victory over Utah State in the
Pacific Coast Athltitic Association
semifinals. Long Beach State took
the other semifinal game, beating
Pacific 72-70 on Michael Wiley's I~
foot jumper with me second
remaining. '

Milwaukee at San Diego

Notiooalllubllloll"-lalloo

Utah at Seattle

A.tAGluee
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Denver
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Vancouver

Colorado

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Quebec
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Atlanta lll, Cleveland 102, ot
Detroit 137, New Jeneyl28, ot

FOR

W. L. T. Pia. GF GA
Pblladelpllla
NY Ranger~
NY lllandtn
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ana

No games scheduled

Euten c.feftlll.'e

Bolton

the game into overtime with a jwnJolm Drew scored four of his ?JJ
per with II seconds to play, tying the
points in overtime as the Hawks
score at 119.
posted their fifth victory in six
Klnga 98, CUppen_93
games.
otis Birdsong's 27 points helped
Cleveland missed a golden chance
Kansas City beat San Diego and exto win in regulation. The Cavs
tend
its Midwest Divtslon lead to two
trslled 93-93 with 15 seconds left but
games
over Milwaukee. The Kings
tied the score on two fll!&lt; throws by
led
by
six
points midway through the
Dave Robisch and a three-point goal
final
period
·but Cllnched the victory
by Austin Carr. With four seconds
on
~tive
baskets by Gus ·
left, Cleveland's Willie Smith stole
Gerard, Birdsong and Sam Lacey.
the hall from Eddie Johnson and
Sonlcs 108, Balla 101
passed to Foots Walker, who was
wide open for a layup. But the shot ·
SeatUe guar:di G"' 'ft"Jlllams
DenniS Johnson combined for 511bounced off the front rim and fell
points. The outcome was never in
away as the buzzer sounded.
doubt a~ the Sonics capitalized oil15
Pistons 137, Nets 128
Chicago turnovers in the first period
Detroit snapped a 13-game losing
to build a 37-221ead:
streak ori consecutive baskets by
Jazz 91, Blazen 8'1
Jolm Long, Bob McAdoo and Keht
Utah snapped a five-game losing
Benson to start the overtime. The
streak by beating the B~rs. clln·
· Pistons then clinched the victory
ching the victory on a pair of free
with 10 straight free throws.
throws by Ben PllQuette with 35
Mike Newlin of New Jersey, who
led all scorers with 40 points, sent
seconds left.

I

Pro standings

;Syracuse advance
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Spol18 Wrller
For a while the Georgetown
basketball team seemed to be just
going through the motions.
Recently, those motions have accelerated.
•
"That's the hottest team we've
seen so far," said St. Jolm's Coach
Lou Carnesecca after his eighthranked team lost a 7&amp;4i6 decision to.

Burks 126, Lakers 117
Recently acquired center Qob
I.omier scored seven points in overtime as Milwaukee spapped Los
Angeles' 18-game home floor , winning streak. The Lakers'· Earvin
"Magic" Johnson had tied the score
at 107 with a three-point basket with
seven seconds remaining in
regulation.
Milwaukee then scored the first 11
points in overtime to pull away to its
second straight overtime victory on
the road. The Bucks beat the
Phoenix Suns 119-110 in overtime
earlier this week.
Hawks Ill, Cavs 1113

Detro~

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2t 211 9 67
Ill :; ' e 66
. 2li %1 11 63
19 33 Ul 48
Smy111e Dlvllloo
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16 35 10 4(]
Waitt Coafere~et
A-Divllloll
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Z1 31 I 58
2! 32 8 ~
Norris Dlvtalon
ll 20 8 13
211 3D 9 59
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zr

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228 232
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Buffalo I, Edmonton 2

Utab 111, Portland If/
S..Wetoe, ChlcatJolOl
Sudly'l Gamet
Denver at Atlanta
Golden Slate at PblladelpiJia
Indiana at Wuhlngton
Delroltalllolton
Kan&amp;UL~ty at H...,ton
New.Vortl: at New Jeftey
Loo Al.ge!es at l'boen1a
au~t Portland
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Clllcat!••t
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llostcirlatNVRaniel'l
Loo Angeleltl Quebec
TonlOto at Detroit
BuffaloatMinnelola

·

"'f!Z'' Game

l'iltoburghat St.

Wittenberg advances in tournament

SARAH EVANS

SHIRL STONEY

(Ftnt Team AIWIEOAL)

(SecondTeamAIWIEOAL

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~~~

SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) Bears.
Senior Brad Gutchall scored eight ol
Five Wittenberg players scored in
ALL MODELS
bls 12 points early in the second half double figures, led hy Brian Agler
to spark a Wittenberg rally and the
with 18 and Tyrone Curtis with 14.
Tigers went on to beat Wabash 76-68 ' Wabash, llh'i, was paced by subFriday night in the first round of the stitute Bob Thomas with 15 points.
Galli pOll~, Ohio .
405 Secon~ Ave.
NCAA Division IT Great Lakes
Wabash led 4().38 at halftime. WitPH. 446· 7027
Regional b88ketball tournament.
tenberg finally moved out front_48-46
•
Wittenberg, 26-2, advanced to the
early In the second period and never t----------------~---..:.....---~
·
regional championship game Saturtrailed thereafter.
day night agalust Ohio Northern In a
Ohio Northern moved into the
rematch ol the Ohio Conference title
finals on a 92-90 triwnph over Calvin
game won last week by the Polar
In three over".imes.

. JACKSON - Ironton's seth Rist,
averaged 13.7 points a game to
lead Ironton to its second straight
Southeastern Ohio League girls
.basketball crown, was named the
-loop's Most Valuable Player by
Jeague coaches here last week.
: The league chaJDpe a1ao walked
cit with the "Coach of the Year"
_award in Doris Hannun.
Ironton placed Lauren Triplett on
.the first team. The Lady Tigers'
:Jayna Riggs and Janette Vinaon
:rated second team honors. Usa
:Bryant received bonorable mention.
: Three Galllpolla Blue Angels of
: Coach Jackie Knight were honored.
~who

.

: Bob Saund~rs crew
•
•

:cops cage tourney ·
: GAI.UPOI.JS - Bob Saunders
•Quaker State won the Bend Area
:.Jaycees Buketball Tournament,
:played Feb. ·23 and 24 at Wahama
:High School. Q.'ISC repeated their
: Perfonnance ol two years ago by
: tecapturlng the tiUe Sunday nlglt
: pver Gallipolla No. 2 107-65. The
:~ouhle-ellmlnation event featured a
: third team from Galllpolla taking
•third place.
1
: Bob Saunders beat teama from
:Ravenswood, Meigs, Wahama, and
:Galllpolla and wW now have good
: momentum going Into next month's ·
:tournaments at Meigs High School,
. :FairlandHighandPI.Pleasant.
: Team members were ~ark
:Moyer, Ron Ferguson, Rod
•Ferguson, aD ol wbo played two
:years ago and ex·Rio aces Gil Price
:and Steve Loomis, ex-southwestern
: teader Ronnie Jackson, and Mike
:Johnson ol Ewlngton.

PRODUCTS

A 27-point, 21}-rebound per·
fonnance by Larry Smith led Alcorn
State to a 11&amp;-92 decision over
Southern In the semifinals of the
Southwestern Athletic Conference
playoffs. Grambling won the other
berth In tonight's finals, beating
Jackson State 94-77 Friday night
with the help of Martin Lemelle's 36
points.

AT BIG SAV.INGS!

Sarah J!!vans, sophomore center
·who led the league in scoring with
316 points and 196 rebounds,
received first team honors. In
leading GA!fl! to a 11-2 second place
finish in the conference, Evans had
27 steals and 12 assists. She hit 57
percent ol her shots from the field
(146-243) and 60 percent of her free
throws (36 of 60).
Shirl Stoney, junior guard,
received second team honors. She
scored 92 points, had 62 rebounds, 38
steals and 29 assists. She was the
Angels' top defensive player.
Jane Stoney, also a junior guard
and twin sister of Shirl, received
bonorable mention. She had 79 points, 44 rebounds, 35 steals and 14
assists.
Meigs' Terri Wilson ws named first team all·league. A senior, Wilson
was fifth In league scoring this winter with 216 points. Meigs placed
fourth tbls year with a 6-6 league

SI!COND TEAM AIJAEOAL
Pllyer-Sebool
Ja)'IUI Rlgp,lrooloo
Shirl Stoney, Galllpolli
Lori Vickers, Welllton

Janette Vinton. Ironton

KamaSilar!eDII:er, WaverlY

I

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THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY, N. A.
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record.
Dodie Chapman, ninth in league
scoring with 150 points, received
honorable mention.
Wllaon sbot 40 percent from the
field. in the conference, hitting 86 of
213. She connected on 34 of 66 free
throws for 52 percent, and was
credited with 32 steals. She
averaged 11 rebounds a game.
Chapman made 64 of 171 field goal
attempts and 18 of 41 charity tosses.
She tallied 146 points in league play,
had 32 steals and averaged 9.3
rebounds a game.
Other first team honorees were
Kama Sbarfenaker, Waverly and
Pam Lee, Athens.
Here are the 19'1S-00 First, Second
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Ironton dominates
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•

Friday'• Games
llattfonll, St.Louis 0

~10f,Denver103

..

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Toledo's Jim Swaney poured in 27
points and Harvey Knuckles added
26 Saturday as the Rockets defeated
Ball State 91-&amp; in the semi-finals of
the first Mid-American Conference
basketball tournament.
The Rockets, 22-li for the season,
were to meet the winner of the semifinal game between Bowling Green
and Northern Illinois for the championship Sunday at Michigan's
Crisler Arena. The winner of that
game will represent the MAC in the
NCAA tournament.

Jolin E. Fultt

'

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�c-6-The Sunday Ttmes,Sentinel. SWlday, March 2. 1980
04-The SWlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday.

March 2, 198()

Kentucky holds on, slips past Mississippi

Pt. Pleasant drops 75-56
cage decision to Vikings
Clellan, the only local in double
figures, dominated the Big Blacks'
scoring coiWlUl with 20 markers.
David Raike, nonnaUy a hot
shooter, could manage just 8 points
as did.Ron Cremeans while Jay Minton and Greg Thomas tallied 6 each.
David Nott and John McDermitt
were the only other Big alacks to
make the statistics sheet with 4 pain·
ts apiece.
Point out-rebounded Ripley, 35-34,
with ·· Ron Cremeans grabbing 11,
McClellan 9, Thomas, 4, Minton,
Raike and Mark Burris, 3 eacn and
Nott and John McDermitt, one
apiece.
The locals committed 16 turnovers
to Ripley's 15.
Point Pleasant capitalized on only
four attempts from the floor in the
first quarter of action to allow the
Vikings a 15-8 advantage after one
period of play. Ripley's Barnette
began his domination of the game by
tipping in four baskets for eight point• himseH in that stanza.

By Judy Owen
PT. PLEASANT - A fired-up
Ripley Viking squad, spurred by
Butch Barnette's game-high 24 pain·
ts, singed the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks on the local court Friday
night, 75-56.
The loss leaves Coach Lennie Bar·
nette's cagers with a 4-16 record
with just one game remaining in this
most disappointing season. Satur·
day's game with Sarboursville was
postponed, due to the heavy
snowfall.
Meanwhile, the attention of all
local fans is sure to be focused on
Tuesday's tourney opener when the
Big Blacks will seek to avenge
Friday night's loss in a rematch with
the Vikings.
In Friday night's contest,
however, it was Ripley all the way.
The Vikings placed four men in
double figures with Barnette leading
them all with 24, Steve Mullins and
Dave Lucas firing for 14 each and
Jim Smith adding II. Glen Me-

The locals held their own In tbe

second qu~rter when Ripley out·
scored them by only two points - not
enough, however, to make up for a
slow start and tbe home team went
to the locker room trailing 26-17 at
halftime.
The Big Blacks showed more
promise at the start of the second
baH, adding 16 points in the third
quarter. The VIkings overshadowed
that feat, however, putting on quite a
show in equaling their first hall per·
formance with 26 points in that stan·
za. The third quarter came to an end
with Ripley leading by 20 points, 5333.
As the final period dawned, minds
switched back to Monday night when
the Big Blacks, down 5().35 with
three minutes remaining in the
game, held Milton and rallied to an
amazing 52-50 comeback victory.
But Ripley fans roared with
vengeance and their team respon·
ded by pulling ahead by 30 points at

I

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.

(AP)

-

Freshman Sam &amp;wie tallied 27

points as ~ed Kentucky
held~ determined Mississippi ~
Friday night to advance to Satur·
day's finals ol the Southeastern Conference basketbaU tournament.
The WUdcats, r;ecordlng tbelr 11th
eonseeutlve victory, faced No. ~
Louisiana State in the championship
game In a rematch ol their
showdown last Sunday for tbe conference tlUe which Kentucky won in
overtime 7&amp;-74.

one point mme tounnquarter. Cries
of "Eighty, eighty" drifted from the
visitors' stands as the VIkings set
their point goal.
·
Down but not out, the Big Blacks
mustered what they could and
narrowed the margin to 19 before !hie
clock ran out. The final score ;Ripley 75, Point Pleasant 56. The Big
Blacks didn't have their desired vi~
tory but the Vikings didn't 'malre
their 80 points either.
·
In the junior val'lllty tilt Ripley
slipped by Coach Larry Markham's
Uttle Blacks, 49-45. Barry Barnette
led the locals with 25 points, Ma~
Burris had 7, Pat Hammack 4, JIIJI
Bowser 3, and Jon Veazey, Mike
Porter and Steve Wamsley, 2esch. :
Tuesday sectional tournament aetion with Ripley stiu'ts at 7:30p.m. :
Box score:

I.SU elj[Tied its finals berth with a
~victory over Alabama in which
DeWayne Scales led the way with 27
points and 11 rebounds.

Kentucky blew a ll)·point lead in
the first half and faced an uphill
struggle when the inside scoring of
John Stroud and the outside shooting
of Elston Turner helped the Rebels
build a &amp;-point lead twice, the last at
00-44 with 12:331eftin the game.
With Bowie leading the way, Kentucky finally reclaimed the lead on a

Bowie layup 8:40 from the finish
aod, after three lead exchanges,
Kyle Macy put the 'Cats ahead to
stay on a 1Moot shot with 6:18 to
play for a 6&lt;»9 lead.
Two straight layups by Bowie near
the four minute and three minute ·
marks stretched the lead to ~9
during a period in which Stroud
missed ihe first shot on a pair of I·
and-1 free throw situations.
The Wildcats iced the game at the
free throw line in the final two
minutes when Mary· and Dirk Min·

LOUISVILLE, KY. (AP)- Derek
Smith !ICOI'ed 24 points and Darrell
Griffith added 20 as fourth-ranked
Louisville dumped Memphis state
~ In a semifinal game of the
Metro Conference basketball tournamentFriday.
LouiBvtlle, 27-3, moved Into Saturday's title game against Florida

POINT PLEASANT (Jif) - Jay Minim ~;
David Rall&lt;e ~; Gtel Thomas - ; Ron
CremelltiS 3-2-8; David Nott :w-4; Jolll MoJlermit11·2-4; Jim Stewari~; Jeff Chambo!n
I&gt;IJ.O; Barry Barnette~; M.rlc 8111'1'11 ~;
Glen McCI.eUan 7.&amp;-20. Totall ZS.lN&amp;.
,
RIPLEY (71) - Mulllna 7.0.14; &amp;nllh W.ll;
PricoiHHI; J.ucas&amp;-2-14; Malro IHHJ; Ralnet 3139; Lawloo 1-0-2; Knopp 040; Caito IJ.OiO;
HUeman ~; Tygrelt O.J.I ; Brown~. Totoll

Score by qurten:
Ripley

Sportsmen's meetings

Poi11!Piwant

15 ll 27

8 tl8

State, 21-7, which needed Murray
Brown's baskets in the second overtime to beat Cincinnati 7~9 in the
other semifinal.
Memphis State, 13-14, made a
game of it for a half, trailing 37-34 at
halftime after hitting a blistering 74
percent from the field in the opening
haH.

Greg Moore hit a layup to bring
Memphis State to within 37-36 in the'
opening seconds of the second baH.
But Louisville then ran off the next
10 points for a 47-36 lead. Smith and
Griffith started that run with 11&gt;-foot
jumpers and guard Jerry Eaves ended it with a layup.
Memphis State managed to draw

Cleveland's John Denny says

n.!-"

pickoff move 'not an accident' .

2)4

slated in Charleston

Hawks win, add
to Cavs' woes
ds left, Johnson fumbled the ball and
ATLANTA (AP) -It has been a
Dave Robi.'!ch was fouled at the
long and frustrating year for the
other end. After Robisch hit his two
Cleveland Cavaliers, Coach Stan
free throws, Austin Carr pumped in
A! beck said after the Atlanta Hawks
a
three-point field goal to tie the
added to his team's woes.
score.
Atlanta defeated Cleveland 111-103
"I think that with us up, they
in overtime in National Basketball
shoot
and miss, we kick the ball out
Association action Friday, but the
to
Eddie
Johnson with 19 seconds to
game was especially frustrating for
go
and
we're
sitting pretty fat,"
Albeck because his team came back
Brown said. "Eddie Johnson falls
from a five-point deficit in the last 19
asleep with the basketball and they
seconds of regulation only to watch
score. That is the critical play in the
an uncontested layup fall away at
whole game which allows the last 19
the buzzer.
seconds to happen. Because if he
With · four seconds left in
just takes the ball and passes the
regulation and the score tied at 98,
ball we run out the clock with the
Willie Smith stole the ball from
comfortable lead we had."
Atlanta's Eddie Johnson and passed
Instead, the Hawks needed a 211it to Foots Walker at the other end.
Walker, who was wide open, missed . PGint perfonnance from John Drew,
including four points In the overtime
the shot.
period, to win.
"I've seen it a lot of times because
The victory, Atlanta's fifth in the
you can expect anything at the end
last
six games, raised the Hawks
of the game in the NBA," Albeck
record to 40-26 and gives them a
said. ''What it really boils down to is
our inability to make the big play. seven-game lead over Houston and
San Antonio in the Central Division.
We've lost 17 basketball games by
The loss dropped Cleveland's
four points this season, and its been
record to 26-42.
a very frustrating and avery menRandy Smith led Cleveland with 24
tally tough year."
points and Mike Mitchell had 20.
Friday's game was also tough on
Johnson had 17 for Atlanta and Dan
Atlanta Coach Hubie Brown. With
Roundfield had 18.
his team leading 98-93 with 19 secon·

Friday'a RHWta
Cla11 AAA TOW"DaDleDtl

A!htabula 60, CoMeaul ~. ot
Athens S6, Marietta f8

Au.stintown-Fitch 62, Wam:n HowlBnd 49
Canton Cltth. 52, Copley 34
Eutlake N. 61 , W. Ge.a1J1al5
Lancaster 52, Mlami Trace 41
Lebonon 42, Hamilton Tall38
Medina Highland n, Ber&lt;a 40

Middletown 59. Lemon-Monroe 40

Registr~tion

I
'

'

l\Jhl. St. John 72, Lulheron E. 57
Berlill W. Reserve64, Uabon 44
Bloomfield 64, SouihlnMton 63
Cardinrton 62, Wortlunor 46

Cll11 A TOUJ"'UllDeUtl

Centerville &amp;I, Franklln57
Cleve. St. Ignatius ~. ·Lakewood ~2
Col. Brwkhaven 51, Col. Marion-Franklin 42
Col. C.ntral68, Upper Ar~ 18
Day. Stlv·Pal81!Day. W
61
Del..w•re58,Co . Walnut dge45
E. ClevellndShaw90, Cleve. Glenvl.lh! S3
Euclid 56; Brush 50
Falrbom Bater 93, Day. White 64
Folrfleld 88, Cln. Sycamore 61

Greenaburs G,...n88, Field 40
Greenville76, Tecumseh64
Maysville 70, W. MuskJnsum 52

Men..- Lake Citb. 15, Patnesvllle Riverside 45
Middletown 74, Lemon-M.....,. t;
N,Royaltonf1,Cleve. W. Ted1$1

Porlc lll1b 56, Trotwood Mtdllon 46

'

WamnChampion61, PymatuningVal . J6
Cla11 A Touroameuta

Clul AAA TOW'IIAIDelltl

can. McKinley 4&amp;, N. Canton 43

'

New Richmond 62, Blanchester 31
Strulllen 44, s. Range 18

Younjs. Rayen !H, Aquinas 57

Akron Buchtel T1, Akroo Ellet 63
Akron Cen-Hower 68, Copley 60
Amhl!nt Steele 49, Medina t7

'

New Lexington 68, Sheridan 55

By The Auocla&amp;ed Pn:u
Friday" I Retultl

Rocky River Ill, Slronlsvillel8
Solon 53, Cl~e. E. TeCh U
Spring. South 103, Greeon 49
W. ~r Lakola 1J, Cin. Northwest $5
QuiAAT..,...et.tl
AknJn St. VJn.Mary 111i, Triway 14

BJsWalnutll7, Fmlerlcldown66
Qwlell2, W~dle ii2

C..peatea, WeilstonM

Col. Centennlal70, Granville 38
Col. St. Cboriel71, Clrdevlllelll

Elyria W. 71, Cnhambi.14S
Falrleu l!t, W•Jnedale74
Flreilllcllll, LoniJollrooblde!l
Gamanille Gufltld 10, .uhllbula Harbor Ill

...-11, l'y........,Vol. IV
~~~. T1171VII. ~. 7ol
PlkelooM,IIc£loi.-NW~
.u-voi. II,~Vol . ~

1
."'*'1.,,_..
sr.rta

,

ltiiJilud M; Utica 36
SieGbsMDeii,IIIMibel River'f/
l'«ry34
71, Slreetlboro 18
Wl!'fM! Trace , an Wert 3'1
Wbeelmi&gt;Uriii, Jaeboo42 {

Cin.1Bfidmark47, Cin. Country Day U
Cln. Summit Country Day 74, Georgetown 4~
Colwnbiana M, ColWl'lbiana Crestview 57
CUyahoga Hts. 64, s. llrnherst 4.1

Lucuvillc Val. 70, Beaver Eastern63
MJneral Ridie 52, McDonald 44
N. Union 811, Johnstown Northridg• ~I
J11ckson Center 12, Trlad S5
Peeblet70, Manchester 49

Racine Southern 72, N. Gallia »
Ripley III,_New Miami T1
Trimble"'· Croolcaville 51
Tusc..rawu Cath. ta, Hiland 45
llopborBalh II, A~ 12
Bellewo 74, Upper Sand"'ky 54
Bucyrua61, Shelby II
Careyfl, Uberty Benton 50
Cleve. Baptiat68, Cleve. Heritage 53
CUid,.oler51, W1pokonota Ill
Co)llnl W. ~!I. New Londoo 54
COihocUJn M, AshLand ~2

I

Entry forms may be obtained at
Skyline Lanes. Registration began
on Friday, February 29, and will
close on March 21. All entries must
be submitted to the secretary of the
association, Helen Spradling, by
that time. This year, the cost for the
tournament will be 55 per person,
per event, plus $1 for the all events
competition.
The Women'$. City Tournament is

'tifflnColwnbianA, NOrwalk 49

Tol. ottawa Hllllli.,_H.,.weU Loudon 59
UpperSdoto Val.lua. Arcadia 57
Wynford49, Cnwford 46

I

TAWNEY
. JEWELERS

the Indians said.
The Indians also said that infielder
Mike &lt;llampion and right-handed
pitcher Rafael Vasquez signed on~
year contracts on Friday. Terms
were not disclosed.

nJCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Cleveland
Indians' designated hitter Cliff John-

son Is recovering from exploratory
surgery on a fractured finger and
wW be out of action about a month,
the American League team an-

•

nounced.
Only three members of the Indians' 4lHnan roster - pitcher Len
Barker and Victor Cruz and out·
fielder Andres Mora - have yet to
come to terms with the team, Bick
said.
Meanwhile, Manager Dave Garcia
put his club through another 3-hour
workout Friday at Hi Corbett Field
at Tucson.

Indians spOkesman Joe Blck said
Johnson entered a hospital In his
home town of San Antonio, TelUIS on
Friday ~r fracturing the knuckle
of the middle finger of his rlgli
hand.

"Fine Jewelry for
Over 40 Years"
424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh .

since 1975 before coming to
Cleveland with outfielder Jerry
Mumphrey for outfielder Bobby
Bonds. The Indians have since
traded Mumphrey.
The &amp;-foot-3, 190 pound ·pitcher
says he has a complete philosophy
on holding runners at first and surprising the unwary ones with his
throws.
"First of all, if you stop the runner
from getting a good lead you take
away the possibility of a steal. You
make the runner defensive, because
he is worried about getting picked
off. U he does steal, you give the cat·
cher more time to throw him out. A
good move is like having an extra
pitch. It's another weapon you can
use to stop the offense," he said at
the Indians spring training camp.
Denny has even been tutoring
some eUler Cleveland pitchers on
the art of holding and picking off

to within 5246 with 12 minutes to go,
but reserve David Wright scored six
points and Smith and Griffith added
four each as Louisville coasted out to
a 68-51 bulge with 6:25 left in the
game.
Jeff Battle led Memphis State with
16 points and Dennis Isbell added 15.
Brown, who led balanced Florida
State with 20 points, broke through
three defenderS for a layup early in
the second overtime period for a 6663 lead and later turned a missed
free throw into a basket and a 72.(;7
lead with 1:41left in the final extra
period. .
Cincinnati, which finished its
season 13-1~. drew within 72.(;9 but
Florida State pulled away from
there.

KC to sell old
football game films
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek
Athletic Boosters Club is currently
in the process of selling all old films
of football games dating fonn 1958 to
1976.
The filnis are being sold for $10
each and money will be used for
booster projects.
KG-North Gailia films are not
being sold and filrns of the past three
seasons are also being kept.
For more infonnation contact
Coach Jim Sprague at Kyger Creek,

to

nr"•

~o u

better.

1'1\embtr: FDIC

"I learned a lot about holding guys
on from Lou Brock," said Denny of
·his onetime teammate.
"Lou always said that runnel'll
hate to keep diving back to first
base," Denney said. " It makes them
tired and defensive. I'll keep
throwing to first so long as a runner
has to dive hack in."

SCREENS

Direct Deposit
Is safe and easy..

WAUIH COACH RESIGNS
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Jim Borchik resigned Friday after one year
as basketball coach at Wa1sh
College, an NAJA schOol.
Walsh had a 7-19 won-loss record
this winter.

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Dintet deposit Is ,.fe and convenient
u It tU;os the worry out of getting your chock
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(&gt;.~ ........

Eastern didn't move out front of
Wright State unW late in the first
baH with a 14-2 scoring spurt, but af·
ter that, Coach Don Eddy said, "the
ball just starteil going in.
"Once we got going, we played
with a lot of authority on defense,"
he added.

•

Valley

Wheel Horse's Big 11 H.P. Tractor
with 38" mower

·-·

Eastern, ~. was paced by
Warren Patten who came off the
bench to score 16 points, and Craig
DeWitt with 14. Leading Wright
State, 24-3, was Rodney Benson with
a gam~high 20 points.
The scoring spree gave Eastern
Illinois a 2&amp;-2S lead with 2:26
remaining in the hall. Eastern led
30-29 at intermission and expanded
the advantage to as much as 14 points in the second period.
Ernie Montgomery poured in 24
points and Mark Mindeman added 22
in Northern Michigan's victory over
Indiana State-Evansville.
Northern, 23-S, snapped a 21-21 tie
midway through the first half and
kept the lead the rest of the way . It
was outfront 42-36 at halftime.

.

Y••• SAVE $355

BUY

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Eastern
Illinois and Northern Michigan
squared off Saturday for the championship in the NCAA Division II
Great Lakes Regional basketball
tournament.
Eastern moved into the finals by
surprising third-ranked host Wright
State 7~ while Northern advanced
with a 93-83 verdict over Indiana
State-Evansville.

Eastern Illinois, Northern Michigan in finals

HART
FIREPLACE
FURNISHINGS

·w~hf\e

llelpholst. John'all, Archbold II
Lake Rldle A&lt;!.&lt;~· ~~ Elyria Christ. 4.2

lima Calh.•• "'"""' 110 .
Lucaa 76, M.ns. Christ. 64
Mansfield 82 Mut~ Hardwa~ 58
Margllrf!tta iii,,Tiffln Calvel157
Marion Local 110, Ft. l\ccoYery 52
ottawa Glandorf 71, Lelpolc 47
OtloviUeiii,IIJc:Uville 44
Pari&lt;way73, St. Mlryl71
St. Heory 11, Umo PelT)' Ill
SoencervUlti2,/IIOIIdonUnlon60

5ioo :

open to all sanctioned bowlers.lt is a
handicap tournament, and this year,
the handicap ·has been increased
from 70 percent of 200 to 80 percent
of 200. This means that the low•
average bowler has a much better
chance of doing as well as a highaverage bowler.
It is the intention of the association
'
to equallie the tournament as much
as possible; and by changing the
•
~from
•
handicap, they are well on their
way. For further details of the tour• .
Four locM.Ialll to .nrn reu Mtter.
nament, interested bowlers may
~hr:POIC
contact any association board member.
j-------------~--.,....----=·-

E. Canlotl84, Smithville 56
Ft. Loramie 91, Fairlawn 49

Garaway47, Indian Valley N. U
U9:l.ng Hts. s:i, Amanda-Ciearcretk 64
Loral.R Clearvtew 85, Black Rlver63

Denny toiled in the National
League with the St. Louis Cardinals

WEDDING RIN4S

From

Saturday night's championship
clash marked the third time the two
nationally-ranked powers have met
in the tournament finals, with Ken·
lucky winning the previous ones in
1946 and 1952.

Wl'Cn tournaments that encted In !952
and began again one year ago.
In the i.SU·Aiabama game, Scales
put I..SU ahead to stay 50-48 when he
converted a three-point play with
8:58leftinthegame.

for women's

GALUPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Women's Bowling Association held
its monthly meeting on Wednesday,
Feb. 27, at Skyline Lanes. The main
point of business this month was the
opening of registration for the annual City Tournament. This year's
tournament will be beld the weekends of March 22, 23, and March 29 and
30. The team event will take place on
both Saturdays, and the singles and
doubles competition on both Sun·
days.

Youngs. Oumey 53, 'iOUJ18S. Ursuline45
Clua AA TouroameuLI
Cbardon M, Garrettsvtlle Garfield :ll
Cin. Reading 32, Hamilton Badin 30, ot
Cin. Wyoming 6S, Harrison 30
E. Palestine 36. Rootstown 32
Lovelal)d 5.1, Cln. Madeira 43

Boys tournament scores

Russo, a Baltimore scout, says,
"Denny has the best move to first
base of any righlhaoder in baeball."

Indians' Johnson has surgery

bowling tourlley underway

Southern Local45, Lisbon 14
United Local46, Jllckson-Milton 40

Valley Forge 58, Cleve. Mar.~lu:tl14 l
Wooster 34, N. Canton 'II

n1ng and throwing. '!'hat's why a lot
of pitchers dilo 't have good moves."
Denny says he considers his move
to first base his specialty, and Jim

FIRES FOR TWO - Glen McClellan goes up for two of the 20 points
he tallied in Friday night's Point-Pleasant Ripley game. Looking on is
Ripley' s Steve Mullins.

E. Canton 57, Leetonia 26

Salem 42, Poland Seminary 33

Pitcher
John Denny, one ol the Cleveland IndianS' winter acqul8ltions, says his
blghly-regardedpick-off move to first base Is no accident.
The 27-year-old rlghthanded
hurler says of his move to hold
speedy baserunners close to the bag,
"It takes a lol of work. You have to
do extra work above the usual run-

He was Injured while moving
storage barrels at his home on Thursday and nearly severed the bone,

I Girls tournament scores
G~ll Bukelball
Dy 1be Anocll&amp;ed Pre,.

nJCSON, Ariz. (AP) -

CHARLESTON - Sportsmen's
meetings will be held March 17-20 at
14 locations throughout the state to
discuss 1981 hunting, fishing, and
!rapping regulations. ~eetings are
scheduled for 7:30 p:m. on the
following dates: March 17 in
Charleston at the Kanawha County
Courthouse in court room No. 4;
March 18 iiJ Huntington at the Cabell
County Courthouse in the Common
Pleas court room; and March 19 In
Logan at the Logan County Courthouse in court room No. 1. Other
meeting locations In the state are
Glendale, Princeton and Elkins on
March 18; Clarksburg, Lewisburg,
Martinsburg and Parkersburg on
March 19; and Spencer, Richmond,
Moorefield, and Beckley on March
20.
All persons interested in wildlife
regulations, seasons, and bag and
creel limits shollld plan to attend
these meetings to express their
opinions. All dates and meeting
locations are listed In the 1980 hun·
ling and fishing regulations.

Kentucky made its 18th championship game appearance in 21 con·
ference tournaments, including a
steak of 16 consecutive post-season
events.
The SEC had a 27-year lapse bet·

Louis"ville dumpsMemphis State,B4-65·

lt-11-75.

OUT-MANEUVERS OPPONENT - Point Pleasant's Greg Thomas
r&lt;H ) out-maneuvers Ripley's Butch Barnette to get a shot off. The Big
Blacks get a chance to avenge their 75-li6 loss Tuesday when they host
Ripley again in the opening round of the sectional basketball tournament.

nifield each hit two and Chuck Verderber and Charles Hurt one apiece.
The victory lifted Kentucky to 28-4
for the season. It was the Wildcats'
14th consecutive victory over Ole
Miss and stretched their series ad·
vantage to 56-4.

PHONE

446-4464

OpE N DAII,.Y

7:00·5:00
TILI:OO
FRI.

CLOSED SUN.
'·

�c-6-The Sunday Ttmes,Sentinel. SWlday, March 2. 1980
04-The SWlday Times-Sentinel, Sunday.

March 2, 198()

Kentucky holds on, slips past Mississippi

Pt. Pleasant drops 75-56
cage decision to Vikings
Clellan, the only local in double
figures, dominated the Big Blacks'
scoring coiWlUl with 20 markers.
David Raike, nonnaUy a hot
shooter, could manage just 8 points
as did.Ron Cremeans while Jay Minton and Greg Thomas tallied 6 each.
David Nott and John McDermitt
were the only other Big alacks to
make the statistics sheet with 4 pain·
ts apiece.
Point out-rebounded Ripley, 35-34,
with ·· Ron Cremeans grabbing 11,
McClellan 9, Thomas, 4, Minton,
Raike and Mark Burris, 3 eacn and
Nott and John McDermitt, one
apiece.
The locals committed 16 turnovers
to Ripley's 15.
Point Pleasant capitalized on only
four attempts from the floor in the
first quarter of action to allow the
Vikings a 15-8 advantage after one
period of play. Ripley's Barnette
began his domination of the game by
tipping in four baskets for eight point• himseH in that stanza.

By Judy Owen
PT. PLEASANT - A fired-up
Ripley Viking squad, spurred by
Butch Barnette's game-high 24 pain·
ts, singed the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks on the local court Friday
night, 75-56.
The loss leaves Coach Lennie Bar·
nette's cagers with a 4-16 record
with just one game remaining in this
most disappointing season. Satur·
day's game with Sarboursville was
postponed, due to the heavy
snowfall.
Meanwhile, the attention of all
local fans is sure to be focused on
Tuesday's tourney opener when the
Big Blacks will seek to avenge
Friday night's loss in a rematch with
the Vikings.
In Friday night's contest,
however, it was Ripley all the way.
The Vikings placed four men in
double figures with Barnette leading
them all with 24, Steve Mullins and
Dave Lucas firing for 14 each and
Jim Smith adding II. Glen Me-

The locals held their own In tbe

second qu~rter when Ripley out·
scored them by only two points - not
enough, however, to make up for a
slow start and tbe home team went
to the locker room trailing 26-17 at
halftime.
The Big Blacks showed more
promise at the start of the second
baH, adding 16 points in the third
quarter. The VIkings overshadowed
that feat, however, putting on quite a
show in equaling their first hall per·
formance with 26 points in that stan·
za. The third quarter came to an end
with Ripley leading by 20 points, 5333.
As the final period dawned, minds
switched back to Monday night when
the Big Blacks, down 5().35 with
three minutes remaining in the
game, held Milton and rallied to an
amazing 52-50 comeback victory.
But Ripley fans roared with
vengeance and their team respon·
ded by pulling ahead by 30 points at

I

BIRMINGHAM, Ala.

(AP)

-

Freshman Sam &amp;wie tallied 27

points as ~ed Kentucky
held~ determined Mississippi ~
Friday night to advance to Satur·
day's finals ol the Southeastern Conference basketbaU tournament.
The WUdcats, r;ecordlng tbelr 11th
eonseeutlve victory, faced No. ~
Louisiana State in the championship
game In a rematch ol their
showdown last Sunday for tbe conference tlUe which Kentucky won in
overtime 7&amp;-74.

one point mme tounnquarter. Cries
of "Eighty, eighty" drifted from the
visitors' stands as the VIkings set
their point goal.
·
Down but not out, the Big Blacks
mustered what they could and
narrowed the margin to 19 before !hie
clock ran out. The final score ;Ripley 75, Point Pleasant 56. The Big
Blacks didn't have their desired vi~
tory but the Vikings didn't 'malre
their 80 points either.
·
In the junior val'lllty tilt Ripley
slipped by Coach Larry Markham's
Uttle Blacks, 49-45. Barry Barnette
led the locals with 25 points, Ma~
Burris had 7, Pat Hammack 4, JIIJI
Bowser 3, and Jon Veazey, Mike
Porter and Steve Wamsley, 2esch. :
Tuesday sectional tournament aetion with Ripley stiu'ts at 7:30p.m. :
Box score:

I.SU elj[Tied its finals berth with a
~victory over Alabama in which
DeWayne Scales led the way with 27
points and 11 rebounds.

Kentucky blew a ll)·point lead in
the first half and faced an uphill
struggle when the inside scoring of
John Stroud and the outside shooting
of Elston Turner helped the Rebels
build a &amp;-point lead twice, the last at
00-44 with 12:331eftin the game.
With Bowie leading the way, Kentucky finally reclaimed the lead on a

Bowie layup 8:40 from the finish
aod, after three lead exchanges,
Kyle Macy put the 'Cats ahead to
stay on a 1Moot shot with 6:18 to
play for a 6&lt;»9 lead.
Two straight layups by Bowie near
the four minute and three minute ·
marks stretched the lead to ~9
during a period in which Stroud
missed ihe first shot on a pair of I·
and-1 free throw situations.
The Wildcats iced the game at the
free throw line in the final two
minutes when Mary· and Dirk Min·

LOUISVILLE, KY. (AP)- Derek
Smith !ICOI'ed 24 points and Darrell
Griffith added 20 as fourth-ranked
Louisville dumped Memphis state
~ In a semifinal game of the
Metro Conference basketball tournamentFriday.
LouiBvtlle, 27-3, moved Into Saturday's title game against Florida

POINT PLEASANT (Jif) - Jay Minim ~;
David Rall&lt;e ~; Gtel Thomas - ; Ron
CremelltiS 3-2-8; David Nott :w-4; Jolll MoJlermit11·2-4; Jim Stewari~; Jeff Chambo!n
I&gt;IJ.O; Barry Barnette~; M.rlc 8111'1'11 ~;
Glen McCI.eUan 7.&amp;-20. Totall ZS.lN&amp;.
,
RIPLEY (71) - Mulllna 7.0.14; &amp;nllh W.ll;
PricoiHHI; J.ucas&amp;-2-14; Malro IHHJ; Ralnet 3139; Lawloo 1-0-2; Knopp 040; Caito IJ.OiO;
HUeman ~; Tygrelt O.J.I ; Brown~. Totoll

Score by qurten:
Ripley

Sportsmen's meetings

Poi11!Piwant

15 ll 27

8 tl8

State, 21-7, which needed Murray
Brown's baskets in the second overtime to beat Cincinnati 7~9 in the
other semifinal.
Memphis State, 13-14, made a
game of it for a half, trailing 37-34 at
halftime after hitting a blistering 74
percent from the field in the opening
haH.

Greg Moore hit a layup to bring
Memphis State to within 37-36 in the'
opening seconds of the second baH.
But Louisville then ran off the next
10 points for a 47-36 lead. Smith and
Griffith started that run with 11&gt;-foot
jumpers and guard Jerry Eaves ended it with a layup.
Memphis State managed to draw

Cleveland's John Denny says

n.!-"

pickoff move 'not an accident' .

2)4

slated in Charleston

Hawks win, add
to Cavs' woes
ds left, Johnson fumbled the ball and
ATLANTA (AP) -It has been a
Dave Robi.'!ch was fouled at the
long and frustrating year for the
other end. After Robisch hit his two
Cleveland Cavaliers, Coach Stan
free throws, Austin Carr pumped in
A! beck said after the Atlanta Hawks
a
three-point field goal to tie the
added to his team's woes.
score.
Atlanta defeated Cleveland 111-103
"I think that with us up, they
in overtime in National Basketball
shoot
and miss, we kick the ball out
Association action Friday, but the
to
Eddie
Johnson with 19 seconds to
game was especially frustrating for
go
and
we're
sitting pretty fat,"
Albeck because his team came back
Brown said. "Eddie Johnson falls
from a five-point deficit in the last 19
asleep with the basketball and they
seconds of regulation only to watch
score. That is the critical play in the
an uncontested layup fall away at
whole game which allows the last 19
the buzzer.
seconds to happen. Because if he
With · four seconds left in
just takes the ball and passes the
regulation and the score tied at 98,
ball we run out the clock with the
Willie Smith stole the ball from
comfortable lead we had."
Atlanta's Eddie Johnson and passed
Instead, the Hawks needed a 211it to Foots Walker at the other end.
Walker, who was wide open, missed . PGint perfonnance from John Drew,
including four points In the overtime
the shot.
period, to win.
"I've seen it a lot of times because
The victory, Atlanta's fifth in the
you can expect anything at the end
last
six games, raised the Hawks
of the game in the NBA," Albeck
record to 40-26 and gives them a
said. ''What it really boils down to is
our inability to make the big play. seven-game lead over Houston and
San Antonio in the Central Division.
We've lost 17 basketball games by
The loss dropped Cleveland's
four points this season, and its been
record to 26-42.
a very frustrating and avery menRandy Smith led Cleveland with 24
tally tough year."
points and Mike Mitchell had 20.
Friday's game was also tough on
Johnson had 17 for Atlanta and Dan
Atlanta Coach Hubie Brown. With
Roundfield had 18.
his team leading 98-93 with 19 secon·

Friday'a RHWta
Cla11 AAA TOW"DaDleDtl

A!htabula 60, CoMeaul ~. ot
Athens S6, Marietta f8

Au.stintown-Fitch 62, Wam:n HowlBnd 49
Canton Cltth. 52, Copley 34
Eutlake N. 61 , W. Ge.a1J1al5
Lancaster 52, Mlami Trace 41
Lebonon 42, Hamilton Tall38
Medina Highland n, Ber&lt;a 40

Middletown 59. Lemon-Monroe 40

Registr~tion

I
'

'

l\Jhl. St. John 72, Lulheron E. 57
Berlill W. Reserve64, Uabon 44
Bloomfield 64, SouihlnMton 63
Cardinrton 62, Wortlunor 46

Cll11 A TOUJ"'UllDeUtl

Centerville &amp;I, Franklln57
Cleve. St. Ignatius ~. ·Lakewood ~2
Col. Brwkhaven 51, Col. Marion-Franklin 42
Col. C.ntral68, Upper Ar~ 18
Day. Stlv·Pal81!Day. W
61
Del..w•re58,Co . Walnut dge45
E. ClevellndShaw90, Cleve. Glenvl.lh! S3
Euclid 56; Brush 50
Falrbom Bater 93, Day. White 64
Folrfleld 88, Cln. Sycamore 61

Greenaburs G,...n88, Field 40
Greenville76, Tecumseh64
Maysville 70, W. MuskJnsum 52

Men..- Lake Citb. 15, Patnesvllle Riverside 45
Middletown 74, Lemon-M.....,. t;
N,Royaltonf1,Cleve. W. Ted1$1

Porlc lll1b 56, Trotwood Mtdllon 46

'

WamnChampion61, PymatuningVal . J6
Cla11 A Touroameuta

Clul AAA TOW'IIAIDelltl

can. McKinley 4&amp;, N. Canton 43

'

New Richmond 62, Blanchester 31
Strulllen 44, s. Range 18

Younjs. Rayen !H, Aquinas 57

Akron Buchtel T1, Akroo Ellet 63
Akron Cen-Hower 68, Copley 60
Amhl!nt Steele 49, Medina t7

'

New Lexington 68, Sheridan 55

By The Auocla&amp;ed Pn:u
Friday" I Retultl

Rocky River Ill, Slronlsvillel8
Solon 53, Cl~e. E. TeCh U
Spring. South 103, Greeon 49
W. ~r Lakola 1J, Cin. Northwest $5
QuiAAT..,...et.tl
AknJn St. VJn.Mary 111i, Triway 14

BJsWalnutll7, Fmlerlcldown66
Qwlell2, W~dle ii2

C..peatea, WeilstonM

Col. Centennlal70, Granville 38
Col. St. Cboriel71, Clrdevlllelll

Elyria W. 71, Cnhambi.14S
Falrleu l!t, W•Jnedale74
Flreilllcllll, LoniJollrooblde!l
Gamanille Gufltld 10, .uhllbula Harbor Ill

...-11, l'y........,Vol. IV
~~~. T1171VII. ~. 7ol
PlkelooM,IIc£loi.-NW~
.u-voi. II,~Vol . ~

1
."'*'1.,,_..
sr.rta

,

ltiiJilud M; Utica 36
SieGbsMDeii,IIIMibel River'f/
l'«ry34
71, Slreetlboro 18
Wl!'fM! Trace , an Wert 3'1
Wbeelmi&gt;Uriii, Jaeboo42 {

Cin.1Bfidmark47, Cin. Country Day U
Cln. Summit Country Day 74, Georgetown 4~
Colwnbiana M, ColWl'lbiana Crestview 57
CUyahoga Hts. 64, s. llrnherst 4.1

Lucuvillc Val. 70, Beaver Eastern63
MJneral Ridie 52, McDonald 44
N. Union 811, Johnstown Northridg• ~I
J11ckson Center 12, Trlad S5
Peeblet70, Manchester 49

Racine Southern 72, N. Gallia »
Ripley III,_New Miami T1
Trimble"'· Croolcaville 51
Tusc..rawu Cath. ta, Hiland 45
llopborBalh II, A~ 12
Bellewo 74, Upper Sand"'ky 54
Bucyrua61, Shelby II
Careyfl, Uberty Benton 50
Cleve. Baptiat68, Cleve. Heritage 53
CUid,.oler51, W1pokonota Ill
Co)llnl W. ~!I. New Londoo 54
COihocUJn M, AshLand ~2

I

Entry forms may be obtained at
Skyline Lanes. Registration began
on Friday, February 29, and will
close on March 21. All entries must
be submitted to the secretary of the
association, Helen Spradling, by
that time. This year, the cost for the
tournament will be 55 per person,
per event, plus $1 for the all events
competition.
The Women'$. City Tournament is

'tifflnColwnbianA, NOrwalk 49

Tol. ottawa Hllllli.,_H.,.weU Loudon 59
UpperSdoto Val.lua. Arcadia 57
Wynford49, Cnwford 46

I

TAWNEY
. JEWELERS

the Indians said.
The Indians also said that infielder
Mike &lt;llampion and right-handed
pitcher Rafael Vasquez signed on~
year contracts on Friday. Terms
were not disclosed.

nJCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Cleveland
Indians' designated hitter Cliff John-

son Is recovering from exploratory
surgery on a fractured finger and
wW be out of action about a month,
the American League team an-

•

nounced.
Only three members of the Indians' 4lHnan roster - pitcher Len
Barker and Victor Cruz and out·
fielder Andres Mora - have yet to
come to terms with the team, Bick
said.
Meanwhile, Manager Dave Garcia
put his club through another 3-hour
workout Friday at Hi Corbett Field
at Tucson.

Indians spOkesman Joe Blck said
Johnson entered a hospital In his
home town of San Antonio, TelUIS on
Friday ~r fracturing the knuckle
of the middle finger of his rlgli
hand.

"Fine Jewelry for
Over 40 Years"
424 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh .

since 1975 before coming to
Cleveland with outfielder Jerry
Mumphrey for outfielder Bobby
Bonds. The Indians have since
traded Mumphrey.
The &amp;-foot-3, 190 pound ·pitcher
says he has a complete philosophy
on holding runners at first and surprising the unwary ones with his
throws.
"First of all, if you stop the runner
from getting a good lead you take
away the possibility of a steal. You
make the runner defensive, because
he is worried about getting picked
off. U he does steal, you give the cat·
cher more time to throw him out. A
good move is like having an extra
pitch. It's another weapon you can
use to stop the offense," he said at
the Indians spring training camp.
Denny has even been tutoring
some eUler Cleveland pitchers on
the art of holding and picking off

to within 5246 with 12 minutes to go,
but reserve David Wright scored six
points and Smith and Griffith added
four each as Louisville coasted out to
a 68-51 bulge with 6:25 left in the
game.
Jeff Battle led Memphis State with
16 points and Dennis Isbell added 15.
Brown, who led balanced Florida
State with 20 points, broke through
three defenderS for a layup early in
the second overtime period for a 6663 lead and later turned a missed
free throw into a basket and a 72.(;7
lead with 1:41left in the final extra
period. .
Cincinnati, which finished its
season 13-1~. drew within 72.(;9 but
Florida State pulled away from
there.

KC to sell old
football game films
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek
Athletic Boosters Club is currently
in the process of selling all old films
of football games dating fonn 1958 to
1976.
The filnis are being sold for $10
each and money will be used for
booster projects.
KG-North Gailia films are not
being sold and filrns of the past three
seasons are also being kept.
For more infonnation contact
Coach Jim Sprague at Kyger Creek,

to

nr"•

~o u

better.

1'1\embtr: FDIC

"I learned a lot about holding guys
on from Lou Brock," said Denny of
·his onetime teammate.
"Lou always said that runnel'll
hate to keep diving back to first
base," Denney said. " It makes them
tired and defensive. I'll keep
throwing to first so long as a runner
has to dive hack in."

SCREENS

Direct Deposit
Is safe and easy..

WAUIH COACH RESIGNS
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Jim Borchik resigned Friday after one year
as basketball coach at Wa1sh
College, an NAJA schOol.
Walsh had a 7-19 won-loss record
this winter.

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Dintet deposit Is ,.fe and convenient
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(&gt;.~ ........

Eastern didn't move out front of
Wright State unW late in the first
baH with a 14-2 scoring spurt, but af·
ter that, Coach Don Eddy said, "the
ball just starteil going in.
"Once we got going, we played
with a lot of authority on defense,"
he added.

•

Valley

Wheel Horse's Big 11 H.P. Tractor
with 38" mower

·-·

Eastern, ~. was paced by
Warren Patten who came off the
bench to score 16 points, and Craig
DeWitt with 14. Leading Wright
State, 24-3, was Rodney Benson with
a gam~high 20 points.
The scoring spree gave Eastern
Illinois a 2&amp;-2S lead with 2:26
remaining in the hall. Eastern led
30-29 at intermission and expanded
the advantage to as much as 14 points in the second period.
Ernie Montgomery poured in 24
points and Mark Mindeman added 22
in Northern Michigan's victory over
Indiana State-Evansville.
Northern, 23-S, snapped a 21-21 tie
midway through the first half and
kept the lead the rest of the way . It
was outfront 42-36 at halftime.

.

Y••• SAVE $355

BUY

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Eastern
Illinois and Northern Michigan
squared off Saturday for the championship in the NCAA Division II
Great Lakes Regional basketball
tournament.
Eastern moved into the finals by
surprising third-ranked host Wright
State 7~ while Northern advanced
with a 93-83 verdict over Indiana
State-Evansville.

Eastern Illinois, Northern Michigan in finals

HART
FIREPLACE
FURNISHINGS

·w~hf\e

llelpholst. John'all, Archbold II
Lake Rldle A&lt;!.&lt;~· ~~ Elyria Christ. 4.2

lima Calh.•• "'"""' 110 .
Lucaa 76, M.ns. Christ. 64
Mansfield 82 Mut~ Hardwa~ 58
Margllrf!tta iii,,Tiffln Calvel157
Marion Local 110, Ft. l\ccoYery 52
ottawa Glandorf 71, Lelpolc 47
OtloviUeiii,IIJc:Uville 44
Pari&lt;way73, St. Mlryl71
St. Heory 11, Umo PelT)' Ill
SoencervUlti2,/IIOIIdonUnlon60

5ioo :

open to all sanctioned bowlers.lt is a
handicap tournament, and this year,
the handicap ·has been increased
from 70 percent of 200 to 80 percent
of 200. This means that the low•
average bowler has a much better
chance of doing as well as a highaverage bowler.
It is the intention of the association
'
to equallie the tournament as much
as possible; and by changing the
•
~from
•
handicap, they are well on their
way. For further details of the tour• .
Four locM.Ialll to .nrn reu Mtter.
nament, interested bowlers may
~hr:POIC
contact any association board member.
j-------------~--.,....----=·-

E. Canlotl84, Smithville 56
Ft. Loramie 91, Fairlawn 49

Garaway47, Indian Valley N. U
U9:l.ng Hts. s:i, Amanda-Ciearcretk 64
Loral.R Clearvtew 85, Black Rlver63

Denny toiled in the National
League with the St. Louis Cardinals

WEDDING RIN4S

From

Saturday night's championship
clash marked the third time the two
nationally-ranked powers have met
in the tournament finals, with Ken·
lucky winning the previous ones in
1946 and 1952.

Wl'Cn tournaments that encted In !952
and began again one year ago.
In the i.SU·Aiabama game, Scales
put I..SU ahead to stay 50-48 when he
converted a three-point play with
8:58leftinthegame.

for women's

GALUPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Women's Bowling Association held
its monthly meeting on Wednesday,
Feb. 27, at Skyline Lanes. The main
point of business this month was the
opening of registration for the annual City Tournament. This year's
tournament will be beld the weekends of March 22, 23, and March 29 and
30. The team event will take place on
both Saturdays, and the singles and
doubles competition on both Sun·
days.

Youngs. Oumey 53, 'iOUJ18S. Ursuline45
Clua AA TouroameuLI
Cbardon M, Garrettsvtlle Garfield :ll
Cin. Reading 32, Hamilton Badin 30, ot
Cin. Wyoming 6S, Harrison 30
E. Palestine 36. Rootstown 32
Lovelal)d 5.1, Cln. Madeira 43

Boys tournament scores

Russo, a Baltimore scout, says,
"Denny has the best move to first
base of any righlhaoder in baeball."

Indians' Johnson has surgery

bowling tourlley underway

Southern Local45, Lisbon 14
United Local46, Jllckson-Milton 40

Valley Forge 58, Cleve. Mar.~lu:tl14 l
Wooster 34, N. Canton 'II

n1ng and throwing. '!'hat's why a lot
of pitchers dilo 't have good moves."
Denny says he considers his move
to first base his specialty, and Jim

FIRES FOR TWO - Glen McClellan goes up for two of the 20 points
he tallied in Friday night's Point-Pleasant Ripley game. Looking on is
Ripley' s Steve Mullins.

E. Canton 57, Leetonia 26

Salem 42, Poland Seminary 33

Pitcher
John Denny, one ol the Cleveland IndianS' winter acqul8ltions, says his
blghly-regardedpick-off move to first base Is no accident.
The 27-year-old rlghthanded
hurler says of his move to hold
speedy baserunners close to the bag,
"It takes a lol of work. You have to
do extra work above the usual run-

He was Injured while moving
storage barrels at his home on Thursday and nearly severed the bone,

I Girls tournament scores
G~ll Bukelball
Dy 1be Anocll&amp;ed Pre,.

nJCSON, Ariz. (AP) -

CHARLESTON - Sportsmen's
meetings will be held March 17-20 at
14 locations throughout the state to
discuss 1981 hunting, fishing, and
!rapping regulations. ~eetings are
scheduled for 7:30 p:m. on the
following dates: March 17 in
Charleston at the Kanawha County
Courthouse in court room No. 4;
March 18 iiJ Huntington at the Cabell
County Courthouse in the Common
Pleas court room; and March 19 In
Logan at the Logan County Courthouse in court room No. 1. Other
meeting locations In the state are
Glendale, Princeton and Elkins on
March 18; Clarksburg, Lewisburg,
Martinsburg and Parkersburg on
March 19; and Spencer, Richmond,
Moorefield, and Beckley on March
20.
All persons interested in wildlife
regulations, seasons, and bag and
creel limits shollld plan to attend
these meetings to express their
opinions. All dates and meeting
locations are listed In the 1980 hun·
ling and fishing regulations.

Kentucky made its 18th championship game appearance in 21 con·
ference tournaments, including a
steak of 16 consecutive post-season
events.
The SEC had a 27-year lapse bet·

Louis"ville dumpsMemphis State,B4-65·

lt-11-75.

OUT-MANEUVERS OPPONENT - Point Pleasant's Greg Thomas
r&lt;H ) out-maneuvers Ripley's Butch Barnette to get a shot off. The Big
Blacks get a chance to avenge their 75-li6 loss Tuesday when they host
Ripley again in the opening round of the sectional basketball tournament.

nifield each hit two and Chuck Verderber and Charles Hurt one apiece.
The victory lifted Kentucky to 28-4
for the season. It was the Wildcats'
14th consecutive victory over Ole
Miss and stretched their series ad·
vantage to 56-4.

PHONE

446-4464

OpE N DAII,.Y

7:00·5:00
TILI:OO
FRI.

CLOSED SUN.
'·

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 2,

1980

~7-1be Sunday Times-Sentinel.

Reds fan to walk to opener, all the way from St. Louis
CINCINNATI (AP)- Last year, it
was a canoe which brought the
opening' day baseball to Riverfront
Stadium.
This year, the Cincinnati Reds
held a contest to see what new way
they could bring on the first ball.
The winner was Keen Babbage
who is going to walk it in - au the
: way from St. Louis where the
: baseball is made.
; "I guess you could say this is
• carrying your team spirit pretty
: far," admitted Babbage, "but I'm a
: real Reds fan. I grew up in

Lexington, and some of my best
memories are family trips to
Crosley Field and later to Riverfront. When I was in college, the
guys in the fraternity house would
Usten to the games every night. I'm
hooked on the Reds. "
The Reds are not the only reason

that Babbage is interested in
making the 431&gt;-mile trip. He's also
interested in promoting walking and
especially a fund-raising walk for
the March of Dimes.
When Babbage arrives at River-

front April 9, he will hand the ball
over to the Cincinnati area's 1980
March of Dimes poster child, Jason
Edwards, who will make the
ceremonial first pitch of the 1980
baseball season.
The route Babbage will take will
include plaMed overnight stops at
St. Libroy, Mt. Vernon and Merriam
in Illinois; Princeton, Huntingburg,
Marengo and New Albany in Indiana ; and Louisville, Simpsonville,
Frankfort, Lexington, Georgetown,
Williamstown and Covington in Ken-

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

makes the official major league
baseball.
He plans to spend most of his
nights with families who have volunleered their hospitality through local
chapters of the March of Dimes.
After graduation rrom centre

FREE1
·

:
;
:
:
·
·
··

briefs. .

•

GOLF

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Dave
Eichelberger posted an early [).
under-par 66 for a 136 total and made
it stand up all day to take a !-stroke
lead over first-round leader Dan
Pohl at the midway point of the
$300,000 Bay Hill Golf Classic.
Buddy Gardner shot a 67 to tie
Miller Barber and Fuzzy Zoeller for
third place at 137.
SUN CITY, Ariz. + Jan Stephenson shot a 71 and increased her lead
to two shots after two rounds of the
Sun City Classic.
Her 36-hole total of 139 withstood
the challenge of several of the pros
at 'Hillcrest Golf Course, with a
group of four coming home at 5 under. They include Sandra Palmer,
Judy Rankin, and Sue Berning, all of
whom sl)ot 70s and Bonnie Lauer,
who finished at 71.
TENNIS
MEMPHIS, TeM. (AP) -Jimmy
Connors and John McEnroe, the top

two seeds in the U.S. National Indoor
Tennis Championships, moved into
the semilinals by overpowering
their opponents.
Top-seeded McEnroe ousted Bob
Lutz U, ~. &amp;-I, while Connors beat
John Sadri, the No.8 seed, &amp;-2, &amp;-2.
Third-seeded Roscoe Tanner lost
• to No. 5seed Harold Solomon 6-4, U,
&amp;-2.
HOUSTON (AP) - Eighth-seeded
Greer Stevens stunned second' seeded Tracy Austin~. 6-4 to reach
the semifinals rJ the $150,000
Women's Pro T4!nnis Tournament.
Stevens' opponent in' the
semifinals will be No.3 seed Billie
Jean King, who defeated Sue Barker
6-4,7-5.

Top-seeded Martina Navratilova
: defeated Virgina Rt12ici 7-5, &amp;-2 and
: will meet fourtb-seeded Wendy Turnbull In the semifinals. Turnbull
• defeated Dianne Fromholtz 6-4, &amp;-2.
ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP) Victor Pecci of Paraguay upset
·• Bjorn Borg of Sweden 6-4, 6-4, &amp;-2 in a
; best«·five challenge match.
.:
In another match, Francisco Goo'• zalcz of Puerto Rico beat Vilas
:,·• Gerulaitis 6-4, H

.•

:; ,---------- - - r

~

•
•

••

BIG
DISCOUNTS
PLUS
REBATES
ON SOME '79
MODELS

•,

way point. Eichelberger was at 7linder-par 135.
Pohl added a 72 to his opening 64 to
go six strokes under.
Zoeller, a &amp;-year veteran who has
one other victory ·besid~ the 1979
Masters, was tied at 137, two strokes
back, with veteran Miller Barber
and third-year pro Buddy Gardner.
"I've been putting well in recent
weeks and that's what's saved me,"
Zoeller said. "I'm not driving well at
all.''

He whacked a tee shot into the

trees on the 18th hole and wound up
with a double-bogey six.
"But I'm working on consistency,
and I feel I've been playing well so
far this year," Zoeller said.
Jim Colbert and Leonard Thornpeon were three strokes off the pace
at4-under-par 138.
Tom Wejskopf was at 139 and Bill
Kratzert carded a 140 total. The
tour's money leader, Tom Watson,
shot a 71 Friday for a 143 total eight strokes back of the leaders.
Tournament host Palmer and

VACATION
FOR TWO

Gary Player just rruinaged to make
the cut with two-day totals of 147.
The 144-man field was reduced to
75 players shooting 148 or lower.
Eichelberger, who has won the
Greater Milwaukee Open twice for
his only tour victories in his 12-year
career, had the day's low round with
his66.
The 48-year-old Barber started the
second round at 4-under-par and
went to 9-under after eight holes. But
bogeys on four of the next six holes
gave him a 70 for the day.

4 DAYS • 3 NIGHTS
2 ADULTS AND 2 CHILDREN

.

Plus
-4 heel drive Chevy
Pickups &amp; Blazers
4-Wheel Drive LUV
Plc.kups
-Chevy Citations &amp;
Chevettes In Stock.

WESTLAFAYETI'E, Ind. (AP)Senior center Joe Barry Carroll
scored 26 points Sat~y as 18thrated Purdue routed Michigan State
91-73 to claim undisputed possession
of third place in the final Big Ten
. . Conference basketball race.
The Boilermakers, who hope their
third place finish will earn them an
NCAA bid on Sunday, took the lead
for good midway in the first half as
the Spartans went nearly six
minutes without a field goal.
Purdue rallied from a 1&amp;-11 deficit
to open a 31&gt;-22 advantage. Carroll
had 5 points, while Drake Morris and

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -

In-

truding Butler nosed out Miss

Korina ina photo finish Friday night
to with the $1,200 featured pace mile
at Lebanon and paid $12.60, ~.60 and
$5.60.
The place horse returned $4.60 and
$3.20 and Lamar's Me Too, the show
horse, $3.00.
Jug's Knight and Satin SUpper
combined 2-4 in the double for $33.20.

IN
· "MUSIC CITY U.S.A."
Nashville, Tennessee

MYRTLE BEACH

Stay at the beautiful
Best Western
Nashville-Central Hotel

Stay in the Executive Holiday Inn directly on the
ocean.

Michigan State never drew closer
than 8 points.
Purdue, which shared the Big Ten
tiUe with Michigan State and Iowa
Junior Jay Vincent, the Big Ten's last season, finished its regular
scoring leader who finished with 23 . season with a 11·7 conference record
points, sparked a Michigan State .and an 18-9 overall mark.
Michigan State, forced to rebulld
comeback that cut their deli~it to
from
last season's NCAA chamtwo .points, 32-30 with 4: OJ left In the
pionship
when Greg Keiser
half. But, Purdue came back with
graduated
and Earvin "Magic"
seven consecutive points and had
Johnson
elected
to sign a National
five more points after a Spartan
Basketball
Association
contract afbasket while opening a commanding
ter his sophOmore year, ended its
46-;14 halftime advantage.
season &amp;-12 in league play and 11-16
Carroll scored Purdue's first four
overall.
goals of the second half. and

Keith Edmonson each had a pair of
field goals as Purdue outscored the
Spartans 15-4 to pull away.

Now at Carroll Norris Dodge Buy a Remaining New '79
or '80 Model Car or Truck and Save Hundreds of DollarsPlus You'll Receive Fabulous Vjlcation of Your Choice
- Myrtle Beach, South ca rot ina or Nashville, Tennessee.

a

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300 SECOND AVE.

GALliPOliS, OHIO

LATONIA RESULTS

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) -Double '
Gleam captured the $5,000 featured
seventh race Friday night at
Latonia and paid ~,20, $3.20 an4
$2.60.
Boonetucky Buddy placed, $4.60
and $3.20 and Misty Bell, third, $3.00.
The IH double of Crickely and
Machito paid $59.00 and he crowd of
3,882 bet $463,688.

5-M-A-L-L C-A-R-5

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CAR REALTY, INC.
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By The Associated Press
There's no substitute for experience. The New England Whalers
are counting on it.
The Whalers signed 41-year-old
Bobby Hull this week and he worked
out with the team for the first time
Friday. But it was a man 10 years
Hull's senior, Gordie Howe, who led
New England to a 3-0 victory over
the St. Louis Blues Friday night.
The 51-year-old Howe scored his
sooth regular season National
Hockey League goal, flipping a wrist
shot between the pads of St. Louis
goalie Mike Liut at 1:27 of the third
period.
.
'
"Maybe Bobby inspired me,"
joked Howe, who h8s scored 14 goals ·
this season.
"I didn't get much rest tonight,"
he added. "I got a lot of ice time.
Now I'd like to get the next
milestone of 20 goals this season.''
Liut said, "He caught me out of
position. If I don't move to him, be's
got the whole far side. He made a
good play.It's experience."
In other NHL games Friday night,
the Vancouver Canucks and Winnipeg Jets fought to a :h'l tie and the
Buffalo Sabres beat the Edmonton
Oilers 4-2.
'
Hartford goalie AI Smith only had
to make 14 saves in the shutout.

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Floyd Rayford, inftelder-catcher. had agreed to

-...u....&amp;..: Dan Meadows

llOCKEY
Signed Ken

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

PITI'SBURGH PENGUINS - Signed Mark

Johnloo center, tea multi--year contract.
'
COLLI!GB
NIAGARA - Flrod Don Rukln. bead hasketboll C&lt;llch. Named Pete Lonergan head basketboll coach.
WAKE FORFSr - Named Ed Zaunbe&lt;:her offenlive coordinator and Dennis Darnell offensive
lineeoach.

Open 9 Til7 Dally
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" I stayed in shape lor' the past 1t
years at the Houston Fitness .Center," be said. "I ran three miles
every day."
The hard work finally paid off, as
Milburn swept past stwnbling Lance
Babb, another fonner member of
the defunct ITA, just before the
finish line and earned his first victory in five outings this year.
"I'm still optimistic about being
allowed to go to the Moscow Olympics despite the President's finn
stand (about boycotting the Swnmer
Games)," said Milburn. " If I don't
go, I'll still be around in 1984 and go
to (the Games) in Los Angeles."

W ANTS

Morrow, defenaeman, to a mulU-year contract.

'76 DODGE DART
$1850
$1895 6 cyl., auto .• air.
5

4 for the price of 3.

amate~ .

' T HE MAYOR

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Al1nOw1Ced tbat
Stewart and Larry Jooeo, pitchers, and

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(

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NEW YORK ISLANDERS -

BUT CHEAP

Stephenson, 28, who shot what she

called a " bad 71" Friday, held a 2stroke lead on the field after
Friday's round on the 6,l:i4-yard,
par-72 Hillcrest Golf Co~. She's at
7-under-par 137, with a quartert of
Judy RB'nkin, Sandra Palmer, Sue
Berning and Bonnie Lauer in hot
pursuit at 139 ,.

Homea~W

__

Tokulve, pitcher.

SPECIAL

professional International Track
Association.
After the' ITA folded in 1976,
Milburn waited until last November
before be again was declared an

SUN CITY, Ariz .. (APl - Transplanted Australian Jan Stephenson,
calling herself "emotionally upset,"
headed a field of 73 pros and three
amateurs into Sat~y's second
roundoftheLPGASunCityCiassic.

Transactions
.......,.
BASEBALL

pitcher, to a one-year contract.
PITI'SBURGH PIRATES - Signed Kent

1976 CHEVROLET
Vz TON

"It would not have been a successful indoor season if I had not
won," said Coghlan, who had lost his
last two races after wiMing 15 in a
row in the mile or 1,500 over three
years.
Milburn, the 1972 Olympic champion, said be wasn't "frustrated I

hadn't won yet" this season after
regaining his amate~ status.
"I couldn't be intimiated by being
third or fo~." said Milburn, who
had not run as an amate~ since
1973, the year he joined the

Stephenson heads field in Sun Classic

Blues Coach Red Berenson said,
seconds left to play. It was.WIWams'
''Tl)is is one of our poorest SO-minute
first goal since he was obtained by
perfonnances of the season. We've
VancouverfromTorontoonFeb.20. ,-------~-----'------------------------played bad periods before, but not
Vancouver goalie Gary Bromiey
an entire game."
had been lifted in favor of another
Gordie Roberts got the game's fir·
attacker when Ivan Boldirev circled
st goal when he beat Liut from close
behind the Winnipeg net and set up
range at 7:41 of the second period.
WUllams' tying goal.
His goal came during a delayed
Sabres (, Ollen 2
penalty call which had allowed the
Defenseman Richard Dunn scored
Whalers to lift Smith for an extra
two goal:! to lead Buffalo past Edskater.
monton. Three of the Sabres' four
After Howe made it 2-(1, Pat . goals came on power plays in the
Boulette lifted the puck over a fallen
rough game, which saw the Oilers
Liutlor Hartford's other goal at 6:15
play shotthanded for 12 consecutive
of the final period.
minutes during the second period afCanucu 3, Jets 3
ter defenseman Kevin Lowe was
Vancouver fought back from a ~
given a minor, major, two match
deficit with three third-period goals,
penalties and ejected from the game
finaUy gaining a tie when Dave
for kicking during a fight with the
"Tiger" Williams scored with just 12
Sabres' Tony McKegney .

CINCINNATI REDS- Signed Frank Pastore,

1975 FORD
BRONCO
4x4

Perhaps the field did not appear so
tough to Coghlan because he was so
overpowering.
In crui!ing to his impressive
triwriph, be had the .third fastest
three-mile time ever, the fastest for
an ll·lap-~e tracli: and the
fastest ever run in the United States.
Belgium's.Emiel Puttemans owns
the two fastest · indoor three-mile
clockings, 12:54.6 in 1976 and 12:58.9
in 1974.

55,000

l l::=~:§~§:~~-==:::1

••

and be competitive'/ ' said the
rejuvenated Milburn, after posting
his first victory as an amateur in
seven years, capturing the SO-yard
hurdles in 7.09 seconds.
Coghlan and Milburn were the
most popular performers in a meet
that·produced several world indoor
bests, American records and meet
marks.
"Every race until now I've been
· conunitted to run the mile (or 1,500
meters)," said Coghlan after
proving convincingly that he ·could
conquer longer distances on the
tricky banked indoor boards.
"I wanted to have one three-mile
race. I was hoping to break 13
minutes, and if the field was
tougher, the \ime definitely would
have been under 13 minutes "

CHICAGO WHITE SOX- 5i&amp;ned Randy Sea~
11ery and Fred Howard, J)ttcben.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS - AMOWI&lt;ed tbat
Phil Huffman. piidler, and. Willie Upshaw, outfielder, had qfted lo lenno.
Nou-ILoa...

.

l t...--POM..,... ':":'E:-::-RO':':'Y:-:M-:-::Oo=TO::-R~co=-.-

NEW YORK (APJ - For EamoM
Coghlan, it was just like another
cross-country event or roa.&lt;l.J:ace,
which he ran in his native Ireland
early in the win\er as a conditioner
for the American indoor track
season.
For Rod Milburn, it brought back
memories of years ago, when he was
the king of the high hurdlers.
"It was the easiest three-mile I've
ever run," said Coghlan, nonnally a
miler or !,~meter runner, after
shattering the·American all-comers
record with a clocking of 13 minutes,
U seconds Friday night .in the
National Indoor Track and Field
Chanipionships at Madison Square
Garden.
"There were times I had doubts.
Was I going to be able come back

lenni.

A.C., P .S., P.B. , cruise,
AM· FM . 301 engine .

1977 PLYMOUTH

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4Spd ., 4

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REGAL 2 DR

Coghlan calls 3-mile run 'easiest ever'

Howe paces New England

2 Adults and 2 Children

On South Carolina's
Beautiful

'GRAND STRAND'

LEBANON RESULTS

VACATION
FOR TWO
Meals and transportation
not included.

Meals and transportation
not Included.

Michigan State routed by Purdue

Sports

.

FOR TWO•••

Zoeller maystill be man to beat

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Dave
Eichelberger has the lead, but if
Masters champion Fuzzy Zoeller
can tame his erratic driver, be
might be the man to beat in the final
two rounds of the $300,000 Bay Hill
Golf Classic.
Zoeller sank seven birdies, but
also posted three bogeys and a
double bogey to settle for a thirdplace tie Friday on Arnold Palmer's
7,119-yard layout.
Eichelberger fired a f&gt;-under-par
66 Friday to pass first-round leader
Dan Pohl by one stroke at the mid-

·

YOUR CHOICE OF A VACATION

.

~Fuzzy

year when SIX Morehead, Ky.,
recreation enthusiasts traveled 200
miles by canoe up the Licking River
to bring the opening day ball to Cincinnati.
The baseball club chose this year's
promotion from suggestions submitted by a dozen fans.

College in Danville, Ky., in 1976,
Babbage moved to Cincinnati and
has 'worked in advertising (or the
past four years. He is also working
on his master's degree in education
at Xavier University.
1be Reds search lor a novel way to
begin the season was started last

tucky.
"I've planned my route and I think
I'll be able to walk 8-10 hours and
cover 30 to 35 miles a day," said
Babbage, who estimates that the
trip will .take him 15 days to walk
from the St. Louis headquarters of
RBwlings Sporting Goods, which

Sunday . :11arrh 2, 19811

•

Middleport, Ohio

I

PRI CES MAV \IAAY. AT INOI,V'IOUAL. ,STORES ·

.•

'

I

�~The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 2,

1980

~7-1be Sunday Times-Sentinel.

Reds fan to walk to opener, all the way from St. Louis
CINCINNATI (AP)- Last year, it
was a canoe which brought the
opening' day baseball to Riverfront
Stadium.
This year, the Cincinnati Reds
held a contest to see what new way
they could bring on the first ball.
The winner was Keen Babbage
who is going to walk it in - au the
: way from St. Louis where the
: baseball is made.
; "I guess you could say this is
• carrying your team spirit pretty
: far," admitted Babbage, "but I'm a
: real Reds fan. I grew up in

Lexington, and some of my best
memories are family trips to
Crosley Field and later to Riverfront. When I was in college, the
guys in the fraternity house would
Usten to the games every night. I'm
hooked on the Reds. "
The Reds are not the only reason

that Babbage is interested in
making the 431&gt;-mile trip. He's also
interested in promoting walking and
especially a fund-raising walk for
the March of Dimes.
When Babbage arrives at River-

front April 9, he will hand the ball
over to the Cincinnati area's 1980
March of Dimes poster child, Jason
Edwards, who will make the
ceremonial first pitch of the 1980
baseball season.
The route Babbage will take will
include plaMed overnight stops at
St. Libroy, Mt. Vernon and Merriam
in Illinois; Princeton, Huntingburg,
Marengo and New Albany in Indiana ; and Louisville, Simpsonville,
Frankfort, Lexington, Georgetown,
Williamstown and Covington in Ken-

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

makes the official major league
baseball.
He plans to spend most of his
nights with families who have volunleered their hospitality through local
chapters of the March of Dimes.
After graduation rrom centre

FREE1
·

:
;
:
:
·
·
··

briefs. .

•

GOLF

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Dave
Eichelberger posted an early [).
under-par 66 for a 136 total and made
it stand up all day to take a !-stroke
lead over first-round leader Dan
Pohl at the midway point of the
$300,000 Bay Hill Golf Classic.
Buddy Gardner shot a 67 to tie
Miller Barber and Fuzzy Zoeller for
third place at 137.
SUN CITY, Ariz. + Jan Stephenson shot a 71 and increased her lead
to two shots after two rounds of the
Sun City Classic.
Her 36-hole total of 139 withstood
the challenge of several of the pros
at 'Hillcrest Golf Course, with a
group of four coming home at 5 under. They include Sandra Palmer,
Judy Rankin, and Sue Berning, all of
whom sl)ot 70s and Bonnie Lauer,
who finished at 71.
TENNIS
MEMPHIS, TeM. (AP) -Jimmy
Connors and John McEnroe, the top

two seeds in the U.S. National Indoor
Tennis Championships, moved into
the semilinals by overpowering
their opponents.
Top-seeded McEnroe ousted Bob
Lutz U, ~. &amp;-I, while Connors beat
John Sadri, the No.8 seed, &amp;-2, &amp;-2.
Third-seeded Roscoe Tanner lost
• to No. 5seed Harold Solomon 6-4, U,
&amp;-2.
HOUSTON (AP) - Eighth-seeded
Greer Stevens stunned second' seeded Tracy Austin~. 6-4 to reach
the semifinals rJ the $150,000
Women's Pro T4!nnis Tournament.
Stevens' opponent in' the
semifinals will be No.3 seed Billie
Jean King, who defeated Sue Barker
6-4,7-5.

Top-seeded Martina Navratilova
: defeated Virgina Rt12ici 7-5, &amp;-2 and
: will meet fourtb-seeded Wendy Turnbull In the semifinals. Turnbull
• defeated Dianne Fromholtz 6-4, &amp;-2.
ASUNCION, Paraguay (AP) Victor Pecci of Paraguay upset
·• Bjorn Borg of Sweden 6-4, 6-4, &amp;-2 in a
; best«·five challenge match.
.:
In another match, Francisco Goo'• zalcz of Puerto Rico beat Vilas
:,·• Gerulaitis 6-4, H

.•

:; ,---------- - - r

~

•
•

••

BIG
DISCOUNTS
PLUS
REBATES
ON SOME '79
MODELS

•,

way point. Eichelberger was at 7linder-par 135.
Pohl added a 72 to his opening 64 to
go six strokes under.
Zoeller, a &amp;-year veteran who has
one other victory ·besid~ the 1979
Masters, was tied at 137, two strokes
back, with veteran Miller Barber
and third-year pro Buddy Gardner.
"I've been putting well in recent
weeks and that's what's saved me,"
Zoeller said. "I'm not driving well at
all.''

He whacked a tee shot into the

trees on the 18th hole and wound up
with a double-bogey six.
"But I'm working on consistency,
and I feel I've been playing well so
far this year," Zoeller said.
Jim Colbert and Leonard Thornpeon were three strokes off the pace
at4-under-par 138.
Tom Wejskopf was at 139 and Bill
Kratzert carded a 140 total. The
tour's money leader, Tom Watson,
shot a 71 Friday for a 143 total eight strokes back of the leaders.
Tournament host Palmer and

VACATION
FOR TWO

Gary Player just rruinaged to make
the cut with two-day totals of 147.
The 144-man field was reduced to
75 players shooting 148 or lower.
Eichelberger, who has won the
Greater Milwaukee Open twice for
his only tour victories in his 12-year
career, had the day's low round with
his66.
The 48-year-old Barber started the
second round at 4-under-par and
went to 9-under after eight holes. But
bogeys on four of the next six holes
gave him a 70 for the day.

4 DAYS • 3 NIGHTS
2 ADULTS AND 2 CHILDREN

.

Plus
-4 heel drive Chevy
Pickups &amp; Blazers
4-Wheel Drive LUV
Plc.kups
-Chevy Citations &amp;
Chevettes In Stock.

WESTLAFAYETI'E, Ind. (AP)Senior center Joe Barry Carroll
scored 26 points Sat~y as 18thrated Purdue routed Michigan State
91-73 to claim undisputed possession
of third place in the final Big Ten
. . Conference basketball race.
The Boilermakers, who hope their
third place finish will earn them an
NCAA bid on Sunday, took the lead
for good midway in the first half as
the Spartans went nearly six
minutes without a field goal.
Purdue rallied from a 1&amp;-11 deficit
to open a 31&gt;-22 advantage. Carroll
had 5 points, while Drake Morris and

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) -

In-

truding Butler nosed out Miss

Korina ina photo finish Friday night
to with the $1,200 featured pace mile
at Lebanon and paid $12.60, ~.60 and
$5.60.
The place horse returned $4.60 and
$3.20 and Lamar's Me Too, the show
horse, $3.00.
Jug's Knight and Satin SUpper
combined 2-4 in the double for $33.20.

IN
· "MUSIC CITY U.S.A."
Nashville, Tennessee

MYRTLE BEACH

Stay at the beautiful
Best Western
Nashville-Central Hotel

Stay in the Executive Holiday Inn directly on the
ocean.

Michigan State never drew closer
than 8 points.
Purdue, which shared the Big Ten
tiUe with Michigan State and Iowa
Junior Jay Vincent, the Big Ten's last season, finished its regular
scoring leader who finished with 23 . season with a 11·7 conference record
points, sparked a Michigan State .and an 18-9 overall mark.
Michigan State, forced to rebulld
comeback that cut their deli~it to
from
last season's NCAA chamtwo .points, 32-30 with 4: OJ left In the
pionship
when Greg Keiser
half. But, Purdue came back with
graduated
and Earvin "Magic"
seven consecutive points and had
Johnson
elected
to sign a National
five more points after a Spartan
Basketball
Association
contract afbasket while opening a commanding
ter his sophOmore year, ended its
46-;14 halftime advantage.
season &amp;-12 in league play and 11-16
Carroll scored Purdue's first four
overall.
goals of the second half. and

Keith Edmonson each had a pair of
field goals as Purdue outscored the
Spartans 15-4 to pull away.

Now at Carroll Norris Dodge Buy a Remaining New '79
or '80 Model Car or Truck and Save Hundreds of DollarsPlus You'll Receive Fabulous Vjlcation of Your Choice
- Myrtle Beach, South ca rot ina or Nashville, Tennessee.

a

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE
300 SECOND AVE.

GALliPOliS, OHIO

LATONIA RESULTS

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) -Double '
Gleam captured the $5,000 featured
seventh race Friday night at
Latonia and paid ~,20, $3.20 an4
$2.60.
Boonetucky Buddy placed, $4.60
and $3.20 and Misty Bell, third, $3.00.
The IH double of Crickely and
Machito paid $59.00 and he crowd of
3,882 bet $463,688.

5-M-A-L-L C-A-R-5

* SMALL
CAR REALTY, INC.
CAR HEADQUARTERS

1977 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

1977 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

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-r

l .. .
Ij

112.1111
·

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PGM
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"·

2 Dr.

like new.

By The Associated Press
There's no substitute for experience. The New England Whalers
are counting on it.
The Whalers signed 41-year-old
Bobby Hull this week and he worked
out with the team for the first time
Friday. But it was a man 10 years
Hull's senior, Gordie Howe, who led
New England to a 3-0 victory over
the St. Louis Blues Friday night.
The 51-year-old Howe scored his
sooth regular season National
Hockey League goal, flipping a wrist
shot between the pads of St. Louis
goalie Mike Liut at 1:27 of the third
period.
.
'
"Maybe Bobby inspired me,"
joked Howe, who h8s scored 14 goals ·
this season.
"I didn't get much rest tonight,"
he added. "I got a lot of ice time.
Now I'd like to get the next
milestone of 20 goals this season.''
Liut said, "He caught me out of
position. If I don't move to him, be's
got the whole far side. He made a
good play.It's experience."
In other NHL games Friday night,
the Vancouver Canucks and Winnipeg Jets fought to a :h'l tie and the
Buffalo Sabres beat the Edmonton
Oilers 4-2.
'
Hartford goalie AI Smith only had
to make 14 saves in the shutout.

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'

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'74 MAZDA RX-4
Dr. , auto., air, AMFM, new llres. 42,000

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'76 GREMLIN
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1850

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Great car, Rally wheels,
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4

'70 FORD GALAXIE
$199
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'72 BUICK LESABRE '
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'78 FORD 1h lON
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25,000 miles, 6 cvi ., 3 s3395
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TAWNEY

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~W ITH

CHARGE IT

HIM!

(MOST STORES)

Floyd Rayford, inftelder-catcher. had agreed to

-...u....&amp;..: Dan Meadows

llOCKEY
Signed Ken

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

PITI'SBURGH PENGUINS - Signed Mark

Johnloo center, tea multi--year contract.
'
COLLI!GB
NIAGARA - Flrod Don Rukln. bead hasketboll C&lt;llch. Named Pete Lonergan head basketboll coach.
WAKE FORFSr - Named Ed Zaunbe&lt;:her offenlive coordinator and Dennis Darnell offensive
lineeoach.

Open 9 Til7 Dally
Clased Sunday

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" I stayed in shape lor' the past 1t
years at the Houston Fitness .Center," be said. "I ran three miles
every day."
The hard work finally paid off, as
Milburn swept past stwnbling Lance
Babb, another fonner member of
the defunct ITA, just before the
finish line and earned his first victory in five outings this year.
"I'm still optimistic about being
allowed to go to the Moscow Olympics despite the President's finn
stand (about boycotting the Swnmer
Games)," said Milburn. " If I don't
go, I'll still be around in 1984 and go
to (the Games) in Los Angeles."

W ANTS

Morrow, defenaeman, to a mulU-year contract.

'76 DODGE DART
$1850
$1895 6 cyl., auto .• air.
5

4 for the price of 3.

amate~ .

' T HE MAYOR

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Al1nOw1Ced tbat
Stewart and Larry Jooeo, pitchers, and

Na-Hod&lt;eylape

1973' 2 dr
Cadillac $79500
1973 Catalina

6 cyl., 4 spd . trans.,
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r~------::::=============~~-~

(

Sammy

NEW YORK ISLANDERS -

BUT CHEAP

Stephenson, 28, who shot what she

called a " bad 71" Friday, held a 2stroke lead on the field after
Friday's round on the 6,l:i4-yard,
par-72 Hillcrest Golf Co~. She's at
7-under-par 137, with a quartert of
Judy RB'nkin, Sandra Palmer, Sue
Berning and Bonnie Lauer in hot
pursuit at 139 ,.

Homea~W

__

Tokulve, pitcher.

SPECIAL

professional International Track
Association.
After the' ITA folded in 1976,
Milburn waited until last November
before be again was declared an

SUN CITY, Ariz .. (APl - Transplanted Australian Jan Stephenson,
calling herself "emotionally upset,"
headed a field of 73 pros and three
amateurs into Sat~y's second
roundoftheLPGASunCityCiassic.

Transactions
.......,.
BASEBALL

pitcher, to a one-year contract.
PITI'SBURGH PIRATES - Signed Kent

1976 CHEVROLET
Vz TON

"It would not have been a successful indoor season if I had not
won," said Coghlan, who had lost his
last two races after wiMing 15 in a
row in the mile or 1,500 over three
years.
Milburn, the 1972 Olympic champion, said be wasn't "frustrated I

hadn't won yet" this season after
regaining his amate~ status.
"I couldn't be intimiated by being
third or fo~." said Milburn, who
had not run as an amate~ since
1973, the year he joined the

Stephenson heads field in Sun Classic

Blues Coach Red Berenson said,
seconds left to play. It was.WIWams'
''Tl)is is one of our poorest SO-minute
first goal since he was obtained by
perfonnances of the season. We've
VancouverfromTorontoonFeb.20. ,-------~-----'------------------------played bad periods before, but not
Vancouver goalie Gary Bromiey
an entire game."
had been lifted in favor of another
Gordie Roberts got the game's fir·
attacker when Ivan Boldirev circled
st goal when he beat Liut from close
behind the Winnipeg net and set up
range at 7:41 of the second period.
WUllams' tying goal.
His goal came during a delayed
Sabres (, Ollen 2
penalty call which had allowed the
Defenseman Richard Dunn scored
Whalers to lift Smith for an extra
two goal:! to lead Buffalo past Edskater.
monton. Three of the Sabres' four
After Howe made it 2-(1, Pat . goals came on power plays in the
Boulette lifted the puck over a fallen
rough game, which saw the Oilers
Liutlor Hartford's other goal at 6:15
play shotthanded for 12 consecutive
of the final period.
minutes during the second period afCanucu 3, Jets 3
ter defenseman Kevin Lowe was
Vancouver fought back from a ~
given a minor, major, two match
deficit with three third-period goals,
penalties and ejected from the game
finaUy gaining a tie when Dave
for kicking during a fight with the
"Tiger" Williams scored with just 12
Sabres' Tony McKegney .

CINCINNATI REDS- Signed Frank Pastore,

1975 FORD
BRONCO
4x4

Perhaps the field did not appear so
tough to Coghlan because he was so
overpowering.
In crui!ing to his impressive
triwriph, be had the .third fastest
three-mile time ever, the fastest for
an ll·lap-~e tracli: and the
fastest ever run in the United States.
Belgium's.Emiel Puttemans owns
the two fastest · indoor three-mile
clockings, 12:54.6 in 1976 and 12:58.9
in 1974.

55,000

l l::=~:§~§:~~-==:::1

••

and be competitive'/ ' said the
rejuvenated Milburn, after posting
his first victory as an amateur in
seven years, capturing the SO-yard
hurdles in 7.09 seconds.
Coghlan and Milburn were the
most popular performers in a meet
that·produced several world indoor
bests, American records and meet
marks.
"Every race until now I've been
· conunitted to run the mile (or 1,500
meters)," said Coghlan after
proving convincingly that he ·could
conquer longer distances on the
tricky banked indoor boards.
"I wanted to have one three-mile
race. I was hoping to break 13
minutes, and if the field was
tougher, the \ime definitely would
have been under 13 minutes "

CHICAGO WHITE SOX- 5i&amp;ned Randy Sea~
11ery and Fred Howard, J)ttcben.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS - AMOWI&lt;ed tbat
Phil Huffman. piidler, and. Willie Upshaw, outfielder, had qfted lo lenno.
Nou-ILoa...

.

l t...--POM..,... ':":'E:-::-RO':':'Y:-:M-:-::Oo=TO::-R~co=-.-

NEW YORK (APJ - For EamoM
Coghlan, it was just like another
cross-country event or roa.&lt;l.J:ace,
which he ran in his native Ireland
early in the win\er as a conditioner
for the American indoor track
season.
For Rod Milburn, it brought back
memories of years ago, when he was
the king of the high hurdlers.
"It was the easiest three-mile I've
ever run," said Coghlan, nonnally a
miler or !,~meter runner, after
shattering the·American all-comers
record with a clocking of 13 minutes,
U seconds Friday night .in the
National Indoor Track and Field
Chanipionships at Madison Square
Garden.
"There were times I had doubts.
Was I going to be able come back

lenni.

A.C., P .S., P.B. , cruise,
AM· FM . 301 engine .

1977 PLYMOUTH

FOR YOUR GAS SAVER, CAl! 446-7118
'76 HONDA CIVIC
'74 MUSTANG
Silver, nice, auto., air.
12795 3 Dr., Hpd, 4cyl. 51,000 $1650
mi les.
'76 PONTIAC ASTRE
'74 VEGA WAGON
cyi.
$2095 Auto.,
4 cyl.,
~95
miles. Runs gOOd.
·u
4Spd ., 4

1978 BUICK
REGAL 2 DR

Coghlan calls 3-mile run 'easiest ever'

Howe paces New England

2 Adults and 2 Children

On South Carolina's
Beautiful

'GRAND STRAND'

LEBANON RESULTS

VACATION
FOR TWO
Meals and transportation
not included.

Meals and transportation
not Included.

Michigan State routed by Purdue

Sports

.

FOR TWO•••

Zoeller maystill be man to beat

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Dave
Eichelberger has the lead, but if
Masters champion Fuzzy Zoeller
can tame his erratic driver, be
might be the man to beat in the final
two rounds of the $300,000 Bay Hill
Golf Classic.
Zoeller sank seven birdies, but
also posted three bogeys and a
double bogey to settle for a thirdplace tie Friday on Arnold Palmer's
7,119-yard layout.
Eichelberger fired a f&gt;-under-par
66 Friday to pass first-round leader
Dan Pohl by one stroke at the mid-

·

YOUR CHOICE OF A VACATION

.

~Fuzzy

year when SIX Morehead, Ky.,
recreation enthusiasts traveled 200
miles by canoe up the Licking River
to bring the opening day ball to Cincinnati.
The baseball club chose this year's
promotion from suggestions submitted by a dozen fans.

College in Danville, Ky., in 1976,
Babbage moved to Cincinnati and
has 'worked in advertising (or the
past four years. He is also working
on his master's degree in education
at Xavier University.
1be Reds search lor a novel way to
begin the season was started last

tucky.
"I've planned my route and I think
I'll be able to walk 8-10 hours and
cover 30 to 35 miles a day," said
Babbage, who estimates that the
trip will .take him 15 days to walk
from the St. Louis headquarters of
RBwlings Sporting Goods, which

Sunday . :11arrh 2, 19811

•

Middleport, Ohio

I

PRI CES MAV \IAAY. AT INOI,V'IOUAL. ,STORES ·

.•

'

I

�D

classified

INVITES ALL TO

Highway improvement bill work nears end

OUR•••

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Approved 711-22 by the House last
Working against a Wednesday
week, the proposed constitutional
deadline, the Senate will try to comamendment would allow the state to
plete legislative action this week on
issue $500 million worth of highway
a ballot proposal which seeks to adimprovement bonds over the next
dress Ohio's need for highway and five years.
bridge improvements.
Actually, it contains authority for
It will be alred by the Senate amother $700 million in the decade
Finance Committee on Monday ' after 1985, but its language ties the
night, as the Senate returns from
issuance of bonds to certification
that existing tax revenues will be .
weekend recess a day ahead of the
House. Tentative plans call for
sufficient to retire them.
Senate floor action Wednesday, the
Those revenues - from one penny
last day for placing issues on the
of the seven cents-a-gallon gasoline
state's June 3 ballot.
tax, and the axle mile truck tax -

SEALY

SOFA BED AND CHAIR
(1 I 2 Pc . Blue Strip
Reg. $339.95
(2) 2 Pc., 1 Gold, 1 Green,
Flowered
Reg . $469.95
(2) 2 Pc., 1 Black, 1 Red Vinyl
Reg. $389.95
(1 I 2 Pc. Brown Velvet
Reg. $499.95

NOW $249.95

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COMPONENT WITH 8 TRACK FM, AM, RECORD PLAYER,
3000 SPEAKERS, COMPONENT CAB AND SPEAKER
STANDS WAS 1748.84 ......... ................ NOW 1599.95
(1) USED VCR TAPE RECORDER FOR TV
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NOW

3 Pc. Living Room Suite
.
Reg. 5399...................... .. . .. . _. _...... . .•• Now 5249.95
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3 Pc. Early American Living Room Suite, Antron nylon
velvet,

Save $40.00 to $100.00 on each piece. Refrigerator, gas
and electric ranges, washers and dryers, chest &amp;
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CLOSEOUT GIBSON FREEZERS.
..
·
SALE $329 95
15 cu. ft. Chest
Reg. $399.95
25 cu. ft. Chest
Reg. $499.95
SALE $399.95

SWIVEL ROCKERS, ASST. COLORS

1-------------.
.
.
.
BEDROOM SUITE SALE

.,

9 Pc. All Wood Frame, Living Room Suite,
sofa, chair, rocker, foot stool, 3 tables, 2
lamps, nylon velvet cover.
Reg. S110o.oo

$89995

5 Pc. All wood Frame Living Room Suite,
sofa, chair, 3tables, 2lamps.
Reg. $799.95 SALE

$ 4·9995

WITH MA nRESS

(1) Brown Reg.I699.95 .............. ........NOW '479.95
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PaddedTops,Reg.S299.95NOW
$199
(1) Rust, Beige Flower Reg. '699.95 ... ..... NOW ' 4 6 9 . 9 5 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " 1

LANE CEDAR CHEST

BUY ONE GET

(1) Blue Flowered Reg. SS99.95 .......... NOW '449.95 LAMP SALE
ONE FREE
(1) Red, Green Vase Reg. 1579.95 .......... NOW '459.95 a.,.;;;;,:.,;;;,;,;,;;.;;..,;;,;;;.;;.;;;;,;;;,;,__________"'
(J) Brown, Beige Plaid Reg. 1599.95 ........ NOW '399.95

LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE
2 PC. TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITE
Rust I Brown.
Reg. $699.95

SALE *599.95

3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
Old Mill Stream.
Reg. s1, u;o.oo

SALE *899.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE
Velvet, tree pattern .
Reg. $799.95

Reg. 5799.95

SALE '599.95

3 PC. MODERN
SOLID
BROWN LIVING ROOM SUITE
(Fun)

Reg. $199.95
NOW $50.00 ea.
Reg. $49.95
NOW $29.95
Reg. $59.95
NOW 539.95

REG. ,59•95 ........... _.. NOW 138•88
ALL UPRIGHTS .........119.95 AND UP

Get Free Attachments

~eg. s79.95

FREE MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
.
FULL OR QUEEN WITH EVERY BEDROOM SUITE

DINING ROOM SUITE SALE
BASSm REG. 11099.95......................... NOW 1899.95
Hutch, Table, 6 Chairs.

BASSm PINE REG. 11795.00 ................ NOW 11495.00

MAPLE OR OAK TABLE REG. 1699.95.......... SALE 1499.95

BED SALE
BRASS BEDS
QUEEN REG. '329.95 ...... , ..... NOW '249.95
TWIN REG. '49.95 ................... NOW '29.95
FULL REG. ·'59.95 .................... NOW '39.95
QUEEN REG. '69.95 ................ NOW -'49.95

Reg . $139.95 NOW

7 PC. BREAKFAST SET

Slightly Damaged
Reg. $199.95 To $229.95 NOW

KING REG. '99.95 ...................NOW '59.95

5 PC.

95
Reg. $239.95 NOW

BUNK BEDS
Starting At

$99

$149~~mplete

.....----------""'1
3 PC. COFFEE AND 2 END TABLES
Pine and Oak '
Reg. $399.95 Set

Table &amp; 6 Chairs.

BRASS HEAD BOARDS

DOUBLE PEDESTAl: DESK

SALE 1799.95

SALE *799.95

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, OAK, WAS 1599.95... NOW 1499.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, BASSm, PECAN
WAS 1799.95 ....................................... NOW '699.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, BASSm, OAK,
WAS 1899.95 ........... ................... ... ...... NOW 1799.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, BASSm, PINE,
WAS 1899.95...................................... NOW '799.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, WEDD, UGHT PINE,
WAS '999.95. ................ -..................... NOW 1899.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, WEBB, DARK PINE,
WAS '999.95 ..... -... -............ -............... NOW 1899.95
4 PC. RIBERSIDE, MAPLE, WAS 11999.95 .... .NOW 11488.00

NOW *39.95

(2) MAPLE, OPEN FRONT CHINA
Reg . $239.95 NOW *139.9$

Yellow and Red.

SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1980

PAGE 1-D.

Hostage negotiations
being held. Saturday

SSAALLEE S$339999.9955
•

4 Side Chairs, 2 captains Chairs.

PINE AND MAPLE ROUND LAMP TABLES

$6.9

Reg. $999.95

Reg. $499 .95
Reg. $439.95

Hutch, Table, 6 Chairs.

SEALY KING SIZE MATTRESS
Reg. $499.95
AND BOX SPRINGS
SALE •1
. .
3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
SEAlY MATIRESS &amp;
, SECONDS &amp;
Gold-Plaid or Velvet.
. SALE *599.95
Reg. 5799.95
95And up
BOX SPRING
2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET WITH WOOD TRIM
Reg. 51288.00

21 cu. ft. Upright
16 cu. ft. Upright

PINE OR MAPLE REG. 1549.95 ............... SALE 1399.95

SALE *599.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE .

VOL. 15 NO. 5

AND SUNRAY

SEALY REDI BED

(1) Gold Flower Reg. 1499.95 ................ NOW '399.95

in a House committee.
But the director said the pending
plan would give his financially
strapped agency the funds to qualify
for about $489 million in available
federal funds. This would let the
department get under way on many
priority projects which have had to
be put on the shelf, he said.
The Senate holds a Monday night
floor session to get the legislative
week under way. It has three comparatively routine bills scheduled
for a vote. House members reconvene Tuesday morning.

BIGSON, FRIGIDAIRE, MAYTAG

REG. $299.95 NOW

(21 Stationary Chairs
New Chest, 4 Dr.
New Chest, 5 Dr.

reviewed the proposal briefly last
week, indicated he has reservations
about it and will have some amendments.
For one thing, the veteran
Mahooing County lawmaker
questioned the wisdom of earmarking money which is currently
being used for transportation department operating purposes.
Transportation Director David L.
Weir said the one penny from the gas
tax and the axle mile tax now is

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

NOW 139,9.95 PI.~:;..:-5;;_79;,;9,;,;.9,;;.5;.:,--~--~"~"~'-~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~'~"~-·;.;,··;.;,No,o,;w,;.$;;.;4.;,;88iio.Oiol0--l
1
NOW 449.95
NEW SHIPMENT .
1
NOW 599.95
NOW '699.95 1-.;.;;.;.;.;;,.;;;,;;;.__;...._...;,_~~~~~--1
NOW 1849.95
ALSO 25 RECLINERS TO CHOOSE
NOW '699.95
AND UP

.13" COLOR TV WAS 1439.95
1
19" COLOR TV WAS 499.95
23" COLOR TV MAPLE, PECAN WAS '699.95
25" COLOR TV 1799.95 WAS 1799.95
25" SPACE COM. TV WAS '949.95
25" COLOR TV WAS 1899.95

may or may not be sufficient, depending on whose view is accepted.
A group of _majority Democrats
fought the bond issue in the House,
saying it might provide bond money
for a year or two, but then would
require a tax hike.
Fifteen Democrats and seven
Republicans opposed it there, while
44 Democrats and ?.6 Republicans
voted for it.
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown, whose panel

bringing in about $40 million a year
more than needed to retire highway
bonds already outstanding.
But he conceded the $40 million
helps subsidize the department in
other ways, and could not say how it
could be replaced.
Weir also raised some finance
committee eyebrows when he said
the new bond issue, if approved,
would fall short of meeting Ohio's
total transportation needs.
The department had proposed $2.5
billion in bonds over 10 years in a
proposal voted down late last month

APPLIANCES SALE

2 PC. SOFA BED &amp; CHAIR

NOW 5339 .95

ZENITH SALE

A.OOR MODEL STEREO REG.

Square or Hex End Tables Reg. 179.95 ......... NOW •38.00
Wood Rocker Reg. 1179.95 _...... ... .. _... _...... NOW •aa.oo

AP news analysis

SALE '299.95 SET

METAL

.

.

WARDROBE &amp; KnatEN CABINET SALE
REG. $79.95 .;.................... ,..... NOW '49.95 £A
REG. '99.95: ....... ~ ............ :..... NOW $49.95 EA.
REG. $129.95.....~ .............. ,............ NOW *89.95 ·
42" METAL KITCHEN CABINET
. REG~ '189.95 ........................:...... NOW '99.$5
30'' METAL KITCHEN QUNA CABINET
REG. 5139.95.. :............ :.... .".... ~ ...... NOW $79:95
24" BASE CABINET REG. '69.95 .. ;... NOW '39.95 .
.

'

•

.

.

.

•

l

LIKE A LAMB? - March which is traditionaUy
supposed to "come in like a lamb and go out like a Uon"
came on strong Saturday. Residents who had retired
Friday night with the prediction of "little ac-

cumulation" foWld their cars covered with the deepest
snow of the year when they arose Saturday morning.
Four inches fell overnight and the snow was still
coming down at 4 p.m. Saturday.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) Negotiations were set to begin Satur·
day between the Colombian government and guerrillas holding some 41
hostages inside the Dominican Embassy, including U.S. Ambassador
Diego C. Asencio and 14 other envoys.
President Julio Cesar Turbay
Ayala's govenunent Friday night
reversed its longstanding policy
against negotiating with terrorists
after the guerrillas holding the embassy threatened to kill two of their
diplomatic captives.
In a telephone interview with the
Colombian radio station Caracol, a
guerrilla leader accused the government of reneging on a promise to
negotiate even though the guerrillas
had released all their women caplives in reply to government demands. He ~tened to kill two unnamed diplomats by 10 p.m. EST.
Ninety ~ minutes before the
deadline, the govenunent broadcast
an urgent message over Colombian
radio stations offering to open talks
iuunediately. It said negotiations
could be held in a "camioneta,"
Spanish for station wagon or van,
parked in full view of the embassy so
· it could be watched by the
guerrillas.
"As a new demonstration of its interest in resolving the situation," the
government "accedes to the
proposal of the ambassadors that
the dialogue be initiated," the gover·
JUnent statement said.
The deadline passed without incident and a guerrilla .. spokesman
told a local radio station the death
threal was lifted because of the
government's announcement.

• • meeting
•
Mill•tantS d eny comnnsston
By Allsoclated Pre8s
Militants holding the U.S. Embassy in Tehran Saturday denied
having agreed to an imminent
meeting between the visiting U.N.
commission and the American
hostages, but the panel still expects
to see the captives before ending its
investigation of Iran's grievances
against the deposed shah.
Aspokesman for the militants said
in a telephone interview the fiveman U.N. panel was not expected at
the occupied embassy today and
there was no indication of a visit
with the hostages in the near future.
His conunents came amid a spate
of rumors suggesting Iranian
authorities had secured approval of
the militants for such a meeting
following secret talks with government officials. Since the embassy
takeover Nov. 4, the militants have
repeatedly demanded the return of
deposed Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi in exchange for the
Americans' release.
The ,commission, meanwhile, met
this morning with Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who has
already promised the panel will be
allowed to visit the hostages, held
captive for 119 days.
The talks dealt with "meatls by
which the pamil would continue its
work," Tehran radio said in a broadcast monitored in Itllwait. The radio
said no details of the talks were

given but that the group was
believed to have discussed whether
the commissfon would be aUowed to
visit the Americans.
The radio also reported that Abdul
Karim Mossawi Ardabili, Iran's
newly-appointed attorney general,
had urged the commission to
"anounce their findings to the
world" and expressed strong
backing for the embassy militants.
The embassy occupation "is in
line with the revolution's strategy
not to be subservient to either East
or West," the radio quoted him as
saying Friday.
ASked whether such a visit was
possible soon, U.N. spokesman
Samir Sambar said only that members of the commissioo Iwere
"hopeful."
He also told reporters: "It would
be misleading to concentrate on
seeing the hostages as the only function the commission has."
Aspokesman for the militants who
seized the embassy Nov. 4 denied
again that a meeting between the
commission members and hostages
was Imminent, suggesting anew that
Iranian government officials are
having a difficult time getting the
militants to agree to it.
Foreign Minister Sa:degh Ghotlr
zadeh already has promised that the
panel will be allo\\'ed to visit the approximately 50 American hostages,
who spent their 119th day in cap-

·
tivity Saturday.
The U.N. spokesman said that
while the five-man commission still
hoped to meet with the hostages, the
panel also was pursuing other
means to ease the U.S.-Iran crisis.
Sambar refused to pinpoint the
date of the commission's departure
from Iran, but said it would not be
before the middle of next week. He
also said the commission was
already drafting its report for U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim.
The commission spent Saturday,
its seventh full day in Tehran,
meeting again with Ghotbzadeh and
gathering more information oo
alleged human rights violatioll8 under the regime of deposed Shah
Mohammad Reza Pah!avi.
Sambar would not disclose details
of the commission's meeting with
Ghotbzadeh except to say the status
of the hostages was discussed. The
meeting lasted just less than two
hours.
MUST LEASH DOGS
POMEROY - Pomeroy dog
ownen are advised by Pollee
Chief Harry Lyo1111 that IHre ill a
leash law ord!Dance In effect In
Pomeroy. Dogs most be confiDed
or OD a leash. U complaiDt callJ
contlmle, legal actioo will be
~en, the chief wams.

Earlier, the estimated 30
guerriUas who stormed the embassy
Wednesday during a Dominican Independence Day celebration freed
their last five women hostages, one
of the conditions the govenunent set
before It would open talks.
Ten other women were freed Thursday, along with a 1&amp;-year-old boy,
and three wounded men, including
the acting ambassador of Paraguay.
The guerrillas also sent out the body
of one of their comrades killed
during the takeover.
The guerrillas, members of the M19, or Apri119 Movement, the most
active and violent urban terrorist
group in Colombia, are demanding
$50 million in ransom, freedom for
311 alleged political prisoners,
publication of an anti·govenunent
manifesto in foreign newspapers
and safe passage out of the country.
They have said their demands are
negotiable, but they claim they are
prepared to hold the embassy for
one to two months.
In a telephone conversation with a
radio station in Caracas, Venezuela,
one of the guerrillas said the
hostages "must necessarily accompany us to our ultimate
destination." He did not say what
country the guerrillas wanted to go
to but hinted it could be Venezuela.
Panama has offered to grant the
guerrillas political asylum in an ef-

fort to end the crisis.
In a telephone interview with The
Associated Press in Washington,
U.S. Ambassador Asencio said the
hostages were being "treated
correctly" and were in good condition.
The exact number of hostages inside the embassy has not been
established, although the commander of the guerrillas, who calls
himself Comandante Numero UnoCommander No. I - said 60 were
there when it was seized four days
ago.
At least 15 of those still in the embassy are either ambassadors or acting ambassadors. The others are
believed to be lower ranking
diplomats and embassy employees.
Along with Asencio of the United
States, the ambassadors are: Edgar
Selzer of Austria; Reinaldo de
Careroalso, acting ambassador of
Bolivia; Ger'ald Eulalia do
Nascimiento e Silva of Brazil;
Diogenes Mayil Burgos of the
Dominican Republic; Mauricio Garcia ' Priesto of El Salvador; Salm
Aloha of Egypt; Aquiles Pinto
Florez of Guatemala; Leonard
Pierre Louis of Haiti; Aliahu Barak
of Israel; Ricardo Galan of Mexico;
Jean Bourgeois of Switzerland; Fernando Gomez of Uruguay; Monenor
Angel Cervi of the Vatican and
Virgilio Lovera of Venezuela.

LIONLIKE - Without a
.doubt, most area residents
were awakened by quite a
surprise this morning, the
largest snowfall in over a
year. While March arrived
· like a lion, it may leave
hopefully like a lamb. Saturday's snow measures as high
as 10 or 11 inches in the tricounty area. It has forced
cancellation of meetings,
· ballgames and other
weekend activity. In other
parts of the state, (Cin~innati
area) snow alerts have been
posted and major interstate
highways have been closed.

MARKET SHOWS RALLY
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock

market staged a modest technical
rally in relatively quiet trading
today.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 3.84 to 858.28 by noontime.
Gainers outnumbered losers by a
1).3 margin among New York Stock
Exchange-listed issues.
In the news, the government
reported that the index of leading
economic indicators dropped 0. 7 percent in January, for Its fourth
straight monthly decline.

Kennedy heads home for .contest he can't afford to lose
By Alsoclated Preas
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is going
home to MassachuSetts for the contest he can't afford to lose to
President Carter. :rhe political oddsnlakers say be'll be safe there, in
the banda ol the voters who four
times elected him to the Senate.
. But the oddsmakers aten't having
avery good BeiUICIII, and Kennedy is
~ 111tely to gain the kind of
w.-cbuletts )andsllde to which he
baa become aCC\IBtomed.
; ~ last pUblillhed poll rated Ken. !ll!dy a l-1leader in Massachusetts,
I \Jut that Will before Carter beat him
~ly ' lil Maine imd Comfortably
1,11 the New Hampsbjre preal~entlru
primary electlon last TueSday. ,
' New Hampshire made It~ In a
(ow fGr 'Carte- ewer ~ennedy, and
\Ill pneideat also won big In the flrsl

phue rl ~·s Den)ocratic
del9te aelection procesS. KeMedy
· dldnlt put lip a ·campaign in the

dsUcte victor in his Senate elections,
primary 00 Tuesday, too. The
home state of Vice President Walter
Democratic
contest
is
rated
cl011e
·
he hasn't faced a formidable
F.Mondale.
between
Carter
and
Kennedy,
whose
challenge
since his first contest in
Massachusetts is a must for Kenloss
in
New
Hampshire
isn't
going
to
Massachusetts
18 years ago. ·
nedy, and -a crucial contest for
do
him
any
good
in
the
state
next
carter
has
nothing to lose in
&amp;pubUcan George Bush, landsUde
Massachusetts.
Under the proporloser to Ronald Reagan in New door.
Reagan says he thinks he can run
tiona! representation system, he's
Hampshire. Bush also was a big
in
Massachusetts
bound to pick up some convention
a
respectable
race
leader in the last Boston Globe poll
and
might
beat
Bush
in
Vennonl
delegate
votes Tuesday. He's
of Massachusetts voter preferences,
The
Republican
competition
moves
already
seen
to it that Kennedy
and Reagan at one point had planned
next
to
a
primary
Saturday
in
South
spends
campaign
time and 111011ey In
to skip It and go south. ,
Massachusetts,
while
Kennedy Ia
Ca
llna
ro
.
But after gaining 50 percent of the
In the Massachusetts primary,
,~ving him a virtually free ride in
New Hampshire primary vote to 23
White
House
press
secretary
Jody
the
Georgia primary March 11.
percent for Bush, t,he former CaliforPowell
said
the
president
would
be
As
the candidate who has to win,
nia governor decided to spend some
·
.doing
well
to
gain
211
percent
of
the
Kennedy
doesn't have much to gain.
~lgn time in' Massachusetts in
1
. vote and a share of the 111 dele~ates
He's~ to win eli.Sily at home.
advance of Tueaday s primary.
the
state
will
send
to
the
Democratic
Anything less wolild not only be a
BWih, who was "born In Milton,
National
Convention.
setback
for him against Carter; it
Ma.,s., needs a 1:9meback as badly
That's
more
ploy
than
prediction.
Could
embolden
home-state rivals
as Kennedy does. Their prolipects
The
idea
Is
to
aet
Carter's
e-,:Bhould
he
run
foc
the
Senate again in
• are bleak in the next round, all in
pectatlons
aa
low
1111
poilible,
the
1982.
·
Southern states wm.re conservative
And- Kennedy has some political
Reagan and Georgian 'Carter loom ·.better•to claim aort a« J110I'8) victory
whatever
the
outecme.
.
,
enemies
at home. Gov. Edward J.
strong.
.
,
While
Kennedy
has
been
the
lan!II
.
King,
a
conservative,
_la supporting
-Vennont holds" a presidential

a

Carter. Boston Mayor Kevin White
would not be dismayed to see Kennedy in trouble.
The primary will apportion
national convention delegates In line
with candidate showings in each of
the 12 Massachusetts congressional

districts.
The Republican primary is for 42
delegates, assigned to candidates
the same way.
The ballot lists all the GOP candidates, with Bush and Reagan the
top contenders. Sen. Howard Baker
of Tennessee has waged a limited
campaign. The wild card Is ·aep.
Joha B. Anderson of Dlinols, a
Republican liberal in liberal

tem~;· ran

third In New Jfam.
pahlre, Anderson fourth.
There are 1.3 mj)llon reBI»tered
Democrats in Massachusetts,
419,000 Republicans f!lld 1.2 mlllloo
independents who. can vote in either
party primaf't. Anderson is pu.shlng

hard for independent votes, which
could bolster his showing in the GOP
primary and at the same time eut into Kennedy's column in the
Democratic contest.
On the other hand, Kennedy
probably was the beneficiary when
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. dropped his Massachusetts campaign, and said he would concentrate on .the April 1 primary in
Wisconsin. 1be Carter camp had
figuled that Brown wOuld Jill votes
away from Kennedy.
·In Vermont, where the
Democratic primary Is not binding,
Republicans are competing for 19
national convention votes.
Bush, Reagan, Anderson and
Baker - who has the support ol Gov.
Richard Snelling - are the acUve
entrlllll in that campaign.
Former Texas Gov. Jolin B. eo.
nally wrote olf Vennont alq wttb
New Hamalhlre and - t IIOUth to ~
make his stand in South Carolina.

�D

classified

INVITES ALL TO

Highway improvement bill work nears end

OUR•••

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Approved 711-22 by the House last
Working against a Wednesday
week, the proposed constitutional
deadline, the Senate will try to comamendment would allow the state to
plete legislative action this week on
issue $500 million worth of highway
a ballot proposal which seeks to adimprovement bonds over the next
dress Ohio's need for highway and five years.
bridge improvements.
Actually, it contains authority for
It will be alred by the Senate amother $700 million in the decade
Finance Committee on Monday ' after 1985, but its language ties the
night, as the Senate returns from
issuance of bonds to certification
that existing tax revenues will be .
weekend recess a day ahead of the
House. Tentative plans call for
sufficient to retire them.
Senate floor action Wednesday, the
Those revenues - from one penny
last day for placing issues on the
of the seven cents-a-gallon gasoline
state's June 3 ballot.
tax, and the axle mile truck tax -

SEALY

SOFA BED AND CHAIR
(1 I 2 Pc . Blue Strip
Reg. $339.95
(2) 2 Pc., 1 Gold, 1 Green,
Flowered
Reg . $469.95
(2) 2 Pc., 1 Black, 1 Red Vinyl
Reg. $389.95
(1 I 2 Pc. Brown Velvet
Reg. $499.95

NOW $249.95

NOW $299.95
NOW $339.95

COMPONENT WITH 8 TRACK FM, AM, RECORD PLAYER,
3000 SPEAKERS, COMPONENT CAB AND SPEAKER
STANDS WAS 1748.84 ......... ................ NOW 1599.95
(1) USED VCR TAPE RECORDER FOR TV
NEW 11025.00 ....................... ....... USED '699.95
NOW

3 Pc. Living Room Suite
.
Reg. 5399...................... .. . .. . _. _...... . .•• Now 5249.95
3 Pc. Early American
Living Room Suite ... ... . . .. ... . ..... ... ............. 5299 •95
9 Pc. Living Room Suite ........ .. ................... 53 99 · 95
3 Pc. Early American Living Room Suite, Antron nylon
velvet,

Save $40.00 to $100.00 on each piece. Refrigerator, gas
and electric ranges, washers and dryers, chest &amp;
upright freezers.
CLOSEOUT GIBSON FREEZERS.
..
·
SALE $329 95
15 cu. ft. Chest
Reg. $399.95
25 cu. ft. Chest
Reg. $499.95
SALE $399.95

SWIVEL ROCKERS, ASST. COLORS

1-------------.
.
.
.
BEDROOM SUITE SALE

.,

9 Pc. All Wood Frame, Living Room Suite,
sofa, chair, rocker, foot stool, 3 tables, 2
lamps, nylon velvet cover.
Reg. S110o.oo

$89995

5 Pc. All wood Frame Living Room Suite,
sofa, chair, 3tables, 2lamps.
Reg. $799.95 SALE

$ 4·9995

WITH MA nRESS

(1) Brown Reg.I699.95 .............. ........NOW '479.95
95
(1) Rust, Green Flower Reg. '699.95 ....... NOW '46 9 •9 5
PaddedTops,Reg.S299.95NOW
$199
(1) Rust, Beige Flower Reg. '699.95 ... ..... NOW ' 4 6 9 . 9 5 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " 1

LANE CEDAR CHEST

BUY ONE GET

(1) Blue Flowered Reg. SS99.95 .......... NOW '449.95 LAMP SALE
ONE FREE
(1) Red, Green Vase Reg. 1579.95 .......... NOW '459.95 a.,.;;;;,:.,;;;,;,;,;;.;;..,;;,;;;.;;.;;;;,;;;,;,__________"'
(J) Brown, Beige Plaid Reg. 1599.95 ........ NOW '399.95

LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE
2 PC. TRADITIONAL LIVING ROOM SUITE
Rust I Brown.
Reg. $699.95

SALE *599.95

3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
Old Mill Stream.
Reg. s1, u;o.oo

SALE *899.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE
Velvet, tree pattern .
Reg. $799.95

Reg. 5799.95

SALE '599.95

3 PC. MODERN
SOLID
BROWN LIVING ROOM SUITE
(Fun)

Reg. $199.95
NOW $50.00 ea.
Reg. $49.95
NOW $29.95
Reg. $59.95
NOW 539.95

REG. ,59•95 ........... _.. NOW 138•88
ALL UPRIGHTS .........119.95 AND UP

Get Free Attachments

~eg. s79.95

FREE MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING
.
FULL OR QUEEN WITH EVERY BEDROOM SUITE

DINING ROOM SUITE SALE
BASSm REG. 11099.95......................... NOW 1899.95
Hutch, Table, 6 Chairs.

BASSm PINE REG. 11795.00 ................ NOW 11495.00

MAPLE OR OAK TABLE REG. 1699.95.......... SALE 1499.95

BED SALE
BRASS BEDS
QUEEN REG. '329.95 ...... , ..... NOW '249.95
TWIN REG. '49.95 ................... NOW '29.95
FULL REG. ·'59.95 .................... NOW '39.95
QUEEN REG. '69.95 ................ NOW -'49.95

Reg . $139.95 NOW

7 PC. BREAKFAST SET

Slightly Damaged
Reg. $199.95 To $229.95 NOW

KING REG. '99.95 ...................NOW '59.95

5 PC.

95
Reg. $239.95 NOW

BUNK BEDS
Starting At

$99

$149~~mplete

.....----------""'1
3 PC. COFFEE AND 2 END TABLES
Pine and Oak '
Reg. $399.95 Set

Table &amp; 6 Chairs.

BRASS HEAD BOARDS

DOUBLE PEDESTAl: DESK

SALE 1799.95

SALE *799.95

4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, OAK, WAS 1599.95... NOW 1499.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, BASSm, PECAN
WAS 1799.95 ....................................... NOW '699.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, BASSm, OAK,
WAS 1899.95 ........... ................... ... ...... NOW 1799.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, BASSm, PINE,
WAS 1899.95...................................... NOW '799.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, WEDD, UGHT PINE,
WAS '999.95. ................ -..................... NOW 1899.95
4 PC. BEDROOM SUITE, WEBB, DARK PINE,
WAS '999.95 ..... -... -............ -............... NOW 1899.95
4 PC. RIBERSIDE, MAPLE, WAS 11999.95 .... .NOW 11488.00

NOW *39.95

(2) MAPLE, OPEN FRONT CHINA
Reg . $239.95 NOW *139.9$

Yellow and Red.

SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1980

PAGE 1-D.

Hostage negotiations
being held. Saturday

SSAALLEE S$339999.9955
•

4 Side Chairs, 2 captains Chairs.

PINE AND MAPLE ROUND LAMP TABLES

$6.9

Reg. $999.95

Reg. $499 .95
Reg. $439.95

Hutch, Table, 6 Chairs.

SEALY KING SIZE MATTRESS
Reg. $499.95
AND BOX SPRINGS
SALE •1
. .
3 PC. EARLY AM. LIVING ROOM SUITE
SEAlY MATIRESS &amp;
, SECONDS &amp;
Gold-Plaid or Velvet.
. SALE *599.95
Reg. 5799.95
95And up
BOX SPRING
2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET WITH WOOD TRIM
Reg. 51288.00

21 cu. ft. Upright
16 cu. ft. Upright

PINE OR MAPLE REG. 1549.95 ............... SALE 1399.95

SALE *599.95

2 PC. EARLY AM. VELVET LIVING ROOM SUITE .

VOL. 15 NO. 5

AND SUNRAY

SEALY REDI BED

(1) Gold Flower Reg. 1499.95 ................ NOW '399.95

in a House committee.
But the director said the pending
plan would give his financially
strapped agency the funds to qualify
for about $489 million in available
federal funds. This would let the
department get under way on many
priority projects which have had to
be put on the shelf, he said.
The Senate holds a Monday night
floor session to get the legislative
week under way. It has three comparatively routine bills scheduled
for a vote. House members reconvene Tuesday morning.

BIGSON, FRIGIDAIRE, MAYTAG

REG. $299.95 NOW

(21 Stationary Chairs
New Chest, 4 Dr.
New Chest, 5 Dr.

reviewed the proposal briefly last
week, indicated he has reservations
about it and will have some amendments.
For one thing, the veteran
Mahooing County lawmaker
questioned the wisdom of earmarking money which is currently
being used for transportation department operating purposes.
Transportation Director David L.
Weir said the one penny from the gas
tax and the axle mile tax now is

WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL

NOW 139,9.95 PI.~:;..:-5;;_79;,;9,;,;.9,;;.5;.:,--~--~"~"~'-~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~"~'~"~-·;.;,··;.;,No,o,;w,;.$;;.;4.;,;88iio.Oiol0--l
1
NOW 449.95
NEW SHIPMENT .
1
NOW 599.95
NOW '699.95 1-.;.;;.;.;.;;,.;;;,;;;.__;...._...;,_~~~~~--1
NOW 1849.95
ALSO 25 RECLINERS TO CHOOSE
NOW '699.95
AND UP

.13" COLOR TV WAS 1439.95
1
19" COLOR TV WAS 499.95
23" COLOR TV MAPLE, PECAN WAS '699.95
25" COLOR TV 1799.95 WAS 1799.95
25" SPACE COM. TV WAS '949.95
25" COLOR TV WAS 1899.95

may or may not be sufficient, depending on whose view is accepted.
A group of _majority Democrats
fought the bond issue in the House,
saying it might provide bond money
for a year or two, but then would
require a tax hike.
Fifteen Democrats and seven
Republicans opposed it there, while
44 Democrats and ?.6 Republicans
voted for it.
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown, whose panel

bringing in about $40 million a year
more than needed to retire highway
bonds already outstanding.
But he conceded the $40 million
helps subsidize the department in
other ways, and could not say how it
could be replaced.
Weir also raised some finance
committee eyebrows when he said
the new bond issue, if approved,
would fall short of meeting Ohio's
total transportation needs.
The department had proposed $2.5
billion in bonds over 10 years in a
proposal voted down late last month

APPLIANCES SALE

2 PC. SOFA BED &amp; CHAIR

NOW 5339 .95

ZENITH SALE

A.OOR MODEL STEREO REG.

Square or Hex End Tables Reg. 179.95 ......... NOW •38.00
Wood Rocker Reg. 1179.95 _...... ... .. _... _...... NOW •aa.oo

AP news analysis

SALE '299.95 SET

METAL

.

.

WARDROBE &amp; KnatEN CABINET SALE
REG. $79.95 .;.................... ,..... NOW '49.95 £A
REG. '99.95: ....... ~ ............ :..... NOW $49.95 EA.
REG. $129.95.....~ .............. ,............ NOW *89.95 ·
42" METAL KITCHEN CABINET
. REG~ '189.95 ........................:...... NOW '99.$5
30'' METAL KITCHEN QUNA CABINET
REG. 5139.95.. :............ :.... .".... ~ ...... NOW $79:95
24" BASE CABINET REG. '69.95 .. ;... NOW '39.95 .
.

'

•

.

.

.

•

l

LIKE A LAMB? - March which is traditionaUy
supposed to "come in like a lamb and go out like a Uon"
came on strong Saturday. Residents who had retired
Friday night with the prediction of "little ac-

cumulation" foWld their cars covered with the deepest
snow of the year when they arose Saturday morning.
Four inches fell overnight and the snow was still
coming down at 4 p.m. Saturday.

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) Negotiations were set to begin Satur·
day between the Colombian government and guerrillas holding some 41
hostages inside the Dominican Embassy, including U.S. Ambassador
Diego C. Asencio and 14 other envoys.
President Julio Cesar Turbay
Ayala's govenunent Friday night
reversed its longstanding policy
against negotiating with terrorists
after the guerrillas holding the embassy threatened to kill two of their
diplomatic captives.
In a telephone interview with the
Colombian radio station Caracol, a
guerrilla leader accused the government of reneging on a promise to
negotiate even though the guerrillas
had released all their women caplives in reply to government demands. He ~tened to kill two unnamed diplomats by 10 p.m. EST.
Ninety ~ minutes before the
deadline, the govenunent broadcast
an urgent message over Colombian
radio stations offering to open talks
iuunediately. It said negotiations
could be held in a "camioneta,"
Spanish for station wagon or van,
parked in full view of the embassy so
· it could be watched by the
guerrillas.
"As a new demonstration of its interest in resolving the situation," the
government "accedes to the
proposal of the ambassadors that
the dialogue be initiated," the gover·
JUnent statement said.
The deadline passed without incident and a guerrilla .. spokesman
told a local radio station the death
threal was lifted because of the
government's announcement.

• • meeting
•
Mill•tantS d eny comnnsston
By Allsoclated Pre8s
Militants holding the U.S. Embassy in Tehran Saturday denied
having agreed to an imminent
meeting between the visiting U.N.
commission and the American
hostages, but the panel still expects
to see the captives before ending its
investigation of Iran's grievances
against the deposed shah.
Aspokesman for the militants said
in a telephone interview the fiveman U.N. panel was not expected at
the occupied embassy today and
there was no indication of a visit
with the hostages in the near future.
His conunents came amid a spate
of rumors suggesting Iranian
authorities had secured approval of
the militants for such a meeting
following secret talks with government officials. Since the embassy
takeover Nov. 4, the militants have
repeatedly demanded the return of
deposed Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi in exchange for the
Americans' release.
The ,commission, meanwhile, met
this morning with Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, who has
already promised the panel will be
allowed to visit the hostages, held
captive for 119 days.
The talks dealt with "meatls by
which the pamil would continue its
work," Tehran radio said in a broadcast monitored in Itllwait. The radio
said no details of the talks were

given but that the group was
believed to have discussed whether
the commissfon would be aUowed to
visit the Americans.
The radio also reported that Abdul
Karim Mossawi Ardabili, Iran's
newly-appointed attorney general,
had urged the commission to
"anounce their findings to the
world" and expressed strong
backing for the embassy militants.
The embassy occupation "is in
line with the revolution's strategy
not to be subservient to either East
or West," the radio quoted him as
saying Friday.
ASked whether such a visit was
possible soon, U.N. spokesman
Samir Sambar said only that members of the commissioo Iwere
"hopeful."
He also told reporters: "It would
be misleading to concentrate on
seeing the hostages as the only function the commission has."
Aspokesman for the militants who
seized the embassy Nov. 4 denied
again that a meeting between the
commission members and hostages
was Imminent, suggesting anew that
Iranian government officials are
having a difficult time getting the
militants to agree to it.
Foreign Minister Sa:degh Ghotlr
zadeh already has promised that the
panel will be allo\\'ed to visit the approximately 50 American hostages,
who spent their 119th day in cap-

·
tivity Saturday.
The U.N. spokesman said that
while the five-man commission still
hoped to meet with the hostages, the
panel also was pursuing other
means to ease the U.S.-Iran crisis.
Sambar refused to pinpoint the
date of the commission's departure
from Iran, but said it would not be
before the middle of next week. He
also said the commission was
already drafting its report for U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim.
The commission spent Saturday,
its seventh full day in Tehran,
meeting again with Ghotbzadeh and
gathering more information oo
alleged human rights violatioll8 under the regime of deposed Shah
Mohammad Reza Pah!avi.
Sambar would not disclose details
of the commission's meeting with
Ghotbzadeh except to say the status
of the hostages was discussed. The
meeting lasted just less than two
hours.
MUST LEASH DOGS
POMEROY - Pomeroy dog
ownen are advised by Pollee
Chief Harry Lyo1111 that IHre ill a
leash law ord!Dance In effect In
Pomeroy. Dogs most be confiDed
or OD a leash. U complaiDt callJ
contlmle, legal actioo will be
~en, the chief wams.

Earlier, the estimated 30
guerriUas who stormed the embassy
Wednesday during a Dominican Independence Day celebration freed
their last five women hostages, one
of the conditions the govenunent set
before It would open talks.
Ten other women were freed Thursday, along with a 1&amp;-year-old boy,
and three wounded men, including
the acting ambassador of Paraguay.
The guerrillas also sent out the body
of one of their comrades killed
during the takeover.
The guerrillas, members of the M19, or Apri119 Movement, the most
active and violent urban terrorist
group in Colombia, are demanding
$50 million in ransom, freedom for
311 alleged political prisoners,
publication of an anti·govenunent
manifesto in foreign newspapers
and safe passage out of the country.
They have said their demands are
negotiable, but they claim they are
prepared to hold the embassy for
one to two months.
In a telephone conversation with a
radio station in Caracas, Venezuela,
one of the guerrillas said the
hostages "must necessarily accompany us to our ultimate
destination." He did not say what
country the guerrillas wanted to go
to but hinted it could be Venezuela.
Panama has offered to grant the
guerrillas political asylum in an ef-

fort to end the crisis.
In a telephone interview with The
Associated Press in Washington,
U.S. Ambassador Asencio said the
hostages were being "treated
correctly" and were in good condition.
The exact number of hostages inside the embassy has not been
established, although the commander of the guerrillas, who calls
himself Comandante Numero UnoCommander No. I - said 60 were
there when it was seized four days
ago.
At least 15 of those still in the embassy are either ambassadors or acting ambassadors. The others are
believed to be lower ranking
diplomats and embassy employees.
Along with Asencio of the United
States, the ambassadors are: Edgar
Selzer of Austria; Reinaldo de
Careroalso, acting ambassador of
Bolivia; Ger'ald Eulalia do
Nascimiento e Silva of Brazil;
Diogenes Mayil Burgos of the
Dominican Republic; Mauricio Garcia ' Priesto of El Salvador; Salm
Aloha of Egypt; Aquiles Pinto
Florez of Guatemala; Leonard
Pierre Louis of Haiti; Aliahu Barak
of Israel; Ricardo Galan of Mexico;
Jean Bourgeois of Switzerland; Fernando Gomez of Uruguay; Monenor
Angel Cervi of the Vatican and
Virgilio Lovera of Venezuela.

LIONLIKE - Without a
.doubt, most area residents
were awakened by quite a
surprise this morning, the
largest snowfall in over a
year. While March arrived
· like a lion, it may leave
hopefully like a lamb. Saturday's snow measures as high
as 10 or 11 inches in the tricounty area. It has forced
cancellation of meetings,
· ballgames and other
weekend activity. In other
parts of the state, (Cin~innati
area) snow alerts have been
posted and major interstate
highways have been closed.

MARKET SHOWS RALLY
NEW YORK (AP) - The stock

market staged a modest technical
rally in relatively quiet trading
today.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 3.84 to 858.28 by noontime.
Gainers outnumbered losers by a
1).3 margin among New York Stock
Exchange-listed issues.
In the news, the government
reported that the index of leading
economic indicators dropped 0. 7 percent in January, for Its fourth
straight monthly decline.

Kennedy heads home for .contest he can't afford to lose
By Alsoclated Preas
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy is going
home to MassachuSetts for the contest he can't afford to lose to
President Carter. :rhe political oddsnlakers say be'll be safe there, in
the banda ol the voters who four
times elected him to the Senate.
. But the oddsmakers aten't having
avery good BeiUICIII, and Kennedy is
~ 111tely to gain the kind of
w.-cbuletts )andsllde to which he
baa become aCC\IBtomed.
; ~ last pUblillhed poll rated Ken. !ll!dy a l-1leader in Massachusetts,
I \Jut that Will before Carter beat him
~ly ' lil Maine imd Comfortably
1,11 the New Hampsbjre preal~entlru
primary electlon last TueSday. ,
' New Hampshire made It~ In a
(ow fGr 'Carte- ewer ~ennedy, and
\Ill pneideat also won big In the flrsl

phue rl ~·s Den)ocratic
del9te aelection procesS. KeMedy
· dldnlt put lip a ·campaign in the

dsUcte victor in his Senate elections,
primary 00 Tuesday, too. The
home state of Vice President Walter
Democratic
contest
is
rated
cl011e
·
he hasn't faced a formidable
F.Mondale.
between
Carter
and
Kennedy,
whose
challenge
since his first contest in
Massachusetts is a must for Kenloss
in
New
Hampshire
isn't
going
to
Massachusetts
18 years ago. ·
nedy, and -a crucial contest for
do
him
any
good
in
the
state
next
carter
has
nothing to lose in
&amp;pubUcan George Bush, landsUde
Massachusetts.
Under the proporloser to Ronald Reagan in New door.
Reagan says he thinks he can run
tiona! representation system, he's
Hampshire. Bush also was a big
in
Massachusetts
bound to pick up some convention
a
respectable
race
leader in the last Boston Globe poll
and
might
beat
Bush
in
Vennonl
delegate
votes Tuesday. He's
of Massachusetts voter preferences,
The
Republican
competition
moves
already
seen
to it that Kennedy
and Reagan at one point had planned
next
to
a
primary
Saturday
in
South
spends
campaign
time and 111011ey In
to skip It and go south. ,
Massachusetts,
while
Kennedy Ia
Ca
llna
ro
.
But after gaining 50 percent of the
In the Massachusetts primary,
,~ving him a virtually free ride in
New Hampshire primary vote to 23
White
House
press
secretary
Jody
the
Georgia primary March 11.
percent for Bush, t,he former CaliforPowell
said
the
president
would
be
As
the candidate who has to win,
nia governor decided to spend some
·
.doing
well
to
gain
211
percent
of
the
Kennedy
doesn't have much to gain.
~lgn time in' Massachusetts in
1
. vote and a share of the 111 dele~ates
He's~ to win eli.Sily at home.
advance of Tueaday s primary.
the
state
will
send
to
the
Democratic
Anything less wolild not only be a
BWih, who was "born In Milton,
National
Convention.
setback
for him against Carter; it
Ma.,s., needs a 1:9meback as badly
That's
more
ploy
than
prediction.
Could
embolden
home-state rivals
as Kennedy does. Their prolipects
The
idea
Is
to
aet
Carter's
e-,:Bhould
he
run
foc
the
Senate again in
• are bleak in the next round, all in
pectatlons
aa
low
1111
poilible,
the
1982.
·
Southern states wm.re conservative
And- Kennedy has some political
Reagan and Georgian 'Carter loom ·.better•to claim aort a« J110I'8) victory
whatever
the
outecme.
.
,
enemies
at home. Gov. Edward J.
strong.
.
,
While
Kennedy
has
been
the
lan!II
.
King,
a
conservative,
_la supporting
-Vennont holds" a presidential

a

Carter. Boston Mayor Kevin White
would not be dismayed to see Kennedy in trouble.
The primary will apportion
national convention delegates In line
with candidate showings in each of
the 12 Massachusetts congressional

districts.
The Republican primary is for 42
delegates, assigned to candidates
the same way.
The ballot lists all the GOP candidates, with Bush and Reagan the
top contenders. Sen. Howard Baker
of Tennessee has waged a limited
campaign. The wild card Is ·aep.
Joha B. Anderson of Dlinols, a
Republican liberal in liberal

tem~;· ran

third In New Jfam.
pahlre, Anderson fourth.
There are 1.3 mj)llon reBI»tered
Democrats in Massachusetts,
419,000 Republicans f!lld 1.2 mlllloo
independents who. can vote in either
party primaf't. Anderson is pu.shlng

hard for independent votes, which
could bolster his showing in the GOP
primary and at the same time eut into Kennedy's column in the
Democratic contest.
On the other hand, Kennedy
probably was the beneficiary when
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. dropped his Massachusetts campaign, and said he would concentrate on .the April 1 primary in
Wisconsin. 1be Carter camp had
figuled that Brown wOuld Jill votes
away from Kennedy.
·In Vermont, where the
Democratic primary Is not binding,
Republicans are competing for 19
national convention votes.
Bush, Reagan, Anderson and
Baker - who has the support ol Gov.
Richard Snelling - are the acUve
entrlllll in that campaign.
Former Texas Gov. Jolin B. eo.
nally wrote olf Vennont alq wttb
New Hamalhlre and - t IIOUth to ~
make his stand in South Carolina.

�1).3-'Ibe Sunday Times-• •'lltinel. Sunday . March 2. 1980

1).2- The Sunday Times-sentinel , Sunda) , ~l arc h 2. l!lOO

lleeps •••

Judge may leave easel
CLEVELAND (AP ) - U.S.
District Judge Robert B. Krupansky
is considering removing himself
from trying Cleveland's $330 million
anti-trust suit against Cleveland
Electruc Illuminating Co.
Lawyers for the city of Cleveland
filed a motion Friday charging that
Krupansky has favored CEI in the
case.
James B. Davis, a former city law
director, said a motion filed Friday
also seeks to delay the suit,

scheduled for trial March 10, until
the issue of Krnpansky's alleged
prejudice is settled.
Affidavits accompanying the
motion allege that Krupansky has
repeatedly frustrated the city's attempts at securing information
needed in the cru~e. The suit was filed
in 1975.
Among instances of alleged bias
cited by the city lawyers was a Dec.
15, 1978 statement from Krupansky
thst unless the city paid a $4.4

Renovation program
finds many problems
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Leonard
Salatsky says he did not expect aU
the snags he has encountered in his
attempt to reconstruct a home that
once belonged to Moses Cleaveland,
the founder of Cleveland.
The Hudson Township resident
and his wife, Sally, bought the house
in Brookline, Conn., and had it taken
apart and shipped to Hudson, a
suburb northwest of Akron, by
railroad. The pieces of the house are
being stored in two semi-trailers.
Salatsky and Edward P. Friedlander, a dealer in antique homes,
researched the deeds of the house
and found one from last century
belonging to Moses Cleaveland.
But Salatsky said he has experienced numerous delays in his attempts to rebuild the house. He says
he will attempt to sell it if his
restoration attempt becomes too
costly.
He is currently waiting for Summit County officials to approve plans

for an allotment in Hudson Town·
ship. '
"My loan committment time is
running out," Salatsky said. "If I
don't hear something by March 16,
I'll have to r~ce . "
He said several Hudson TownshiP
residents have offered to sell him
lots if his orginal plans fall through.
His other major snag has been a
debate with historians over the
validity of his Moses Cleaveland
ownership contention.
In January, the Western Reserve
Historical Society said the house
was not owned by Cleveland's founder, but by someone else with the
name.
Last week, Salatsky said, the
historical society recognized that
the house once belonged to the
proper Moses Cleaveland. One of the
deeds he showed the historical
society mentioned the names of Asa
and John Bacon, who were partners
with the real Cleaveland in a law
firm.

million debt to CEI within 15 days,
he would dismiss the anti-trust suit.
That was the day Cleveland went into default on $14 million in notes held
by local banks.
On Nov. 29, 1978, the judge rejected the city's proposal that he stop
CEI from attaching city property for
debts run up by the Municipal Electric Light System, according to an
affidavit filed by William Norris, a
lawyer in Davis' form. Norris said
Krupansky's ruling gave "a
stimulus" to CEI's "long-standing
objective" of acquiring the
municipal light plant.
The city had suggested other alter- .
natives in an effort to keep Muny
Light from being taken over by CEI,
but Krupansky rejected those,
Norris said.
.
The administration of former
Mayor Dennis J. Kucinich satisfied
the CEI debt and sidetracked a campaign by political rivals to place the
municipal light plant up for sale.
Krupansky said he . will decide
within several days whether to bow
out of the case. He said during a
hearing on the motion that he and his
law clerks will research the law
regarding disqualification.
The anti-trust suit developed from
an alleged refusal of CEI to give the
city access to Iow~ost power
available from New York State in
the early 1970s. The 45,001kustomer
urban power plant operates inside a
region served by CEI. Outside power
would have been "wheeled" across
CEI lines.
The city bad accused CEI and four
other utilities in the Central Area
Power Coordination Group of
monopolistic practices and con·
spiring to try to put Cleveland's
municipal utility out of business.
The city recently announced a $1.5
million out-of~ourt settlement with
the other four utilities, leaving only
CEI in the case.

Public lands moratorium declared
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Interior Depar:tment has imposed a
moratoriwn on its public land lotteries after Investigators uncovered
what they termed wide-scale fraud
in the oil and gas leasing program.
Frank Gregg, director of the
department's Bureau d. Land
Management, said the lotteries had
been "subjected to such thorough
manipulation that the possiblity of
lawful, bonafide participants successfully obtaining a lease has in
many cases been reduced to a very
low level."
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus
announced Friday that be was
suspending aU noncompetitive oil
and gas leases for an indefinite
period while the department explored ways to correct abuses.
Officials said their six-month investigation had concentrated on five
western states - Wyoming,
Colorado, New Mexico, Montana
and Utah - where most of the lease
sales are made.
Gregg said the U.S. attorney's office bad found probable evidence of
wire fraud, mail fraud and conspiracy. Officials said they were investigating evidence against some
-!t

---naniP.:.CI. and·~ services.

No figures were available im-

mediately on how much oil and gas ·
bas been discovered on lands
covered by the noncompetitive
leasing program.
However, none of the states where
the investigation is concentrated are
among the nation's major oil
producing states.
Under the noncompetitive bid
procedure, a person pays a fee of $10
to enter his name along with all
others interested in a certain tract of
land. If his name is drawn in a lottery, he can lease the land, usually
for $1 an acre, and has the right to
drill exploratory wells.
Andrus said the leasing procedure
was intended to "spur oil and gas exploration and production on public
lands through a system open to
everyone. But in practice the system
bas been abused by middlemen who
resell leases on a speculative basis."
While a person ean legally file only
one application for each tract of
land, BLM officials said they had
evidence some companies were
using many people to make lease applications for them, greatly in·
creasing their chances of being the
eventual winner of a particular
tract.
Andrus last June proposed

changes in the law aimed at
reducing the influence leasing services play in the lotteries. He said
that some of the services were
charging fees up to $5,000 to give advice and complete the $10 filing
procedure.
In 1978, there were 3.5 million applications .for the non-competitive
leases. Of the 10,624 onshore leases
the department issued that year, 97
percent were done on a non·
competitive basis.
The other 3 percent of onshore
leases involved land in known oil and
gas producing areas, which like all
offshore leases, are handled through
competitive bids. Andrus'
moratoriwn does not affect these
lease sales.
Andrus said he would report in 30
days on whether the noncompetitive
leasing program can be reformed or
whether it should be scrapped for
competitive bids.

@

g,a\ltpo\ts
1iiarp
By J. Samuel Peeps
( - 19Uar l is f : Ern{'U H Shepardl

· GALLIPOIJS-James C. Myers,

who lives on Ingels Hill (first house

RETIREE HONORED- Raymond Furbee, Rt. 2,
Racine, was recently honored upon his retirement
from Kaiser Aluminwn, Ravenswood Works. Furbee
was presented a plaque by the company and a gold
watch by his co-workers in Plate Department. Pic-

tured with Furbee are Plate Department employees, .
Tom Chapman, Jack Fisher, Oscar Smith, Jack
Gilland, Lester Shockey, Ed Cromney, Richard Wise,
Paul Nohe, Tom Riffle and Orville Bush.

At least 500 educators and
merchants cited past week
NEW DJi;LIU, India (AP) Afghanistan's militia in the past
week has arrested al least 500
educators, merchants, civil servants
and Moslem clergymen suspected of
subversion, in a new ·crackdown by
the Soviet-backed government, a
report from Kabul said Saturday.
The report,' from an Afghan source
who has proved reliable in the past,
said some of those detained have
been tortured into confessing they
were "foreign agents."
The reported wave of arrests
followed a roundup of about 2,000
Shiite Moslems. The members of the
minority sect were accused of in·
stigating the Feb. 22 anti.SOviet
rioting which left about 300 per:sons
dead and an estimated 1,000 injured.
Meanwhile, there was no formal
Soviet response to a British proposal
for the neutralization of Mghanistan
and a quick withdrawal of Russian ~
troops. Britain said Friday it had
presented Moscow with an ouUine of
the plan, proposed . through the
European Common Market.
Senior Foreign Office sources said
the Soviets gave "a ' nwnber of
signals" in recent days indicating
they might be interested in the
British plan.
In Islamabad, a Foreign Ministry
spokesman said a Soviet Air Force
plane violated Pakistan's airspace
Saturday morning near Chitral,
close to the Pakistani-Mgban bor·
der, in the first such incident repor·
ted. The Pakistani Air Force fired
twice at the plane, he said, but it was
not hit.
Pakistan's President, Gen.

spokesman said. But the official said,'
Pakistan told its ambassador in,
Moscow to lodge a strong prole~·
with the Soviet government.

Mohanunad Zia ui-Haq, was informed of the incident and directed
that the Soviet aircraft tie escorted
peacefully from the area, the

Stewart man gets
prison sentences
conviction of B and E. The sentences
are to run consecutively.
In other activity, Patrick Me-. .
Cloud, 20, Middleport, who failed to.
surrender himself to the sheriff's
department Feb. 15 following a six
month to five year sentence for..
trespassing in an unoccupied struc-. ·
lure, was taken into custody at his- .
residence Wednesday by In·
vestlgator Gary Wolfe and State.
Probation Officer Phil McKinney.
l:le will be transported to the Ohio
Penal Medical and Reception Center_.
in Columbus next week.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies'
took a deer accident report Friday
from Mary E. Pullins, 31, Middleport. She said a deer ran into the·
path of bet vehicle while she was
driving south on SR 7. The deer was
killed.

POMEROY - Richard Cooper,
Rt. 1, Stewart, pleading guilty on a
Bill of Information to a charge of
breaking and entering, was sen·
tenced to six montha to five years
Friday by Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Judge John C. Bacon.
Cooper was also sentenced to a
term of six months to five years for
violation of probation on a previous
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted-Clara Clark, Reed·
sville; Douglas Kitchen, Dexter;
Beulah Ransom, Racine; Kathryn
Evans, Portland; Joseph McCloud,
Middleport; Donna Williams,
Pomeroy; Stella O'Bryan, Mason;
Thomas Basin, Long Bottom.
Discharged--Flora Friley,
Dorothy Hysell, Lillian Schenkle.

Owens-Corning
"Save Twice"
Insulation Sale

public, and constable in Gallia Coun·
ty,
at different times, of course.
you reach in Green Twp.), read Foro
In
an illustrated article for Motor
l)!st Borden's solution to Gwendoyln
Magazine
for Decem her, 1930, Athey
Sheets' problem. The birthday anwrote
what
happened. He sail! that
riiversaries of her four children aU
be
slept
in
his
place of business, and
iiill on the same day of the week.
customers
woke
him up for service
~ Myers says that if the birth anor to make purchases.
iiiversaries fall after Feb. 29, any
On this occasion, one man stayed
birthday separated from another by
in the car while two others went into
a nwnber divisible by seven will fall
the station and got some soft drinks.
on the same day as another birthday
They drew guns, ordered Athey to
au the time.
the rear, took small change from
Imogene Hal,ley, 82 State St., says
him, and started to tie him up with a
that if the birthdays are exactly so
rope.
many weeks apart visibly they'll
"I broke away from them ," Athey
come out on the same day of the
wrote,
"and made a run for my cot
week. She takes Gwendolyn's
about
15
feet away. As I started to
children as proof: there's six weeks
run
one
of
the two grabbed me by the
between first and second birthdays;
clothes
with
one band and struck me
six weeks between the second and
about the head with his pistol with
third; nine weeks he tween the third
the other, but I kept going and dragand fourth; and two weeks between
ged him with me. I threw myself
the fourth and first.
across the cot and reached for my
Myers has already turned in his
revolver, lying on a small stand on
f,amily history for Volwne One of the
the
far side of the cot."
Gallia County History Book. When
(Athey
frired backward over his
Y.ou get yours finished, you know,
left
shoulder,
a shot which "apyou send it to Mary Allison, 136
burned
him about the face
parently
River Kanauga, Gallipolis· 45631, or
and
partly
blinded
him, for he turnHenny Evans, 638 First Ave.,
ed
and
ran
out
'Of
the building. As
Gallipolis.
quickly
as
I
could
I turned to the
He'e going to buy two of the books,
other
man,
who
was
standing a bout
and will give one of them to the
18 feet away' with an automatic in
Lawrence County Public Library.
each hand. I fired, and he feU, and
Since Don Mills, the Taylor
the autopsy afterward showed that I
Publishing Company man, said that
Myers was the first to turn in a . had hit him in the heart."
manuscript, Myers thinks it's possi·
GRANDMA GWOOD's diary: July
ble that he might get a Gallia County
14,
1911-No rain for many weeks,
History Book without cost; if he
and
the river is low and crops ·are
does, he'll donate it to the Dr.
drying
up. Aug. 4, 1911-The.first day
Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
of
Chautauqua.
No rain yet and the
Library.
river is the lowest in 35 years.
Potatoes will be scarce this fall.
IRMA BALES' maternal grandAug. 29, 1911-Tbe river is rising and
father was W. R. Athey, who killed a
the Carrie Brown started running.
holdup man at his Meigs County sero
Sept. 22, 1911 -Burrel Sims of
vice station at 2:45a.m. Sept. 4,1930.
Crown
City had Albert and Herman
Athey bad a versatile public
Lockhart arrested for murdering
career during his life at Kyger,
Carl Sims and throwing his body off
where he continued to keep his
a
river boat. I feel so sorry for
residence even though his business
Mother
Lockhart and Laura Sims
was In Meigs. He was township
and
her
family.
Asenseless killing.
trustee, G 0 P central commit·

Gallipolitan first graduate
GALLIPOIJS - In the spring d.
1880, Oberlin M. Carter of Gallipolis
was graduated first in his class at
Jbe United States Military Academy
.tWestPoint,N. Y.
: Commissioned a second lieutenant
jn the Corps of Engineers, Carter
ehalked up a four-year record at
West Point which had been exceeded
~Y only one man, Robert E. Lee.
: Following graduation, Lieutenant
(:arter and his wife Marguerite
ft'escotl, daughter of New- York
JIIU)tlmillionaire, Roger ·Fulger
rescott, were sent to Savannah,

i

Meigs Transfers
Gerald D. Wllldnsoo to George W.
Me Daniel, R. Carolyn McDaniel,
Lots, Pomet oy.
Oliver E. Balley, Martha Balley to
Clyde J. GllllJan, Vicky GllllJan,

Pan:eiB, Olive.
Gary Durst, Ruth Durst to Col.
and South. Elec. Co., Ease., Olive.
Boyd L. Kinzel, Audrey C. Kinzel
1o Col. Soutbem Ohio Elec. Co.,
Eue., Salisbury.
Glemt E. 'J'bcmpeon, Lob 'lbompson 1o Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elec. Co., Eue., Salisbury.
Robert B. Burdette, Genevieve
BurdeUe to Robert S. Burdette,
Pareels, Salisbury.

Willard C. Wilson, Anna M. Wilson
to FOI'elt Ganwer, Sandy Ganliwer,
Pan!els, Salllbury.
EIIM' 0 . Ritcllle, Joyce Rltclde to

UbertYOOkG.Co.,Ease., Olive.
FrankDoiJglae, Affkl., Setpto.
MallniJig D. Weblltei', Mary A.
Weflster to ~ Butlanai,
Pai'celi, Silii)W.
sam N. ArnOld, RUth ArnOld to
L.awreike Bestlaftl, ~reels, Setpio.
Gtorge A. C2!rblt)', Eunlc

Olrtatf lo

~

•

Ounmins, Clpel

r...e.Jmeuse.

CUmm!Jil,
L1iti'Y Lee I,;Jelllllll, Bonnie Cleland
1o R6bert' L. Bfitllfteld, "' Ac.,

Sli1._.n.
c.rt'1Jf!tll~!r:, ~wd to
T~
tq,

Joyce E. Hawley to Robert J .
Hawley, Divorce Decree, Pomeroy.
Waid Hayman, Donna Hayman to
Arnold P. Johnson, 5.75 A.,
Salisbury.
Chester.

Dan P. Smith, Doma J . Smith,
John T. Wolfe, Joan Wolfe to
Douglas W. UUie, Connie L. UtUe,
411.:11 A., Sutton.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to Anthony Pizzino, Margaret Pizzino,
UJO'll A., Sutton.
Emma Hines, dec., to Jeanne E.
Hines, Mary PbyWs Whitcomb,
Cert. of'l'rans.,$UUon.
Grafton D. Grueser, dec., to.Daisy
Grueser, Cert. Ttans., Sutton.
Audrey Neff, . Charles A. Neff, :
Freda Grueser,; )laud Grueser to
Dann,y Dwaln ~. Pan!els, Sutton.
Jeame E. Hines, Mary PhyUls
Whitcomb, John G. Whitcomb to
Oanny Dwaln Brown, Pan!els, Sut-

ton.

William K. Dean to Daniel Dwain
BroWn, Pan!els, SUtton.
Willlun T. Dean, Derry Dean to
Dliilly. Dnlilll'iiW!i, Parcel8, Buttoll.

·•

Mlirtbli J:
to DanW Owain
Bl'c!llm; Pati!illl~

Plltty .s. Wile, ~

•

fe ......

County,

Jea'n • ~~

14=
:
'
.
. ,. m~. .
"·~~=ri"':01W ~

~~.'

ARWBAREFAm

ABOUTaFIRM
MAnRESSES.
on
Scbbf Ilctnco.l
(Or,._lo_ bundle

I

~ CADET CHARLIE M. Carter

Medi•Ritt'MIIIIeu

~u plclared 1D Ule U. S. MDitary
tAeademy Year ID 1880.

Somrllk1 1 f1rn o U.. mm~Mi•dii&lt;I'M

MUIIrt'.,..,~, 1 '
( rml nolut•
,

rtnlll'llll . l k nwo·~

$89 95

body rlff'd!.

.

r1111oo

sn..,s ,.._

O....IAM ' ' " · " • " ' .
:··"•"' I

~:~::,:; KlntlfM

POSTPONED
GALLIPOLIS - Saturday
olght's Class A Sectlooal championship basketball· game bet·
ween Southern and South·
western's girls wu postponed,
due to the heavy soowfall. It bas
beeo rescheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Monday according to Dao
Bricker, tournament manager.

In further action, John W. Dillon,
32, GaWpolll, was charged with fill'
ai8hlng lntodeatlng liquor to a
minor at tbe,Gallipolla Ice Coo!pany
Called to the scene at 10:06 p.m., Ca'rry-Out, 709 First Ave.
palllpollls City Police report a north
Phillip E. Massie, 17, Galllpolls,
auto operated . by Wllllam was cited on a charge of purchasing
JJ "'IIIII• 54, sideswiped a parked auto · Intoxicating liquor.
by Howard B. Sauncjers,
Additionally, Max L. Reames, 56,
continued and struck a Columbus, was cited on a charge ol
auto owned by Melvin K. DWI.
CrQwnCity.

FIBERGLAS BATI INSULATION A-19 (6')

.21~

PRINCESS

GARDNER~

Seville

.

Heady fashion vintage! Rich Burgundy or Tan colored
accessories' of glove·soft VILLA COWHIDE, elegantly
ornamented with a goldtone chain set in a velvety
suede, oval inset.

"Tri·Partite " French Purse
KEY &lt;¥\RD" . . . . . . . . . .
Ot~er

.

$20.00
. $10.00

matching accessories from $13.00

Clark's Jewelry Store

.1/

' '

SUPPtY COMPANY
675,1160 ' ,_.Ill PINiiitd ·

312 Soxt11 !. tntel

Storettours :

••·'!1·-Sp.m.S.t. la.m.·ltiiOOft- '

Doyle J. SaWlders, Amy Spencer, Brett Ritter ,
Chris Patterson, Brad Halfhill, Canncn Mayo,
Ronrue Sn)·de r. Dorothy Hurt, Christy Lowder ,
l.l!iil Spencer, Riichel Green1 ~ . Blaine GiUooN' ,

Karen

Mantooth · 1, Scott Roosh ·I. Alln Maroun. Tim
Green · 11.. Kathy Morrison - I , 10m Price • 1: ,
GnHid &amp;gs. Jaml@ C.Whln - 1., Emily Yair-

child - x. Jun Coleman, Enc Ritter - I, John
Wortun.a.n, Marlt Foremen, Betti Adkina.
l.ot11de B- EUen EJ.~Iebl, Lisa Caldwell, Kimrru Coleman, Bcm.Jta Roberta, Cindy Hl&amp;ley.
Diane Shi lot. Andy Adams. Je&amp;Mine Miller,
Dtbbi~ Boyle, Matt Kt:ll"lptt , Becky S..IT, Tammie Welli.ngton · 1 , OtrisSmith_

Heather Bost.ir.

GradeS- Laurar&gt;rosos, Be&lt;Sy Greenlee , Rand)' Jltcbon, Rita McMeecham , Ka th)' Nelson ,
Missy Roble, Annelte Thomas, Malil Stou t.
Sh&lt;rry Smith.
Grade 6 - Charlene 8ogge3.'!1, Jeff Boyle, Pwm
CE. mpbrll , l£ ge&amp; G l.assburn, David Hammoru1,

Marlene Hurt , Penny Jotmson, Wendy Lemley,
Earl Mayo, Kelly Miller, Sandy Sh.afer, Lisa
Sisson, Craig Smith, stephanie Sprague . x,
Karen Steele · x, 0\eryl Tay lor • x. Cam.1
Williams.

Cadmus fourth six weeks honor
roll is announced:
Fourth grade - Tammy Pelfrey, Oleryl Cambum, Krtsty Crews, Tim Bostic, Lesa Sword,
Jon Bailey, PrUcilla Mille r, Vicky Harnmood.
Fifth grade - Harvey Burnett. Joey RUSM'll,
Sabrma Thornton.
SL.rth gr11 de - JO)' Carter , Jim Jeffers, John
Lehman , Sandra Patrick, Robert Roach .

Gra de 7 - Thurman HoMay. Allan Dnl~n .

J&amp;J GOLD &amp;SILVER
•WILl BUY GOLD 10.14-16 &amp; 18K
•SILVER •STIRLING •999
•SILVER COINS •SILVER DOUARS
•RINGS •DIAMONDS •WATCHES
•GUNS

.

'

ASSURED CURRENT MARKET PRICES

FINE

BALDWIN'S

GUNS

305 Upper River Road

Across from Silver Bridge Plaza
PHONE 446· 2227

f-------------.:....------------

$
A

$

A

v

v

E

E

25 " diagonal COLO~ TV/2SVMO~L
· · .
EARlY AMERICAN SM. lNG lh9
o l traditional fort. , Am .
~armlh and c harm
.
"Y
enc an cabJnetry o151
hgt11 p ine t'inish o n Pine sollos wood
res~ed

a~cenr s comoostt lo n

• VIR ll "Bioodcasl
Controlled" Color Televisio n
• Keyboard Quartz Preci SIOn
Eleclronic Tuning
• Dual Mode Remol e
Conhol
• Room light Sensor
• 100'1. Solid State Chassis
• Modular Chassis Design
• GE In-Line Picture
Tube Syslem

• Black Motnx Picture Tube
• ACC (Automatic
Calm Conlrol)
• Sharpness Co nhol
• DC Resl01oHon
• line Vo"age Regulator
• Digrtal Channel Number$
• Cable-Ready ·
Antenna Co nnector
• "Tilt.Out" Conlrol Bin

TV Is

12"

'9995

OMEROYLANDMARK
"Serving Meigs, Gallla
and Mason Counties"
Main Street
Pomeroy
Store Hours: 8:30to5:30
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Mill Closed at S: 00 P.M.
Phone 992·1 B1

NEW 1980 FAIRMONT HAPPY HOUSE, 14x70
Bay

Total
Electric

Window I~'i :!
,,
•I

Front

'

. 1 1--;_:_--~. -·,-·~o._·~~=-()_.~---===--~-=~~~---==Z·~=Wd='•~~~i~~~c:=~~l-.~
-

-+--7'- ;o'·-' +--&lt;i· 6' - -+-- 9'~ 4'·--+---- 17'· 9 '' ----'-+--

3 Bedroom Model

'

Gr.llde 4 - Chandra Wooldridge, Charles Caldwell , Missy SmlUl, Kaye Stover , Carla l.teving,

Serut.ll Morris, l&gt;awn McMeechlm - I,

BLACK AND WHITE SALE

Rear

15" Widths 0JIIJ, 'Other Widths
An.d.Thicknesses Also Oii' Sale:'. · .

Bi dwe ll-Porter
Eleme ntary
School announces the honor roll for
the fourth six weeks period. 1x Denotes aUA's 1.

'100 DISCOUNT

and

persq. ft.

Area honor rolls announced

boar d a nd srmuloted w ood

GALLIPOIJS - A Gallipolis man
cited on a charge ol DWI Friday
thre&amp;-vehlcle accident oo

Save on Owens-Corning Fiberglas' Insulation no~
Save on fuel billsJrom now on.
·
Heres your chance to get your house in shape
and fight back against rising fuel bills. At our "Save
Twice" insulation sale price' Savings vary. Find
out why in seller's fact sheet on A-va lues. Higher
·
A-values mean greater insulating power.
Install it yourself and you 'll save even more. Now
and in the long run.
Better hurry, though . This sale ends March 9 .

8.

0.

placed in direct charge of harbor
projects.
Recent family correspondence
with the United States Military
Academy has indicated that the institution will honors Its graduates of
100 years ago through family members and descendants at a special
"1880 Day at West Point." May 4 and
5, 1980, have been officially
designated for that honor.
According to the publication
"Descendants of John Carter Mary Lehr" by Francis Copeland
Stover, 1968, most Carters in Gallla
County descended from a conunon
ancestor, John Carter. Carter
history indicates that John Carter
and his wife Mary came to Gallla
County In the late 1770s from
Shenandoah County, Virginia. They
were the parents of nine children to
whom most of the Carters in Gallla
County can be tracect.
Individuals desiring more in·
formation regarding the upcoming
reunion at West Point, are encouraged U! contact David R. Carter, 120 Queens Road, Milford, Ohio
45150. .

CENTER CLOSED
RIO GRANDE - All facilities in
Lyne Center at Rio Grande CollegeConununity College will be closed to
the public until March 11. The pool
will be closed to the public until Maro
ch 30 for repairs and repainting. A
new schedule will be issued during
the week of March 9 for the beginning of the spring quarter.

it.

olice cite driver fo~ DWI

·Be a Double Winner.•.
Save Twice

Mnll ilf'SI Cla.•!!lilr '
MaHrt$~ Sri' ddl l't'r 1h&lt;" rmt"hnoull ~ ·• pport your

Somt' llkt' 11

Georgia, where Carter quickly rose
to the rank of captain and was

The recipe used by Kittredge
called for six ounces of strained
hops, three quarts of molasses, a

pint of yeast, and enough water to
fill the cask.
It is also interesting to note that
Gallia's famous peach brandy also
played a part in one of America's
most interesting edisodes - the
Aaron Burr conspiracy.
If we take Burr's word, it was in
1805 that he went west to drum up
support for a plan to organize 5,000
men at various points along the
Mississippi River so that in the event
of war with Spain (and war in 1805
seemed likely) this army could
liberate Texas and Mexico.
Blennerbassett lslaDd
How•ver, there were some who
doubted the patriotism of Burr and
accused him of trying to form his
own country along the Mississippi.
At any rate it was in 1806 that Blennerhassett Island in the Ohio River
(near Belpre) became a center of
activity for Burr's scheme as Har·
man Blennerhassett was collecting
supplies , building boats and
recruiting men.
President Jefferson sent a spy to
Ohio to study Burr's movements and
soon concluded that Burr and
associates bad to be arrested. It was
in December that Jefferson issued a
proclamation asking aU militia to
assist in apprehending the so-called
traitors.
Go to Point Pleasant
On December 11, 1806, the Wood
County militia under Col. Phelps
landed at the island to make arrests.
Blennerhassett, however, had
already departed by boat, heading
south. Phelps and several men
proceeded by horseback to Point
Pleasant to head off Blennerhassett
and the men he bad with him.
On inquiry by Phelps at Point
Pleasant and Gallipolis it was learned that Blennerhassett had yet to
pass these two points. Phelps
enlisted the help of the militia from
these two places and also put in a
supply of that famous Gallia liquor.
Spirits up and down
A large fire was built on the riverbank as militia and citizens set up
the watch. Minutes rolled by slowly
on this cold December eve as the
men kept up their spirits by pouring
spirits down.
As night wore on, the good old
"French booze" began to take its effect, and under the "watch" of slambering guards Blennerhassett
passed by Gallipolis and continued
down the Ohio to join Burr's forces.

BY JAMES SANDS
GAUJPOUS - In a November,
1791 edition of a Philadelphia
newspaper, it was reported that the
French at Gallipolis had just shipped to the east a load of wine.
The article went on to say that the
French had made the wine out of the
wild American grape that was found
growing in abundance on Gallipolis
Island. The sandy soil or the island
made it ideal for the growing of
grapes. it was commonly thought by
the "500" that the grapes had been
started 50 years before by French
fur traders.
WIDe praised
This wild Gallia grape was juicy
with a thin skin aod a small stone.
On the Philadelphia rMrket the wine
was known as Sciota wine, and compared favorably by persons in
Philadelphia to Madeira wine.
In ApriJ,l792, in a letter from John
Matthews to William Duer we find
that the French had begun also to
plant domestic grapes as well as
peach and apple trees: "The success
of their experiments in making wine
and brandy are circwnstances that
attach them much to the country."
It soon became the tradition in
Gallipolis for every French family to
keep an iron-bound cask in one cor. ner of the cellar, filled with pure
peach brandy and aged for several
years.
Braudy clears sinuses
Each day a large glass flask was
taken from the cask and set on the
side board ready to welcome aU
visitors and bandy for use after
meaLs. The French believed brandy
was an absolute necessity for
digestion and for clearing the
sinuses.
By about 1819 Gallipolis shipped
all over Ohio their famous peach
brandy, as it became Gallipolis' first
successful industry. It was also
about that time that Gallia became
noted for the making of beer and
several farmers grew their own
hops:
Alcoholism takes toll
Dr. Kittredge of Gallipolis was one
who encouraged the growth of the
beer industry in Gallipolis, mostly
for health reasons as alcoholism bad
taken a terrific toll on Gallia
citizens, and beer had less alcohol in

342 Second, Gallipolis, OH.

SJ9 ~ ~:.:-. ..-

&lt;&gt;fftt «J mforlal* flrn1 ~upporl 111 il

·c AROLINA .LUMBER

.

r.,: .,.,

..:~: ~-

Rutland.

Kenneth LaWIJOII, Aff. of Death,

Ieeman, justice of the peace, notary

French ·at Gallipolis
ship wine load east

Furnished

9'· 9'----.j

•12,49500

�1).3-'Ibe Sunday Times-• •'lltinel. Sunday . March 2. 1980

1).2- The Sunday Times-sentinel , Sunda) , ~l arc h 2. l!lOO

lleeps •••

Judge may leave easel
CLEVELAND (AP ) - U.S.
District Judge Robert B. Krupansky
is considering removing himself
from trying Cleveland's $330 million
anti-trust suit against Cleveland
Electruc Illuminating Co.
Lawyers for the city of Cleveland
filed a motion Friday charging that
Krupansky has favored CEI in the
case.
James B. Davis, a former city law
director, said a motion filed Friday
also seeks to delay the suit,

scheduled for trial March 10, until
the issue of Krnpansky's alleged
prejudice is settled.
Affidavits accompanying the
motion allege that Krupansky has
repeatedly frustrated the city's attempts at securing information
needed in the cru~e. The suit was filed
in 1975.
Among instances of alleged bias
cited by the city lawyers was a Dec.
15, 1978 statement from Krupansky
thst unless the city paid a $4.4

Renovation program
finds many problems
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Leonard
Salatsky says he did not expect aU
the snags he has encountered in his
attempt to reconstruct a home that
once belonged to Moses Cleaveland,
the founder of Cleveland.
The Hudson Township resident
and his wife, Sally, bought the house
in Brookline, Conn., and had it taken
apart and shipped to Hudson, a
suburb northwest of Akron, by
railroad. The pieces of the house are
being stored in two semi-trailers.
Salatsky and Edward P. Friedlander, a dealer in antique homes,
researched the deeds of the house
and found one from last century
belonging to Moses Cleaveland.
But Salatsky said he has experienced numerous delays in his attempts to rebuild the house. He says
he will attempt to sell it if his
restoration attempt becomes too
costly.
He is currently waiting for Summit County officials to approve plans

for an allotment in Hudson Town·
ship. '
"My loan committment time is
running out," Salatsky said. "If I
don't hear something by March 16,
I'll have to r~ce . "
He said several Hudson TownshiP
residents have offered to sell him
lots if his orginal plans fall through.
His other major snag has been a
debate with historians over the
validity of his Moses Cleaveland
ownership contention.
In January, the Western Reserve
Historical Society said the house
was not owned by Cleveland's founder, but by someone else with the
name.
Last week, Salatsky said, the
historical society recognized that
the house once belonged to the
proper Moses Cleaveland. One of the
deeds he showed the historical
society mentioned the names of Asa
and John Bacon, who were partners
with the real Cleaveland in a law
firm.

million debt to CEI within 15 days,
he would dismiss the anti-trust suit.
That was the day Cleveland went into default on $14 million in notes held
by local banks.
On Nov. 29, 1978, the judge rejected the city's proposal that he stop
CEI from attaching city property for
debts run up by the Municipal Electric Light System, according to an
affidavit filed by William Norris, a
lawyer in Davis' form. Norris said
Krupansky's ruling gave "a
stimulus" to CEI's "long-standing
objective" of acquiring the
municipal light plant.
The city had suggested other alter- .
natives in an effort to keep Muny
Light from being taken over by CEI,
but Krupansky rejected those,
Norris said.
.
The administration of former
Mayor Dennis J. Kucinich satisfied
the CEI debt and sidetracked a campaign by political rivals to place the
municipal light plant up for sale.
Krupansky said he . will decide
within several days whether to bow
out of the case. He said during a
hearing on the motion that he and his
law clerks will research the law
regarding disqualification.
The anti-trust suit developed from
an alleged refusal of CEI to give the
city access to Iow~ost power
available from New York State in
the early 1970s. The 45,001kustomer
urban power plant operates inside a
region served by CEI. Outside power
would have been "wheeled" across
CEI lines.
The city bad accused CEI and four
other utilities in the Central Area
Power Coordination Group of
monopolistic practices and con·
spiring to try to put Cleveland's
municipal utility out of business.
The city recently announced a $1.5
million out-of~ourt settlement with
the other four utilities, leaving only
CEI in the case.

Public lands moratorium declared
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Interior Depar:tment has imposed a
moratoriwn on its public land lotteries after Investigators uncovered
what they termed wide-scale fraud
in the oil and gas leasing program.
Frank Gregg, director of the
department's Bureau d. Land
Management, said the lotteries had
been "subjected to such thorough
manipulation that the possiblity of
lawful, bonafide participants successfully obtaining a lease has in
many cases been reduced to a very
low level."
Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus
announced Friday that be was
suspending aU noncompetitive oil
and gas leases for an indefinite
period while the department explored ways to correct abuses.
Officials said their six-month investigation had concentrated on five
western states - Wyoming,
Colorado, New Mexico, Montana
and Utah - where most of the lease
sales are made.
Gregg said the U.S. attorney's office bad found probable evidence of
wire fraud, mail fraud and conspiracy. Officials said they were investigating evidence against some
-!t

---naniP.:.CI. and·~ services.

No figures were available im-

mediately on how much oil and gas ·
bas been discovered on lands
covered by the noncompetitive
leasing program.
However, none of the states where
the investigation is concentrated are
among the nation's major oil
producing states.
Under the noncompetitive bid
procedure, a person pays a fee of $10
to enter his name along with all
others interested in a certain tract of
land. If his name is drawn in a lottery, he can lease the land, usually
for $1 an acre, and has the right to
drill exploratory wells.
Andrus said the leasing procedure
was intended to "spur oil and gas exploration and production on public
lands through a system open to
everyone. But in practice the system
bas been abused by middlemen who
resell leases on a speculative basis."
While a person ean legally file only
one application for each tract of
land, BLM officials said they had
evidence some companies were
using many people to make lease applications for them, greatly in·
creasing their chances of being the
eventual winner of a particular
tract.
Andrus last June proposed

changes in the law aimed at
reducing the influence leasing services play in the lotteries. He said
that some of the services were
charging fees up to $5,000 to give advice and complete the $10 filing
procedure.
In 1978, there were 3.5 million applications .for the non-competitive
leases. Of the 10,624 onshore leases
the department issued that year, 97
percent were done on a non·
competitive basis.
The other 3 percent of onshore
leases involved land in known oil and
gas producing areas, which like all
offshore leases, are handled through
competitive bids. Andrus'
moratoriwn does not affect these
lease sales.
Andrus said he would report in 30
days on whether the noncompetitive
leasing program can be reformed or
whether it should be scrapped for
competitive bids.

@

g,a\ltpo\ts
1iiarp
By J. Samuel Peeps
( - 19Uar l is f : Ern{'U H Shepardl

· GALLIPOIJS-James C. Myers,

who lives on Ingels Hill (first house

RETIREE HONORED- Raymond Furbee, Rt. 2,
Racine, was recently honored upon his retirement
from Kaiser Aluminwn, Ravenswood Works. Furbee
was presented a plaque by the company and a gold
watch by his co-workers in Plate Department. Pic-

tured with Furbee are Plate Department employees, .
Tom Chapman, Jack Fisher, Oscar Smith, Jack
Gilland, Lester Shockey, Ed Cromney, Richard Wise,
Paul Nohe, Tom Riffle and Orville Bush.

At least 500 educators and
merchants cited past week
NEW DJi;LIU, India (AP) Afghanistan's militia in the past
week has arrested al least 500
educators, merchants, civil servants
and Moslem clergymen suspected of
subversion, in a new ·crackdown by
the Soviet-backed government, a
report from Kabul said Saturday.
The report,' from an Afghan source
who has proved reliable in the past,
said some of those detained have
been tortured into confessing they
were "foreign agents."
The reported wave of arrests
followed a roundup of about 2,000
Shiite Moslems. The members of the
minority sect were accused of in·
stigating the Feb. 22 anti.SOviet
rioting which left about 300 per:sons
dead and an estimated 1,000 injured.
Meanwhile, there was no formal
Soviet response to a British proposal
for the neutralization of Mghanistan
and a quick withdrawal of Russian ~
troops. Britain said Friday it had
presented Moscow with an ouUine of
the plan, proposed . through the
European Common Market.
Senior Foreign Office sources said
the Soviets gave "a ' nwnber of
signals" in recent days indicating
they might be interested in the
British plan.
In Islamabad, a Foreign Ministry
spokesman said a Soviet Air Force
plane violated Pakistan's airspace
Saturday morning near Chitral,
close to the Pakistani-Mgban bor·
der, in the first such incident repor·
ted. The Pakistani Air Force fired
twice at the plane, he said, but it was
not hit.
Pakistan's President, Gen.

spokesman said. But the official said,'
Pakistan told its ambassador in,
Moscow to lodge a strong prole~·
with the Soviet government.

Mohanunad Zia ui-Haq, was informed of the incident and directed
that the Soviet aircraft tie escorted
peacefully from the area, the

Stewart man gets
prison sentences
conviction of B and E. The sentences
are to run consecutively.
In other activity, Patrick Me-. .
Cloud, 20, Middleport, who failed to.
surrender himself to the sheriff's
department Feb. 15 following a six
month to five year sentence for..
trespassing in an unoccupied struc-. ·
lure, was taken into custody at his- .
residence Wednesday by In·
vestlgator Gary Wolfe and State.
Probation Officer Phil McKinney.
l:le will be transported to the Ohio
Penal Medical and Reception Center_.
in Columbus next week.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies'
took a deer accident report Friday
from Mary E. Pullins, 31, Middleport. She said a deer ran into the·
path of bet vehicle while she was
driving south on SR 7. The deer was
killed.

POMEROY - Richard Cooper,
Rt. 1, Stewart, pleading guilty on a
Bill of Information to a charge of
breaking and entering, was sen·
tenced to six montha to five years
Friday by Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Judge John C. Bacon.
Cooper was also sentenced to a
term of six months to five years for
violation of probation on a previous
VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted-Clara Clark, Reed·
sville; Douglas Kitchen, Dexter;
Beulah Ransom, Racine; Kathryn
Evans, Portland; Joseph McCloud,
Middleport; Donna Williams,
Pomeroy; Stella O'Bryan, Mason;
Thomas Basin, Long Bottom.
Discharged--Flora Friley,
Dorothy Hysell, Lillian Schenkle.

Owens-Corning
"Save Twice"
Insulation Sale

public, and constable in Gallia Coun·
ty,
at different times, of course.
you reach in Green Twp.), read Foro
In
an illustrated article for Motor
l)!st Borden's solution to Gwendoyln
Magazine
for Decem her, 1930, Athey
Sheets' problem. The birthday anwrote
what
happened. He sail! that
riiversaries of her four children aU
be
slept
in
his
place of business, and
iiill on the same day of the week.
customers
woke
him up for service
~ Myers says that if the birth anor to make purchases.
iiiversaries fall after Feb. 29, any
On this occasion, one man stayed
birthday separated from another by
in the car while two others went into
a nwnber divisible by seven will fall
the station and got some soft drinks.
on the same day as another birthday
They drew guns, ordered Athey to
au the time.
the rear, took small change from
Imogene Hal,ley, 82 State St., says
him, and started to tie him up with a
that if the birthdays are exactly so
rope.
many weeks apart visibly they'll
"I broke away from them ," Athey
come out on the same day of the
wrote,
"and made a run for my cot
week. She takes Gwendolyn's
about
15
feet away. As I started to
children as proof: there's six weeks
run
one
of
the two grabbed me by the
between first and second birthdays;
clothes
with
one band and struck me
six weeks between the second and
about the head with his pistol with
third; nine weeks he tween the third
the other, but I kept going and dragand fourth; and two weeks between
ged him with me. I threw myself
the fourth and first.
across the cot and reached for my
Myers has already turned in his
revolver, lying on a small stand on
f,amily history for Volwne One of the
the
far side of the cot."
Gallia County History Book. When
(Athey
frired backward over his
Y.ou get yours finished, you know,
left
shoulder,
a shot which "apyou send it to Mary Allison, 136
burned
him about the face
parently
River Kanauga, Gallipolis· 45631, or
and
partly
blinded
him, for he turnHenny Evans, 638 First Ave.,
ed
and
ran
out
'Of
the building. As
Gallipolis.
quickly
as
I
could
I turned to the
He'e going to buy two of the books,
other
man,
who
was
standing a bout
and will give one of them to the
18 feet away' with an automatic in
Lawrence County Public Library.
each hand. I fired, and he feU, and
Since Don Mills, the Taylor
the autopsy afterward showed that I
Publishing Company man, said that
Myers was the first to turn in a . had hit him in the heart."
manuscript, Myers thinks it's possi·
GRANDMA GWOOD's diary: July
ble that he might get a Gallia County
14,
1911-No rain for many weeks,
History Book without cost; if he
and
the river is low and crops ·are
does, he'll donate it to the Dr.
drying
up. Aug. 4, 1911-The.first day
Samuel L. Bossard Memorial
of
Chautauqua.
No rain yet and the
Library.
river is the lowest in 35 years.
Potatoes will be scarce this fall.
IRMA BALES' maternal grandAug. 29, 1911-Tbe river is rising and
father was W. R. Athey, who killed a
the Carrie Brown started running.
holdup man at his Meigs County sero
Sept. 22, 1911 -Burrel Sims of
vice station at 2:45a.m. Sept. 4,1930.
Crown
City had Albert and Herman
Athey bad a versatile public
Lockhart arrested for murdering
career during his life at Kyger,
Carl Sims and throwing his body off
where he continued to keep his
a
river boat. I feel so sorry for
residence even though his business
Mother
Lockhart and Laura Sims
was In Meigs. He was township
and
her
family.
Asenseless killing.
trustee, G 0 P central commit·

Gallipolitan first graduate
GALLIPOIJS - In the spring d.
1880, Oberlin M. Carter of Gallipolis
was graduated first in his class at
Jbe United States Military Academy
.tWestPoint,N. Y.
: Commissioned a second lieutenant
jn the Corps of Engineers, Carter
ehalked up a four-year record at
West Point which had been exceeded
~Y only one man, Robert E. Lee.
: Following graduation, Lieutenant
(:arter and his wife Marguerite
ft'escotl, daughter of New- York
JIIU)tlmillionaire, Roger ·Fulger
rescott, were sent to Savannah,

i

Meigs Transfers
Gerald D. Wllldnsoo to George W.
Me Daniel, R. Carolyn McDaniel,
Lots, Pomet oy.
Oliver E. Balley, Martha Balley to
Clyde J. GllllJan, Vicky GllllJan,

Pan:eiB, Olive.
Gary Durst, Ruth Durst to Col.
and South. Elec. Co., Ease., Olive.
Boyd L. Kinzel, Audrey C. Kinzel
1o Col. Soutbem Ohio Elec. Co.,
Eue., Salisbury.
Glemt E. 'J'bcmpeon, Lob 'lbompson 1o Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elec. Co., Eue., Salisbury.
Robert B. Burdette, Genevieve
BurdeUe to Robert S. Burdette,
Pareels, Salisbury.

Willard C. Wilson, Anna M. Wilson
to FOI'elt Ganwer, Sandy Ganliwer,
Pan!els, Salllbury.
EIIM' 0 . Ritcllle, Joyce Rltclde to

UbertYOOkG.Co.,Ease., Olive.
FrankDoiJglae, Affkl., Setpto.
MallniJig D. Weblltei', Mary A.
Weflster to ~ Butlanai,
Pai'celi, Silii)W.
sam N. ArnOld, RUth ArnOld to
L.awreike Bestlaftl, ~reels, Setpio.
Gtorge A. C2!rblt)', Eunlc

Olrtatf lo

~

•

Ounmins, Clpel

r...e.Jmeuse.

CUmm!Jil,
L1iti'Y Lee I,;Jelllllll, Bonnie Cleland
1o R6bert' L. Bfitllfteld, "' Ac.,

Sli1._.n.
c.rt'1Jf!tll~!r:, ~wd to
T~
tq,

Joyce E. Hawley to Robert J .
Hawley, Divorce Decree, Pomeroy.
Waid Hayman, Donna Hayman to
Arnold P. Johnson, 5.75 A.,
Salisbury.
Chester.

Dan P. Smith, Doma J . Smith,
John T. Wolfe, Joan Wolfe to
Douglas W. UUie, Connie L. UtUe,
411.:11 A., Sutton.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to Anthony Pizzino, Margaret Pizzino,
UJO'll A., Sutton.
Emma Hines, dec., to Jeanne E.
Hines, Mary PbyWs Whitcomb,
Cert. of'l'rans.,$UUon.
Grafton D. Grueser, dec., to.Daisy
Grueser, Cert. Ttans., Sutton.
Audrey Neff, . Charles A. Neff, :
Freda Grueser,; )laud Grueser to
Dann,y Dwaln ~. Pan!els, Sutton.
Jeame E. Hines, Mary PhyUls
Whitcomb, John G. Whitcomb to
Oanny Dwaln Brown, Pan!els, Sut-

ton.

William K. Dean to Daniel Dwain
BroWn, Pan!els, SUtton.
Willlun T. Dean, Derry Dean to
Dliilly. Dnlilll'iiW!i, Parcel8, Buttoll.

·•

Mlirtbli J:
to DanW Owain
Bl'c!llm; Pati!illl~

Plltty .s. Wile, ~

•

fe ......

County,

Jea'n • ~~

14=
:
'
.
. ,. m~. .
"·~~=ri"':01W ~

~~.'

ARWBAREFAm

ABOUTaFIRM
MAnRESSES.
on
Scbbf Ilctnco.l
(Or,._lo_ bundle

I

~ CADET CHARLIE M. Carter

Medi•Ritt'MIIIIeu

~u plclared 1D Ule U. S. MDitary
tAeademy Year ID 1880.

Somrllk1 1 f1rn o U.. mm~Mi•dii&lt;I'M

MUIIrt'.,..,~, 1 '
( rml nolut•
,

rtnlll'llll . l k nwo·~

$89 95

body rlff'd!.

.

r1111oo

sn..,s ,.._

O....IAM ' ' " · " • " ' .
:··"•"' I

~:~::,:; KlntlfM

POSTPONED
GALLIPOLIS - Saturday
olght's Class A Sectlooal championship basketball· game bet·
ween Southern and South·
western's girls wu postponed,
due to the heavy soowfall. It bas
beeo rescheduled for 7:30 p.m.
Monday according to Dao
Bricker, tournament manager.

In further action, John W. Dillon,
32, GaWpolll, was charged with fill'
ai8hlng lntodeatlng liquor to a
minor at tbe,Gallipolla Ice Coo!pany
Called to the scene at 10:06 p.m., Ca'rry-Out, 709 First Ave.
palllpollls City Police report a north
Phillip E. Massie, 17, Galllpolls,
auto operated . by Wllllam was cited on a charge of purchasing
JJ "'IIIII• 54, sideswiped a parked auto · Intoxicating liquor.
by Howard B. Sauncjers,
Additionally, Max L. Reames, 56,
continued and struck a Columbus, was cited on a charge ol
auto owned by Melvin K. DWI.
CrQwnCity.

FIBERGLAS BATI INSULATION A-19 (6')

.21~

PRINCESS

GARDNER~

Seville

.

Heady fashion vintage! Rich Burgundy or Tan colored
accessories' of glove·soft VILLA COWHIDE, elegantly
ornamented with a goldtone chain set in a velvety
suede, oval inset.

"Tri·Partite " French Purse
KEY &lt;¥\RD" . . . . . . . . . .
Ot~er

.

$20.00
. $10.00

matching accessories from $13.00

Clark's Jewelry Store

.1/

' '

SUPPtY COMPANY
675,1160 ' ,_.Ill PINiiitd ·

312 Soxt11 !. tntel

Storettours :

••·'!1·-Sp.m.S.t. la.m.·ltiiOOft- '

Doyle J. SaWlders, Amy Spencer, Brett Ritter ,
Chris Patterson, Brad Halfhill, Canncn Mayo,
Ronrue Sn)·de r. Dorothy Hurt, Christy Lowder ,
l.l!iil Spencer, Riichel Green1 ~ . Blaine GiUooN' ,

Karen

Mantooth · 1, Scott Roosh ·I. Alln Maroun. Tim
Green · 11.. Kathy Morrison - I , 10m Price • 1: ,
GnHid &amp;gs. Jaml@ C.Whln - 1., Emily Yair-

child - x. Jun Coleman, Enc Ritter - I, John
Wortun.a.n, Marlt Foremen, Betti Adkina.
l.ot11de B- EUen EJ.~Iebl, Lisa Caldwell, Kimrru Coleman, Bcm.Jta Roberta, Cindy Hl&amp;ley.
Diane Shi lot. Andy Adams. Je&amp;Mine Miller,
Dtbbi~ Boyle, Matt Kt:ll"lptt , Becky S..IT, Tammie Welli.ngton · 1 , OtrisSmith_

Heather Bost.ir.

GradeS- Laurar&gt;rosos, Be&lt;Sy Greenlee , Rand)' Jltcbon, Rita McMeecham , Ka th)' Nelson ,
Missy Roble, Annelte Thomas, Malil Stou t.
Sh&lt;rry Smith.
Grade 6 - Charlene 8ogge3.'!1, Jeff Boyle, Pwm
CE. mpbrll , l£ ge&amp; G l.assburn, David Hammoru1,

Marlene Hurt , Penny Jotmson, Wendy Lemley,
Earl Mayo, Kelly Miller, Sandy Sh.afer, Lisa
Sisson, Craig Smith, stephanie Sprague . x,
Karen Steele · x, 0\eryl Tay lor • x. Cam.1
Williams.

Cadmus fourth six weeks honor
roll is announced:
Fourth grade - Tammy Pelfrey, Oleryl Cambum, Krtsty Crews, Tim Bostic, Lesa Sword,
Jon Bailey, PrUcilla Mille r, Vicky Harnmood.
Fifth grade - Harvey Burnett. Joey RUSM'll,
Sabrma Thornton.
SL.rth gr11 de - JO)' Carter , Jim Jeffers, John
Lehman , Sandra Patrick, Robert Roach .

Gra de 7 - Thurman HoMay. Allan Dnl~n .

J&amp;J GOLD &amp;SILVER
•WILl BUY GOLD 10.14-16 &amp; 18K
•SILVER •STIRLING •999
•SILVER COINS •SILVER DOUARS
•RINGS •DIAMONDS •WATCHES
•GUNS

.

'

ASSURED CURRENT MARKET PRICES

FINE

BALDWIN'S

GUNS

305 Upper River Road

Across from Silver Bridge Plaza
PHONE 446· 2227

f-------------.:....------------

$
A

$

A

v

v

E

E

25 " diagonal COLO~ TV/2SVMO~L
· · .
EARlY AMERICAN SM. lNG lh9
o l traditional fort. , Am .
~armlh and c harm
.
"Y
enc an cabJnetry o151
hgt11 p ine t'inish o n Pine sollos wood
res~ed

a~cenr s comoostt lo n

• VIR ll "Bioodcasl
Controlled" Color Televisio n
• Keyboard Quartz Preci SIOn
Eleclronic Tuning
• Dual Mode Remol e
Conhol
• Room light Sensor
• 100'1. Solid State Chassis
• Modular Chassis Design
• GE In-Line Picture
Tube Syslem

• Black Motnx Picture Tube
• ACC (Automatic
Calm Conlrol)
• Sharpness Co nhol
• DC Resl01oHon
• line Vo"age Regulator
• Digrtal Channel Number$
• Cable-Ready ·
Antenna Co nnector
• "Tilt.Out" Conlrol Bin

TV Is

12"

'9995

OMEROYLANDMARK
"Serving Meigs, Gallla
and Mason Counties"
Main Street
Pomeroy
Store Hours: 8:30to5:30
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
Mill Closed at S: 00 P.M.
Phone 992·1 B1

NEW 1980 FAIRMONT HAPPY HOUSE, 14x70
Bay

Total
Electric

Window I~'i :!
,,
•I

Front

'

. 1 1--;_:_--~. -·,-·~o._·~~=-()_.~---===--~-=~~~---==Z·~=Wd='•~~~i~~~c:=~~l-.~
-

-+--7'- ;o'·-' +--&lt;i· 6' - -+-- 9'~ 4'·--+---- 17'· 9 '' ----'-+--

3 Bedroom Model

'

Gr.llde 4 - Chandra Wooldridge, Charles Caldwell , Missy SmlUl, Kaye Stover , Carla l.teving,

Serut.ll Morris, l&gt;awn McMeechlm - I,

BLACK AND WHITE SALE

Rear

15" Widths 0JIIJ, 'Other Widths
An.d.Thicknesses Also Oii' Sale:'. · .

Bi dwe ll-Porter
Eleme ntary
School announces the honor roll for
the fourth six weeks period. 1x Denotes aUA's 1.

'100 DISCOUNT

and

persq. ft.

Area honor rolls announced

boar d a nd srmuloted w ood

GALLIPOIJS - A Gallipolis man
cited on a charge ol DWI Friday
thre&amp;-vehlcle accident oo

Save on Owens-Corning Fiberglas' Insulation no~
Save on fuel billsJrom now on.
·
Heres your chance to get your house in shape
and fight back against rising fuel bills. At our "Save
Twice" insulation sale price' Savings vary. Find
out why in seller's fact sheet on A-va lues. Higher
·
A-values mean greater insulating power.
Install it yourself and you 'll save even more. Now
and in the long run.
Better hurry, though . This sale ends March 9 .

8.

0.

placed in direct charge of harbor
projects.
Recent family correspondence
with the United States Military
Academy has indicated that the institution will honors Its graduates of
100 years ago through family members and descendants at a special
"1880 Day at West Point." May 4 and
5, 1980, have been officially
designated for that honor.
According to the publication
"Descendants of John Carter Mary Lehr" by Francis Copeland
Stover, 1968, most Carters in Gallla
County descended from a conunon
ancestor, John Carter. Carter
history indicates that John Carter
and his wife Mary came to Gallla
County In the late 1770s from
Shenandoah County, Virginia. They
were the parents of nine children to
whom most of the Carters in Gallla
County can be tracect.
Individuals desiring more in·
formation regarding the upcoming
reunion at West Point, are encouraged U! contact David R. Carter, 120 Queens Road, Milford, Ohio
45150. .

CENTER CLOSED
RIO GRANDE - All facilities in
Lyne Center at Rio Grande CollegeConununity College will be closed to
the public until March 11. The pool
will be closed to the public until Maro
ch 30 for repairs and repainting. A
new schedule will be issued during
the week of March 9 for the beginning of the spring quarter.

it.

olice cite driver fo~ DWI

·Be a Double Winner.•.
Save Twice

Mnll ilf'SI Cla.•!!lilr '
MaHrt$~ Sri' ddl l't'r 1h&lt;" rmt"hnoull ~ ·• pport your

Somt' llkt' 11

Georgia, where Carter quickly rose
to the rank of captain and was

The recipe used by Kittredge
called for six ounces of strained
hops, three quarts of molasses, a

pint of yeast, and enough water to
fill the cask.
It is also interesting to note that
Gallia's famous peach brandy also
played a part in one of America's
most interesting edisodes - the
Aaron Burr conspiracy.
If we take Burr's word, it was in
1805 that he went west to drum up
support for a plan to organize 5,000
men at various points along the
Mississippi River so that in the event
of war with Spain (and war in 1805
seemed likely) this army could
liberate Texas and Mexico.
Blennerbassett lslaDd
How•ver, there were some who
doubted the patriotism of Burr and
accused him of trying to form his
own country along the Mississippi.
At any rate it was in 1806 that Blennerhassett Island in the Ohio River
(near Belpre) became a center of
activity for Burr's scheme as Har·
man Blennerhassett was collecting
supplies , building boats and
recruiting men.
President Jefferson sent a spy to
Ohio to study Burr's movements and
soon concluded that Burr and
associates bad to be arrested. It was
in December that Jefferson issued a
proclamation asking aU militia to
assist in apprehending the so-called
traitors.
Go to Point Pleasant
On December 11, 1806, the Wood
County militia under Col. Phelps
landed at the island to make arrests.
Blennerhassett, however, had
already departed by boat, heading
south. Phelps and several men
proceeded by horseback to Point
Pleasant to head off Blennerhassett
and the men he bad with him.
On inquiry by Phelps at Point
Pleasant and Gallipolis it was learned that Blennerhassett had yet to
pass these two points. Phelps
enlisted the help of the militia from
these two places and also put in a
supply of that famous Gallia liquor.
Spirits up and down
A large fire was built on the riverbank as militia and citizens set up
the watch. Minutes rolled by slowly
on this cold December eve as the
men kept up their spirits by pouring
spirits down.
As night wore on, the good old
"French booze" began to take its effect, and under the "watch" of slambering guards Blennerhassett
passed by Gallipolis and continued
down the Ohio to join Burr's forces.

BY JAMES SANDS
GAUJPOUS - In a November,
1791 edition of a Philadelphia
newspaper, it was reported that the
French at Gallipolis had just shipped to the east a load of wine.
The article went on to say that the
French had made the wine out of the
wild American grape that was found
growing in abundance on Gallipolis
Island. The sandy soil or the island
made it ideal for the growing of
grapes. it was commonly thought by
the "500" that the grapes had been
started 50 years before by French
fur traders.
WIDe praised
This wild Gallia grape was juicy
with a thin skin aod a small stone.
On the Philadelphia rMrket the wine
was known as Sciota wine, and compared favorably by persons in
Philadelphia to Madeira wine.
In ApriJ,l792, in a letter from John
Matthews to William Duer we find
that the French had begun also to
plant domestic grapes as well as
peach and apple trees: "The success
of their experiments in making wine
and brandy are circwnstances that
attach them much to the country."
It soon became the tradition in
Gallipolis for every French family to
keep an iron-bound cask in one cor. ner of the cellar, filled with pure
peach brandy and aged for several
years.
Braudy clears sinuses
Each day a large glass flask was
taken from the cask and set on the
side board ready to welcome aU
visitors and bandy for use after
meaLs. The French believed brandy
was an absolute necessity for
digestion and for clearing the
sinuses.
By about 1819 Gallipolis shipped
all over Ohio their famous peach
brandy, as it became Gallipolis' first
successful industry. It was also
about that time that Gallia became
noted for the making of beer and
several farmers grew their own
hops:
Alcoholism takes toll
Dr. Kittredge of Gallipolis was one
who encouraged the growth of the
beer industry in Gallipolis, mostly
for health reasons as alcoholism bad
taken a terrific toll on Gallia
citizens, and beer had less alcohol in

342 Second, Gallipolis, OH.

SJ9 ~ ~:.:-. ..-

&lt;&gt;fftt «J mforlal* flrn1 ~upporl 111 il

·c AROLINA .LUMBER

.

r.,: .,.,

..:~: ~-

Rutland.

Kenneth LaWIJOII, Aff. of Death,

Ieeman, justice of the peace, notary

French ·at Gallipolis
ship wine load east

Furnished

9'· 9'----.j

•12,49500

�D-5- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunda). March 2. 1980

I~egislation

status

•"

•

QUEEN NAMED - Mary Moore was named
queen at a recent dance held at Meigs Junior High
sponsored by the Junior High Health and Pbysical
Education Department. The queen and her attendants

General

were presented with flowers and the queen also
received a box of candy. Pictured from I tor are the attendants, Lisa Oiler, Cathy Dean, Paula Swindell, and
queen, Mary Moo!'".

Assemhly~s

work reviewed

Ways and Means (fuel taxes, smoke . tive insurance practices); Judiciary
detectors, municipal income taxes) ;
(jury verdicts-mentally ill) ; ComPublic Utilities (railroad facilities);
merce and Labor (unemployment
Insurance (police and fire equip- compensation, railroad police, oil
ment purchases, property in- company owned service stations).
surance) ; Commerce and Labor
WEDNESDAY
(employee overtime, stuffed toy
Senate
session
11 a.m., House 1:30
regulations, retirement benefits) .
p.m.
Senate Conunittees: Ways and
Senate Conunittees: Highways
Means (pubtic employee sick leave,
and
Transportation (service station
income tax exemptions, corporate
air
pumps, tumptke tons, auto ·
franchise tax); Local Govenunent
repair
dealers); Judiciary (speedy
and Urban Affairs (surveyor
trials,
prison transfers, wrongful
registration, township zoning, arts
death actions); Education and
and cultural organizations); ElecHealth (Afro-American musewn,
tions, Financial Institutions and Inschool discipline, parental school
surance (initiative and referendum
choices).
laws, school board elections, decepHouse Committees : Economic Affairs and Federal Relations (federal .
revenue sharing, coal research) ;
Finance (liquor profits-industrial
development); Energy and EnHope's Helping Hands 4-H Club met February
be March6 at 7:3(1 p.m. at uan ttamuton ·s home
vironment (coal reclamation, gae
18 at Cindy "Byrd's hoW!t?. Mrs. Hope Burnett
Advisors are Wayne, J ane and Terri J ividen.
pilot lights) ; Highways and Highpresided and had charge of the program. She
Members present were Tim, Mark and Danny
aJao led devotions. Officers are, treasurer,
Beave, Heather and Jerry Riley KeUy and
way
Safety (motor vehicle . titles,
Michele HoUey; president, Charlene Hammons;
Margie Hamilton, Jane Ellen Wood Kim
billboard
advertising); State Govervlce pruident, Phil Greenlee ; new:s reporter,
Jividen, Teresa Haffelt, Ricky Swain, ' LH.rry
.Cindy Byrd; secretary, Scott Blevins; safety,
SHunders, Mark Holley and Patty Slayton.
funent
(finance
planning depr :tKemy Holley ; recreatioo leaders, Amy Wells,
Guests pr~ent were Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Haffelt,
David Blevins; health, Jenny Poole; telephone
ment) ; Education (state aid to
Dan Hamilton and Lor1, Anette JiVIden and Arcommittee, Angie Halley; song leader, Whitney
butw Sa unders.- Reporter Heather Riley.
education)
; Health and Retirement
Boker. The nut mee~ will be at Whitney
(police and firemen's retirement,
Baker's house Monday, March 17. Hope Burnett
suueated for the club's commwtity project to
military service credits); Small and
K.. C. nnd the SWlShine Girls Recognition
collect ITHJfley for the March of Dime:~ . Money·
Meeting - Parents, relatives and friends atGeneral Busfness (forms
rais~rojects will be selllng and serving food
tended a meeting ~o honor our club mtmbers
at the
sale, also selling tici:ets for the skating
management center, dentist-patient
who completed their projects for fair showing
. Hope Burnett Is advisor . Members
party.
this past summer. Guests were served .punch,
relationships, minority businesses).
present were Angie Holley, Michele Holley,
coffee and cook.i es by the club members from a
Charlene llarnrnoM. Phil Greenlee, Cindy Byrd,
table beautifully appointed wilh silver coffee serTHURSDAY
Scott Blevins, Kenny Holley, Amy Wells, David
VIce, pwx:h bowl and a lovely centerpiece. We
Blevin!, Jenny Poole, Whitney Baker, Charlene
Senate session 11 a.m., House at I
also OOnored Conn.ie Bradbury who has been our
Stewart, Eric Ritter, David Hammons, Todd
leader fo r four years but who will be unable to
Thacker, mart Stout, Bret Ritter . Guests
p.m.
continue as leader. Pins and certificates were
~were Mr. and Mrs. James Byrd and JimSenate Conunittees: Agriculture,
awarded to the followin.H : 4 year pins, Chris
my Bynl. - Cindy Ann Byrd.
Beebe, Sara Nay ; Su.sle rfay; 3 year pins Diane
Conservation
and Environment
Dailey, Krista Dailey, Mellsaa Tucker · '2 year
Thlvener P1oneen 4-H Qubmet Feb. 21 at Mr.
.(coal
mine
reclamation,
stream
piM,
~Dailey,
Paula
Kncn;,
Kelly
Siephem;
and Mrs. Jerry Haffelts' home. Kim Jlvlden
l year pliL'I, Kanm Abrams, Terri Corbin, Misty
presided . Patty Slayton led devotions . Mr. and
navigability).
Colvin, Mellisa Davis, Brenda Goucher, Eileen
Mnl. Wayne Jividen and Terri Jividen had
House Conunittees: Local GovernHarbour, Marie Janko, Stephanie Leifheit , Jodi
charge of the program. Kelly Hamilton demonSaunders, Rachael Saxon. the nerl meetins will
lltrated on the proper way to break your call to
ment
(county recorders, city goverbe March 3 at 6:30 p.m. at the Bulaville Townlead. Danny Beaver demonstrated the pro~r
nments);
Transportation and Urban
shouse. Those girls wishing to be in our club
care for sheep. Offlcers are, president, JGm
should attend this meeting. Club leaders will be
Jividen; vicepresldent, Tim Beaver; secretary,
Affairs
(jail
standards, shooting
Karen Tucker and Mildred Nay. - Reporter
Patty Slayton; treasurer, Teresa Haffelt; news
preserves).
Susie Nay.
l't'J)Or1.er, Heather Riley. The ne)llt meeting will

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here
are highlights of activity this week
in the 113th Ohio General Assembly :
J
MONDAY
Senate session 7:30p.m.
No House session.
Senate Conunittees : Finance
(highway bond issue) .
TUESDAY
House session II a.m., Senate
session 1:30 p.m.
House Committees : Finance
· (mental health facilities, real estate
tax bills); Agriculture and Natural
Resources (drainage Ia ws, dog kennelB, hunting Ucenses ) ; Judiciary
(marijuana laws, organized crime,
domestic violence, forcible .entry);

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP)- Here is
the status of legislation pending in
the 113th Ohio General Assembly :
HIGHWAYS - Proposed constitutional amendment allowing up
to$1.2 billion in bond issue sales over
16 years for highway improvements.
Passed House. Hearings Monday
before Senate Finance Conunittee.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Earmarks portion of state liquor
profits for loans and grants to reta~
Ohio industry. Passed Senate.
Hearing Wednesday by House
Finance Committee.
MENTAL HEALTH- Splits state
Mental Health and Mental Retardation Department into separate
agencies. Passed House, pending in
Senate Education and Health Committee.
LOTTERY - Strengthens
management of the Ohio Lottery and
provides for legislative oversight.
Passed both chambers in different
form. Conference committee unable
to reach compromise so far.
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS $841 million construction budget for
projects throughout the state.
Passed House and Senate in different forms; no hearings set by conference committee.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT - Reinstate the death penalty In Ohio.
Passed House, pending before the
Senate Judiciary Committee. No
hearings expected before late March.

Homemakers'
Circle

Gallia County 4-H News •••

County agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
Exteosion Agent
Agriculture and CNRD
Meigs County
CALENDAR
POMEROY - Monday, March 3,
Senior Fair Board Meeting- 8 p.m.
Wednesday, March S, Corn Planter Adjustment School, Meigs High
. School-7:30p.m.
0!
Thursday, March 6, Dairy Service
Unit-8:30p.m.
The Corner planter adjustment
school will be held in the vocational
agriculture shop. Along with com
planter adjustment, sprayer
!lr calibration will be discussed. We
~ hope to have 2-3 different types of
!l' planters on hand so we can get
through the steps of calibration.
.- Gasohol Meeting - At the
Lausche Building on the State'
Fairgrounds will be a meeting on
making gasohol. How it is =de, t1ie
chemical process, and exhibits will
be available to anyone interested.
There is a charge for lunch and a
packet of materials. The charge is
$10 for tickets purchased in advance
or $15 at the door. Tickets are
a\'ailable in our office.
Smoke Detectors' Work - They
now think that universal use of
IIIIOke detectors can reduce fire
related fatalities by 75 percent.
~on against fatalities from
the borne fires that cause a
significant number of deaths during
Ohio's winter months could come in
the form.of ~e. detectors.
The detectors are classified as
early warning devices because of
their abillty to detect small amounts
rJ. IIIDOke In the very early stages of
flre from remote locations of the

The average ranch style house
with the bedrooms located in one
area can usually be protected by one
detector. A two-story house or any
residence with one or more separate
bedroom areas will need enough
detectors to protect each sleeping
area. You should put an additional
early warning device at the top of

I5

.

'

Results of MDM Com Trials Now
Available- The yields, lodging, and
other data regarding MDM varieties
of corn is now available in our office.
nie tri~ls are conducted each year
at Portsmouth and involve many
varieties.

SNACKING TIPS
Gallipolis - Snacking has become
so much a part of nearly everyone's
way of life that I feel anyone who has
a need to lose weight will a1Bo need
help in coping with the snacking
problem. Those between meal or
party snacks can have a good or had
effect on your figure, your complexion and your health. Whatever
you conswne - be it food, beverage, ·
or both - should be considered as
part of your day's diet. In choosing
snacks then, be sure to count them in
your day's total calories, and be sure
they are chosen from the basic four
food groups to help supply part of
your nutritive reqauirements.
You will also want to choose
snacks that are low in calories. Raw
vegetables, fresh fruit and skim
milk are high in nutritive but
generally low in calories. For example, a glass of skim milk is only 90
calories, while ten single potato
chips count up to 100 &lt;r more
calories.
A really nutritious snack you
might like to try is our "Skinny Dip"
with raw vegetables·. Here is the
recipe. Place one small carton lowfat cottage cheese in a blender.
Blend untO smooth, adding a litUe
milk if necessary. Remove from
container. Stir In dip mtx. Chill. Serve with raw vegetables. H you don't
have a blender, you can use a mtxer
to make the cottage cheese smooth.

.

WASIDNGTON (APl- Claiming
that world demand will. continue
strong for u.s. farm commodities,
.the Carter administration has
decided against paying farmers to
voluntarily reduce some of their
COI1l acreage this year.
The aMOuncement followed a
report Friday by the Agriculture
Department showing that farm
pri~, on average, rose slightly in
February, malnly because of higher
prices for livestock, cotton and some
·
other products.
Com prices, however, declined in
February, the report showed. Some
farm groups and members of
Congress had urged the administration to approve Ute so-called
"paid diversion" plan to reduce com
acreage and thus belp bolster prices.
But Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland told a news conference the
decision not to have a paid diversion
program this year was made late
Wednesday at a White House
meeting that included top administration economists and advisers to President Carter.
"I laid out the figures and told

•

By Bryson R.IBudt Cartt'r
Gallia County Extension Agent
SMALL-FARM
FAMILY PROGRAM
GALUPOLIS - Gallia County
farm !amities are invited to enroll in
a new rarm and home educational
assistance program called the
"Small-Farm Family Program."
EnroUment blanks are available at
these agricultural agencies involved
in conducting the program through a
combined effort. Cooperative Extension Service (Courthouse
Galli polis),
Agricult urai
Stabilization and Conservation Service, Soil Conservation Service, and
Farmers Home Administration
(SpringVaUey Shopping Center).
You are encouraged to enroU by
March 1S, but enrollment may be
any time during the year. Participation is open to any farm family
producing agricultural products for
sale. FuUtirne or parttirne farmers
are Included. For identification purposes a smaU farm is considered as
anything from a few acres to several
hundred acres with a gross farm income less than $20,1100.
·
The county extension agents bave
been asked to assume the leadership
role in organizing the program. AU
of the USDA agencies m~ntioned

above will be involved in helping
plan and conduct the county
program plus others such as
Wildlife, Forestry, etc.
Once a family enroUs they will be
contacted to determine what
·agricultural and-m- home economics
educational assiStance theY would
tike to have in the coming months.
The sponsoring agencies then will
attempt to provide this assistance
through methods such as farm andor home visitations, office and
telephone consultations, personal
and circular letters, bulletins,
publications, and encouragement to
participate In meetings, field days,
etc. No, there isn't any government
money being made available
through this program - just lots of
advice, good sound research backed
recommendations and encouragement. But along the way we
may be able to guide you into some .
programs where financial assistance is available.
Give any of the agencies involved
a telephone call if you would like
more information. Enrolling today
may be your best step taken in the
1980s.

Hoofs and Paws I

vice to corn growers is to store it, to
hold it and wait for better prices.
"There's no reason in the world to
panic and sell. It's true, prices
aren't as strong as most of us would
Uke to see, but that mostly is the consequence of the huge crop last

Dlatrlct CODBervationlst
SoU Colllervation Service
GALUPOLIS I recently
received the March-April copy of
"International Wildlife" - a
publication of the National Wildlife
Federation. There was a story on the
pffects of accelerated soU erosion
upon a country's social and
economic welfare. I thought I'd
relate some of this story as an example d. the Important task we face in
conserving the managing .our soil the worse."
USDA Agriculture advisors were
and water resources.
.
sent
in to help in this emergency.
The example Investigated in this
While
their efforts are vastly helping
article is the smaU island of Java.
the
problem seems to be nearly
Java ill undergoing troubles similar
beyond
the recovery point. One
in effect if not cause, to America's
states
you
"can't have soil ,if it's
Dust Bowl of the 1930s.
'
The problem begins on the upper already gone."
The point of this article was more
slopes of their mountains. These
than a history lesson and more than
cleared and burned to
mountains
a statement of interesting and
expand agriculture production
awesome facts - it will hopefully
acreate. Through the villager's need
place the problem of soil erooion into
for production hund and tlu9r
perspective.
Excessive soil loss is
Ignorance of· proper management
more
than
a
farmer's
problem - it
techniques for conservation, these
is
a
conununity
a
national
and a
cleared acres were ravaged by
civilizatlonal
problem.
Soil
lossesterribly accelerated erosion rates.
particularly topsoil losses can force
As.the topsoil was moved away and
a
nation into complete dependency
caused yields to plummet, these
upc;n other nations. A nation that
recently cleared areas were abancannot feed its people cannot
doned and new sites selected,
possibly expect to be strong.
cleared and cultivated as before.
In all honesty soil losses here are
The cycle was colllJ)leted and connot nearly as severe as In this examtinUBlly sell-propagating.
ple. Our fanners are much better
These abandoned areas were so
educated
on conservation. But, we
mis-lllllliagjld and so robbed of au
do
have
widespread
excessive soil
natural fertility that no revegetation
erosion.
If.
we
use
Java as a
could occur. The -result was large
example
of
our own
magnified
Inlets of bare hillBlde land left In a
problem
we
see
that
we
can concondition to suffer the most severe
.
tinue
to
lose
soil
and
either
degree of erosion. Pastures were in
gradually deplete the fertility and is
such poor condition that they could
not support grazing fnm sheep. turn reduce our standard of Uving
(as we may now be doing) or gearIrrigation systems (of which Java
up toward soil conservation and
has the most sophisticated in all of
maintain the resource base which
Asia) were rendered nearly useless
will insure otir future high Uvlng
by excessive silt deposits. A heavy
standards.
Pretend that Java's
rain In the mountains can cause
problems
are
an accelerated model
62,500 acres of land to be flooded in
of
our
own
future.
It looks like we
one day.
be
changing
our resource
had
better
Several landowners were inmanagement
techniques,
doesn't It?
.verviewed. One related that he had

Bergland said, for example, it wiD
require about H months for the
record com harvest of more than 7.7
billion busheiB " to work its way"
through the marketing system for
domestic use and as exports to other
.countries.
"There's no quick fill, there 's no
cure," Bergland said. "A paid diversion would not put aside the fact that
we have this huge crop that must be
marketed In a prudent, businesslike
way." ·
Bergland las.t year announced
wheat and com fanners In 1980
would not have to set aside part of
their land from crop production as a
basic requirement for getting
federal price supports, a provision
that was in effect the JI!IS( two years.
The programs In 1978 and 1979 also
included a !Uversion provision so
corn fanners could be paid for idling
additional land.
But since Carter announced a partial embargo of U.S. grain sales to
the Soviet Union Jan. 4, the administration has said repeatedly
that an acreage diversion plan by it-

BY DIANA S. EBERTS
Extension Agent
Home Economics
Meigs County
POMEROY - Inflation is cutting
into everyone's income. If you' re
looking for ways to supplement your
income, be wary of these enticing
work-at-home ads.
Don't be taken in by newspaper or
magazine ads that promise a quick
profit. Be especially leery of ads that
claim you can make a fantastic
profit in your spare time. One such
ad might say, "Earn $175 an hour
while watching television.''
That pitch sounds great, but when
you read on to the end of the ad you
find the catch. This tYJl') of scheme
usually requires you to send money
for more details.
When you send in the monty, that
may be the end of the line. You get
no details and you've lost money.
But to get started you may have to
buy materials from the company
before they can set you up in
business. So, that means sending
more money -and that cuts down on
your profit margin before you ~ven
get started.
Sure, you may make a small
profit. But you may have to work
harder and longer than the ad leads
you to believe.
Another work-at-home scheme
that's often a gyp is an ad that
claims "no selling" is Involved. With

this type of scheme the consumer of-

ten does some handwork, like
sewing or making crafta. You make
the produce and seU it back to the
company if it's "up to standards."
So you're stuck with a lot of items
you can't use or sell.

Testimonials are also a tactic
used by advertisers. Be skeptical of
ads using nonexistent consumers
who have made thousands of doUars
at home with the help of the firm.
Before investing any money In this
type of work as the company f&lt;r
positive proof about the
testlmonialB. Contact a person who
has had "success" with the work.
Before you invest money in any
type of extra-Income scheme find
out all you can about the firm and
the work. A good place to start is
your banker, or contact your local
Better Business Bureau. Get the facts before you Invest in nothing but
false hope.

.

Slanrla rd s teel
tank ladder

capawy dus t cotl ectOf

100 bushel ta nk

Op tiO na l flip · uP

~DIN NOW! 'JUSi

9~CAU~t: YCJJ'I&lt;~ IN1iit

fOORIH GRAOE DW.tfl
MEAN Yo lilt OV~R 11-lf=
HI~!- .

-·-·-- - - ·

''

'

A phone call to your County Extension Office will help you locate
a 4-H group in your community.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Farmer and Family
Make plans now to att•nd our old fashioned

.

Southeastern
Ohio
Fertilizer Service
'

PANCAKE &amp; SAUSAGE
WHEN:
DAYS
WHERE:
Jaycee Building

MARCH

St. Rt. 35

5th &amp;6th

Kanauga, OH.

WHY:

WHO:

To announce ·
the opening of
PDo0 ,. .~utheastern Ohio
___ j Fertilizer Service

Your Entire

ITO TIMI;..

Fami~

!

Acc urate leedmg ca lr oratoon Chart

auger e •ten s10ns
cruelty and abuse, that we have
Srx load-chec k wmdows. ltl ree o n each srde
Adtu stabte cradle
neglected the more important task
~r ani\ auger slide l or exac t teed I low
of buDding an ethical system In
Fast. ove1 cente r m1lllat ct1
Posr trve up-d own auger wmch
which kindness to animals is regarW1de screen· to-doo r
ded as the norm rather than the exPop -up stub auge r lid . p ro tects auger
1
to, last teed !tow
ception."
Op tional oll eelcoo;,,.ca,fe ·l
magnet. all m odels .
Think about that statement for a
agar~ h11rdware d1sease
Ad tustat&gt;le drop Ieeder sp""sjl
moment ... in other words, humane
Co nven.ent dr oporganizations and agencies have I R•e•e"s'b'• hammers. l ou r gr ,ndmg edge!
fe eder n~ug ht control
been responding to and treating the . 8 u u aedoacoott" mrlllor hrg l1 hammer speed
Oro p I eeder clutch
symptoms instead of preventing the
Adtust aote a" fl ow l or gr•nd•ng capa crty
disease! We are in the process of fin- 8 Tt,. o• ··o,tclu tc h stops mrll
Dro p-fe eder pOSi tion lock
g.ves. on 1mpact
lets muter run
ding an Educational Officer and
hope within the next year to start
Shielded dr np le(KII! r
New-shrelded pto
w1t h ho lder and tock
working withyOWig people.
Fo ld· OUl fhm 51 de on hopper
PI Lg -proot auger head
We wiD be placing Interesting
r ·r ansport lock on d'ot&gt;· f"''" I
literature in local libraries and we 8 Sefot'"" ""''o' dn ve l!nes
Low·t l!l co ncentrate hopper
gears
would request that local church ofFl 1p -up S&lt;lk- Kutr opens oags '
ficials promote a reverence for life
~ t ay - put tod spr.ng , lormula card pockat
theme for future sermonS.
Shear.prn protected muter
DISChaJge brake-l ock
and auger dm•e
One aul)er moves both teed 'and concentrate
g1ves o n 1mpac t
Topics such as "Do animals have
Clean
-o
u
t
slide
under
Fwe
double·DandeCl
VOelt
d
rr'o'
e
any rights?" (based on a discussion
Three heavy- duty
auger and tank
tarik suppo rts
of Genesis and the philosophy of Dr.
E11tra sc reen storage
Co nvenient unloadmg
auger
ctutcn
Albert Schweitzer) will generate
Quick-cha nge screens
much interest and response. There
Is much that. can be done by
'
everyone to assist in eUminating the
unnecessary suffering rJ. animals
that goes on presently. H 8llY
. .
.
. .
I
readers have additional suggestionS,
ONE 'ONLY IN'
FARM HAND MODEL 817 .GRINDER-MIXER
W/100
BU. TQK
.
,.
do let us know.
1'bei'e are llllimBls homeless. They
· AND ·16" HAMMER'MIU:.
are au young and lri good health - .1
having had their shots and been wormed .. • and we are seeking reaUv
good homes for each to remain for
their lifetime. H Interested can the
HUIIJ8IIIl Society at WU2IlO any day
noon through 7p.m.

SALIII

S'RICK:

- - ·-- ---

Boys and girls 9 years of age or in the 3rd grade may join 4-H.
Any youth who hss not passed their 19th birthday on January 1st can be
a 4-H'er. In addition to 4-H projects designed for elementary age youth
there are many pr ogr ams and activities available for older teenagers.

are

Raising small animals is another
potential money-loser. Some of these
ads claim that " no experience Is
necessary." That may be partially
true if you're just "raising"
animals. However, these schemes
usuaUy involve animal breeding.
And that often takes a lot of knowhow and experience. So you may end
up investing in animals that don't
~produce - or worse yet, dying and
diseased animals.

Weather- hgllt lid.
pops up i1 overfilled

Cooperat ive Extension Service
The Ohio State Un lvoratty

ATTENTIONI

a

BY :
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

Bergland said the diversion
Under last year's Jli'OfP'BffiS,
program could be aimed at farmers
wheat and feed grains r,niJera Idled
idling 6 million to 10 million acres
about IU million acres, includin&amp; .
this yea r, mostly land that has less
about 1.1 million acres rJ. idled com
production potential and should be , land for which farmers were paid ·
protected from erosion by keeping it
about $109.1 million.
out of crops .

s•U for feed grains was an option understudy.
·
A number of farm groups and
farm-state members of Congress
have urged such action to help boost
grain prices.
In an interview eartier this week.

year. "

to abandon his farm and now worked
for others. Another man has had 80
percent crop damages In the past 18
montha; stiU another has had only
one marketsble crop since 1974.
Flooding was such problem to one
farmer that he ow raises ducks and
seUs eggs. As one agriculture advisor stated "This depletion of our
soil resources is so drastic thai the
people In Java don't know what hit
them. They know only that in recent
years life has taken a sharp turn for

By Stephen D. HibiDger

•

looomod tank, sheds wat er

them it was a close call whether to
have one or not," Bergland told a
reporter after the news conference.
Bergland sl!fd there was mosUy
general agreement at the meeting
after fooking at world grain supply
and demand projections thjlt no
land-Idling program was needed this
year.
At his news conference, Bergland
said inflation· factors aiBo were involved In deciding against paying
com farmers not to grow crops on
some of their acres this year.
Howard W. Hjort, Bergland's
chief economist, said a "modest"
land-idling program would have cost
around $300 million in payments to
farmers. It could. have !'educed 1980
corn production by an estimated 120
million to 160 million bushels, be
said.
•
Bergland was asked whether the
decision would have any dramatic
downward impact on grain market
prices.
" None whatsoever," Bergland
replied. "Com is . not going out of
style. It won't rot, it is in great
demand the world over, and my ad-

·Soil erosion can
•
move a nation

&gt;

By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - CHurches and
schools, as well as good parents,
know that lessons learned and principles taught to us as children normally stay with us our entire lives.
The manner in which parents Uve,
react, and speak, all stays with a
child and creates the type .adult that
child will become one day.
This rule of thumb works in just
about everything - including the attitude that people have toward
animals.
If a child is raised in a home where
the idea is to only feed and care for
animals when it is convenient, to
kick the cat as a way of taking out
frustrations, and where the father is
tJie "so caUed macho type" that
thinks any form of kindness or compassion toward them Is not being
masculine - well, that ridiculous attitude carries on to the next
generation.
This is one of the main reasons
why the Hwnane Society of the •
United States Is pushing more and
more to have thoi!e of us in the field
boule.
Smolre detecting devices should be cultivate a very strong .Educational ·
placed outlide bedroom areas to.in- · program within our local societies.
As John Hoyt, President of HSUS
, ~ IIIIOke befcire it can get into
stated'
recently, "For ioo long the
bedrooiiia that boule sl~ping occuplllltl. The dfteeton lh!IWd be humane movement in this country
,placed on the ceilllll becauae sm11ke has been on the defensive. We have
tlliell 'alfil· firel c.ll be c!Wcovered so preoccupied ourselves with
responding to the conliequences of
' RlOI'I! quickly. .
.I

e

basement stairs.

In' 8 £Trl! CUM.

1

Farmers will not be paid for reducing corn crops

Agriculture andour community

•

••

We'll be serving Pancakes &amp; Sausage from
10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P~M. Please come in at your
convenience~ Don't miss our special discounts
during "The Southeastern Fertllizer Servl~e'''
Open House and Pancake and Sausage Days.
We

for
•••

o~car

will have r8presentatlves on han~ to talk with .yau r. 0111
these componlesa

prices Qn
/i.mmonlum.
Nitrate

. .•

CENTRAL
SOYA
.
.

6_
95 SyCamore, •Gali!JI)Iis
.·. .w&amp;-7672

'

Mobay

Monsanto
DuPont
Elanco

Basa
Shell

Dow
·union Carbide ·

Stauffer

Otevron

·

Ciba Geigy

~ith .·Douglas Fertilizer

C. L. C. 'labs

NciiHaup King Seeds
.Ruffs Seeds
0. Y. 0. Seeds
I

.

Southeastern .Ohio :fertilizer Service is affiliated with Gala Roller Mils

-.

�D-5- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunda). March 2. 1980

I~egislation

status

•"

•

QUEEN NAMED - Mary Moore was named
queen at a recent dance held at Meigs Junior High
sponsored by the Junior High Health and Pbysical
Education Department. The queen and her attendants

General

were presented with flowers and the queen also
received a box of candy. Pictured from I tor are the attendants, Lisa Oiler, Cathy Dean, Paula Swindell, and
queen, Mary Moo!'".

Assemhly~s

work reviewed

Ways and Means (fuel taxes, smoke . tive insurance practices); Judiciary
detectors, municipal income taxes) ;
(jury verdicts-mentally ill) ; ComPublic Utilities (railroad facilities);
merce and Labor (unemployment
Insurance (police and fire equip- compensation, railroad police, oil
ment purchases, property in- company owned service stations).
surance) ; Commerce and Labor
WEDNESDAY
(employee overtime, stuffed toy
Senate
session
11 a.m., House 1:30
regulations, retirement benefits) .
p.m.
Senate Conunittees: Ways and
Senate Conunittees: Highways
Means (pubtic employee sick leave,
and
Transportation (service station
income tax exemptions, corporate
air
pumps, tumptke tons, auto ·
franchise tax); Local Govenunent
repair
dealers); Judiciary (speedy
and Urban Affairs (surveyor
trials,
prison transfers, wrongful
registration, township zoning, arts
death actions); Education and
and cultural organizations); ElecHealth (Afro-American musewn,
tions, Financial Institutions and Inschool discipline, parental school
surance (initiative and referendum
choices).
laws, school board elections, decepHouse Committees : Economic Affairs and Federal Relations (federal .
revenue sharing, coal research) ;
Finance (liquor profits-industrial
development); Energy and EnHope's Helping Hands 4-H Club met February
be March6 at 7:3(1 p.m. at uan ttamuton ·s home
vironment (coal reclamation, gae
18 at Cindy "Byrd's hoW!t?. Mrs. Hope Burnett
Advisors are Wayne, J ane and Terri J ividen.
pilot lights) ; Highways and Highpresided and had charge of the program. She
Members present were Tim, Mark and Danny
aJao led devotions. Officers are, treasurer,
Beave, Heather and Jerry Riley KeUy and
way
Safety (motor vehicle . titles,
Michele HoUey; president, Charlene Hammons;
Margie Hamilton, Jane Ellen Wood Kim
billboard
advertising); State Govervlce pruident, Phil Greenlee ; new:s reporter,
Jividen, Teresa Haffelt, Ricky Swain, ' LH.rry
.Cindy Byrd; secretary, Scott Blevins; safety,
SHunders, Mark Holley and Patty Slayton.
funent
(finance
planning depr :tKemy Holley ; recreatioo leaders, Amy Wells,
Guests pr~ent were Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Haffelt,
David Blevins; health, Jenny Poole; telephone
ment) ; Education (state aid to
Dan Hamilton and Lor1, Anette JiVIden and Arcommittee, Angie Halley; song leader, Whitney
butw Sa unders.- Reporter Heather Riley.
education)
; Health and Retirement
Boker. The nut mee~ will be at Whitney
(police and firemen's retirement,
Baker's house Monday, March 17. Hope Burnett
suueated for the club's commwtity project to
military service credits); Small and
K.. C. nnd the SWlShine Girls Recognition
collect ITHJfley for the March of Dime:~ . Money·
Meeting - Parents, relatives and friends atGeneral Busfness (forms
rais~rojects will be selllng and serving food
tended a meeting ~o honor our club mtmbers
at the
sale, also selling tici:ets for the skating
management center, dentist-patient
who completed their projects for fair showing
. Hope Burnett Is advisor . Members
party.
this past summer. Guests were served .punch,
relationships, minority businesses).
present were Angie Holley, Michele Holley,
coffee and cook.i es by the club members from a
Charlene llarnrnoM. Phil Greenlee, Cindy Byrd,
table beautifully appointed wilh silver coffee serTHURSDAY
Scott Blevins, Kenny Holley, Amy Wells, David
VIce, pwx:h bowl and a lovely centerpiece. We
Blevin!, Jenny Poole, Whitney Baker, Charlene
Senate session 11 a.m., House at I
also OOnored Conn.ie Bradbury who has been our
Stewart, Eric Ritter, David Hammons, Todd
leader fo r four years but who will be unable to
Thacker, mart Stout, Bret Ritter . Guests
p.m.
continue as leader. Pins and certificates were
~were Mr. and Mrs. James Byrd and JimSenate Conunittees: Agriculture,
awarded to the followin.H : 4 year pins, Chris
my Bynl. - Cindy Ann Byrd.
Beebe, Sara Nay ; Su.sle rfay; 3 year pins Diane
Conservation
and Environment
Dailey, Krista Dailey, Mellsaa Tucker · '2 year
Thlvener P1oneen 4-H Qubmet Feb. 21 at Mr.
.(coal
mine
reclamation,
stream
piM,
~Dailey,
Paula
Kncn;,
Kelly
Siephem;
and Mrs. Jerry Haffelts' home. Kim Jlvlden
l year pliL'I, Kanm Abrams, Terri Corbin, Misty
presided . Patty Slayton led devotions . Mr. and
navigability).
Colvin, Mellisa Davis, Brenda Goucher, Eileen
Mnl. Wayne Jividen and Terri Jividen had
House Conunittees: Local GovernHarbour, Marie Janko, Stephanie Leifheit , Jodi
charge of the program. Kelly Hamilton demonSaunders, Rachael Saxon. the nerl meetins will
lltrated on the proper way to break your call to
ment
(county recorders, city goverbe March 3 at 6:30 p.m. at the Bulaville Townlead. Danny Beaver demonstrated the pro~r
nments);
Transportation and Urban
shouse. Those girls wishing to be in our club
care for sheep. Offlcers are, president, JGm
should attend this meeting. Club leaders will be
Jividen; vicepresldent, Tim Beaver; secretary,
Affairs
(jail
standards, shooting
Karen Tucker and Mildred Nay. - Reporter
Patty Slayton; treasurer, Teresa Haffelt; news
preserves).
Susie Nay.
l't'J)Or1.er, Heather Riley. The ne)llt meeting will

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here
are highlights of activity this week
in the 113th Ohio General Assembly :
J
MONDAY
Senate session 7:30p.m.
No House session.
Senate Conunittees : Finance
(highway bond issue) .
TUESDAY
House session II a.m., Senate
session 1:30 p.m.
House Committees : Finance
· (mental health facilities, real estate
tax bills); Agriculture and Natural
Resources (drainage Ia ws, dog kennelB, hunting Ucenses ) ; Judiciary
(marijuana laws, organized crime,
domestic violence, forcible .entry);

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP)- Here is
the status of legislation pending in
the 113th Ohio General Assembly :
HIGHWAYS - Proposed constitutional amendment allowing up
to$1.2 billion in bond issue sales over
16 years for highway improvements.
Passed House. Hearings Monday
before Senate Finance Conunittee.
INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Earmarks portion of state liquor
profits for loans and grants to reta~
Ohio industry. Passed Senate.
Hearing Wednesday by House
Finance Committee.
MENTAL HEALTH- Splits state
Mental Health and Mental Retardation Department into separate
agencies. Passed House, pending in
Senate Education and Health Committee.
LOTTERY - Strengthens
management of the Ohio Lottery and
provides for legislative oversight.
Passed both chambers in different
form. Conference committee unable
to reach compromise so far.
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS $841 million construction budget for
projects throughout the state.
Passed House and Senate in different forms; no hearings set by conference committee.
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT - Reinstate the death penalty In Ohio.
Passed House, pending before the
Senate Judiciary Committee. No
hearings expected before late March.

Homemakers'
Circle

Gallia County 4-H News •••

County agent's corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
Exteosion Agent
Agriculture and CNRD
Meigs County
CALENDAR
POMEROY - Monday, March 3,
Senior Fair Board Meeting- 8 p.m.
Wednesday, March S, Corn Planter Adjustment School, Meigs High
. School-7:30p.m.
0!
Thursday, March 6, Dairy Service
Unit-8:30p.m.
The Corner planter adjustment
school will be held in the vocational
agriculture shop. Along with com
planter adjustment, sprayer
!lr calibration will be discussed. We
~ hope to have 2-3 different types of
!l' planters on hand so we can get
through the steps of calibration.
.- Gasohol Meeting - At the
Lausche Building on the State'
Fairgrounds will be a meeting on
making gasohol. How it is =de, t1ie
chemical process, and exhibits will
be available to anyone interested.
There is a charge for lunch and a
packet of materials. The charge is
$10 for tickets purchased in advance
or $15 at the door. Tickets are
a\'ailable in our office.
Smoke Detectors' Work - They
now think that universal use of
IIIIOke detectors can reduce fire
related fatalities by 75 percent.
~on against fatalities from
the borne fires that cause a
significant number of deaths during
Ohio's winter months could come in
the form.of ~e. detectors.
The detectors are classified as
early warning devices because of
their abillty to detect small amounts
rJ. IIIDOke In the very early stages of
flre from remote locations of the

The average ranch style house
with the bedrooms located in one
area can usually be protected by one
detector. A two-story house or any
residence with one or more separate
bedroom areas will need enough
detectors to protect each sleeping
area. You should put an additional
early warning device at the top of

I5

.

'

Results of MDM Com Trials Now
Available- The yields, lodging, and
other data regarding MDM varieties
of corn is now available in our office.
nie tri~ls are conducted each year
at Portsmouth and involve many
varieties.

SNACKING TIPS
Gallipolis - Snacking has become
so much a part of nearly everyone's
way of life that I feel anyone who has
a need to lose weight will a1Bo need
help in coping with the snacking
problem. Those between meal or
party snacks can have a good or had
effect on your figure, your complexion and your health. Whatever
you conswne - be it food, beverage, ·
or both - should be considered as
part of your day's diet. In choosing
snacks then, be sure to count them in
your day's total calories, and be sure
they are chosen from the basic four
food groups to help supply part of
your nutritive reqauirements.
You will also want to choose
snacks that are low in calories. Raw
vegetables, fresh fruit and skim
milk are high in nutritive but
generally low in calories. For example, a glass of skim milk is only 90
calories, while ten single potato
chips count up to 100 &lt;r more
calories.
A really nutritious snack you
might like to try is our "Skinny Dip"
with raw vegetables·. Here is the
recipe. Place one small carton lowfat cottage cheese in a blender.
Blend untO smooth, adding a litUe
milk if necessary. Remove from
container. Stir In dip mtx. Chill. Serve with raw vegetables. H you don't
have a blender, you can use a mtxer
to make the cottage cheese smooth.

.

WASIDNGTON (APl- Claiming
that world demand will. continue
strong for u.s. farm commodities,
.the Carter administration has
decided against paying farmers to
voluntarily reduce some of their
COI1l acreage this year.
The aMOuncement followed a
report Friday by the Agriculture
Department showing that farm
pri~, on average, rose slightly in
February, malnly because of higher
prices for livestock, cotton and some
·
other products.
Com prices, however, declined in
February, the report showed. Some
farm groups and members of
Congress had urged the administration to approve Ute so-called
"paid diversion" plan to reduce com
acreage and thus belp bolster prices.
But Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland told a news conference the
decision not to have a paid diversion
program this year was made late
Wednesday at a White House
meeting that included top administration economists and advisers to President Carter.
"I laid out the figures and told

•

By Bryson R.IBudt Cartt'r
Gallia County Extension Agent
SMALL-FARM
FAMILY PROGRAM
GALUPOLIS - Gallia County
farm !amities are invited to enroll in
a new rarm and home educational
assistance program called the
"Small-Farm Family Program."
EnroUment blanks are available at
these agricultural agencies involved
in conducting the program through a
combined effort. Cooperative Extension Service (Courthouse
Galli polis),
Agricult urai
Stabilization and Conservation Service, Soil Conservation Service, and
Farmers Home Administration
(SpringVaUey Shopping Center).
You are encouraged to enroU by
March 1S, but enrollment may be
any time during the year. Participation is open to any farm family
producing agricultural products for
sale. FuUtirne or parttirne farmers
are Included. For identification purposes a smaU farm is considered as
anything from a few acres to several
hundred acres with a gross farm income less than $20,1100.
·
The county extension agents bave
been asked to assume the leadership
role in organizing the program. AU
of the USDA agencies m~ntioned

above will be involved in helping
plan and conduct the county
program plus others such as
Wildlife, Forestry, etc.
Once a family enroUs they will be
contacted to determine what
·agricultural and-m- home economics
educational assiStance theY would
tike to have in the coming months.
The sponsoring agencies then will
attempt to provide this assistance
through methods such as farm andor home visitations, office and
telephone consultations, personal
and circular letters, bulletins,
publications, and encouragement to
participate In meetings, field days,
etc. No, there isn't any government
money being made available
through this program - just lots of
advice, good sound research backed
recommendations and encouragement. But along the way we
may be able to guide you into some .
programs where financial assistance is available.
Give any of the agencies involved
a telephone call if you would like
more information. Enrolling today
may be your best step taken in the
1980s.

Hoofs and Paws I

vice to corn growers is to store it, to
hold it and wait for better prices.
"There's no reason in the world to
panic and sell. It's true, prices
aren't as strong as most of us would
Uke to see, but that mostly is the consequence of the huge crop last

Dlatrlct CODBervationlst
SoU Colllervation Service
GALUPOLIS I recently
received the March-April copy of
"International Wildlife" - a
publication of the National Wildlife
Federation. There was a story on the
pffects of accelerated soU erosion
upon a country's social and
economic welfare. I thought I'd
relate some of this story as an example d. the Important task we face in
conserving the managing .our soil the worse."
USDA Agriculture advisors were
and water resources.
.
sent
in to help in this emergency.
The example Investigated in this
While
their efforts are vastly helping
article is the smaU island of Java.
the
problem seems to be nearly
Java ill undergoing troubles similar
beyond
the recovery point. One
in effect if not cause, to America's
states
you
"can't have soil ,if it's
Dust Bowl of the 1930s.
'
The problem begins on the upper already gone."
The point of this article was more
slopes of their mountains. These
than a history lesson and more than
cleared and burned to
mountains
a statement of interesting and
expand agriculture production
awesome facts - it will hopefully
acreate. Through the villager's need
place the problem of soil erooion into
for production hund and tlu9r
perspective.
Excessive soil loss is
Ignorance of· proper management
more
than
a
farmer's
problem - it
techniques for conservation, these
is
a
conununity
a
national
and a
cleared acres were ravaged by
civilizatlonal
problem.
Soil
lossesterribly accelerated erosion rates.
particularly topsoil losses can force
As.the topsoil was moved away and
a
nation into complete dependency
caused yields to plummet, these
upc;n other nations. A nation that
recently cleared areas were abancannot feed its people cannot
doned and new sites selected,
possibly expect to be strong.
cleared and cultivated as before.
In all honesty soil losses here are
The cycle was colllJ)leted and connot nearly as severe as In this examtinUBlly sell-propagating.
ple. Our fanners are much better
These abandoned areas were so
educated
on conservation. But, we
mis-lllllliagjld and so robbed of au
do
have
widespread
excessive soil
natural fertility that no revegetation
erosion.
If.
we
use
Java as a
could occur. The -result was large
example
of
our own
magnified
Inlets of bare hillBlde land left In a
problem
we
see
that
we
can concondition to suffer the most severe
.
tinue
to
lose
soil
and
either
degree of erosion. Pastures were in
gradually deplete the fertility and is
such poor condition that they could
not support grazing fnm sheep. turn reduce our standard of Uving
(as we may now be doing) or gearIrrigation systems (of which Java
up toward soil conservation and
has the most sophisticated in all of
maintain the resource base which
Asia) were rendered nearly useless
will insure otir future high Uvlng
by excessive silt deposits. A heavy
standards.
Pretend that Java's
rain In the mountains can cause
problems
are
an accelerated model
62,500 acres of land to be flooded in
of
our
own
future.
It looks like we
one day.
be
changing
our resource
had
better
Several landowners were inmanagement
techniques,
doesn't It?
.verviewed. One related that he had

Bergland said, for example, it wiD
require about H months for the
record com harvest of more than 7.7
billion busheiB " to work its way"
through the marketing system for
domestic use and as exports to other
.countries.
"There's no quick fill, there 's no
cure," Bergland said. "A paid diversion would not put aside the fact that
we have this huge crop that must be
marketed In a prudent, businesslike
way." ·
Bergland las.t year announced
wheat and com fanners In 1980
would not have to set aside part of
their land from crop production as a
basic requirement for getting
federal price supports, a provision
that was in effect the JI!IS( two years.
The programs In 1978 and 1979 also
included a !Uversion provision so
corn fanners could be paid for idling
additional land.
But since Carter announced a partial embargo of U.S. grain sales to
the Soviet Union Jan. 4, the administration has said repeatedly
that an acreage diversion plan by it-

BY DIANA S. EBERTS
Extension Agent
Home Economics
Meigs County
POMEROY - Inflation is cutting
into everyone's income. If you' re
looking for ways to supplement your
income, be wary of these enticing
work-at-home ads.
Don't be taken in by newspaper or
magazine ads that promise a quick
profit. Be especially leery of ads that
claim you can make a fantastic
profit in your spare time. One such
ad might say, "Earn $175 an hour
while watching television.''
That pitch sounds great, but when
you read on to the end of the ad you
find the catch. This tYJl') of scheme
usually requires you to send money
for more details.
When you send in the monty, that
may be the end of the line. You get
no details and you've lost money.
But to get started you may have to
buy materials from the company
before they can set you up in
business. So, that means sending
more money -and that cuts down on
your profit margin before you ~ven
get started.
Sure, you may make a small
profit. But you may have to work
harder and longer than the ad leads
you to believe.
Another work-at-home scheme
that's often a gyp is an ad that
claims "no selling" is Involved. With

this type of scheme the consumer of-

ten does some handwork, like
sewing or making crafta. You make
the produce and seU it back to the
company if it's "up to standards."
So you're stuck with a lot of items
you can't use or sell.

Testimonials are also a tactic
used by advertisers. Be skeptical of
ads using nonexistent consumers
who have made thousands of doUars
at home with the help of the firm.
Before investing any money In this
type of work as the company f&lt;r
positive proof about the
testlmonialB. Contact a person who
has had "success" with the work.
Before you invest money in any
type of extra-Income scheme find
out all you can about the firm and
the work. A good place to start is
your banker, or contact your local
Better Business Bureau. Get the facts before you Invest in nothing but
false hope.

.

Slanrla rd s teel
tank ladder

capawy dus t cotl ectOf

100 bushel ta nk

Op tiO na l flip · uP

~DIN NOW! 'JUSi

9~CAU~t: YCJJ'I&lt;~ IN1iit

fOORIH GRAOE DW.tfl
MEAN Yo lilt OV~R 11-lf=
HI~!- .

-·-·-- - - ·

''

'

A phone call to your County Extension Office will help you locate
a 4-H group in your community.

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Farmer and Family
Make plans now to att•nd our old fashioned

.

Southeastern
Ohio
Fertilizer Service
'

PANCAKE &amp; SAUSAGE
WHEN:
DAYS
WHERE:
Jaycee Building

MARCH

St. Rt. 35

5th &amp;6th

Kanauga, OH.

WHY:

WHO:

To announce ·
the opening of
PDo0 ,. .~utheastern Ohio
___ j Fertilizer Service

Your Entire

ITO TIMI;..

Fami~

!

Acc urate leedmg ca lr oratoon Chart

auger e •ten s10ns
cruelty and abuse, that we have
Srx load-chec k wmdows. ltl ree o n each srde
Adtu stabte cradle
neglected the more important task
~r ani\ auger slide l or exac t teed I low
of buDding an ethical system In
Fast. ove1 cente r m1lllat ct1
Posr trve up-d own auger wmch
which kindness to animals is regarW1de screen· to-doo r
ded as the norm rather than the exPop -up stub auge r lid . p ro tects auger
1
to, last teed !tow
ception."
Op tional oll eelcoo;,,.ca,fe ·l
magnet. all m odels .
Think about that statement for a
agar~ h11rdware d1sease
Ad tustat&gt;le drop Ieeder sp""sjl
moment ... in other words, humane
Co nven.ent dr oporganizations and agencies have I R•e•e"s'b'• hammers. l ou r gr ,ndmg edge!
fe eder n~ug ht control
been responding to and treating the . 8 u u aedoacoott" mrlllor hrg l1 hammer speed
Oro p I eeder clutch
symptoms instead of preventing the
Adtust aote a" fl ow l or gr•nd•ng capa crty
disease! We are in the process of fin- 8 Tt,. o• ··o,tclu tc h stops mrll
Dro p-fe eder pOSi tion lock
g.ves. on 1mpact
lets muter run
ding an Educational Officer and
hope within the next year to start
Shielded dr np le(KII! r
New-shrelded pto
w1t h ho lder and tock
working withyOWig people.
Fo ld· OUl fhm 51 de on hopper
PI Lg -proot auger head
We wiD be placing Interesting
r ·r ansport lock on d'ot&gt;· f"''" I
literature in local libraries and we 8 Sefot'"" ""''o' dn ve l!nes
Low·t l!l co ncentrate hopper
gears
would request that local church ofFl 1p -up S&lt;lk- Kutr opens oags '
ficials promote a reverence for life
~ t ay - put tod spr.ng , lormula card pockat
theme for future sermonS.
Shear.prn protected muter
DISChaJge brake-l ock
and auger dm•e
One aul)er moves both teed 'and concentrate
g1ves o n 1mpac t
Topics such as "Do animals have
Clean
-o
u
t
slide
under
Fwe
double·DandeCl
VOelt
d
rr'o'
e
any rights?" (based on a discussion
Three heavy- duty
auger and tank
tarik suppo rts
of Genesis and the philosophy of Dr.
E11tra sc reen storage
Co nvenient unloadmg
auger
ctutcn
Albert Schweitzer) will generate
Quick-cha nge screens
much interest and response. There
Is much that. can be done by
'
everyone to assist in eUminating the
unnecessary suffering rJ. animals
that goes on presently. H 8llY
. .
.
. .
I
readers have additional suggestionS,
ONE 'ONLY IN'
FARM HAND MODEL 817 .GRINDER-MIXER
W/100
BU. TQK
.
,.
do let us know.
1'bei'e are llllimBls homeless. They
· AND ·16" HAMMER'MIU:.
are au young and lri good health - .1
having had their shots and been wormed .. • and we are seeking reaUv
good homes for each to remain for
their lifetime. H Interested can the
HUIIJ8IIIl Society at WU2IlO any day
noon through 7p.m.

SALIII

S'RICK:

- - ·-- ---

Boys and girls 9 years of age or in the 3rd grade may join 4-H.
Any youth who hss not passed their 19th birthday on January 1st can be
a 4-H'er. In addition to 4-H projects designed for elementary age youth
there are many pr ogr ams and activities available for older teenagers.

are

Raising small animals is another
potential money-loser. Some of these
ads claim that " no experience Is
necessary." That may be partially
true if you're just "raising"
animals. However, these schemes
usuaUy involve animal breeding.
And that often takes a lot of knowhow and experience. So you may end
up investing in animals that don't
~produce - or worse yet, dying and
diseased animals.

Weather- hgllt lid.
pops up i1 overfilled

Cooperat ive Extension Service
The Ohio State Un lvoratty

ATTENTIONI

a

BY :
DIANA S. EBERTS
COUNTY EXTENSION AGENT
HOME ECONOMICS
MEIGS COUNTY

Bergland said the diversion
Under last year's Jli'OfP'BffiS,
program could be aimed at farmers
wheat and feed grains r,niJera Idled
idling 6 million to 10 million acres
about IU million acres, includin&amp; .
this yea r, mostly land that has less
about 1.1 million acres rJ. idled com
production potential and should be , land for which farmers were paid ·
protected from erosion by keeping it
about $109.1 million.
out of crops .

s•U for feed grains was an option understudy.
·
A number of farm groups and
farm-state members of Congress
have urged such action to help boost
grain prices.
In an interview eartier this week.

year. "

to abandon his farm and now worked
for others. Another man has had 80
percent crop damages In the past 18
montha; stiU another has had only
one marketsble crop since 1974.
Flooding was such problem to one
farmer that he ow raises ducks and
seUs eggs. As one agriculture advisor stated "This depletion of our
soil resources is so drastic thai the
people In Java don't know what hit
them. They know only that in recent
years life has taken a sharp turn for

By Stephen D. HibiDger

•

looomod tank, sheds wat er

them it was a close call whether to
have one or not," Bergland told a
reporter after the news conference.
Bergland sl!fd there was mosUy
general agreement at the meeting
after fooking at world grain supply
and demand projections thjlt no
land-Idling program was needed this
year.
At his news conference, Bergland
said inflation· factors aiBo were involved In deciding against paying
com farmers not to grow crops on
some of their acres this year.
Howard W. Hjort, Bergland's
chief economist, said a "modest"
land-idling program would have cost
around $300 million in payments to
farmers. It could. have !'educed 1980
corn production by an estimated 120
million to 160 million bushels, be
said.
•
Bergland was asked whether the
decision would have any dramatic
downward impact on grain market
prices.
" None whatsoever," Bergland
replied. "Com is . not going out of
style. It won't rot, it is in great
demand the world over, and my ad-

·Soil erosion can
•
move a nation

&gt;

By Marlon C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - CHurches and
schools, as well as good parents,
know that lessons learned and principles taught to us as children normally stay with us our entire lives.
The manner in which parents Uve,
react, and speak, all stays with a
child and creates the type .adult that
child will become one day.
This rule of thumb works in just
about everything - including the attitude that people have toward
animals.
If a child is raised in a home where
the idea is to only feed and care for
animals when it is convenient, to
kick the cat as a way of taking out
frustrations, and where the father is
tJie "so caUed macho type" that
thinks any form of kindness or compassion toward them Is not being
masculine - well, that ridiculous attitude carries on to the next
generation.
This is one of the main reasons
why the Hwnane Society of the •
United States Is pushing more and
more to have thoi!e of us in the field
boule.
Smolre detecting devices should be cultivate a very strong .Educational ·
placed outlide bedroom areas to.in- · program within our local societies.
As John Hoyt, President of HSUS
, ~ IIIIOke befcire it can get into
stated'
recently, "For ioo long the
bedrooiiia that boule sl~ping occuplllltl. The dfteeton lh!IWd be humane movement in this country
,placed on the ceilllll becauae sm11ke has been on the defensive. We have
tlliell 'alfil· firel c.ll be c!Wcovered so preoccupied ourselves with
responding to the conliequences of
' RlOI'I! quickly. .
.I

e

basement stairs.

In' 8 £Trl! CUM.

1

Farmers will not be paid for reducing corn crops

Agriculture andour community

•

••

We'll be serving Pancakes &amp; Sausage from
10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P~M. Please come in at your
convenience~ Don't miss our special discounts
during "The Southeastern Fertllizer Servl~e'''
Open House and Pancake and Sausage Days.
We

for
•••

o~car

will have r8presentatlves on han~ to talk with .yau r. 0111
these componlesa

prices Qn
/i.mmonlum.
Nitrate

. .•

CENTRAL
SOYA
.
.

6_
95 SyCamore, •Gali!JI)Iis
.·. .w&amp;-7672

'

Mobay

Monsanto
DuPont
Elanco

Basa
Shell

Dow
·union Carbide ·

Stauffer

Otevron

·

Ciba Geigy

~ith .·Douglas Fertilizer

C. L. C. 'labs

NciiHaup King Seeds
.Ruffs Seeds
0. Y. 0. Seeds
I

.

Southeastern .Ohio :fertilizer Service is affiliated with Gala Roller Mils

-.

�1).6--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. March 2,

)).7- Tbe SUnday Times-Sentinel, SWldily, Marc~ 2, 1980

1980

'. For Best "Results ·use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are f,ound zn the Sunday Times-Sentinel
.

In Memory

'

r
•'r

·,.

Pets for Sale
BRIARP ATC H
KEN

In memory of Bla ine Car ter, Sr .• who passed away J
vears ago March 2.
Plese. God, forg ive a silent
tear,
A fervent w ish our Dad wa s
here.
There are oftlers, yes, we
know
But he was ours, w e loved
hlmso . •
Dear God , take a message
To our father in heaven
above
Tell him how much we m iss
him
And give him all our love
Family.

NELS .
Boarding and
groom 1ng .
AK C Gordon

Setter's, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446 4191.
POODLE

GROOMING

Call Judy T .!y lor at 367·
7220

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Available
now, 1 Blac k Female Chow
Chow puppy, Orders tor
spring puppies and kit tens
are being accepted. Call
446·3844 after 6 p.m.

IN LOVING MEMORY of
c. K. Holley who passed
away March 1, 1958.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dobermans Call 446· 7795.

The flowers we place upon
your grave.
May wither and decay
But our LOVE for you,
Will never fade away .
Sadly missed by brother
and slster.

BEAUT! FU L White ma le
Spitz Ni ce 4-H project Call

446·4191.

A" ' Shetland Sheep dog ·
min. Collie Puppies. 8 wks.
old . Call 304·675·4515 or 675·
1659.

Card of Thanks
Larry and Bambi wish to
extend their thanks to all of
the persons who save 'g ifts
or
support
to
t hem
following the destruction of
their residence by fire
·

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
pon1es . Ruth Reeves. 614
698 -3290 . Bord1ng and
Rid1ng Lessons and Horse
Care prOducts. Western
bOots. Children's Sl5.50

Notices
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

AdultS$29 .00.

Dobermans. 614·446·7795

HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed.

CARTER'S BODY SHOP
RIO GRAND.E , OH
Is permanently closed due
to lack of financial support.

Donations required.
6260, noon-7 p.m.

No further estimates or
repairs acceptepted .

Puppies. puppies. puppies.

Thank You

all sizes. all shapes, also

Greg Carter

Chesapeake

LEARN to macrame at the
Gazebo. Classes. Friday, 1
p.m . Call for information.

675·3365 .
TOLE painting Classes at
the Gazebo. Certified instructor _ Call for Information . 675-3365 .

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY1PM. FACTDRY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT. Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m.
AI their bulldlngln Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .

Corn

992-

Hollow Gun Club,

Rutland . Proceeds donated

to Boy ScoutTroop249

Bay

Retriever, giant schnouser,
2 straight leg Beagles, 1
poodle, Saint Bernard

Shepherd type . Adult
Shepherd type Humane
Society , 992·6260

WANT AD
CHARGES
15Wor-d..'!orUnder

Cash
100

I day
Zelaya

Char!!•

1.2$

uo

3dayJ

8clayt

190

1.11)

% .~

3.00

l7S

l!'.lc:b word over the minimtm
15 words ia • cents per word per
day. Ada running oth!!r than con-

IIC\Itive da)'l w[U be charged at

the 1day rate.
ill memory, Card~ Thonka
and Obituary: a cen11 per word,
$1.00 minimtan. Cash l.n •dVIJlCO, .

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also.
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
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 , I
BROWN'S.
I PAY highest prices '
possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Mobile Home sale. and Yard
Illes ""' aceepled only w1tli
cub wttb order. ~ cent cbarKe
for ads C&amp;lT)'ing Box Number In

Careoi.Tht!ienllnel.

Tbe Publ..l.aher ruerves Ul!.!
right to edll ,.. reject any a&lt;l!

deemed objectional. The
Publlaher wiU not be responolble
for f'D(ft than one incornct Insertion.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING

DEADLINES

Shop, Middleport.

GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
Sl LVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEJ MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE . 992··6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING
La Mar Beauty Salon, 101
W. 2nd St., Pomeroy . New
day and hours, Tuesday
lhru Friday, 9 till ? Satur·
days, 9 till 5. Call for apoin·
tment at 992·705&lt;1, ask tor
Terri, lmoJean or Gerrl .
Walk·lns welcome.
Automatic coin operated
water sales has been In -

stalled. Racine, corner 3rd
and Vine for truck water as
of March I. Uses quarters
only.

Block 111 mineral rights.
Ohio or W.V. Willing to pay
fop dollar. Write to Box m ,
Nelsonville, Oh . .&amp;5764.
Pawn Broker, golf and
guns, used silver 1964 or
e'rller for purchases. John
Teaford, 614-985·3961.

'
•

Jones Meat Processing
Slaughter facilities now.
. open. Washlngtorl county
Road, 248, Little Hocking,
. 011. 667· 6133.

Tu-y
thruFridly
I P.M.
the day before pubUcaUm
SWiday

I P.M.
Frldayoflmlom

Help Wanted
Full·llme ll..,·ln position
and parttlme week and

·- .. -----'3530.

'

•

m

EXPERIENCED
BODY MEOIANIC
FOR
GALl POLIS MOTORS
446·3672

1974 MONTE

LAB
TECHNICIAN . Accepting
applications tor full time
permanent technician .
MLT (HEW or ASCPJ.
Salary commenaurale with
expie.rlence. Mall r.esume or

apply In person, Veterans
Memorial HOipltal, Box
747,
Mulberry
Hgt,
Pomeroy, Oh .&amp;5769. Ph 614·
992 ·21~ . Equal opportunity
Employer.
NEED BABYSITTER for 2
children, In the City school
district for evening shift. ·
CUII446·1197. ' ·

1976 Ford F·100 pickup with
matching topper. 6 qdinder standard . 4 ,000 miles,
new tires. excellent con dition . $2500 f irm . Phone

CARLO

992-7285 after 4 p.m.

1973 MONTE CARLO
$700.
Call388·8469 .
·

1

·

1964 Pontiac Tempest. 4

1977 Che"y 4&lt;4 for sale or
trade. 992 5449 .

fiberglass topper and
sliding windows. Reese hjt·

1978 Ford F·150 Custom

1978 CUTLASS SUPREME
BROUGHAM · Loaded with

1974 FORD F·100 Pick up.

eKtras, good gas mileage.

One owner, call379·2320 .

·

--------1974 VW BEETLE · low
1975
DODGE
RAM · l,"iles. new paint, AM·FM
CHARGER · 4-Spd., 4·W·D, • ·track, $1,500. Call 379·
low miles. exc . body and 2469.

eng . Must sell. Will take

best offer. Call 446·7828 af· 1978 CHEVY Heavy duty
ter 6 p.m.
pick up. 350 eng ., 27,000
miles, e&lt;e. cond., Call 256·
1957 WILLYS jeep, H.T. 9353.
good shape. $1600. Call Jt.l·
7/U/ .
1975 FORD F· 100 pick up, 6
new tires, 302 3-spd., all
FORD GALAXY · like new. Call 446·2445

op·

portunity employer. For
furTher information, please

!l.!l ·•••• ion

wagon

$400. Call

call Planned Parenthood of
Southeast Ohio, 992·5912.
8:30·3:30 weekdays. 11 no

daily, 446-4792 evenings.

1977

CHEVROLET

Step

side pick up. Short wheel

base . Call446·3395.

ch . Big II res. Rust proofed.
25,000 miles. Can be seen at
Ashland Bulk Plant al
Mlners"llle. 742·2225, 742·
2125 or 992·5111 .
1977 Capri, 4 cyl ., A.C.• AM·
FM 4 speed . Excellent con dition. 992-6069, $3500 firm .

1974 MGB

Authority will open sealea
bids at their office, 16 Slate
Street, Gallipolis, OH, on
March 19, 1980, at 2:30
p.m., for the audit of the
financial records of the
Housing AutHority.
The Audit must be con·
ducted by a Certified
Public Accountant In ac·
cordance with the "State of
Ohio Audit Guide For
Metropolitan
Housing
Authorities."
Bids must be submltled
by 12:00 noon on March 19,
.1980. . Anyone Interested
should contaot John P.
Roderus, Executive Dlrec·
tor (6141 446·0251.
The Board of Com·
missioners of the Gatlla
Metropolitan
Housing

1977 Celica GT, low
mileage, 5·speed, A.C.,
AM·FM stereo, CB radio,

1979 OLDS 98 - Regency
Coupe. Loaded, with all ex -

1978 BLAZER . 1 owner.
Exc . cond . 446·8696 after 5
p.m.

missioners
of
Gallla
Metropolitan
Housing

offer . Call 992·6149 after 5
p.m

1978 Che"y Pickup, 4&lt;4, 350
engine, automatic, P.S.•
P.B., AM·FM radio, cab
lights, 6 11. bed with

eluded Call446·7904.

mornings.

preciatedj must sell . Best

stp at 37641 Texas Road .

Exc . cond ., 40 1n copper in- 2320.

Bar Help Needed. Call 992·
3860 between 8:30 and 10 :30

must be seen to be ap·

tires. and balfery . AM·FM

1979 BRONCO
LOW
1971 F·lOO FORD pick up. mileage, loaded. Call 379·

Atlanta, GA. 30348

24,000 actual, good mi)jl,

Dr .• V·6, auto .• shitl. Run·
ning good. C.all 985·3366. Or

Call 367·7560.

NOTICE OF
INVITATION
FOR BIDS
FINANCIAL
AUDIT OF THE
GALLIA
METROPOLITAN
HOUSING
AUTHORITY.
The Board of Com·

spec ial trim and Interior,

black on black . New radial

tras. $5,800 . Call446·2615.

Mature Individuals with
recent work experience
Occasional hourly work,
weekdays, 9-5, physical 1n
ventorying end venfying
serialized merchandise at
retail stores in Middleport.
lvenchek . Box 105029,

Auto Sales
1977 Pontiac Grand Prix
SJ , P .s. , P.B., A. C., power
seats and locks. AM·FM

stereo B·track, landau top,

1979 BLAZER
p.s.. p.b.,
tape and more . Real nice. air cond ., AM-FM radio,
9,500 mtles. S/ ,200. Call446·
Call446 3257 or 446 0303 .
4216.

Appl ications now being
taken tor restauran t work,
apply in person only ,
Tuesday thru Friday , 10 :30
to 3 p.m., next 3 weeks at
Steamboat Inn, Racin e.

new radial tires. Excellent ,

mileaoe. 99N201 .

4x4,

excellent

condition.

Lifl kits, AM·FM 8·track,
lois of extras, 21,000 miles.
Take over payments. See
Greg Grover or call 992-

5620 .
1978 Ford 4x4 F · 150.
custom made. AM·FM 8·
track, CB. 19.000 miles. 992·
2656.5

Authority

mint cond., a.c., low
mileage, gOod gas mileage.

Call 992-6259 .

cruise control. 992-3310.

good condition-, small V-8,

Jl/1 Ton Dodge truck, w-16
If. alum. van body, roll up

door. Like new,
miles. 667·3080.

17. Reward, Call

Found : Male beagle dog.
Call949·2225.

Carlo,

PHYSICIAN Relocating to
Gallipolis
needs
im·
mediately, a clean, one
bdr. furnished apartment
or house to rent. Call

1978 Ford Bronco, A.C .,
AM· FM stereo, P.S., P.B .,
4 new tires. Call 992·6130.

Holzer Clinic 446·5187 bet·
ween 8:00 a.m . and

2201.

p.m. weekdays.

s-oo

$2200.
T RAILER lot with hook up.
Northern pari of Gallia
County. Fairly secluded.
Call 388·8178.
wanted to Buy
DIAMONDS, old coins.
wedding bands, estat~
l~welry, class rings, etc.
TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

NOilOlOS

YOU CAN START AT THE TOP

IN YOUR OWN?
It you Mvt tht req1ured lnvnr·
mtnr of 5f,fn.oo, you can have
your own highly IUCUISIUI
business .
TWO BOOMING INDUSTRIES

ATTENTION:
LEARN

COMBINED INTO ONE .
You will hav~ income from
two different sources, nor lUll
one You will m!loufaclure de
mend Items for &amp;.anks, Savings
I. Loan Al toelatlons. Hospi tals,
Schools, Shopping CC!'nlers, Of
flee Buildings, Retail Stores,
Tourist lnclusrr v. Professional
Buildings, Ft~ctones, Adpart·
ment Buildings , Mo r els ,
Restaurants, City, county, Stille
and U S Agencies. lind other
buslrHt!lteS too numerous to
men lion
We person.!l lly Install lhe
machinery and equ lpmenl for
both IMullrles at your location
You wil l be thoroughly 1!100 ex·
Derll'f framed IM botl't pMses of
factor.,.
operat i On\
!we
guarantee
your
compl~te
satiSfltCtlonl
The marketing of your pro
duelS will b&amp; handled by c:om
pen,- established sales o\Jtlets
1no selling by you is necess.ary) .
YCIU will ha-n a protected lerrilor r and each state will have a
limited number Of our factory
operations - so be one of the
l ln l applicllnls In your 11rea act now - en unheard of op
portunily to be In an exc •ustve
business for yourself Achieve
lolel tlnanclel independence end
become one of the top money
makers. .n your l!lrea
Cell or Write (Include telephone
number )
Cr•ft World lnterrw~tional , Inc
No. 41 Soledad Drive
Montarty, Calllornlll Uf40
Phooe4oa-..t-..,71

PROFESSIONAL
SALES

ACROSS
I
1 Confines
6 Tendency
11 Freshet
16 Declare
21 Tether
22 Pass on
23 Candle
24 Kind of

wave
Sell targe ticket item
and make money. 1,000

to 1,soo dollars commission from 1 sale. Multip-

ly this by 2 or 3 sales a
week.

Recent corporation
change put us in a mass
expansion program .
Must be available now.
Extensive travel by
plane and car. Must be
able to travel. Must
hiJve late model car and
de5ire extremely high

Income. Opportunity Is
now. Call Mr. Stein Col·
teet Monday through
Friday, 9:00a.m. to s:oo
p.m. at (314) 781 ·2224
Central standard time.

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency Is accepting applications until March 7, 1980, for the
following position to be filled by
March 12, 1980.
Responsible for day·to·day

weatherization and home repair activities includirig

supervision of wealherlzallon ..personnel. Other
duties Include job s~he1Ming, maintaining inven·
tory records, tool control, safety, quality control,
and vehicle aRd tool malntenan~e. Other relevant
duties as assigned by supervisor. Supervisor needed
for Gallla County only,
Qualifications for the above position Include: High
School Diploma or equivalent, two vears experience
rel•ted to housing constructlop or weatherization,
supervlsorv experience in housing trades, sensitive

of noeds of low-Income and elderly. Must have
dependoble tronsportotlon and valid driver's
license. ~ate of pay Is $4.81 per hour. Fringe
benefits Include paid hospitotiution. Applications
are available from the CAA Central Offl~e or the
OBES Office. Further lnfprmallon can be obtained
from Mr. Ron Crawford at 367·7341, or by writing
P.O. Box 212, Cheshire, Ohio 45620.
Equal Oppor!unlty/Afflrmatlve Action Employer.

$20,000 to $30,000
. ANNUALL~
"'
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN
BE ,;.:,
·
N
·
lrtG MORE THA
JUST A
SALES PERSON, AND WILLING
TO PUT FORTH THE NECESSARY
EFFORT:"!' WE OFFER YOU:
• A anund floor opportunity with back-up by .a arowlh
c-wnp~ny thlt ._"_' Nltl people count.
• A Plf'Nfttnt NIH potjtktn tla1t build~ r•pe•l bush-...,.
• Autornobtle A.Uowance p.id monthly .

• Ower.... c:t.c,t, Pllkl moftlhly.
• Gnlup lnHIIIIK:e with nt.ljor IMdtbl benifitl .
• • $1,100 "*"fhiY draw IJiinet rommiuion / JNid weftl,j.
to win. hftu•. tripe • "'"'"'·
• ~; DN~~Iinueul tr.alnln1

' e•pe-nae.

proara"'

•t company

• A Mln~n~n .n...ted comp~ny that pnMMIH from within.
• Our tr•:nfnt will 11M..-. you of immrdMit! hlah e.amlnJt.
·• P~d• of tht hiahal fldlity in our,lftdullry.
A &lt;1!1'-1' eduGttion or dtftnlal b•dlaroulld lt not ~uirtd . 'r o
(IINIIfy. yoU .._.ld ho~we direc.1 -e~ tllptrlen&lt;9. /Y®r
bradaaNUM wil be ChtcUd/. Y® •
hawe the •blflty to
lf&gt;•m, and be conftdent ol ,...; 1ltllity lo dOH.

25 Snake
26 Fairy in
"The Tempest"
28 BUild
30 Hyalite
32 College deg.
33 State: Abbr.
34 Away
35 Guido's high
note
36 Aroma
.37 Deposit
38 Skill.
40 Erased
42 Female ruff
43 Barracuda
44 Ascend
45 Tierra del
Fuegan Indian
47 Expunged
49 Female student
50 Small rug
51 Deaden
54 Swill
55 Mend
56 Alludes to
59 Tatter
60 Vigor
62 Ingredient
64 Nuisance
65 Near
66 For example: Abbr. ·
67 Soak
69 Flee
,
70 Edible

seeds
71 Nahoor

sheep
72 Lamprey
74 Weird
76 Theater
abbr .
77 Spoken
78 Solar disk
79 Frightfully
82 Asian ass
84 Belief
85 Comic
sketch
86 Falsehoods
88 Way out
89 Appellation
of Athena
90 Set firmly
92 Carnlvqrous
mammal
94 Ultimately
98 English river
99 Evergreen
trees
100 Legal matter
102 Growing out
of
103 Bishopric
104 Japanese
currency
105 Offsrprlng:
Pl.
106 Lasso
108 Expire
109 State: Abbr.
110 Tin symbol
111 Unadulterated
112 Carriers
114 World War
II vessel:
Abbr.
116 Weight ot
India
117 Regard
119 Transaction
120 Rodents
122 Soup dish
124 Communist
125 Stony ridge
126 Yield
128 Regret

129 Mix
131 Dispatch
132 Man's nick-

name
133 Stupid one
135 Fondle
138 Brim
139 Venetian
ruler
140 Away
141 Lubricate
142 State: Abbr.
143 Printer's

measure
144 Nip
145 Gel up
147 Shovel
149 Dry, as wine
150 Man's name
152 Titles
154 Metal
156 Girl's name
158 Tinge
159 Right
160 Towers
161 Ledger
entry
DOWN
I Girl's name
2 Norse gods
3 Opening
4 Plural ending
5 The urial
6 Bagatelle
7 Heavy jackets
8 Cloth measure
9 Continent:
Abbr.
10 Stain
11 Gravestone
12 South
American
rodent
13 Likely
14 Tellurium
symbol
15 Worn away

16 Sky sight
17 Sesame
1B Paid notice
19 Domesticates
20 Gladden
27 Fish eggs
29 Rattan
31 Vessel
36 Unlock
37 Location
39 Chinese faction·

40Wet
41 Valley
42 Repulses
43 Classify
44 Float
46 Greek letter
48 Food fish
49 Walking
stick
50 Army meal
51 Propagate
52 Ardent
53 Deprived
55 Testify '
56 Actual
57 Hindu
. queen
'58 Endure
61 Soulh
American
country
63 Filipino
64 Fruit
68 Helms
70 Feign
71 Robs
73 Instruction
74 Redacl
75 Man's name
77 Pointed
arch
78 Region
80 Related
81 Affirmative
83.Cutting tool
B4 Hint
'
87 Continued
story
89 Certify

90 Out of date
91 Kilns
92 Port, e.g.
93 Shakes.pearian king
95 Metal fastener
96 Embankment
97 Long tor
99 Mold
101 Cubic
meters
105 Petitioned
106 Peruse
107 Asian sea
111 Equal
112 Twist
113 Stalk
115 Screw
116 Ooze
118 Journey
119 European
12t Prying one
123 Ruthenium
symbol
125 Ruler
126 Wheel
tracks
127 Tellis
129 s·lumbered
130 Ringworm
131 Drunkard
132 Semblance
134 Ancient
136 Resin
137 Understood
139 Soil
140 Russian city
144 Man's nickname
145 Quantity:
Abbr.
146Worm
147 Ocean
148 Finish
149 Cry
151 Scale note
153 Three-toed
Slot~
155 Preposition
157 Qlphthong

I BUY BASEBALL CAR·
DS . Immediate cash;
Prefer 1933·1972. Condition
Important. Call collect 0·
891-7431.
CATALYTIC
CON·
VERTERS · · (Used), ~op·
per, brass, aluminum,
lead, baHeries, radiators,
automatic transmissions,

(Junk), beefhldes, furs, and
Glnse~g. Call Robert ~.
Harper, 675-3616 or 675·
5202.
• RENTAL houses and reri·
tal property. Call446·7627.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pollet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

_gravel, (:al c lum·
chloride, fertilizer, dog

food, and all types ot sail.
3891.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES.
Washers,
dryers, refrldgerators,
ranges.
Skaggs Ap·
pllances. 1918 Eastern Av
ce., 446· 7398.
CHAIN

SAWS,

Centenary Road. 446·9442 .
FIREWOOD.
seasoned
oak. ash and hickor.y. Ph
446·9442.
FIREWOOD
Split,
seasoned oak &amp; hickory,
cross fie ends. Call 446·4534
or 446·2329.
40 LB Box of West Virginia
Chunks, low ash, low sulfur
Foster Coal Co., 446·2783.

SOfas and chairs priced

from $275. to $550. Tables,
$33 .·$60·$7 ©
and $85.
Sofabed and cHair, S150.
Hlde· a · b~ds,$300. ,
queen
size, $325.,
&amp;
uP .
Recliners, tl25., . $150.,
$160 .. $175 .. and $225. Lam·
ps from $18. lo SSO. 5 pc.
dinettes from $69. to $325.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$275. Table, two leaves. 6
chairs, (high backed), $400.
Hutches, $300. and $350.,

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·
clles, class rings, wedding
bands, .diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call~ . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

992-2Q94.

JIM MARCUM rOOfing, ·
spouting and siding. 30

Five 1975 Camaro wheels

years experience. Free
estimates . Remodeling _

dition. Call992·5663.

Call 388·9857.

16

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave ., Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 446·1833.

GOLD, SILVER DR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY ·OTHER . GOLD DR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL f"AY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO
APP!IAISING.

HS. Day old or started
leghorn pullets, both floor

JERRY LUCAS' S water
delivery.
Call 446•7534

- -- - - - ·

••...__

I• .

~

..

t:

cau coJJectt-ltl-7431

UNCLE BUDDY'S Trading
Past · 756 Second Ave.
Special · 6 pair top quality
lube socks, ret.a ll SL98 ' pr.
new, 6 pr. $5.95. All purpose

REMINGTON

. Mid·~,.-;ir.r~~~
. . . .7

.

-

....... , _ ~

. ..

•

.. ~~~~~ :,,,,illilt!fll

'

~

IAIIJ'I.

Colaa.,_, N... 18801

ce
20821965.
. Call/42 ·2951 or 992·

. 388·9759

·

2501 after 10 a.m.

Thurman, Ohio
service,

residential a. commer·
clat. Electric eel ~er·
yice, chemical toilets.

-~
· ----.~--'''--

1979 SKI BOAT · 70 H. P., 15
ft. trl·hull. Call 446·244.5
dally, 446·4792 evenlngo_.

~u,,_._

ELWOOQ
RF.PAI R -

Insulation, storm doors,
windows, gutters, full
estimates.

call Mullins

95Uecolld Avenue
!JifiiPG!Is,Ohlo
45UI

.HOME

IMPROVEMENT$

I!RU.C,•~~·

Ma'
~E. •~':~~~~1\1!'.

~:E~&amp;· d!'!•! .,;.:.;

't.!l
e"~·

0

. ~1!._41_":._

~~~

~~~-r~~~!c

~!
,

,:;;;:
~·o:

:J•. '

1

Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doors,
Replacement
Winc(ows,
Patio
Cover!~'.
Aluminum
Sidin ·,g
and
Accessories. Call
·

'Bill'S
446-2642

J

ELMER '

cloL Tree a shrUbs In·
stallod, designing a
planting. Plan for .,..
lng plenllngs 11
F~:.~~~le
rates.

·•

MURREL

~~DEN~ Doz~r work, 446·

Certiiii.Cf)
•
l~:la&lt;':"n Beds, Waler and
10.. Lines, ,&amp;lecl!lc
lli._s,~no-~,PolelulldlntS.

Reese Triftching

&amp; D..._l.l.oe r:.....:ce

,..,.·JIOO . •'

' &amp;

McCO·RMICK

remodeling
, Roolino.
con·
ST·ILLMA:N
,
•
for
crete, and gen. home main·
tenonce. Coil 675·5774 and
evenlno-,675·1298\
'

·.

•

WELt. Drilling

PU

::J
~':f.\'.:d. c~~~.,
Orlnt......
l;ru. c:co,

1

plail tt

...

plastarl~o.

,..,.,1;, teiCIIIre
~lllncre. , fr.. . tltlmlfft.
KoH116'1s ••
-

-...,-

--~---

.""'·"

~~·=G~I~I~II~poi~,I~I,~O~h~la~=~',~~~~
· · ~~~~~~~~

FOR BEST In Carpet I
-&lt;:!tarilng • Call Smeltzer'j 1
Steamway. Call 614·446·
t

~~

NlS.C-ilve.

i ,,

molds for candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special rates for
organizations

e~4/f.t; ~4&lt;Uu

?~""«.t-It

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

"I Made it Myself"

2-17·1mo

Pomeroy, Oh.

sWAIN'

~·

;MOBIL£ HOME
SERVICE

11iMvw DaDN

· 'I"'"""" DNl
We '••II on~thlng ' for

Anc:horlng.

tnybocly at our A:ilttfon

!lorn or In your ltome. For
lnformollon ond pickup

Hl')llct &lt;1112"-1961.

· ~~~~='lt~~m~'

'

·:

~lrting.

Awnl.ngs,
P1t1o
. Covers. · Carports.
Roof . Paint, Stf·UP

·•nd R•lavtllng. C:.ll

,·

BILl'$ .
446-2&amp;42
•

. BOWERS

.. .. Craftsarefun!

L - - - - - 2·18·1 mo.
TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room
E . Main 51. Pomeroy, 0.
EVERY
S.UURDAY NIGHT
8:00TII11:30
"Disco Lighting"

Admission 52.00 Single
$3.00 coupte
Sponsored by Music
Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages permitted. For fUrther in-

992-3795

fo., can 992-6058.
2·28·1 mo. pd.

RAILROAD
SiREET
GARAGE
Middleport, 0.

PAYING
$20.00 AND UP

sweepers,

FOR

S S. G Carpel Cleaning.
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 742·2211 .

PH. 949-2801

Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
"DOn't CUSS·Call US" .

No Sunday Calls
1

~:::::::::2:·2:8:·1=m=o=·==~==:::::::::'=·l=l·=(pd==.J~

t-

all

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits . Do·lt·vourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.

makes. 992·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Ph6ne
9A9·2487 or ,949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford .

SEWING
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

AUTOMOBI~E

SURANCE been
celled?· Lost

Automotive Rep;rir
Open 9·6 Mon. lhru Sat.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

SILVER DOllARS

and

WILL HAUL limestone and
grevel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455 .

.- •iiii
J-__,,.......,,~.._..,,...,_-.....r
1
• 's;rvl~et&lt;~~.r~ ·t, t;~~~~~~;-t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
l" l&lt;i:iTAlciC •
' 'TIINIC~
~I;...'S / D~P~.NDlBLE
LA~DSCAP.ING . .c
I'
I·
·'""""'
water delivery. ran 256.
RHid4tntla1 f Commer·
(Galli• Cowtty

"
9368 anytlm~ . ,, ;

idish

WALL PAPERING
painting . 742·2328.

· Home Improvement

crete work. Ph. 367-11427,
36H194, 367-G141. Free
estimates.

'-'!"

chocolate wrappers and

Free E~timate

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

VINYL SIDING

guners -spouts -con-

MUST SELL NO'I'/. · All
steel bldgs, ou . rz~}_4!
$5,695 . ':,;0.,;.0 . .e
~48xl4, .• -·~~·.;.
Call Ol'\¥• ,,.
11

macrame classes.
-Now
carrying

Aluminum Siding

toasters, irons, all small
applll!lnces. Lawn mower.

It=========~

J·.&amp;S GIBSON GUITAR ·
,
like new, hard shell case, I!--~--.-----' ·
call446·7'104.

collect. ;
'HAY. F9R SALE · . Call
Pearl be.~ney ~t 2~·5,546. .

;!J~~

618 E. Main

INCOME TAX
SERVICE
Audrey Canaday
25 Locust 51., Gatllpolls
H Mon.·Sat. Evenings
by appointment.
Phone 446·3636

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types, home lm·
provements - Roofing

FIREWOOD · for sale. Call
"

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be having

2·25·1 mo.

WELDING TANKS wllh
guages, 25 ft. hose. ,3· dlf·
ferent tips, cutting tips and
1 arc wefdlng helmet. Like
new. $32~. Call446·7434.
f----------'---i

38~·9311.

Ph . 992-7583

.g,•.ranteed .

D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
All types home improvements •nd . room
additions, Also Insurance claim repairs &amp;
electric wiring. .
Free Estimates
446431417 or 367-03,. ,

GENERAL
E~EC .
Retrlagerator, good cond.,
call446·1489.
,

I

elnsulation
• storm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement
,
Windows

construction, all types.
F~:'!:.eatlm~!~· all work

446-1019.

'

Greg Roush

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

367-0527

orfl';-------~-i

Shop. Call 446·1842 or 446·
0690.

949-2320
Racine, 0.

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.
-

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE·

..

at collection. MTS Coin •·

Exper' ence

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

~· ~·.

RemOdeling repair, new

WORLD
BOOK
EN ·
CYCLOPEDIA • SpeCial
Sale • $100. off regolar
11rlce, payment plan. Call

*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years

INSULAJION
Vinyl &amp;

- .

EI!W ~

Cash~----------i

einxgtensive remodel-

J&amp;L BLOWN

· ~~~
~
~-_,_~L : { ya,~~ t E,J

County Road 8

tank

_

11

Roger Hysell
Genge

'

24HS5S

C•lf 245-9513
or446·3896

homes

Call tor Appt.

t-.---- .-_

Or General Repair

Stripping
and Refinishing

*New

Wed. &amp; Thurs.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission ·
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-JO ·Ifc

Free Estimates

Furn~ure

ROUSH

CQNSTRutnQN

SALON

1 t mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St . Rt. 114 toward
Rutland.

repair.

Complete Remodeling

2·14-tfc

rI~=========~~====~2=·:;m;o:·~~~=:;=:.~~2~-2~4~-1~m~o~.~

G"ORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, gutter,
build -up roof, home

~----------i

Free Estimates
388-9759

B. A. BEAUTY

1-22 -ttc

r~======:::=:;-1

WOODS
REMODELING CO.

s Mon. thru Fri.

MenorWomen
by Diann Jewell
at

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and

388·8797 or 388·8860.

446·7887

Roofing,
si~ing,
gutter,
built-up
roof
and
home
repair.

HAIR" STYLING

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

E &amp; R Tree Service. Pain ting and excavating _ Cal

register, Bunn commercial
~otfee maker, restaurant l•r-=--,-::---::---:-::--,''
booths &amp; tables. Call 446·
Fronk Rose Con~ I. Co.

WATER

tilt

Faines

Daniels Quality service sin-

septic

WI! HIRI! PI!DPLI! NOT PAPER
Call Cliff Sulllvon 1·100-221·1501 .
On Monday, March 3 or Tuesday, March4 h&lt;itween 1
a.rn. •nd 4 p.m .
'

and

Continuous no· leak gut·
terlng
•
Day· 698·8205 · Night

14 FT. WOOD BOAT · Fac·
tory built, trailer and 40
H.P. Johnson motor. $450.
Call446·1294.

2096: ,

.

LIMESTONE · Delivered

and up. come on down.

FANCY RESUMES NOT NECESSARY
To•rr•op fotllttf'MNIInltMih,

(Formerly

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

~~========~l;:=;:;;;;:;;;:;:~:;:::::;t;==~~:;;.;;;::==~

downspouts,
gutter
New homes, old homes, , cleaning and painting.
commercial structures .
All work guaranteed.
For free estimates call ""6 Free Estimates
1971.
Reasonable Prices
call Howard
PIANO TUNING · Lane
949·2862

23 mile radius, Gallipolis.
Pt. Plea$ant, free estimate

throw rugs, 65 cents each

F\RE'{l'OqD · Pick ,UP
delivered. Call256·6735.

FURNITURE
pref81' 1tll-19'12
Cemlltton Important

CO.

8 til

sui master foam insulation.

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER&amp; DOOR, INC.

CALL 992 -7544

Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30·pd .

2·18·1 mo.

Free Estimates

SILVER DOLLARS · and

and SNYDER
'
lmllladlate cash Pali

BOGGS
EXTERMINATING

BUY.· SELL &amp; TRADE · ~=========--l
Ho~s and ponies. Hay-for
sale. Call256-1507.
OHIO VALLEY
SHEET
METAL
JVC AM·FM STEREO
150 Third Ave.
Receiver, 85 watts per
Gu1ters &amp; downspouts
channel, Fisher turntable,
Installed
a repaired.
2 speakers, call446·4779.

mp75. ,..

..

..._
'

- Safe, dustless cleaning,

Overhead
Garage'
Doors,
E lectrlc Door
Operators,

2342.

..-

I

(::;

Mink stole also fur jacket
(never worn) , 992·3283.

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin•
g machine, $50. Call 446·

.

..

weldlng
.
ling,
brazing,
arc 5:
Call 25&lt;1
·9302 after
30

.RON'S TV SERVICE
Specializing in Zenith . ·
House Calls. Call 1·304·576·
2398 or 446·2454.

FIREWOOD · Hickory,,
red, White &amp; bla~k Oak.
Sugar Maple, $35. truck
load, we also have. Call446·
71.&amp;5after6.

.

KEN MANNON MOBILE
WELDING Service. CUI·

of driveways. Call 367·7101.

refrigerators.

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh .
Ph. 992-3752
or 992·3743

STOVE, furnace and chim ney insulat ion. Call 4-463407 .

zpalrlck Orchard, State
Route
689, . Phone
Wilkesville 669·3785.

tertalnment centers, $40.

'

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Call256·1562.

THEISS INSULATION, In·

and SSO. Desks, $38.
USED

KACH·ALL PORTABLE
BLDG. All sizes, 6xl0 to
12x40.•SH at 12JV. Pine St.,
446-2783 or 3 houies below
Bowling Alley on Rl. 7, 446·
1279.
.

ESTIMATES"

Lowest Possible Prices.

The Chimney Sweep, 1 373·
tJ!57 .

PIGS· Hamp., ·York, call
446·4999 or 446·8539.

A&amp;H

VOLKSVWAGEN PARTS

AVOID CHIMNEY FIRES

10·12·14.

992-7314
1·28·1 mo.

3·2·1 mo.

"fREE

Automation.
Mollern
Poullry, 399 W. Main
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2164.

co.ndilion. Sizes
992·3283.

992-6125 or

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Finest Quality at the

O'dell) Oak Hill. Oh .. call
collec1446· 7569.

Ladies Dresses. beautiful
spring styles, excellent

RACINE, 0 .

UPHOLSTERING

anytJme .

pies, sauce and butter . Fit·

Hours 9 -1 M ., w., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment.
JD7 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy . o.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

BILl'S AUTO
REPAIR

or cage grown available .
Poultry
Housing
and

Apples, Rome Beauty at
$4 .00 ,per bushel. E&lt;e. for

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

service. Call 388·8274, or
388·9963 .

Upper Rt .• l Call 446·2445
days and 446·4792 nights.

and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992·2583

work , down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways .

CAll 992-3238
ASK FOR DAVE

in

Federal Hous ing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

Gutter

Been in Business
For 5 Years

Residential, commercial,
heating, cooling. electrical

service. All1ypes of repair.

JOHNSON Water Delivery .
Call446·1004 anytime .

meet

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

D·DAY
REFRIDGERATION

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker

Decorated cakes for a II oc casions. Character cakes,

full or twin, $55 .• firm, $65.
and S75. Queen sets, $185. 4
dr. chest, 542. 5 dr.. chests,
549. Bed frames, S20. En·

.
:-

,

Philco

11 .

SS.E Gill Shop (Syracuse)
10 percent off on all items
during March.
·

Mattresses or box springs,

FIREWOOD ·lie ends, 8ft.
bed.• $20.;6 ft .~· $15. split
WOO&lt;!, ' fl. bed, J25, 6 It.
bed, $20. .&lt;Dyer Brothers
Now acceplng loos at our . NorthupO,Call '44&lt;&gt;-116l
,
!
-U
.
log ,y ard 7:30-J:JO WHk·
days. H lgh prices for gooct
GRAii£LY TRAC•TORS,
quality 1001 with a limited
pre·se•son Hie. Purchase
amou'!t of ·1ow: grade.
your new Gravefy tractor
Payment upon delivery
now ot 1979 prices less 10
and sealing. Blaney Har·
, and a $100. deposit will
ctwoocls, BOx 66, Vincent, hold your tractor . until
•- .. OH 45714. 614·678·2960,
April. This plfer good thru
Feb. 29, 1980. Outdoor
Equipment Sall!s1 ~ct. Rls.
GOLD AN~ 1 SitVER
COINS OF, THE WORLD: 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis, Ohio. Ph.
446-Jt.?O .. Open Mon.·Frl. 9
RI ·NGS, • JEWELR·Y ,
to 5. Sat. 910 I.
STERL!ING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP-TO·DATJ'
TRY
E NEW
PRICES. · CONTACT · ED
,
"PILLOW SOFT"
BllRKETJ
BARBE.R
SERTA
SHOP,' MIDDLEPORT,
• • ' OHIO: OR CAlL. 992·;1476.
PERFECT
.
SLEEPER '
i · : wanted ' to buy: a ~~eWer
THE ULTIMATE IN
, car, to takeover Plfyments.
SLEEPING COMFORT
t I
7-G·:JC8).
'

cu .

Refrigerator, 2 dr. com·
bination, will go fast at $125
at Pomeroy Landmark .

(White), $325. (pecan),
$350. (oak), Bassett Oak,
$550., Bassett Cherry, $675.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, $175., $250.,
$275. Captain's beds, $250.
complete. Baby beds; $75.

gold coins. For investment

.

and hub caps. New con-

to

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

"FREE ESTIMATES"

dividual needs. Contact,
Foster Lewis, your neighbor an.d agent .

Free estimates. 15 yr exp .
Call 367-7184 or·Jt.7·7160.

SeVera-l U~d chain saws .
Pomeroy Home and Auto.

maple ' or pine finish.
Bedroom suites, S27S.

Ranges,

available

PAINTING. Residential in·

.

.LAYNE'S FURNITURE
chair .and loveseat, $275.

surance Co. has offered
-serviCes for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost ' a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are

terior and exterior barn
and mobile home roofs.

.

We Do Roofing,
GulletS and
Remodeling

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

insulation. 446·8515 or 446·
0445. Call after • =30.

33 acres, J miles from
Chester. S15,000. 985·4349.

-: . ..

MAIN ·
Electric al ,

furnaces. Call388·9698.

Lennox Hea1ing and air
condi,t ionlng . Rapco Foam

power

Bllsiness Services

Block,

plumbing ,
heat i ng.
specializing in oil and gas

2642.

788·2589.

PENDLETON REBUILT
B1&lt;TTERY. $20. plus lax
and o.ld battery. We buy old
balle•les. Repair balterles.
Call388-8596',

QUALITY
TENANCE

and Home Improvements.
Free estimate$ . Call 446-

alternators - own the best
- buy Winpower . Call 513

CO NST

379·2123.

BILL' S. MOBILE HOMES

APP LES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 669·3785,

dressers, TV's,
head·
• boards and beds. ·Hutch,
table and chairs. Chest,
OLD FURNITURE, Ice
bedroom suite, swivel
boxes, brass beds, Iron
. rotker, bar stools, desks.
beds, desks, etc., complete
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
households. Write M.D.
Open
9am to 8pm, Mon.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
thru Fri., 9am toSpm, Sal.
(:all992-7760.
446·0322
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE,· gloss, china,
anything. SH or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.

Gallipol is, Ohio. Call 446·
7785.

EMERGENCY

5121 after 5pm .

LA IR

brtck , fireplaces , new
homes, r emOdeling, call

and Son, Upper River Rd .,

sewer pipes. wiridows, lintels, etc . ,Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245-

wood cutting supplies.
Charles McKean, Fairfield

moving to Gallipolis. Call
446·7070, ask for Hank.

Services Offered

LIME STONE. gravel and
sand. All si zes. At Richards

--------Fitzpatrick Orchard , SR ·
RU SS AND MAX
689 .
ELLIOTT

hydraulic wood splitters,

for manager and family

-

For Sale
ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,

Sofa, _chair, .- rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, ssoo. Sofa,

WHY STRUGGL.E TO GET
THE TOP IN SOMEONE
ELSE'S BUSINESS WHEN

Field Supervisor ( 1) -

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main St , Ftomeroy, 992-

J~nuary

• WANT to rent 4 bdr. house

AM FM radio, 8·1rack tape ,
Call after 5 p.m .• 247·2813.

1974 CJ ·5 Jeep,
Phone 949·2545.

992·6343 .

saw chain, bars, and all

23,000

1973 Pontiac Catalina. 992-

sand,

wanted to R'ent

1977 Dodge Aspen, AM·FM
radio. A.C ., S2600. 1974
Monte

LOST, 2 manila folders

Services Offered·

For Sale
COAL,
LIME STONE ,

with papers In plain brown
sack In Pomeroy on

ECHO

1973 Ford Maverick, very

Chevrolet

Lost and Fouricf -·

March 2. 9

auto .• good tires. 55,000 ac·
lual miles. 985·4346.

1978 ,Ford
Bronco .
Customized, p.b., p.s.,

reserves ' the

right to reject any or all
bl&lt;ls.

GT hardtop,

593··3375, collect.

.•,._...nity
MEDICA~

$300. 992·2503.

PICKUP

Call446·3139 after 5p .m.

Hourly RN, parttime for
family planning clinics.
Must be registered in Ohio,
have
reliable
tran sportation. Orientation will

be provided . Equal

to, 1974 Vega . Now buying
cars. Car Realty , Inc · 446-

dow, new fiberglass topper . on wk . ends.

Call Mr Zidian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Man ·
day through Friday , 9-5.

· MSgt Mike Gilmore at
(614 ) 474·7048 (collect)
nights
(614 )
497 0607
(collect) days.

1973 Vega station wagon.

custom deluxe, 12 ton, 305 1976 CHEVROLET 9 pass.
eng _, p.s.' auto ., dis c wagon. Air, verv gd. cond .,
brakes, sl iding back win - $2,150. Call 446·4141 after 6

time RN or LPN , ll to7 :30

would you Ike to be pa id for
going to college? You c an
get this and extras like -a
$1500 .00 bonus, free tran sportation t o ex o ti c
paradises like Hawaii , and
Puerto Rico, Life In surance. and more just for
one weekend a month and
15 days a year In the Ohio
Air National Guard. To
find out how this dream can
come true for you, call

Auto Sales

Auto Sales
1974 MU S rANG 1974 Pin

1

RN OR LPN , full time 311 .30 and 11 to 7:30. Part

Center . 446·711 2.

- - · - : : -- : - --

7118

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

home for position
five menfor
who are
weekend
developmentally disabled,.
In Gallipolis area . Send
resume to Buckeye Com·
munity Services, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, · OH 456«l.
EQual opportunity em·
plover.

Wllnfed to Rent
Trailer space, small house
or apartment. Preferably
In Sugar ~un area. 992·

the e ligibi lity list a t

and medical term inology
are necessity , Call Lon
Johnson at Pinecrest Care

FOR THE BEST buy in

KENNELS.

1977 CHEVY

2156 or 992-21 57.

PART ·TIME TYPIST 4
p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday lhru
Friday . Good typtng Skill s

Wanted : Live in . house
keeper to care for small
girl 6 years old. All the
privilege of home. Car furnished. Must be sober. Man
works away. 992·3519.

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC registered

tinel route carr ier. Phone
us ri ght away and get on

some great Q1fts as a Sen

spartation Orient at• on will
be provided. Equal opportunity employ er . For
fu r th er information pl ease
call collect to Planned
Parenthood of South east
Oh10, 286-5496, 9 to 4 week days.

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

shopping at Tawney's. 422
second Ave, Gallipolis, Oh.
many of our Items priced at
200. gold, and 9.00 silver.

I

Must be r eo• ster ed in Ohi o ;
hav e
r e 11able
fran ·

Call

' HILLCREST

and earn gOOd money plus

1976 FOR 0 p ic k up w i th
topper Ca l l 446 1404

as a young business person

tor fam•lv plann1 ng cl•nics

·-

Auto Sales

G E T VAL UAB LE t ra i n i ng

Part time

answer, call main office

diamonds, &amp; jewelry go to
Tawney Jewelers, Com pare prices . and values.
You can save a fortune

I

HOURL Y R.N.

_ _...,
Hco:.
e lp_Wan ted

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292 .

Georges Creek Rd .
446·0294.

'
•'
I'

Help Wanted

.

PIANO TUNING . ~ane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951. service '10
schools and home since
1965.
CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742·2328. Reteren·
ces.

IN · rL;:::::::::::::::::jb:::::::::::::::::~

can ·
your

SPRING.SALE .

operator's license? Phone

992·2143.

THE OHIO VALlEY UVESlOCK 00.
52 VINTON STREET
GALLI POLIS, OHIO 45631

Services Offered
Will do Odds and ends,
poneJI~g; floor tile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992·6338.

SPECIALSPRING GRASS CATTLE SALE
•
SALE TIME 8 P.M.
bates: Wed., Mar. 19 &amp; Wed., Aprll19

WANTED: housecleaning
position, I or 2 days per
week, •elloble, har·
dworklng, clean
and
honest, can supply re!efen·
ce$ to character. Please
call 843·4'151 anytime. Have
dependable transportation.

SPONSO,RED BY-T,HE ·OHIO VALLEY.
' FeEDER CAL.F COMMITTEE
Denver Y ,oho, Pres.-Ph. 245·5508
Dick Neal, Sec.-Ph. 381-8287

Wilt 'eare for elderly In our
tmme, ' tt:_alned and ex~
11frlenced. 99PJI4.
' ..

We will be accepting all classes 'of feeder
cattle (calves, yearlings &amp; bulls).

WILL HAUL WATER. 992·

5858.

•

Will care for children In my
hQme In Tuppers Plains
..... 614-661'·3723.
·Re~llng, paneling a""'

ceiling tile, Addltl9fll built
n. ,No .lab 109 smali. call
94'1m79. ,.
:------'---~
··,--

i.

Cattle will be received after 3:00P.M. the
day .befor.e the sale and , until 12:00 noon
the day olsale.
·
• .
All canl, will

be graded into unifprm lots •

,For more information- phone any of the
.abcllie Ust~ no;'s or Tommy Joe Stewart ,

- 446-7222, 446-9760.
.

.

•
'

�1).6--The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday. March 2,

)).7- Tbe SUnday Times-Sentinel, SWldily, Marc~ 2, 1980

1980

'. For Best "Results ·use Sunday Times-Sentinel Classifieds

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are f,ound zn the Sunday Times-Sentinel
.

In Memory

'

r
•'r

·,.

Pets for Sale
BRIARP ATC H
KEN

In memory of Bla ine Car ter, Sr .• who passed away J
vears ago March 2.
Plese. God, forg ive a silent
tear,
A fervent w ish our Dad wa s
here.
There are oftlers, yes, we
know
But he was ours, w e loved
hlmso . •
Dear God , take a message
To our father in heaven
above
Tell him how much we m iss
him
And give him all our love
Family.

NELS .
Boarding and
groom 1ng .
AK C Gordon

Setter's, English Cocker
Spaniels. Call446 4191.
POODLE

GROOMING

Call Judy T .!y lor at 367·
7220

DRAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL, AKC
Chow Chow dogs. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese cats. Available
now, 1 Blac k Female Chow
Chow puppy, Orders tor
spring puppies and kit tens
are being accepted. Call
446·3844 after 6 p.m.

IN LOVING MEMORY of
c. K. Holley who passed
away March 1, 1958.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dobermans Call 446· 7795.

The flowers we place upon
your grave.
May wither and decay
But our LOVE for you,
Will never fade away .
Sadly missed by brother
and slster.

BEAUT! FU L White ma le
Spitz Ni ce 4-H project Call

446·4191.

A" ' Shetland Sheep dog ·
min. Collie Puppies. 8 wks.
old . Call 304·675·4515 or 675·
1659.

Card of Thanks
Larry and Bambi wish to
extend their thanks to all of
the persons who save 'g ifts
or
support
to
t hem
following the destruction of
their residence by fire
·

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
pon1es . Ruth Reeves. 614
698 -3290 . Bord1ng and
Rid1ng Lessons and Horse
Care prOducts. Western
bOots. Children's Sl5.50

Notices
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

AdultS$29 .00.

Dobermans. 614·446·7795

HUMANE
SOCIETY.
Adopt a homeless pet.
Healthy, shots, wormed.

CARTER'S BODY SHOP
RIO GRAND.E , OH
Is permanently closed due
to lack of financial support.

Donations required.
6260, noon-7 p.m.

No further estimates or
repairs acceptepted .

Puppies. puppies. puppies.

Thank You

all sizes. all shapes, also

Greg Carter

Chesapeake

LEARN to macrame at the
Gazebo. Classes. Friday, 1
p.m . Call for information.

675·3365 .
TOLE painting Classes at
the Gazebo. Certified instructor _ Call for Information . 675-3365 .

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY1PM. FACTDRY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT. Racine
Volunteer Fire Dept.
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m.
AI their bulldlngln Bashan.
Factory choke guns only.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .

Corn

992-

Hollow Gun Club,

Rutland . Proceeds donated

to Boy ScoutTroop249

Bay

Retriever, giant schnouser,
2 straight leg Beagles, 1
poodle, Saint Bernard

Shepherd type . Adult
Shepherd type Humane
Society , 992·6260

WANT AD
CHARGES
15Wor-d..'!orUnder

Cash
100

I day
Zelaya

Char!!•

1.2$

uo

3dayJ

8clayt

190

1.11)

% .~

3.00

l7S

l!'.lc:b word over the minimtm
15 words ia • cents per word per
day. Ada running oth!!r than con-

IIC\Itive da)'l w[U be charged at

the 1day rate.
ill memory, Card~ Thonka
and Obituary: a cen11 per word,
$1.00 minimtan. Cash l.n •dVIJlCO, .

ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec tibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large. Also.
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
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 , I
BROWN'S.
I PAY highest prices '
possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber

Mobile Home sale. and Yard
Illes ""' aceepled only w1tli
cub wttb order. ~ cent cbarKe
for ads C&amp;lT)'ing Box Number In

Careoi.Tht!ienllnel.

Tbe Publ..l.aher ruerves Ul!.!
right to edll ,.. reject any a&lt;l!

deemed objectional. The
Publlaher wiU not be responolble
for f'D(ft than one incornct Insertion.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING

DEADLINES

Shop, Middleport.

GOLD, SILVER OR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY OTHER GOLD OR
Sl LVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL PAY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIEJ MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING .
PHONE . 992··6370. ALSO
DO APPRAISING
La Mar Beauty Salon, 101
W. 2nd St., Pomeroy . New
day and hours, Tuesday
lhru Friday, 9 till ? Satur·
days, 9 till 5. Call for apoin·
tment at 992·705&lt;1, ask tor
Terri, lmoJean or Gerrl .
Walk·lns welcome.
Automatic coin operated
water sales has been In -

stalled. Racine, corner 3rd
and Vine for truck water as
of March I. Uses quarters
only.

Block 111 mineral rights.
Ohio or W.V. Willing to pay
fop dollar. Write to Box m ,
Nelsonville, Oh . .&amp;5764.
Pawn Broker, golf and
guns, used silver 1964 or
e'rller for purchases. John
Teaford, 614-985·3961.

'
•

Jones Meat Processing
Slaughter facilities now.
. open. Washlngtorl county
Road, 248, Little Hocking,
. 011. 667· 6133.

Tu-y
thruFridly
I P.M.
the day before pubUcaUm
SWiday

I P.M.
Frldayoflmlom

Help Wanted
Full·llme ll..,·ln position
and parttlme week and

·- .. -----'3530.

'

•

m

EXPERIENCED
BODY MEOIANIC
FOR
GALl POLIS MOTORS
446·3672

1974 MONTE

LAB
TECHNICIAN . Accepting
applications tor full time
permanent technician .
MLT (HEW or ASCPJ.
Salary commenaurale with
expie.rlence. Mall r.esume or

apply In person, Veterans
Memorial HOipltal, Box
747,
Mulberry
Hgt,
Pomeroy, Oh .&amp;5769. Ph 614·
992 ·21~ . Equal opportunity
Employer.
NEED BABYSITTER for 2
children, In the City school
district for evening shift. ·
CUII446·1197. ' ·

1976 Ford F·100 pickup with
matching topper. 6 qdinder standard . 4 ,000 miles,
new tires. excellent con dition . $2500 f irm . Phone

CARLO

992-7285 after 4 p.m.

1973 MONTE CARLO
$700.
Call388·8469 .
·

1

·

1964 Pontiac Tempest. 4

1977 Che"y 4&lt;4 for sale or
trade. 992 5449 .

fiberglass topper and
sliding windows. Reese hjt·

1978 Ford F·150 Custom

1978 CUTLASS SUPREME
BROUGHAM · Loaded with

1974 FORD F·100 Pick up.

eKtras, good gas mileage.

One owner, call379·2320 .

·

--------1974 VW BEETLE · low
1975
DODGE
RAM · l,"iles. new paint, AM·FM
CHARGER · 4-Spd., 4·W·D, • ·track, $1,500. Call 379·
low miles. exc . body and 2469.

eng . Must sell. Will take

best offer. Call 446·7828 af· 1978 CHEVY Heavy duty
ter 6 p.m.
pick up. 350 eng ., 27,000
miles, e&lt;e. cond., Call 256·
1957 WILLYS jeep, H.T. 9353.
good shape. $1600. Call Jt.l·
7/U/ .
1975 FORD F· 100 pick up, 6
new tires, 302 3-spd., all
FORD GALAXY · like new. Call 446·2445

op·

portunity employer. For
furTher information, please

!l.!l ·•••• ion

wagon

$400. Call

call Planned Parenthood of
Southeast Ohio, 992·5912.
8:30·3:30 weekdays. 11 no

daily, 446-4792 evenings.

1977

CHEVROLET

Step

side pick up. Short wheel

base . Call446·3395.

ch . Big II res. Rust proofed.
25,000 miles. Can be seen at
Ashland Bulk Plant al
Mlners"llle. 742·2225, 742·
2125 or 992·5111 .
1977 Capri, 4 cyl ., A.C.• AM·
FM 4 speed . Excellent con dition. 992-6069, $3500 firm .

1974 MGB

Authority will open sealea
bids at their office, 16 Slate
Street, Gallipolis, OH, on
March 19, 1980, at 2:30
p.m., for the audit of the
financial records of the
Housing AutHority.
The Audit must be con·
ducted by a Certified
Public Accountant In ac·
cordance with the "State of
Ohio Audit Guide For
Metropolitan
Housing
Authorities."
Bids must be submltled
by 12:00 noon on March 19,
.1980. . Anyone Interested
should contaot John P.
Roderus, Executive Dlrec·
tor (6141 446·0251.
The Board of Com·
missioners of the Gatlla
Metropolitan
Housing

1977 Celica GT, low
mileage, 5·speed, A.C.,
AM·FM stereo, CB radio,

1979 OLDS 98 - Regency
Coupe. Loaded, with all ex -

1978 BLAZER . 1 owner.
Exc . cond . 446·8696 after 5
p.m.

missioners
of
Gallla
Metropolitan
Housing

offer . Call 992·6149 after 5
p.m

1978 Che"y Pickup, 4&lt;4, 350
engine, automatic, P.S.•
P.B., AM·FM radio, cab
lights, 6 11. bed with

eluded Call446·7904.

mornings.

preciatedj must sell . Best

stp at 37641 Texas Road .

Exc . cond ., 40 1n copper in- 2320.

Bar Help Needed. Call 992·
3860 between 8:30 and 10 :30

must be seen to be ap·

tires. and balfery . AM·FM

1979 BRONCO
LOW
1971 F·lOO FORD pick up. mileage, loaded. Call 379·

Atlanta, GA. 30348

24,000 actual, good mi)jl,

Dr .• V·6, auto .• shitl. Run·
ning good. C.all 985·3366. Or

Call 367·7560.

NOTICE OF
INVITATION
FOR BIDS
FINANCIAL
AUDIT OF THE
GALLIA
METROPOLITAN
HOUSING
AUTHORITY.
The Board of Com·

spec ial trim and Interior,

black on black . New radial

tras. $5,800 . Call446·2615.

Mature Individuals with
recent work experience
Occasional hourly work,
weekdays, 9-5, physical 1n
ventorying end venfying
serialized merchandise at
retail stores in Middleport.
lvenchek . Box 105029,

Auto Sales
1977 Pontiac Grand Prix
SJ , P .s. , P.B., A. C., power
seats and locks. AM·FM

stereo B·track, landau top,

1979 BLAZER
p.s.. p.b.,
tape and more . Real nice. air cond ., AM-FM radio,
9,500 mtles. S/ ,200. Call446·
Call446 3257 or 446 0303 .
4216.

Appl ications now being
taken tor restauran t work,
apply in person only ,
Tuesday thru Friday , 10 :30
to 3 p.m., next 3 weeks at
Steamboat Inn, Racin e.

new radial tires. Excellent ,

mileaoe. 99N201 .

4x4,

excellent

condition.

Lifl kits, AM·FM 8·track,
lois of extras, 21,000 miles.
Take over payments. See
Greg Grover or call 992-

5620 .
1978 Ford 4x4 F · 150.
custom made. AM·FM 8·
track, CB. 19.000 miles. 992·
2656.5

Authority

mint cond., a.c., low
mileage, gOod gas mileage.

Call 992-6259 .

cruise control. 992-3310.

good condition-, small V-8,

Jl/1 Ton Dodge truck, w-16
If. alum. van body, roll up

door. Like new,
miles. 667·3080.

17. Reward, Call

Found : Male beagle dog.
Call949·2225.

Carlo,

PHYSICIAN Relocating to
Gallipolis
needs
im·
mediately, a clean, one
bdr. furnished apartment
or house to rent. Call

1978 Ford Bronco, A.C .,
AM· FM stereo, P.S., P.B .,
4 new tires. Call 992·6130.

Holzer Clinic 446·5187 bet·
ween 8:00 a.m . and

2201.

p.m. weekdays.

s-oo

$2200.
T RAILER lot with hook up.
Northern pari of Gallia
County. Fairly secluded.
Call 388·8178.
wanted to Buy
DIAMONDS, old coins.
wedding bands, estat~
l~welry, class rings, etc.
TAWNEY JEWELERS,
422 Second Ave.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

NOilOlOS

YOU CAN START AT THE TOP

IN YOUR OWN?
It you Mvt tht req1ured lnvnr·
mtnr of 5f,fn.oo, you can have
your own highly IUCUISIUI
business .
TWO BOOMING INDUSTRIES

ATTENTION:
LEARN

COMBINED INTO ONE .
You will hav~ income from
two different sources, nor lUll
one You will m!loufaclure de
mend Items for &amp;.anks, Savings
I. Loan Al toelatlons. Hospi tals,
Schools, Shopping CC!'nlers, Of
flee Buildings, Retail Stores,
Tourist lnclusrr v. Professional
Buildings, Ft~ctones, Adpart·
ment Buildings , Mo r els ,
Restaurants, City, county, Stille
and U S Agencies. lind other
buslrHt!lteS too numerous to
men lion
We person.!l lly Install lhe
machinery and equ lpmenl for
both IMullrles at your location
You wil l be thoroughly 1!100 ex·
Derll'f framed IM botl't pMses of
factor.,.
operat i On\
!we
guarantee
your
compl~te
satiSfltCtlonl
The marketing of your pro
duelS will b&amp; handled by c:om
pen,- established sales o\Jtlets
1no selling by you is necess.ary) .
YCIU will ha-n a protected lerrilor r and each state will have a
limited number Of our factory
operations - so be one of the
l ln l applicllnls In your 11rea act now - en unheard of op
portunily to be In an exc •ustve
business for yourself Achieve
lolel tlnanclel independence end
become one of the top money
makers. .n your l!lrea
Cell or Write (Include telephone
number )
Cr•ft World lnterrw~tional , Inc
No. 41 Soledad Drive
Montarty, Calllornlll Uf40
Phooe4oa-..t-..,71

PROFESSIONAL
SALES

ACROSS
I
1 Confines
6 Tendency
11 Freshet
16 Declare
21 Tether
22 Pass on
23 Candle
24 Kind of

wave
Sell targe ticket item
and make money. 1,000

to 1,soo dollars commission from 1 sale. Multip-

ly this by 2 or 3 sales a
week.

Recent corporation
change put us in a mass
expansion program .
Must be available now.
Extensive travel by
plane and car. Must be
able to travel. Must
hiJve late model car and
de5ire extremely high

Income. Opportunity Is
now. Call Mr. Stein Col·
teet Monday through
Friday, 9:00a.m. to s:oo
p.m. at (314) 781 ·2224
Central standard time.

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency Is accepting applications until March 7, 1980, for the
following position to be filled by
March 12, 1980.
Responsible for day·to·day

weatherization and home repair activities includirig

supervision of wealherlzallon ..personnel. Other
duties Include job s~he1Ming, maintaining inven·
tory records, tool control, safety, quality control,
and vehicle aRd tool malntenan~e. Other relevant
duties as assigned by supervisor. Supervisor needed
for Gallla County only,
Qualifications for the above position Include: High
School Diploma or equivalent, two vears experience
rel•ted to housing constructlop or weatherization,
supervlsorv experience in housing trades, sensitive

of noeds of low-Income and elderly. Must have
dependoble tronsportotlon and valid driver's
license. ~ate of pay Is $4.81 per hour. Fringe
benefits Include paid hospitotiution. Applications
are available from the CAA Central Offl~e or the
OBES Office. Further lnfprmallon can be obtained
from Mr. Ron Crawford at 367·7341, or by writing
P.O. Box 212, Cheshire, Ohio 45620.
Equal Oppor!unlty/Afflrmatlve Action Employer.

$20,000 to $30,000
. ANNUALL~
"'
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN
BE ,;.:,
·
N
·
lrtG MORE THA
JUST A
SALES PERSON, AND WILLING
TO PUT FORTH THE NECESSARY
EFFORT:"!' WE OFFER YOU:
• A anund floor opportunity with back-up by .a arowlh
c-wnp~ny thlt ._"_' Nltl people count.
• A Plf'Nfttnt NIH potjtktn tla1t build~ r•pe•l bush-...,.
• Autornobtle A.Uowance p.id monthly .

• Ower.... c:t.c,t, Pllkl moftlhly.
• Gnlup lnHIIIIK:e with nt.ljor IMdtbl benifitl .
• • $1,100 "*"fhiY draw IJiinet rommiuion / JNid weftl,j.
to win. hftu•. tripe • "'"'"'·
• ~; DN~~Iinueul tr.alnln1

' e•pe-nae.

proara"'

•t company

• A Mln~n~n .n...ted comp~ny that pnMMIH from within.
• Our tr•:nfnt will 11M..-. you of immrdMit! hlah e.amlnJt.
·• P~d• of tht hiahal fldlity in our,lftdullry.
A &lt;1!1'-1' eduGttion or dtftnlal b•dlaroulld lt not ~uirtd . 'r o
(IINIIfy. yoU .._.ld ho~we direc.1 -e~ tllptrlen&lt;9. /Y®r
bradaaNUM wil be ChtcUd/. Y® •
hawe the •blflty to
lf&gt;•m, and be conftdent ol ,...; 1ltllity lo dOH.

25 Snake
26 Fairy in
"The Tempest"
28 BUild
30 Hyalite
32 College deg.
33 State: Abbr.
34 Away
35 Guido's high
note
36 Aroma
.37 Deposit
38 Skill.
40 Erased
42 Female ruff
43 Barracuda
44 Ascend
45 Tierra del
Fuegan Indian
47 Expunged
49 Female student
50 Small rug
51 Deaden
54 Swill
55 Mend
56 Alludes to
59 Tatter
60 Vigor
62 Ingredient
64 Nuisance
65 Near
66 For example: Abbr. ·
67 Soak
69 Flee
,
70 Edible

seeds
71 Nahoor

sheep
72 Lamprey
74 Weird
76 Theater
abbr .
77 Spoken
78 Solar disk
79 Frightfully
82 Asian ass
84 Belief
85 Comic
sketch
86 Falsehoods
88 Way out
89 Appellation
of Athena
90 Set firmly
92 Carnlvqrous
mammal
94 Ultimately
98 English river
99 Evergreen
trees
100 Legal matter
102 Growing out
of
103 Bishopric
104 Japanese
currency
105 Offsrprlng:
Pl.
106 Lasso
108 Expire
109 State: Abbr.
110 Tin symbol
111 Unadulterated
112 Carriers
114 World War
II vessel:
Abbr.
116 Weight ot
India
117 Regard
119 Transaction
120 Rodents
122 Soup dish
124 Communist
125 Stony ridge
126 Yield
128 Regret

129 Mix
131 Dispatch
132 Man's nick-

name
133 Stupid one
135 Fondle
138 Brim
139 Venetian
ruler
140 Away
141 Lubricate
142 State: Abbr.
143 Printer's

measure
144 Nip
145 Gel up
147 Shovel
149 Dry, as wine
150 Man's name
152 Titles
154 Metal
156 Girl's name
158 Tinge
159 Right
160 Towers
161 Ledger
entry
DOWN
I Girl's name
2 Norse gods
3 Opening
4 Plural ending
5 The urial
6 Bagatelle
7 Heavy jackets
8 Cloth measure
9 Continent:
Abbr.
10 Stain
11 Gravestone
12 South
American
rodent
13 Likely
14 Tellurium
symbol
15 Worn away

16 Sky sight
17 Sesame
1B Paid notice
19 Domesticates
20 Gladden
27 Fish eggs
29 Rattan
31 Vessel
36 Unlock
37 Location
39 Chinese faction·

40Wet
41 Valley
42 Repulses
43 Classify
44 Float
46 Greek letter
48 Food fish
49 Walking
stick
50 Army meal
51 Propagate
52 Ardent
53 Deprived
55 Testify '
56 Actual
57 Hindu
. queen
'58 Endure
61 Soulh
American
country
63 Filipino
64 Fruit
68 Helms
70 Feign
71 Robs
73 Instruction
74 Redacl
75 Man's name
77 Pointed
arch
78 Region
80 Related
81 Affirmative
83.Cutting tool
B4 Hint
'
87 Continued
story
89 Certify

90 Out of date
91 Kilns
92 Port, e.g.
93 Shakes.pearian king
95 Metal fastener
96 Embankment
97 Long tor
99 Mold
101 Cubic
meters
105 Petitioned
106 Peruse
107 Asian sea
111 Equal
112 Twist
113 Stalk
115 Screw
116 Ooze
118 Journey
119 European
12t Prying one
123 Ruthenium
symbol
125 Ruler
126 Wheel
tracks
127 Tellis
129 s·lumbered
130 Ringworm
131 Drunkard
132 Semblance
134 Ancient
136 Resin
137 Understood
139 Soil
140 Russian city
144 Man's nickname
145 Quantity:
Abbr.
146Worm
147 Ocean
148 Finish
149 Cry
151 Scale note
153 Three-toed
Slot~
155 Preposition
157 Qlphthong

I BUY BASEBALL CAR·
DS . Immediate cash;
Prefer 1933·1972. Condition
Important. Call collect 0·
891-7431.
CATALYTIC
CON·
VERTERS · · (Used), ~op·
per, brass, aluminum,
lead, baHeries, radiators,
automatic transmissions,

(Junk), beefhldes, furs, and
Glnse~g. Call Robert ~.
Harper, 675-3616 or 675·
5202.
• RENTAL houses and reri·
tal property. Call446·7627.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pollet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

_gravel, (:al c lum·
chloride, fertilizer, dog

food, and all types ot sail.
3891.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES.
Washers,
dryers, refrldgerators,
ranges.
Skaggs Ap·
pllances. 1918 Eastern Av
ce., 446· 7398.
CHAIN

SAWS,

Centenary Road. 446·9442 .
FIREWOOD.
seasoned
oak. ash and hickor.y. Ph
446·9442.
FIREWOOD
Split,
seasoned oak &amp; hickory,
cross fie ends. Call 446·4534
or 446·2329.
40 LB Box of West Virginia
Chunks, low ash, low sulfur
Foster Coal Co., 446·2783.

SOfas and chairs priced

from $275. to $550. Tables,
$33 .·$60·$7 ©
and $85.
Sofabed and cHair, S150.
Hlde· a · b~ds,$300. ,
queen
size, $325.,
&amp;
uP .
Recliners, tl25., . $150.,
$160 .. $175 .. and $225. Lam·
ps from $18. lo SSO. 5 pc.
dinettes from $69. to $325.
Wood table and 4 chairs,
$275. Table, two leaves. 6
chairs, (high backed), $400.
Hutches, $300. and $350.,

OLD COl NS, pocket wat·
clles, class rings, wedding
bands, .diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call~ . A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6462.

992-2Q94.

JIM MARCUM rOOfing, ·
spouting and siding. 30

Five 1975 Camaro wheels

years experience. Free
estimates . Remodeling _

dition. Call992·5663.

Call 388·9857.

16

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave ., Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 446·1833.

GOLD, SILVER DR
FOREIGN COINS, OR
ANY ·OTHER . GOLD DR
SILVER ITEMS. ALSO,
ANTIQUE FURNITURE
OR OTHER ANTIQUE
ITEMS. WILL f"AY TOP
DOLLAR. CHECK WITH
OSBY (OSSIE) MARTIN
BEFORE
SELLING.
PHONE 992·6370. ALSO DO
APP!IAISING.

HS. Day old or started
leghorn pullets, both floor

JERRY LUCAS' S water
delivery.
Call 446•7534

- -- - - - ·

••...__

I• .

~

..

t:

cau coJJectt-ltl-7431

UNCLE BUDDY'S Trading
Past · 756 Second Ave.
Special · 6 pair top quality
lube socks, ret.a ll SL98 ' pr.
new, 6 pr. $5.95. All purpose

REMINGTON

. Mid·~,.-;ir.r~~~
. . . .7

.

-

....... , _ ~

. ..

•

.. ~~~~~ :,,,,illilt!fll

'

~

IAIIJ'I.

Colaa.,_, N... 18801

ce
20821965.
. Call/42 ·2951 or 992·

. 388·9759

·

2501 after 10 a.m.

Thurman, Ohio
service,

residential a. commer·
clat. Electric eel ~er·
yice, chemical toilets.

-~
· ----.~--'''--

1979 SKI BOAT · 70 H. P., 15
ft. trl·hull. Call 446·244.5
dally, 446·4792 evenlngo_.

~u,,_._

ELWOOQ
RF.PAI R -

Insulation, storm doors,
windows, gutters, full
estimates.

call Mullins

95Uecolld Avenue
!JifiiPG!Is,Ohlo
45UI

.HOME

IMPROVEMENT$

I!RU.C,•~~·

Ma'
~E. •~':~~~~1\1!'.

~:E~&amp;· d!'!•! .,;.:.;

't.!l
e"~·

0

. ~1!._41_":._

~~~

~~~-r~~~!c

~!
,

,:;;;:
~·o:

:J•. '

1

Storm
Windows,
Storm
Doors,
Replacement
Winc(ows,
Patio
Cover!~'.
Aluminum
Sidin ·,g
and
Accessories. Call
·

'Bill'S
446-2642

J

ELMER '

cloL Tree a shrUbs In·
stallod, designing a
planting. Plan for .,..
lng plenllngs 11
F~:.~~~le
rates.

·•

MURREL

~~DEN~ Doz~r work, 446·

Certiiii.Cf)
•
l~:la&lt;':"n Beds, Waler and
10.. Lines, ,&amp;lecl!lc
lli._s,~no-~,PolelulldlntS.

Reese Triftching

&amp; D..._l.l.oe r:.....:ce

,..,.·JIOO . •'

' &amp;

McCO·RMICK

remodeling
, Roolino.
con·
ST·ILLMA:N
,
•
for
crete, and gen. home main·
tenonce. Coil 675·5774 and
evenlno-,675·1298\
'

·.

•

WELt. Drilling

PU

::J
~':f.\'.:d. c~~~.,
Orlnt......
l;ru. c:co,

1

plail tt

...

plastarl~o.

,..,.,1;, teiCIIIre
~lllncre. , fr.. . tltlmlfft.
KoH116'1s ••
-

-...,-

--~---

.""'·"

~~·=G~I~I~II~poi~,I~I,~O~h~la~=~',~~~~
· · ~~~~~~~~

FOR BEST In Carpet I
-&lt;:!tarilng • Call Smeltzer'j 1
Steamway. Call 614·446·
t

~~

NlS.C-ilve.

i ,,

molds for candy making
-Full line of Kraft supplies
-Special rates for
organizations

e~4/f.t; ~4&lt;Uu

?~""«.t-It

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

"I Made it Myself"

2-17·1mo

Pomeroy, Oh.

sWAIN'

~·

;MOBIL£ HOME
SERVICE

11iMvw DaDN

· 'I"'"""" DNl
We '••II on~thlng ' for

Anc:horlng.

tnybocly at our A:ilttfon

!lorn or In your ltome. For
lnformollon ond pickup

Hl')llct &lt;1112"-1961.

· ~~~~='lt~~m~'

'

·:

~lrting.

Awnl.ngs,
P1t1o
. Covers. · Carports.
Roof . Paint, Stf·UP

·•nd R•lavtllng. C:.ll

,·

BILl'$ .
446-2&amp;42
•

. BOWERS

.. .. Craftsarefun!

L - - - - - 2·18·1 mo.
TEEN DISCO
DANCE
AI The Orchid Room
E . Main 51. Pomeroy, 0.
EVERY
S.UURDAY NIGHT
8:00TII11:30
"Disco Lighting"

Admission 52.00 Single
$3.00 coupte
Sponsored by Music
Unlimited. Chaperones
will be present. No
alcoholic beverages permitted. For fUrther in-

992-3795

fo., can 992-6058.
2·28·1 mo. pd.

RAILROAD
SiREET
GARAGE
Middleport, 0.

PAYING
$20.00 AND UP

sweepers,

FOR

S S. G Carpel Cleaning.
Steam cleaned.
Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. scotchguard . 992·
6309 or 742·2211 .

PH. 949-2801

Phone 992-2390
Reasonable Rates
"DOn't CUSS·Call US" .

No Sunday Calls
1

~:::::::::2:·2:8:·1=m=o=·==~==:::::::::'=·l=l·=(pd==.J~

t-

all

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various sizes of
pool kits . Do·lt·vourself or
let us Install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.

makes. 992·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service. Ph6ne
9A9·2487 or ,949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford .

SEWING
Repairs,

MACHINE
service,

AUTOMOBI~E

SURANCE been
celled?· Lost

Automotive Rep;rir
Open 9·6 Mon. lhru Sat.
Additional Hours
By Appointment

SILVER DOllARS

and

WILL HAUL limestone and
grevel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2455 .

.- •iiii
J-__,,.......,,~.._..,,...,_-.....r
1
• 's;rvl~et&lt;~~.r~ ·t, t;~~~~~~;-t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
l" l&lt;i:iTAlciC •
' 'TIINIC~
~I;...'S / D~P~.NDlBLE
LA~DSCAP.ING . .c
I'
I·
·'""""'
water delivery. ran 256.
RHid4tntla1 f Commer·
(Galli• Cowtty

"
9368 anytlm~ . ,, ;

idish

WALL PAPERING
painting . 742·2328.

· Home Improvement

crete work. Ph. 367-11427,
36H194, 367-G141. Free
estimates.

'-'!"

chocolate wrappers and

Free E~timate

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

VINYL SIDING

guners -spouts -con-

MUST SELL NO'I'/. · All
steel bldgs, ou . rz~}_4!
$5,695 . ':,;0.,;.0 . .e
~48xl4, .• -·~~·.;.
Call Ol'\¥• ,,.
11

macrame classes.
-Now
carrying

Aluminum Siding

toasters, irons, all small
applll!lnces. Lawn mower.

It=========~

J·.&amp;S GIBSON GUITAR ·
,
like new, hard shell case, I!--~--.-----' ·
call446·7'104.

collect. ;
'HAY. F9R SALE · . Call
Pearl be.~ney ~t 2~·5,546. .

;!J~~

618 E. Main

INCOME TAX
SERVICE
Audrey Canaday
25 Locust 51., Gatllpolls
H Mon.·Sat. Evenings
by appointment.
Phone 446·3636

C&amp;W CONTRACTORS
All types, home lm·
provements - Roofing

FIREWOOD · for sale. Call
"

NOW HOLDING
TOLE &amp; DECORATIVE
PAINTING CLASSES
-We will be having

2·25·1 mo.

WELDING TANKS wllh
guages, 25 ft. hose. ,3· dlf·
ferent tips, cutting tips and
1 arc wefdlng helmet. Like
new. $32~. Call446·7434.
f----------'---i

38~·9311.

Ph . 992-7583

.g,•.ranteed .

D&amp;F CONTRACTORS
All types home improvements •nd . room
additions, Also Insurance claim repairs &amp;
electric wiring. .
Free Estimates
446431417 or 367-03,. ,

GENERAL
E~EC .
Retrlagerator, good cond.,
call446·1489.
,

I

elnsulation
• storm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement
,
Windows

construction, all types.
F~:'!:.eatlm~!~· all work

446-1019.

'

Greg Roush

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

367-0527

orfl';-------~-i

Shop. Call 446·1842 or 446·
0690.

949-2320
Racine, 0.

Business-Farms-Partnerships
and Corporations
Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.
-

MASSEY
SANITARY SERVICE·

..

at collection. MTS Coin •·

Exper' ence

Tri-County
Bookkeeping
Service

~· ~·.

RemOdeling repair, new

WORLD
BOOK
EN ·
CYCLOPEDIA • SpeCial
Sale • $100. off regolar
11rlce, payment plan. Call

*Electrical work
*Masonry work
12 Years

INSULAJION
Vinyl &amp;

- .

EI!W ~

Cash~----------i

einxgtensive remodel-

J&amp;L BLOWN

· ~~~
~
~-_,_~L : { ya,~~ t E,J

County Road 8

tank

_

11

Roger Hysell
Genge

'

24HS5S

C•lf 245-9513
or446·3896

homes

Call tor Appt.

t-.---- .-_

Or General Repair

Stripping
and Refinishing

*New

Wed. &amp; Thurs.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission ·
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4-JO ·Ifc

Free Estimates

Furn~ure

ROUSH

CQNSTRutnQN

SALON

1 t mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
on St . Rt. 114 toward
Rutland.

repair.

Complete Remodeling

2·14-tfc

rI~=========~~====~2=·:;m;o:·~~~=:;=:.~~2~-2~4~-1~m~o~.~

G"ORGE'S ROOFING
Roofing, siding, gutter,
build -up roof, home

~----------i

Free Estimates
388-9759

B. A. BEAUTY

1-22 -ttc

r~======:::=:;-1

WOODS
REMODELING CO.

s Mon. thru Fri.

MenorWomen
by Diann Jewell
at

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and

388·8797 or 388·8860.

446·7887

Roofing,
si~ing,
gutter,
built-up
roof
and
home
repair.

HAIR" STYLING

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

E &amp; R Tree Service. Pain ting and excavating _ Cal

register, Bunn commercial
~otfee maker, restaurant l•r-=--,-::---::---:-::--,''
booths &amp; tables. Call 446·
Fronk Rose Con~ I. Co.

WATER

tilt

Faines

Daniels Quality service sin-

septic

WI! HIRI! PI!DPLI! NOT PAPER
Call Cliff Sulllvon 1·100-221·1501 .
On Monday, March 3 or Tuesday, March4 h&lt;itween 1
a.rn. •nd 4 p.m .
'

and

Continuous no· leak gut·
terlng
•
Day· 698·8205 · Night

14 FT. WOOD BOAT · Fac·
tory built, trailer and 40
H.P. Johnson motor. $450.
Call446·1294.

2096: ,

.

LIMESTONE · Delivered

and up. come on down.

FANCY RESUMES NOT NECESSARY
To•rr•op fotllttf'MNIInltMih,

(Formerly

GEORGE'S
ROOFING

~~========~l;:=;:;;;;:;;;:;:~:;:::::;t;==~~:;;.;;;::==~

downspouts,
gutter
New homes, old homes, , cleaning and painting.
commercial structures .
All work guaranteed.
For free estimates call ""6 Free Estimates
1971.
Reasonable Prices
call Howard
PIANO TUNING · Lane
949·2862

23 mile radius, Gallipolis.
Pt. Plea$ant, free estimate

throw rugs, 65 cents each

F\RE'{l'OqD · Pick ,UP
delivered. Call256·6735.

FURNITURE
pref81' 1tll-19'12
Cemlltton Important

CO.

8 til

sui master foam insulation.

ADVANCED SEAMLESS
GUTTER&amp; DOOR, INC.

CALL 992 -7544

Rt. 3, Racine, SR 124
949·2422
1·30·pd .

2·18·1 mo.

Free Estimates

SILVER DOLLARS · and

and SNYDER
'
lmllladlate cash Pali

BOGGS
EXTERMINATING

BUY.· SELL &amp; TRADE · ~=========--l
Ho~s and ponies. Hay-for
sale. Call256-1507.
OHIO VALLEY
SHEET
METAL
JVC AM·FM STEREO
150 Third Ave.
Receiver, 85 watts per
Gu1ters &amp; downspouts
channel, Fisher turntable,
Installed
a repaired.
2 speakers, call446·4779.

mp75. ,..

..

..._
'

- Safe, dustless cleaning,

Overhead
Garage'
Doors,
E lectrlc Door
Operators,

2342.

..-

I

(::;

Mink stole also fur jacket
(never worn) , 992·3283.

BURROUGHS Bookkeepin•
g machine, $50. Call 446·

.

..

weldlng
.
ling,
brazing,
arc 5:
Call 25&lt;1
·9302 after
30

.RON'S TV SERVICE
Specializing in Zenith . ·
House Calls. Call 1·304·576·
2398 or 446·2454.

FIREWOOD · Hickory,,
red, White &amp; bla~k Oak.
Sugar Maple, $35. truck
load, we also have. Call446·
71.&amp;5after6.

.

KEN MANNON MOBILE
WELDING Service. CUI·

of driveways. Call 367·7101.

refrigerators.

3rd St. in
Syrcuse, Oh .
Ph. 992-3752
or 992·3743

STOVE, furnace and chim ney insulat ion. Call 4-463407 .

zpalrlck Orchard, State
Route
689, . Phone
Wilkesville 669·3785.

tertalnment centers, $40.

'

FOREIGN CAR
REPAIR

Call256·1562.

THEISS INSULATION, In·

and SSO. Desks, $38.
USED

KACH·ALL PORTABLE
BLDG. All sizes, 6xl0 to
12x40.•SH at 12JV. Pine St.,
446-2783 or 3 houies below
Bowling Alley on Rl. 7, 446·
1279.
.

ESTIMATES"

Lowest Possible Prices.

The Chimney Sweep, 1 373·
tJ!57 .

PIGS· Hamp., ·York, call
446·4999 or 446·8539.

A&amp;H

VOLKSVWAGEN PARTS

AVOID CHIMNEY FIRES

10·12·14.

992-7314
1·28·1 mo.

3·2·1 mo.

"fREE

Automation.
Mollern
Poullry, 399 W. Main
Pomeroy. Phone 992·2164.

co.ndilion. Sizes
992·3283.

992-6125 or

BROTHERS
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Finest Quality at the

O'dell) Oak Hill. Oh .. call
collec1446· 7569.

Ladies Dresses. beautiful
spring styles, excellent

RACINE, 0 .

UPHOLSTERING

anytJme .

pies, sauce and butter . Fit·

Hours 9 -1 M ., w., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment.
JD7 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy . o.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

BILl'S AUTO
REPAIR

or cage grown available .
Poultry
Housing
and

Apples, Rome Beauty at
$4 .00 ,per bushel. E&lt;e. for

.PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

(FREE ESTIMATES)

service. Call 388·8274, or
388·9963 .

Upper Rt .• l Call 446·2445
days and 446·4792 nights.

and sheet cakes. Call 992·
6342 or 992·2583

work , down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways .

CAll 992-3238
ASK FOR DAVE

in

Federal Hous ing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

Gutter

Been in Business
For 5 Years

Residential, commercial,
heating, cooling. electrical

service. All1ypes of repair.

JOHNSON Water Delivery .
Call446·1004 anytime .

meet

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

D·DAY
REFRIDGERATION

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 24 hr. wrecker

Decorated cakes for a II oc casions. Character cakes,

full or twin, $55 .• firm, $65.
and S75. Queen sets, $185. 4
dr. chest, 542. 5 dr.. chests,
549. Bed frames, S20. En·

.
:-

,

Philco

11 .

SS.E Gill Shop (Syracuse)
10 percent off on all items
during March.
·

Mattresses or box springs,

FIREWOOD ·lie ends, 8ft.
bed.• $20.;6 ft .~· $15. split
WOO&lt;!, ' fl. bed, J25, 6 It.
bed, $20. .&lt;Dyer Brothers
Now acceplng loos at our . NorthupO,Call '44&lt;&gt;-116l
,
!
-U
.
log ,y ard 7:30-J:JO WHk·
days. H lgh prices for gooct
GRAii£LY TRAC•TORS,
quality 1001 with a limited
pre·se•son Hie. Purchase
amou'!t of ·1ow: grade.
your new Gravefy tractor
Payment upon delivery
now ot 1979 prices less 10
and sealing. Blaney Har·
, and a $100. deposit will
ctwoocls, BOx 66, Vincent, hold your tractor . until
•- .. OH 45714. 614·678·2960,
April. This plfer good thru
Feb. 29, 1980. Outdoor
Equipment Sall!s1 ~ct. Rls.
GOLD AN~ 1 SitVER
COINS OF, THE WORLD: 7 &amp; 35, Gallipolis, Ohio. Ph.
446-Jt.?O .. Open Mon.·Frl. 9
RI ·NGS, • JEWELR·Y ,
to 5. Sat. 910 I.
STERL!ING SILVER AND
MISC. ITEMS. PAYING
RECORD
HIGH,
HIGHEST UP-TO·DATJ'
TRY
E NEW
PRICES. · CONTACT · ED
,
"PILLOW SOFT"
BllRKETJ
BARBE.R
SERTA
SHOP,' MIDDLEPORT,
• • ' OHIO: OR CAlL. 992·;1476.
PERFECT
.
SLEEPER '
i · : wanted ' to buy: a ~~eWer
THE ULTIMATE IN
, car, to takeover Plfyments.
SLEEPING COMFORT
t I
7-G·:JC8).
'

cu .

Refrigerator, 2 dr. com·
bination, will go fast at $125
at Pomeroy Landmark .

(White), $325. (pecan),
$350. (oak), Bassett Oak,
$550., Bassett Cherry, $675.
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, $175., $250.,
$275. Captain's beds, $250.
complete. Baby beds; $75.

gold coins. For investment

.

and hub caps. New con-

to

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

"FREE ESTIMATES"

dividual needs. Contact,
Foster Lewis, your neighbor an.d agent .

Free estimates. 15 yr exp .
Call 367-7184 or·Jt.7·7160.

SeVera-l U~d chain saws .
Pomeroy Home and Auto.

maple ' or pine finish.
Bedroom suites, S27S.

Ranges,

available

PAINTING. Residential in·

.

.LAYNE'S FURNITURE
chair .and loveseat, $275.

surance Co. has offered
-serviCes for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost ' a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are

terior and exterior barn
and mobile home roofs.

.

We Do Roofing,
GulletS and
Remodeling

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

insulation. 446·8515 or 446·
0445. Call after • =30.

33 acres, J miles from
Chester. S15,000. 985·4349.

-: . ..

MAIN ·
Electric al ,

furnaces. Call388·9698.

Lennox Hea1ing and air
condi,t ionlng . Rapco Foam

power

Bllsiness Services

Block,

plumbing ,
heat i ng.
specializing in oil and gas

2642.

788·2589.

PENDLETON REBUILT
B1&lt;TTERY. $20. plus lax
and o.ld battery. We buy old
balle•les. Repair balterles.
Call388-8596',

QUALITY
TENANCE

and Home Improvements.
Free estimate$ . Call 446-

alternators - own the best
- buy Winpower . Call 513

CO NST

379·2123.

BILL' S. MOBILE HOMES

APP LES - ROME beauty
apples at $4 per bu . Best for
apple butter. Call 669·3785,

dressers, TV's,
head·
• boards and beds. ·Hutch,
table and chairs. Chest,
OLD FURNITURE, Ice
bedroom suite, swivel
boxes, brass beds, Iron
. rotker, bar stools, desks.
beds, desks, etc., complete
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
households. Write M.D.
Open
9am to 8pm, Mon.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
thru Fri., 9am toSpm, Sal.
(:all992-7760.
446·0322
ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE,· gloss, china,
anything. SH or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH. 992·
3161.

Gallipol is, Ohio. Call 446·
7785.

EMERGENCY

5121 after 5pm .

LA IR

brtck , fireplaces , new
homes, r emOdeling, call

and Son, Upper River Rd .,

sewer pipes. wiridows, lintels, etc . ,Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0 . Phone 245-

wood cutting supplies.
Charles McKean, Fairfield

moving to Gallipolis. Call
446·7070, ask for Hank.

Services Offered

LIME STONE. gravel and
sand. All si zes. At Richards

--------Fitzpatrick Orchard , SR ·
RU SS AND MAX
689 .
ELLIOTT

hydraulic wood splitters,

for manager and family

-

For Sale
ALL TYPES of building
materials, block, brick,

Sofa, _chair, .- rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, ssoo. Sofa,

WHY STRUGGL.E TO GET
THE TOP IN SOMEONE
ELSE'S BUSINESS WHEN

Field Supervisor ( 1) -

Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main St , Ftomeroy, 992-

J~nuary

• WANT to rent 4 bdr. house

AM FM radio, 8·1rack tape ,
Call after 5 p.m .• 247·2813.

1974 CJ ·5 Jeep,
Phone 949·2545.

992·6343 .

saw chain, bars, and all

23,000

1973 Pontiac Catalina. 992-

sand,

wanted to R'ent

1977 Dodge Aspen, AM·FM
radio. A.C ., S2600. 1974
Monte

LOST, 2 manila folders

Services Offered·

For Sale
COAL,
LIME STONE ,

with papers In plain brown
sack In Pomeroy on

ECHO

1973 Ford Maverick, very

Chevrolet

Lost and Fouricf -·

March 2. 9

auto .• good tires. 55,000 ac·
lual miles. 985·4346.

1978 ,Ford
Bronco .
Customized, p.b., p.s.,

reserves ' the

right to reject any or all
bl&lt;ls.

GT hardtop,

593··3375, collect.

.•,._...nity
MEDICA~

$300. 992·2503.

PICKUP

Call446·3139 after 5p .m.

Hourly RN, parttime for
family planning clinics.
Must be registered in Ohio,
have
reliable
tran sportation. Orientation will

be provided . Equal

to, 1974 Vega . Now buying
cars. Car Realty , Inc · 446-

dow, new fiberglass topper . on wk . ends.

Call Mr Zidian at Pomeroy
Health Care Center, Man ·
day through Friday , 9-5.

· MSgt Mike Gilmore at
(614 ) 474·7048 (collect)
nights
(614 )
497 0607
(collect) days.

1973 Vega station wagon.

custom deluxe, 12 ton, 305 1976 CHEVROLET 9 pass.
eng _, p.s.' auto ., dis c wagon. Air, verv gd. cond .,
brakes, sl iding back win - $2,150. Call 446·4141 after 6

time RN or LPN , ll to7 :30

would you Ike to be pa id for
going to college? You c an
get this and extras like -a
$1500 .00 bonus, free tran sportation t o ex o ti c
paradises like Hawaii , and
Puerto Rico, Life In surance. and more just for
one weekend a month and
15 days a year In the Ohio
Air National Guard. To
find out how this dream can
come true for you, call

Auto Sales

Auto Sales
1974 MU S rANG 1974 Pin

1

RN OR LPN , full time 311 .30 and 11 to 7:30. Part

Center . 446·711 2.

- - · - : : -- : - --

7118

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

home for position
five menfor
who are
weekend
developmentally disabled,.
In Gallipolis area . Send
resume to Buckeye Com·
munity Services, P.O. Box
604, Jackson, · OH 456«l.
EQual opportunity em·
plover.

Wllnfed to Rent
Trailer space, small house
or apartment. Preferably
In Sugar ~un area. 992·

the e ligibi lity list a t

and medical term inology
are necessity , Call Lon
Johnson at Pinecrest Care

FOR THE BEST buy in

KENNELS.

1977 CHEVY

2156 or 992-21 57.

PART ·TIME TYPIST 4
p.m. to 8 p.m. Monday lhru
Friday . Good typtng Skill s

Wanted : Live in . house
keeper to care for small
girl 6 years old. All the
privilege of home. Car furnished. Must be sober. Man
works away. 992·3519.

Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC registered

tinel route carr ier. Phone
us ri ght away and get on

some great Q1fts as a Sen

spartation Orient at• on will
be provided. Equal opportunity employ er . For
fu r th er information pl ease
call collect to Planned
Parenthood of South east
Oh10, 286-5496, 9 to 4 week days.

POODLE GROOMING .
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.

shopping at Tawney's. 422
second Ave, Gallipolis, Oh.
many of our Items priced at
200. gold, and 9.00 silver.

I

Must be r eo• ster ed in Ohi o ;
hav e
r e 11able
fran ·

Call

' HILLCREST

and earn gOOd money plus

1976 FOR 0 p ic k up w i th
topper Ca l l 446 1404

as a young business person

tor fam•lv plann1 ng cl•nics

·-

Auto Sales

G E T VAL UAB LE t ra i n i ng

Part time

answer, call main office

diamonds, &amp; jewelry go to
Tawney Jewelers, Com pare prices . and values.
You can save a fortune

I

HOURL Y R.N.

_ _...,
Hco:.
e lp_Wan ted

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292 .

Georges Creek Rd .
446·0294.

'
•'
I'

Help Wanted

.

PIANO TUNING . ~ane
Daniels. New phone num·
ber, 742·2951. service '10
schools and home since
1965.
CARPENTER WORK complete remodeling by AI
Tromm, 742·2328. Reteren·
ces.

IN · rL;:::::::::::::::::jb:::::::::::::::::~

can ·
your

SPRING.SALE .

operator's license? Phone

992·2143.

THE OHIO VALlEY UVESlOCK 00.
52 VINTON STREET
GALLI POLIS, OHIO 45631

Services Offered
Will do Odds and ends,
poneJI~g; floor tile, and
ceiling tile. Call Fred
Miller, 992·6338.

SPECIALSPRING GRASS CATTLE SALE
•
SALE TIME 8 P.M.
bates: Wed., Mar. 19 &amp; Wed., Aprll19

WANTED: housecleaning
position, I or 2 days per
week, •elloble, har·
dworklng, clean
and
honest, can supply re!efen·
ce$ to character. Please
call 843·4'151 anytime. Have
dependable transportation.

SPONSO,RED BY-T,HE ·OHIO VALLEY.
' FeEDER CAL.F COMMITTEE
Denver Y ,oho, Pres.-Ph. 245·5508
Dick Neal, Sec.-Ph. 381-8287

Wilt 'eare for elderly In our
tmme, ' tt:_alned and ex~
11frlenced. 99PJI4.
' ..

We will be accepting all classes 'of feeder
cattle (calves, yearlings &amp; bulls).

WILL HAUL WATER. 992·

5858.

•

Will care for children In my
hQme In Tuppers Plains
..... 614-661'·3723.
·Re~llng, paneling a""'

ceiling tile, Addltl9fll built
n. ,No .lab 109 smali. call
94'1m79. ,.
:------'---~
··,--

i.

Cattle will be received after 3:00P.M. the
day .befor.e the sale and , until 12:00 noon
the day olsale.
·
• .
All canl, will

be graded into unifprm lots •

,For more information- phone any of the
.abcllie Ust~ no;'s or Tommy Joe Stewart ,

- 446-7222, 446-9760.
.

.

•
'

�D-3--- The SWiday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

The SWiday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

For Best Results Use Sund.ay
Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate for Sale

608 E .
Mll.IN •
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Love·
ly 2 story home on good
street with carpeting
and
compl i mentary
paneling, 3·.4 bdrms.•
spacious living room,
built -in kitchen and
separate dining room,
11h baths, full base·
ment, paved drive and
parking, storage bldg.
Pri ced to sell $35,000.00.
NEW LISTING 2
story, handyman's
delight, 5 rooms', l lf2
baths. lots of storage,
WHIP INFLATION
WITH YOUR OWN
RENTAL
UNIT .
$10,000.00.
RACINE Recently
remodeled
story
frame, 7 rooms, full
basement,
walk to
everything, $25,000.00.
W 0 0 D L A N 0
HOMESITE$ - Appx .
25

acres,

some

lots

surveyed, water and
elec .
available .
EASTERN DISTRICT
U7.500.oo.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,

river view, 1112 baths,
central air, full basement, excellent condl ·
tion, carpeting etc.: .
READY TO MOVE IN·
TO $.40,000.00.
GR !OAT Location,
style and condition,
. rooms to Spare, up to 4
bdrms., Jlh baths, fami·
IV room, rec. room, cen·

tral heat ·&amp; air . MAKE
' OF' FER $59,800.00.
FARM- you have
been waiting for, a.c
beautiful laying acres,

good large barn, 2
ponds. old house to
remodel, good large
PLUS a

ment,

bdrm. ranch
. .• full base·

manv

other

features In excellent
condition. STEAL AT
$76,325.00.
THERE ARE 41 WAYS
.TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW HOME, WE CAN
HELP YOU . LOCALLY
OWNED AND FULL
TIME.
REALTOR

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
993·6191
ASSOCIATES
Do"ie &amp; Roger Turner
742-2474

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are }"ou.nd in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate lor Sale

21 LOCUST STREET
446-4806
"A WORLD

Assoc.
Ph. Home: 446·3294 .

of Difference; .

LAND CONTRACT - Small down payment will buy
you a house with 2 aoartments and a mobile home In
Rio Grande. Call today. 525,000.
#0250
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots with 4
rental mobile home pads, all are rented, each pad
t,as concrete runners and patio, located in Rodney.
$15.500.
' 2155
~ICE HO, U:. WITH RENTAL Ranch, w.b.
·ireplace in living room, full basement, 2 car
iarage, also 2 bedroom block house, 1.76 acres
i51,000.
• oosi
; ACRES - Has a good building site, some woods.
i6.200.

·3 ACRES - Vacant land, good investment proper·
y, some timber, at I mineral rights, located in Adlison Twp. $23,000. ·
1 10)2

IUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- Service station do·
ng good business, excellent building, large shop. If
'OU're interested In owning vour own business and
naking money, stop in and see us fordetalls. 11100

Jean Trusseii985·2UO

FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259
For Rent

Evenings Call
'
Darvin BloOmer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
. john Fuller, Realtor 446-4327 .
'

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Callt--==:::;=:;=;::==-T-:::========:i
992·7479.
1
For Rent
For Rent
' AND 4 RM furnished apNice
country
home,
fur·
SLEEPING
ROOMS for
ts. Phone992· 5434.
nlshed, garden, scenery, rent, Gallla Hotel.
prlvac~ . Children and pets
RENTER'S assistancE! for
considered.
$200 mo .
2 TRAILER SPACES
Senior Citizens in Village
Coolville 667·30110.
comcrete patio ond walk,
Manor apts. Caii992·77B7.
900 block In town. Large
2 bedroom house tor rent,
lawn area. water paid, 160.
One bedroom apt., ununfurnished, 'deposit req .
mo.
Call 446-4416 alter 5
furnished, all electric.
992·309!h
p.m.
Pomeroy Home and Auto.
992·2()94.
2 BDR . furn. mobile home, LARGE home, 8 rm. and
12x60 In Cheshire. dep. req. bath, 1 mile trom city
One bedroom apt., unlimits, comp . carpeted, furCall-146·4229.
furnished, . all electric .
nace
heat, refridoerator
Pomeroy Home and Auto.
and stove turn., ba~ment,
992·2094.
1974 2 bdr. mobile home. ref. and dep. . req., wood·
total elec., adults only. No burning stove, SJOO. mo.
pets. Call367 ·7o438 .
Two bedroom trailer.
Caii446-G239.
Adults Only 992 ·3324
FURNISHED two bedroom NICE 2 BEDROOM home
mobile home In city. with basement near Crown
2 Sleeping rooms, private
Parking, adults. No pets. City on Rt. 7. Call Wiseman
entrance. Off the street
$225 Includes water. Ref Agencv at .uc!·J6.43.
parking, refrigerator &amp;
and sec. deposit. Call .uc!·
television. Call after 4 week
3671 .
days992· 7791.
SMALL MOBILE HOME
or camper space. 446-4736.

FARM SALE
SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1980
10:00 A.M.
LOCATION: 25 Miles SOtJth of Gallipolis, 25 Miles
North of Ironton, 2 Miles West ol State ROtJte 141 on
Honev' s Branch.
The following Will be offered:
1977 White 2·105 Tractor (800 hrs. like new). Oliver
8B Diesel, 1928 McCormick·Deerlng .Tractor "1530"
on Steel, 1969 Oliver 5.50 Diesel , JD 170 Unloader JD
4·14" PLow, Oliver 5· 16" Plow;ll' Pittsburgh Wheel
Disc, Brlllln Culllpacker, IH Harrow, 3 Pt. Scraper,
J&amp;M Wagon Gear, KiUbros Wagon &amp; Gfar, JD 336
Hay Baler with Flotation Tires, New Holland 256
Pull Type Hay Rake, I" Gehl Hayblne, ~· New Idea
Elevator, Patz Manure Splreader. 3 Pt. Bush Hog,
JD 4 Row Cultivator, Chisel Plow, Kino Harrow,
Hay Plck· Up Elevator, Potato Digger, S~&gt;rghum
Mill &amp; Cooker, Corn ·Sheller, Holland Tobacco Set·
ter, 3 Pt. Post Hole Digger, Hydraulic Post Driver
on Trailer. Ford 2 Row Corn Planter, 2 Silage
Wagons !Fox &amp; Lamco), Fox Silage Blower &amp; Pipe,
NH One Row Corn Picker, Gehl Grinder- Mixer,
16·7 Grain Drill, 2 Flat Wagons with Side Boards.
Catrtle Head Shute, Boom P.Oie, 3 Pt. "Quick Hook·
up"; One Lot CresatOed FEnce Post, one Lot New
· Tobacco Sticks, 2 Metal Corn Cribs, 10 1nternatlonal
Weights, JO Tractor Weglhts, White Tractor
Weights, 38" Duals, 12' Hydraulic Auger 6" 20'
Electric Auger 6", 2 surge Vacuum PumPS. Steel
Traps, Harness, Cattle &amp; Hog Feeders and Waters,
Maddox, Picks, Shop Equipment, Supplies,
Hydraulic Cylinders and Miscellaneous Items
Found ll!t A Farm Auction.
.
T•rms: Cash
Lunch Avalloitle'
. RUTT BROTHERS, OWNERS
.
•
,

LH Jcillnson -AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio· PlloM2SH751

SMALL MODERN private
home, 1 or 2 adults. Write
P.O. bOX 10, Gallipolis.
2 BDR. UNF. trailer on
lleautlful cOtJntry 101, gar·
den space, air conditioning,
newly carpeted. Call 388·
8794.
UNF. 2 bdr. mobile home,
adults only, no pels .
Located ·2 miles out 588.
$175. plus dep . . Call 446·

2300.
NICE 3 bdr. home, unf.,
total electric. Located at
E vervreen. Ref. &amp; dep.
req.
Call446·31y.2.

suo.

. 2 BDR. TRl!.ILER
Porter, ctep. and ,.., .
Caii36NI01.

Pluinblng I Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone ......-.. or 446·4477
· DEWITT'S PLUMBING
,
ANDHEATING
' Route 1110 at Evargr'Mn
Phone 446-2735.
GENE PLANtS
.
ANDSONS
'Piumbi!lli • Healing · ,t.~r
conditioning. · 300· l'oui'ih
Ave. P/1.'446·1637.
' STANDARD
Plymblog·Htall'!ll ·.
215 !hltd 'tve., 41i-l112

Real Estate for Sale

PINE SI!TTI
527,500
3 bedroom mobile home, large living
room, eat· ln kitchen. 36x36 heated
aluminum garage with concrete floor.
Call for details of this lovely very well
kept place . All thla situated on 1 acre M
&amp; L of beautiful pine trees.
UU

concrete floors. 1.000 walnut and poplar trees on
fatm . Clay Tw. City schools .

tobacco base, prOduc·
tlve cropl&amp;nd. Call for

an appointment.

QUALITY
PLUS BEAUTY
This Is a family home,
811 brick
with 4
bedrooms and a sparkl ·.
lng full bath up. Large
kitchen lined with pretty
cabinets. Large foyer
•nd formal living room
and dining. Full base·
ment ·fireplace In faml·
ly room, 2 car garage at·
tached, also a workshop
and a barn. Situated ·on
aproxlmately 5.9 acres.
This home reflects
tender, loving care and
true value.

PLEASANT
ATMOSPHERE
$42.900.00
Lovely home, 3 BR, bath
and utility room . Large
living room and dining
room . Fully equipped
kitchen with side· bv·
side r~frlgerator . Large
level landscaped lot. Be
the first to see this nice
home conveniently
located In town. Owner
will FHA or VA. City
schools.
. 1 367

SAY HELLO TO
ANEW FLAME I
On long cold winter
nights you can cudd'e up
next to a nice coz·~ 'IOd
fireplace. Defl ~~ 1 a
plusforthlsL.~' brick
home. ,..,~~ring 3 NEW LISTING- Near
bedroor- \,.' •'h baths, Rio Grande furnished
modP~~_,ilt· in kitchen mobile home on a half
and a~Ppliances. For- acre. Franklin wood·
mal dining area. Utility bUrner and .storage
room , gas forced air building . Buy now for
heat. Excellent location. $12,500.00.
state Rt. 35.

2.6ACRI!S
VACANT LAND
City water, sewer
hookup, electric on pro· ·
perty,
Landscaped.
Limestone drlvew~y.
Redwood sun porch
already b~llt. Loc•ted
on St. rt. 325 at edge of
Rio Grande. All this for
a low price, all now.
#395

BEAT THIS$300.00 PER MONTH
1ncluding principal, Interest, taxes and lnsurahce.
Only 9% Int. Owner transferred and very anxious to
sell. City schools, acre of ground more or less, living
room, 2 w .b. fireplaces, kllcnen &amp; dining area. Full
basement . Priced In $40's. Call for more details.

Real Estate for Sale

. . FANTASTIC
BRICK RANCH
6 Rooms - Large for·
mal dining rm. Steel
outside doors, Heat
pump, also • wood ·
burning fireplace. 1'h
baths, nice · lar(ll! kit•
chen w·bullt·ln cabinets,
dlshwesher, . garbage
dlspaHI. Thermopane
w l - . Located In a
nice subdivision off
35.

RODNEY-CORA RD.
.SB acre, mobile home
runners for a 12&gt;&lt;60
trailer, septic tank,
ruritl water available.
. Very reasonable.

Bonnie L Stutes, ReaHor, 44Mt..t~tuo ....
James R. Stutes, Assoc. 446-2885
L Leach, Assoc. 245-9484

ANY PERSON who haS
anything to give away and
does not olftr or attempt to
offer any Other thing for
.sale may place an ad In .this
~Oiumn. There will 11e no
charge to the advertiser.

~T. LabradQr Retriever,

Pf. German $'hepherd pup·
pies. Call 446·4199 alter
S:30.

GOOD sink with double
dralnbQard. Call446•42•1.

Do

WILL CARE FDR ,chlldren
In my home. RoelntY area.
Phone 2A5·•· '

!li-

write let·
· WILL TYPE
tera of all typn lor a
· modest fee. Coli 1614) 379·
FrH to good home 2
3
- l . m pups, one black, 2636 between 9 a.m. ·one blonae. 3 months old. P·!:"·
Cell7-12·2692.
AL TERA 'I' IONS or ltwlnt
to do In my nome: Call ol461

7197,

r,

I

PARTIAL LISTING - WE HAVE OTHERS

S P A C E - 4 Br ., 21h baths, base·
ment, fireplace, screened porch, for mal dining, nerly an acre, just outside
city. $53,'100.

Electronic Realty Associates

: 92

JUST RIGHT FOR
YOUR SMALL FAMI·
L Y - You couldn't ask
for a better location for
this cozy 2 or 3 bedroom
home. Located i ust off
u.s. Rt. 35, this 5 room
frame home offers din·
ing room, nice kitchen,
bath, carport and large
~~rd. $34,500.
NEW LISTING GRANDVIEW
ES ·
'TATES' - Extra nice 3
bedroom. 2 bath ranch.
Full basement with
finished family and rec.
room,
2
lovely
fireplaces, hardwood
floors, nat. gas heat,
cent. air, vinyl siding
and 2 car garage . 1 Year
Buyer Protection . .SO's.

QUALITY- QUALITY- QUALITY-. OVer 2,000
sq . ft. of well p'anned living space. Immaculate bl ·
level with S bedrooms, 2 baths, equipped kitchen,
dinil"'g room, large family room, recreation room
for your pool table &amp; oversized 2 car garage. Large
landscaped yard on corner lot. Near Rodney. City
schools.
\

Audrey Canaday, Realtor, 446·3636

IB
••

:'.1

t,

25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - 3 BR , 'I•
acre lot, new roof. new furnace. 27,500.

CALL 446-3643

DESIGNED
FOR
TOTAL LIVING - Just
imagine yourself own·
ing this
lovely
4
bedroom home in a
sup~r
neighborhood .
Lots of space including
combined kitchen &amp; dining, 2 baths, family &amp;
rec. room, full base·
ment plus 112 acre with
16x32 pocl. U.S. Rt. 35.

READY TO BUILD? We have some excellent
building lots in a super
location between the
Ohio River and Raccoon
Creek . Central sewage,
rural water, recreation
area, streets to be pav·
ed, &amp; city schools.
Several to choose from .

SPACIOUS
l
AC .
Lots of
ESTATE space inside &amp; out in this
7 yr . old brick . 5
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
w.b. fireplaces, large
family room, equipped
kitchen, 2 patios, 2 heat
pumps, circular drive &amp;
pond . 5 miles from town .
City Schs.

E. XC~ L LENT
NEIGHBORHOOD CITY SCHOOLS - A
real bargain exists on
this 3 bedroom brick &amp;
frame. Family r"oom
with fireplace, eat-in
kitchen, llh baths, 2 car
garage, nat. gas &amp; cent
air, $49,'100. Assumable
loan at 911&gt;%.

NEW LISTING - Very
attractive 3 bedroom
brick in city. Large
fami lv room with
fireplace, equipped kitchen, 2 baths, basement, screened patio, 2
car garage &amp; nat. gas
heat .
Beautifully
decorated.

HOME &amp; l ACRES $40,000 -: Very well kept
&amp; remodeled 3 bedroom
home just outside town
on Rt. 588 . Fireplace,
large kitchen , family
room, full basement &amp;
gas heat. Circular drive
plus 3 acres with ex·
cellent garden spot.

JIM COCHRAN, ASSOCIATE-446-7881 EVE.
B. J. HAIRSTON, AS50CIATE-446-4240 EVE.

E. M . WISEMAN, BRQKER-446-3796 EVE.
E. N. WISEMAN, BROKER-446·4500 EVE.

TURN OF THE CEN ·
TURY You won' t
have to remodel th is
one. The owners have
taken great care of th is
2 story 4 bedroom home
Double
i n town .
fir eplace, family room,
den, formal dining , A
real gem . $69,900.
DON ' T LET THIS SLIP
BY A remarkably
well kept 2 story 3 or 4
bedroom home on Rt.
141 112 mile from town.
includes family room,
large equipped kitchen,
basement, nat. gas heat,
dining room &amp; nice fenced yard. $29,900. City
schools.

.12 900 -

Inexpensive 3

b~droom home on Neil

Ave. in town . Needs
so me work but is
liveable. Nat . gas heat.
nice sized yard .

NEW LISTING - Ex·
cellent family home
l ocated i n fam i ly
oriented nei ghborhood.
4 bedroom ranch . Includes nice equ ipped
kitchen , din ing area,
full ba semen t w / large
family room &amp; corner
firepla ce, lo.w heat bills
(nat,, gas heat) , sundeck
&amp; .6 acre . City schools .
$40's VA or FHA . 1 year
buyer protection .

500 2nd AVE. • GALLI POLIS

NANCY SMITH, ASSOCIATE-446·4910 EVE .
DAN EVANS, ASSOCIATE-38B·Blll EVE .

•.,

"OOUNTRY

HOME

3 lledroom, 1 story house on
Long St .. Rutland. Large
lot out of high water. close
to school. Call742·2975.

available. Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 . .uc!-2359 after 6.

with

·~tocked pond for swimming
IJ#' fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
~arpeted. 3 to 17 acres

"'
"I'
"K ·

3 PROPERTIES IN ONE

HOBSTETTER

-small house~ 2 Bdrm., rental possibili·

REALTY

ty.
'
-Lg.
Bdrm. well kept home, 4 car
garage.
-Country store, gas station, restaurant.

s

158,500
Quality, style, beauty
all combined In thislove·
ly bHevel. 3 bedrooms,
l'h baths, huge utility
room, lovely kitchen
with bullt·ln cabinets,
range,
disposal,
d!shwasher, large faml·
IV and rec, room with
fireplace. This home
has been tastefully
decorated. Call us, and
put y~ur family In this
lovely home. Close to
Holzer Hospital. We can
advise you on financing.

'

hoUSe,
lng room~
· 2 pc)rc,..., barn, .
cellar &amp; ·mueh, much,
more. Large tobacco
base, rich· In minerals..
Call ·lor mroe lnforma·
tiOn.
1409

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636

E.lch oitt(l' rrltiL' P('Ildt•nl h mYned ,md o per,lted

NICE 5 ROOM HOM.E
ONLY$17,000.00
Circular porch, fuel oi I ,
FA furnac•. City water',
cellar, · outside storage ·
building. Nice com·
munlty, Phone for
\ &lt;Jetalls.
1316

PRODUCINfo
PERTY
6 rooms, 3 B.R . home
located on Old Rt. 160 In
Porter with 1974 14'x72'
mObile home . 3 B:R.
with complete kitchen,
electric stove &amp; refrlg.
F .A. furnace, central
all. Home has a stoker
coal stove. Live in one.
rent the other. Gallla
Rural Water Syst. l'h
lot. All for ·only $29,000.
CALl. NOW.
#220

FIFTY ·SEVEN - Ap·
prox . 25 tillable
meOJdow, severa l pine
gr oves, wooded areas.
large stoc k ed pond,
rural water avai labl e.
$25,700.

All you need to know in Real Estate:
THE WISEMAN AGENCY

TOOL AUCTION

All properties located on approx. 2 acres In Letart
Falls, Oblo, SR 124, 11f2 miles from the new electric
plant. owner willing to llnance to responsible party.
May call (513) 9114·1959 or writ~:

WEUSlON AUCTION HOUSE.

Barbara Brotvan
11239 IIOIIWood Court

126 EAST 2Nq STREET, WEUSTON, OHIO

Cincinnati, Ott. 45242

' 315

WEDNEsDAY, MARCH 5, 1980

7:00 P.M.

Auctions "
108 Acres In Salisbury
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. Some timber, oil and
gas well on prQperty, and
old farm buildings. Appraised at $45,000 .00 and
cannot sell for less than 80
percent of that value. To be
offered for sale at the of·
flees of Crow, Crow and
Porter, Mulberry and
Second Ave., Pomeroy,
Ohio, at 1:00 p.m. on March
7th, 1980. Cash on delivery
of deed.
Immediate
possession.

Sale Items Can Be Inspected One Hour Before Sale Time I
'
AUCTIONEER: SWAIN &amp;MUS'TARD
PHONE 286·2034

DRILL PRESSES, POWER TOWELS, AIR-COMPRESSORS,
. ..

TABlE SAWS, ROLL AROUND TOOL BOXES

Buy, At You'r Price

Mobile Homes· Sale
1973 Fairpoint, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14X65 3
bdr ., bath 1h
1971 Shakespe 0 r, 14x65 2
!ledroom
1965 Yenor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fle&lt;!lwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; "S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
WV . 30H75·4o424.

·The Auction Way
we Carry Highest Quality Nationally Adllertls~ Name Brands
B'lco. Rockwell ·. Rodec • Fuller ~ Cummings· SteeJcraft • Buf·
lelo -·shopmate -·w-right· Chan"ei, Lock· Remington· Black &amp;
Decker· McGraw Edison· Witerloo ·Ingersoll Rend · ~oods •
sanborn • wen • NASA • Continental,

ruris tl)routh prCJIM!rtv.

same tr-111r- wllll .
concreto I._,, Tills ~ .

,..tty OIIIV $22,300. Ull

•

JUST

.

MALl! SHEPHERD· black
• .,...., Loy,e l, loves at·
*tflon'. llree to a IIOOd
home. Coli 446·0515 .-tier Pr:oteulonet hrvlca
5:00p.m: .
· CALL us for your
photographic Oft&lt;ls. Po~·
Free to · good home 2 trait, r•saports, com•
and wedding
-lent pup~, one !lleck, mercia
Tawney
on. blorKie. 3 months Old. photography ,
Studloa, 424 SeCond Ave.
Ceii7G·J692,

g~~~~~g~~

Not only
this nonne ·•
have 2 flrl•plaCEiS
the home
and Inviting. Large
/ng room, family room,
dining room and-recrea ·
lion room. 4 bedrooms &amp;
l baths. Lovely kitchen
· with range, dishwasher
and refrlgrator. 2 acres
with a 50&gt;&lt;30 metal barn.

MODERN RANCH .
·
I R!&gt;Of'A "OME · .
In country.,Over 120hq•.
' fl. of living-space. Large
. living ,room, 16'x18',
I family raom 17'x12' with
wocid·burnlno flreplf&lt;•· •
R~ral · water, central
.air, aPPfOX. 'h ·A: of
clean land. Large con·
ITATB HIGHWAY
c~e~ patio, carport, 3
RIAJOftlloiLY
mull;lerry ·. trees.
A
• ' l'tUCBD .
beautiful moderh coun·
150 ft. frwiluaa on Rt.
try llqme.. '(oll m~st'"
160. Largo 'living andl
this home to IIPDi'aclate
Nt·ln kHchen. ·Two BR
lis beauty. PR.ICE IN
witt\ ~IOiet, bath with
THE '30's. '
UU
~· Nice tlrMm

Giveaway

Wanted to

CHARMING BUT AFFORDABLE Take time to view this 3 B R ranch,
energy saving heat pump, cen. air. fully
carpeted except kitchen . 1'12 baths, at·
tached garage. $42,500.

Neartv 50 acres over
1,000' frontage
along
Cherry Ridge Road .
Partially wooded Ex ·
cell ent building si tes .
$65,000.

SERII1CE STATION ,
garage and restaurant
located on bu sy Rt . 7.
Great location tor soft
ice cream and sa ndw ich
shop . Full deta i ls 1o
serious buver .

CENTENARY - Natural cedar ranch,
nearly an acre lawn , 3 BR , family rm .,
2 car garage. A showloce! $61 ,900.

MODERN BRICK situated on nearly an
acre has a comblna'tion kitchen -family
room with fireplace, 3 BR's, Jl/2 baths,
fully carpeted, full basement with
recreation room . Located in Kyger
Creek School District, 6 mile$ from cl·
ty. $54,900 .

... RIOGRANDE
... ACREAGE

graceful

· time and fam ily needs , 4 BR , liv i ng rm .
W ith fireplace, formal dining , full base ment, 1112 acre rolling lawn front s on
Oh io River, just owtside city .

FLAIR .... and
Briel&lt;, cedar and stucco combine to
give thls brand riew home an English
TudOr flavor. Double door entry into
foyer leading to family rm . with cozv
fireplace. verv private living rm .• fully
equ ipped kitchen with formal dining
area and bedroom wing. 3 spacious
bedrooms, 2 full baths, plus carpet, cen .
air, heat pump. Flnlshed 2 car garage .
Beautiful view from any room through
diamond paned windows. 3/" acre level
lot. $57,900.

$8,900
TWO HOUSES
One 5 rooms · one 2
rooms, also storage
bldg. Located on Main
St . in Crown City. Large
· level lot. Front porch.
1361

IN GALLIPOLIS
3 Bedroom~ Total 6
rooms plus bath.
Mo!lern kitchen with
lots
of
cabinets,
dishwasher. SOme new
wall to wall c•rpet,
Natural gas furnace. Cl·
tv water and sewer. Afl ·
for only $29,900.
, 405

MEW .SECTIONAL
• mos. old, J bearooms,
2 baths, famllv room,
living room and dining
room. Modern bullt·ln
kitchen. Woodburner.
Take a look at this real
nice home. All setting 6n
one and half acres In the
city school district.
Priced In the 30's.

Giveaway

BRAND
~IG
NEW, $53,900
Large living room with WB fireplace,
lovely kitchen with bullt·ln cabinets,
range, dishwasher, formal dining
room, with patio doors, 3 BR, 2 lull
baths, utility room . All this and more
situated on 1 are of level land Oli State
H lghway 160. Be the one to turn this
lovely house into your home. •
I 378

ROWQF
. TA,LL PINE TREES
AND 5 ROOM HOME
&amp;I ACRE
Beautiful row &lt;* tall
pine trees by road In
front of home - 5 rooms
with full basement, bOt·
tie ga• F.A. furnace, one
car oarl!lge, woodburning fireplace. Kyger r-------o;;::~~
Creek S~hoot Dlst. 5
miles from Gallipolis.
All
$34,900.
I

BEAT THE INTEREST....,;RATE RAPI
"Today's rates are !I heavy penalty. Why
not beat the rap with these home buys."
10% LOAN
AROUND$3,400.00
AVAILABLE
DOWN PAYMENT
LOWDOWN
With of only 9'n% Int.
PAYMENT
and own this lovely
Cedar Ranch only 2 This home Is lust
yrs.old. 3 bedrooms, 2 waiting to be yours.
You'll bubble with ex·
baths, modern bulll·ln
kitchen. dining area . citement when you sip
This home Is only 1'1• the features this luxury
home offers. Foyer.
miles from city . Owner
has been transferred flooring, formal llvlno
room, w.b. fireplace,
and Is verv anxious to
cedar mantle track,
sell.
lighting, new plush
carpeting, formal din·
FINANCEI FINANCE I
lng room, beautiful
FINANCE I
family room with large
Owner will help fln8nce
sliding door leading to
with a down payment
beoutlful pool and patio
and carry the balance
area, terraced ground
on a land contract. with
lots of shrubbery,
Stately 2 story plllary
•s
grill,
ldeol for enter·
posts, 3 bedroom,· for·
tainment,
3 bedrooms, 2
mal entry and large
baths, large kitchen
open winding staircase ..
with unusual breakfast
Family room with plank
bar, cherry, walnut
flooring and w . b.
wood, full basement,
fireplace. Formal living
central air, garage and
room, spacious eat-in
openers. Thla home II
kitchen with loads of
beautifully ctecorat.cl.
knotty pine , cabinets.
All
new
custom
This and much more
draperies. Looks like It
setting on 3 acres. Can
lust came right out of an
bUY only one acre. City
Interior oeeorator's
schools. Give us a call
magazine. One of the
for more details.
finHt. I'm sure It will be
love at flrslllght.

AT THIS PRICE
YOU CAN MAKE
INFLATION WORK
FOR YOU\
Cozy 3 bedroom home,
large modern kitchen,
living room, bath, utility
room and a storage
building. All setting on 3
acres of ground In the
city scho91 district.
Priced In the 30s.

BABY RANCH 20
acres mostly woodlan d,
gOOd 2 BR home, forced
air furnace. IQ. barn
Rural water. blacktop
rd .. city schools. $24,900

Il l

DAIRY FARM
135 Acres more or less. 1.3 miles Raccoon Creek bot·
tom «l acres creek bOttom. 60 acres total tillable.
used as a !'rode A D~lry operaton, 4 milkers with
automatic washer!, 800 gal. bulk tanks, 2 silos (800
tons&gt;. total with silo unla&lt;~dlng auger. Structyres :
40x80 metal, 112xo10 milk house with feecj room.
40x170 concrete slab feed lot. All structures have

SCENIC OHIO
RIVER ACREAGE
~s Acres of gOOd farm .
YOU'll love this mOdern
4 bedroom brick home
with tun ba~ment, 21J2
baths. Family room
with
woodburning
tlreplace, two kitchens.
Good barn, fences,

REMODELED BUNGALO ~ Cute and
cozy, new c~rpet and kitchen cabinets.
2 BR , lg. living rm. plus family rm. or
den, rilling lawn. Extra large storage
bldg. $27.500.·
.

NEW ON THE MARKET - Brick and
frame ranch, 3 BR . 1'12 baths, fullY
carpeted. Attached garage . Across the
street from Spring Valley Shopping
Plaza. Newly redecorated . $45,000.

GOOD FAMILY LIVING - This lovely ranch has 3
bedrooms, family _room with woodburner, large 2
car garage, beaut1ful 18x36 pool with large patio,
close to town. $59,900 .
11995

JUST LISTED - Nice Vinedale mobile home,
12x60, tip out, 2 bedrooms, central air, nice lot.
117,000.
I 1017

--- -

Real Estate for Sale

A DELICATE BALANCE -

Estate Agency

---

PORTER - Nice 12x50 mobile home with addition
on back, furnished and air cond ., large garage and
large lot, $16,'100.
10961

Real Estate for Sale

We cover over
7 m illion miles
to find.you a home.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

N.EW LI~TING - Attractive 3 bedroom home, bath,
d1nlng room . storage building, nice level lot, only
$27,500.
I 1572

Real Estate for Sale

446-3636 Anv Hour

G,allia County's Fastest Grotping

FIRST LISTING - Nice BHevel , 3 bedrooms. 2 full
aths, garage with electric opener, heat pump with
central air . Close to hospital on 2 acres with wOOds.
$46,500.
I 1465

Real Estate for Sale

Real estate for Sate

Real Estate for Sale

BAIRD &amp; FUu.ER
REALTY

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT - Attractive ranch, 3
bedrooms, lOrge living room, folly carpeted, full
basement with 12x24 f8mily room, central air, 1 cer
gara(ll!, located In Kyger Ck. Sch. Dlst., only
$44,500,
uw
CLOSE TO ENO - Nice 1970 Rebel mobile home,
12x60, in excellent condition, furnished, front porch
I &amp; a carport, storage building and an Oliver tractor .
Located on 2 acres of nice land, better hurry, only
$16,500.
~0561

.

LISTED.

.

. •

•

j

•

•

we 'have th• lergesf selectl!'n ot ill hand tools and accessories
on wheels.
•
.
A complet!l selection of hand~ tools, elr tools, electric tools for
" " plumber, carpenter, mechanic, etei:triclen, tr\lcker,
farmer, palnter, contractor, shop owner or serious· tool user In
profe1s1on: we try to liave It ell - drlll ·blts to air tools,
lletksew blides to table saws, paint brushes to compressors,
samiJiper
grinders, exte11slon cords to totch hoses • .

12X60 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom.
Furnished or unfurnished.

992·614Q.
1971 12x65 Trailer, com·
ptelely tumlshed, A.t .,
very good condition. On a
lot that' can be rented .
Ready to move Into. S6500
firm. 992·5304 . · .
"

any

"A

tO

.

, I

'

Mobile Homes· Sale
WINTER SALE · Prices
reduced on used mobile
homes .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES. CALL
446·7572 .
1973 Fairpoint, 14x65, 2 bdr .
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2 bdr.
1971 Fleetwood, , Ux65, 3
bdr ., l'h bath .
1971 Shakespeare, 12x65, 2
bdr . ·
196SYanor, 12x60, 2bdr.
1968 Fleetwood, 12x 60, 2
bdr .
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sales
Pt. PieasaniW.VA&lt;
675·4424.
1977 · 14x70, Windsor. unf.
Call675-6930.
1971 · 12x60 SKYLINE • 2
bdr. Mob. home, ext.
cond., newly carpeted . Un·
derplnnlng Included. Call
388·8794.
1969 12X65 SHULTZ • lm·
perlal hou~ trailer, $4,000.
Call.uc!·3836.
For Lease

next
Sq•ore
Bob Evans Steak
1. ••o••!.•- 1100 sq . fl. ~fflce,
4,,0
'wareho\i.Se
! storat•, garage or any
:other com mercl•l 111e.
i Call tke Wiseman
44t·)64)
The Wiseman Agency

PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING
Chester. Beautiful 3
bedroom home. 2 baths,
living room, dfning
room, family room, extra nice kitchen With
mi cro-wave oven . ca1·1
for
more details.
$58,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Ex·
ecutive svtle home .
Must see inside to ap·
preclale. Almost totally
remodeled within the
past 2 yrs. 5 bedrooms, 2
baths and "'uch, much
more. Call t6day I
EXTRA NICE 3
bedroom, total electric
home. Kitchen, dining
room, 2 baths and 114
basement with wood
burner and workshop.
Close to Meigs High.
Good price $42,000 .00.
INCOME PROPERTY
- 2 homes, beth extra
nice. Situated on 10
acres
across from
Legion In Rutland.
POMEROY Lovely 3
bedroom home with
panoramic view of
river. Only $.40,000.00.
LIST WITH US. We
have buyers and llnanc·
lng available.
Cheryl Lemley, Assfe.
Phone 742-2003
Velma
Nlnclnskv,

Assoc.

Phone 742-3092
Georges. Hobstettir Jr.
Broker 992·5739

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
HEY! YOU WON' T
BELl EVE J BR
frame house. Carpeted
&amp; paneled, on a quiet
street in Racine. Close
to schools &amp; stores.
won ' t last long . $21.000.
MlbDLE PORT 3
bedroom home, new
vinyl siding, Insulated,
new FA gas furnace,
woodburning fireplace,
equipped kitchen, 1'12
baths. mostly carpeted,
two blocks
from
downtown.

Phone

1-(614)·992·3325

TWO BEDROOM home
located on one acre,
Middleport area, trailer
hookup for additional in·
come. $11,000.
MIDDLEPORT AREA
2 bedroom home,
paneling and carpet,
eat· in kitchen . 510,500.
JUST OFF SR 7, 2
bedroom home. hard ·
wood floors, new panel ·
lng , on four acres of
land, barn, in Mid·
dleport area , will sell on
land contract, $12,500.
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY
Well
established business In
the heart of Middleport,
on corner lot, plus 4
apartments all present·
ly rented . Sell all or
part.

DILLON
REALESTATE

Mortgege
money
H-rt Dillon, Broker
available. New homes, old
FavManl•y,
homes and refinancing
BrahchMgr.
your present home. CON·
Phone 992·2598
VENTIONAL · 5 Pet. down.
VA : no down payment.
FHA · low down payment.
FHA .. -245 graduated
FINANCING·VA· FHA LO·
paymeht program. FHA
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
265 subsidy progra(Tl . Ca!l
for d.etalls . . IRELAND . PAYMENT. PURCHASE
REFINANCE .
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E. OR
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
State St., Athens. 592·3051.
77 E. STATE, ATHENS.
614-592·3051 ,

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

For Lease
AMSBARY Eye Clinic near
liolzer Hospital, suitable
·for offices, or b~slness,
plenty of parking , Call &lt;146·

0239.

.

•

-~.

51750.00 DOWN - 4 to 5
bedrooms, formal din ·
ing, equipped kit., base·
ment, 2 car garage, 2
business rooms on large
level lot.
11 ROOMS - l'h baths,
nat . gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement, 2
poches, outbuilding and
dbl. garage. 517.500.
80 ACRES - Nice lay·
lng farm land or f~r sub·
divlson . About V2 fenc·
ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of .farm bldgs. Minerals.
$925.00 OOWN 3
bedrQOms. bath. por·
ches, basement, birc h
kitchen, nat. gas furnace and copper plumbing.
BUILDING LOT Near Rock Springs in
Restricted
area ,
utilit ies &amp; trees .
3 IN 1 - Home has 11
rooms, furnace, 2 ren tals, 4th available, 2 car
garage and over 1 acre
of sandy land. Good buy
at $25,000.00.
6 RENTALS All
under one roof. Brick
construction . Only
$35,000 .
BUILDING LOT - Cor·
ner lot in Pomeroy in
good residential area .
out of flood .
RESTFUL- Quiet set·
tlng with a lot of Ires on
2112 acres. Like new in·
Side, bath, utility, nat.
gas furnace &amp; ~lty
water. S1,000 .00DOWN ..
FREE 80 CALENDARS.
FOR SEI.LING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992·3325 or 992·:,187 6

•

Housing
Headquarters

. f - - - - - - - - --f
Approxlmtely 4 acres
MelliS Mines.
quick trailer setup or
building site. Phone
6306.

Modern 3 bedroom home,
basement with fireplace,
,central air, tully carpeted.
located on ·61h acres near
Racine on Raclne·Bashan
Rd . 949·2836 after 5 and . Dennis Ault, 1639 LlllCOig
weekends. Larry Wolle.
1Hts. ; Pomeroy , Oh, 45769"''

l

�D-3--- The SWiday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

The SWiday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March 2, 1980

For Best Results Use Sund.ay
Times-Sentinel Classifieds
Real Estate for Sale

608 E .
Mll.IN •
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Love·
ly 2 story home on good
street with carpeting
and
compl i mentary
paneling, 3·.4 bdrms.•
spacious living room,
built -in kitchen and
separate dining room,
11h baths, full base·
ment, paved drive and
parking, storage bldg.
Pri ced to sell $35,000.00.
NEW LISTING 2
story, handyman's
delight, 5 rooms', l lf2
baths. lots of storage,
WHIP INFLATION
WITH YOUR OWN
RENTAL
UNIT .
$10,000.00.
RACINE Recently
remodeled
story
frame, 7 rooms, full
basement,
walk to
everything, $25,000.00.
W 0 0 D L A N 0
HOMESITE$ - Appx .
25

acres,

some

lots

surveyed, water and
elec .
available .
EASTERN DISTRICT
U7.500.oo.
BEAUTIFUL - 2 story,

river view, 1112 baths,
central air, full basement, excellent condl ·
tion, carpeting etc.: .
READY TO MOVE IN·
TO $.40,000.00.
GR !OAT Location,
style and condition,
. rooms to Spare, up to 4
bdrms., Jlh baths, fami·
IV room, rec. room, cen·

tral heat ·&amp; air . MAKE
' OF' FER $59,800.00.
FARM- you have
been waiting for, a.c
beautiful laying acres,

good large barn, 2
ponds. old house to
remodel, good large
PLUS a

ment,

bdrm. ranch
. .• full base·

manv

other

features In excellent
condition. STEAL AT
$76,325.00.
THERE ARE 41 WAYS
.TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW HOME, WE CAN
HELP YOU . LOCALLY
OWNED AND FULL
TIME.
REALTOR

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
993·6191
ASSOCIATES
Do"ie &amp; Roger Turner
742-2474

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are }"ou.nd in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
Real Estate lor Sale

21 LOCUST STREET
446-4806
"A WORLD

Assoc.
Ph. Home: 446·3294 .

of Difference; .

LAND CONTRACT - Small down payment will buy
you a house with 2 aoartments and a mobile home In
Rio Grande. Call today. 525,000.
#0250
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 nice lots with 4
rental mobile home pads, all are rented, each pad
t,as concrete runners and patio, located in Rodney.
$15.500.
' 2155
~ICE HO, U:. WITH RENTAL Ranch, w.b.
·ireplace in living room, full basement, 2 car
iarage, also 2 bedroom block house, 1.76 acres
i51,000.
• oosi
; ACRES - Has a good building site, some woods.
i6.200.

·3 ACRES - Vacant land, good investment proper·
y, some timber, at I mineral rights, located in Adlison Twp. $23,000. ·
1 10)2

IUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- Service station do·
ng good business, excellent building, large shop. If
'OU're interested In owning vour own business and
naking money, stop in and see us fordetalls. 11100

Jean Trusseii985·2UO

FULL TIME
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259
For Rent

Evenings Call
'
Darvin BloOmer, Assoc. 446-2599
Oscar Baird, Realtor 446-4632
. john Fuller, Realtor 446-4327 .
'

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Callt--==:::;=:;=;::==-T-:::========:i
992·7479.
1
For Rent
For Rent
' AND 4 RM furnished apNice
country
home,
fur·
SLEEPING
ROOMS for
ts. Phone992· 5434.
nlshed, garden, scenery, rent, Gallla Hotel.
prlvac~ . Children and pets
RENTER'S assistancE! for
considered.
$200 mo .
2 TRAILER SPACES
Senior Citizens in Village
Coolville 667·30110.
comcrete patio ond walk,
Manor apts. Caii992·77B7.
900 block In town. Large
2 bedroom house tor rent,
lawn area. water paid, 160.
One bedroom apt., ununfurnished, 'deposit req .
mo.
Call 446-4416 alter 5
furnished, all electric.
992·309!h
p.m.
Pomeroy Home and Auto.
992·2()94.
2 BDR . furn. mobile home, LARGE home, 8 rm. and
12x60 In Cheshire. dep. req. bath, 1 mile trom city
One bedroom apt., unlimits, comp . carpeted, furCall-146·4229.
furnished, . all electric .
nace
heat, refridoerator
Pomeroy Home and Auto.
and stove turn., ba~ment,
992·2094.
1974 2 bdr. mobile home. ref. and dep. . req., wood·
total elec., adults only. No burning stove, SJOO. mo.
pets. Call367 ·7o438 .
Two bedroom trailer.
Caii446-G239.
Adults Only 992 ·3324
FURNISHED two bedroom NICE 2 BEDROOM home
mobile home In city. with basement near Crown
2 Sleeping rooms, private
Parking, adults. No pets. City on Rt. 7. Call Wiseman
entrance. Off the street
$225 Includes water. Ref Agencv at .uc!·J6.43.
parking, refrigerator &amp;
and sec. deposit. Call .uc!·
television. Call after 4 week
3671 .
days992· 7791.
SMALL MOBILE HOME
or camper space. 446-4736.

FARM SALE
SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1980
10:00 A.M.
LOCATION: 25 Miles SOtJth of Gallipolis, 25 Miles
North of Ironton, 2 Miles West ol State ROtJte 141 on
Honev' s Branch.
The following Will be offered:
1977 White 2·105 Tractor (800 hrs. like new). Oliver
8B Diesel, 1928 McCormick·Deerlng .Tractor "1530"
on Steel, 1969 Oliver 5.50 Diesel , JD 170 Unloader JD
4·14" PLow, Oliver 5· 16" Plow;ll' Pittsburgh Wheel
Disc, Brlllln Culllpacker, IH Harrow, 3 Pt. Scraper,
J&amp;M Wagon Gear, KiUbros Wagon &amp; Gfar, JD 336
Hay Baler with Flotation Tires, New Holland 256
Pull Type Hay Rake, I" Gehl Hayblne, ~· New Idea
Elevator, Patz Manure Splreader. 3 Pt. Bush Hog,
JD 4 Row Cultivator, Chisel Plow, Kino Harrow,
Hay Plck· Up Elevator, Potato Digger, S~&gt;rghum
Mill &amp; Cooker, Corn ·Sheller, Holland Tobacco Set·
ter, 3 Pt. Post Hole Digger, Hydraulic Post Driver
on Trailer. Ford 2 Row Corn Planter, 2 Silage
Wagons !Fox &amp; Lamco), Fox Silage Blower &amp; Pipe,
NH One Row Corn Picker, Gehl Grinder- Mixer,
16·7 Grain Drill, 2 Flat Wagons with Side Boards.
Catrtle Head Shute, Boom P.Oie, 3 Pt. "Quick Hook·
up"; One Lot CresatOed FEnce Post, one Lot New
· Tobacco Sticks, 2 Metal Corn Cribs, 10 1nternatlonal
Weights, JO Tractor Weglhts, White Tractor
Weights, 38" Duals, 12' Hydraulic Auger 6" 20'
Electric Auger 6", 2 surge Vacuum PumPS. Steel
Traps, Harness, Cattle &amp; Hog Feeders and Waters,
Maddox, Picks, Shop Equipment, Supplies,
Hydraulic Cylinders and Miscellaneous Items
Found ll!t A Farm Auction.
.
T•rms: Cash
Lunch Avalloitle'
. RUTT BROTHERS, OWNERS
.
•
,

LH Jcillnson -AUCTIONEER
Crown City, Ohio· PlloM2SH751

SMALL MODERN private
home, 1 or 2 adults. Write
P.O. bOX 10, Gallipolis.
2 BDR. UNF. trailer on
lleautlful cOtJntry 101, gar·
den space, air conditioning,
newly carpeted. Call 388·
8794.
UNF. 2 bdr. mobile home,
adults only, no pels .
Located ·2 miles out 588.
$175. plus dep . . Call 446·

2300.
NICE 3 bdr. home, unf.,
total electric. Located at
E vervreen. Ref. &amp; dep.
req.
Call446·31y.2.

suo.

. 2 BDR. TRl!.ILER
Porter, ctep. and ,.., .
Caii36NI01.

Pluinblng I Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone ......-.. or 446·4477
· DEWITT'S PLUMBING
,
ANDHEATING
' Route 1110 at Evargr'Mn
Phone 446-2735.
GENE PLANtS
.
ANDSONS
'Piumbi!lli • Healing · ,t.~r
conditioning. · 300· l'oui'ih
Ave. P/1.'446·1637.
' STANDARD
Plymblog·Htall'!ll ·.
215 !hltd 'tve., 41i-l112

Real Estate for Sale

PINE SI!TTI
527,500
3 bedroom mobile home, large living
room, eat· ln kitchen. 36x36 heated
aluminum garage with concrete floor.
Call for details of this lovely very well
kept place . All thla situated on 1 acre M
&amp; L of beautiful pine trees.
UU

concrete floors. 1.000 walnut and poplar trees on
fatm . Clay Tw. City schools .

tobacco base, prOduc·
tlve cropl&amp;nd. Call for

an appointment.

QUALITY
PLUS BEAUTY
This Is a family home,
811 brick
with 4
bedrooms and a sparkl ·.
lng full bath up. Large
kitchen lined with pretty
cabinets. Large foyer
•nd formal living room
and dining. Full base·
ment ·fireplace In faml·
ly room, 2 car garage at·
tached, also a workshop
and a barn. Situated ·on
aproxlmately 5.9 acres.
This home reflects
tender, loving care and
true value.

PLEASANT
ATMOSPHERE
$42.900.00
Lovely home, 3 BR, bath
and utility room . Large
living room and dining
room . Fully equipped
kitchen with side· bv·
side r~frlgerator . Large
level landscaped lot. Be
the first to see this nice
home conveniently
located In town. Owner
will FHA or VA. City
schools.
. 1 367

SAY HELLO TO
ANEW FLAME I
On long cold winter
nights you can cudd'e up
next to a nice coz·~ 'IOd
fireplace. Defl ~~ 1 a
plusforthlsL.~' brick
home. ,..,~~ring 3 NEW LISTING- Near
bedroor- \,.' •'h baths, Rio Grande furnished
modP~~_,ilt· in kitchen mobile home on a half
and a~Ppliances. For- acre. Franklin wood·
mal dining area. Utility bUrner and .storage
room , gas forced air building . Buy now for
heat. Excellent location. $12,500.00.
state Rt. 35.

2.6ACRI!S
VACANT LAND
City water, sewer
hookup, electric on pro· ·
perty,
Landscaped.
Limestone drlvew~y.
Redwood sun porch
already b~llt. Loc•ted
on St. rt. 325 at edge of
Rio Grande. All this for
a low price, all now.
#395

BEAT THIS$300.00 PER MONTH
1ncluding principal, Interest, taxes and lnsurahce.
Only 9% Int. Owner transferred and very anxious to
sell. City schools, acre of ground more or less, living
room, 2 w .b. fireplaces, kllcnen &amp; dining area. Full
basement . Priced In $40's. Call for more details.

Real Estate for Sale

. . FANTASTIC
BRICK RANCH
6 Rooms - Large for·
mal dining rm. Steel
outside doors, Heat
pump, also • wood ·
burning fireplace. 1'h
baths, nice · lar(ll! kit•
chen w·bullt·ln cabinets,
dlshwesher, . garbage
dlspaHI. Thermopane
w l - . Located In a
nice subdivision off
35.

RODNEY-CORA RD.
.SB acre, mobile home
runners for a 12&gt;&lt;60
trailer, septic tank,
ruritl water available.
. Very reasonable.

Bonnie L Stutes, ReaHor, 44Mt..t~tuo ....
James R. Stutes, Assoc. 446-2885
L Leach, Assoc. 245-9484

ANY PERSON who haS
anything to give away and
does not olftr or attempt to
offer any Other thing for
.sale may place an ad In .this
~Oiumn. There will 11e no
charge to the advertiser.

~T. LabradQr Retriever,

Pf. German $'hepherd pup·
pies. Call 446·4199 alter
S:30.

GOOD sink with double
dralnbQard. Call446•42•1.

Do

WILL CARE FDR ,chlldren
In my home. RoelntY area.
Phone 2A5·•· '

!li-

write let·
· WILL TYPE
tera of all typn lor a
· modest fee. Coli 1614) 379·
FrH to good home 2
3
- l . m pups, one black, 2636 between 9 a.m. ·one blonae. 3 months old. P·!:"·
Cell7-12·2692.
AL TERA 'I' IONS or ltwlnt
to do In my nome: Call ol461

7197,

r,

I

PARTIAL LISTING - WE HAVE OTHERS

S P A C E - 4 Br ., 21h baths, base·
ment, fireplace, screened porch, for mal dining, nerly an acre, just outside
city. $53,'100.

Electronic Realty Associates

: 92

JUST RIGHT FOR
YOUR SMALL FAMI·
L Y - You couldn't ask
for a better location for
this cozy 2 or 3 bedroom
home. Located i ust off
u.s. Rt. 35, this 5 room
frame home offers din·
ing room, nice kitchen,
bath, carport and large
~~rd. $34,500.
NEW LISTING GRANDVIEW
ES ·
'TATES' - Extra nice 3
bedroom. 2 bath ranch.
Full basement with
finished family and rec.
room,
2
lovely
fireplaces, hardwood
floors, nat. gas heat,
cent. air, vinyl siding
and 2 car garage . 1 Year
Buyer Protection . .SO's.

QUALITY- QUALITY- QUALITY-. OVer 2,000
sq . ft. of well p'anned living space. Immaculate bl ·
level with S bedrooms, 2 baths, equipped kitchen,
dinil"'g room, large family room, recreation room
for your pool table &amp; oversized 2 car garage. Large
landscaped yard on corner lot. Near Rodney. City
schools.
\

Audrey Canaday, Realtor, 446·3636

IB
••

:'.1

t,

25 Locust St., Gallipolis, Ohio

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - 3 BR , 'I•
acre lot, new roof. new furnace. 27,500.

CALL 446-3643

DESIGNED
FOR
TOTAL LIVING - Just
imagine yourself own·
ing this
lovely
4
bedroom home in a
sup~r
neighborhood .
Lots of space including
combined kitchen &amp; dining, 2 baths, family &amp;
rec. room, full base·
ment plus 112 acre with
16x32 pocl. U.S. Rt. 35.

READY TO BUILD? We have some excellent
building lots in a super
location between the
Ohio River and Raccoon
Creek . Central sewage,
rural water, recreation
area, streets to be pav·
ed, &amp; city schools.
Several to choose from .

SPACIOUS
l
AC .
Lots of
ESTATE space inside &amp; out in this
7 yr . old brick . 5
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
w.b. fireplaces, large
family room, equipped
kitchen, 2 patios, 2 heat
pumps, circular drive &amp;
pond . 5 miles from town .
City Schs.

E. XC~ L LENT
NEIGHBORHOOD CITY SCHOOLS - A
real bargain exists on
this 3 bedroom brick &amp;
frame. Family r"oom
with fireplace, eat-in
kitchen, llh baths, 2 car
garage, nat. gas &amp; cent
air, $49,'100. Assumable
loan at 911&gt;%.

NEW LISTING - Very
attractive 3 bedroom
brick in city. Large
fami lv room with
fireplace, equipped kitchen, 2 baths, basement, screened patio, 2
car garage &amp; nat. gas
heat .
Beautifully
decorated.

HOME &amp; l ACRES $40,000 -: Very well kept
&amp; remodeled 3 bedroom
home just outside town
on Rt. 588 . Fireplace,
large kitchen , family
room, full basement &amp;
gas heat. Circular drive
plus 3 acres with ex·
cellent garden spot.

JIM COCHRAN, ASSOCIATE-446-7881 EVE.
B. J. HAIRSTON, AS50CIATE-446-4240 EVE.

E. M . WISEMAN, BRQKER-446-3796 EVE.
E. N. WISEMAN, BROKER-446·4500 EVE.

TURN OF THE CEN ·
TURY You won' t
have to remodel th is
one. The owners have
taken great care of th is
2 story 4 bedroom home
Double
i n town .
fir eplace, family room,
den, formal dining , A
real gem . $69,900.
DON ' T LET THIS SLIP
BY A remarkably
well kept 2 story 3 or 4
bedroom home on Rt.
141 112 mile from town.
includes family room,
large equipped kitchen,
basement, nat. gas heat,
dining room &amp; nice fenced yard. $29,900. City
schools.

.12 900 -

Inexpensive 3

b~droom home on Neil

Ave. in town . Needs
so me work but is
liveable. Nat . gas heat.
nice sized yard .

NEW LISTING - Ex·
cellent family home
l ocated i n fam i ly
oriented nei ghborhood.
4 bedroom ranch . Includes nice equ ipped
kitchen , din ing area,
full ba semen t w / large
family room &amp; corner
firepla ce, lo.w heat bills
(nat,, gas heat) , sundeck
&amp; .6 acre . City schools .
$40's VA or FHA . 1 year
buyer protection .

500 2nd AVE. • GALLI POLIS

NANCY SMITH, ASSOCIATE-446·4910 EVE .
DAN EVANS, ASSOCIATE-38B·Blll EVE .

•.,

"OOUNTRY

HOME

3 lledroom, 1 story house on
Long St .. Rutland. Large
lot out of high water. close
to school. Call742·2975.

available. Located approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 . .uc!-2359 after 6.

with

·~tocked pond for swimming
IJ#' fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
~arpeted. 3 to 17 acres

"'
"I'
"K ·

3 PROPERTIES IN ONE

HOBSTETTER

-small house~ 2 Bdrm., rental possibili·

REALTY

ty.
'
-Lg.
Bdrm. well kept home, 4 car
garage.
-Country store, gas station, restaurant.

s

158,500
Quality, style, beauty
all combined In thislove·
ly bHevel. 3 bedrooms,
l'h baths, huge utility
room, lovely kitchen
with bullt·ln cabinets,
range,
disposal,
d!shwasher, large faml·
IV and rec, room with
fireplace. This home
has been tastefully
decorated. Call us, and
put y~ur family In this
lovely home. Close to
Holzer Hospital. We can
advise you on financing.

'

hoUSe,
lng room~
· 2 pc)rc,..., barn, .
cellar &amp; ·mueh, much,
more. Large tobacco
base, rich· In minerals..
Call ·lor mroe lnforma·
tiOn.
1409

Ron Canaday, Realtor, 446-3636

E.lch oitt(l' rrltiL' P('Ildt•nl h mYned ,md o per,lted

NICE 5 ROOM HOM.E
ONLY$17,000.00
Circular porch, fuel oi I ,
FA furnac•. City water',
cellar, · outside storage ·
building. Nice com·
munlty, Phone for
\ &lt;Jetalls.
1316

PRODUCINfo
PERTY
6 rooms, 3 B.R . home
located on Old Rt. 160 In
Porter with 1974 14'x72'
mObile home . 3 B:R.
with complete kitchen,
electric stove &amp; refrlg.
F .A. furnace, central
all. Home has a stoker
coal stove. Live in one.
rent the other. Gallla
Rural Water Syst. l'h
lot. All for ·only $29,000.
CALl. NOW.
#220

FIFTY ·SEVEN - Ap·
prox . 25 tillable
meOJdow, severa l pine
gr oves, wooded areas.
large stoc k ed pond,
rural water avai labl e.
$25,700.

All you need to know in Real Estate:
THE WISEMAN AGENCY

TOOL AUCTION

All properties located on approx. 2 acres In Letart
Falls, Oblo, SR 124, 11f2 miles from the new electric
plant. owner willing to llnance to responsible party.
May call (513) 9114·1959 or writ~:

WEUSlON AUCTION HOUSE.

Barbara Brotvan
11239 IIOIIWood Court

126 EAST 2Nq STREET, WEUSTON, OHIO

Cincinnati, Ott. 45242

' 315

WEDNEsDAY, MARCH 5, 1980

7:00 P.M.

Auctions "
108 Acres In Salisbury
Township, Meigs County,
Ohio. Some timber, oil and
gas well on prQperty, and
old farm buildings. Appraised at $45,000 .00 and
cannot sell for less than 80
percent of that value. To be
offered for sale at the of·
flees of Crow, Crow and
Porter, Mulberry and
Second Ave., Pomeroy,
Ohio, at 1:00 p.m. on March
7th, 1980. Cash on delivery
of deed.
Immediate
possession.

Sale Items Can Be Inspected One Hour Before Sale Time I
'
AUCTIONEER: SWAIN &amp;MUS'TARD
PHONE 286·2034

DRILL PRESSES, POWER TOWELS, AIR-COMPRESSORS,
. ..

TABlE SAWS, ROLL AROUND TOOL BOXES

Buy, At You'r Price

Mobile Homes· Sale
1973 Fairpoint, 14x65 2
bedroom
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2
bedr.
1971 Fleetwood, 14X65 3
bdr ., bath 1h
1971 Shakespe 0 r, 14x65 2
!ledroom
1965 Yenor 12x52, 2 bedr.
1968 Fle&lt;!lwood 12x63, 2
Bdr.
B &amp; "S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT. PLEASANT,
WV . 30H75·4o424.

·The Auction Way
we Carry Highest Quality Nationally Adllertls~ Name Brands
B'lco. Rockwell ·. Rodec • Fuller ~ Cummings· SteeJcraft • Buf·
lelo -·shopmate -·w-right· Chan"ei, Lock· Remington· Black &amp;
Decker· McGraw Edison· Witerloo ·Ingersoll Rend · ~oods •
sanborn • wen • NASA • Continental,

ruris tl)routh prCJIM!rtv.

same tr-111r- wllll .
concreto I._,, Tills ~ .

,..tty OIIIV $22,300. Ull

•

JUST

.

MALl! SHEPHERD· black
• .,...., Loy,e l, loves at·
*tflon'. llree to a IIOOd
home. Coli 446·0515 .-tier Pr:oteulonet hrvlca
5:00p.m: .
· CALL us for your
photographic Oft&lt;ls. Po~·
Free to · good home 2 trait, r•saports, com•
and wedding
-lent pup~, one !lleck, mercia
Tawney
on. blorKie. 3 months Old. photography ,
Studloa, 424 SeCond Ave.
Ceii7G·J692,

g~~~~~g~~

Not only
this nonne ·•
have 2 flrl•plaCEiS
the home
and Inviting. Large
/ng room, family room,
dining room and-recrea ·
lion room. 4 bedrooms &amp;
l baths. Lovely kitchen
· with range, dishwasher
and refrlgrator. 2 acres
with a 50&gt;&lt;30 metal barn.

MODERN RANCH .
·
I R!&gt;Of'A "OME · .
In country.,Over 120hq•.
' fl. of living-space. Large
. living ,room, 16'x18',
I family raom 17'x12' with
wocid·burnlno flreplf&lt;•· •
R~ral · water, central
.air, aPPfOX. 'h ·A: of
clean land. Large con·
ITATB HIGHWAY
c~e~ patio, carport, 3
RIAJOftlloiLY
mull;lerry ·. trees.
A
• ' l'tUCBD .
beautiful moderh coun·
150 ft. frwiluaa on Rt.
try llqme.. '(oll m~st'"
160. Largo 'living andl
this home to IIPDi'aclate
Nt·ln kHchen. ·Two BR
lis beauty. PR.ICE IN
witt\ ~IOiet, bath with
THE '30's. '
UU
~· Nice tlrMm

Giveaway

Wanted to

CHARMING BUT AFFORDABLE Take time to view this 3 B R ranch,
energy saving heat pump, cen. air. fully
carpeted except kitchen . 1'12 baths, at·
tached garage. $42,500.

Neartv 50 acres over
1,000' frontage
along
Cherry Ridge Road .
Partially wooded Ex ·
cell ent building si tes .
$65,000.

SERII1CE STATION ,
garage and restaurant
located on bu sy Rt . 7.
Great location tor soft
ice cream and sa ndw ich
shop . Full deta i ls 1o
serious buver .

CENTENARY - Natural cedar ranch,
nearly an acre lawn , 3 BR , family rm .,
2 car garage. A showloce! $61 ,900.

MODERN BRICK situated on nearly an
acre has a comblna'tion kitchen -family
room with fireplace, 3 BR's, Jl/2 baths,
fully carpeted, full basement with
recreation room . Located in Kyger
Creek School District, 6 mile$ from cl·
ty. $54,900 .

... RIOGRANDE
... ACREAGE

graceful

· time and fam ily needs , 4 BR , liv i ng rm .
W ith fireplace, formal dining , full base ment, 1112 acre rolling lawn front s on
Oh io River, just owtside city .

FLAIR .... and
Briel&lt;, cedar and stucco combine to
give thls brand riew home an English
TudOr flavor. Double door entry into
foyer leading to family rm . with cozv
fireplace. verv private living rm .• fully
equ ipped kitchen with formal dining
area and bedroom wing. 3 spacious
bedrooms, 2 full baths, plus carpet, cen .
air, heat pump. Flnlshed 2 car garage .
Beautiful view from any room through
diamond paned windows. 3/" acre level
lot. $57,900.

$8,900
TWO HOUSES
One 5 rooms · one 2
rooms, also storage
bldg. Located on Main
St . in Crown City. Large
· level lot. Front porch.
1361

IN GALLIPOLIS
3 Bedroom~ Total 6
rooms plus bath.
Mo!lern kitchen with
lots
of
cabinets,
dishwasher. SOme new
wall to wall c•rpet,
Natural gas furnace. Cl·
tv water and sewer. Afl ·
for only $29,900.
, 405

MEW .SECTIONAL
• mos. old, J bearooms,
2 baths, famllv room,
living room and dining
room. Modern bullt·ln
kitchen. Woodburner.
Take a look at this real
nice home. All setting 6n
one and half acres In the
city school district.
Priced In the 30's.

Giveaway

BRAND
~IG
NEW, $53,900
Large living room with WB fireplace,
lovely kitchen with bullt·ln cabinets,
range, dishwasher, formal dining
room, with patio doors, 3 BR, 2 lull
baths, utility room . All this and more
situated on 1 are of level land Oli State
H lghway 160. Be the one to turn this
lovely house into your home. •
I 378

ROWQF
. TA,LL PINE TREES
AND 5 ROOM HOME
&amp;I ACRE
Beautiful row &lt;* tall
pine trees by road In
front of home - 5 rooms
with full basement, bOt·
tie ga• F.A. furnace, one
car oarl!lge, woodburning fireplace. Kyger r-------o;;::~~
Creek S~hoot Dlst. 5
miles from Gallipolis.
All
$34,900.
I

BEAT THE INTEREST....,;RATE RAPI
"Today's rates are !I heavy penalty. Why
not beat the rap with these home buys."
10% LOAN
AROUND$3,400.00
AVAILABLE
DOWN PAYMENT
LOWDOWN
With of only 9'n% Int.
PAYMENT
and own this lovely
Cedar Ranch only 2 This home Is lust
yrs.old. 3 bedrooms, 2 waiting to be yours.
You'll bubble with ex·
baths, modern bulll·ln
kitchen. dining area . citement when you sip
This home Is only 1'1• the features this luxury
home offers. Foyer.
miles from city . Owner
has been transferred flooring, formal llvlno
room, w.b. fireplace,
and Is verv anxious to
cedar mantle track,
sell.
lighting, new plush
carpeting, formal din·
FINANCEI FINANCE I
lng room, beautiful
FINANCE I
family room with large
Owner will help fln8nce
sliding door leading to
with a down payment
beoutlful pool and patio
and carry the balance
area, terraced ground
on a land contract. with
lots of shrubbery,
Stately 2 story plllary
•s
grill,
ldeol for enter·
posts, 3 bedroom,· for·
tainment,
3 bedrooms, 2
mal entry and large
baths, large kitchen
open winding staircase ..
with unusual breakfast
Family room with plank
bar, cherry, walnut
flooring and w . b.
wood, full basement,
fireplace. Formal living
central air, garage and
room, spacious eat-in
openers. Thla home II
kitchen with loads of
beautifully ctecorat.cl.
knotty pine , cabinets.
All
new
custom
This and much more
draperies. Looks like It
setting on 3 acres. Can
lust came right out of an
bUY only one acre. City
Interior oeeorator's
schools. Give us a call
magazine. One of the
for more details.
finHt. I'm sure It will be
love at flrslllght.

AT THIS PRICE
YOU CAN MAKE
INFLATION WORK
FOR YOU\
Cozy 3 bedroom home,
large modern kitchen,
living room, bath, utility
room and a storage
building. All setting on 3
acres of ground In the
city scho91 district.
Priced In the 30s.

BABY RANCH 20
acres mostly woodlan d,
gOOd 2 BR home, forced
air furnace. IQ. barn
Rural water. blacktop
rd .. city schools. $24,900

Il l

DAIRY FARM
135 Acres more or less. 1.3 miles Raccoon Creek bot·
tom «l acres creek bOttom. 60 acres total tillable.
used as a !'rode A D~lry operaton, 4 milkers with
automatic washer!, 800 gal. bulk tanks, 2 silos (800
tons&gt;. total with silo unla&lt;~dlng auger. Structyres :
40x80 metal, 112xo10 milk house with feecj room.
40x170 concrete slab feed lot. All structures have

SCENIC OHIO
RIVER ACREAGE
~s Acres of gOOd farm .
YOU'll love this mOdern
4 bedroom brick home
with tun ba~ment, 21J2
baths. Family room
with
woodburning
tlreplace, two kitchens.
Good barn, fences,

REMODELED BUNGALO ~ Cute and
cozy, new c~rpet and kitchen cabinets.
2 BR , lg. living rm. plus family rm. or
den, rilling lawn. Extra large storage
bldg. $27.500.·
.

NEW ON THE MARKET - Brick and
frame ranch, 3 BR . 1'12 baths, fullY
carpeted. Attached garage . Across the
street from Spring Valley Shopping
Plaza. Newly redecorated . $45,000.

GOOD FAMILY LIVING - This lovely ranch has 3
bedrooms, family _room with woodburner, large 2
car garage, beaut1ful 18x36 pool with large patio,
close to town. $59,900 .
11995

JUST LISTED - Nice Vinedale mobile home,
12x60, tip out, 2 bedrooms, central air, nice lot.
117,000.
I 1017

--- -

Real Estate for Sale

A DELICATE BALANCE -

Estate Agency

---

PORTER - Nice 12x50 mobile home with addition
on back, furnished and air cond ., large garage and
large lot, $16,'100.
10961

Real Estate for Sale

We cover over
7 m illion miles
to find.you a home.

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

N.EW LI~TING - Attractive 3 bedroom home, bath,
d1nlng room . storage building, nice level lot, only
$27,500.
I 1572

Real Estate for Sale

446-3636 Anv Hour

G,allia County's Fastest Grotping

FIRST LISTING - Nice BHevel , 3 bedrooms. 2 full
aths, garage with electric opener, heat pump with
central air . Close to hospital on 2 acres with wOOds.
$46,500.
I 1465

Real Estate for Sale

Real estate for Sate

Real Estate for Sale

BAIRD &amp; FUu.ER
REALTY

LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT - Attractive ranch, 3
bedrooms, lOrge living room, folly carpeted, full
basement with 12x24 f8mily room, central air, 1 cer
gara(ll!, located In Kyger Ck. Sch. Dlst., only
$44,500,
uw
CLOSE TO ENO - Nice 1970 Rebel mobile home,
12x60, in excellent condition, furnished, front porch
I &amp; a carport, storage building and an Oliver tractor .
Located on 2 acres of nice land, better hurry, only
$16,500.
~0561

.

LISTED.

.

. •

•

j

•

•

we 'have th• lergesf selectl!'n ot ill hand tools and accessories
on wheels.
•
.
A complet!l selection of hand~ tools, elr tools, electric tools for
" " plumber, carpenter, mechanic, etei:triclen, tr\lcker,
farmer, palnter, contractor, shop owner or serious· tool user In
profe1s1on: we try to liave It ell - drlll ·blts to air tools,
lletksew blides to table saws, paint brushes to compressors,
samiJiper
grinders, exte11slon cords to totch hoses • .

12X60 Hillcrest, 2 bedroom.
Furnished or unfurnished.

992·614Q.
1971 12x65 Trailer, com·
ptelely tumlshed, A.t .,
very good condition. On a
lot that' can be rented .
Ready to move Into. S6500
firm. 992·5304 . · .
"

any

"A

tO

.

, I

'

Mobile Homes· Sale
WINTER SALE · Prices
reduced on used mobile
homes .
TRI · STATE
MOBILE HOMES. CALL
446·7572 .
1973 Fairpoint, 14x65, 2 bdr .
1971 Cameron, 14x65, 2 bdr.
1971 Fleetwood, , Ux65, 3
bdr ., l'h bath .
1971 Shakespeare, 12x65, 2
bdr . ·
196SYanor, 12x60, 2bdr.
1968 Fleetwood, 12x 60, 2
bdr .
B&amp;S
Mobile Home Sales
Pt. PieasaniW.VA&lt;
675·4424.
1977 · 14x70, Windsor. unf.
Call675-6930.
1971 · 12x60 SKYLINE • 2
bdr. Mob. home, ext.
cond., newly carpeted . Un·
derplnnlng Included. Call
388·8794.
1969 12X65 SHULTZ • lm·
perlal hou~ trailer, $4,000.
Call.uc!·3836.
For Lease

next
Sq•ore
Bob Evans Steak
1. ••o••!.•- 1100 sq . fl. ~fflce,
4,,0
'wareho\i.Se
! storat•, garage or any
:other com mercl•l 111e.
i Call tke Wiseman
44t·)64)
The Wiseman Agency

PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING
Chester. Beautiful 3
bedroom home. 2 baths,
living room, dfning
room, family room, extra nice kitchen With
mi cro-wave oven . ca1·1
for
more details.
$58,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Ex·
ecutive svtle home .
Must see inside to ap·
preclale. Almost totally
remodeled within the
past 2 yrs. 5 bedrooms, 2
baths and "'uch, much
more. Call t6day I
EXTRA NICE 3
bedroom, total electric
home. Kitchen, dining
room, 2 baths and 114
basement with wood
burner and workshop.
Close to Meigs High.
Good price $42,000 .00.
INCOME PROPERTY
- 2 homes, beth extra
nice. Situated on 10
acres
across from
Legion In Rutland.
POMEROY Lovely 3
bedroom home with
panoramic view of
river. Only $.40,000.00.
LIST WITH US. We
have buyers and llnanc·
lng available.
Cheryl Lemley, Assfe.
Phone 742-2003
Velma
Nlnclnskv,

Assoc.

Phone 742-3092
Georges. Hobstettir Jr.
Broker 992·5739

DILLON
REAL ESTATE
HEY! YOU WON' T
BELl EVE J BR
frame house. Carpeted
&amp; paneled, on a quiet
street in Racine. Close
to schools &amp; stores.
won ' t last long . $21.000.
MlbDLE PORT 3
bedroom home, new
vinyl siding, Insulated,
new FA gas furnace,
woodburning fireplace,
equipped kitchen, 1'12
baths. mostly carpeted,
two blocks
from
downtown.

Phone

1-(614)·992·3325

TWO BEDROOM home
located on one acre,
Middleport area, trailer
hookup for additional in·
come. $11,000.
MIDDLEPORT AREA
2 bedroom home,
paneling and carpet,
eat· in kitchen . 510,500.
JUST OFF SR 7, 2
bedroom home. hard ·
wood floors, new panel ·
lng , on four acres of
land, barn, in Mid·
dleport area , will sell on
land contract, $12,500.
INVESTMENT PRO·
PERTY
Well
established business In
the heart of Middleport,
on corner lot, plus 4
apartments all present·
ly rented . Sell all or
part.

DILLON
REALESTATE

Mortgege
money
H-rt Dillon, Broker
available. New homes, old
FavManl•y,
homes and refinancing
BrahchMgr.
your present home. CON·
Phone 992·2598
VENTIONAL · 5 Pet. down.
VA : no down payment.
FHA · low down payment.
FHA .. -245 graduated
FINANCING·VA· FHA LO·
paymeht program. FHA
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
265 subsidy progra(Tl . Ca!l
for d.etalls . . IRELAND . PAYMENT. PURCHASE
REFINANCE .
MORTGAGE CO., 77 E. OR
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
State St., Athens. 592·3051.
77 E. STATE, ATHENS.
614-592·3051 ,

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

For Lease
AMSBARY Eye Clinic near
liolzer Hospital, suitable
·for offices, or b~slness,
plenty of parking , Call &lt;146·

0239.

.

•

-~.

51750.00 DOWN - 4 to 5
bedrooms, formal din ·
ing, equipped kit., base·
ment, 2 car garage, 2
business rooms on large
level lot.
11 ROOMS - l'h baths,
nat . gas furnace, 5 or 6
bedrooms, basement, 2
poches, outbuilding and
dbl. garage. 517.500.
80 ACRES - Nice lay·
lng farm land or f~r sub·
divlson . About V2 fenc·
ed, good 10 room farm
house with bath and lots
of .farm bldgs. Minerals.
$925.00 OOWN 3
bedrQOms. bath. por·
ches, basement, birc h
kitchen, nat. gas furnace and copper plumbing.
BUILDING LOT Near Rock Springs in
Restricted
area ,
utilit ies &amp; trees .
3 IN 1 - Home has 11
rooms, furnace, 2 ren tals, 4th available, 2 car
garage and over 1 acre
of sandy land. Good buy
at $25,000.00.
6 RENTALS All
under one roof. Brick
construction . Only
$35,000 .
BUILDING LOT - Cor·
ner lot in Pomeroy in
good residential area .
out of flood .
RESTFUL- Quiet set·
tlng with a lot of Ires on
2112 acres. Like new in·
Side, bath, utility, nat.
gas furnace &amp; ~lty
water. S1,000 .00DOWN ..
FREE 80 CALENDARS.
FOR SEI.LING YOUR
PROPERTY CALL
992·3325 or 992·:,187 6

•

Housing
Headquarters

. f - - - - - - - - --f
Approxlmtely 4 acres
MelliS Mines.
quick trailer setup or
building site. Phone
6306.

Modern 3 bedroom home,
basement with fireplace,
,central air, tully carpeted.
located on ·61h acres near
Racine on Raclne·Bashan
Rd . 949·2836 after 5 and . Dennis Ault, 1639 LlllCOig
weekends. Larry Wolle.
1Hts. ; Pomeroy , Oh, 45769"''

l

�[).10-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. SundaY . March 2. 19841

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are J?ound in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
--~--,----

~

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate tor Sale

D-11-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March2,1980

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn the Sunday Times-Sentinel
0

Real Estate for Sale

1k

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

PRIVACY ABOUNOS - In tills brick
ranch nestled In the pine trees. The
home consists of a I g. living room with a
huge flreR)ate, 3 bedrooms, built· In kitchen, nice dining area, family rm.,
bath, Ig. double brick carport, all of this
on 3 acres of land with a nice pend. Plu s

WM. D. TONEY • BROKFII

446 3081

.

. ~

Finish up the r em odeli ng of this 2 story
3 BR country home . It has been
rewired, new breaker bo'l&lt;, some dry
wall work done New roof and materials
. osti ng over $1500 on premises. County
water ta p paid for . 1 acre of level
ground . What a change you can make
and profits unlimited for $17,500 . N 442

OPPORTUNITY
This sturdy home is located at The edge
of town . Big enough for grandpa and
grandma . 4 bedrooms, fam il y room ,
bath, k itc hen , utility room and pa ntry,
full basement, natur al gas heat. 3
acres. At a price you can afford.
$33,000.
I 366

HERE IT IS
For your fa r ming plea sure. 189 acres of
real farm land . 1700 lb. toba cco base.
Several acres of tillable land . Severa l
acres of woods and pasture. Excellent
barn. Shed. Adequate water surply . it
you're look ing fo r an income pr oduci ng

farm, call today .
20 ACRES VACANT LAND

~

403

10 acres woods, some t imber, 10 ~cres
level to rolling. co unty water avatlab le
for building. $14,000.
11389

COUNTRY DREAM
30 acres. half woods and half rolling
pasture . 5 miles from. Rio Gr~nde .
Beautiful location to butld and r a1se

famiy . 521,500.

a

N402

APLACEINTHECOUNTRY
Can be yours. We have 115 acre f arm
with 2 story, 3 bedroom home just
waiting-for you. Approx. 10 acres of bot·
tom land, tobac co base, barn and other
ou tbui ldi ngs . Priced in the S40 ' s. Hurry
on thi so ne !
/1443

SO NICE TO COME HOME TO! Owner has r educed the price on this 53
acre farm! Newly remodeled, 3
bedroom home, barn, tobac co base,
pond, plenty of wa ter, 30x42 new metal
building with concrete floor. Tak.e a
look, you ' ll like it . Reduced to sell
NOW! $42,500.
I 29S
ACRES
Situated in both Meigs and Vinton cou n·
ties. 31/:2 acres. Older two bedroom
home in need of repair. Looking tor a
h ide-a·way, ca ll tod ay . $15,000.
N 411
llf2

BETTER: THAN NEW IS thi s tutor and
stone st y led 3 yr. old hom e wi ht more
features than can be descr ibed. 1675 ~ ·
ft. entry ha ll , unique li'Ving roo m, fam1 ·
ly room , form al dining room, . 3
bedr ooms, Phi baths. A honey of a k1t ·
c hen wi th built ·in applia nces. 2
f irep laces, fu ll basement, pantry . Sit ·
tin g on 2 acres w i th older 7 room house
and outbuild ings. Look ing for a lot for
your money , t:heck with us on this one.
Pri ced in the sso ·s.
N363

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate tor Sale

OUTSTANDING -

NEW LISTING ..,,ROOM

Lovely sweeping

w m21

Ontu~
"S HOW OFF "
Warm and inviting throughout, this
ni ce 3 bedroom home, is def initely a
pleasure! Nice living room, di ning
r oom, 20x 12 garage, aluminum sid ing
and stor,m wi ndows, and a very nice
chain li nk fenced yard . See for yourself
today, show off to your friends tamar·
row ! Priced in the SJO's.
# 444

SUPER STARTER
This neat little house would be a perfect
retirement or starter home . New fuel
oi l furnace, small basement, new bath,
nice lot. If you're looking for a home
l ike this, CALL TODAY! Priced at

$14,500.

ATTENTION! HOG FARMERS
If you're looking for the ideal set-up for the hog rai s·
ing business, we have it . 101 acres of l?roductive
land and in Meigs county . New furrow1ng house ,
block fattening house, barn , new 6,000 bushel grain
dryer . 2 wire corn cribs, plenty of water. Hook-up
for 2 mobile hom es. Owner will sell complete with or
without equipment. Wanting to get in the hog
business or just wllnting a top notch farm , call to·

144S

Liter ary man's retreat from his days
labors. New 3 BR home, bath, fu ll base·
ment and all the com fort he could want .
Any amount of acres from 5 to 62 . Pri c·
ed to se ll. Only 15 m in ute drive from
Galli polis . Must be seen to be ap·
preciated. Ca ll any of our professiona l

We have 38 acres of land, a well con·
str ucted barn, other ou tbuildings . 7
room house, 4 room basement . Ga r den
area, farming area, p astur e for severa l
animals, pl enty woods for firewood . Get
ready for spring, this ca n be your s and
IJ 354
much more for $22,500.

sa ies staff loday

A PLEASURE TO SEE
AND A JOY TO LIVE IN - Thi s nome
Is in move· in condition. 3 bedrooms, kit-

~y

IT TAKES A LOVING FAMILY -

to

COUNTRY LIVING ON 9 ACRES Tt'lis small mini·farm is ideal for young,
old and in·between . Nice ranch st y le
home with 3 bedroom s, l lf2 baths, basement , and 2 car garage. Also has a
small tobacco base, barn, and n ice
storage building. Don 't hesitate or
you' ll be too late! Contact our office TO·
OAY! Pri ce din the LOW $40's.
N433

Ideal

loc ation

tor

conven ie nce,

have it! This house has A-1 siding, -4
bedrooms, 2 baths, liv ing room, dining,
complete kitchen, family room, 2 wood
burners, Florida perch, 2 decks, red·
wood fence, and 1-car garage, located
city school district. Need we say

and 40&gt; 150 lot .
43.52 Prime de'w'elopment
Located off of Rt. 35.

land .

..

ESTATE

Large double corner lot on

workshop. $25,000.
RUTLAND -

Older home needs some repairs on

Salem Street. Nice corner lot. $9900.00.
•
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5acres. $7,000 .
SYRACUSE - Old nouse on a nice lot, $11,600.
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on
this one if you choose- Soutn Second Ave .

natural gas. Situated on the acres, rramly ;,.JOded.
Close to mines. Addition-.1 land cGn be purchased.
Call now, buys like th is are hard to find .
I 383

brick is in exce llent condition . Features
liv ing room, dining room with sliding
glass doors, 'Very nice fini shed fa mily
room in basement, 1112 baths, 2 ca r
garage. It has a personality all its own!

SAO's witn all of tne room you need? We

COZY - Lovely small 3 bdrm . home,
compl ete l y remodeled, located in c ity
school distri ct. New F .A . gas furna ce

AFTER HOURS PHONE
BECKY LANE, ASSOC.
446-0458
VICKIE HAULDR E N, ASSOC . 446-4042
WILLA DAVIS, _ASSOC.
44+-J)fH

Locust St., three bedroom, 2 bath, garage &amp;

garage wilh doors on front and ba ck_. Heated .by

highways 8. shopping , tnls 3 bedroom

CIILLNOW

MIDDLEPORT -

ing space. 4 bedrooms, built· in kitchen with lots of
cabinet room. Large living room , dimng with
sliriing glass doors, Ph baths, full basement, 2 car

CIRCLE THIS ONE

AND FRIENDLY - Completl'ly ren•odeled . older nome with 3
b£rtronms, cellar, 2 carogarage with at tached creen house setting on 3.5 acres
i.1 Green Elementary and GAHS High
scnool distric ts .

~-iARM

a house In the

bath , full basement, gas·furnace, storm windowS &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance if you need it. $17,500.

SITTING PRETTY
Sitting very prelty, nestled in a grove of trees, you
will find this friendly brick home, 2-400 sq. ft. of liv-

ca r garage! 3 acr es of flat ground. FHA
approved.
11 391

Have you been looking for

MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom, 1112 batn, nice lot
just one block from hearl of town . $25,000.
POMEROY - On Lincoln His. - Two bedroom and

I 406

al$29,900 .

bet tnat your fami ly will find tnis 3 B R
ranch easy to live in and easy to love. 2

WHAT LUCK I -

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAit.A·BLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .

lq8
GOOD BUY

make a house a home. And it's a sure

chen and dining combi nation , bath,
family room wiTh wOOdburner . We ll insu lated. Lg , lot. At a price you ca n afford. 1n tne $30's.
N400

R~AL

For the th r ifty minded family . Nice 3 bedroom
home with 211• acres. unattached 21h car garage
equipped with furnace and air conditioning. W~uld
be ideal for a machinery shop. Pr iced to sell rap1dly

#398

WE BRING PEOPLE HOME
NEW LISTING -

car garge, basement, attic and much.
much more!
117 ACRE - Building lot with water and
sewage on Bulav ille Roa d.

••4

MILL ION$$$ VIEW

THINK SUMMER

I'ROFESSICJrW,S"

®

EXCELLENT
Need an added in·

come? Then invest in this apartment
building, -4 units, 2 bedrooms each,
natural gas heat, county water, in·
el udes some furnishings. In a good location.

STATELY Lovely older home
located In the city. Homes like this are
not built any more . 3 bedrooms
upsta irs, 1 bath, storage in nallwav .
Downstaris liv. rm ., kit., tam. rm .,
lovely formal din . rm ., 1 full batn , util ity rm, Plus beautiful In -ground pool, 3

• R(ll,l.;t t'rt'd Tradt&gt;m.otk n l ( ~mu~ 21 1(1"01 1 E!IU&amp;II" Corvnratlon . Prlnltd 1, ~ ~
, t'i179 Cf'n lu rv 21 H•·:ol E"mu · c"'l"" "'ll" " ! q,ldl Ho11t ln1 Opportu.JI.UFl.:.J
F-.ach orno.:., I• lad "'P'"•uleau, o•n~d
opcnte4.

FARM - 50 beautifu l acres and home
with 3 BRs, li'w'ing rm . with wb . fp ., din ·
lng rm ., nice kit., bath, utility rm . and
enclosed front porch . Separate 1 rm .
cottage, outbuilding, root cellar, 900 lb .
tab. ba ., and al l minera l rights. Priced
to sell .

NEW LISfNG
POSSIBILITIES -

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WE 00 OUR HOMEWORK!

WE'RE THE NEIGHIIdRttOOO

Real Estate lor Sale . ..

ROAM-·

On almost 4 acres of land with a pond
and small barn. Plus! A new 3 bedroom
home, with l'h baths, a sunburst orange
kitchen, centra l air, eiE''=tric heat pu mp
· extra insulation.

'View of the Ohio River, from this im ·
maculate 3 BR ranch. This home
features LR with pretty corner frpl. ,
nice kitchen, den, bath, C.A ., 2 car
garage and full basement with shower .
Situated on 1 acre of rol ling lawn .

simp le as ont- . tw o. 1h ree .

'- ~,'~'t.e:w"'

" DO IT YOURSELF"

owner finan cing . Loan can be

' Ne

24 STATE STREET

When you decide to. buy, a CENTURY 21
Neighborhood Professional will help you prepare
the o!Ter. negouate the terms and close the sale.
Whatever Is needed to make buying a home as

Real Estate lor Sale

7H~l M~7"

TONEY REALTY (0
IN1IREST RATES ARE HIGH ANO MONEY IS mrr:
IS 11IS AGOOD TM 10 BUY PROPER I T'l

- .. -~· --:--c----:----::---:-

t;ufp:Au·

Of

,., ;::t

Real Estate lor Sale

CALL 992-2342

NJ80

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992-3731
BILL CHI.LDS, BRANCH MGR .-HO. '192-2449

STROUT REALTV, InC~
.;ill~
.
446-0008
OWNER FINANCINI&gt; 4VAILABLE - $6,500 down
- 9% - Asking $33,000- Rem• deled 2 stor y home,
3 BR's, LR , den, fam ily rm ., d ning, kitchen, 2 WB
f irepla ces, 3 1/7 acres. Loca t ed on State Route 233

between Gallipolis and Oak Hill
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Approx . 6 acre5
le'w'e l &amp; genTlY rolling land, county water , ni ce
building si tes, loca ted on the floyd Clark Rd . ap
prox . 'h mi . off Route 160 nea r Porter . Askin ~

$15,000.
OWNER
ho m~

FINANCING AVAILABLE Remodeled

includes 5 rms . &amp; bath , ca rport, stove, refrig .,
dishwasher, mobi le hom e pad, alm ost 6 acr es on 588
2 mi. from town. SJO,OOO .
FREE GAS -

100 acres m· l, \lacant land rlear
Bulaville, approx . .40 acr es wooded, balance r olli ng
pastureland, some timber r eported. 7 miles out,

$55,000.
RACCOON CREEK FARM SO acres , 3B A. boltom,
11 A . pasture, IO\Iely modern brick hom e with 3 Brs.,
2 baths, ca thedra l ce ilings, fireplace , large sun deck
and lots of other extra s, new m etal pole barn , crib,
1oading chute, approx . 1700 ft . creek
frontage ,
ocate d 4 mi. f rom Meigs Mine No . 3.

WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF - Malure land
scaping &amp; r ic h gr een lawn highlig ht this enc hant ing
ri'Verview home. ow ner has been transf erred &amp;
must sell this custom built 3 BR home. LR , di ning
rm ., equiped kitchen, foyer with open stai rwa y,
family rm . with FP, basement &amp;. 2 ca r garage are
only a few of the specia l features. Located on Route
7 south of town with fron tage on the Ohio River.

GREEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - 155 A.
M ·L located on SR Ul approx. 6 mi. west of town.
Land is approx. 60o/o cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; in·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a gOOd barn. Priced at $500 per
acre.

LOW DOWN F.\YMENT - SUPER BUY - FHAVA • CQNVENTIONAL - This 3 yr . old bi -level is

like new &amp; must be sold this month. 3 or &lt;1 BR '5, 2112
baths, family rm ., heatalator firepla ce, low heat
bill s, Cla y grade school, Gallia Academy High
School. Call for Appointment.

!
I
t
t

WOOD REALTY, INC.

446-1066

I
Russell D. Wood

Evenings 446-4618
Realtor

OHIO RIVER VIEW - Th is 3 BR brick ranch is in
exce llen t condition and offe r s 2112 baths, den with
FP, di ni ng r m ., foyer. HW f loors, glassed in porch,
patio, extra nice landscaping, doubl e garage plu s a
detached 22x24 brick and concr ete garage. Lots of
privacy .

Ken Morgan
Evenings 446-0971
Realtor

1
t
t
t
f

VILLAGE OF PATRIOT -

BMR-336 -

First time on the market. This house

so'-0 '

$

DOWNINGCHIL.bS AGENCY, INC.

BMR-150 - Building lot on Holcomb Hill. $9,50f\

Older nome In heart of downtown

LOOKING FOR A HOUSE IN THE
20's? - owner w14,..•.. this 3 bedroom
sold this wee~
reduced price
over $8,000 .00.
.&amp;0 'lO you will not
find anything t. 'l•' ... pare it with. Very
convenient to Gall!pal!s State lnsitute.
Gallipolis City School.

ggz.z34z

rights. Call today .

has lots of space throughout (2800 sq. ft.). lncludes
entrance hall, LR with FP , FR wilh FP, DR, 4 BR's,
2117 baths, large kitchen with built· i ns. Nearly 6
acres . City schools. Call without delay.

MINI FA RM ·- OWners moved to Florida and are
se lling thi s lovely 3 BR b r ick home. Thi:. 6 yr. old
beauty offer s lots of goou living for so me lucky
family w ith a large k itc hen &amp; din ing rm ., LR , fam i ·
ly rm. with fireplac-.:!, garage &amp; barn . Located on
State Route 160 approx . 6 mi. from HMC .

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

BMR-149 - Development !~nd . 30 acres on Clark
Chapel Rd. 500ft. of front fOotage includin'.) mineral

Gallipolis. In need of repair. Has lots of potent ia l.
Must be seen to appreciate .

Let Us Sell Yours!

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

BMR ·I47 - crown City, commercial building on Rt.
7. Situated on two tots - Under $18,000.

BMR-33S -

ACRES) Make som ethi ng of this property again . 11
A., 2 acre lake, s~veral t.ui•dings i n need of repa ir ,
dumping stati on, 2 water Sf' Stems, lots of pine trees.
Fix thi s dandy place up &amp; sta rt mak ing money . Op·
portuni ty knocks.

SERVING SOUlliEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

aluminum siding sit uated on nearly an acre Of flat
land. Call now. Owner an x ious to sell.

BMw-llJI - LOCated 2 miles below Eureka. 3 BR 's,
LR , DR , F R, kitchen includes refrigerator and
ra r'1Ye. All electric with woodburner in F . R.

We Are ·Selling Real Estate

INSURANCE

Large farm hOme with

BMR-334 - Commercial land. 1.3 acres. Owner will
consider land contract at 8% interest. Call today!

CAMPGROUND (FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEL

·---------------------DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.

Realtor-Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
serving 6,0CIO
communities
421 second Ave •
call 446-8552 Anvtlme

~~~~~~~~~~~$
r------------,,-------------,1,..,..
RESTAURANT
Money-making· opera,..,..,..
tion doing business at
present time. 2100 sq. II.
,..,..
brick with office and
storage room. Electric
,..
heat. central air .
Building 5 years old.
completely furnished .
•,..
Room for expansion.

•:•
*

1434

Gracious L-shaped brick ranch

heat. THis lovely home Is sttuted on 3.56 acres. Ca ll
for complete detai ls.

Reslricfed building lot,

1.22 ac r e, nice wooded setting, city schools, $5,950.

BMR ·1S7 -

PERRY TOWNSHIP- 78 acres, 15 A. Simms Creek
bottom , ba lance rollin g pasture &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large barn, sever al other buildings,
tab . base, corner of s·R 141 &amp; the Vernon Woods Rd.

carpet and electric baseboard heat.

Priced to sell fast - in low 40's.

OVERLOOKING

RIVER

-

Stone

ranch with natural gas forced air with
central air conditioning. This lovely

home nas 4 bedrooms, 2 baths and bui ltIn kitchen.

50 ACRE FARM - KYGER CREEK
SCHOOLS - Older two story home,
good bottoms, and several buildings on
property . 5«,500.

&gt;1- WOMAN PLEASE R - !!rand new
frame and brick situated on _1.1 acres .

IN TOWN -JUST OFF SECOND AVE .
- An attractive, ideally located all
brick with full basement on Sunset

fireplace, heat pump with air condition·

Drive. All serious offers will be con ·
sldered.

*lf*,..

near Holzer Medical Center. Natural gas forced air

CROUSE BECK ROAD -

bedrooms, one bath and one car attach·

ed garage . Beautiful sculptured snag

*

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BMR -139 - Older two story nome on Second Ave. In
GalliPOlis, 31arge BR 's, LR, FR, DR, eat-in kitchen .
Under $30,000,
NEW LISTI.NG -

LISTINGS NEEDED NOW!!!

NEW LISTING - Almost completed
new home In nice subdivision. Li vi ng
room, extra large eat·in kitchen, 3

Equipped kltcnen, family room with
lng. Low SO's .

NEW LISTING - BEAT THIS FOR
$25,000 - V,A, APPROVED - This 3
bedroom frame nome Is perfect for the
small family . Kitchen Includes
refrigerator and douDie-oven range .
Nice level lot with plenty of shade trees.

Gallipolis City Schools. No down payment, Veterans!

EVENINGS
BOB LANE
SUE ROUSH
CHERYL CUNNINGHAM

446-1049
446-9753
367-0433

*'************************************************************************

Located in Eureka, very nice 3 BR

·a me-home with 32 acres . City or county schools .

3 BDR RANCH , nice size ;

BMR -159 - Two story home In clly. 4 BR 's, LR. FR,
OR, large kitchen, 1112 baths. Less than $30,000.

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY .

Sun·day and Monday's TV Log

BMR·ll7A - Beautiful brick ranch featuring full
basement, FR w ith fireplace, 3 BR ' s, 1'1&gt; baths,
carpet, kitchen with bu llt-lns,.p;, baths, carpet, kitchen wltn buill-Ins, and a bar plus din ing area.
Situated on large_flat lot. City Schools .
.

- Unfinished one stor y home with 3.-4 acres on RA C·

COO N CREE~ . Located on the Green Sa under s Rd .

near Nor thup. S18,500.

CHESHIRE -$26,000 - Remodeled I'/, story, 2l!R,
bath, LR, dining rm ., kitchen. part basement, dou ·
ble ca r por t, storage building and a large corner lot .

llBC - new Listing - 12 unit apartment compte•,
furnished . All units occupied, owner has constant
waiting list.
337 - In Gallipolis, Includes two BR's, bath, living
room with woodburner, dining room, basement and
a a large lot.
1976 14•70 KirkwOOd moDIIe home In excellent con·
dillon. Includes equipped kitchen. Situated on a
rented lot. Call now.
BMR 361 - Very nice older home featuring
spacious rooms, partial b.asement. This home ts on
natural gas with a S55 budget. Also includes 3 additional lots. $55,000.
BMR C36o- Thinking of your awn business. Give us•
a call. we are Offering just the right location In
Downtown Gallipolis. You have the choice of the
building and Its present .operation or fust the
bUilding by Itself. Don't miss this opportunity . Call

now.

OWNER ANXIOUS to sell, Thirty acres wllh.house
In need of repair, L.ocated near Rio Grande, Call today.
•
·
LOVELY HOME In excellent condition. This fine
home Is located on Rt, 71n Cheshire. E&gt;:&lt;cellent spat
lor commercial or professional use.
LET'S TAL.K MONEY
Down payments of N, 109f. or 209b, with up to 30
years to repay.
·
Sttve•McGhH
$lilts AI.OC,
~552

Even though the talka may be a
drag, g't them off your agenda.

TAURUS (Aprfi20-Moy 20) •Your

Intentions ma~ be QO.od, but your
frlende could rttent It today If

thll)t 1... you:re trying to run their

· lives. Keep yoUr suggestion• to
YOUtlell.

GEI!INI (Mil 2Huno 20) To
maintain harmony at home
tOday, II may be necessary to
bite the bullet. Avoid bri nging up
luuas thai drlve .ottlers to take
aides.
,
CANCER (Juno 2Huly 22) Yo"'
powers' of coneentr111on may not
be~p to your usually high standards today. ~ sure to doubltt·

~:;&amp;' Ceiit. 'JWiool, :Ill tn '
IC
your p r - 1~ oomt ol '

your
- lon't- tlltre.
gGIIIp
- . !the
•
~ who
ClllnOt
~ ...,, don't bo • 1'
eonb1butor,·
oubloct "

uarn- 'c-. _

U) Dotllll n
\

,

""'Y '"-'tnt '

ifllor•1011r II*.,. 001-1.ed
tOday, A - 1 0 GIW lfllm the

SUNDAY, _M ARCH2, l 980
:6: 00- Amerlcan
Proj&gt;lems
&amp;
Challenges 10; Between the
Lines 17.
6:Jo-.-Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Better
'
1 Way -8; Treehouse Club 10.
;7:DO-Thls Is The Life 3; Jerry
Falwell 8;- Urban League 10;
, Action Newsmaker 13 ; Rev .
1 Terry Cole-Whlllake'" 17.
:7:30-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
: 6; Jerry , Falwell 10; The Bible
• Answers 13; Jimmy Swaggarl

!

15; It Is WriHen 17.

'8:00-Mormon Choir 3; Grace
Cathedral6; WTBS Funhouse 17; .
Sesame St . 20,33.
• '
l!I: 3D-&lt;lral Roberts 31 Rev . Leonard
! Repass 8; Contact 61 LO)Ver
~
Lighthouse 13; Open Bible 15.
111:®-Gqspel Singing Jubilee 3i Re•
;
Humbord 6; Oral Roberts 10;
Christian Cenfer 8: Rev. ·'Jim
,
Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15;
~- Lost lh Space 17; Mlsfer Rogers

t

!

·I
•

20•

~tudlo

See 33. ,

_.

:30-11 fs Wrlllen 10; Rev, R.A,
WesiiJ ; Sesam~ St. 20; Big Blue
1
'
• Mei"ble 33.
ilO:OD-Re• Humbord 3; Kids are
Pewle Too 6; Movie " The St.
t
Valentlne' s Day Massacre" 1O;
Jimmy Swagga~l 13; Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15 ; L.eave It To•
Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
~ O : Jo-Ernest Angley 8; Movie
"Dango..ous" 17; 3·2- 1 Cohtact

'
I

20.

. ""'"" lypo or gtmo plan, your
. day oould t1oo fruolrotlnt and

lot, Green Schools, very :

' .

11 : DO-Human Dimension 3;

Re~

Humbard 15; Rev, Henry Mahan
13; Elec. Co. 20; Once Upon A
Ctosslc 33. '
11 :3G-B !II Darco Ouldoors 31
•Animals, Animals, Animals 6;
· Face Tho Nallon I; Big Blue
1 Marble ' 20; Mario &amp; the Magic
i(!'Ovl• Machine 13 ; Unicorn
Tales~ ·
-

Jl ,jo

'""'' ~

I

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

12:DO-At Issue 3; Issues 11. Answers
6,13 : VIewpoint 8; The Issue 10;
This Is The Life 15; Movie " A
Raisin In lhe Sun" 17; Ohio
Journal 20; Movie " Heroes of the
Hills" 33.
12 : 3G-Meel the Press 3,15;
Directions 6; . Championship
Fishing 8; Face the Nation 10;
Kids are People Too 13; Sound 8.
Rhythm of Young Japan 20.
1:DO-College Basketball 3,15; NBA
Basketball
8, 10;
Young
Matadors 6;· Movie "Jamaica

Inn" 20; World of fhe Beaver 33.
1:30--Fishln' Hole 6; HI-Q 13.
2 : 00-S\Jper-sfars 13 ; America's
Alhleles
6;
T hat
Great ·
American Gospel Sound 33.
2: 30-Movle "Gry Danger" 17,
3:00-Movle "The.Forty-Eight Hour
· Mile" 3; Golf 1S; Movie " They
Came from Beyond Space" 6.
3: 15-Movle "Go West. Young Man"

20.
3:30-Boxlng
13 ;
3:45-NBA
Basketball 8, 10.
4:00-Movle "Critic's Choice" 17;
Live from the Grand Ole Opry 33.
• :»-Wide World of Sports 6,13;
5:oo-5porlsworld 3,15; . Austin
City Limits 20.
.
7: OG-Disney's Wonderfu f World
3,1s1 Movie "Sinbad &amp; the Eye of
the Tiger" 6, 13; 60-Minule..J 8, 10;
Nashv!l,loontheRoad171 Freeto
&lt;i:hoose 33 1 7:1 5-Fiash Gordon

20. ,

r

·7:JO,-Por.ter 'Wagoner 17.
8:®-Tenspeed &amp;. Brown Shoe 6,13;
Arch~ . Bunker's Place 8,10;
Voyage of Charles Dar.,ln 20,331
Energy : What Mo.tlers Most? 17.)
8:»--ne Dey AI A Time 8,10.
9:00- Movle "The Aliens Are
Coming '; 3,15; Movi e "Attica"

6, 13; Masterpiece ·The,tre 20,33;
9:3()--,JeffeMons 8, 10.
10 : 00-Tr~ John, M .D. 3,10;

Winston Churchill 17 ; To Norway: Home of Giants 33.
10 :30-Ruff Hou se 17 ; Al i-Star
Swing Festiva l 20: 10:4G-Firlng
Line 33.
11 :®-News 3,6,8,10,13,15 ; M ovie
" Bombers B-S2" 17.
11 : 15-ABC News 6; CBS News 10;
PMA Pulse 15.
.
11 : !10-Movle " Oust Be My Destiny "
3;
After Benny , Thames
Presents 6; Celebrity Concerts 8:
Movie " Before Winter Comes"
10; PTL Club 13; Wrestling 15;
Flash Gordon 20.
12 :0G-FBI 6; 12 : 3o-News 15 ;
1: 1G-Movle " Jet Alfack" 17.
1:3o-ABC News 13 ; 2:2G-Movle
"The Oklahoma Woman" 17 ;
3:50-Movle "Paradise Alley"
17; -?":JG- Love, American Style
17.
MON DAY, MARCH 3, 1980
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:5G-PTL
Club 13,
6:®-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10; L.lsten 17; 6:15. Ath letes 17.
6:»--=-For Our Times 10; News 17:
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; A.M .
Weather 33: 6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55. News 13.
7:®-Today 3, 15; GOOd Mor~lng
America 6,13; Monday Morning
8; Batman 10; WTBS Funho u•e
17
.
7: Jo-Famlly Affair 10: Sesame St .
33; 7:55-Chuck While Reparls
10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17 .
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:00-llob Braun 3; Big Va~ley 6;
~ Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeller &gt;ns
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affal• 17 .
9:30-Bob Newharl8 : One Day At A
. . '!meo tO : Cr e~n Acre!. ·17. • ·
10:00-- Ca.d Sl,•rks 3. 15; . Edge ol

Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker 's
W ild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie " On the Riviera" 17.
10 :3 0- Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20.000 Pyramid 13: Whew! 8, 10;
Anoy Grlflll h 6; 10 :55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.
11 :®-High Roller s 3, 15; Laverne 11.
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Righi 8,10;
Etec. Co. 20.
11 :30- Wheel of Forlune 3,1S;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20,33: 11 :55-News 17.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Health Field 15; Love,
American Style 17 .
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10: Password Plus
15: Movie "The Damned Don't
Cry" 17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:OQ-,-Oays of Our Lives 3, 1S; All My
Children 6,13: Young 8. the
Restless 8, 10,
7:oo-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13 ; As The World Turns 8,10;
2:25-News 17.
2: 30-Another
World
3,15;
Gigglesr10rt Hotel 17.
J: oo-Gejleral
Hospital
6, 13:
Guidi!'!! Light 8,10: I L.ove L.ucy
17; Bi ll Moyers' Journal 20.
3:3G-FIIntstones 17.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Sesame Sl. ~0,33:
Gomer Pyle 10; Real McCoys 13;
Little . Rascals 1S; Speclreman
17.
'
4:3G-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; 'Tom s. Jerry
13; Mf!rv Griffin 15: Gilligan's Is.
17'
5:00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son·8; Mary Ty ler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 171 M ister Rogers

20,33.

'

5:30- Mash 3; · News 6: Play the
Percentages 81 Elec . Co. 201
Ma~ h 10 ,- Happy Days Again 13: I
Drearn of Jeannie 17; Doctor

Who 33.

low 40's. Call .u\·300 after ,
6.

6:®-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17: 3-2-1 Contacl
20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,15: ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnell 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild. World of Animals 33.
7: ®-Cross·Wits 3; Tic Toe Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
· MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33;
News 10: Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Flash
Gordon 20.
7:3o-That Nashville Music 3;
Muppel Show 6: Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud 10, 13; Nashville on
the Rood 15; All In The Family
17; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20;
Dlck Caveil 33.
8:®-LIIIIe House on lhe Prairie
3, 15 ; That's Incredible! 6:
WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10; Billy
Graham Crusade 13, 15; National
Geographic 33; Movie "The .
Desert Fo•" 17; Dick Cavell 20.
9:®-Mov.te " Let's Do It Again"
3, 15; Family 6, 13; Mash 8, 10;
American Short Story 20 :
Wllerness Alive 33; 9:30-House
Calls 8,-10.
10 : ~Stone 6,13; Lou Grant 8,10;
Big Battles 17.
10:05-Amerlcan Short STory 33;
IO :Jo-Ne.ws 20.
11 :00-News 3;6,8, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wild 17; Flash Gordon 20.
11 :05-'-Four Freshmen In Concert

33.
11 :3o-Tonlghl 3, IS ; AB C News
Special 6, 13; Harry 0 8; Movie
· "Lisa &amp; th&lt;l Devil" lO; Movie
" Across the •Pacific" 17; Dick
Cavell 20.
11 :45-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :20Pollce Story 13; 12; 4G-McCioud
8; News 15; I :30-News 13,17.
1:35-Movle " Fort Massacre" 17;
3:15-Un'touchables 17; 4:15l.lflergy : What Matters Most?
Special 17 . .

3 BDR . &amp; bath, 1.6 acres of
ground, St. Rl. 553, 112 mile
up Rt. 7, $16,000. Call 256·
1270.
FARM

FOR

SALE

by '

owner 75 acres, 6 rm . house :
with bath. Garage, barn, 1
and
other
buildings . :
Located 11 miles from .

Jackson Ohio. Off St. Rt. :
35, East. Coli 1-286-3730.
1
I

WANTED TO BUY · Rental '

houses and rental property. :

C:ali.ul-7627.

,

------- ,
BEAUTIFUL 5 bdr. ranch,
2 f&lt;reptaces. screened par·
ch, 3 full baths, located In
one of Gallle County's
finest subdivisions. Priced
In the 70's, Call.u\-4539.

1
:
1

1
1

~====:::;,;··

.. ·'

R E S T R 'I C T E 0 '.
BUILD! NG LOTS
.
Otlllly Drlvt all ."
utilities nalloble . 1
STRQUT
REALTY,~ .

u•-·

"'

'I
.
' .
-------:-~·

' RIVER VI~ HOM£ •
' I
FOR SALE
"

BYOWNI!R
,,
Oown St. Rt. 7; S
minutes from City P•rk. ; '
2 story fr•mt: 4 I.R.'s, • ,
llvlnl room with W.l.
tl{iplaC., nf.l• kit· •
chen. Blsoment •1141
gliralt. 'Price.! In low ·,
40'1 •.
Cllll : Doytlme, 446-1615
'
Afttll' 5: 446:1244
.

"l

~~--------------~''·

�[).10-The Sunday Times-Sentinel. SundaY . March 2. 19841

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are J?ound in the Sunday Times-Sentinel
--~--,----

~

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate tor Sale

D-11-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, March2,1980

Your Best Real Estate Buys Are Found zn the Sunday Times-Sentinel
0

Real Estate for Sale

1k

Real Estate for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

PRIVACY ABOUNOS - In tills brick
ranch nestled In the pine trees. The
home consists of a I g. living room with a
huge flreR)ate, 3 bedrooms, built· In kitchen, nice dining area, family rm.,
bath, Ig. double brick carport, all of this
on 3 acres of land with a nice pend. Plu s

WM. D. TONEY • BROKFII

446 3081

.

. ~

Finish up the r em odeli ng of this 2 story
3 BR country home . It has been
rewired, new breaker bo'l&lt;, some dry
wall work done New roof and materials
. osti ng over $1500 on premises. County
water ta p paid for . 1 acre of level
ground . What a change you can make
and profits unlimited for $17,500 . N 442

OPPORTUNITY
This sturdy home is located at The edge
of town . Big enough for grandpa and
grandma . 4 bedrooms, fam il y room ,
bath, k itc hen , utility room and pa ntry,
full basement, natur al gas heat. 3
acres. At a price you can afford.
$33,000.
I 366

HERE IT IS
For your fa r ming plea sure. 189 acres of
real farm land . 1700 lb. toba cco base.
Several acres of tillable land . Severa l
acres of woods and pasture. Excellent
barn. Shed. Adequate water surply . it
you're look ing fo r an income pr oduci ng

farm, call today .
20 ACRES VACANT LAND

~

403

10 acres woods, some t imber, 10 ~cres
level to rolling. co unty water avatlab le
for building. $14,000.
11389

COUNTRY DREAM
30 acres. half woods and half rolling
pasture . 5 miles from. Rio Gr~nde .
Beautiful location to butld and r a1se

famiy . 521,500.

a

N402

APLACEINTHECOUNTRY
Can be yours. We have 115 acre f arm
with 2 story, 3 bedroom home just
waiting-for you. Approx. 10 acres of bot·
tom land, tobac co base, barn and other
ou tbui ldi ngs . Priced in the S40 ' s. Hurry
on thi so ne !
/1443

SO NICE TO COME HOME TO! Owner has r educed the price on this 53
acre farm! Newly remodeled, 3
bedroom home, barn, tobac co base,
pond, plenty of wa ter, 30x42 new metal
building with concrete floor. Tak.e a
look, you ' ll like it . Reduced to sell
NOW! $42,500.
I 29S
ACRES
Situated in both Meigs and Vinton cou n·
ties. 31/:2 acres. Older two bedroom
home in need of repair. Looking tor a
h ide-a·way, ca ll tod ay . $15,000.
N 411
llf2

BETTER: THAN NEW IS thi s tutor and
stone st y led 3 yr. old hom e wi ht more
features than can be descr ibed. 1675 ~ ·
ft. entry ha ll , unique li'Ving roo m, fam1 ·
ly room , form al dining room, . 3
bedr ooms, Phi baths. A honey of a k1t ·
c hen wi th built ·in applia nces. 2
f irep laces, fu ll basement, pantry . Sit ·
tin g on 2 acres w i th older 7 room house
and outbuild ings. Look ing for a lot for
your money , t:heck with us on this one.
Pri ced in the sso ·s.
N363

Real Estate lor Sale

Real Estate tor Sale

OUTSTANDING -

NEW LISTING ..,,ROOM

Lovely sweeping

w m21

Ontu~
"S HOW OFF "
Warm and inviting throughout, this
ni ce 3 bedroom home, is def initely a
pleasure! Nice living room, di ning
r oom, 20x 12 garage, aluminum sid ing
and stor,m wi ndows, and a very nice
chain li nk fenced yard . See for yourself
today, show off to your friends tamar·
row ! Priced in the SJO's.
# 444

SUPER STARTER
This neat little house would be a perfect
retirement or starter home . New fuel
oi l furnace, small basement, new bath,
nice lot. If you're looking for a home
l ike this, CALL TODAY! Priced at

$14,500.

ATTENTION! HOG FARMERS
If you're looking for the ideal set-up for the hog rai s·
ing business, we have it . 101 acres of l?roductive
land and in Meigs county . New furrow1ng house ,
block fattening house, barn , new 6,000 bushel grain
dryer . 2 wire corn cribs, plenty of water. Hook-up
for 2 mobile hom es. Owner will sell complete with or
without equipment. Wanting to get in the hog
business or just wllnting a top notch farm , call to·

144S

Liter ary man's retreat from his days
labors. New 3 BR home, bath, fu ll base·
ment and all the com fort he could want .
Any amount of acres from 5 to 62 . Pri c·
ed to se ll. Only 15 m in ute drive from
Galli polis . Must be seen to be ap·
preciated. Ca ll any of our professiona l

We have 38 acres of land, a well con·
str ucted barn, other ou tbuildings . 7
room house, 4 room basement . Ga r den
area, farming area, p astur e for severa l
animals, pl enty woods for firewood . Get
ready for spring, this ca n be your s and
IJ 354
much more for $22,500.

sa ies staff loday

A PLEASURE TO SEE
AND A JOY TO LIVE IN - Thi s nome
Is in move· in condition. 3 bedrooms, kit-

~y

IT TAKES A LOVING FAMILY -

to

COUNTRY LIVING ON 9 ACRES Tt'lis small mini·farm is ideal for young,
old and in·between . Nice ranch st y le
home with 3 bedroom s, l lf2 baths, basement , and 2 car garage. Also has a
small tobacco base, barn, and n ice
storage building. Don 't hesitate or
you' ll be too late! Contact our office TO·
OAY! Pri ce din the LOW $40's.
N433

Ideal

loc ation

tor

conven ie nce,

have it! This house has A-1 siding, -4
bedrooms, 2 baths, liv ing room, dining,
complete kitchen, family room, 2 wood
burners, Florida perch, 2 decks, red·
wood fence, and 1-car garage, located
city school district. Need we say

and 40&gt; 150 lot .
43.52 Prime de'w'elopment
Located off of Rt. 35.

land .

..

ESTATE

Large double corner lot on

workshop. $25,000.
RUTLAND -

Older home needs some repairs on

Salem Street. Nice corner lot. $9900.00.
•
BUILDING OR TRAILER LOT - Hysell Run Road
- 5acres. $7,000 .
SYRACUSE - Old nouse on a nice lot, $11,600.
LOT IN MIDDLEPORT - We will build a house on
this one if you choose- Soutn Second Ave .

natural gas. Situated on the acres, rramly ;,.JOded.
Close to mines. Addition-.1 land cGn be purchased.
Call now, buys like th is are hard to find .
I 383

brick is in exce llent condition . Features
liv ing room, dining room with sliding
glass doors, 'Very nice fini shed fa mily
room in basement, 1112 baths, 2 ca r
garage. It has a personality all its own!

SAO's witn all of tne room you need? We

COZY - Lovely small 3 bdrm . home,
compl ete l y remodeled, located in c ity
school distri ct. New F .A . gas furna ce

AFTER HOURS PHONE
BECKY LANE, ASSOC.
446-0458
VICKIE HAULDR E N, ASSOC . 446-4042
WILLA DAVIS, _ASSOC.
44+-J)fH

Locust St., three bedroom, 2 bath, garage &amp;

garage wilh doors on front and ba ck_. Heated .by

highways 8. shopping , tnls 3 bedroom

CIILLNOW

MIDDLEPORT -

ing space. 4 bedrooms, built· in kitchen with lots of
cabinet room. Large living room , dimng with
sliriing glass doors, Ph baths, full basement, 2 car

CIRCLE THIS ONE

AND FRIENDLY - Completl'ly ren•odeled . older nome with 3
b£rtronms, cellar, 2 carogarage with at tached creen house setting on 3.5 acres
i.1 Green Elementary and GAHS High
scnool distric ts .

~-iARM

a house In the

bath , full basement, gas·furnace, storm windowS &amp;
doors. Owner will help finance if you need it. $17,500.

SITTING PRETTY
Sitting very prelty, nestled in a grove of trees, you
will find this friendly brick home, 2-400 sq. ft. of liv-

ca r garage! 3 acr es of flat ground. FHA
approved.
11 391

Have you been looking for

MIDDLEPORT - Three bedroom, 1112 batn, nice lot
just one block from hearl of town . $25,000.
POMEROY - On Lincoln His. - Two bedroom and

I 406

al$29,900 .

bet tnat your fami ly will find tnis 3 B R
ranch easy to live in and easy to love. 2

WHAT LUCK I -

WE HAVE FINANCING AVAit.A·BLE
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YEARS
TO PAY, ON MOST HOMES .

lq8
GOOD BUY

make a house a home. And it's a sure

chen and dining combi nation , bath,
family room wiTh wOOdburner . We ll insu lated. Lg , lot. At a price you ca n afford. 1n tne $30's.
N400

R~AL

For the th r ifty minded family . Nice 3 bedroom
home with 211• acres. unattached 21h car garage
equipped with furnace and air conditioning. W~uld
be ideal for a machinery shop. Pr iced to sell rap1dly

#398

WE BRING PEOPLE HOME
NEW LISTING -

car garge, basement, attic and much.
much more!
117 ACRE - Building lot with water and
sewage on Bulav ille Roa d.

••4

MILL ION$$$ VIEW

THINK SUMMER

I'ROFESSICJrW,S"

®

EXCELLENT
Need an added in·

come? Then invest in this apartment
building, -4 units, 2 bedrooms each,
natural gas heat, county water, in·
el udes some furnishings. In a good location.

STATELY Lovely older home
located In the city. Homes like this are
not built any more . 3 bedrooms
upsta irs, 1 bath, storage in nallwav .
Downstaris liv. rm ., kit., tam. rm .,
lovely formal din . rm ., 1 full batn , util ity rm, Plus beautiful In -ground pool, 3

• R(ll,l.;t t'rt'd Tradt&gt;m.otk n l ( ~mu~ 21 1(1"01 1 E!IU&amp;II" Corvnratlon . Prlnltd 1, ~ ~
, t'i179 Cf'n lu rv 21 H•·:ol E"mu · c"'l"" "'ll" " ! q,ldl Ho11t ln1 Opportu.JI.UFl.:.J
F-.ach orno.:., I• lad "'P'"•uleau, o•n~d
opcnte4.

FARM - 50 beautifu l acres and home
with 3 BRs, li'w'ing rm . with wb . fp ., din ·
lng rm ., nice kit., bath, utility rm . and
enclosed front porch . Separate 1 rm .
cottage, outbuilding, root cellar, 900 lb .
tab. ba ., and al l minera l rights. Priced
to sell .

NEW LISfNG
POSSIBILITIES -

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WE 00 OUR HOMEWORK!

WE'RE THE NEIGHIIdRttOOO

Real Estate lor Sale . ..

ROAM-·

On almost 4 acres of land with a pond
and small barn. Plus! A new 3 bedroom
home, with l'h baths, a sunburst orange
kitchen, centra l air, eiE''=tric heat pu mp
· extra insulation.

'View of the Ohio River, from this im ·
maculate 3 BR ranch. This home
features LR with pretty corner frpl. ,
nice kitchen, den, bath, C.A ., 2 car
garage and full basement with shower .
Situated on 1 acre of rol ling lawn .

simp le as ont- . tw o. 1h ree .

'- ~,'~'t.e:w"'

" DO IT YOURSELF"

owner finan cing . Loan can be

' Ne

24 STATE STREET

When you decide to. buy, a CENTURY 21
Neighborhood Professional will help you prepare
the o!Ter. negouate the terms and close the sale.
Whatever Is needed to make buying a home as

Real Estate lor Sale

7H~l M~7"

TONEY REALTY (0
IN1IREST RATES ARE HIGH ANO MONEY IS mrr:
IS 11IS AGOOD TM 10 BUY PROPER I T'l

- .. -~· --:--c----:----::---:-

t;ufp:Au·

Of

,., ;::t

Real Estate lor Sale

CALL 992-2342

NJ80

RODNEY DOWNING, BROKE R- HO. 992-3731
BILL CHI.LDS, BRANCH MGR .-HO. '192-2449

STROUT REALTV, InC~
.;ill~
.
446-0008
OWNER FINANCINI&gt; 4VAILABLE - $6,500 down
- 9% - Asking $33,000- Rem• deled 2 stor y home,
3 BR's, LR , den, fam ily rm ., d ning, kitchen, 2 WB
f irepla ces, 3 1/7 acres. Loca t ed on State Route 233

between Gallipolis and Oak Hill
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - Approx . 6 acre5
le'w'e l &amp; genTlY rolling land, county water , ni ce
building si tes, loca ted on the floyd Clark Rd . ap
prox . 'h mi . off Route 160 nea r Porter . Askin ~

$15,000.
OWNER
ho m~

FINANCING AVAILABLE Remodeled

includes 5 rms . &amp; bath , ca rport, stove, refrig .,
dishwasher, mobi le hom e pad, alm ost 6 acr es on 588
2 mi. from town. SJO,OOO .
FREE GAS -

100 acres m· l, \lacant land rlear
Bulaville, approx . .40 acr es wooded, balance r olli ng
pastureland, some timber r eported. 7 miles out,

$55,000.
RACCOON CREEK FARM SO acres , 3B A. boltom,
11 A . pasture, IO\Iely modern brick hom e with 3 Brs.,
2 baths, ca thedra l ce ilings, fireplace , large sun deck
and lots of other extra s, new m etal pole barn , crib,
1oading chute, approx . 1700 ft . creek
frontage ,
ocate d 4 mi. f rom Meigs Mine No . 3.

WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF - Malure land
scaping &amp; r ic h gr een lawn highlig ht this enc hant ing
ri'Verview home. ow ner has been transf erred &amp;
must sell this custom built 3 BR home. LR , di ning
rm ., equiped kitchen, foyer with open stai rwa y,
family rm . with FP, basement &amp;. 2 ca r garage are
only a few of the specia l features. Located on Route
7 south of town with fron tage on the Ohio River.

GREEN TOWNSHIP- PASTURE FARM - 155 A.
M ·L located on SR Ul approx. 6 mi. west of town.
Land is approx. 60o/o cleared &amp; 40% woods &amp; in·
eludes 2 ponds &amp; a gOOd barn. Priced at $500 per
acre.

LOW DOWN F.\YMENT - SUPER BUY - FHAVA • CQNVENTIONAL - This 3 yr . old bi -level is

like new &amp; must be sold this month. 3 or &lt;1 BR '5, 2112
baths, family rm ., heatalator firepla ce, low heat
bill s, Cla y grade school, Gallia Academy High
School. Call for Appointment.

!
I
t
t

WOOD REALTY, INC.

446-1066

I
Russell D. Wood

Evenings 446-4618
Realtor

OHIO RIVER VIEW - Th is 3 BR brick ranch is in
exce llen t condition and offe r s 2112 baths, den with
FP, di ni ng r m ., foyer. HW f loors, glassed in porch,
patio, extra nice landscaping, doubl e garage plu s a
detached 22x24 brick and concr ete garage. Lots of
privacy .

Ken Morgan
Evenings 446-0971
Realtor

1
t
t
t
f

VILLAGE OF PATRIOT -

BMR-336 -

First time on the market. This house

so'-0 '

$

DOWNINGCHIL.bS AGENCY, INC.

BMR-150 - Building lot on Holcomb Hill. $9,50f\

Older nome In heart of downtown

LOOKING FOR A HOUSE IN THE
20's? - owner w14,..•.. this 3 bedroom
sold this wee~
reduced price
over $8,000 .00.
.&amp;0 'lO you will not
find anything t. 'l•' ... pare it with. Very
convenient to Gall!pal!s State lnsitute.
Gallipolis City School.

ggz.z34z

rights. Call today .

has lots of space throughout (2800 sq. ft.). lncludes
entrance hall, LR with FP , FR wilh FP, DR, 4 BR's,
2117 baths, large kitchen with built· i ns. Nearly 6
acres . City schools. Call without delay.

MINI FA RM ·- OWners moved to Florida and are
se lling thi s lovely 3 BR b r ick home. Thi:. 6 yr. old
beauty offer s lots of goou living for so me lucky
family w ith a large k itc hen &amp; din ing rm ., LR , fam i ·
ly rm. with fireplac-.:!, garage &amp; barn . Located on
State Route 160 approx . 6 mi. from HMC .

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

BMR-149 - Development !~nd . 30 acres on Clark
Chapel Rd. 500ft. of front fOotage includin'.) mineral

Gallipolis. In need of repair. Has lots of potent ia l.
Must be seen to appreciate .

Let Us Sell Yours!

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH? DO
YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

BMR ·I47 - crown City, commercial building on Rt.
7. Situated on two tots - Under $18,000.

BMR-33S -

ACRES) Make som ethi ng of this property again . 11
A., 2 acre lake, s~veral t.ui•dings i n need of repa ir ,
dumping stati on, 2 water Sf' Stems, lots of pine trees.
Fix thi s dandy place up &amp; sta rt mak ing money . Op·
portuni ty knocks.

SERVING SOUlliEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

aluminum siding sit uated on nearly an acre Of flat
land. Call now. Owner an x ious to sell.

BMw-llJI - LOCated 2 miles below Eureka. 3 BR 's,
LR , DR , F R, kitchen includes refrigerator and
ra r'1Ye. All electric with woodburner in F . R.

We Are ·Selling Real Estate

INSURANCE

Large farm hOme with

BMR-334 - Commercial land. 1.3 acres. Owner will
consider land contract at 8% interest. Call today!

CAMPGROUND (FORMERLY CLARK CHAPEL

·---------------------DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY INC.

Realtor-Auctioneer
NATIONAL HOME
RELOCATION
serving 6,0CIO
communities
421 second Ave •
call 446-8552 Anvtlme

~~~~~~~~~~~$
r------------,,-------------,1,..,..
RESTAURANT
Money-making· opera,..,..,..
tion doing business at
present time. 2100 sq. II.
,..,..
brick with office and
storage room. Electric
,..
heat. central air .
Building 5 years old.
completely furnished .
•,..
Room for expansion.

•:•
*

1434

Gracious L-shaped brick ranch

heat. THis lovely home Is sttuted on 3.56 acres. Ca ll
for complete detai ls.

Reslricfed building lot,

1.22 ac r e, nice wooded setting, city schools, $5,950.

BMR ·1S7 -

PERRY TOWNSHIP- 78 acres, 15 A. Simms Creek
bottom , ba lance rollin g pasture &amp; woods, nice
modular home, large barn, sever al other buildings,
tab . base, corner of s·R 141 &amp; the Vernon Woods Rd.

carpet and electric baseboard heat.

Priced to sell fast - in low 40's.

OVERLOOKING

RIVER

-

Stone

ranch with natural gas forced air with
central air conditioning. This lovely

home nas 4 bedrooms, 2 baths and bui ltIn kitchen.

50 ACRE FARM - KYGER CREEK
SCHOOLS - Older two story home,
good bottoms, and several buildings on
property . 5«,500.

&gt;1- WOMAN PLEASE R - !!rand new
frame and brick situated on _1.1 acres .

IN TOWN -JUST OFF SECOND AVE .
- An attractive, ideally located all
brick with full basement on Sunset

fireplace, heat pump with air condition·

Drive. All serious offers will be con ·
sldered.

*lf*,..

near Holzer Medical Center. Natural gas forced air

CROUSE BECK ROAD -

bedrooms, one bath and one car attach·

ed garage . Beautiful sculptured snag

*

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BMR -139 - Older two story nome on Second Ave. In
GalliPOlis, 31arge BR 's, LR, FR, DR, eat-in kitchen .
Under $30,000,
NEW LISTI.NG -

LISTINGS NEEDED NOW!!!

NEW LISTING - Almost completed
new home In nice subdivision. Li vi ng
room, extra large eat·in kitchen, 3

Equipped kltcnen, family room with
lng. Low SO's .

NEW LISTING - BEAT THIS FOR
$25,000 - V,A, APPROVED - This 3
bedroom frame nome Is perfect for the
small family . Kitchen Includes
refrigerator and douDie-oven range .
Nice level lot with plenty of shade trees.

Gallipolis City Schools. No down payment, Veterans!

EVENINGS
BOB LANE
SUE ROUSH
CHERYL CUNNINGHAM

446-1049
446-9753
367-0433

*'************************************************************************

Located in Eureka, very nice 3 BR

·a me-home with 32 acres . City or county schools .

3 BDR RANCH , nice size ;

BMR -159 - Two story home In clly. 4 BR 's, LR. FR,
OR, large kitchen, 1112 baths. Less than $30,000.

FINISH THIS ONE YOURSELF &amp; SAVE MONEY .

Sun·day and Monday's TV Log

BMR·ll7A - Beautiful brick ranch featuring full
basement, FR w ith fireplace, 3 BR ' s, 1'1&gt; baths,
carpet, kitchen with bu llt-lns,.p;, baths, carpet, kitchen wltn buill-Ins, and a bar plus din ing area.
Situated on large_flat lot. City Schools .
.

- Unfinished one stor y home with 3.-4 acres on RA C·

COO N CREE~ . Located on the Green Sa under s Rd .

near Nor thup. S18,500.

CHESHIRE -$26,000 - Remodeled I'/, story, 2l!R,
bath, LR, dining rm ., kitchen. part basement, dou ·
ble ca r por t, storage building and a large corner lot .

llBC - new Listing - 12 unit apartment compte•,
furnished . All units occupied, owner has constant
waiting list.
337 - In Gallipolis, Includes two BR's, bath, living
room with woodburner, dining room, basement and
a a large lot.
1976 14•70 KirkwOOd moDIIe home In excellent con·
dillon. Includes equipped kitchen. Situated on a
rented lot. Call now.
BMR 361 - Very nice older home featuring
spacious rooms, partial b.asement. This home ts on
natural gas with a S55 budget. Also includes 3 additional lots. $55,000.
BMR C36o- Thinking of your awn business. Give us•
a call. we are Offering just the right location In
Downtown Gallipolis. You have the choice of the
building and Its present .operation or fust the
bUilding by Itself. Don't miss this opportunity . Call

now.

OWNER ANXIOUS to sell, Thirty acres wllh.house
In need of repair, L.ocated near Rio Grande, Call today.
•
·
LOVELY HOME In excellent condition. This fine
home Is located on Rt, 71n Cheshire. E&gt;:&lt;cellent spat
lor commercial or professional use.
LET'S TAL.K MONEY
Down payments of N, 109f. or 209b, with up to 30
years to repay.
·
Sttve•McGhH
$lilts AI.OC,
~552

Even though the talka may be a
drag, g't them off your agenda.

TAURUS (Aprfi20-Moy 20) •Your

Intentions ma~ be QO.od, but your
frlende could rttent It today If

thll)t 1... you:re trying to run their

· lives. Keep yoUr suggestion• to
YOUtlell.

GEI!INI (Mil 2Huno 20) To
maintain harmony at home
tOday, II may be necessary to
bite the bullet. Avoid bri nging up
luuas thai drlve .ottlers to take
aides.
,
CANCER (Juno 2Huly 22) Yo"'
powers' of coneentr111on may not
be~p to your usually high standards today. ~ sure to doubltt·

~:;&amp;' Ceiit. 'JWiool, :Ill tn '
IC
your p r - 1~ oomt ol '

your
- lon't- tlltre.
gGIIIp
- . !the
•
~ who
ClllnOt
~ ...,, don't bo • 1'
eonb1butor,·
oubloct "

uarn- 'c-. _

U) Dotllll n
\

,

""'Y '"-'tnt '

ifllor•1011r II*.,. 001-1.ed
tOday, A - 1 0 GIW lfllm the

SUNDAY, _M ARCH2, l 980
:6: 00- Amerlcan
Proj&gt;lems
&amp;
Challenges 10; Between the
Lines 17.
6:Jo-.-Chrlstopher Closeup 3; Better
'
1 Way -8; Treehouse Club 10.
;7:DO-Thls Is The Life 3; Jerry
Falwell 8;- Urban League 10;
, Action Newsmaker 13 ; Rev .
1 Terry Cole-Whlllake'" 17.
:7:30-TV Chapel 3; Eddie Saunders
: 6; Jerry , Falwell 10; The Bible
• Answers 13; Jimmy Swaggarl

!

15; It Is WriHen 17.

'8:00-Mormon Choir 3; Grace
Cathedral6; WTBS Funhouse 17; .
Sesame St . 20,33.
• '
l!I: 3D-&lt;lral Roberts 31 Rev . Leonard
! Repass 8; Contact 61 LO)Ver
~
Lighthouse 13; Open Bible 15.
111:®-Gqspel Singing Jubilee 3i Re•
;
Humbord 6; Oral Roberts 10;
Christian Cenfer 8: Rev. ·'Jim
,
Franklin 13; Ernest Angley 15;
~- Lost lh Space 17; Mlsfer Rogers

t

!

·I
•

20•

~tudlo

See 33. ,

_.

:30-11 fs Wrlllen 10; Rev, R.A,
WesiiJ ; Sesam~ St. 20; Big Blue
1
'
• Mei"ble 33.
ilO:OD-Re• Humbord 3; Kids are
Pewle Too 6; Movie " The St.
t
Valentlne' s Day Massacre" 1O;
Jimmy Swagga~l 13; Gospel
Singing Jubilee 15 ; L.eave It To•
Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
~ O : Jo-Ernest Angley 8; Movie
"Dango..ous" 17; 3·2- 1 Cohtact

'
I

20.

. ""'"" lypo or gtmo plan, your
. day oould t1oo fruolrotlnt and

lot, Green Schools, very :

' .

11 : DO-Human Dimension 3;

Re~

Humbard 15; Rev, Henry Mahan
13; Elec. Co. 20; Once Upon A
Ctosslc 33. '
11 :3G-B !II Darco Ouldoors 31
•Animals, Animals, Animals 6;
· Face Tho Nallon I; Big Blue
1 Marble ' 20; Mario &amp; the Magic
i(!'Ovl• Machine 13 ; Unicorn
Tales~ ·
-

Jl ,jo

'""'' ~

I

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

12:DO-At Issue 3; Issues 11. Answers
6,13 : VIewpoint 8; The Issue 10;
This Is The Life 15; Movie " A
Raisin In lhe Sun" 17; Ohio
Journal 20; Movie " Heroes of the
Hills" 33.
12 : 3G-Meel the Press 3,15;
Directions 6; . Championship
Fishing 8; Face the Nation 10;
Kids are People Too 13; Sound 8.
Rhythm of Young Japan 20.
1:DO-College Basketball 3,15; NBA
Basketball
8, 10;
Young
Matadors 6;· Movie "Jamaica

Inn" 20; World of fhe Beaver 33.
1:30--Fishln' Hole 6; HI-Q 13.
2 : 00-S\Jper-sfars 13 ; America's
Alhleles
6;
T hat
Great ·
American Gospel Sound 33.
2: 30-Movle "Gry Danger" 17,
3:00-Movle "The.Forty-Eight Hour
· Mile" 3; Golf 1S; Movie " They
Came from Beyond Space" 6.
3: 15-Movle "Go West. Young Man"

20.
3:30-Boxlng
13 ;
3:45-NBA
Basketball 8, 10.
4:00-Movle "Critic's Choice" 17;
Live from the Grand Ole Opry 33.
• :»-Wide World of Sports 6,13;
5:oo-5porlsworld 3,15; . Austin
City Limits 20.
.
7: OG-Disney's Wonderfu f World
3,1s1 Movie "Sinbad &amp; the Eye of
the Tiger" 6, 13; 60-Minule..J 8, 10;
Nashv!l,loontheRoad171 Freeto
&lt;i:hoose 33 1 7:1 5-Fiash Gordon

20. ,

r

·7:JO,-Por.ter 'Wagoner 17.
8:®-Tenspeed &amp;. Brown Shoe 6,13;
Arch~ . Bunker's Place 8,10;
Voyage of Charles Dar.,ln 20,331
Energy : What Mo.tlers Most? 17.)
8:»--ne Dey AI A Time 8,10.
9:00- Movle "The Aliens Are
Coming '; 3,15; Movi e "Attica"

6, 13; Masterpiece ·The,tre 20,33;
9:3()--,JeffeMons 8, 10.
10 : 00-Tr~ John, M .D. 3,10;

Winston Churchill 17 ; To Norway: Home of Giants 33.
10 :30-Ruff Hou se 17 ; Al i-Star
Swing Festiva l 20: 10:4G-Firlng
Line 33.
11 :®-News 3,6,8,10,13,15 ; M ovie
" Bombers B-S2" 17.
11 : 15-ABC News 6; CBS News 10;
PMA Pulse 15.
.
11 : !10-Movle " Oust Be My Destiny "
3;
After Benny , Thames
Presents 6; Celebrity Concerts 8:
Movie " Before Winter Comes"
10; PTL Club 13; Wrestling 15;
Flash Gordon 20.
12 :0G-FBI 6; 12 : 3o-News 15 ;
1: 1G-Movle " Jet Alfack" 17.
1:3o-ABC News 13 ; 2:2G-Movle
"The Oklahoma Woman" 17 ;
3:50-Movle "Paradise Alley"
17; -?":JG- Love, American Style
17.
MON DAY, MARCH 3, 1980
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:5G-PTL
Club 13,
6:®-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10; L.lsten 17; 6:15. Ath letes 17.
6:»--=-For Our Times 10; News 17:
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; A.M .
Weather 33: 6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13; 6:55. News 13.
7:®-Today 3, 15; GOOd Mor~lng
America 6,13; Monday Morning
8; Batman 10; WTBS Funho u•e
17
.
7: Jo-Famlly Affair 10: Sesame St .
33; 7:55-Chuck While Reparls
10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lucy
Show 17 .
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:00-llob Braun 3; Big Va~ley 6;
~ Beverly Hillbillies 8; Jeller &gt;ns
10; Phil Donahue 13,15; Family
Affal• 17 .
9:30-Bob Newharl8 : One Day At A
. . '!meo tO : Cr e~n Acre!. ·17. • ·
10:00-- Ca.d Sl,•rks 3. 15; . Edge ol

Night 6; Jeffersons 8; Joker 's
W ild 10; Morning Magazine 13;
Movie " On the Riviera" 17.
10 :3 0- Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20.000 Pyramid 13: Whew! 8, 10;
Anoy Grlflll h 6; 10 :55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.
11 :®-High Roller s 3, 15; Laverne 11.
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Righi 8,10;
Etec. Co. 20.
11 :30- Wheel of Forlune 3,1S;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20,33: 11 :55-News 17.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Health Field 15; Love,
American Style 17 .
12 :3G-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10: Password Plus
15: Movie "The Damned Don't
Cry" 17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:OQ-,-Oays of Our Lives 3, 1S; All My
Children 6,13: Young 8. the
Restless 8, 10,
7:oo-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13 ; As The World Turns 8,10;
2:25-News 17.
2: 30-Another
World
3,15;
Gigglesr10rt Hotel 17.
J: oo-Gejleral
Hospital
6, 13:
Guidi!'!! Light 8,10: I L.ove L.ucy
17; Bi ll Moyers' Journal 20.
3:3G-FIIntstones 17.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Merv
Griffin 6; Sesame Sl. ~0,33:
Gomer Pyle 10; Real McCoys 13;
Little . Rascals 1S; Speclreman
17.
'
4:3G-Lone Ranger 3; Gomer Pyle 8;
Brady Bunch 10; 'Tom s. Jerry
13; Mf!rv Griffin 15: Gilligan's Is.
17'
5:00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford &amp;
Son·8; Mary Ty ler Moore 10; My
Three Sons 171 M ister Rogers

20,33.

'

5:30- Mash 3; · News 6: Play the
Percentages 81 Elec . Co. 201
Ma~ h 10 ,- Happy Days Again 13: I
Drearn of Jeannie 17; Doctor

Who 33.

low 40's. Call .u\·300 after ,
6.

6:®-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17: 3-2-1 Contacl
20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,15: ABC News 13;
CBS News 8, 10; Carol Burnell 6;
Bob Newhart 17; VIlla Alegre 20;
Wild Wild. World of Animals 33.
7: ®-Cross·Wits 3; Tic Toe Dough
8; Newlywed Game 6, 13;
· MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33;
News 10: Love, American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Flash
Gordon 20.
7:3o-That Nashville Music 3;
Muppel Show 6: Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud 10, 13; Nashville on
the Rood 15; All In The Family
17; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20;
Dlck Caveil 33.
8:®-LIIIIe House on lhe Prairie
3, 15 ; That's Incredible! 6:
WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10; Billy
Graham Crusade 13, 15; National
Geographic 33; Movie "The .
Desert Fo•" 17; Dick Cavell 20.
9:®-Mov.te " Let's Do It Again"
3, 15; Family 6, 13; Mash 8, 10;
American Short Story 20 :
Wllerness Alive 33; 9:30-House
Calls 8,-10.
10 : ~Stone 6,13; Lou Grant 8,10;
Big Battles 17.
10:05-Amerlcan Short STory 33;
IO :Jo-Ne.ws 20.
11 :00-News 3;6,8, 10, 13, 15; Last of
the Wild 17; Flash Gordon 20.
11 :05-'-Four Freshmen In Concert

33.
11 :3o-Tonlghl 3, IS ; AB C News
Special 6, 13; Harry 0 8; Movie
· "Lisa &amp; th&lt;l Devil" lO; Movie
" Across the •Pacific" 17; Dick
Cavell 20.
11 :45-Barney Miller 6,13; 12 :20Pollce Story 13; 12; 4G-McCioud
8; News 15; I :30-News 13,17.
1:35-Movle " Fort Massacre" 17;
3:15-Un'touchables 17; 4:15l.lflergy : What Matters Most?
Special 17 . .

3 BDR . &amp; bath, 1.6 acres of
ground, St. Rl. 553, 112 mile
up Rt. 7, $16,000. Call 256·
1270.
FARM

FOR

SALE

by '

owner 75 acres, 6 rm . house :
with bath. Garage, barn, 1
and
other
buildings . :
Located 11 miles from .

Jackson Ohio. Off St. Rt. :
35, East. Coli 1-286-3730.
1
I

WANTED TO BUY · Rental '

houses and rental property. :

C:ali.ul-7627.

,

------- ,
BEAUTIFUL 5 bdr. ranch,
2 f&lt;reptaces. screened par·
ch, 3 full baths, located In
one of Gallle County's
finest subdivisions. Priced
In the 70's, Call.u\-4539.

1
:
1

1
1

~====:::;,;··

.. ·'

R E S T R 'I C T E 0 '.
BUILD! NG LOTS
.
Otlllly Drlvt all ."
utilities nalloble . 1
STRQUT
REALTY,~ .

u•-·

"'

'I
.
' .
-------:-~·

' RIVER VI~ HOM£ •
' I
FOR SALE
"

BYOWNI!R
,,
Oown St. Rt. 7; S
minutes from City P•rk. ; '
2 story fr•mt: 4 I.R.'s, • ,
llvlnl room with W.l.
tl{iplaC., nf.l• kit· •
chen. Blsoment •1141
gliralt. 'Price.! In low ·,
40'1 •.
Cllll : Doytlme, 446-1615
'
Afttll' 5: 446:1244
.

"l

~~--------------~''·

�•

'

D-12- The Sunday Times-Sentmel. Swul;l\ . ~•rch ~ .

I 'll\(;

New Haven area homeowners
VOL ?~ . NO. 225

·g et reduced insurance rate
NEW HAVEN - Homeowners
within a six mile radius of New
.Haven are in for SOJlle good news as
the result of the institution, effective
as of midnight Friday night, of the
New Haven Rural Fire Protection
District.
This means a significant drop in
fire insurance rates for many one
and two family dwellings located
within the district.
According to Bill James, chief of
the New Haven Volunteer Fire
Department, " Dwellings within
• 1,000 feet of an acceptable fire
hydrant will enjoy an equivalent of
eig ht class premiums. If the
property is in excess of 1,0000 feet to
an acceptable fire hydrant. then it
. will be granted an equivalent of
: ninth dass. Previously, all property
; in this area was loth dass."
A straight fire insurance contract

fo r a $25,000 wood. frame single
famil y dwt'lling is $169 for lOth
l'lass. $137 for ninth class and $48 for
eighth class. Thus, there would be a
sav ings of $121 for a dwelling going
from loth class to eighth class and a
sav ings of $32 for a dwelling going
from lOth class to ninth dass.
Ja mes was recently notified by the
Insuran ce Services Office of West
Virgin ia that it had completed an
extensive evaluation of the public
fir e protection facilities of the area
outs ide of New Haven and, based on
its findings . wa s officially
recognizing the rural fi re protection
district effective March I.
Insurance agents will be advised
of the credits that are applicable.
Rates for mercantiles, industrial
and institutional type property will
depend upon construction, occupancy, hazards. exposures, etc.

James said he was proud of the fire
department's accomplishment and
noted, " I want to deeply thank the
Mason County Conunissioners for
all the help they have given us.
Without them, this would not have
been possible''

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

North Carolina tops list

36 people killed by
latest winter blast

..,

CONG RATULATING the New Haven Volunteer Fire Department for its successful inception of the New
Haven Rural Fire Protection District are,' from left, Mason County Commissioners Bob Powers and Charles Fowler.
New Haven Fire Chief Bill James, right, last ni~ht ~ave the two men conies of a letter from the Insurance Services
Office of West Virginia, granting its recognition of the new district. Also pictured in the rear are Asst. Fire Chief Pat •
Fields and Fire Dept. Lt Chuck Zerkle. Powers said of the accomplishment, "This is where the taxpayers are getting

By Associated Press
Snow was ~ deep aci'OSll much
ol the Soutli today with fiWTies
falling deep into Florida where
oranges were freezing on the trees in
record cold. At least 38 persons have
died In the storm that roared out of
the Midwest into the Atlantic Coallt

a return on their money."

states.

..

Production resumes after
illness hits battery plant
LANCASTER, Ohio (APJ Production has resumed at Ray-0Vac Co.'s battery assembly division,
where a mysterious illness was
responsible for sending 100 workers
home.
But that doesn't mean the investigation into the causes of the
illness is over, said Peter Schmitt,
acting director of the Occupational
Safety and Health Admjpistration in
Columbus. And OSHA still has not
approved the situation there, he added.
"We haven't put a stamp of approval on anything," Schmitt said
Friday.
.
His announcement conflicted with
an earlier report by plant manager
Paschal A. King, who said OSHA
had given the plant a "clean bill of
health."
The incident began Feb. 22 when
four employees in the plant's battery
assembly division were treated at a
hospital after they experienced

headaches, nausea and eye
irritation. On Monday, another
seven were hospitalized.
As a result, the transistor battery
assembly line was shut down, with
its 100 employees indefinitely sent
home. But on Friday, production
was "back to normal," according to
a plant supervisor who refused to be
identified.
·
That hasn't prevented the investigation's legal process from continuing, however, Schmitt said.
"These investigations have connotations that could possibly result
in citations," he said. "We have yet
to make our final determination as
to what type of citation we're going
to consider, if any."
Schmitt has declined to reveal
results of the probe until a final
decision is made. He also has
refused to discuss King's comments
that the plant's problems were
corrected.
According to King - who refused
to comment on the issue Friday -

&gt;·-~

propane gas leaking from a forklift
truck parked near the battery
assembly section was responsible
for the illness. A compressor supplying air to the assembly line
carried the propane gas through air
hooes used by the workers, he said.
But Tim Griffing, OSHA's compliance officer who is conducting the
inspection, later said the truck isn't
all that's being considered.
"There are a number of things
we're looking at (as causing the
illness) Including the forklift truck,''
Griffing said. "I can't say that is the
problem. Potentially, it could have
caused those types of symptoms."
Meanwhile, tests also were being
made of the plant's ventilation
system, Schmitt said. An industrial
hygienist with the state's On Site
Consultation Service, contracted by
the federal agency, sent air samples
to Madison, Wis., earlier this week
for analysis.
Schmitt has refused to discuss the

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) - A
high-ranking official said Satur.lay
that the government was prepared
to give leftist guerrillas a plane and
safe conduct passes enabling them
to leave Colombia with the
estimated 40 hostages they are
holding at the Dominican Republic's
Embassy. The official asked not to
be identified.
The hostages include U.S. Ambassador Diego C. Asencio and at
least 15 other. foreign envoys. The
guerrillas, who took over the em·
bassy during a diplomatic reception

COUNT DOWN

Wednesday, are demanding
payment of $50 mill!on in cash, the
release of 311 leftist prisoners,
worldwide publication of a
manifesto and safe conduct out of
Colombia.
One of the guerrillas said earlier
in a telephone interview with a local
radio station that the hostages
"must necessarily accompany us to
our ultimate destination." He did not
saywhatcountrytheguerrillaswanted to go to but hinted they hoped to
go to Venezuela.
Panama has offered to grant the

ALL SCHOOLS OPEN
Despite temperatures lD &amp;be zero
area Moadly mol'lliDg, all schools of
Meigs Couuty were opeD.
A 18-laeb BilOW feU over the
weelleDd bat roads were relatively
clear Moada;y mOI'IIIDg 10 ltlat buses
could run over a great part of lbelr
I'QUiel. ID &amp;be Melp Local Sebool
Dllltrlel, the

s,.P,.;;;iftCOUri pii,Mdl"fi:Friif:itprr .,
WASHING'OON - The Supreme Court today thwarted eftOrt8 by
' news reporters and hiatorlana to obtain transcripts of telephone convenatlona Henry A. Kissinger had while he was secretary of state and
White House national security adviser.
By a ~2 vote, the justices ruled that the Freedom of Infonnation Act
does not authorize federal courts to order transfer of the notes from
die Library of Congress, where they are stored, to the State Depart·
mentfor release.
The ruling, however, leaves the State Department free to seek
return .of the documents. It Is likely the department will come under
some pressure to do so.

guerrillas politi&lt;;&amp;J asylum man effort to end the crisis.
.
.
The go~ernment Fnday rught
reversed Its .longstanding ~licy
against bargaining With terronsts,
but negotiations still were not under
way by mid-afternoon Saturday· A
Cabmet ~r, ':'ho ~ed not to
· be Identified. sa1d senous talks
probably would not start until S~mda~. ti d C 1 J 11 Lo d
sec!:~~nd uatothe F~~no,
Ministry a ared briefly Saturlf
'
li
8 a po ce post near
mo~
em....,..,y,

Government presents alternate plan
BOGOTA, CQiombla - The Colombian govenunent proposed that
the guerrillas holding the Dominican Republic's embassy keep as
hostages only the 20 foreign diplomats and two Colombian officials
they captured and let the rest of their captives go.
There was no lmmedlata response from the anned band of leftists
who Invaded the embassy during a diplomatic reception five days ago.
The 29 guerrillas freed a doctor and four walters Sunday after a go.
Jnlnute negotiating session held In a Ford panel truck parked outside
the embaSsy. They released 19 other hostages last· Thursday and
Friday, Including all15 women, and are believed stlil holding 38.

u!

Motion pending in Flynt verdict

ELBERFELDS

COLUMBUS, Oblo- A motion will be flied to set iiSicte a jury's verdict flncllng Hustler magazine and Its publisher, Larry Flynt, guilty of
libel and lnvasloo of privacy, says Flynt's attorney.
Lawyer Laurence sturtz tenned Saturday's verdict in the suit
brought by Penthouse magazine publisher Robert Guccione "Wegal
.and Improper."
Gucclooe, who claimed Flynt and Hustler had conducted a campaign of malice against him and his 111180Clates, was awarded $39.3
miWunln damages by a Franklin County Common Pleas Court jury of
five women and three men. The figure Includes more than $27 million
from Flynt plirsonany and more than •12 million from the magazine,
and is belie\reillo be l record amount for a libel suit.

The Hide-A-Bed·Sofa

"We've made a special purchase of

Mode on y by SIMMONS ~·

ten 1979 model Grand Prixs. All
cars are weD equipped with factory
air, AM-FM radio, bucket seats,
Rallye wheels and only 7,000 to 12,000
. miles. For only '5799.00, they're the

Sick Jeave abuse crackdown coming

.

\

COWMftl,l_8, Oblo- Qlio's budget chief, Wllllam D. Kelp, propl,eect
- leglalaUon today to crack down on the abuae of sick leave by state em-

best on today's market!

ployee~.

But his legi.slliUoo also would provide lncenUves Ia make them want
to come .to~· st1eh 811 paying worken In Cash at Cbrialu)aa ttme for
sick leave not jlled during the year, he told a news conference.
Citing O)'e-openlng statlltics, he !IBid the costa have II08red as

*GOOD
SELECTION

·.

*BALANCE OF
FACTORY
WARRANTY

..

salarieS have·~. and I'Day balloon to $&amp;5 miUlon in 1llll0.
.Kelp iild1bat every two weeks, 30 percent of the state's employees

•

111M! at least ilne clay of sicli leave.

'

·'

ON SOME

In 1t'l9; l!e said, the costa of sick leave were equivalent to the state
paylnf3,000 penons a year's pay for staying at home all year.
_J

SimmQns new lower profile makes a Hide·A·Bed Sofa that looks u'ke a sofa and
tits Into today's home decor - also sits more co-mfortably and has mQre seating
room.
·
Ma!&lt;es a bed far more easily and quicker and has box spring type support
Queen ~tnd twin sizes length and width. ·
·
•
Stop in, see all the styles an~ ,sizes. sa've.now.

I

$ENSIBLE' CREDIT· ·SERVICE _._ FREE DELIV.RY

ELBERFELD$ ~

•

rewai.ted with Pamntlf

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Steven Stayner, the 14-yeaNlld teunlted

FURNITURE DEPT. - 3RD FLOOR

AS LOW AS

•

.Long lost son

SPECIAL SALE PRICES NOW

Grand Pr ix

~ ~

POMEROY

'

•

..'
''

•'

·~--~~~~~~~~~--~ ~

.',

'
•..

~

'
''

aelledullDI

WBII ODe

boar later thaD aormal.
Altbaulb &amp;be temperatare wulow
011 Moaday, It wu to moderate to
about 3li dep-ees today 8lld ta go IDio
lbe 50'1 on Tuaday,

By Tbe AooclatedPrell

tests.

ipe

. -1;

remove the drifted white stufi. Besides the snow,
motorists had to contend with slippery hillsides, and in
some cases, because of the cold temperatures, some
people's vehicles' engines just would not turnover. For
the most part, tri~ounty residents who dill make It,
drove carefully, since just five traffic accidents were
investigated by the Ohio Highway Patrol.

COUNTRY TRAVEIJNG ROUGH - Tri-(Ounty
residents living in rural areasJiave had some rough
traveling the past two days since Saturday's unex·
peeled snow stonn which dumped as much as 12 inches
of snow. This photo was taken late Saturday evening
before township trustees used their road grader to

Says government would fly
guerrillas from Columbia .

RAND PRIX

MONDAY, MARCH 3, 1980

.,

To qualify for the reduced fire
credit , the Ni!w Haven Volunteer
Fire Department had to meet cer'.ain criteria. James said. Among
these, the fire department had to
show that its pumpers could pump a
rN!lain nun1her of water a minute
and that It had facilities to carry 700
gallons of water out of town. In
addition, the department hao to
have all standard fire fighting
equipment and had to draw up a plan
to show that it could handle a second
alarm fire 1a second fire while one is
already in progress) .

Bankers, bureaucrats provid·e big
:obstacle for ailing Chrysler Corp.

* 1979 MODELS

POMEROY -MIDDLfPnRT 01-ll(l

with his pare11t1 ~en yean after he .,.. abducted on bi.s way home
~ IICiiocil, ~ tm1lalf Dennis and "811 .irdroducecl by Keruieth
Eve~ ~&amp;!,JdiiiOII, their nel&amp;bboniay. ·
· ·
.'1'1• Mt~ · aililed In telephone ll1tervleWa ~y that they
ranl1 ciU&amp;lit'. 8Unilie fl.·Tllnopiy 1M White, &amp;, of Ukiah, wl!o hid
·Jolneil tbO ·~ aild bOy at the oniH'oom ranch ca.bln after be Was
,' reportedllllll!lnlfrcmblah&lt;meFeb.~4.
, ,ParneJI, 41, bu been booked fOI" i1!vestlptlon .of kldnapplllg lit the
cae Gl the Wblte boy. No charges have been fUed In connec!tlon with
1

•

'

Stllyner'a.U.ppiarance frvm Merced In o-mber 1972.

•'·: 1,...,...;..;__..;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,._ _ _ _ _ _

Weekend
toll hits 12
By Tbe Alloclated Pn!a
Accidents on Ohio roads over the
weekend killed at least 12 persons,
Including five in one crash, according to the Highway Patrol.
The patrol said the head-on
coWslon which killed five persons on
Ohio 73 in Clinton County on Satw-

By LOUISE COOK
Allaoelated Prell Writer
Sugar prices added a sour note to
family grocery bills last month;
helping boost supennarket prices by
an average of just over I percent, according to an Associated Press
marketbasltet survey.
. The price of a five-pound sack of
sugar went up at the stores checked
in 12 of the 13. cities on the survey list
and was unchanged in the 13th city.

~~=~
in the price' at·pork chops and eggs.
The AP d!Ttv up a random list of 15
conunonJy purchased food and nonfood Items, checked the price at one
supennarket in each of 13 cities on
. March 1, 1973 and has rechecked on
or about the start of each succeeding
month. One' Item, chocolate chip
cookies, was dropped from the list at
the end of November 1977 beca1111e
the manufacturer discontinued the
package size used in the survey.
The latest aurvey showed that the
marketbaskel bill increased at the
chec:kllst store In eight cities during

dsy~wheaa~~

driven by John Bartram, 24, of
Wilmington, went out of controron
the partially snow..:overed road and
slammed Into a southbound
automobUe driven by Jerry L. Griffith; 35, of New Vienna. Both men
were killed.
Also killed in the accident were
Gary N. Sabin, 24, also of
Wilmington, and Griffith's 36-yearold wife, Ruth, and ll·yeaNlld son,
Jerry Jr.
The patrol counts weekend
fatalities from 8 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead:

Weather
~

(!-

Increasing i;loudiness and not as
cold tonight. Lows near 26. Mostly
cloudy and W8f1ller Tuesday. Highs
in the upper 408. The chance of
precipitation Is near zero tonight
and 26percent Tuesday.

February, rising an average of 2.6
percent. Tile bill declined in five
cities, down an. average of 1.2 percent. On an overall basis, the
marketbasltet bill at the checklist
store was 1.1 percent higher at the
start of March than it was a month
earlier. The increase compared with
a seven-tenths of a percent boost
during January and a 1 percent
decline during February 1979.
Coo1paring today's prices with
tboae ,seven J~"' ago, tl\e AP found
that tlie maltetllUket bill at the
cliecldi.st stores Is an average of lrl
percent higher today than It was on
March1, 1973.
The Increase in sugar costs reflects higher prices being paid on world
markets which, In turn, reflect a
smaller sugar crop. According to the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, the
world price averaged about 8 cents a
pound during the first half of 1979,
but had risen to 21 cents a pound by
the first week in February lliiiO.
There was some encouraging
news at the meat counter. The price
of a center-&lt;:~~t pork chops declined
during February at the checklist
store In seven clUes, reflecting the
steady Increase in hog production.
The USDA says federally inspected
hog slaughter during the first slx

weeks of 1980 was up 26 percent from

a year earlier.
Egg prices also dropped, according to the AP survey. The price
of a dozen eggs declined at the
checklist store in 11 cities. On the
average, the price of eggs in the AP
survey dropped by about 7 percent
during February, following an 11
percent decline in January.
No attempt was made to weight
the AP survey results l)ccording to
population density or In terms of
what percent of a familY's actual
grocery outlay ea~h Item represents. The AP did not try to compare actual prices from city to city. The
only comparisons were made In ter. ms of percentages of increase or
decrease . .
The items on the AP checklist
were: chopped chuck, center cut
pork chops, frozen orange juice concentrate, coffee, paper ·towels, but·
ter, Grade-A medium white eggs,
~ peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fabric softener, tomato
sauce, milk, frankfurters and
granulated sugar. The cities
checked were : Albuquerque, N.M.,
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, Dallaa,
Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York, Philadelphia, Providence,
R.I., Salt Lake City and Seattle.

Vanda1ism checked
Meigs County sberiff's depuUes
are Investigating the breaking of a
plate glass window at the Rutland
Hardware Store.
Deputies ~ the broken
window Sunday at 10 a.m.
Joe Moore, Rutland, owner, said
he heard a car stop In front ol the
store and leave at approximately 5
a.m. Apopcan was used to brea1t the

SVNDAY
NORWALK- Doug1a.s S. Baco'it,
21, of Greenwich, In a one-car accident on a Huron County road.

FINDLAY - Grecory A. Wood-

window.
One accldent report WBII received
over the weekend.

ward, 17, of Jenera, In a one-ear accident on a Hancock County road.

8.\'11JRDAY
WILMINGTON - John P. Bartram, 24, the driver of one car, and
Gary N, . Sa~ln, 24, both of
Wilmington; and Jerry L. Griffith;
35, the driver of a secood car, Ruth
E. Griffith; 33,1111d Jerry L. Griffith
Jr., 11, all of New VIenna, Ill a tWocar accldent on Ohio 73 in Clinton
County.
COLUMBUS- Michael A. Swint,
fl, of Columbus, ·,in a three car accident on Qhlo 3151n Columbwi.
LIMA - Deanna Webb, no ace
given, of Wapakcmela, a ~er,
· In a coe-cat accident on Oblo 117 int
Allen County.
.
CLEVELAND . - Lo)ll'ell B.,
Burleuoo, 48, of Cleveland, In a onecar accident on a CJeveland city
street.
'

in Orlando, 26 in Daytona Beach,
and 32 in Miami.
Meanwhile, California residents
were digging out from under a fresh
series of rain-spawned mudslides,
and "twister" winds caused a smaU
plane to crash in snow in the San
Gabriel Mountains.
Virginia Gov. John Dalton
declared a state of emergency as of·
ficials in Norfolk, a port city of
286,000, ordered everyone off the
streets and the National Weather
Service predicted more snow. Some
looting was reported as wincklriven
snow brought the city to a standstill.
Some 2,300 persons attending a
late-afternoon circus performance
in Norfolk on Sunday were ordered
to remain in the Scope coliseum
overnight as a blizzard raged and
the curlew began.
"I spent $28 on tickets and I'm
going to see the circus." said Billy
Bank ol Chesapeake. "Besides, I
haven't missed a circus in 10 years
(Continued on page 10)

Grocery bills higher, sugar blamed

'

FRIDAY
CAN'l'ON - ·Gecirge A. KUlnger, 18,
rl Minerva, lit a two-Car actident on
Ohio 183jn Stan: dounty.
• PARMI- HEIGHTS - Jeffrey A.
·
,...--- Murphy, 18, ol Panna, In a one-car
accident on It Parma Heights city ·
lln!et.
.

..;..__..;..~

In addition to the 13 dealba·ln North Carolina, the stonns have been
blamed for slx deaths in Ohio, five in
Missouri, three in South Carolina,
three in Tennessee, two in Pepnsylvanla and one each In Kentucky,
Virginia, Florida and Maryland.
The National Guard wu called out
to assist stranded motorists in North
Carolina where .two feet of snow
driven by 60 mj&gt;h winds hammered
some conununltles and 13 people
died. Five-foot drifts paralyzed
Wilmington, a coastal city of 50,000
people.
''A dsy the Tar Heels will remember," was the way ooe North
Carolina forecaster described the

tw&lt;Hiay storm. He said it was "as
close as a Midwestern blizzard will
ever come to North Carolina.''
Residents were ordered off the
streets of Norfolk, Va., after the
stonn dumped heavy snow along the
East Coast from Florida to southern
New Jersey.
In Florida, where temperatures
broke records for the date set in 1947
from Pensacola to Miami, it was 32
degrees this morning. Earl Wells of
the Florida Citrus Mutual said there
had been considerable damage to
the citrus crop, with about half the
season's oranges still on the trees.
"We know we've lost some juice,
but the severity of the damage will
depend on what happens tonight and
during the next week.
"U It stays cold, we get the fruit
off the trees and still get some juice.
But if It turns wann, it deteriorates
and thefrultstarts to drop off."
With snow fiWTies reported as far
South as Tampa, · record temperatures In Florida included the 25

J11111e11 L. .J\!denoor, Otester, was
traveling aouUI on SR 881 delivering
bottled gas, wben Ilia truck lild Clll
the I1IOW oovered highway and
struck an embankment. There WBII
moderate damage and. the driver
complained ol a bruised shoulder.

OSP cites motorist
1·

One driver wu cited follo. a
two-vehicle ,aeddent lnvestiCated
SundaY· by the Gallla-Meip POIIt,
Highway Patrol.
Called to tbe scene on U.S. 311,
elgbt-tentbil of a mile tl'est of SR lSI,
at 5:80p.m., officers report a . bOUnd auto operated by Marpret
Lane,». Bidwell, tutned lert Into the '
~th II. a 'lftltbouDd velilcle driven '·
by Jlickrlc Mongkollnglonl, 34, Addison. '
'
LaJie was cited.oo a charge of lm·
proper left tum. Both vehlclea Incurred modetate damage.
The , Gallla·Melga Post Investigated five other weekend accidents dllflnl wblch the tbere w~
no Injuries and no ci\atlonl issued.

YOUNGER SET - A Ill-Inch snowfall In MeigS County Saturda;y
prl!VIded plenty of cold weather activity for the younger set and altboli8b
temperatures wa'rmed a bit Sunday and roads were relaUvdf clear,
there wu atill a lot ol snow for, fun tline. Anna Cblapman and Heather
Woods of Pomeroy are pictured "relulng" In the white stuff alter a
iltrenUOUSIIfternOOII ol play,

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